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•

•"

By The Bend

•

I

8!f Ed Peter.on,

:::'·
Social Security Ofllce

oh

l)ro ounces.

BRANDEN IIOLLINQSWOiml

.Marketing seminar set March 7
,.

.

Some people are saying that
younger workers win never see a cent
from Social Security when they retire.
Well, here are the facts.
The latest trustees report on
Social Security shows that the program is sufficiently financed to pay
be~efits well into. the· next century.
Another fact: polls show that most
Americans are behind Social Security and are willing to support changes
to keep it solvent.
· Added together, these two facts
mean that we have the time to make
whatever changes are nei:ess.ary to
keep Social Security adequately
financed and the will to make those
changes.
You can count on Social Security
because Social Security can count on
_you to support a program that pays
benefits to one out of six people. and
provides retirement, disability, and
survivors protection to 95 percent of
today's workers and their families.
It will be there for you, too, today
and tomorrow.

Retinmeat lacome
Too often, people rely on Social
Security to support themselves in old
age.
Well, you should know that Social
Security was never intended to be
your only means of support after 65.
For the kind of retirement you hope
to have, plan to supplement your
Social Security benefits with savings,
investments, pensions and insurance.

Delay retirement
If you are nearing retirement age
you may be wondering when is the
best time to stop working?
Well, you should know that the
·Jonger you delay_retirement, tile larg.er your monthly benefit will be.
You can retire as early as age 62.
If you do, your Social Security benefits will be reduced by as much as 20
percent... to take into account the
longer period of lime you'll he drawing benefits. Or JOU can wait until
your full retirement age ... 65 for peapie retiring within the next few years
..; and receive your full retirement
benefit. Or you can keep working and

put off collecting Social S«urity and
your benefits will increase for each
month you delay retirement after 65
up to age 70. To find out how much
you will receive from Social Security when you retire. just call I -800772-1213.
IS.S. dlsabWty iosui'IIJKe
A lot of people \hink that Social
,Security is just for old folks.
Well, more than two million peo- ·
ple who aren't old receive Social
Security payments every month ...
payments through Social Security's
disability program. Social S«urity
disability insurance protects people
against the loss of income while.
.they're young if they become unable
to work beca~e of an illness or
injury. And if the disability lasts for
tw~ years or longer. there's Medicare
too, to help with doctors' and hospital bills.
Nine out of I0 workers are eligible for disability benefits if they
become disabled. To find out more
about how Social Security disability
insurance can help you, call 1-800772-1213 and ask for a free copy of

!

l

•

"Reducing the Risk" is an in nov·•live curriculum that is designed to
,help adolescents build skills to pre•
vent pregnancy, sexually transmitted
·diseases and HIV.
. . The workshop is being offered by .
Planned Parenthood of Southeast
Ohio to train teachers, counselors,
•and social workers on how to use this
highly effective curriculum in class.rooms and other settings. ·
The workshop will be held on Fri-day from ~:45 a.m. to ·4:30 p.m. in
Athens, Continuing Education Units
have been applied for to the Ohio
Department of Education.
The goal of the "Reducing tlie
Risk" cu.rriculum is to provide students with the skills they
to
postpone sexual intercourse, orto be more responsible if 'they decide to
bccome sexually active. Research on
the "Reducing the Risk" curriculum

need

' 1· ~~ '

~:

~j

··...: .j t',}jy •
'

d)e pamphlet "Disability." Thil num-~

. ft\' _:

Services are free
A lot of people believe that you
have to pay for services from Social
Security. Well, that just isn't so.
'
All Social Security services are
offered free of charge. That means
that if you marry and want io chanse
the name on your .Social •Security
records, you can do so ... absolutely
free.
If you need to get a Social Security number for your newborn child ... .
there's never a charge.
And if you want to check yoW:
'earnings or get an estimate of whqf
your retirement benefits will be ... you
can do so without payipg anyone to,
do it for you .
Unfortunately, some·unscrupulous
businesses do charge a fee , anywhere ·
from $10 to $2S or more, for the same
free services you can get from Social
Security. To take advantage of any o:f
Social Security's services, just call 1800-772-1213.

..
Vol. 48, NO. 215
1 Section, 10 Pagee

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel New1 Staff
.
· Veterans Memorial Hospital received a vote of confidence from the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners, which pledged its support to a planned hospital addition Monday.
,
The pledge was in response to a letter signed by 124 hospital employees
. and volunteers sent to commissioners requesting their suppon for a proposed
. medical arts building.
•
·
Commission Vice President Janet .Howard 'read the commission's
response, a letter signed by all three commissioners:
"We ... pledge to do everything within our power to make land available
near the hospital for the construction of this facility.
"We understand that five areas on the hospital campus have been selected as possible sites and that none of these sites will interfere with the operation of the Meigs County Home."
·
The board also said It would assist in the selection of the site and encour. aged all parties to proceed "as rapidly as possible to ensure that the health.
.

LAURA LEE
.

,
'

The Grand High Priest of the

...

\ B &lt; ll -~ .I Ill
B 0 \ I l \1 \ I&lt; 1\.1 I'.'

Orand Chapter of Royal Arch
Masons, Arthur. Ross, and his wife,
Carole, Sandusky, will be in Middleport for a dinner-reception to be held
at ,the Middleport Masonic Temple
Saturday.

&amp;
High Interest Yitlds
Available
• No Loads or Fees
• Accumulate or Monthly
Income
• High Safety!
• Wide Choice of AMuitles of
Ali .Kinds
Call for lnfoimation:

'

The

I

Community Calendu Is

ptiblllli'ed u

free 1ervlce to non·
.·P. . . '""-'' wilhlllg to announce
' Ill r ttlrilllid fi'CCIII even11. 'The cal........ II, ~ ,delliV«&lt;Io promote
..w.:.ol',,'liliid niHrs olany type.
11

~~ IIJJ prlnle!fuspace permits
aDil c1ta1111t"' piannleed to n~n a

, ~ oialliber o1 days.

MO~AY ,
. : Rt.J'h.,AND -- An indoor camp
·~'"'' ,ponsored by the Meigs
' ' ~ 1 .tfQiiP~~ ~ssociation, will
•.bC!flblil'from ~arch 4-9, 7 ·P·I1'· each
~' ~venlfll, ~M~h. HI. 6 p.m: 111 the
I\Ptllnd·~uatene Cliurch..Evangelist
Will l!e ,the ReV- 1\ic~ Strickland
~. evangelia!S; Ralph and
.;IOA'iU!'tJ.unillil'ti· ·
·
· ~ JSA~p- •- Tile Lei1rt 1bw11ship
~ Monclay, 6 p.m: at -~ pffice

.with

\!P.i!iliiil .

'·

.. .

'

. ' UclNE.; ~ ViiJase Cowlcilt 7, ~nl~~cinc,ijy It Stir Mill Parle.
· i -~ .f.¢r.s - Letsrt Falls
p.DL 'il~y. dlildienls pro-

' PTO.,,
·~

·~

·~

i!f&gt;/'.'4.

.....; l-1.,
,;;
.~

¥

,·fll·- ~·'.' '.. ~+- ;,
')

·~

COLUMBUS (AP) - Southern
Local Schools in Meigs County will
receive $187,000 in an emergency
· loan approved by the State Controlling Board Monday .
Southern Local, which had earli~r applied for the loan, was one of
seven school districts to get their loan
. applications approved. The largest
amount, $1 million, will go to the
Madison Local Schools. ·
· Meanwhile, construction defects
continue to plague the state's computer center.

•••
'

.

•

~

SCOTT INSURANCE

Community calendar
'

State controllers approve ...---~"'ontest
:loan for Southern Local

Guaran~ Safeey

The dinner will be served at6:30
p.m. Tickets are $7 a person and
reservations are to be made with
Harold Rice, education officer of the
12th Capitular District of Royal Arch
Masons, 742-2922. All area Masons
and their wives are invited to auend.

STOCK PICKING WINNERS - Mre. Sarbare
Logan'a Second Grede clan at Middleport Ele'
gram, and presentation by Southern mentary waa honored with tha preaantatlon of
a $400 check Thuradly by Peopln Bank offl·
building committee.
clall for winning tha 111111&amp;111 Stock Plcklng Con·
RACINE -- Racine Chapter 134 teat. aponaored by the bank at their • Partner•·
OES, regular meeting. Mock initia- In-Education • achoola In Mel a, Athena, and
liOII, refreshments.
.
REEDSVILLE-- Olive Township
trustees, Monday, 6:30 at the township hall.
.
. SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
7:30p.m. Monday, Syracuse munic. ipal l!uilding.
POMEROY-- Meigs County Gar·
den Oub Association, 7 p.m. Monday
The week of March 4-11 will be
tit the Meigs Ubrary. Pbin~ fothost· observed as "Save Yo.ur Vision
int .regional meeti!'lg ·and for 'Meigs Week" at the Senior Otizens Center.
Cotlnty Fai~ flower ~how.
·Tuesday the Retired Senior Vol·
qiE;S:rBR-- Cheater ElelllC!llar)l unteer Program will sponsor a speakP'ID m~lina MOiiday, 7 p.m. at the er and free vision screenings at the
sehool. All weli:ome.
Center.
. PO~OY- Meip Band Boost- '
Dr. Je~l'fY McAdoo of Eye
m; Monday, 7p.m, in the band room. Physicians. l)td Surgeons of Athens
TUESDAY -'
·
will talk on catancts at 10:30 a.m.
· MIDDLE;PqRT -- Middleport · ImmediaieJy followin8, he will cooMasonic Lodge, .Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. duct free vision screenings to conat the telll(ill!.
linue until 11:45 a.m. ~o appointment
is necessary'
,.

a

Vision week to be
observed March 4-11

Washington Countlea. Stuclente choae atoclca ·
from a llat of 99 poulble Hlectlona, 'nd the
atoclca wars meeaured over a three morrth pert.
od. Pictured with the claaa are, back (L to R):
Middleport principal Don Heming, Mre. Logan,
Cathy Unacott and Carla King ol Peoplea Bank.

PRIDE

614698 4011 (CGI!eet)

3122 Swert Rd.

_______

.••.

Albuy, Olllo 4$710
• AMuities are i~ued by Insurance
Companies and · have substantial "
penalties for early withdrawBis.
.....,.~

•

State Architect Randy Fisher told
the Controlling Board that inspections have turned up problems with
the fireproofing system at the $62
million building.
It was just the latest in a string of
headaches for state officials who
thought they had a top-of-the~ne
building when they started moving in
in 1991.
. : Then the roof started leaking and
tnoisture trapped by' raulty vapor
seals started collecting on the walls,
leading some workers to claim that it
iomelimes appeared as if it was
raining indoors.
·
"In all my time. I've never seen a
j,roject quite so convoluted," said
Stn. Alan Zaleski, D-Vermilion.
• Zaleski objected to a Department
of Administrative Services request
for more than $81 S,OOO. The money
will pay to hire consuliants to !Jeter-

* GROWTH* PROGRESS
'

VOTE
.Patty Goe,glein Pick,ns.
For County Commissioner
''I BeHeve In ~~i~ ~o~ty~.~·
Election Day March l9 · ·
Paid fDr by IIIIi POP,,tw.m

38215 T - ·l'd1 ~'181W· p!l~88

•,

·,·

..'

..
~

Pomeroy Council
considers par~ing :
•
1ssues once more

B~TOMRAUM

N E I~\' ( ) l1 S

..
.,..

•

•

support

care needs of Meigs County residents are taken care of."
stance in support of the hospital.
"We feel the construction and operation of this facility will not only proHoeflich said people in the county were beginning to get the impression
tect the jobs already there but will result in many new jobs being created and that commissioners did not support the hospit~l.
·
will provide great economic benefits to the citizens of Meigs County through
"No one would want to come into a county without a hospital," she said.
the existing and new payroll which will result from this new .facility," the '"''m surprised the chamber (of commerce) hasn't taken a position on this."
commissioners' response added .
Commission ~resident Fred Hoffman - no relation to George Hoffman
"Our support will always be with the hospital," said Howard, who added - said all three commissioners have supported the hospital and commentthat the hospital is vitally important to eco nomic development i• the coun- · ed that George Hoffman and Hoeflich were the first people to address the
ty.
commission on the subject.
'
VMH financial officer George Hoffman said VMH and Holzer Medical
Howard, Commissioner Robert Hartenbach and Hoeflich cited personal
Center directors have been planning the construction of a medical building examples of people whose lives were saved by having ready access to the
since soon after the two facilities merged last spring.
hospttal.
"Everyone is very committed to seeing this building built," he said. "We
Hoffman said the VMH board has the infonnation on the proposed sites
can't make progress without the building starting up."
and added that 25 to 30 jobs may be created through construction of the new
Charlene Hoeflich, general manager of The Daily Sentinel, who attend- building.
ed the meeting as a private citizen, advised commissioners she considers their
The letter from the hospital employees notes that the proposed medicaf
commitment to be "a real pledge" and added it was "high time" they took a
(Continued on Page 3)

· Asaoclated Preaa Wrher
Republicans were awarding the
_biggest prize so far of the primary
season, 259 delegates in I0 contests
today. A rebounding Sen. Bob Dole,
told by supporters his nomination
was looking more and more
inevitable, said a sweep this l!(eek
"could do it" and clinch the nomination.
~is rivals· baitled on, ·bu~ conced­
ed the Senate majority leader was ..
once again in the driver's seat after a
crucial victory in South Carolina over :
the weekend.
Former Tennessee Gov. Lamar
Ale~ander, after a series of disappointing fourth-place finishes, said he
GREETING SUI;IPORTERS - Republican
ly at a Franklin Square, N.Y., restaurant Monwould press on through todafs conpresidential candlslate Bob Dole shook hands da!f, the clay before the latest round of pritests but would quit the race if he
with supporters during a Dole for Prealdent ralmaries. New York's primary Is Thursday. (AP)
can't beat Dole in next week's Florida primary.
And commentator Pat Buchanan who continues to say he'll fight on to Dole. Buchanan and Alexander all
Dole, meanwhile, had moved on
conceded while campaigning in the GOP's August convention in San campaigned there Monday, Dole win- to New York, which holds its primaGeorgia on Monday that, if Dole Diego, soughtlas·t-minute support in ning a vote - if not a formal ry on Thursday.
·
keeps on winning, _ a "sense of New England on Monday, but gen- endorsement - from House SpeakAlthough Dole started out in
inevitability will develop."
erally drew unenthusilllitic crowds.
er Newt Gingrich.
Georgia saying the race was "far
Eight states were holding priThe newly rejuvenated Dole leads
Gingrich voted by absentee ballot ·from over, " he became far more
maries today, most of them in the in polls in all eight states holding pri- and said that, although he had sought . buoyant in rallies in Albany and on
Northeast: MassachuseiiS, Connecti- maries.today.
to maintain neutrality since he'll Long Island - among his bestcut, Maine, Rhode Island, Vermont,
And forecasts of snq.)V and messy chair the GOP convention, he had auended and most boisterous gatherMaryland. Georgia and Colorado. rain across much of New England cast that vote. for Dole.
ings to date.
And two sta~,es were holding caucus- today were seen by GOP leaders as a
He called Dole "the next p;esies, Washington and Minnesota.
potential boost to Dole, who has deni."
At an airport hanger rally in
Delegates to be chosen today rep- establishment support. in all five
Forbes protested that it was not up Albany, Dole said that wins today folresent rQughly one quarter of those states in the region with primaries.
to Gingrich to decide who stays in the lowed by a victory in New York on
needed to win the GOP nomination .
Georgia was the biggest single race. "The voters make that decision, Thursday could nail down the nomi Wealthy publisher Steve Forbes. delegate prize of the day, with 42, and . not politiGalleaders," he said.
nation for him. ·

Ann
LAnders

Masonic
Lodge event Saturday
' .

~ommission's

Dole pins
·his hopes
on 'junior
.Tuesday'

Abusive husband should never have a second chance ,

35 cenla
A Gannett Co. NeweP"per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 5,.1996
•

VMH addition gets

'Wheel-of-Fortune' official game show of Summer Olympics

8, and Cayla 6, both students at Middl~port Elementary School, reside in
Mtddlepon.

Rain tonight, Iowa In the
SO.. Wedneeday, rain,
mild, hlgha In 60a.

ber again for a free pamphlet from,
SociatSccurity on d~illty.ii 1-800- •
772-1213.
•
•

coordinator, Casa Nueva Restaurant;
Stacy Hall, dairy, meat and veggie
farmer and co-owner of Dix-Hall
Farm; Ed Perkins; newspaper columnist for The Athens Messenger; Rulli
Morris, owner/producer of herbal
vinegars with Southemwood Trace
Co.; and Keith Wiens, VISTA worker with the Sustainable Agriculture
Committee of Rural Action, a farmer
So how did he like the music?
book some Olympic athletes as conShe W!IS auto~hinl ller 'bestNEW YORK (AP)- Hey dad and activist.
"Now I know all about who Seal testants.
'
seller,
"It Takes a Village/ ' ·He was
get
with
it!
Reservations are required and the
is
is
.that
his
name?
And
I
thought
The
deal
marks
the
first
time
signing
his 'I Holding Court·&gt;·ReflecThat
was
the
gist
of
first
daughter
enrollment is limited. To enroll resihe was quite good."
Olympic
organizers
have
sold
spon~
lions
on
the Game I Love." :
Chelsea
Clinton's
nudging
to
get
the
dents should contact ACEnet at 592sorship
righ~
to
TV
game
shows.
·
The
authors n\'et brieflY. and
president
to
tune
in
to
a
little
of
the
3854.
AlLANTA
(AP)
If
letter-turn"Jeopardy!"
is
the
other
TV
game
exchanged
inscribecl.copi¢s,
Grarnmy Awards show.
'
ing
were
a
sport,
Vanna
White
would
show sponsor.
"Best Wishes, Dick. Forever a
"Chelsea joked I've missed 20
fan," the first lady wrote.
years ·of music and I need to get my be a shoo-in for a gold medaL
It isn't, but she and Pat Sajak plan
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - U
The sportscaster's inscription washead right," Clinton told Newsweek
to
tape
"Wheel of Fortune" in Atlanta you're keeping score, it's Hillary n't too different f(om -his play-byin the March II issue. "I was trying
to become somewhat less irrelevant to this month - as the official game Rodham Clinton 2,000, Dick Vitale play: "I really respect any individual
600.
who faces the pressure that you fac~~
my own daughter and the other teen- show of the Summer Olympics .
For
three
days,
beginning
March
That's
how
many
fans
lined
up
last
on a daily basis. I truly have great:.
has shown it to be one ofthe few cur- agers of the world."
29, cast and crew will tape 14 shows month when the literary duo showed respect for you. You' re awesome,
Clinton
conceded
that
he
doesn't
ricula nationwide that significantly
get to watch much television, and his from the city 's famed !'ox Theater, up at the same store at the same time baby."
postpones sexual intercourse.
•
from a set decked out with Olympic for book signings, Sports Illustrated
Planned Parenthood "Of Southeast taste runs toward "specific movies or .
'
images.
Producers
are
even
hoping
to
reports in its March 4 issue.
Ohio provides family planning and sporting events or news."
related preventative health care to
over 5,000 women and men each year
at health sites in Athens, Chillicothe,
Chesapeake, Gallipolis, Jackson,
'
Dear Ann Landers: You recently want letters about how we met ou~
Logan, ,Middleport and McArthur. By ANN LANDERS
.
printed a funny letter about chivalry spouses, here's a good one:
Dear Ann Landers: I am tired of
PPSEO is a private non-profit orgaEarly
in
1941.1traveled
to
a
new
.
-- a woman fainted when a man
nization whose governing board con- reading letters from women who
air
base.
My
friend,
"Rob,"
and
l
· offered her his seat on the subway.
sists ·of community volunteers from complain about being abused. You
When she recovered, she thanked stopped off in Cincinnati . for the ..
the region. Private donations are a have said many ·times, "No one can
·him, and he fainted. You replied, evening and were told the USO was :
significant source of support for the take advantage of you without your
medical anil educational programs permission."
"Thanks for a joke from the '50s. I close to the YMCA where we were.:
offered lly Planned Parenthood.
I don't know anyone pe~sonally
kicked the s!~ts out of my cradle staying. While Rob napped, I wan"
dered over there and lined up dates·
Those introduced in the training who is being abused, bull have seen ter how many times he apologizes when I heard it the first time."
Your response didn't add up for the dance that-eve11ing.
workshop on March 8 may call !alk shows and read artiCles about and professes his love. Please tell
When I told Rob, he said, "I'm '
,Planoed Parenthood at 1-614-593- girlfriends and spouses who have them again, Ann. They need to get the numerically. Meaning no disrespect,
not
interested. You always. get the 3375 to register or for more infor- been beaten up and knocked around message. -- Seen Too Much in Balti- Ann, but you were long out of the
good-looking one." I promised him
for years. Often, the woman says she more
cradle in the '50s.
mation.
·
Dear Baltimore; Thanks for the
Of course, we all know that the he could have first choice this time,,:
can't leave the guy because she
.
. "loves him." They gel married, and opportunity. I hope somebody listens. Ann Landers column was born in and he relented. ·
\fter
the
war,
we
lost
touch, and, :
Wife-beating is probably the most · 19S5. So, Happy 40th Anniversary,
the abuse continues. The woman
'I
didn't
see
Rob
until
1985.
GuesS" ·
thinks if she has children, the abt'ise underreported crime in the country. A Ann. You're doing great.-- Wes Pedwhat?
He
married
the
girl
I
fiKed
him ·· :
will stop. It doesn't. Seven kids lat- great number of .women are scared ersen, director of communications
up with in Cincinnati, and they have:
Laura Lee. a multi-modality Tech- er, she says she can't leave him silent. Many fear reprisals; others are and public relations, Public Affairs been together more than 50 years:'
because
"the
children
need
a
father."
afraid
to
he
alone.
They
figure
an
Council,
Washington,
D.C.
nician at Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Over the years, the woman calls abusive man is better than none.
Dear Wes Pedersen: Thanks for a Not bad, eh? -- Paul in Bloomfield
was recently registered in Obstet,.
the police repeatedly and has the man
I urge these women to get coun- :perceptive catch. Would you believe Hills, Mich.
rics/Gynecology Ultrasound .
Dear
Paul:
Beautiful'
I
hope
they,
In order to apply for testing, Lee arrested. The following day, she seling. They need to understand the 1that gaffe got by me and three edi- named their first son after you. , ·;,
was required to have a specific drops the charges and lets him back importance of self-respect. No ' tors?
Sharp-eyed readers such as you
amount of clinical experience in her in the house. Three days later, he woman who allows a man to knock
' Lande..._
Send qu~tlons to Ann
beats
her
up
again.
·
keep
me on my toes, and I appreciher
around
can
have
a
decent
opinion
field. She took the test in October,
ICI'CIItors Syndleate, 5777 W. Cen-':'
A woman should never give a man of herself. Once women get this mes- ate it.
and recently received notification
a second chance to abuse her, no mat- sage, they can move forward.
Dear Ann Landers: If you still 'tury Dive\,, Suite 700, Los An&amp;eiCS: ~:
she had passed the test.
Calif. 90045
&lt;
Lee received her associate's
degree of applied science from
Columbia State Community College
in Tennessee and hllli been a member
of the "Family of Professionals"

sin~:~- her two children, Cassie

562
Pick 4:
9731
Buckeye 5:
2-5-20-27-28

Spc&gt;rW, Page 4

Lee receives registration
.

Plck3:

baseball
results

:Planned
Parenthood
.
:workshop slated Friday
.

Ohio Lottery

Exh lbltlon

. P.10,
Monday, March 4, 1991":

Social Security secure well into next centu~

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Michael
Hollinpwonb, the former Angela
Ponollue of Harrisonville, Lake Dallas, Texas, announce the Jan. 26 birth
son, Branden Michael.
:, 'J1ie infant weighed eight pounds,

A seminar on finding local mar.kets for food products will be held
Thursday, March 7, at the Commu·nity Kitchen, 98 North Columbus
Road, Athens.
.• The emphasis will be on various
~ng strategies that some farm. m and food producers are using to
market their products locally and .the
expectations of wholesale buyers
and will also explore ideas and
Opportunities for marketing food
lJroducts within the community.
: PreS.,nters at the seminar will be
~ike McKniff, food and operations

.

•'

Birth of son
announced
:- Maternal grandparents are Ruth
~ue of Proctorville and Stephen
Donohue of Harrisonville. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. David
ijollingsworth of Mount Vernon,
1\'xas. Great-grandparents are Mr.
an4 Mrs. Jettie Arix of Proctorville.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Donohue of
Harrisonville, and Mrs. Juanita Sowell
and Mr. and Mrs. Ray
~ollingsworth of Texas.

The Daily Senti.D.el

mine what caused the building
defects - and help recover the cost
of fixing them from the contractors
responsible.
The controlling board voted 4-2 to
approve the request fi&gt;r consulting
fees. Voting no )"ere Zaleski and Rep.
Ross Boggs. D-Andover.
··
But Rep. Tom Johnson, R-Ncw
Concord, suggested that the department wrap the situation up quickly.
"I need to feel more comfortable
that the end is in sight and that it can
be fixed before you come back here
asking for more money," Johnson
said.
Coopers &amp; Lybrand of McLCJin,
Va .• and Raths, Raths &amp; Johnson Inc .
of Willowbrook, lll., will help determine what caused the problems, figure out ways to fix them and to force
the contractors- either thrOugh the
courts or a settlement - to pick up
the tab.
t
The cost of repairing the exterior
walls alone is upected to reaoh $2
million, William Becker, assistant
attorney general, told the board. A
complete cost estimate was not available.
·
In October, the department filed a
lawsuit in Franklin County Common
, Pleas Court against architect Robeit
P. Madison International Inc. of
Cleveland and contractors MilesMcClellan Construction · Co. of
Columbus and Forest Ciry Erectors or
TWinsburg.
·

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Parking problems, both in front of
Pomeroy Elementary School and in
the downtown business district. once
again dominated discussion at Monday night's meeting of Pomeroy Village CounciL
Melinda Strong, mother of two
Pomeroy Elementary pupils, met
with council to update members on
her efforts to solve a parking dilem.
ma at the school.
She is concerned about the safety
of students walking to school, as well
as those dropped off at the school by
their parents.
Mayor Frank Vaughan said he is
in the process of contacting owners
of property across from the school to
see if it can be used for additional
parking. Some people already use the
space for parking, although recent
floods have left large ruts there.
Later, Meigs Local Board of Education mcmher Randy Humphreys
told counci I that he supports Mrs.
Strong in her efforts. She has met
several times with council as well as
the school board.
"I've got to give her credit ... she's
trying to do o~&lt;o mething ," he commented . This is something the town
and school can work out. he added.
Council members said they would ·
investigate the installation of another traffic signal east of the school,
while Vaughan said he would direct
the street department to repaint cross. walks .near the sc hool.
Vaughan and council members

1asked if teachers could park across
:the street from the school once the
parking areas are upgraded so sm~ll
children would not have to walk
across the street.
Meanwhile, Vaughan said he .is
directing village officers to sl~rt
heavily enforcing village parking
ordinances, particularly those referring to people parking illegally in 'no
;parking' zones, handicapped parking
·zones and sidewalks .
Too many people have been parking in these places, he said. A longtime e.ception for law enforcement
officers parking cruisers in front of
· the jail will still he observed, he
add~d.

In addition, merchants will hold a
meeting March 14 at 7 p.m . in council chambers to discuss the future of
. parking meters in the village. Everyone with suggestions arc invited to
attend the meeting.
During open discussion, council
members discussed problems with
potholes, water leaks and junked cars
and butldings.
In other business, council:
• Approved an emergency resolution authorizing $1 0,320 for construction of a block building for a
water storage by Jeffers' Construction
of Pomeroy;
• Approved use of the lower end
of the parking lot and the Riverfront
Amphitheater for the. 1996 United
Fund Big Bend Wallcyc/Sauger Fishing Tournament on Oct. 26;
• Discussed dirty streets and slde(Continued on Page 3)

winners hailed-.. . . . Arson blamed

in hotel blaze ·.

IRONlDN (AP) -A tire at a residential hotel that injured eight people was caused by arson, police said
today.
Daryl Brown, 42, a resident of the
Marting Hotel , was arrested Monday
night and charged with aggravated
arson, vandali&gt;m and inducing panic. Ironton Police Sgt. James Carey
said.
Brown was being held at the
Lawrence County Jail, Carey said.
Arraignment was · scheduled for
today.
Eight people were treated for,
smoke inhalation. but none required
hospitalization.
·
Seven people were treated at
Lawrence County General Hospital
in Ironton, nursing supervisor Wendy
Grimm said. A firefighter was treat•
ed at Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital in Russell, Ky., nursing supervisor Eleanor Broaddus said.

. "Why my family 11 Important to me • was the theme of the naay contest for Melga County
fifth gredel'l sponaored by the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite Masons of the Valley of Columbua In obaervance of Family Ufe Week. Winner was Megan Combs, abaent when the picture
wa1 taken. Pictt.lred here receiving a plaque from David Fox Is Tommy Thelaa, honorable men·
tlon, with hie father, Tom Thel11, atandlng behind, and teacher Linda Fisher accepting a check
for $100 to be used for claasroom. suppllae from Larry Lavender. Fox and Lavender are on
the Melga County fraternal relation• r;ommlttae. (5entlnel photo)

Neither the hosp1tals nor authorities had identities of the injured.
The fire was reported about I0:15
p.m. Monday, acting chief Capt. Jim
Reidel said. He said Brown's apart'
ment was gulled and all six floors of
the hotel suffered smoke damage. · ·
All the residents we~evacuated
~though .th~ exact nu~ber of ~op~ .
10 the buddmg at the lime could riot
be determined, Reidel ~- Some res..
· idents may be allowed to

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�.:COmmentary

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Clfl_51-• L

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The Daily Sentinel . ~~~is su~~~~~!~~Y.~~~!~.~y ~"~!~~!,.
'EstaDfislid in 1!148

·

111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 1192-2157

A Gannett Co•.Newspaper
"ROBERT t..WINGETT,
Publlaher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Ganeral Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller.

Letters to the editor
•

.A Democratic point qf view
. . In response to Gay Johnson's public forum on 2121 in The Daily Sentinel,
•I would like to respond from a Democratic point of view.
Gay Johnson is a mad Republican, I've been l!&gt;Id, and in my opinion is in
no position t~ criticize others of political status.
•
, He lost the appointment of county commissioner to'Mr. Hoffman, ·he lost
. being elected to Columbia Township Central Committee, then he also lost
..being elected for Columbia's Township trustee.
.. · aut I do agree with one statement in the article ·· concerning Mr. Jones.
'-.. . But hang in there Mr. Johnson&gt;, things may get better.
Dorsey Jordan
Pomeroy

.Employee concerned
:about future of hospit{JI

.

.. As an employee, I am writing regarding the status of. our local hospital,
··veterans Memorial.
.. · In the years that I have worked here, I have seen ·it slowly, but progres_sively, decline.
·
.. In years past, I remember when all the rooms were filled, as well as
:patients lined up and down the corridors. Those days seem to be gone forever.
.. .. At the present time, our physicians have decreased, but we are recruiting
-~very day and, if we can build the proposed medical. building on campus, I
:f~l this would get the hospital going again and save it for the community.
.. Soine people do not.use this facility as they prefer to go elsewhere, but as
Bob Hoeflich stated, it may be an emergency situation for you or your family in the future, as it was for my sister recently when she had to be brought
.!Jere for stabilization before being transferred.
::. I am writing with concern for this hospital, not only as my livelihood, but
::-as care for the young, the elderly, or whomever may be brought to its door:
:!!:feel the community needs medical care within reach and hope that they will
•:.t behind this situation and really push it forward out of the depression that
;,_is in.
·• •
A concerned employH
:::
· JOYCII Manuel

A Washington state money man·
ager that used to only manage
money for the very wealthy has
some new funds that are attraCting
the average investor.
The Rainier Funds, managed by
Rainier Investment Management in
Seanle, used to ll:nd only to those
with hundreds of thousands of dolIars to invest. The minimum invest·
ment into any of their four portfolios
was $250,000. Now RIM has low· .
ered the minimum for in1stors who
shop at the mutual fund superstores
like Schwab's OneSource, Jack
White and Fidelity. Depending upon
the brokerage firm, RIM has made
· its mutual funds available to those
with $1,000 to $2,500 to invest. And, because of their fund 's past
performance· recor~. the money is
rolling in. .
Last year, all three of Rainier's
equity funds outperformed the aver·
ages of their peers and the market:
At year-end 1995, the Rainier
Small/Mid Cap Equity Portfolio had
a total return of 47.48 percent, rank·
ing it No.4 out of 106 mid-cap funds
in the Lipper mid-cap universe. The
Core Equity Portfolio liad a total
return of 47.16 percent, ranking it
No. I 0 out of 569 growth funds; and
the Balanced Portfolio was up 33.16
percent, ranking it No. 4 out of the
225 balanced · funds that Lipper
tracks.
This year, the funds are still far·
ing well. The Core Equity fund's
total return was up over 5 percent as
of Feb. 8, the Small/Mid Cap fund
up 4.66 percent; and the Balanced
fund ahead about 3.5 percent.
· Even tile Interlnediate Fixed.
Income Portfolio, the family 's only
fixed incoqie fund, which previously
has had average performimce when
compared to other like funds, is up;
it's ranked No. 49 out of 157 invest·
!!lent-grade intermediate bond {unds

One reason for the sound performance of ~ier's equity _funds
could be because the funds mvest
their asSets in sector weightings sim·
ilar to those the index furid follows.
And as we know, the inde~es are
hard to beat. Last year, fewer th4n 20
pen:ent of diversified equity funds
beat the performance of the S&amp;P
SOO.
" We' ve been sector neutral,"
says Jim Margard, ·one . portfolio
manager of the funds , "alld stay rea·
sonably close to the sector weightings of the S&amp;P SOO for the Core
Portfolio. In the case of the
Small/Mid Cap fund, it's the Russell
mid-cap index."
•·
Although management doesn 't
follow an index's sector weightings

..
.

·'

I remember overhearing argu·
ments about what it was Billie Jo
threw off the Tallahatchie Bridge. I
remember breathless media discus·
sions of who Carly Simon was trashing when she sang her smash hit,
"You're So Vain." Some said War·
ren Beatty; some said Mick Jagger
(eveI) though he sang backup on the
song).
.
Then there was the Paul-Is-Dead
flap. What do you hear when you
play "Revolution Number 9" backwards? Does John really say, "I
buried Paul" at the end of "Straw·
berry Fields Forever?" Does the
album cover of "~bbey Road" show
a funeral procession?
'. Alanis Morissette's smash hit,
"Yo1,1 Oughtit Know," is the latest in
the I series of musical mysteries.
"You Oughta Know" is the firstperson narrative of a woman raging ·
agairast a lover who dropped her like
·a bad habit. Women, by and large,
love this song. Men, by and large,
seem terrified by it.
·

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oday i_
n istory .
,

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YOU~~d~~reJ!"~t~":~S:hdi~:

. ';
singer in her teens; to some criticS,
yte Alloc;lated Prall
-·
. tllis background disqualifies her
, Today is Thesday, March 5, the 65th day of 1996. There are 301' days left. . from ra;e. Some also sneer that this
intthe year.
'-,
l
•
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•
. sons •WII$ CO•wrilteil with Glen Bal:
"'TOO.y'sHighlight)n H~oty:, .-. .
-, ', ~.
. . ' . ·. •
· larif(a IJ18ll!l: . composer for slick
. t Fjf\y ~- 180: 911 M~ S, l9~: fQ111161' B~~h -Prime Minuter._Win· supersws like Mpdonna an~ Wilson
~ Clllp'c;hill del1v~ ~ f1m~s }~? Curwn ~~hat ~~n~ \: Philli~. '111is. makes Mons~ne I!;
"JiiiR fult'I" .. Miss. ~ ~h~ll, FI'QIII· ~tetlin m Batuc, ~'In· phony, St)me &amp;ay, only pretending .to
•
In W Al!rilllc, ~ 11'011 CUfWII has de~ ICiliU t~ continent, hate •her lover to 'sell records to lbswili8 poJice pvemmems to rule Blstem Eurot!e·"
/ · . : ' ' ·. ;' .&amp;Junlled feminists. .
'~:.,}766. ~ish off'JCial ~ Aaton!«' de qlloa .-ived in New Orleans
"Timei "have changed. •Nobody
of tho
1Crritory fl'oa,l the ~Iteyer called CJat:ly Simon a phony
tln 1 lbeBOIIOII.~tookplaceu.Bndlbeoldierswhohldbeen when she: disrespected her anony~ by ~-CroW of t:Oloniets ~ lilw, JdUiRa fiw p,ople. (Two Britjsh ~ :v~n. lo,verboy. feople didn't .
ddlln -1111r COIIVicted of may(••ahter.)
•
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. . call DOn Mcl.eln ~ when they

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*'91i!IN·"'
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:spring again teases area
!with mild but brief weather
I, ByWarmer
The Allocllted Prell
conditions moved into

Tonight. .. Rain. statewide with a
chance of thunderstorms south. Lows
!Ohio today - but they won't last rrom the mid 30s north to near
'long.
·
south.
•1 The rain•· that cove~ the state
Wednesday...Periods of rain and
:today could turn to snow by Wednes- continued mild. A cliance of thun·
:day night or Thursday, forecasters derstorms south. Highs from near 40
•said.
north to the lower 60s south.
- ~ But the mercury on Wednesday
Wednesday night...Rain changing·
'could cliinb inio the 60s in southern to snow northwest. Rain likely elseOhio, Highs in the north will be · where. Lows 25 to 30 northwest to
'around 40.
the lower 40s southeast.
Lows tonight will range from the
. Extended forecast:
Thursday.. .Turning' ·
colder
· mid-30s in the north to near 50 in the
south, the National Weather Service statewide with a chance .of snow
$aid.
northwest and rain showers changing
: The record-high temperature for to snow showers." Highs 30 north "to
this date at the Columbus weather 40 southeast.
station was 78 degrees in 1983 while
Friday... A chance of snow. Cold
the record low was I in 1978. Sunset with lows in the teens. Highs in the
tonight will be at 6:28 p.m. and sun· 20s.
rise Wednesday at 6:57 a.m.
Saturday...Fair skies but continued
Weather forecast:
cold. Lows 10 to IS . Highs 25 to 30.

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repeated req"uests for
ties have adopted anti-harassment codes that ban
dates to OU!·and-out
all forms of sexual gestures, comments and jokel.
stalking. .
"These types of behavior could be deemed scxuln order to be consid·
ally harassing if they were part of a sufficiently
e~ sexual . harassment,
severe or pervasive pattern of conduct, but isolat~
the EEOC guidelines say
ed incidents of such behavior should not be con~
thai offensive behavior
· sider;d se~ual harassment," says Strossen.
at the workl!lace must be
· Understanding what is NOT.sexual harassment .
severe, repeated, itnwclis as important as understanding whaCis - from
come and it must
both a free-speech and a feminist standpoint. ·
'-' unreas&lt;il)a~IJI intert:ere
BY,~ ·I;ckal . '··. For one thing, overbroad sexuat harassment
·with an ' mdi'iidual's
·lc
codes trivializc the ~nstances when ·one :employ.
work performance or must create a liostih! work ee's bad behavior truly creates an undue burdeii
environment."
. -~.
· ;.for aflOther. •
'
And •overzealous enforcement of a sexual
Asking someone for a date or com!llenting on
a flaHering haircut is unlikely to land you in coun. harassment code could .lead to the very thing it
However, employers have a vested. interest in aims to prevent: gender discrimination. In a comdiscouraging even the most benign e~~hangcs of pany where sensitive material is handled, a male!
a sexual nature, regardless of whether they are executive may decjde it would be safer not to hire
illegal or not. With millions of dollars being women, or 10 exclude them from certain meet;
awarded to sexual harassment plaintiffs, it's ings. The boss who travels a lot may •• con•
understandable that ~ompany heads don't want to sciously or unconsciously -- choose the associate
take chances.
·
of his own gender to take along on visits to those
To that end, American Civil Liberties Union important clients.
President Nadine Strossen believes it's important
To this end, Strossen suggests companies
for employees to understand their bosses' motiva· adopt strong penalties not only against sexua•
tions. "Private employers do not have a responsi· harassers, but also against those •who make fals6
bility 19 protect the free-speech rights of tHeir accusations.
employees. They are, however, legally bound to
As she says, "You want to walk line that is•
protect employees from sexual harassment. So the as respectful of both of these rights as possible."
incentiv~ is to overdefine sexual harassment."
• Sara Eckel Ia a ayndlcatad writer for rtewaAs she points out in her book, "Defending papal' Enterprln Alloclatlon. Sitnd c011'm_anl!
Pornography: Free Speech, Sex ~nd t~ Fight for to .the autt~or In care of lhla ~Wipaper or
·Women's Rights," some companies and universi- haf e-niell.at lll'lellllllol.cclm. •
.,
·

a

nn1f

Win a dream date with·Alanis Morissette! .,

..

t

r~ ~

Drawin·g the line on se)( al harassment

school a good investment

•

&gt;

varying roulh!y S pen:ent from the these portfoli~s in_clu~ Olst_en
~eightings in either dim:tion-. ~- Cprp., the Ieadma provtder of tn·
mg 199S, the Core and Smal!IM1d home nurses; NoveJlus Sysll:ms, a
Cap funds kept around a IS ~n:ent semiconductor company; and Genweighting in technology issues, eral Electric.
roughly the' same weighting as the · 'The Rainier f\lnds have only been
S&amp;P SOil.
around. since May 1994. RIM, howOnce the_sectOrs are identified, ever, has been managing money for
managers invest their assets into years. So even though the .fu~s
companies that not only have good don't have a Jon_g track record, tf
earnings growth potential; but are they continue t9 .use the ind~~es as a
reasonably priced as
guide llld ~•* h t18dt-1iltk•·
"We don'tlook so milch at how ing talents, this fund ·family is worth
the stocks are performing. as we do keeping an ey.e on.
.
how the underlying earnings of the
Dian Vujovlch II~ 'i.Jthor of
companies are performing " says "Stral!ht Talk About . Mutual
Margard. "It's hard to mak~ money Fundi' and "StraiQht Talk ~~
by moving in and out of sectors so it lnveatlng .for .Your Aet!Niilant,
•
' ood both of whleb ara publlahed by
makes ~o~ sense to o~n the g
McGraw Hill. Sand queatlona to
stocks Within the sector.
hlr In cara of thla"heWipa~.

~'-

As someone who finds both discrimination and
censorship intolerable, sexual h!lrassment has
always been a difficult issue for me. ·
-·
I believe very strongly that women and men
have a right to work in environments that are free
from piggish and harassing behavior.
I also believe very strongly in the First Amendment -- and thus the" right of people to express
their piggish thoughts.
In the in_!erest of confronting_ these iss~es, I
recently
attended a corpQrate seminar on sexual
~ .:
Racine
;~
.
.
'
harassment.
..
Nonnally,
the
very
no!ion
of
a
"corporate
scm-·
:t~ew
inar"
tends
to
give
me
!Jives,
and
I
confess
I
.
·: • Our youth.of today are faced with many pressures our generation never expected this one to be an Orwellian nightmare,
:~countered. With the advancement of all areas of communicatipn, Meigs with a Stepford staffer giving employees a list of
forbidden words and generally promoting the idea
·:..:ounty is no long isolated from the world.
:: ~ .After workipg many years in industry, I observed first hand the rapid that any remotely flirtatious speech in the work·
·4anges occurring and the skills needed to compete for jobs in the work place could result in a subpoena.
:)nvironment. There will be few work opportunities available for those·with·
But the wmtshop leader was an honest-togoodness human being, and she was quite candid
:bin computer skills. . .
::: The three R's, reading, writing, and arithmetic are as important as ever about her reason for being there: to prevent
·lmd maybe more emphasis should be applied in these areas. As a former expensive lawsuits. The training session was, for
· t:ierk of the district, I know the administration is handicapped by state man· the most part, a review of the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission guidelines on sexual
j~.all:d programs required to maintain an accredited school system. If we feel
sJrongly that some of these programs are not necessary, we should lobby the harassment and a discussion about how various
State Department of Education for changes.
·
employees feel about the issue.
:: Our existing grade and junior high buildings are old and not equipped to
So what exactly is sexual harassment? Most
c8rry us into the 21st century. We are fortunate to have our existing high people understand that quid pro quo harassment · S!;hool, which can be mode~ized, and enough acreage on si,Jjl for a new K - requests for sexual favors as a condition of
through eighth grade facility.
employment ·- is and should be illegal. Much
:: We should not pass up an opportunity to invest $4.180 million (local murkier is the Supreme Court -defined " hostile
nioney) and receive $3.191 million (state money) in return.
environment" harassment-- which could include,
:• Our children in the Southern Local School District deserves the best we as a component, anything from leering looks to
c~n provide. Will you join me and my family and vote "yes" for the South·
~m Local School District bond levy.·
.:
Paul Beegle
:.
Letart Fall1

•.

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tried to decipher the
lyrics to "American
Pie."
Why isn't anybOdy
interested ,in finding out
who · Mqrissette's ex:
lover is? What if it was
Trent ReznOI\ or some·
body really ·cool? We
don't care. We've lost
our curiosity. No won·
der the music died. .
I recently had OCpl·
sion to sit next to a
Canadian guy on · a
flight.to New Orlean$. ·
We started to chat, and the discus·
sion turned to things Canadian, ~ it
usually does when one chats with .
people from Canada. They feel over- :
shadowed by Americans, you see,
and feel an urge to thrust their nlilio~
into ·,our consciousness whenever
possible. (Expatriate Canadians, by
the way, include Neil Young, Lome
Greene, Lome Michaels •• anybody

called Lome is from
Canada, actually·- · Joni·
Mitchell, · the cast 'of
"Saturday Night Live,"
and the cast of "SCTV."
They are everywhere.
Keep watching the
~Ides!)
·
. i
. Anyway, it seems
that Alanis Morissette is
Canadian as well, and
my flying coinp.anion
had been following her
career with interest. He
told me that the lover
who provided the subject
matter for lier"hit was -- Dave Coulier! Yes, allegedly, the co-host of the
chintzy "Americ.a's Funniest Home
Videos" and' co-star of the bland sit·
com "Full House" wa$ th~man
who'd broken Ms. Moris tte's
heart, unleashed her demons, a set
her down the road to triple platinum
and six OraJI\!IIy nominations,
·
Now, I have nothing against Dave

Couljer. As a matter ·of fact, l
worked with him _some yeats ago on
a children's television show for
Nickelodeon called "Out ·of Con'
trol." He sttuck me as a nice guy
who never lost his tempe'r, even as
he labo~ to be funny under a gru,
eling shooting schedule. He definite·
ly didn't strike me as the Rochester
or Heathcliff type though. He used
to do impressions .of Rocky,. Bull' I
winkle. and. -Donald -Duck- between.
takes! That's,not hqw Antony wooed1
Cleopatra.
.·
Imagine discovering that "You're'
So Vain" was really about Job.n Ril-!
ter, that Bil)ie Jo was just throwing a
!J!lbble off the bridge, or, that Paul
~ merely been asleej). Suppose l
tllat when Don McLean drove his l
&lt;:;hevy to the levee, it was actually :
soppmg wet, and the good ola boys
~ found there were drinkirig S'n~ 1
~le -- well, you can see I'm nO\ tall, l
mg this rumor very well at all.
0~ the other hand! I don't know ~
anything about Alan1s Morissette's I
emotional needs. Maybe a m111 who 1
does impressions of cartoon charac- •
teis. filled a void in her ·~yche. 11;
.could be that Dave Coulier, when !
~·s not.malling fwmy mouth noises, ,.
is ~ ~rOoding B)'!Oilic figure of grea(
Ill! I mal f"!'Btlnetts'!' . •• ~ Qanie!
Day·LewJS of schlll)kmcasters.
:I don't know the trilth. NobodY,
does. But · I do know that Dave !'
Coulier is Cl!lldJur, Think ahout it.
lan · Shoal~ I• a a.JndiOIIe.d: :
for ...(!o
" . race1ve
. . . . ~writer
AIM cllllon.
a oompu.:. I
men
lin StlOalil
In DUCK
Duck'a lrwth, fOI iroad
tk ..da Clly, CA 11111111.)
· ·• •

.Commissioners back ·VMH

call~

":"JJIw':;.
sc.:

Clinton waalS $8 billion added
back to the social J)I'OUaiJIJ, 111d has
proposed p~~ying for it with savings
from other areas that Republicans
have rejected. But Panetta signaled
that the White House would be willing settle for less than that, saying it
would work with congressional com·
mittees on the final product.
Earlier, Livingston, R·I.a., said $8
'billion extra is too much because
"It's just Inflated spending."
On a campaign trip Monday in
Michigan, Clinton urged lawmakers
to pass "the right kind" of balanced
budget before the election. "Just
because there is· an election in
November doesn't mean we s!lould
have a work stoppage in March," he
said.
Republicans were blamed heavily
by the public "for the fli'St two partial
shutdowns, during which hundreds of
thousands of federal workers were
idled for a total of 27 days. Since the
second shutdown ended in January;
GOP leader's have vowed to avoid
another one .
Eight of the 13 annual spending
bills for 1996 have already become
law. But the remaining five covet the
Health and Human Services Department, the Environmental Protection
Agency and many other agencies that
are at the heart of the social services
the government provides.
'The legislation would also include
about $1.7 billion extra the administration has requested for U.S. operatiQns in Bosnia and relief for the
recent Northwest floods and to transfer fighter planes to Jordan.

Two Ashland locals vote
today on contract offer
ASHLAND, Ky. (AP) - Two
striking union locals were voting
today on the lall:st contract proposal
from Ashland Inc., wheo: a walkout
began Feb. 17 at the Catlettsburg
refinery.
"We'll be casting ballots all day,"
said Richard Sang, secretary-treasurer of Local 3-SOS of the Oil Chemical and Atomic Workers Union.
He said his local's polls would be
open until 6 p.m. EST, but that balloting would end at Local 3-214 by
5p.m.
Sang $aid the dispute, involving
about 1,000 workers, revolves.around
the assignment of duties. "They
came up with another proposal but
did very little adjusting from their
previous offer," he said.
Stan Lampe, spokesman for Ashland, said the company was offering
a• three-year ·wage package but
declined to give specifics. Ashland
has been insisting that workers at the
Callensburg refinery be allowed to do
. jobs outside their specific classifica-

tions.
Since the strike, Ashland has been
operating the refinecy by using
employees.from other Ashland Petroleum operations,
Spokesmen for both locals said
earlier they would let the membership
decide on the propcisal reached after
three days of bargaining last week .
"We're pre§enting the facts and
they're going to make the call," said
Charles Leonberg, president of Local
3-505.
Jack Gillenwater, spokesman for
Local3-214, $aid the newest propos·
al includes safety language that was
not in the company's original offer.
Gillenwater said he was not sure
what would happen if one local
approves the contract and the other
votes it down. Leonberg said he
thinks the strike would continue.
Local 3:505 works in wha\ is
known as the No. 2 refinery, which
comprises the northern end of the
refinery complex.

omCERS SWORN IN- Secretary of State Bob Taft, center, :
admlnlatered the oeth of office to two reappointed memberl or:
the Mllgl County Board of Election• et 1 _ , , ceremony.ln ChHI-•
lcothe. Henry Hunter, !aft, of .Pomeroy, and Bernard Gilkey, rlghl,: ·
of Mlddleporl, were awom lo four-year terms by Taft, band upon:
racommandatlon1 from the Mllga County Republican and Demo-•
cretlc Pll'ly executive commlttHa.
:
•

GM workers at two
Ohio plant$ walk out

DAYTON (AP) - About 3,000 under the union's'natiQnal agreement,
workers at two General Motors Corp. 'which expires in September. The con·
brake plants went on strike today tract allows the union to terminate the
after failing to resolve a contract dis- contract and strike under certain cir·
pute with the automaker by a union cumstances.
The plants make brake pads,
deadline,
Members of United Auto Workers boosters, master cylinders, calipers
Local696 walked off the job shortly and other parts for anti-lock and conafll:r 10 a.m. The union had said it ventional brake systems. The brakes
would strike if talks did not resolve ' are used in the assembly of a variety
differences with the company by of GM and other vehicles.
then.
·
. Striking workers walked off the
At issue is outsourcing- the pro- job and headed immediately to pickduction of parts by outside_plants or et lines outside the plant gates.
"Nobody .wants to go but it's t~c
companies- that could result in lost
jobs at the plants. Union leaders have necessary thing to do if we want to
said OM has issued outsourcing keep these jobs," said worker SteYe
Jackson, 47, of Dayton.
·
notices that co11ld affect 125 jobs.
Steve Mowry, 45, of Wilmington.
Worker health and safety also are
'
issues. The union has said it is not sat- agreed.
"We
do
what
we
got
to
do,"
he
isfied with the company's efforts to ·
detennine how workers are injured in said. ''We 're talking about jobs.
good-paying jobs. Hopefully we can
jobs with repetitive motion.
Local 696 President Joe Hasen- keep them alive for our kids, who i re
'
jager said both sides negotiated going to need jobs later on ."
Workers at the two plants went on
through the night but there was little
progress. He said it could be a long strike two years ago , idling five GM
assembly plants in Michigan, Indiana
strike.
1
"'They just want to continue to and Wisconsin before lhe three-day
was settled.
take jobs away from this plant, away work
from this community," he said of
OM . "We're doing what we have to
do today." ·
Another bargaining session is
scheduled for Wednesday.
Alan Dawes, vice president and
general manager of OM 's Delphi
Chassis Division, said the company
would continue to bargain.
"For the sake of our employees,
customers and community, it is critical that we resolve this situation as
soon as possible," he said in a stalemen!.
"However, it is imperative that
any settlement not jeopardize the
competitiveness of these plants and
hence thC job security of our employ-

(ContliiUid from Page 1)
ans building would house from seven to 10 physicians who would utilize
the hospital's services.
·
.
County Economic Development Director Julia Houdashelt said she would
also send a letter to the hospital offering her support and services.
. In other matters, Tteasurer Howard Frank gave commissioners his semi·
annuill report on the coynty investment plan.
·
, Frank sai.4 ~ county now has $2.S million invested in local banks and
added that lhe county made more than S162,000 last year through its invest·
ments.
Hoffman pointed out that cominissi~ners did not have to make an advat;~ce
draw on real estate wes to pay bi!ls and salaries through January, due to a
j:lll)'OVer balance from 1993.
.
Commissioners also met with John Francescon, regional representative
for Ohio-lndustties for- the Handicapped, who wanted commissioners to
approve distributiQR of OIH catalogs to county offices along with i direc·
tive to consider om products. OIH promotes the hiring of handicapped peoees."
ple through offering services and products.
Local 696, which represents work, n.e baird agreed to allow OIH to distribute its catalogs and to issue the
ers at the' two GM Delphi. Chassis ·
directive.
Systems "plants, has beeh operating
In other business. lhe board:
'..
COLUMBUS (AP) - Indiana- 47.S0-49.SO.
. • Noted the state is granting a 12.5 percent pay raise to county sheriffs Ohio dim;t hog prices at selected
U.S. 2-3; 23'0-260 lbs. 4l.S0•l'fective March I. 'The increase raises sheriffs' pay from $33,243 to
buying points Tuesday by the U.S. 4S.50.
$37,398.38 a year;
Sows: weak to 50 cents lower.
. Department of Agricplture Market
, • Discussed the purchase of a copying machine for the economic devel·
U.S. 1-3, 300-500 lbs. 30.00News:
&lt;jpment office;
.
·
.
·
32.50;
S00-650 lbs. 32.50-35 .00, a
Barrows and gilts: finn to mostly
· • Paid weekly bills of $84, 1~.76 consisting of 109 entries.
SO cents higher; demand moderate on few 36.00.
. . Also present was Clerk of Commission Oloria Kloes.
Boars: 25.00-28.00.
a moderate to light supply.
Estimated receipts : 39,000.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 46.00Prkes from The Producers
48.00, a few 45.SO and 48.SO; plants
Llvesloc:k Association:
. Cattle: uneven, 1.00 lower to 75
· (Contl~uecl from Piia 1)
'The Rev. William Middleswarth
cents
higher.
walks covoroil with mud· left over asked the blessing followed by- the Sblpn at ~han:ll •
Slaughier steers: choice 55.00from receni;fl'o&lt;iding;
•
Pledge of Allegiance, led by VaughRussell Spencer and the Gospel
63.50;
select 50.00-60.00.
Tones will be at the Fellowship
, • Appointed John Anderson, vii· an.
1996 Plat Directory
Slaughter
heifers: choice 55.00l~e adminlsti'IIUir, and Councilman
Present were Vaughan, Clerk Church, Racine, Saturday, 7 p.m.
64.85; select S0.00-60.00.
George )Vright11$_liaisons-to the Fed- Kathy Hysell, C®ncil President John Charles Bush is the pastor.
Cows: 1.00 lower; all cows 38.00
erai ~y Management Agency Musser and council .members Oeri
and
down. '
on·· federal: assistance following the . Walton~~'Schott Dillndon, ~i!l h;oung, Ript to Life
.
Bulls:
steady; all bulls 51.75 and
Jan. 22 flood; .
·
, Larry nc rung a
ng , · and
The Meigs County Right to Life
' • A~pted !Iii; minutes of the Feb. • Police Cl!ief Gerald Rought.
will meet Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the down.
Veal calves: strong; choice 150.00
M~igs Counly Library. ~ guest from
19 meeilng and the IJllyor's report of
and
down.
'
the Gallia County chapter will attend.
$5,410.~;
·• ,
Sheep
and
lambs:
steady ; choice
· • Met with Patly Pickens, a
wools
81.00-95.00;
choice clips
Veter1111 Meii!Orilll
DAVmeeting
Rep!iblican candid~ for,the Meigs
84.50-89.00;
feeder
lamBs
83.00 and
Monday admissions - Leo B.
The Meigs County DAY will meet down; aged sheep 39.00"and
County B~ of Coidmissioners.
down.
Morris, Rutland; James Eynon, Monday, 7 p.m. at the Rock Springs
Reedsville.
Grange Hall.
Monday discharg~s - Harry
Clark, Portland.

..

Today's livestock report

tounci.l .considers pa~king

Jlllll'-------ii
1996 Edition

Meigs County Plat
Directory

Announcements

MEIGS COUNTY
• Ohio

Hospital new•

The Daily Sentinel

Stocks

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Marcil 4- Timothy
McKenzie, Mrs. Charles Williamson
and ·sOn, Rebecca Bums, Homer
Bays, Joyce Knotts, Rachel Paine.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Anspach, daughter, Middleport .
(PIIblilhed With pennisllon)

1

!

so

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pre·
viewing a oew showdown over bud· ·
get priorities, the Whill: House is
relxJffitiJ a Republic111 plan to link
e~tra social spending to apeement on
a deficit-cutting deal.
With spending authority for
dozens of federal agencies due to
lapse on March 15, GOP congressional leaders are crafting legislation
that would finance the government
through fiscal 1996, which runs
through SepL 30. 'The measure, which
the Senate Appropriations Commilll:C
and full House plan t9 consider this
week, would cut billions from education, environmental, housing and
other programs.
.
Top Republicans want to add a
provision to the bill that could restore
nearly $5 billion of the money - if
there is agreement with President
Clinton on extracting savings from
Medicare, welfare and other fastgrowing benefit programs. This
would mark a GOP abandonment of
last year's strategy of threatening to
close government agencies if Clinton
doesn't agree to a budget-balancing
pact.
But after meeting with House
Appropriations Committee Chair·
man Bob Livingston in the Capitol,
White House chief of staff Leon
Panetta told reporters that Clinton
"without question" would veto leg·
islation that lacked the funds he
believes are needed for socil!l programs like education and the environment. He said the idea of linking
the extra money to a later deal over
the budget simply creates "a big
question mark."

,SlJ1801m0fiii"DI ..
.
.,.caintit ' W~.....
OOe ~~ .....·-'"'""'""-""""-·-·····--.$100
O.M...............................:..............:..S8.'1!1
I

'

:

'ooe Y. .......... .............................. ..... 5104.00
·
SJNGLBOOP\' raJCII
Dolly .. .................................................. 3, c.u
I

lOt-....

r

pi)' .... -1111)'

to ""'- ~~~- .10 no Dolly s..toel
· on•~~orl~ ....... booU.+mtllwiBbi

.-

'

.

No oubocriplioa by mlit .....tied ID dire bollll . . . ~ ,, .Vit'tblt
'
-!'

'··

,

.·J

MAILI.-:III"'loNN

.......... c..,

~~ ,...... ~
.!0
~,.) • •...,:. ..... l ......... ..... ..... ............. S$3.1l
.

. . . . . .. . . . ..

. .......
:

. ..

. . . . . . . . . .. . . .

. .....1
. 27

5l.,.,.:.........."·-··-..···•·· ..···..........St05.!6

·... ·
-..... c..tr
.-.
.........................
..............
n ....._............. ,_, ____ ................ stot.n

13 .............................................~......129.2!1
~

•••

~

~.

Abo ......................................51\

Aahland Oll ...........................38\

AT•T .....................................13\

Bank One ..............................37,_

BOb Evana ....................~··· ····1&amp;'.-

llorg-WI,..,., ...........................33
Cl\ariJplon II"Mt. ......................17'4
Clalrmllll 8ttop ........................5
City ttoldng ••.••••••.•••••••••••••••.23\
Federa1Uogu1 .......................18\
1
•
Units Qf die Meip Countj Emcr- , Qannelt .................................18'1.
gency Medical Service recorded five
QoodvwM' TlR ...................... ISO'!.
calls for assistance Mon&lt;lay. Units"-. LaK~ .....................................7\

~elgs EMS runs
respond.in&amp; included:

-

MIDDLEPORT

·
.
12:04 p.m., Overbrook Nurstng
Cenler. Oscar Qualls, Holzer Medical

aa---. ·. H. :;,:;•
.

. Soh«ibon

Am Ele Power .••...........••....••.42\

·center.

10 04

.

It

~MEROY
'

North Sec nd~
VMH

o

~enue,

'

RUTLAND .
10:23 a.m., Star Hall Road,
·' MarJie Schuler, HMC;
6 :39 p.m., Salem StreeI, Suretta
Cade, VMH;
7:13p,m.• VMHemeiJellCyroom,
.Jelfw,y ~"!lcr, HMC.

,,

End ............................. 17'1.

Umlled Inc ............................ ! a\
'"-oplll Bancorp...................23
Ohio Valley Bank ....................3t
'One ValleJ.............................32,.
Rockw• ....~ ........................"sa'.Robblna • Mv.ra.. - ;..............30
Royal Dulch/Shell •••.•. ~·.......131\
Shoner'a·~nc ...........................e'•
Star BII1IC ...............................~~\
Wtrldv li1t'l............................11\
Worttilnttonlnd. ..................21'1.
-•-•SloCic raporta are the 10:3
a.m. qUOIM provldacl by Atlwll
of Gatllpolla.
·
•

Appeal offered
in murder case

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
The West Virginia Supreme Court has
accepted the appeal petition of a Point
Pleasant man convicted of first
degree murder and aggravated robbery, according to Mason County
Prosecuting Attorney Damon Mor·
gan.
The justices will review David
John Francisco's petition for an
appeal to reconsider his sentence of
40 years for aggravated robber and
life without mercy for murder, Morgah said.
According to. the prosecutor, the
petition was accepted for review to
determine if an appeal should be
granted.
. ...
The petition, accepted on Feb. 28,
is solely on the sentence, not the convictions, Morgan said.
Francisco was sentenced Sept.
20, 1994 by Circuit Judge O.C.
"Hobby" Spaulding after he pleaded
guilty to the Sepll:mber 1993 murder
of Norman Ray Laudermilt of
P,iason.

.

..

,

COunty~

llllga
Clube
..... _,HoW*.
,_,Ohlo•(l
..) llelge·Sotl &amp;
Conwvotlon Dlotrlct

~~

w...,

» 1 0 1 - - ........... ONo -·(114)112-7

Ohio State University
Extltnalon, Melp Co.
MulbiiTy tt.lghta, P.O. Box-32
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789 •

614-992-6696

Melge Soli I Wnat:'
ConMI'VItlon Dla...-.ct

33101 Hll11id Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 457811
'
614-89M647
.

fii'IMI'I Bank I Slvlnge Co.

221 w. 2nd
POIMI oy, Ohio 45789
81481M136

•·

.J

I

�~Sports

The Daily Sentin,jJ.
Merch 5, 1•
.

Tu••~MY·

·Royals edge Indians 6-5

.."

FIRST TEAM

...... ..,.... ...."'·

Marlins remain winless; :
Reds bow 2-0
By The Alloclated Prell
Aside from its stated PlllR!l~ gettina ready for the regular season
- spring training has always been a
time for the players to relax and forgel about pennant race pressures for
a while.
'The Florida Marlins, winless in
their first four outings of the exhibition season, are doing just that and

more.

FORCED AT SECOND · Atlanlll'a Plblo Mar·
tlnez dancea • Jig.to get around Loa Angeln'
~ HllnHn during Mondlly'a eprlng exhlb~

•

'

t\011 bllubell 911~ In w..t Pelm Beech, Fla.

Martinez wu unable to complete the double
pley In the Bravu won, 7-3. (AP)

)

· :Wildcats
still No. 1
•

p.llarquette moves ,u p in AP cage
ratings; Bearcats drop .to eighth

By JIM O'CONNELL
AP l11blball Writer
Marquette was on the verge of
being one of the Top 25's one-week
wonders.
The Eagles crashed the rankings
live weeks ago at No. 24, but were
gone in the next yoting after losing
road games to North Carolina Charlotte and Tulane. Tbey were back in
Monday at No. 21 after a week that
saw them register wins over two
ranked teams, Louisville ~nd Cincinnati.
.
• "Certainly it means a great deal
now that it did when we were
ranked earlier in the seaSon in-terms
of the NCAA selection committee,"
·. Marquette coach Mike Deane said
Monday. "It's got to help for seeding
purposes. What's nice is that we got
lllltlere earlier, got out of there quick,
'inade a liitle ap~nce, and now
we're there at the end when it
dounts."
There will be one more poll this
season following the announcement
neJit Sunday of the NCAA tournaihent's field of 64, an4. by then rank~~ are window dressing as teams
~to play for the national champiOnship.
• Kentuc~y was one vote shy of
!icing a unanimous No. I selection
Ibis week. The Wildcats (26-1)
matched a school record with their
25th consecutive victory Saturday
and also became the first team in 40

more

years to go ·unbeaten in ·thC Southeastern Conference regular season.
They received 65 first-place votes·
and I ,649 points from the national
media panel, 73 more than Massachusetts, which got the 'other No. I
vote.
The Minutemen (28-1 ), the regular-season champions of the Atlantic
10, were the onl)' team to beat Kentucky this season and had the No. I
rating for nine straight weeks until the
Wildcats moved to the top spot last
week.
The next three spots were held by
conference champions a8 well, with
Connecticut of the Big East moving
up one spot to third. Purdue of the Big
Ten jumped one spot to fourth and
Kansas of the Big Eight dropped two
places to fifth after losing the regularseason finale to Oklahoma.
Georgetown moved up two spots
to sixth and was followed in the Top
Ten by Texas Tech, Cincinnati, Villanonand Utah.
Arizona led the Second Ten, followed by Wake Fores~ Syracuse,
Memphis, Virginia Tech, Pe.nn State,
UCLA. Georgia Tech, Iowa and
North Carolina.
The last five teams were Marquette·, ,Louisville, Iowa State, Wisconsin-Green Bay and Mississippi
State.
In addition to Marquette (20-6),
Mississippi State (19· 7), a preseason
Top Ten selection, moved back in this

week, its second appearance in the
last seven weeks.
Deane felt the Eagles deserved the
ranking recently, and it was cemented with the victories over Louisville
and Cincinnati in the final week of
regular-season play in Con'ference
USA's lir,t vear.
"I was surprised that some of the
teams that were ranked ahead of us
(tbe last few weeks) were , ranked
ahead of us anyway. But these last
two wins certainly justify that we're
a Top 25 club,'' Deane said. "I think
that there are a number of teams with
more losses in theie than we have,
and the fact that we're 6-1 against
teams that were ranked when we
played them suggests that we might
even be considered higher, baSed on
what we've done, not on who we are
or what we are, but based on what
we've accomplished.
"We did what we had to do to tum
the voters' heads a little bit in our
direction. I think we're one of those
teams that's sneaking up now on
clubs, media and coaches. All of a
sudden we've got\en a renewed
respect because of the win at
Louisville and the win against Cincinnati. It's exactly what we needed."
J;lropping out of the l'ankings were
then-No. 24 George Washington (206), which beat Massachusetts but lost
to St. Joseph's on Saturday in its regular-season finale, and then-No. 2~
Stanford (17-8), which lost to California in its only game last week.

Scoreboard
Monday's ~or Collep
Bukelball Scores

Mon1rcal6, Florida l
N.Y. Mets '·Detroit 4
Toronto t Piusburgh 0
St. LoWs !1, Philodelpbja 3
California S, San DieJO 0 .
Chicaso Cub1 8, Colorado S
Oaklo.nd 10, San Fraacisco 8
Sc:aule 13, Milwaukel: 7
Baltimore 4, N.Y. Yankees I

:i 100111
.
Mlrftond 88, A"'ido St. 78

• SOUTHWEST
•
Oral Roberts 96, Hampcon U. ~
' TOURNAMI!NTS
~ Colonial Athletic Auoci.Uoo
, ~......lp

··-

' Mid-Continau Conrereoce
ValplrailK' 78, E. Ulinois 65
W. llliQOil68. Cent Connecticut St. 66
~ Millouri VaJie)' Coalmnce

:
•
~

.,_,,

t!

Tul11 60. Cnc11ey 46

:

• Nw a..... c.tfaakt

!

Monmouth. NJ. S7. Mlriot 311
Ri!lcr 74, MO&lt;tnl Sc. Mal)&lt;'s, Md. 70
, Wtll Cout ConltftiKf
.

1

.a.-.......... .
;

Ponlllld 76, Ootwtp 68

'

·. NBA ruults

! Menday'•
a....
lolton
Milwaukee 98
1~.

t

I

llttnlit 99. AU.... 93
Ort.do 110, Pbit.delpbia 97
Su AMonio 101. Denver 90

:
1

1 :~

-

NHLresult
!l-

.

"""J!nq' Z. N.Y. 11oa1m Z. be

'OIN.Y. blloda1,7:l0p.m.
&gt;
.
~a.,...Bay, 7ol0p.m.
.• · f10rWa 11 St l.Gola, I:JO p.111.

9 p.m.

,l lilllp. Aoolt&lt;ios. 10::10 p.m. '
~

•.

'

. . . . . . ~7p.m.

.

_.'

l!iw H&lt;~~:o· 7:30 , .... .
'·"'"'' '" '" • &lt; JllllliiO'II ,
IO:JOp.ot
. . II,Silll !'!-· IO:JO.p.a
'
, . . . . . ... JAil AliloiA 10:30 p.ra.

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

• .•. o-

P. ; YI ...L.....I... I '
~~.
·,''
..... ....__O. J

.

~- {!a...Mal5 .

-=-;;:~
... ~'--

p.m.

FOOTBALL
Natlonol FoadooiLeopo
ATLANTA FALC9NS--8ipc4 C«nclius Bennett, linet.::br, to a four-yar
contract
· '
BUFFALO BlllS-Apeed 10 1«1n1
wilh Mark~"· tiacb.cka-, on a dttet-

year t'OftR'acl.

CAROLINAPANTHER~tianed

Mark Rodenbluaer, ceacer.
CHICAGO 8EAR5-Siped Conis
Coawey, wide recdver, 10 1 fow-yur con·
ln1Ct.

,.

. "'

REACH OYER 18,500
HOMES WITH
YOUR MESS. GE!

SAN DIEilO CIIAIIGERS-Ap-eod

to . . . trilb Kevil Rou, llflly, 01 IIWO)'all' COIItnct. '

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HOCUY

'I'OURNAMI\IIII

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NEWYOR~~

DIVIIION I·

o.,.~ ... -~61. .

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Sf,N fRitNCISCO --Wal....
Sino 'Mil.... .. - .
WAIHINGTON REDSKIN!&gt;-Sipod
Bob Dlltl, .. - . 10 I -.yw

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AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS .AND
FEATURESEVERY WEEK IN THE
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8outl!im

Fed. Hocldng
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Aleundlr
T~

Fed. Hockilg

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C»&gt;IYP'e
Jeremy Tolson - N.d. Hockilg

COACH OF THE YEAR

Paul Pettit - Fed: Hoclllng

Chris Thompson - t.ttler

.

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ERIC HILL

.,

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CALL· NOW•••.
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GAI.I. IPOLIS

PT. PLEASANT, WV

446-2342

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POMEROY..:MJDDLEPORT
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992-2156
...__ _ _ _ _...__ _......_ _ _ _ _ttlittitltllii. . . . .
It

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PAUL PULUNS

RENEE TURLEY

JONNA MANUEL

FIRST TEAM
Poul Pultlne

H,Sr.

Guard

Kant Glmltt
Jim Simpson
Jeremy ThiiiPP
Jamie Lambett

1-0, St.
1-7, Sr.

Guard

S-Fink
Flylln C...dlll

1-1 , Sr.
6-2. Fr.

1-2, Jr.
8-3, Sr.

Cenlllr
Fotwlrd
Guard
GUard
Center

IIIIa•

Belple
Belple
Nelaanllille-York
Wellalon
Wellalltll
VInton County

Honor...lellendon
.
C..a Ct...nd,llelge; Eric Mitchel and JIIOII Wlita, Nelsonville-York;
Thad Smith, WalatDn; J8181111ah Colgrove; Belple.
IIIYP
Kent Gamltt - Belpre

COACH OF THE YEAR
Jim Dl!ft* • Walloton

JESSICA 'KARR
HOCK IN G DIVISION

FIRST TEAM
I-1D, lir. Center
1-7, Sr.
Guard
M,Jr.
Ouord
W,Sr.
Guard
H , Fr. . Center
5-11, Sr. Centar

Ral:l•cce Evan•
JHIIoeKerr
11.- 'IIIII!IY

Jonne lllonuel
Jonl Grubb
!.tal)' Markin&amp;

~.Sr.

Beth Koons
Ullll Mahomey

5-4, Sr.

Fotw•d
GuiiRI

Eaatern
Eaetern
Sou thorn

SoudMm

.......... .
AleXIildlr

Trimble
Fed. Hockilg

HONORABLE MENTION
Petey W., Eaetern; .._alee Brennon, Eaetern;
Staph Marclde, Miller; Glelchen IJnaootl, Fed. Hocking.

C»&gt;IVP'e
R - Turley • Southem
Jonl Grubb - Alexandlr

COACH OF THE YEAR
Sooll Woh • Eaelllrn

OHI O DI VISION

FIRST TEAM
5-5, Jr.
S-10, So.
5-11, Jr.

Kethy Coyner
Heather Hayee
Krill)'

Rhodaa

Manclae Argabright
Uz linn
0.1111, ·StaviiOI)

· Anile Adlrna

Guant

F-.nl
Centar

5-7, Sr.
5-e, Jr.

Guenl

.... Sr.
6-0, So.

GuiiRI
Center

Guerd

Belple
VlniDn County
Belpre
Wellalltll
\linton County
Walalon '

Nel~le-Vork

HONORABLliiENTION

Cheryl,.... and Anne ~~own, .......,
Mille . . . ind Kinltan Jeltmu, IMioi\ County;
Anfite Hll'/1181 ind Erin Humplny, Belpre.
111/il"
Kathy

1

•

COYner - Belptv

COACH OF THE Y!YR
Dew Wilcoxen • Belpre

Pre••. .

Turley, Manuel, Evans, Karr, Hill, Maynard and Pullins on
First Team; Wolfe 'Coach of Year'; Turley named co..MVP
Meigs County's three high schools
were well represented among the Tri
Valley Conference's elite, with Mon·
day's announcement of the selections
for the 1995-96 All Conference basketball teams.
Southern's Renee Thrley and Jonna Manuel were named to tbe Hocking Division First Team, with Turley
sharing Hocking Division Most Valuable Player honors with Joni Grubb of
Alexander.
Turley, a 5-9 Junior guard, finished
the season averaging 21.4 points per
game, in leading the Tornadoes to the
Sectional · Finals. Manuel is a 5-8
Senior guard.
Eastern's Rebecca Evans and Jes·
sica Karr were also Hocking Division
First Team selections, with Patsy
Aeiker and Jessica Brannon representing Eastern as Honorable Men-

tion selections.
Evans and Karr both capped off
line careers, with terrific seasons for
Scott Wolfe's Lady Eagles. Evans, a
S-10 center, was among the team
leaders in rebounding and Scoring.
Karr, a 5-7 guard, averaged 15.2
points per game and . cracked the
I,000 point career scoring mark this
season.
Wolfe was honored as Coach of
the Year in the Hocking Division, for
guiding the Eagles to a 16-6 overall
mark, and an 11-4 record and Hocking Division championship in the

TVC.
In tbe Ohio Division, Meigs'
Cheryl Jewell and Anne Brown were
honored as Honorable Mention selections for Ron Logan's Lady Marauder's squad. Brown, a 5-9 Senior, and
Jewell, a S-6 Junior, were both key

players for the Lady Marauders this
season.
In the boys All Conference team
selections, each county school placed
one player on the respective division
first teams.
In the Hocking Division, Easlern's
Eric Hill and Southern's Jesse May·
nard wen: selected to the first team.
Eastern's Micah Otto and Southern's
John Harmon were Honorable Mention selections in the division.
Hill, a 6-3 Senior forward , finished
the season shooting 49 percent from
the floor in averaging 19.2 points per
game for the Eagles. Maynard, a 5-9
Junior guard, was the catalyst for the
Tornadoes late season run, and among
the teams leaders in rebounding,
scoring, and steals.
Otto, a 6-3 Senior ·forward, fin ished the season shooting 48 percent

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Penn
State, coming off its second straight
Big Ten women's tourney title and
winner of 10 of its last II games, figure to be a good home-court bet for
the upcoming NCAA Tournament.
But Purdue coach Lin Dunn thinks
her No. J4 Boilermakers deserve the
same fate.
"We just went down to the wire

with a top· ten team," Dunn said after
Purdue's 71-69 loss to No. 9 Penn
State (25-6) ~onday night. ''And
Iowa is a top-ten team," Dunn added,
referring to Purdue's semifinal tourney victim.
.
.
"!think we are certwnly a top-s•xteen team," she added, referring to the
designation that would net Purdue
(20-10) a chance to host the first

round of the NCAA women's tourney.
Lady Lions coach Rene Portland
has no doubt her team will get that
chance, but still sees a tough road
ahead.
"Tbe ne" big feat we have is getting off our own Campus," she said,
after stressing that her squad didn 't
consider the Big Ten tourney a warmup for the NCAAs.

Scott paces Orlando's 11 0-97
victory over 76ers; Bullets romp

my

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. T$.:

",,

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from the floor in averaging 15.9
points per game. Harmon, a 6-~
Senior forward , averaged double-fig~
ures in scoring and was among th~
leaders in team rebounding.
1
In lhe Ohio Division, Meigs 6-Q
Senior guard Paul Pullins was hon.:,
ored by the division's coaches with a
First Team selection . Cass Clela!Hl
received an Honorable Mention selec..
tion, after a very good season for Jeff.
Skinner's Meigs squad.

.

Pullins. recognized by the league'11
coaches as one of the best guards i111
the area, finished the season the fli
double-figure average in scoring and
ranked among the team leaders in al!
categories. Cleland, a 6· 2 Senior fbr·
ward, was among the team leaders iu,
rebounding and scoring for thf
Marauders.

By The AIIOCieted Prell
Call it a zone. Call it a groove.
Whatever it is, Dennis Scott is in it.
''I'm definitely feeling it," Scott
said after hilling eight of I~ 3-(iointers Monday night in the Orlando
Magic's 110-97 victory over the
Philadelphia 76ers.
Scott is zoning along at a 52.9 percent clip in his last eight gl!llles, hitting 4~ of 85 shots from 3-point
range. That puts him on a pace to surpass the NBA n:cord for 3s in a season - 217 - set by New York's
John Starks in 1994-9~ Scott has 192 ·
with 23 regular-season games remaining.
" Dennis got some really good
looks at the basket," Orlando coach
Brian Hill said. "Guys were finding
Dennis, and when he has time, he
usually connects,"
In other · NBA games Monday
night, it was Washington 96, Vancouver 81 ; San Antonio I0'1, Denver
90; Boston 105, Milwaukee 98; and
Detroit 99, Atlanta 93.
" We've got a star-studded,
unselfish team," said Scott, who finished with 26 points. "It frees up
some shots for me and I just let it fly."
The shots have been flying right'
for Scott for a long time. Th~ 6-foot11 guard has not made at least one 3pointer in a franchise-record 63
straight games.
Scott made six of eight 3-pointers in the opening half. His lwo longrange bombs afte• the 76ers took a
24-23 edge told Scott what type of
night he would•have .
"Once I made those two 3s, I felt
I was in a good groove," said Scott,
who owns the Magic record of nine

3-pointers in a game. "It's hard to get
them when you know you ' re looking
for them ·and when you know your
teammates an: trying to se t you up."
Shaquille O' Neal added 22 points,
10 rebounds, six assists and four
blocks for Orlando, while Anfernee
Hardaway had 18 points.
The 76ers were led by Trevor Ruffin with 17 points.
Bullets 96, Grizzlies 81
Juwan Howard scored 25 points,
Calbert Cheaney had 21 and 7-foot7 Gheorghe Muresan 20 as Washington remained in the Eastern Conference playoff hunt by winning at Vancouver.
The Grizzlies, suffering their
eighth straight defeat. were led by
veteran guard Byron Scott, who came
off the bench to score 20 poi nos, and
rookie center Byrant Reeves, who had
19.
Spurs 101, Nuggets 90
David Robinson had 28 points, 13
rebounds and seven blocked shots in
San Antonio's victory at Denver.
Sean Elliott added 18 points, Vinny Del Negro 16, and Avery Johnson
had 14 points and 14 assists.
LaPhonso Ellis paced Denver w!th
18 points.
Celtks 105, Bucks 98
In Boston, Rick Fox sank six 3pointers and finished with 22 points
to help the Celtics defeat Milwaukee.
Dana Barros scored 23 points and
Eric Williams 14 for Boston, which
snapped a two-game losing s~ak.
Vin Baker Jed the Bucks, who suffered their eighth Joss in II games,
with 22 points and 13 rebounds, while
Johnny Newman added 19 points.

"We talked about it, that we w~
not getting into the plane noi to ·wiil¢•
she said. "We didn't care who
played."
f.

t

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r-------------------,•t
The Light
•'
t

To

By
Dave
Grate

of
Rutland
Furniture

'

l

Our friencl's insomnia is so
bad, he can't even sleep when
It's time to get up.

***

He who is always blowing a
fuse is usually in the dark.

** * .

r

***

!
i
l
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For most of us there are
chances of getting rich - slim
and fat.
Proverb: a short sentence
based on long experience.

You know it's an election year }
when congresspeople start
writing to you, instead of the
other way around.

lt.lt4.L1 .t A
lr•

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.,

Lions win second straight Big 10 women's title ;

~The AaloclaNd
At St. Louis, Cordell·Love had 18
·. Tulsa's final year m the M1ssoun points, freshman Michael Ruffin
Valley Conference brought ita cham- added IS points and 13 rebounds and
Jllonship. ViQ!inia Commonwealth's Shea Seals, named tourney MVP, had
first year in the Colon1al Athletic 14 points for Thlsa (22-7). Bradley,
~soci&amp;tion bro,l!gh~ i$ a title, too.
also 22-7, shot 28 pen:eqt from the
: Tbe Golden· Hurricane, headed field.
for the WAC next year, finally took
"We don't play much against
the MVC crown. It was the fourth pR-SSUre like that," Bradley coach Jim
time in the 1990s that Thlsa made it Molinari said. "Wejustdidn'thandle
tb the chantpionship game, but Mon- it.
. day night's 60-46 win over Bradley Vlrpnla Commonwealth 46,
&amp;,ave the Hufricaiie its 6rst conferenct. NC· Wllmillctoa 43
~!lampionshi.p since 1986:
·.
At Richmond, conference player
1995 96: All game•
With it, of course, COII\Cl! a b1d to of the year Bernard Hapkins strugTeam
W LTPOP
lhe N€AATournament.
' . gled in the opening half. ·But he gave
x-Wheelersburg ... 21 11600 1248
'' ")told our .crowd I couldn't thidk himself a pep talk and came through
.....20 11513 1214
bf a better way to leave than to go out With · 10 'points and nine rebounds x-Chesapaaka
Marietta ............·.. .15 612451192
lj$ champions," first-year cOach Steve after the break.
x-Fairland ............ 15 71465 1305
Robinson sail!, "We· felt we could
"I told myself that I was voted the Logan ................. .15 713011171
play with·anybody in !he toum~nt. player of the year, so I better come out Jackson ............... 14 714131319
It was just a matter of. puttmg 1t · and play like the player of the year,'' Greanlield.... ...... .. 14 71387 1313
Meigs ................... 12 91373 1345
together, · and w.e . did it for three Hopkin~ said.
.
x-South Poinl... .... 13 91444 1311
straight lliJhts.': . . . '
.
VCU (24·8) beld NC-Wilmington Warren Local.. ..... 12 1013151197
So did VCU, whtch also limshed to 17 points in the second half.
x-Polnt Pleasal)t .. 10 121295 1390
fltSt in the regular season afier mov"I .don't think we lost ihe game," Southem ................9 131402 1482
·ing over from the :M~. VCU has- said Seahawks coach Jerry Wain- River VaHey ....... ....9 131258 132t
n't been to" the NCAAs since 1985, wright, whose team shot just 31.3 per- Athens ............... ....8 141240 1272
Gallipolis ................ 5 16 1096 1246
bUt it's going after a 46-43 defeat Qr cent. " I think we were beaten."
Portsmouth ............ 4 151164 1381
North Carolina•Wilmington.
·
Caaillua 52,
Vinton County... ..... 2 19 1397 1599
·lv~n CliipJ,eu made ·four free Fairfield 46
xStlllln tourney
throws in the final37.8 seconds, capAI Albany, N.Y., the Golden
Dlvlllon 2 District Finale
At OU, Athena
pjng a 7-for-8 night from the line for Griffins (19-10), who lost Darrell
Merch 9
~im · the rest of the team was 3-for- Barley, the league's best player, four
·Ironton
vs.
South
Point, 6;30 p.m.
12. ' ' · ~
.
· • .· ' · , days before the toumantent started
Rock Hii-Hillsboro winner vs.
:· ·" It's kind Of funny, winning' on with a broken thumb; they shot well Athens-Fairland winner, 8:15 p.m
free t~Vclw, '.l i!e lelcf'..\'I j~ tried to .. under SO percent fro!1t the. field · Two winners advance to the OU
Jlltt it all -~·,or .
niind· l ~jus! : throu~h&lt;iut! and struggled frOm the · reglonals in Athena.
Dlvtllon 3 Dlltrlet Flnela
Stepped UJflo llie line, took my two- foulltne, sbll earned the1r first NCAA
At OU, Alhenl '
dribbles and made the shots." ·
bid in 39 years.
.
·
lllareh a
. Also maki11g the NCAAs were
"Even with Darrell out, I had no North Mams \Is. Chesapeake, 6:30
~anisius and Portland.
.
doubc in my mind that we cou!d.~~e • (l.m.
·• Canisius won the Metro Atlantic, mto the tournament and wm 11, said Zane Trace vs. Wheelersburg, 8:15
' beating Fairfield 52-46. Portland Canisius forward ~icheal _Meeks,
4 Dlltrlct Semlftnela
pbed ti!C ~st C~t Conference · tournamont MVP wtth 18 pomts and p.mDlvl1lonAtOU,A"*tl
slOt by defeadng Gonzaga 76-68. · II rebounds.
March a
:. In semifinals,.it WIS Val~SO 78, Portland 76,
Beaver vs. Green, 6:30 p.m.
atastern Illinois. 65 ,and Wesiem l!li- · Gen••1•lill
.
.
Portsmouth Eaat va. Leeeburg·
rpis 68, Central Connecticut 66 in the
At San18' Clara, Cahf., the Pilots Falrfleld,8:15 p.m.
Welt
Vlrglnle
AAA
Tournement
fitid~Continent. In the Northeast, i\ qualifted for their fint NCAA tourney
ReQloilell II Parllerlbilrg
Rider 7,4, Mount St. Mary's 70 in 37 yean. Kweemada Ki~g scored
Mel Monmoutli 57, Marist56, selling 26 points, including_seven m the last Pt. PleaSIRt va. R' y, 81
ti8 an all New Jersey final. '
two minutes for Portland (19-l{)).
Parkersburg F'teld
•
Missouri ·Valley
As time 'l'lll out, Portland's fans
Winner advancei to IIIII ·
toumement.
'l'blla 6Q,.JndJey .e6
ltrelmedClft\0 thecoun

a

SCOTT WOLFE

l\lleigs· County lands 14 players
on 1995-96 AII-TVC 'Dream Team'

Cage standings

I.

JESSE MAYNARD

OH IO DIVtSION

Tulsa cops MVC.title,
lands NCAA berth

.

--.

·r...,.,

I l •

-TV.TIMES

n
••
••
••-

orru .._ at R~ "-oo, IIUIOina

Su ...... 5elltle .. - . .
Ariz., 1:05 p.m.
· ' · -·
~!'II~ "''tiii 5oa "'' N.Y. Y - II
Fla
.. 7:0:i.l:~
01110
.... _.,.... _..

flb'llrlri'TI,...... ..........

ADVERTISING IN THE

NEW YORK GtANJi-4tllltbcd the

bock. b)' .... Soo "n . ·
NEW YORK. JE'I'S-Trodotl J.,...
~~rowo..-,,......._.,..., Minllolphillllor I IW7 ftilb-- drift piell.
ST. LOUIS I!AMS-Apood to with MoM~J-. liooltoetcr, . . . n-

...... St.
8-2, Sr. FotWIId
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GuiiRI
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Ch8d.Jel'tlil

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HONORABLE IIEHTION

.,
:;
''

GREEN BAY PAckEas-Ro-lianod
8emanlo Hsnlt, l i -.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Roaiped Janel Byrd, Cor....,_t, Co 1 ODe·

- · •· St. LouitiiSI. ........
Fla., 1:05 P·"'·
.
OlietaoC•ba ••. Ctlif..... ll'lllmpe,
Ariz., l~ p.m.
.
Ool&lt;llod ... Colondo .. 1\tcJoo, Ariz.,
J:05 p.m.
s.. DiCJo ... Mn...u." Oludler,
ME., 3:05 p.M. '

.
'· ~
WI.... al'latlllqh, 7ol0
p.m.

. ,. .

J~

HOUSTON ROCKETS-Sisned Som
Mack, pard, for the temliader of the a•on.. and J.-en J~ekson.auW. 10 a second
I 0-dl)' CODtnlel.

HOIIUOft VI. Cleveland II WitUcr
Haven, A1.. I :OS p.m.
Kaniao Qty vi. N.Y. Meu at PM St.
l.Mcie, Fll., 1:10 p.m.
Mo.lmll "" Atlarwa Ill Wat Palm
lleocll, Fla., 1:05 p.m.
'JUM VI. MiDDeiOII _. Fon M)'en,
Fla., I:05 p.m.

llll. . aUIIh.9p.ra.

I

iajwed lin.

Fla.. I:05 p.m.
florida vs. Los Aqelel a1 Vero Beocb,
Fla., 1'(¥,1 p m.

s..... ..

•

CHICAGO BUIJ.S-SiJO&lt;d Joltn Solley, cencer-forw.-d, 10 a 10-day contriCt.
Placed Bill WenoinJton, ccn&amp;er, on the

1-0, St.

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

Iiiii.

Baltimore v1. Bolton at Fort Myers.

,·.c-

~ , .... Colonoclo,

CHARI..011EHORNE1'S-Aeovlll0d
MUIII)' BoJues, l!lltd, from the· injlftd

Fla.. 1:05 p.m.
Cinc:inrllli vs. Philadelphia at Cturwler, Aa.. I :0!1 p.m.
Devoil VI, PitUbuiJh II Bradenton,

.......

,, -

Nodonttlllolkotboll~odoa

WedMiday't c . . .

' • New York II'IDrorlfo, 1 p.m.
' . LA. Cl..... M Bolton, 7:30p.m.
·•
M l - II PbllldelpltiL 7ol0 p.m.
WuhitJfOD, 7:30p.m.
o.- 11 San ANoaio. 8 p.ra.

..

BASKETBALL

Chltqo While Sox n . Boston 11 Fon
M&gt;&lt;n. Aa.. 7:0l p.m.

Utah • Sacramenlo, 10:30 p.m.

t......,.

outfieldtt.

S.l&gt;qoVJ. Oakland a Phoeab.. 3:05

Vaacouvcr 11 Goldon State, !0:30p.m.

I

IASEIALL
Amerian LuaBOSTON RED SOX- Asrecd to
l£rml with Edt Gulldcnon ...S Brian Bilk.
pitchcnl.
Na1iooal Lcque
MONTREAL EXPOS-Asrecd lo
terms with Ouie Can.eco, first buemln-

p.m.

Newlene) llllollu. IJO p.m
lndilftl 'll Phoelli~ 9 p.m.
Hou•on Ill Poniand, 10 p.m.

,

At Kissimmee, Fla., five Houston
pitchers, including starter Shane
Reynolds, combined on a two-hitter.
Derek Bell had two hits and drove
in a run for the Astros, who scored

~Tollon

Fol-.rd
OUerd
Guild
Foe wad

llloloh Otto~ IEMMm; John ltlmlon,louthem;
Natllan Gilderl, F.S. Hockilg; Zac:h Miller, Trtmble; Jervmlllh Ke1141r, Miller

!

ly Tbt Aaw:W"' Prell

p.m.
Lot Anada "'· Moatrnl 11 West

Ariz ..

Sclltlc 11 Qevcllnd, 7ol0 p.m.
Minneso&amp;~ • Milrni. 7 : ~ p.m.
Ortaodo 11 ~. I p.m.
MllwMIUe 11 Clticqo. BolO p.m.

~ w

I

three runs - one earned - on fi.;e - M'"arty
To~y .Castillo
. J'inzen,
.
.
hits .io.~~ inqi!!·~-·~~~..w~~~
Portugal.
. hit ess re 1e a er starter at entg~~
Whke Sos 9, '1\irlm 6
· ' y1elded the lone hit while walki'jl
At Suasota, Fla, Frank Thomas, two and striking out one.
1:
enjoying one of his best spring train- 1 Rangers 3, Red Sosl
•·
ing starts, had two doubles and two . At Port Charlotte, Fla., MBJ!k
RBis for Chicago.
: Brandenburg, competing for a spot"' ·
The l\vins had 15 hits, but strand- the Texas staff, stnK:k out four in tW.O
ed II runners. Rich Becker had two · scoreless innings against Boston. i
doubles and an RBI, and Todd Walk- · Tim Wakefield, two days afttr
er added two hits and drove in two ·after signing a new contract wiih
· Boston, allowed a run on ~.our hils
runs.
Cardloals S, PbiiQes 3
•with three strikeouts in three inning1•.
At Clearwater, ·Fta., relief ace
Jose Alberro got the save fqr
Dennis Eckersley- making his Car- Texas when Boston left the bases
dinals debut - gave up a two-run loaded in the ninth. All told, the Reil
homer to Todd Zeile.
Sox stranded 14.
'
Eckersley, obtained Feb. 13 from Athletl~ IO,,Giults 8
,
Oakland, won despite aiiQ~ing two
At Scottsdale, Ariz., Oakland
hits in his only inning of work ·marked the 1996 debut of sluggdr
because of the · Cardinals' two-out, :Mark McGwire by rallying for thrtje
four-run fifth.
iunearned runs in the ninth innillj!
Philadelphia's Darren Daulton, jagainst San Francisco closer Roil
trying to make the switch from catch- 1Beck.
.
.
,
er to left field, dropped a fly ball to j McGwtre, .":h.o skipped the A!s
tie the game. Tom Pagnozzi followed lint three exhib1bon games as a prewith an infield single.
;caution because of his ciionically bail
Brevet 7, Dodcers 3
·back, grounded into a double play ,ql
At West Palm Beach, Fla., Fred . lined a single to center in his two at
McGriff went 3-for-3 with two RBJs, . bats.
and John Smoltz pitched two score- . Cubs 8, Rockies 5
,
less innings.
· At Me6a, Ariz., Bobby Morris an~
Marquis Grissom singled twice ·Paul Faries hit two-run ·singles in th~
and scored two runs for the Braves, · eighth inning as Chicago rallied t~'
who had 12 hi.ts against five Los win.
•
Angeles pitchers.
With Colorado lihead 5-4, Rockiq'
Smoltz surrendered three hits, but pitcher Jake Viano got two out~:
kept the Dodgers off the ·board.. He . before al)owing a walk and a singlel;
was followed Chad Fox, who allowed . Reliever Curt Leskanic walked Ped,.;•
only two hits and one earned run in Valdes, loading the bases.
;i
three innings of work.
· · Cubs rookie Brooks Kieschnick:
Mets S, Tigers 4
:hit his second spring homer.
'
At Lakeland, Fla., New York's :Aqels S, Padres 0
.
Edgardo Alfonzo, Butch Huskey and i At Peoria, Ariz., Don Slaught:
Jay Payton all doubled and scored in :went 2-for-3 with a bases-loaded;
the eighth inning.
. double to lead California.
,
Tony Mitchell made it a one-run • Angels starter Chuck Finley wenl•
game wUh a three-run homer off • two innings in his first outing of tru;:
Steve Dixon in the Detroit eighth. But ~ spring, allowing two hits while strik::
Bob MacDonald pitched a hitless ing out one.
·:
ninth for the save.
Mark Eichhorn continued to make•
Starter Bobby Jones pitched three !a strong bid for a roster spot by strik' :
perfect innings for the Mets, and was jing out all three batters he faced in his :
the beneficiary of an 1 attack that ~ one inning of work for the Angels. .;
included four doubles among 14 hits. MeriDen 13, Brewers 7
.
Blue Jeys S, Pirates 0
At Chandler, Ariz., Greg Pirkl'~ :
At Dunedin, Fla., Carlos Delgado t~O-'run single j~ the first innin~ ;
homered for .ihe second straight day, 'sparked Seattle, which reached Mil·:
and four Toronto pitchers combined !waukee's Ben McDonald for six•
to one-hit Pittsburgh.
!runs.

Sportsl'nnlactl-

Chieaao Cubs u Saa F.rnncisco a1
Scooldlle, Ariz., l:OS p.m.
Milwa~ · VI. Colorado at Tuc10n,

' T1111617'• a.,
Detroit II TOIOIIO, 1 p.m.
I.A. Olfllten 11 New York. 7ol0 p.m.

l

Altroe 4, Reds 0

N , lr.

Thomu HMIIII
Hee.tli Annblullllr
Scott Nippert

1:

McDonald 49, Columbion~l9

Palm Beach. Fla., I :0-' p.m.
Minnc10ta vs. Toroato at Dunedin. Ra..
1:0!5 p.m.
N.Y. Yankee~ vs. Tc~as a1 Port Chnrlolle, F,la., I:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mecs (ss) vs. Hov.11on Dt K.iuimmee, Aa.. I:0!5 p.m.
.
Aoridl (It) vs. N.Y. Mels"(ss) at Pon
St. Lucie. Aa.. J·IOp.m.
PbUadelphia vs. Pittsburgh at Braden·
1011, Fla., I :0.5 p.m.
California Yl. ScMtlc 11 Peoria. Ariz.•
3:05p.m.

,Wuhinatoft 96, ~ouver 81

f

Trocwood-MidiiOII 67, Middletown 51
DIVISION Ill
Campbell Memotia168. t.isboo Ander·
1oft S9
W...n JFK 64, Conlloa16l
DIVISION IV

p.m.
Balrimore vs. St Louis 11 St. Peltl1·
btJ•I· Fla.. I oOS p.m.
Cleveland vs. ICanJu Cily .M Haines
Ciry, Fta., I:05 p.m.
Occroil VI. Cindrati • Plaal City, Fla.•

. Clliliut 52. Fairfield 46

•

Shaker Hu. 9t.lledf«d 74
lboma Wottllitti'On ·62, Mt. ·Yemon

On Monday, in a 6-3 loss to the
Montreal Expos, the Marlins forgot
what a strike call looks like. And it
was only the first inning.
Montreal 's .Moises Alou took a
called third strike from Kevin Brown
to end the jnning, but none of the
Marlins understood plate umpire Joe
West's sign.al. So they remained on
the field.
Tbe Florida dugout, thinking a ball
had been called, began yelling at
West.
"He said, 'Well, if they want to
stay out on the field, I'm going to Jet
them stay,'" Brown quoted West as
saying. "We're all out there in Ia-Ia
land not knowing what's gojng on."
. Before the game ended. however,
the Marlins did something right.
T)ley broke a sc;oreless streak of 24
innings with three runs - unearned
- in the ninth.
Carlos Perez and six other MOII·
treal pitchers combined on a six-hitter, and F.P. Santangelo had three
RBis in the game at Melbourne, Fla.
Perez, who struck out the first two
batten be faced , allowed no runs, one
hit and one walk in two innings.
Royall 6, lndlaas S
At Winter Haven, Fla., Scooter
Tucker - 0-for-20 in a brief trial with
Cleveland last year -finally got a hit
in an Indians game, and his bonier
proved decisive for Kansas City.
Thcker connected .in the seventh
inning off Steve Kline.
· Cleveland's defense contributed to
a four-run third. First baseman Julio
Franco and second basem1111 Carlos
Baerga made erron on consecutive .
batters. Tbe Indians have made nine
errors in four games.

to As·t ros

Erlo ..l

ChriiThompton

I :~

~plonoltlp

j

l4

1\attd•y's Gtmes
Atlanta v1. Florida (u) a1 Viera. Fla.,

t
V.. CorNnonweaJth ~. N.C.·Witm: iqton4l
• Metro Atlandc Athletic Conf'eren.ce

The Dally Sentinel• P8ge 5

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

�•

P ge I • The Dally Sa(dlnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

ratef~l . co11ple -.reun.ited with kind stranger after ·20'. years- Ann
Landers

Peaden: Remember "Jim

. •·

.:·:In St.' Cblrks"? He's tbe man who

,WJVte lookin1 for Bea McGraw, a
.,; w0111111 'be aad bis wife had met on a

.- lliaflltp Atluta. Bea bad given their
' ~wly •adopted daughter a $20 bill.
-1\ft« Jim's letter appeared, Bea
limite 10 me, and I printtd ber letter.
Sho said. she was making plans to
.t:ome to MiiSOilri and visit Jim and

hil tlmily in St. Clwdea. · ·
( I'm happy 10 say that Jim and
~ COilnecteCt, and here's what I
~* in lhe mail today:
Dear Alln Landers: Thank you so
much for the wonderful" experience
you llllde po~sible by printing our
letter. When I flflt WI'Oietoyou,.alll
wanttd 10 do was thank the woman
wl!o bad been so kind 10 us. With
only her name 10 go on, I hoped thai'
sbe or a friend 'might sec your col-

wrote you 10 RY she wu ~ to
liS. 1Wo local 1V
and
lhe St. Louis Post-Di~ c;overed
our reunion. We ex~haapd gifts.
slwed remembnnces, liid dinner
and-promised to stay in touch. ,
I un so stad I was able to share
witb Bea the joy that I feel having
adopted our little Jirl. Bea is nice
is she seemed when we fint met ber,
and she told us this wu the most
exciting month of her life.
1111\D·
..
If any of your readers are interThis succeed~ ~tter than I ested in forei~n ad~on &amp;om Ru~could ever have nnagtned. Bea, a s1a, I would hke to ,ecommend the
teacher in Frankfurt, Gennany, Small World Adoption Foundation
'beard from a multitude of friends all. in St. Louis. The address is: 1270
around the world, some of whom Fee Fee Rd., St. Louis, Mo. 63146.
she hadn't sccit in '20 years. She The agency has more adoptable cbil-

see

•tatio!l•

u

drcn OD its lilt than parents who can
tlke thimt. '
.
'
file.e 1iet your readers know that
ac11 of ·kindness dO count for sometbiq. They help JDRke this world a
bctier pllce. And so do you, Ann. ..
Jim, Ollll'lotte. and Valla Mielziner,
St.'Charlea, Mo.
• Dear" Jim, Charlotte and Villa:
That cbeerinJ yciu bear in the background is all those readers who were
hoping you aad Bea McGraw would
reunite. 'And you did •• in a~~ !lig
~ay, nove ~ories :OVith .hiP;JIY ~tngs, and this CC1111nly 11 ooe. And
now, let's .!lope Small World is
equipp;,d to handle the m~l it is
bound to get. P.S. Be aware that foreign adoption can be costly.

ind I don'I want 10 mike iny tro~~·
ble. What should be done~ -- Soutliem State Dilemma
.
Dear Dilemma: Two yell'S 1s a
long time to be "putting an estate in
order." It's time to aik Peter approximately when you eaa expec:t your
shaR of the estate. · ·'
Incidentally, you can le$ll &amp;om
the clerk of the county prOb!!te court
if your broiber has been filmg 111
inventory and accounting of tbe
estate. The law requires this.
•
.
.
.
Seiid 4111eftiOIIi·.tbAiili ~en,
cre.10n Syncllcate, 5777 W. Ceil·
tury Blvcl., Sulte.71lp(Los Angel.,
Calli. 90045

Dear Ann Lallders: I have a pl'Oblem ~·· been gnawing at me. and
I'm not sure how to handle it, so
writing to you.
My father, a s~K:&lt;:essful busine"·
man, passed away two years ago.
Mom is alive but-ailing. My father's
will stated that everytbin1 he bad
would be divided bCtwcen Mom and
bis ,children. My brother, ·:Peter,"
was named executor.
Peter is still working on getting
tbe estate in Order, but be refuses to
tell any o~ us what is happen.i~g•.H~
has a credit card'tbat the eslatelJays
for and-has been taking ~ome nice
trips, the last one to Hawaii, even
though Dad had no business there.
·Peter and 1always got a,Jong well,

I'm

. r-;u;:;;;;--,
.__......

.,.

.

·..:

"The Book of Vutues: ATreasuiy
ef Great Moral Slcrics" was reviewed
.;II)' Mrs. WendeD Hoover at tbe J:CCCnt ,
. · Meeting of tbe Middleport Literary
; · f;:lub held at the home of Mrs.
.; !Uchanl Owen.
. -. Mrs. HOover noted that the vol' ·ltme is riot one whicb one would sit
. ;:!!own and f'Cid straight through', but
· ' rather an iniiiUCtive ·anthology of
.ideaiJ thai cUi help develop characand be shad with the whole fam: ily.
,
:. ; William J. Bennett, f01met secre-

.ter

11ry of education and chairm!UI of the

National Endowment for the Humanities unc)er Pres. Ronald.R~. and
director fJf National l:&gt;rug. Control
under Pres. Oe.orge Busli' is the
author. He IJolds a degree in philosophy from Williams College, 11 doctorale in pPiitical philosophy frotp the
University of Texas, a law degree
from Harvard and is currently . codirector of Empower America, a distinguished fellow at the Heritage
Foundation and Senior 'editor of the
National Review mag!lzine..

.:HE:)Ip in choo·sing
{heart attack follow-up
!

Mrs. Hoover described·the structure of the warlc, ten sections on
selecttd virtues, or' 8t times· a vice
which is only a virtue' in 111verse.
They can be,read in.IA)' ordl;r. she
said, but are pre&amp;e!lted in this way:
'SC(f;-discipline. compassion, relipon·sibilll).j friendship, work, courage
(not tile same as fearlessness), perseverance, honesty, loyalty ·and faith.
The revjewet presented a choice of
readings which the editor had selected to illustrate bis list of virtues,
pc)ems, stories, fables, mythology,
'philosophy, drama, even fairy tales.

DR.OOTT
P:&amp;:TER

GOTT, M.D.

By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.

If she chooses to,avoid these pro. DEAR DR. OOIT: My wife cedures, her heart rhythm could be
recently suffered a heart attack and shocked back to normal with an elecwas hospitalized. In follo:w-up, her trical current or trcattd with drugs to
' canliologist gave her four choices Qf slow the pulse and make it more regBecause her canliologist
·an
,treatment: heart rhythm medication, ular.
in
these
mallet'S,
I
believe
that
expert
heart electroshock, angio~Jasty, or
However, these two options are
· by-pass surgery. At 73, she is reluc- not curative: The blockage remains your wife should follow his advice.
'iant to undergo any further surgical and will cause further problems in the · U be suggests angioplasty Or by-pass,
~ocedures and has opttd to .t ry the future. Such problems include addi- I urge ber to relent. The risks in a 73' llledication first. What is involved tiona! heart damage, angina or resis- year-old woman are.actually less than
.. "ith this?
tant i:anliac irregularities. In other they would be sometime in the future
~. DEAR READER: Patients who words, until the arteriosclerotic ·when she is older and her cardiac sit'IIUffer heart attacks bave arterioscle- obsttuctions have been addressed, sbe uation is more unstable.
In my experience, angioplasty (in
. rotic blockages in their coronary is at risk.
1fleries. These obstructions prevent
If your wife wishes only to take particular) is not especially hazotital ~utrients from-rcaching the car- medication, her cardiologist will ardous, even for an older person,
;~ac muscle, causing pain, heart dam- probably prescribe a combination of because it 'doesn '·I require swgery.
.:llae and electrical irregularities of the drugs, including nitroglycerine, beta- And the potential benefits are enor..lleartbeat.
blockers, calcium-channel blockers, mous.
To give you more infonnation, I
- ~ • Your wife apparently has an irreg- or a host of other medications specif- .
lilar cardiac rhythm as a consequen~ ically designed to . alter the pulse. am sending you 'a free copy of my
ber heart disorder. Ideally, this These stop'gap measures are not Health Report "Understsnding Heart
"~ld be corrected by angioplasty permanent: Sooner or later the block· Disease." Other readers who would
,tbeaking up the blockage with a bal- ages will enlarge ·and cause~tmore like a copy should send $2 plus a
'4bon) or by )!y-pass surgery (to re- symptoms -· at which point she will long, self-addressed, stamped enve.111pply the heart mu~le with ade- have to reconsider her decision notto (ope to P.O. Box 2017, Murray Hill
_..ue blood).
'"'have aagioplasty or by-pass surgery. Station, New York, NY IOJS6. Be
sure to mention the title,

«

These drew from myriads of authors
· and character's both real and Tmagi: nary. Mrs .. Hoover concluded ·by
characterizing-thi5 extensive collection as "what•is important and should
help us lift up "ur eyes."
The meeting Qpened with the club
collect and comments on the way
each member handled the recent
blizzard. For roll call mem~ gave
eomments·ori the ixlok. .
Mrs. Betsy Parsons hosted the
Valentine's Day. meeting at her home
· where the boQic, "Let Me Call You

;: JfiULING
"'

'Limestone, .
Gravel, Send,

:! rop
..~!!m ~lrt
6~l-..-~70
.,1

•

that Washington made significa~t
contributions to American , agriculture, in addition to his military and
patriotic contributions, and for that
his work · was recognized by FFA
members in ceremonies held during
the week. · •
·
Activities "tor the week included
election of new officers, special
recognition for teachers and staff, and
cooperativt: activities including recre-·

' ' The Coamiuttlty Calendar. is Officers to wear robes.
jublllhed • a free service to'· aonRUTLAND -· Rutland Youth
:froftt 1ruups wlshiq to aunounce
;.ue• ud lpCCial events. Tbe League baseball sign ups Tuesday, 7~tazhrlnot • 'creel to pi'OIIlOfe 9 p.m. and Satur:day, 4-6 p.m. at tbe
illel or lud nllen of any type. 'fire station.
. . ..are piialed u space permits
-.d canaot be guara~~teed to run a
POMEROY- •• Pomeroy PTO
meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m. at tbe. eleiipKHle •mber of days.
··"' .
mentary school.
'TUESDAY
. ; MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport
POMEROY -- FOE Auxiliary
Masonic Lodge, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. meeting Tuesday, 7:30p.m. Potluck,
7p.m.
:.. ·the temple.

.

.,

1 TUPPERS
PLAINS
-- The WEDNESDAY
·l
.
'
Orange Township trusteeS, 7:30p.m ..
GALLIPOLIS •· Educational sup'fucsday at_ the home of Pat!)' Call- port group for adults with chronic
lung disease, Wednesday at 2 p.m.,
f/lllay.
Holzer ,Medical Center's French 500
l
,:,, PAGEVILLE •• Scipio Township Room. Topic, "Use and Care of Res. IIUSteea, 6:30 p.m. at Pageville.
piratory Equipment."
.
CHESTER •• Chester Garden
.'
.
".. MIDl&gt;LEPORT •• Middleport Club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
b;ldge F.&amp;.AM, 7:30p.m. Middleport ·home of Mrs. Howanl Knight. Top)illasonic Temple, work in the MM ic, "Secrets Of Gardening:" For roll
call display an unusual garden tool.

_,

.

*'gree. .

. .

I

~

: POMEROY •• Pomeroy Chapter THUtulDAY
~6, Order of the Eastern Star, .7 :30
SYRACUSE -- Southern Local
·P,m. ·Tuesday II the Chester ~an. Building Committee meeting Thurs-

•

.

BENNE

FIIEIIITIIIATU

Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling
""" ,. ,.,. • ..me. to bllf:k It up
Serving 1.1. Ohio a Waet VIrginia .

TAll

..........

Toll Free 1-eoN7NII7

CLARK'S CAl CO.
a..-:

Harry • Donna Clark

•P'

,.. for dly ninn;
$1.00 _par p&amp;r80n to
"-roy a Mlddlnpo.t

503 Mill StrMt

--

'

an

Sports Funll
Scores Point •
Spreads and much
more.
1-eoo-ne-o1oo
Ext. 7830 $2.99 per
min. Musfbe -18 yrs
Touch-Tone Phone

; ......... httll
"
Silply al

1-900-656-2600 Ext,

3136,ut,.••
11 yrs., ........

sflalnloclled•mB
,...,. tluni Mlvn.

--

992-3954 or 985-3418

(619) 6451434

J. E. DIDDLE, OWNER .

CHEAPER

··----~

.p2.9:~~

-.

·

.

Dutributed by

JII·SrAJI WATER SYSRIU, INC.

614-742•2193

12 Rulland

Howard Excavatin

a board for
· 18111oni a dlaabled.
Room

Though words cannot convey .

Trucking.
UIINIItone
. Bulldozing and
, · Bnckhoe
Servlcee
Houee Slteeand
Utllltlee

Stille llcenlld.

The tender thoughts and thankfulneu ·

Ltlla Of TLC. Family

home lllmoaphent.

"·

RIIIINIItbieRIIIIJ

'

.tea &amp;042 or 742-1120

Special thanks to Ewing Funeral
Home, Dr, Hunter, coror'ler; Pomeroy
squad, Pallor Peter Trembley and .all

. Polly 01' Cllllt

·

New Fin Sa.
LYapPick
Sports httr1. .11t

SERVICE

'

HooiMI!epelr•

The flmlly of Amber WID Lohn ·

-

All Kinds of Forth

'KJ':c,~

Updated Every 11 Min.

lllmD.IIng

Siding. Aa,ILJI, Pdoe

1'-8CJ0.771-0100

Re•laMiale

~7123

IMunn·~aed
call W.Wfl' Nell'

992-3838

SUMMERIUIES
TAIINIIIG

~ ...."' dlrlct
manu.

"'"""AdclltloM

16 S..•lon• For

Gutter.
DoWMpout.

$25.00

Gutter Cleaning

~20.00

.., IJ.t11115 1114

FRE~·

and any metal •
. materials.

·

S/1MMTFN

31111 mQ.j&gt;CI,

87 Mill st.,
Middleport

· Live Psychics
·
1 on 1
1-900-255-0300

Call 992-3867

ext. 5488
$3.99 per min.

for Detlll..~~-

-$81.

Painting
FREE ESnMATES
94.2168

Phone: 114-11124417

""""* ,,.••

·Call 992-4025
~~a a.m.-a p.m.

.FOR A TOtAL OF
$7.00 P~R DAY.

Handrlclll

At B!g B~nd
Health a Fltneu

lfu1mat::es, batteries
YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN H~RE

4:30 to 10:00 P.M.
OlliiM: Pete a Diana

•

Pick-up diSCarded
w~hers, dryers,
hotwatenaf1k&amp;,

HOW8rd L. Wrtteeel

'12 SH•Jona For

Open 8:00 to 3:00

MU&amp;tbe 18yrs.
Touch- tone phone
(619) 645-8434

IUITM
.
•

...

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cotunumol

••

•NewHomn···

~:::;t~::f:~~

J

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,

..

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oCompltta

,.

A~411ng

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1

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Stop I Coniplre ·
FRE.E I!STIIIATES
4473
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llon.-8a10:f
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LINDA'S
PIIIIIIIIG

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........_.......-....

'ATTN:PI&gt;intPioaoanrtqcJ

'

AVON I All Aroao
Spoarw. 304-e75-1429.

•I

l'o1tal Positions. Permanent tdutima tor cterklaorter1. Full Berit~
flU . For exam, appllcalion !fd
tolary inlli call: 'ltl8-2114-t1138 "l'3810, 11om 10 6pm.
•

I Shlrlly

Able Avon Repreaentatida
needed. Earn money for Chrietmas bills at llotneiat -k. 1-&amp;C¥1-

team players. The McOonal._.s
Restaurant in Hend&amp;rsonJPomt

--~~~~---1

70

............., :

aa...... ..,,...

Yard Sale

Pleaaant, WV 1'81 inun~ato IIlii
ond part timo posjtions lor Ill

no ln-house
experience
is required
::]~~;.:::1 so
shifts.
_tralning
prpgram.
Competitive wages. Paid blr~ -

6

dar• oft. Free unllorma. AutornltF

21 Brooklldt Drive, Wetch
Sign&amp;, &amp;Tl'llrt.

rata increase in 90 days. Medir.IJ
benefits .,.ilable (c.naln rutrlitiona apply). II inlorOIIod, &amp;lOp~

-:-=-:-::--:-::-:---::--::--::-7':'-:-1 McDonald's ol Henderoon al!d
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In pick up an application.
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p, m.

PAIIIISiulG NlSSAN INC.
1127 MtudDcll An,

the i:fay before the ad is to run. Babysitter For 2 Children, Nott·
SUnday edition • 2:00 p.m. Friday. Smoker, No Teenagers, Flexitfte
Monday edllkln . 10:00 a.m. Sar- Hours, 81&lt;4~·3545.

l'lrbnbtaa.WV:ta!Ol

urday.

oO ~ou have room in your h~

Rum~age

8th, 8.00

Sale: .Friday, March

~ . II .

-3.00

P.ll. Grace

Uni18d Methodist CtlJn::h.

Pomeroy,_

Mklclle

rt

B:fm~' 8ho~te':t!n~a~!.nt

Parent and join our team. Free
training in your area, 2• hour
support. competitive reimbur~~: -

and tho opportunity to maMo
Want lo know more? Call A~
-:::-:-:--:-:::--:--:-:-=:-:=-:-( FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER 11
All Yard Sales Mu1r Be Paid In 1·800-835-5277.
·
:;.Advance. Deadline: t:gopm 1ne ::--::::-:-:-::-~:--::---:-:-:or
day belore th&amp;lld i1 tc run, Sun- Ea~y Workl Excellenr Payt ~~-­
day edition- 1:OOpm Friday, lion· oomblo Product&amp; at Homo. Clll
ctar edition 1D:DOa.m. Saturday.
Toll Froa t -BOD-•87-511!16 EX#.
313.
80
Public Sale
Home Typists, PC users needed .
and Auction
S•S.OOO lnrome potential. Call t
1!00·513-4343 En B-9368.
mom

po
&amp; VIcinity

a dillerenco in the lila ol a chilli.

.

Boggs Auction Service, 814·4&lt;46·

tmmediatt Open ing• Avaitab"
For Certified Nurse Aides. Cor\ipetiliva Wages. Difterantal Wf&amp;l
Experi,nce, Sign ,On Bonus
Available Equal Opportunity Employer. Contact The Assistant DIrector' 01 Nursing, Pinecrest
CaniBr, 170 Pinecrest Ori'le, G._
lipoli&amp;, Ohio 45631 614-•.ce -

1150 .
PUBLIC AUCTION

Ill CO. IICYCJ.III
Announces Customer Appreciation
Days during the Month of March
Do your part for our envlro11111111t. Bring ua your
alum, cane and otiMr ..-cycablaa and register to
win a handcrafted aolld .. walnut and c;ectar lined
blanket cheat valued at 1800 to be glvan away
March 30th. Trt. Co. Recyellng open 7 clltYI • - k
toaarveyou.
H Mon.-Frl; 8-3 Sat a _aun. Located comer of
St. Rt. 143 • 1, Pomeroy, 614-912-5114.

New At lq-.s lleetronfes

lladle-l llaeli Dealer
Your favorite artist
on Tape or CD
106 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport

The following used vehlclel wilt
be up lor sale by public auction10 :0Dam, Saturday, lhrch Ia,
1988 at lite port&lt;lng lot botldo tho
lloiga County Sho&lt;ilt'a ollice, Po-. 7112.,

care
•t'

moroy,Dnlo.

(2) 1880 Chevrolet fmpalas, o4

-·
"""""'Fard
m bid.4 door,
$800 minimum
(1) 1888
bid, $800

Job, Jobs $8.75 -$9.25 Ilk
EJisy Work, Flexibll Hours !local
Area, No Experience Nec:esaa"'

Job~

1-800-211 ·9218.

I I) 1985 Chovrolol lmp•la, 4
mlninllm
bid, $500II, minimum
(1) ·ta&amp;l
Ford Bronco
bid .SOD

Velidoa are liOid AS lSI
Tho ..hElls wlll Ill available lor
inspeclion Thursday and Frldlly
one
hour prtor 10 llO •le.

,..w

lonna: CASH N HAND.
Rick Pwtarson Auction ComJMinw.
full time auclloneer, complete
auction
service.
licensed

ne,Ohio

&amp; Well Vir~lnl•.
713-5185 0. -713-5447.

90

304·

Wlflted to Buy

992-2825
1111/tfn

Plllftll
Fraa Eatlmataa
35~-Exp.

R-.bleRatn

. DELUXE
Flnde,.. of hard to
find auto pert..

...............
..,,_

Pocneror. 0111o

J.D. Drilling Co111pany·
P.O. Box 587

IIIQIIDIHI1UIOI

FRU·ISTIMATES ·

,...,1 I ............

...
-

WOfk
(i'REE E811MAi'EJ)
YOU~ 111

,.
..._~~-...IIII!IIW . 1 '---~---...,

,,

"AN EOIW. OPPOR'T\JNOY
EIIPLOYER'

985-4198 _,-

· :=~====; ..--~~-:---'1
' ,ROllin IIS$1LL
l'OUNG'S . ·

STU...

.

PARKERSBURG

live

ROOFING
: NEW-REPAIR

IUiparmln• .
MUatbe11 ....

182-4.405
F6o;"'" 1!6~

Wor~

Something from the
honey's ·
girls 1-to-1
conversations
1-900-288-9155
ext. 3912. 18+
$3.99/min.
Procall Co.
. (602) 954-7420

·required.
Serv·U

Pro• .
DresHI -'·
·levi's ·

II

t1 Middleport

With gratitude our hearts are

ment Capacit~. Uaawa DegrH
Pntlerred.
'
I

Rewardl Lost: llale sd,.,,an HuaDark Gray ~nd Whito, Brown 982·6356 or 304-882·2645, Ind.
Rep.
.f
~~-~~
Free Eat/mates
lng Since lues t20th), Answers
ATIENTION highly motlvatlld
';;;;i;;;;;::;;;::;;:::;;;;;;;~;;,, To Mioha, Call614-&lt;lol&amp;-311~
ky

TOS, 111...,.1 Hardmtn, Iron, PH. ·
' PltaH calllloinSoft at 912""'72 or 1 -.oe 3313
to HI up yaur lrH wattr analytlt.
11WM!n

~

~~ n::.~od~~~~.,:~:

:'~.·a';~~~~~ Meigs Mine

Thll water treatment company COt'dlally Invites you to
participate In a .free, no obligation, comp&lt;ehenslve water
analyala. WE WILL TEST THE FOLLOWING:

.._,••••

-::-60~::-Lost--an-d~F::-OU-ncl-!192-8780.

Owner: Ronnie Jones

·Nisslin H.eadquarten
Lowes! Prices

32124 Happy HollOw t:ld.
Mlddlepot1, Ohio 45760
Oaooy &amp; Peggy Brlckles

ence In An Economic Dtvelop-

SUbm~ eo... Lenor And Reaume
Full aizo bod wtmanrou. double With Rolerencea By II arch u ,
1IMNI, To Exocutlw Oiloctar, Ohio
w~~n~m&gt;r. 304-e75-3734.
Valley Re~lonal Dovalopm~nl
1111e Beoglo, ,,._742·2532.
Corrimlnlon, 740 Second s""'·
Room 102, Port1mouth, OH
Small Dachohund, ~ood with 454162-401111,
el
children, 814·~~·2498 or 614·

cinnamon color, names Cinna~

(614) 367..()266

Port1161e
,.,.,.

Ext. 6Q9IT

Bachelor's !le~roe In Plonnl!.g

Public Or Bualneae Aclminlswa ~
lion Or Relared FieiGa Plus A
Minimum Of Three YHrt Experi·

e1•-ue 01111

20 Years Experience • Insured

SAWMILL

-"&lt;1'· - · n; --------

Free Puppie&amp;, Call Lonnio 0. SUe,

Cheshire, Oh

BATES

2115413 BASHAN 110.
llactn., Ohio 4Sn1
849-3013 Phone
1149-2011 FAX

H&amp;H

Fomalo Port Lab. &amp; Port Flo.-"· e monlhl old Pupio. Lovettble.
Smlr~ Good WICNidron. 814·441·
98118

814 982
- -em.
Found: 181 ollooyl in RuUand Elomentary ICilool porking lot, 614742-211186.
Loa~: lemala Golden Retriever.

Top, Trim, Removal
&amp; Stump Grinding

148-2512

WELDING &amp; fAIRICAnON
S20.00/HR.

t;,.

. 814 448 4482

:1 JONES' TREE SERVICE

UCINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
• ··cHINE sao•r, INC •
llllf lilA

Serv·U (1119) 645- 8434

Give Yourself The ·
Sjl()f1s Edge Sports
Entertainment Unell
1-900-ne.o1 oo

.

r--------------------.....,1· ·.

Req.

R~ulred
s.rv-u (e19l.645 8434

.~hania Twain keeping fans waiting

Sltver Bridge Plua

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alt.mlnum/Stainless • Tool Dressing • Ornamental
Steps -Stairs, RaiHngs, Pallo Fumtture, Fireplace
items, Planter hangers, Trellleea·&amp;lots ol other stuflll
"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
We will work within your budget
Ph. 773-9173
FAX n3-5861
108 Pomero Street
Maaon, WV

::==================i

· ·Um11tone, Sand, Gravel, Coal a Water

,. (llllimol

tho••

Aaba&amp;elle;a

2 G1rm1n Shephard pupplee.

WE OFFER GENERAL HAULING
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

For sympathy In sorrowing days,
For friendship's h.-ling t~uch

""'sa.....,..

Stpllc Tanke Cleaned &amp; Portable Tollata RentM!.
Dalty, -icly &amp; monthly rerital ratae.

,._ (IMJ 61J-16S1

. s-u

Glveewsy

112 Auotralllon Shepherd pup·
plea, 112 inll brood, ewka. ald.
304·875-41511 olltr 5:30pm, all

POMEROY, OHIO
Trllh Removal· Ccimmett:lll or Rnlldimtlal

'~

.. ptcfftl AntWit

~

40

· MODDN SAII!Aftll

I 'I 1111&amp; t ' atl

· rvuwle

For ell the klndnees you have shown
We thank you very m~ch

who sent flowers.

Middleport, Ohio

304-e7~152.

per min.
Must be 18yrs.
Touch
Phone
. Tone
.

We hold for you today, ·

•:t"'•

• (Special Price
Aluminum cans
fl'om March 1 thru 29)
.
Bring In mlnlmUIII of &amp;C) lba. of aluminum canlto
IW(Ilslll kir Bunn ~to be glwn away.
Drawing wiH be held 0.. MarCh 21th; ·

Dtlya: 141-1124 poc.J)
Nlghta: 1)82.2741

~nn-

441 lt11

·-~" MAILEY'S
RECYCLING CENTER "'11

.ltwtlng 8ull. ltllu feb,
218r. Cl11 na lpeall!

TRI.,STATi SEWER &amp;
DRAIN QEANING

.

I; 1TC

fWVU10212

•PalnUng

hi A......

ation, a pizza party, and development
of plans for a petling zoo to held late
this spring.
•
.
Members of the .Southern FFA
·chapter received the Gold Medal
Chapter awanl for the second consecutive year op the state Jcvel. The
chapter ranked 41st in the state, and
will now compete against all other
Gold Medal Chapters in the nation
for the national awards.

ter

'i""'

,.........

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

.
BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENT
and Helen Arnott, Racine, Irene semester.
He is a graduate of Southern High
Jason ~nd Caroline · Arnott Dente, Brooklyn N. Y., and
announce the birth of a daughter, Bai- Genevieve D'Agostine, Wayne, Pa. School, Racine .
Icy Morgan, Feb. 16, at Davis-ManDEAN'S LIST
HONOR ROLL
than Air Force Base Hospital, Thcson,
Mason G. Fisher, son of Mr. and
Ariz.
Mrs. Gordon Fisher of Syracuse, was
A11Jy Lea Ann Well of Reedsville
Grandparents itre Bill and·Stefanie named to Dean's List for first semes- was named to the fall semester dean's
Arnon, Syracuse, Dr. l&gt;eter Dente,
at Miami Universiiy, Oxford.
list at Bowling Green State UniversiBrooklyn N.Y.• and Elizabeth Dente,
Fisher was amorig the students at ty far ilchieving a 3.5 or better on a
Long Island! N. Y.
the university who achieved a '3.5 or 4.0 scale. She is a senior majoring in
Great-gran'd""""nts are ilill and bette - "
· 1
e for the business administration.
Winebrenner,
Syracuse;
Bill
r~~~~~r~--~~~~::!!!!__........r~~~:._·--e~po-l"1nl""""av_e~ra-g:__ _ _ _ __,l""""--------.....

;.i-'
. ~ --Community calendar---

F . . - . All equlp!MIIiln .tock
lor lmr sitU lhllalllliMI.
.

(11C) 182-s53S
('14i 182-2753

'

c.u 992-3967

"

NNI~Cclll~~~~~~~~-!-~..!!t~:,red Houelng

Stww&amp;lntlll
a
'ss.nb

---Society scrapbook---

Publlc.NOtlce
Public Notice
PUBLIC ~
Inter••• of ..Ja . bond•
Tha folto,.lng ' u..d outtlda of the ten·mlll
whlolae wm 1111 'up for 1111 collllltutlotlill tax limitation
by public euctlon... IC!:IN! lmpoeld by Section Z of
11-m., latunlaj, Meroh lth, Article XII of the
11M, 11 '"- puking• lot Conatltutlon of the State of
llMida
111111 County Ofllo, Till mUimum numlltr
day, 7 p.m. at Syracuse Elemen_llry 811artfr'athe
Ofllea• Pomeroy, of YMr&amp; clu!llll whiCh 1111
School. All district residents urged to Ohio.
bonde will run lo twenty·
anend.
z-t- ~ 1tnp11u thtM (23) /'~ra end the
4 dr. Min BkUIOO.
n II mIll
. n erage
1-1- Fonl4 Dr. Mlil. IIIII llldltlonll tax fill, OUIIIcll
'CHESTER
Chester
' of ... ten-IIIAI 11111118~ "
BasebalVSoftball Association first 1100
1·1- Chlviorllllllplla 4 pay IIMtlnlai'Mt.lheiiiOfl1111d
meeting of the 1996 season Thursday, Dr 11111. IIIII...,. .
to retire the eame,- ••
1·1814 Ford Bronco A certltlad by the co,lnty
6:30p.m. at the fire house. All parlid 8100 , '
eudllor, will be four
ents and coaches are welcome and Min.
VIIIIOIII -lolil AS Ill
zerD •(4.0) milia per .f.;J.i~; ·I
encouraged to attend.
The vehtOIII will be (.1.00) Df I~ valuetlan,
available , tor lnapaDtfoll which amount• ID forty
POMEROY -- Lenten Services, lhuNday, Friday and ane oenta (t.40) tor each ona
St. Paul Lutheran Church, 7:30p.m. .ball haur ptlor ID the Hll.
IJundNCI dollttra !*100.001 ol
I '!!'"!!!_" Cuh In IWod ·
tax
vlllllllon
Rev. Charles Neville, speaker. Spon- L II; 131 II, I;~
'"
' - thllil be aubmlttad
sored by Meigs Ministerial Assacia·In .!IOfllunetlon llwia:ilth, u
tion.
Public NOtice'
a elngla, prapo1Hlon, lhtl
POMEROY-- P9meroy Group of
N011CI OF WCTION
. eddHional Clu&amp;itlon: 111111
Ill ICiclltlonll levy ., .....
Alcoholics Anonymous, open disNolle• It hereby giVen be made for tha belllflt of
cussion, Thursday, 7 p.m., basemel't that pureuint to i 1111 Eaatem Local School
of Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
raiolutlon ldoptld by ... District outalclt of. the len. _ . of lclueatlon of lhi
. Ea•tern Local lohool mill limitation, lor tha
•
of I!IYflll tiMt 'l:oet
·SATIJRDAY
· Dtatrlct, CouiJIY of M•lt•.
pure hill of
POMEROY -- Burlingham Mod- . Ohio, on tha 20th d1y ofJ·alraearoom 110111t111 troin
DICM:ber, 1181, lhlre wiN
,
em Woodmen, potluck dinner, Sat- · b1
11111 t or 11ld .......
._.....
aubmltted to thi
urday, 6:30 p.m. at the hall. John · quallflld alactora of n~ dlatrlct, at ... 1'111 of on•
hiiK illlllor eaall .~ cloH.Lentes to speak' on estate pltinning aoho!ll dlatrlot ·. at Ill· : of
valllllton, 111oept 111at tn
and will&amp;.
election to be held .on till
yeara tn which tha
18th dey of llarolt,'1.... at ltata Baanll of Edueatlan,
.....- .,._ of votlnO
to lactlon
· RACINE -- Russell- Spencer and the
therein, the quaetlon of
of tha lleviNd
the Gospel Tones will be at the Fel- luulng " - ' ' of Hid bDird Code
.......
.............__. In - tum of
' raqul,.. .... dl.,._.
lowship churt1h, Racine, Saturday! 7 of - · - n-.
to lnetUH Ilia 1111 rail to
.1.t14.000 for lhiiiiii'JIOU . - . . . ..... thanof the aoqul1ltlon, hlllf milt, but not In • COIIIIrUallon,
of four m1111, until the
raoonllructlon' and ether purcll- price 1o paid, but
lmprove1111nt
and In no 0111 longer than
IICIUipmenl of bulkllnga and twenty-three (23) years. .
1tructurea, and tha
The Polll will bl optll
acCiullltlon of alt.. ,__ ·e:""
7:311
therelora or an amount "vn' ·... a.m. 10 " p:m.
·IICIUII to ..,., whlciiiVIr Ia on lllcl datliay 0n1er Of The
g_.,, and ci( lavytng
·
llcianll Ot,lcluollllon 01
ID pay the JPrlnolpel
The County otllelge,
.1- II. Frynt,_,, o.pt Dlr.
110
DINCII:r of Elutlilna

•

CIMtH

..

··llll•o.-.
•...WG.....

1••

·~
•RaGing

Chll.dr.n &amp; AcluH

'tot D!ttlill

•!Mir Hollleti

•Aelftf)dlllftO

'

Kick Boxing
Training
~t Big Bend
Health &amp; Fltneu

National FFA Week celebrated
The Racine Southern chapter of
the Future · Fanners , of America
recently celebrated National FFA
w~k with a full week of activities at
the school. •
.
The week Ois traditionally set aside
for observance beginning the Saturday before George Washington's
birthday, Feb. 22. and ending the following Saturday. It hils been noted

CIMIIDia ..... l R1

1··

DIY fill

and gripping details from the intermingled lives in the story were used
by Mrs. Ho.rton to keep suspense
alive l!ntil the surpri~, ending.
Bernice Carpenter reviewed "The
Glass Lake" by Maeve Binchey. The
author lives in Dublin and adds Ill)
aulf'entic Irish touch to the narrative.
According to the reviewer, the story
which is set in the small village of
Glass Lake, ill Dublin and in London, ,
revolves around Helen McMahon
and the unfortunate choices she
makes in her lo~e life.

~weetbeart" was reviewed by Pauline
Horton.
Mrs. Honon gave a dramatic presentation of this mystery novel by
Mary Higgins Clark. The reviewer
summ'arized the story by introducing
the many characters involved. 1]1e
plot centers .on a young prosecuting
attorney investigating the murder of
Susan Reardon whose body was
found"tovcrcd with sweetheart roses
and her husband falscly accused of
her death and unjustly imprisoned for
II years. Various political innuendos

(llml !llol»)

.WICKS

~-:~iddleport Literary Club r~v_iews _'Trea~_ury of Great M:oral Stories'
·· ~.

.. ·- ···
Sllni'S
COIRIUCTIOI
'

.

,

VIIIMIIMIMI

. UMIJ.41M

Racine, Oh. 45771
Jamee E. Diddle

Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrt,
Wt dig

bllemertta, put In HptiC

eytteme, lilY II"'•· unctereround born.
For F'" ..UINiie call949-2512

Wontod To Buy: Sand Stene,

r.:"~~1-~~ For La~

To Buy: Sllndtng TlmMr,
......·-·-·-·--..:•::•=•"'";.;;,·;.,. ',1.1.____...!!!!!!!~~~Jt,j~AI~!u!.~..!·~-::..JIArf MttHinl. 81a • me
-.f~~:_---~.=.
I'

..

�Pomeroy~ Middleport, Ohio

TUIIMy,,March 5, 1196

The Dally Sentinel• P8gl•t

·- :;;;~-------:-----=======:-:~=:::::===========~

. ~ AI.I.EY OO_P .
·" IF ~-

r=

I'!I!SI1M
'Tlotes£
!";.....

!

.~

NEA Cros.word Puzzle

8111DGI: -

lo4IGIHT

·IUIC. _ __...._

PHIU.IP

ALDER

. ACROSS
I "'eaten no

. 5-

; I PNI.

..........
,.,._

.
....... Pietstn.._..

41 Actrwe
~4.2 Cric1tM

.
••
•

:=·-- c::c...,._
1111

. ntlfltot.304-87S-_
111115 /IIIIo C-"'"
tow
__ Van,
5prjl.

-t.

Elfteloncr. _ , . . ._Dapoolt.

Pt.IIT SALE. Pl111bui'Gft C~llrtt
Palntltg,IIII/OII .. Fiat'NIII Paint
ttt .ttlgal., Somi-Giou Paint
lt2.881gal., Introductory prtor,
Ytty larat -lmtn11n " ' - ·
all utllltlol paid Including traon N- Slkkono Interior Wood
.and Finllll 2llll. off roeular
prlct, Dlfulto Whitt or Black
pick-up, foiOOimo.•· · - -Enam.t, (Sproy Canl Buy Ont
450
Fumlahld
Got Ont l'roo. W.INT PLUS 304Rooms
175--4014.

No,.... 30Ul'H182.

I

Wll~ A f)l 1\ I D

t&gt;p

I HAVIO &gt;1
f~ 1"11"1' C:;'\N STop
A cl-•C14,

1't1t'l -

180, WM&amp;ed To Do

RoOme lor
,.., • ., "'"""·
slll!na
11 1120omo. Galli! Hotot

.............

tjloi'tbli' cltttrq 101m. 1 tlmt or
regular·'•tvlce. Experienced~
Havt ""trancoo. For naua call
304-175'-t053 before Spm, ~·
87S-585&amp;ollor 5pm

lmprovtmtnta, 81 4·388·8&amp;g7

Chili! tift in mr - · uc. - -A&lt;¥
houri. 304-875-7315.

Goo-:PDrtobloSawmil,
don't
.....
tht
m11 · call
haul your 857
- • "'
JUII
304-875-\ ·
· • Get 'lour
·
GOLFERS:
Cluba RoSol I
d
N
l
grippo ow. aroo
oeton,
Very Raaoonabla Prieto. Allor
5:008,14'"'88432.
·
In Homo. Core for Elderly. We
apoclallzo In lllrhointe(l Cartgiving. 304-712-2544.
LovlriG' aitd Ltim11111 Btbralttlng,
done In my home, references

110

~i~~=~~~;;;;;n~~~~~~~~~~
410 Houees for Rent

uiu1111 ttuoo ''"""r.ozee o!
For lllo- 1887 Ford Bronco II, Y·
8 automotlc, •WD, 1.000 OiiP,
814-7.2-2357.

' EEK&amp;MEEK

•Q

....
•a

t983 Honda V-4·5 M.oona to,ooo

•A K J 5
• 7 6
.7 6 4

lookl Grootl Aaklng $2.500. 6140

ol198hlllc:llmak01MIIItgtl
to-"anrpr-ICt,
llmilltionOidltcrhl.,.llot,

'":;:.0":::

~,.,::..

olfgln. orany lntwntlon to
makoanyi!IJCtlpr"""""'",
Hmilldonolltlcrtnlirtlllou.•

,.

11111 1'181t .....,,.. not

et•-•••·

PEANUTS
Suzuki 50 Jr. Good Condition

$350 Firm 814-379-2858. Four
Milos Soulil Qn 325. :Ttw1 Houao.
Two _..,
875-127,5.

-.tltod

~ "7"14.,.. ..,

Go••-

D·_-....

::--:::::::-:::::::::-"=-

10,000
Oit 114-~J~~-2~14.

eo car~ IIIIo new. 304·

I 1liOU61-1T lliAT
PIRATES TAI16~T TilEIR
PARROTS TO TALK ..

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sa.. .
'89

ers

1892 Probe White 5 SpOocr, Air, 1987 Chation 20 f t Inboard Ma70,000 IIWaa. EIICOilent Condtlon, , tor, Mere Cruil8f Engt~. Garage
/laking 17,450, 814-441-1268.
Kop~ Wln,.,iztd RN&lt;~r. For RilH!fl
Sharp, Cloonl614·388 1111~8.
1803 Ford lluatang LX, 2 !IGor,
hatchbtok, very 1o10 mllta, 4 crL 199~ 201 Pro XL, 20' Struto,a
automatic, $200/mo. payment,
butl boat, 200 XPHP, 614 ·68~­
~7 or 814-849-2878.
8, 4·11112..111 .
IIIJID L.otna. Doalor ~I """"111 11n•ncing even If you. have bttn
turned down elsewhere. Upton

Equipment Uatd Caro. 304-4581088.

720 1luclca for Sale

- ~~,fS A PI(,
OF MY 51STt,
---- . POirOTtiY. wtiO I..OVfl TO PAN(f, i
ANr:&gt; T~IS ON~ 15 Of MY
•f

1893 Mirada 18 Ft. Opon Bow,
Eatro Convaa &amp; Covero, 4.3 V-p
liter $8,500, 814 4 48 IM1 .

1995 Pro 17 btu boat. 40hp.
17,250. 304-8115-31113.

•760

1878 GMC pickup, 8cyl ., 4apd. ,
oood cond., 11750. 304·875-

Auto

Pl!ns &amp;

....

While I was perusing the May 1979
issue of Bridge Magazine, I spotted today's deal. The four-heart conlract is :
relatively easy to make on paper be- ror1--r-cause you can
the bad diamond break. But
bie, only ded·
icated lechnicia s and inveterate
pessimisls would get home safely.
North's two spades was a Michaels
Cue-.Bid, showing at least 5-5 in hearts
and a minor.
After ruffing the spade-ace opening
by Luis campos
lead in the dummy , declarer drew
Ctllblily
c.,..,
CNIIICt ttom ~'ionl ~ t.mou~ peop.. •
Met~
trumps and played a diamond. When
Eech
i"' the ciptler...,. tot anolher. Toc:lly'l OW: P ....... W
West discarded , probably South
cursed under his breath. Shortly
'·
ZVSIIDU
thereafter he conceded one down. He
JDSJDSD
'PFLSLBLS
didn't have the dummy entries left to '
' '
establish and cash the long diamond.
DSL
RYTUR
VK
C E
R V L E,
DWW
The right line is to draw only two
. rounds of trumps ending in band be·
F L S • '
WfUIIYU
JLFTUII
GY
J L
fore leading a diamond toward t,he
dummy. If both opponenls follow, draw
J.
ZVFUEVU .
,
the last trump and reverllo diamonds,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'm no dllterent from anybody else wilh two anma.
winning at least 11 tricks. Yet when
two regs. and forty-two hundred hits.·- Pete Rose.
".
West discards on \he first round of diamonds (It doesn't help blm to ruff), win
with dummy's queen and exit with a
low diamond from the dummy.
TII.U tAllY
Suppose the defenders play three
PUZZLII
rounds of clubs. Ruff lhe last in the
dummy, trump a low diamo11d with the
• heart king, lead your last heart to
dummy's queen and claim, dummy's
· diamonds being good.
•·,
Tbe friend who showed me this deal
offered a small bribe to say that he had
played it like that. But it wasn't nearly
sufficient for me to compromise my
'
journalistic ethic. When I asked whe
had played the contract, he.poinled to
VILAR
someone more than twice my size, so
3
I have left him anonymous.

2~57,

1971 Ford Tri-IIJit 19 FL Alum.
!ltd. Pllonoi:.et+~ ~~..... .;.,
1979 l'nternatlonlil Dump TJUt*,
Cat Diesel, I' bed, hydraulic

t••-

blakaa.814-H2..
1983 S-10 ~&gt;4, 4tpd, gtiod V8
onolno, good bodr. long bod,
11 I ,OOOml., 12,800. 304-875-

3882.

.

lldlalora. noor matt, etc.

D &amp; R ~to. Riplor, WV.

3933 or t-100-273-8329.

790

.

t885 F-250, V-8, auto, g&lt;oat

..

New gas tanks, on• tbn

-

'

r-

·campers ;.

11\1-,T':l NOr /1\Y ~ !

Motor Homes

lo.JAA.T~~ 7 ~T
'1t)t) f!tJAlfJioW,,IJJ) ?'

1988 Winnebago La Sharo motor
home, 21h. sleeps 4, air, awni~,

wotlt dar•. 81•·742-3020 evon-

110,500. 304-882·2373

t89t Chevy ·C-1500, V-8 automatic, 85,000 mHes, sharp,

18500, 814.eo2·4111 .
11194 Joop Orand Ch•okoo Lim--·~
-~
iiOif, L
-. 814-4411· 7-.
1984 S-10 E&gt;lendtd Cab, 18,000
miles, 4 Cjl., 5 •P.Ged. 814-8853917.

t 985 GMC t 500 4l4 Loaded,
13,000 Mill, I!Jcoiiont Condition,
8,14-388-8521..
.
2 Chevy Trucka, 1874, 1178 814·.
-3243 Alter 5 P.M.
'

730 Vlna &amp; 4-WDI

.

i:l

,.$',l

THE BORN LOSER

~-372·

ahape, no rust, 81•· 902· 33&amp;•

lnga &amp;WMittnda.

POI-ICA"·r:&gt;OT ANP
''3A(~IIII' ·" · JILL.!

....

i!

A ·fLAT Tlltf.

••

r-

...

MD r'tl\ ~T too ! HIS PLI&lt;C I~
M ~DOI-.:!111

II

11\E.. :&gt;Tl1EET !

1~

I.

'

-LM¥OM-9a

•

•

., .
·:

l?tQWittr 37 ft.l
dual Olldo outa, IUIIy l!.&lt;IUiPPid. PI;
1884 Fleetwood

tlo

door~,

1

10x15 patiO room, (on

llitel. unclorfllnnod, ltoiiO!t build·
Int. 128,500. Roya( Oai(Reaorr.
~-882-2373
. •
.:

IXl
, tiEAN.

SE RVICE S

Home
. . lmprovementl
BASEMENT
WATEfiPROOFING

~T

HEV, IF

'iOU

I'tl GOtNG

A PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

6

0 1-11\.VE.

YOU'RE
" •PEE~
GOINC:,
TUwtt; I
TO HAVE Wo'Hl' 'Ttl
!(•TUTOR fWCt SORE

810

·ee Ford Branco II .ax.a, Eddie
Bauer. automatic, all pawer, tilt'

.

.'

1990 Travel Masuir Class C 27
Fl. Long, Air, Generator, 6 New
,Tires, ·ei'ceUent Condition, .Inside
-&amp;Out, 814·446-1211, II No Ani

Sovlnrs You 'II
In the
Closs! fled Set:t ion.

THEIR

5TUFF 1.

lifetime guaranteeo
ond crulae, call 814-982-8485 at- Uncor;wtitlanal
Local references furnished . Call
torBpm.
(814) 446·087,0 Or (6t~) 2371
'118 Dodge D250 C - n ¥On, D•BI Rogora Watorp&lt;opflng. Es, ·
tablilhtd 1875.
lour captain chalra. electr'c rear
bod, PW, POL, cru~C"e, dll whool,.
PS, PB,•am/111) 111100 tolltRt,

0

•

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

SCIIAM--I.ETS ANSWERS

· Alli&gt;ITION•f HEY !(NO.I
,

Deputy - Lathe - Crook • Neuron • CARPET
1work with a fellow who has a very negative attitude.
1think he would complain about the pattern in a magie
CARPET.

ITUESDAY

under 70,000 mlltl, exctfttnt

condition, seooo, ctll814·742·
2.Z0-4pm

1Hll Ford 8&lt;0n&lt;!l as;oj~o· Mllta,
A·t Shape, 110,500, 814·3877758.

'

'

_....

-111811 5-10 Blutr -- . E1Hilont
Concfllon 18500 814-245-5512 Of I ,.......
814lM5 51'12
·
11180 Oodgo Ram van 9·250,
72,000 Mllaa, 18,000, Can Bo
Soon At: Gt•lpoll• Dally Tribune. ·Para Home lmpreye~t:reRta- ·
'825 Third llvonue, llalllpollo dellng, roollng,1tlai!ill&lt;cali ,e14882_.583or81~'7315.1' ,-.

:"Oitlo.:::-:-;:-::--:::c:;:-:--:::-:"-:-':-:111111 Ford E..... Silor141t4, air,

crulae, powr windoW• &amp; door
locka. tun rool, cltan I niol, It 4-2481 afttr 5pnJ.

';! "' "

·,

,,

'

own qy. Pisces, troet you!SIIIt to a birth- wilh tho addition of the right
day gift. Send tor your -"'ro-Graph pre- VIRGO (Aug. 23·8ep4. 22)

. ASTRO·ORAPR

Ptdo Docko, CA&lt;jlqrll, Siding,
FrH EltinteiH, Qllll' Stoyt, 814·
24!ii578- '
•'

BERNICE ' '
BEDEOSOL

dictiona for the year ahead by mailing $2
and SIISE to Astro-Graph, c/o this newapaper, P .O. Box 1758, Mwray Hill
Station, New YO&lt;k. NY 10156. Make sure
to alate jOUI' z&lt;Uitc sign.
·
ARIEB (Marcil :i1-Aptll 11) Your judgtnenl will be k - titan usualloday, so
try not to IIIICOnd-guasa your. decisions.
even the ones mada hastily or under
pNSIUIII.

t884 J•p Chtrok• ·Sport '4

Door, 30.000 Milia. Gnat ~~

fl4·4~1-

IMO

"·

••

North Eaat
2•
Paso
Pass • Pass

••••

II

--:=~ IISTflr Jll..t,IAN f1XIftl6

,.

~tlldltY;· Mardt 6, 1988
~
\
,
In the yN.i aheed, your ability to make
lriendl wltlt ~ from all ..tiel ol flfe
will prove a marva lou a a11et. These
asaoc:ialiona will be enduring and con·

IIIIIICI!w.
. '.,..CO ,,.,

t

Weol
t•
Pass

CELEBRITY CIPHER
T ....

Ba'ii!Mr and trailer. 17', cov ·
inboardtoutboar~ . 128 np.

1\

.

•

i

~E CAN'T DO
TWO THIN65
AT ONCE ..

61~2-3132.

Excollont Condition,
71115, 814-112-:1075.

'

3·S

'(OU KNOW, LIKE,
•PIECES OF E161-1T!
WAST, V'SCIJRW
SCIJM!"

·....

84,000

'i '

~~--

••oo.

II·

,f

1 Cctamlle

"?!

eo-..

•

-

4 Seed-'na
5 Sgt., e.g.
8 CryiiiiRna

'

·-Oft

•' • '

occounl
condlllon
111 Darlcall
58 Old IQe
21 111111 1111nnce 57 llexicltn
23 Woodin tub
money
24 TlllnlfiCM'Iatlon 56 EJtgle
co.
58 Achaa
27
Owr
""""
21 Mention
eo Tloompaon
Olwllc
32 Overly
81 Shrewd
clecorlled
34 Genue olanta
DOWN
38 Wllconlln
1 Tldetypa
2 Cry of lllln
37 Raapacjable
38 Bronte ,..oint 3 God oflove-

By Phillip Alder

plato Tree Cart. Buckel Truck
-9YICCIIII
3 Btdrooma, Weaeal StrH~ flo- Rtlrlgtrator /lrnmana Sldt By
Service -10 ftRtach, Stump Remeror, WID, 1350/Mo. Dopoalt, Side Microwave, Color T.V.,'
moval, Fr•• Eatlmateol Inwhlclllaln-tlonofthtlaw.
5tH22-D284.
Wuh•. Drror, VCR.II4-258au&lt;anco. 2• Hr. Emorgenc:y Sltv• Our lledtra are hellliy
1238.
20
lie
4
ice -Call And Savel Nti Traa Too
lnlormtd tho! .. tt 1 lfll
Mob Horntl
.;;;;;;;;.._~------Big Or Too Smolll BidWell, Ohio.
- I n tNs no 1, _
fOr Rent
VIRA FURNITURE
814·31811!1~1. 814-3117-7010.
• ...
a -·"'
etoH48-IIt58
n...,...
14&gt;70 all electric, S2101mo. +udll·
Ou~ Hou- F""'"'" And
Qualified, experienced, CN/11
opportunity-.
ties, Galllpollo Ferrr. 304·175anc:at.Clntt.tOolllaOn
HHA. obit to caro !Dr the elderlr ~~~~~;~~~~~q 4081.
CUh AndCortyl RENT-2-owN
2 112 Vaal Old M•re Green
in their home. pleue call 814· 1
::::::::--::-:--::-::-:--:-::-:~::--:::::::
And u.r-111ao lila-.
Brcko, 112 Ouarttr Hor... teoo,
882;~8.
320 ......lie Hofr1N
2bedroom trailer in counry. S2751
Ftoo
_ Dtllvor)i Within 2511ilft.
814-38UI84.
Tear
dawn
&amp;
remavt
hauat
wt
· IIIUV
mo., water pold, + deposit. 304·
SANDIE'S hto opening for your
for Sale
87S.510t .
Whirlpool waahtr &amp; dryer, largo oalt throughout. D - - -ldATHENS UVESTOC~ SALES
clild. Plarrcom, melfa, anacko.
;::----:---:-----:-:--:-~7 copaclty, 4moo old, tsoo . 304· ed far dtbrla •• no cast Nat r•
aponaible for accidtnta. •700 . Spoclll Faoder Coli Sole: Satur·
All houri, mr heme, C - . 814- 1972 2 Btdroom, Storage, W..h· Nlco two bedroom mobile heme in 875-7453.
dar. March 9th, 1 P.ll. All Con304-!175-511110.
9115-3408.
or/Dryer, Vtrr Good Condition, M~r\ 814-882·5858.
alonmonta Welcome, Trucking
...
Wooden
Twin
Size
Bed
With
.
sun Valley Nuroerr School. l OI¥Ow P 81 4-441-t440.
Rtnttll montlt N. 1071 2bod- llourno Sot, 2Yoar Old, Good TUXEDO RENTAL SPECIAL, Available, 814·582·2322, 114·
pl•c• order. by M•ratl 27, Slvt -.:1531.
Chlklcoro M-F 1om-5:30pm Aoot 1978 14•70 Schultz 1878 t2i21 noom. 1300/mo. • tsoo depoalt.
$15.814--711.
15'11,, for ua~'ltlme thl1 , ..,.
2-~. l'c'ljiig Seho~l A~=~~urlne Vomco Add Room Manr E•traal =liii4-;;...;78,;;511~RE~NT.;,;.':'":':-=:--::~= 20
·
....__
Charolala Bulla For Salt. PurA\INT PLUS
~:
Summer. 9 Oor• PI'
lllnl- E•cellont Condition, Price Ro· Two and thrH bedroom mobllt 5
...,..,. ••ov
ebred, Polled, -'"d Regiattred
mum 814-4411-3857.
duc~l8 • e 803
,_...,_
S
~ h 441.
homoa, at~rdno 11 $240·$300,
""""'
Ulod R-40 Ditch Witch Tronchlr Bred For Colvlrtt Eaao. 814-3711With Backhoo lind Duoa Dleaol 2544, 814-448.0711. '
Babrlltting In my homo, lft&gt;lblo 1'11 91 14 , 78 Breezewood II, 3 .-i, Wllttr and trlah loduded,
Engine, 8tol-e94-7842.
tlouts. Re..onable rates, have Bedroom, 2 Baths, All Electric, 81 4-112-2187·
Cra11bred 1111r1 and htlftrl,
refe~entes. Close ta schDQ;II. Cenlral Air, Oec;k, A Very Well :WI::::th:-:o-:ptfon:::-::ID:-:::bu-:r:-·:-14::1::70::-,-::tltraa::=
Whlto 5800 llotal Datoctor Utod 500 1D 7001bt. 30~ 11115 3319.
304-17S.27114.
Buill And Detailed Homo, Mull bedroom, two btlh, l3501mo ..
2 Timet 1 Yaar Old, Coot: 1500.
Throo trr old Nubian Blly
Will do hliuotkfOplng, anyone in- Soo To Apprtclalll $17,000 81 ~570.
Soil: 1325. 114-448-81170. .·
' Ia A-Graclo I pricO&lt;I"on ·lnapoc·
1
ttreai•.9' call 8)4-882-8875 lor ' ='1 =~0:: Callet4- ;=:430;:.:,;;:Fi:;l,;.;rml;;...":lor~':Ren:-o-:l­
lion. 304-518-2382.
WOLFF
TANNING
BEDS
appoinlrlllnt ............
Ten athcmt
lWo ·black and white faced holl14&gt;70, 2bed· 11 110"• hcllt ~--,..
Buy Dtf£CT ond SAVEl
Will p;rnt your Homo/Bualnou, 1994 Fleetwood
_.,
+
6
-~
ers; one h\!_eford heifer; ont
3
3
Ccmmart:iall
Homo
unltl
~
•·.ooldo' J r, out. E';il!tlencod. ll- room, 2bafl, Oiling flnl. 1kr· ~~~2.- Crob C - Rd. 304black Arigus.,ull and one her•
"
lighlo, di-ahor, tlcu.lt. ro~lg- "''"'W'"'·
$11111.00.
c;anllcfl Senior IaCOunt. Free .,.tor, dryer, all el.ctrtc, cia, unford bull; cow and call; 8t4-882low monthly paymontl.
Hdmo~. Conta&lt;!l Ron, .Ohio Val· dorplnning, garden tub, Zuopan
a ..- . .
7.SS.
FREE color calliog. .
lo~ Paill.tirtt. Homo '304·812· Tnollor Park. PoyoH $22,285.00.
· ""~'"!"'fOr
,. •
Call TODAY t-t00-842-1305.
3803
304-773-e138 5-8pm. .
, _..
530
Anti&amp;Ues
"
550 . Building
Will paint your home/ buaineaa 1885 Skyline, down pormont and 1 and 2 btdlllorn IPiflmln.. fur·
640 Hay &amp; Grain
lnaldo or OUL Eotptrltnct. 1 - . tak.e over payment•. 814-012· nlohld and unlurnlohld, oocuri!y Bur or oell. Rlvtrjno Antlqu..,
Supplies
Ienior dlacount. free estimatft. 31111 .
depooll requ~ed. no ptto, •••· 1124 E. Main SI/H1: on Fh. 124,
Alpha And Orchtrd Grau IIIJod
11112-2211.
. Pomeroy. Houra : M.T.W. 10:00 Block, brick, aewor plpoa, wlrid- 814-448-1104, ~-87$-1143.
Ohio Vallar Pol~tlng, 30•·812a.m. ID 8:110 p.m., Sunday 1:00 1o owa, llntolo. au:. Claude Winltrs.
. 3809 (Rcll~
Ooubtewide Repo'a, No Money
'Rio Grandt, OH Call 114-245· Ntvtr wet, round bales haJ for
Down For CUIN1Y Buyerl 304-7311- 1 and 2 bedroomo, downtown 8:00 p.m.814-8112-25211. .
.... low rent. lurnlahed, aome
Would Ulto To Do Summer Bl!br· 7285.
oalo. 304-882·2077.
5121 .
uiNdto lndudtd. 304475-2053 or StO · Miscellaneous
llltint In GtiHpoHo Aln. II
Metal Roolirtt And Siding Gal· Round Bataa For Solo 120 A
Ilia-. ColetUII oees
Merchandise
Limited Olftrl 1881 doubl-ldt, :3044
~:;~.:..;.1;,;110~·:--"":':"-:--:--:-vanizad, Gllvalume And Painted, Bill. 814318 81156.
9b~ 2btth, lt788 down, S27151 1 Btdroom Near Holztr'l Super
Fa_,- Buit Car Trailer 1800; 814-245-Stll3.
FIIIMI C: II\L
month. Fret dtllvorr &amp; utup. Nlco, UIII!Mo. · Pluo Utllltloo, 18'
Square balai, 11cond cunlng
t 5" Mag. Whlela Fit Ford
Onlr ·t t Oakwood Homll, Nitro Loooo IDopooil Required, 814· Four
orchard
gra11 hay; tar corn for
5flO
Pets
for
Sale·
Plt:ltup$100,114-3117-7512.
ttlo; 81~2-31153.
wv.304-7115-5185.
~··~8~285~7~Alplno Tnocloor Ski Moc:lllnt With Gnoom Shop ·Pot Grooming. Foe· Tobacco Plants lor uie. Taking
N... t 4110, 2 or ~- &lt;lrllr 2bdrm. apll., ~0111 eltctrlc.' IP· Cornpultr
Onlr Uatd Few Time• turl~g Hyd&lt;o B•th. Julio Webb.
moko 2 pormen11 1D , _ ln. No pllancoo lumllhod, laundrr room
ordera for Flo&amp;tbtd Tobacco
1125:
Rtd
Tubular Futon Bunk Coil 814-448-0231 .
permo
. nil aller 4rHII. 304· 7115- logiHtioo, clooo to ochool In IOWn.
Plantl. Call Donor Otwhurol 304INOI'ICEI
Btd.
lWin
On
Top,
Futon
COuch
Applicatlono available at Vllla~o On Bo11om Foide Out Tb Full Slzo e Ratt Terrier Puppies, 8 Weeki 8115-3954 "'!_, 7pm- IOpm.
OiflO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 55118
Bonk Ropoo. Onlr 4 loft 51111 G'"" AP11. 1148 or call 114·88 · Bod. Bluo Futon Culhlon Includ- Old. ISO, 814-448--{!821.
tocommtndl that rou do bull· noaa wllll poopla rou knoW, and In_,.,.,. 304-7115-7181.
:::37:-'-:'·..:EO
__H_.-:::::::::-;::::::;:;=-:::::- ed. Paid 14110 Soil 1185; ilurar African pygmr hedgt~. exotic
NOT 111 IOrtjl money through tho
-..m,
ponldy lurnlthod, uii- EltrCIIO Bike With Spttdomolor n- PI~ 110. :104-875-3882 anyTRANSPORTATION
mall until rou hi.YI inY81tfgated Prlce Bulttrl Now 14&gt;70, 2 or itiaa included, af11111e or doubio I Odomotor, 110, 814-245-5148.
limo.
tht ollarlng.
3bf. Only sees down, • · e -. occupancr. S.curi!y dopoalt roBaby btd, awing, stroller, Clr AKC Engliih Springe&lt; Spaniel All
Froe dellvory &amp; aotup. Only at &lt;~o~irad.304-773-80011.
710 Autollor Sale .
~~~~ High chair. :IO+lll'S-4548.
Oakwood Homee, Nitro WV. 304·
Shell &amp; Worniod 1200, Call Ariel
7115-1!815.
· BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Bluo Couch &amp; Chair, Good Condi- 5 P.M. 814-258·8381, (Potrlcil '118 Thundorblnl SC. two doer, 3.8
PRICES liT JIIC~SON
Roll Plouo Call If Sdll lnttrotl· llt&lt;o, V-8. olito model turbo, PS.
Cllol Klng'a Flnoll SIYirtt Solon, Schult FacJ&lt;lrr Robato: Recelvo BUDGET
ESTATES, 52 Wutwood Drlvo tion, 814-441-Diee.
tdl.
PB, AC, 5 ·speed, power uats
s..kine au- Por-. e.co~­ It ,500 Robato With Anr Now ~om 1244 to 1315. Wllk 1o lhop
••nt.&amp;.oCAtlon, Very Good Buai- Schult Home Ordtrtd Befort a mov111. Call 814-•48-2568. Boola Br Redwlno. Chlppowa, A~C Reglllerod BoJOr Pupa, and lockt, "Gteat C~r; SI500
.. 814·882·7478 or 814-841·
Ton~ lama. Guarantied Lowtlt
~ Anrl""*· 114-3117-Dtl12.
March 20, 1888. SinGle Or Multi E&lt;~o~~l Houolr)ll Opportuni1J.
1200 Tails Docked, 814-258- ntll
2878.
.
Priolo At Shco Colo, Galllpollo.
Sootlon.
Flinch
Cl!y
HorMt,
Inc.
8128.
Tanl.ng Sed Busin••• Far Salt,
Countrr Sldo A!Wtmonll, Nlco 2 Car Trallor Heovr DulY 2 Aaloo,
11188 Ply. Fury Ill 2 Door. HTIP.
loCa*\111 FI-t Hair &amp; Tanning Golipdia,OH 814-4411-11340.
A~C &lt;OQi-od Chlnllt Shorpoi,
1450.080814-448-4318.
Solon, .Callllnylimo. 814-~87·
- · AC, WID, W.tor, Sow- With Brakea, 1575, . 81 4·4411- 2
black
famole
pupa,
large
doge
If Garabge Included, I3501Mo . .3103.
ocn;.r. •;-. ;
a1ao. 8t...-2t28.
1978 Morcurr Grand Marquia,
Oopooit Rl&lt;lollrad. 51~22-.
10 Tracta Of Land,· S Acres +
excellent condition, $500, call
Choat
trpo
troozor.
304-875f-H AL fSTA fE
18.100 Each, 1850 Down, 1100 For Ltue: 2 Bedroomo, UnlurAKC Rogiatored, Show Ouality 81•·1192·2843.
IIIII Cocklt 'Spaniel Pufipy,
Per Month, Harrloon Townahlp, niahod Aporunont In Galllpollo, 12711.
Gallla Co., TraU•rs Welcame, Central Heat lAir, Kitchen ApGood Bloodline, E•eollom Mark- 1978 Buick Conturr. Good Condl'
~lao larger Tracta With land pllancea, Noor Schcoltl I Shoplnos. Bladt /White &amp; Tan In ~. tion,
72l Fourth Avenue,
Contract~tl 88113182.
Dolt Of lllrtlt 111311115. Houotll&gt;m· Aptrtnont 108, GallipoliL
1
.,._.7174.
~ • ~;!;~~~~~:= lton. 814-378-2728.
Building lit'" Witlt road.frcmooe. ping,
Furnlohtd 1 llodn&gt;om /lportrntnt,
t978 Pontiac G11nd Pri&gt; St ,200,
back of New HI:Ytn, rural water, Socond Avonuo. Galllpolla. Up- concrote &amp; Plaollc Soptlc Tonka, t Ogal tank aet up ·apeclalo. flail 814-378-8105.
and flnancinQ availllble. ~-~- llllir1, Utllltloo Paid. No Ptll. Rol· 300 Thru 2,000, Gallon• Ron Tank &amp; Pot Shop, 2413 Jockoon
28E.
Ave. Palnl Plea .. nt, 30.a·875- 1882 lluatane 5.0 H.O., nlco In- '
....... 11.....-szl
' .
EYana En11fpri-. Jackton, OH 2083.
.
lido 6 out, garoee kopt, OWnor
aerator. near Furnlohld 2 llportmont, 1-100-!137. - .
Slitllr
Sqonl304-87~158t
can flnanco with Acro11 From Park, AC, No Petl, Craftaman Tools. Excellent Con1
Roforoneoo, Dapoalt, 1350/llo., Clition. tO" 3 HP Haavr DulY Ta- 1'-'~~.,~~.r·u• puppy., faWn color: ,7 1883 Crown Ylctoral, 33,000 ml
811 448 1235.814-4411-0577.
-1300; 5 11r JoiiWf -Planwith popora. 304-875- on Rtbullt Engine, Good •Tirtl.
~~~· pood, S1500.00 814;..48·
Furnlohtd 2 Room a I Bath, • 1t25. 12' T"" Spoad t til HP
Oownalairo, Ulllltlta Furnlahed, Bandn 1225,lt4-44fi--IS1a.
Roglltorod Aulllrallan Shophor~a
Cloon, No Poll, Rtltrtnct, 0. Dlaner araa. 5 dora. 4 hotol . to Wtikl Old, · vacclnattd. 11183 f'llntlac Firtblrd, now ~rat,
polit Roqulrod, 81.--4*-1518.
nlahta, uu anyllme. Pold 1310, Wormod, Out Of Good Worklrig bltttrr: oohault,, lo' mileage,
Dog, l100, 8t4-44t-t7te. .
runa good, good ahapo, p~cnt
Furnllhod Efftcltncr All U~lltleo oo1ltOO. 301 ~ 8131 ·
814-742-2848.
Pold. Shira Bolli, lt451Mo., 818 Electric Hoaphal' Bode, For Sola
I MH.1 S UPPLII S
t085 Buick Somtraot Whitt, 2
Second A""nuo, Gtftipolla, et 4· Or Rtnt1 11"-'711-2720, AFTER 1
ue 3015.
P.M.
,, I •Vl ~' l OCK
Door, Loaded, Low Milia On R•
bullt Engine~: 11.400. 814-Eiactrlc WMtichalro IScoolllro,
441-0211. _
IUood, Scootor IWhoolchalr
,
~lho, Stal,..,.y Elhatoro, Lift 110 Farm Equipment
18111
Civyalor Le Baron, .1oo1t1 &amp;
Chalro, Bowman·• Homocaro,
'BI G.M.C. 2 112 ton ilnglo ole 814-448-7211.
good.l2,000. 104-812-:1412.
.
.
5 &amp; 2 opd . 22'
1-1 0 IIIIZir Grtr Will!
I IIYtii!OCk

44o

==:;river
of 1 people

The bribe
was insufficient

PtCKENSFURNITURE

odv-lllfor"""-

41

Opening lead: • A

Do It 'l'burHII 1 s.v. On -~-·pot
&amp; Vlnrt F - COYOtlno. llollohon
CorPI1I Rt 7 N, 814-4411-7-.
GOO_D USED APPLIA,NCES
Nlco claan 2 bedroom, In Pomor- Wllhtrl, drrera, rtfriQeratora,
oy, ~· ront 01 with option 11 11neoa. Skagea Appllancto, 7_8
bu•, HUD accepted, , 300 Pit Vlno Stroot, Call 814-448-7388,
' with dopoli~ no poll, 114- ~--·~-~-~~-·~·-~""':'"""':'"~~~
month
898-7244.
Hu- w1ng-11tet&lt; dlalr, litot
Small Houoo On Raccoon Crttk - - 175. Full .o lu broaa bod WI
Bear Run Rood, Shelter Houao, homt.IO. 304-875-1053.
Boat Dock. large Oeck1, Ovtr-

Annatrorog

411 L8dlae

Dealer: West

Frtahlr docorattd, now cerpo~
paint, otc. 2bedrcom, f.ull btaomont. Roforoncoa. Dopoalt. No
Pill~· "75-51""
~
~.

looltina c-.132s.tlo. Plua 0.
1101111 No 1'1111. 814·258-8112.

....

Vulnerable: Both

ahar&amp;pm.

M nlli -It -tltlolflln
thltl n o - l a 1Ubjoc11D
tho Ftdtlll Fa~ Houllng llct

•Jt0984
•At0952
SOUTH
.• 10 6 53

llppllancaa: Goods
riecondltloned
Wltht11. Drytrt, Rangt~, Rlfl'l·
onotoro, 10 Day Guarantool
Fronch City Maytao.
7115

••

7 2·

•K J 3

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...............

·

EAST
•Q 7

•A K J 9 8 4 2

Milea New Tirel, Battery Runs,

441.01511.

a

WEST

Motorcycles

New Ove&lt;haul 13,000 814 ·3888117.

ritL Ono aummor wtdlling gown.
304-475-5188.
.

17
111 BaaiHind-gllllc 11111ca

•Qt0963
•AKQ532

1173 Harley Oavidaon Spor11ter

Prom dreaata, one gr. .n, tWo
white. one black. and ecceaao-

=~:,.

NORTH

·

814-1140-2481 ohor Bprn.

740

...

nclldon.

4 bedroom. newly roinodolod, ~---:::-~-------tonco yard, wid furnlahed , 14501 COunry Furnltura. 304-tl'S-A20.
mo. p;ua utilities. 114-982·811e ~:.=:-:...~~~~~n~ WV.

...- . .. 4 - - -.
Profeasional·Tr.. Service, Com-

lCl-1', loaded,

1.11 IH i iMJIJI'•I

...

contoeiS..OrBII .

a.-

.

siaaplrtt room1 Willi COoking.
llloo trailer apace on river. All
hook-upa. Call allOt ._,00 p.m..
304-17MIIt.- wv.

Brotheri Construction &amp; Home

Foundadonl,
Room Ill!.
Elecurcal.
Plumblno.David,
concrett
~~~.
AtmOdollriO.
814~JRagorlt.....al78.
Gonltll iialnlllnance, Pointing,
Yard Worlt Wlndowa Waahed
Guiiora Clnnod llof1t Havllno.
· ~=:i~.Rnldontlal, SttvO:

Ford F-1 ~ ••4
18 2110 mu...

'
Prom drtaa. lang black ve1vet,
otl--ldor, WII'Orli ""'" .......
alzo 10·12. 1100. 304·t75!2314

With Olflta·
Plaut, Colt

12=
13
14 Dabllnlttltla
15 01 Ctvlet'a

.

aalllnll ., Str1ve to be

flexible and hojMfUI regaiding loday'a
~nta. Evarylhlnfl ~ .work
out wen lor you In tile long r_un if you
ma1re the"*'-~ ellott. Do-1104 fill In your

,.;

TAURUS (Aptll 20-llay 20) Today, you
ciul ... olljeCiivel flllt.appear to'be
too Iough 'fpr others even lo 'l lttempl.
H o -.- you lnUSt be ltlghly_moiiYated
\o IUOCMd.. · I
,• , .
OIIIINI (ll8y t1.JuM 281 Spur-of-the- • deleltlPtr- can yield the moat
., fun .-.11 excitet)lenttodtly. ~eep a flexible '
achedule lhat will allow you to make
quick chltngla.
,
CANCER (June 21..July 221 A unique
opportunity ~ dewlop tqilay wltlt help
from ln-lawa Ot- relatives . Thi8 could be
· more~ then you lhlnk. ' ·
LEQ (Jutr 2'·Auti. 22) Yotl can lind
1111ng11t 1n ..-aiOdly. The poealbillly
ot ldvanclng your inlertlllt! c;ould double

ally .
A Sluggish

financial Involvement you ' ve nursed

might taka a poeitive tum today. This liabiity might Yi!tld desirable retums now .
UBRA (Sept 2~. 23) You will hove a
propensity today lo do things In a style
that tr1enda and peers will find appealing.
Your methode will be noted and imitated.
SCORPIO (Oc1. 24-Nov. 221 Try nol lo
ignore lhe strong hunches or Intuitive
feelings you getloday, especially ~ they
are ol a poailive nalure. Act on lham as
promptty II pollible.
IAOITTA~ (Nov. 23-0ec:. 21) Todjty
you willlmprela people who meel you tor
the llrat titne. H eomeone now takes a
shine to you, do everything you can lo

·'

"

.. w.

.
,

"

' .

~===·

CA
• 22........ 111 A stroke
of luck will
you to fatten your purse
today. Keep your eyea open because lhe
oppoi1Unlliaa n111y be po
in unique

ways-.

_,1«1

AQUARIUI (Jan. 20.Feb. Ill Information rtcalvld today from wrlnen or
spoken IIOUIOM car\ enhance your lallh
and pltiiOICpllica! bollela. u.. lhia advice
to 1118111~,., your 11*11-

.

, &gt;

.

•

...

�.

•

.

:, . 10. The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, March 5, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Minnie Pearl, Country Com.ed;ian, Dead at 83
.

By JIM PATTERSON
Auocl8ted Pre11 Wrtter
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
Minnie Pearl, the country comedian
known worldwide for her shrill
"Howdyyyyy!" and wide-brimmed
straw hat with its dangling $1.98
price tag, is dead at age 83.
Miss Pearl died Monda)'._ night at
Columbia Centennial Medical Center
after a week of unconsciousness following a Feb. 25 stroke. Another
stroke in 1991 had ended her performing career and left her partially .
paralyzed.
Her loud, cheerful "Howdyyyyy! .
I'm just so proud to be here!" and her
straw hat, toothy grin and calico and gingham dresses were her trademarks on more than a half century on ·
the Grand Ole Opry counll'y music

MINNIE PEARL

show 1111d 20 yean on the syndicated
TV show "Hee Haw." ·
.
. "There's a lot of tears in the nation
tonight and certainly quite a few in
Grinder's Switch," said Jerry Stroble,
manager of the Grand Ole Opry.
Miss Pearl laced her jokes with
references to "Grinder's Switclt,'' a
railroad switching station near her
hometown of Cenierville, 50 miles
southwest of Nashville.
Miss Pearl also sang and played
the piano but was best known for her
humor, which focused on a longstanding search for a "feller." A typical quip: "Kissing a feller with a
beard is like a picnic. You don't mind
going through a little brush to get
there."

Her jokes were self-depreciating
and sometimes a bit risque for fami-

.

~ -

.

.

ly entertainment. One of her favorites
was about being accosted by a robber:
"I said, 'But I haven't gof any
money,' so he frisked me and said,
'Are you sure you Jin'tgotany money?' I said, 'No str, but if you'U do
that again I'll write you a check,"'
"Minnie Pearl" was a happy,
hopeless character created from a
composite of several women she had
known early in her life.
·
In coniJ'ast to her stage role, Miss
Pearl. whose real name was Sarah
Ophelia Ca.nnon, was gracious, cultured and sensitive. She married
Henry Cannon, her manager. in 1947
and the couple lived next door to the
Tennessee governor's mansion in
Nashville. They had no children.
"For decades, Minnie was an

J

example to millions with her positive..sclf-deprecatina clean hu!Jior that
made us laugh and stood the test of
time 1" Gov. Don Sundquist said.
"Tho entertainment industry has lost
a greit talent. The world has lost a
great friend."
'l lle youngest of five girls, Miss
· Pearl studied drama in college, and
later became an elegant community .
leader and tireloss worker for charity in Nashville.
She was elected to the Country
Music Hall of Fame in 1975 and was
voted Country Music Woman of the
Year in 1966 by the Col!nlry Music
Association.
She was diagnosed with cancer in
1985 and underwent a double mastectomy. She recovered and continued to perform and do volunteer work

' the Americ.,. Cancer Society.
with
In 1987,.Miss Pearl received the
American Cancer Society's Courage
Award; in 1992, she was among 13
recipients of ll Natiailal Medal !&gt;f Art.
Looking back on her long cireer,
she said in 1989, "R's like wedding
anniversaries -it $CCIIIS fORver and
it seems like no time at all. It seems
;hat I've a] ways been on the ()pry and
that I've always been Minnie Pearl. "
She wa5 the only female mem~.r
of the Grand Ole Opry when. she
joined in 1940. At lhe time, the weekly live radio show was the premier
showcase for country music talent.
"I never did care too much about:
comedians, but she was one of the
funniest women r ve ever known ,"
said "Jumping" Bill Carlisle, a friend
and fellow performer on lhe Opry for
over four decades.

Network gives training Returning bears to wild in winter
Birthday
in Southeast Ohio
makes for fewer un
returns , observed

•
~ · Through networkin" resources
Alld sharing training, the Southeast
O:hio Training Network (SOTN)
helps to provide quality affoidable
training to a vJiriety of social service
asencies in the southeast Ohio region,
iticluding mental health organizatioos, schools, and vocational agencies.
· More than 50 organizations make
up the network which collaborates to
plan and execute training for its personnel, making .a wider variety of
p-aining available to each agency and
saving time and moiley.
'"The idea behind the organization
HI simple," said Dr. Larry Jageman,
to-chair of SOTN and an Ohio Uni'versity faculty member. "We meet
each month to talk about what kind
i)f training is needed in our various
organizations. Based on these discussions and our annual training
needs survey, we make sure that
·needed training is offered."
. ·; When an important topic is not
addressed by the existing training,

SOTN initiates a new workshop or ;
course.
·
'
"It's amazing how much time ~nd~
how many resources can be saved
when we plan training together," :
said Jageman. "Through SOTN, it.
becomes possible for our members to
get the training they need without
duplicating each other's efforts."
SOTN publicizes each training
session ·in a quarterly training calendar which provides a description of
each workshop, the audience the
workshop is appropriate for, and registration information.
The diverse membership ofSOTN
includes such organizations as Athens
County Children Services, Southeast
Psychiatric Hospital, C0tv1PEER,
Gallipolis Developmental Center,
Athens County Schools, and Holzer
Medical Center, as well as County
Boards of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities from
Athens, Gallia, Meigs, Fairfield,
Hocking. Vinton, Pickaway, Perry,
Scioto, Belmont, and Jackson counties.

Sorority
honors
queen
.
.. .. Members of Ohio Eta Phi Chap-

.Jer of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority recent·
:IY met at the Stowaway in Gallipolis
f9r a dinner honoring Valentine

Queen Cindy Ftcemyer. ,
· , Facemyer represented the group in
the 1996 International Valentine
Queen contest and was named ~ one
of 88 women to the royal court of
Beta Sigma Phi by &lt;:elebrity judge,
George Brett.
· Becky Edwards· presented Mrs.
Facemyer with a single yellow rose
and a box of valentine candy.
During the business meeting there
was a discussion about fair gates, and
purchase of a brick from the
Chamber of Commerce. Others
attending the dinner were Tammy
Bachner, Mary Butcher, Sandy
Butcher, Paige Cleek, Cheryl Facemyer, Juli~Hubbard, Karin Johnson,
B~tsy Jones, Theresa Kennedy, Mary
Leach and Whitney Don, Debbie

me

CINDY FACEMYER.
Lowery, Sue Simpson. and Becky
Triplett.-

.Ex-tobacco lobbyist
·tried to 'undo damage'
By DESDA MOSS
USA TODAY
· Victor Crawford, a fonner tobacco industry lobbyist who became an
outspoken anti-smoking activist after
bCiog stricken with throat cancer, was
praised Monday for devoting his last
years to preventing others from
smoking.
, .
· Craw(oro, who began smoking at
13,' died Saturday. He waS 63. Crawford, of Chevy Chase, Md., will be
hllnore" at a memorial service Mandty.
·
• ••Through his efforts to educate
.young people, Victor Crawford
pioved it i~ never ~.oo late to do :-"hat
ybu know ts nght. Pres1dent Chnton
said in a statement.
. Clinton gave Crawford the chance
·iQ tell his story to a national audience
Aus. 12 as part of lhe president's
~~ly radio broadcast. C,rawford
denounced ads that he said were
ilrned at luring the young into smok•
.· ~g;IAs tobacco kills off people like
•

J

me, they need kids like you to replace
me," he said at the time. "It's too late
for me, but it's not too late for you."
Crawford's story also was featured
on CBS's "60 Minutes."
Linda Hay Crawford said her busband felt "tremendous remorse"
about his rille in promoting smoking
as a lobbyist for the Tobacco Institute,
the IJ'ade association for cigarette
manufacturers. "He realized that it
was wrong, that you don't .market
death," she said Monday. "So he
tonk all of the talents and skills ·he
had and U$ed the!1l in reverse, to get
out the anti-smoking message."
A-native of Richmond, Va.. Crawford became a lawyer and was elected to Maryland's House of Delegates
in 1966: He was appointed to the state
•Senate m 1969 and served lhere unttl
1983.
Then Crawford went to work as a
tobacco Industry lobb~1st. He once
boasted that he was patd as much as
$200 an hour to buttonhole old colleagues and persuade them to kill or
water down anti-smoking bills.

By JEFF BARNARD
Aaaocllled Preu Wr._,

GRANTS
PASS,
Ore. (AP) - Pop quiz:
When is the best time
to release an orphaned
bear cub in the wild to
prevent
unhappy
returns?
a) In the summer,
when there are plenty
of berries to eat.
·. b) In the winter,
when there is nothing
to eat.
Answer: b) . In lhe
winter.
"The idea is o.nce
they are released, lhey
will hibernate, and
when they wake up it
will have been a good
four to six months
since they have seen a
human,'' said John
Thiebes. regional biologist for the ·oregon
Department of Fish and
Wildlife.
Back when bears
were released in the
summer, the results
were awful.
"They would immediate! y go down and
find rural homes, raid
the garbage cans and
try to find forage,"
Thiebes said.
In four years of
releasing hears in the
winter, Thiebes has
seen only one flunk
and get shot by a homeowner for raiding
garbage.
Thiebes oversaw the
release this winter of
four bear cubs raised
by Wildlife linages, a
·wildlife rehabilitation
center.
EARLY RELEASE • John Thlebes, ~eglonal blologlat for the Oregon
From a strictly Department of Flah and Wildlife, lege a black beer for release thll winter
financial viewpotnt, ll rether than this aummer.
.
doesn't make much
· and regional wildlife biologist Jeff Rohlman wrote
sense to spend the time and money to hand-raise about their 20· years of research in the book "Shadow
orphaned cubs.
in the Forest, Idaho's Black Bear."
Unlike grizzlies, which are endangered in the lower
The old way was to release the cubs in the spring or
48 states, black bears are plentiful. When they lose . ·summer and hope fo( a good berry· crop to sustain
their fear of humans and develop a taste for garbage them while they learned to survive, said Rohlman. It
picnics, they become dangerous nuisances.
was more expensive that way. Bears in captivity gen, The cubs are so darned cute, and so many people erally don't _hibernate, so you have to feed them all are happy to donate the time and money to care for winter. And there is no break in their association with
them, that there is really no alternative but to free the humans.
ones that can survive in the - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - In 1986, ii occurred to
wild, according to Dave
Unlike grizzlies, which are endangered· Beecham and Rohlman to
Siddon, founder of Wildlife In the lower 411 sr.tes, black ""-r• are plen· take advantage of bears • natImages.
.
tlful. When they lose their fear o( humans ural instinct to dig a den and
Over' the past 22 years. and develop a taste for (lllfbsge picnics, hi1JI,mate through the winWildlife Images has turned they become dangerous nulunces.
ter.
loose 56 bears.
They tranquilized the bears
Even after releasing
anftaid them in abandoned
these four bears, Siddon is still caring for 14, includ- dens dug by .other bears into hillsides or the bases of
· ing Alaskan brown bears, black bears, a grizzly and stumps, hoping that when lhe drug wore off they
Asian sun bears, all of whicH haven't been released for · would stay in the den until spring. Most did.
one reason or another.
Since then, Rohlman and Beecham have learnedThe four were all orphans, said Sidden. One was that if they stop feeding the hears a week or so before
found starving outside a small town. Another was release, they will get lethargic and be more likely to
seized from a pet store trying to sell it for $1,200. A den up.
third was confiscated from a' private menagerie. The
The key to success is finding a place where the
fourth was rescued from being sent to a "canned- bears won't run into humans for about a week while
hunt" ranch, where it would have been turned loose they learn to live in the wild.'
for a hunter to kill.
Rohlman doosn't believe thcl bears forget about
Siddon got the idea of releasing bears in the winter humans during their winter sleep. "I think lhey find ·
from John Beecham, head of bear and cougar research that a wild life is better than a captive life, and they
1
for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game. Beecham Jose their interest in people," Rohlman said.

.

Finan¢i~l
aid delay has students,
colleges in limbo
.' . .
•.
•, I •

(id :rboAY

•

· : The U.S. Department of Educatipc\'# rltnning weeks behind in proCiuina financial aid applications for
!OQP!)O collese ~tudents, a proble!"
, ~ eot.ald lcav.e muy students tn
ti!ftll!l•ll!eY decide where to go to

·~··

·
• .
· ~ tinlina i• tn)ublesome: Many
.f~~ colleP,S ,send out,finlitcial
; ~· jiiiiD {how much they'll give in
, ~ l,l'lllllltid wot:li-study) atound
· llllt J,tln:ll or eerly April. n.litionIIYJICbool• tel May 1·11 the dead·
. • CW I&amp;Ude;IIJ to ckieide which
. . . . lltli,'D ....._~·Jim~·
i 1 ' t MU-.1,fininclalaid din~Cfi&gt;r,
• (JIIllct IIIII' Oruvenity.
_
·

•

But colleges can 't.make an offer until
lhey get results of the Free Applica·
lion forF~ Student Aid formwhich uses standlfll formulas to
detenniqe how much the family and
student ShoUld kick in.
. "We're biting our fingernails
' every day:" says Mager. .
.
EdUCIIIOD Secretary Richard ~·ley
decided Mo~y ~'II "'nd a lotte~ to
collegea 11J8jelbng ne~l strategtes,
, i~cludiqg cJe!a~ing ·~ May .I deadlme. for ~plta,.AbOut 3SO schools,
moW)' pnvlle, use a.separate financill lid form, and some educators
feat ~~ will get a jJDDp on IIUICtina !be bell ~ts. . ·
.
.: The Bckteatt'lll Dcpartrnent's Eltz·

abeth Hicks says the federal government 'shutdowns and bad wealher
meant a loss of 21 working days for
conll'actors processing the forms.
FUI'IhCr. there were problems with
new data entry technologies, she
says.
·
·

All Meigs County high school
jupiors and seniors are invited to submit an entry in lhe National Right to
Life Oratory contest to he held March
19 at the Gallia County Library.
Contestants are to research, write
. and present an original pro-life
speech on abortion, infanticide, or .
euthanasia. The contestants should
use up-to-date, factual infqrmation on
their selected topic_.
·
For complete contest rules and
applications, students may contact
!iaith Hayman, 992-3893 or Martie
Short, 985-3835.
The contest is being sponsored by
the Meigs County Chapter of Right
to Life. Contest enll'y deadline is
March 12.
• Any girl can be Jlomorous," said
Hedy Lamur, the slllr of 1949's
Salluon and IHiilall. "All you have
to do is stand lliU llld look ltllpid."

We Give Mat•re
Drivers, Ho•e
OW.•slnd
Mobile Ho•e
• Own•• Special
Savings.
Our 8\lltlstlcs ahow thai mature
drivers and home owners h!lve
fewer and less cosHy losses than
other age groups. So H's only fair
to charge you less for your
Insurance: Insure yoor home and
car with us and 8ave even more
with our speclal mufti-policy
discounts.

Pick 3:
296
Pick 4:
8414
Buckeye 5:
6-18..28-3o-34

eliminated
by Ball State
Sports, Page 4

Vol. 46, N0.216
2 Sectlona, 12 , . _

of

618 EAST M.AIN ST., POMEROY
OPEN MON.-FRI. 9-6; SAT. 9-6

Hicks says the conll'actors have
gone to round-the-clock schedules to
catch up.
'

~ moet
i

--ilcn. .

992-8674

Freezing 111ln tonight,
Iowa In the 20s. Thul'lday,
anow, hlgha In 20s.

35Mllll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 6, 1996

A Gennett Co.

-.p.per

.Dole in 'clean sweep' Tuesday
Buchanan .concedes defeat, but he, Forbes will stay in race
By MIKE FEINSILBER
Aaaoclated Prell Writer
. Bob Dole is wrapping himself in
ll nominee's mantle, wearing his 8-0
Republican primary triumphs as a
cloak of inevitability. His chief nemesis, Pat Buchanan, conceded today
lhat Dole probably has the GOP nomination wrapped up, but promised to
carry his message across the counter
anyway.
Publisher Steve Forbes also
remained in the ·race, looking for
Thursday's battle in New York state
for 93 delegates to stop the Dole
bandwagon.
: Both Buchanan and Forbes were ·
Severely wounded by Dole's clean
~weep of Tuesday's eight primaries.
· Buchanan was coy about whether
he would support Dole under all cir¢umstances, avoiding answering lhe

question directly.
He told one interviewer today
that Dole's nomination "appears
inevitable," but told another, "I still
think there's a very, very iong shot
that Senator Dole could stumble badly."
TwO' less l)ueatening Dole opponents, former Tennessee Gov. Lamar
Alexander and Indiana Sen. Dick
Lugar, finding no solace in Thesday's
results, prepared to leave the race
today.
"It's over," Republican pollster
Bob Teeter said, surveying Dole's
sweep. Many party leaders agreed.
Even though he acknowledged
that Dole looks like the nominee,
Buchanan continued his sharp
attacks. "Bob Dole has no ideas," he '
said and charged that Dole won
"ugly." He r.plled Dole's campaign

· "hollow, an empty vessel."
He said he would support the
. Republican ticket but many of his
supporters probably would not.
"They certainly would not, as of
this moment, given the character of
lhe campaign Senator Dole has conducted with the ·attacks and the
extremist nonsense, all the rest of it,"
he said.
In a second interview, however,
Buchanan was less certain that he
would not boltto a third party if Dole
is nominated.
"I'm not saying I'm ruling anything like that in .... " be hedged. "I'm
not saying what I'm going to do at all.
I'm going to the Republican convenlion. I've always supported the nominee."
Buchanan recalled recent history:
Ross Perot's independent bid in 1992

•which won 19 percent of the nati()n:al vote, and, many observers think,
assured President Clinton's election.
"There's a huge broad mass of
middle America that's unrepresented
... My view is these people are not
going to go unrepresented forever,' '
he said.
Perot this year is forming a third
party, but hasn't said who its nominee
might be. He and Buchanan see eye1
to-eye in their opposition to the
North Atlantic Free Trade Agreemen~
which Buchanan blames for much of
the economy's troubles.
Publishing heir Forbes, the other
troublesome rival for Dole, said he is
in the race "for the duration."
With the prize seemingly within
grasp at last, Dole kept his emotions
in close check at a Washington rally.
. Continued on page 3

CLEAN SWEEP • GOP prealdential hopeful Sen. Bob Dote of
Kansas and wife Elizabeth auend a rally In Washington Tuesday
night after winning ell eight primaries and seizing an overwhelming lead in the Republican presidential race. (AP)

Chances for flepublican tax cuts fading Chester Courthouse
WASHINGTON (AP) - The campaign. Republicans believe such
Odds are fading that Republicans will · a veto would hurt him in the eyes of
jilin tax cuts· this year for investors voters hungry for a balanced budget
and families with kids year, leaving and l9wer taxes..
one of the GOP's top priorities mostOn another budget front, Republi·
lyasaweaponforembarrassingPres- cans planned to begin committee
ident Clinton.
action in the House and Senate today
Republican House and Senate on bills financing the departments of
'ieader$ said Tuesday that they prob- Interior, Health and Human Services
ably would not attach tax cuts to and other agencies for the rest of lisl)pcoming must-pass legislation cal 1996.
extending the government's bonow·
The measures would prevent a
ing authority. They decided the two new shutdown after March 'IS for the
would send a politically contradicto- dozens of agencies whose 1996 budry message of redllcing taxes while gets have been s!ftlled.du!: t~ battling
simultaneously raising the aovem- between Clinto~ Jllld RepUblicans.
ment's borrowing.
Each chamber's bill would provide
''Not exactly a smart thing to do," . _m_any programs with loss money than
Hoose Whip Tom DeLay, R-Texas, · Clinton wants, including for hiring
told reporters.
police officers, helping seniors pay
That likely relegates tax cuts to a utility bills and environmental propackage of savings from benefit pro- tection.
grams like Medicaid and welfare latThe bills dangle extra funds er this year. Clinton, who vetoed a $3.5 billion more in the House, $4.7
GOP budget-balancing bill containing billion more in the Senate- if the
similar items last fall, would he like- two sides cao shake hands on cuts
ly to do so again amid his re-election elsewhere in the budget. The White

House wants $8 billion more and have focused on a $500.per c!lild tax
credit for many families, a reduction
opposes the GOP legislation.
Ointon and lawmakers face anoth- in the capital gains tax rate paid on
er deadline, too. The government's profits from property sales, and othability to borrow money eKpires er breaks for businesses. Clinton has
around ,March 20, and the adminis- sought a more modest package.
In the Senate, where tax-cut sentration says. that failing to extend it
will prompt a first-ever federal . timent has been secondary to deficit
default. Republican leaders seeking to · reduction, Budget Committee Chairavoid a politically damaging con- man Pete Domenici, R-N.M.. said he
frontation with Clinton bave vowed to believed tax reductions would not be
send him legislation that he can sign included in the debt-limit package
unless it also contained enough
extending the debt limit.
Congress seems likely to -send sp&lt;:n'ding cuts to balance the budget.
Ointon a short extension of the debt That is virtually certain not to happen.
· limit through ~ March without any · Separating tax cuts from spending
unrelated provisions on it, giving reductions creates "a chance to get
Republicans a chance to decide what bipartisan support on a deficit-reduc·
will be attached to a long-term exten- tion package" and "defines the issue
sion. GOP leaders still hope the long- for the American people very differ·
term version will include some ently," Dorhenici said.
changes in Medicaid. welfare and
· In another sign of how the chances
other benefit programs, but not the tax for tax cuts have slipped, Senate GOP
cuts.
Whip Trent Lott of Mississippi said
Tax cuts have been a primary goal Senate Republicans would have to
for Republicans since they captured "look for other options" if there was
Congress in November 1994. They no budget-balancing agreement

tours set.March 14

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel news staff
Public tours of the old Chester
Courthouse scheduled for restoration
this summer will be conducted March
14.
"We want people to see !he condition of the building, everythinglhat
· needs to be done, and hear about
plans for its restoration and use." said
Pat Holter, activity coordinator for the
Chester Courthouse Restoration
Committee.
Those interested in taking a tour
are invited to meet at the Chester fire. house anytime between 3 and 6 p.m.
They will be taken in groups through
the courthouse. Holter also asked that
anyone with memorabilia to display
for the day contact her in ad.vance or
bring it with them.
The county was recently awarded
$46,000 in Appalachia Public Facility Grant monies for the projecl.
Since that is only about half of
what is needed to completely restore
the building, several fund raising projects are being planned.
"Bob Vallandingham- and I wili
On March 15, the committee will
speak for him now - stands in front stage a dinner at Royal Oak Park,
of you and asks for justice," he said . . 6:30 p.m . Providing entertainment
Defense attorney Tim Smith urged will be a barbershop quartet.
jurors to consider Sanders' troubled
Holter said that the Modem Woodchildhood. He said Sanders grew up men, Camp 4798, has taken on the
without a father and in poverty.
fund raising projecls of the committee as a "matching fund project". This
"That kind of childhood has to means that the Modem Woodmen
have an effect," Smith said. "A child will match up to $2,500 in ·monies
who is most sensitive would have the raised by the local committee for the
most' difficulty over it. ... That kind of restoration project.
childhood cries out for mercy."
Tickets for the dinner are available
Even if jurors recommended at Farmer's Bank and Savings Co.,
against the death penalty, he said. they Rutland Branch of Bank One, Racine
would not have to worry about Home National Bank;, Fruth's PharSanders being set free. 1 ·
macy, Chester Quick Stop, and Sum·
"I know it, you know it and he mersfields at Chester. The tickets are
knows it - he will never get out of $10 each for a complete turkey din·
prison," Smith said.
ner with dessert .

Death sentence recommended for Sanders
CINCINNATI (AP)- A jury has
the death penalty for
the inmate accused of leading a deadly riot at Ohio's maximum-security
prison.
Carlos Sanders was convicted last
month of aggravated murder for
ordering the death of prison guard
Robert Vallandingham.
Vallandingham, 40, anil nine
inmates were killed during the April
1993 riot at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility near Lucasville.
Jurors deliberated for more than
five hours Tuesday bef&lt;lR di'Ciding
that Sanders should be put to death
for his part in Vallandingham~s murder.
Vallandingham's parents were
relieved. They had commuted to the
r~commended

trial every day from their home near
Lucasville about 83 miles east of
Cincinnati.
"In my lifetime, I'll never see him
go to the electric chair." Homer Vallandingham said. "But he will be
locked down and won't be able to run
around causing trouble."
Jurors could have recommended a
life sentence with either the possibility of parole in 34 years or 24 years.
"I think they made the correct
decision," Wanda Vallandingham
said.
Hamilton County Common Pleas
Judge Fred Cartolano set sentencing
for today.
When jurors annqunced they had
reached a decision, Sanders was led
into the courtroom under heavy guard

and made eye contact with his sister.
Catherine Sanders, 31. of Savannah, ·Ga., sat in the front row, on the
opposite side of the aisle from Vallandingham's parents.
Neither Sanders nor his sister
showed any emotion when the jury
recommendation was read.
"It's a numb reaction," Ms.
Sanders said after her brother was
returned to his cell. "I never foresaw
it coming to a death penalty."
Pros.ecutors · said Sanders, who
was serving a 10-to 25-year sentence
for aggravated robbery in Cuyahoga
County, planned and led the riot.
In his closing statement, Prosecutor Gerald Krumpelbeck urged jurors
to recommend death.

Most of the food is being donated
for the dinner. Modem Woodmen,
Trinity Church, Broughton's Dairy
and the Chester Garden Club are
among those contributing food.
Also. at the dinner, Holter said
,there will he a display of memorabilia and asked that those attending contribute by bringing things in for the
evening.
All of the proceeds from the dinner will go into the restoration of the
courthouse.
Chester has the distinction of having the oldest courthouse still standing in Ohio. It was built in 1823 on a
knoll overlooking the village.
The restoration will begin with
replacement of the roof which now
has large holes allowing birds and'
other animals to enter the building. •
But, according to Holter, the exteriOr
walls will have to be reinforced
before work can go forward on
replacing the roof.
She said that tentative plans cafl'
for a "shake" roof, noting, however, .
that whatever is done must conform~
witb specifications of the Ohio His-·
torical Society, Mary Ann Reeves,
Southeast Ohio coordinator.
The first floor of the building·
which many years ago was remodele4
will be restored to the way it was ·iii ·
the early 1820's, Holter said. The sec·ond floor is pretty much the same as'
it was 170 years ago with its single
room and large exposed beams. ·
The committee foresees the building being used in a variety of ways - a place for meetings, theater pre~ .
sentations, and educational purposes
as well as for ilisplaying historicaiartifacts, particularly those pertaining
to the legal system. As a part of the
restoration, a temperature contrQ)
system will be installed so as not to
Coptinued on page 3

Girl Scout cookies arrive Monday for 1996 sale
ies were sold by 178 Girl Scouts in
the county with Thin Mints continuing to be the top seller, according to
Shirley Cogar, county Girl Scout
director.
Cogar said, "2,880 boxes of Thin
Mints were sold, with Samoas running a close second in sales with
2,532 boxes sold."
Top cookie sellers in Meigs County this year were : Individual -Ashley
Payne of Middleport Junior lfoop
111276, with sales of 553 boxes;

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Slaft
It is once again time for all of us
to sacrifice a few calories for a familiar March cause; Girl Scout Cookies
will soon be arriving at your door.
More than 1,100 c&amp;Ses of cookies
were delivered to Pomeroy Village
Hall Monday afternoon by Little
Brownie. Bakers of Louisville, Ky.,
where they were sorted for delivery
by Meigs County Girl Scouts later
this week.
Last year, 13,980 boxes of cook-

Troop - Rutland Brownie Troop more adult volunteers so we can
111308. with sales of 118 cases; Fam- expand the programs," said Cogar. ·
The cookie deliveries will unoff"'
. ily . the Anna Norman family. with
cially
kick off National Girl SeoUl
sales of 515 boxes.
Sales were very good in Meigs week, March 6-13, according to Cog,.
County for the year, especially since ar.
National Girl Scout Week activithere has been a decline in Girl Scout
ties
will officially kickoff with the
membership in the county in recent
annual
county Girl Scout skatint
years .
party
Saturday
afternoon . Other activ"There are some schools we would
ities
for
the
week
will include scouts~
like to have Girl Scout ll'oops in, but
we don't have the adult leaders for the wearing uniforms to churches and
troops. Ho~fully, we'll he able to get schools, as well as various other
events.

Columbus. judge tough on violent teenage crime ·
~l$R
- ~
...;_

Vic Klatt, education. coordinator
fcir the House Econoniic and Edueatioilal Opportunities Comminee, says
· the delay shows "the department's
liCk solid management skills...

•
1

.Oratory
contest
announced

OU Bobcats

Do _-you have an.IRAl
a Keoghl or ci'SEPl

'

.

•

The 86th birthday of Vermont
Markins was celebrated at the home
of her daughter. Mr. and Mrs. John A.
' Dean, Wolfe Pen Road, Pomeroy.
· Attending were her daughter, Mrs.
Betty Reid, Rodney Reid, David
Reid, Mrs. Virginia Porter and daugh~r. Mica Dawn and Tom, all' of
·Pataskala; Mrs. Donna Young and her
·daughter, Susatt Riffle, Aditm Riffle
and Nicki Riffle, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Junior Smalley, Wierton, W.Va.; Mrs.
Judy Jones and Angela Jones of
Erie. Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Smalley, Jesse and Sarah, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Smalley, Wierton, W.Va.; Mr.
and M111. Bill Spaun, Julia and Shannon, Mr. and Mrs. John Walw Dean,
James and Sarah and Eric ·White,
Pomeroy. and Mr. aod Mrs. Garold
1 Gilkey, Athens.
1
A birthday cake was served and
; gifts were presented to the honoree.
:Unable to attend due to illness were
· ·Mrs. Markiris sons, Walter Terrell and
Junior Smalley.

Ohio Lottery

Insurance Services
214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

88H887
Aut~nen_ I,....,.,.~•

Life Home Car

· COOKIES DELIVIREb - Actetlwry drtvw fclf the Laullvlle,

ICy• .,.._. Utile Brownie 1!11U!'1 unloida 101M of the 1,185 tal• of QlriScqut (:aalllelllllld by llllga County.Girl~ dwlng their lnnUII drift. Tht •te 011111 elld more than $&amp;,000 fclf
Girl Seoul progt'MIIIn the county 1ut yee~r. (Sentinel pllolo by

-Tam Hunter)

.'

·

COLUMBUS (AP) - A juvenile accused of robbing a Salvation Army
court judge who upheld the constitu- thrift store with a sawed-off shotgun
tionality of a law that is tough on on Jan. 10
teens who commjt violent crimes has
Baker's attorney, John F. Hilt, had
exc:rcised&lt;the law.
challenged the law. Lias on Monday
Judge Kay Lias on 1\tesday . ruled it constitutional.
ordered 17-year-old lfeavor Bakerto
Under the law, which took effect
·be moved from a juvenile detention Jan. I, a juvenile judj!e is not required
hall to the Franklin County Jail to to hear O:Om child psycho~osis~ ~r
await trial as an adult on an armed take tcsumony about a JUVemle s
robbery charge.
.. past or school records. I~ requires only
Baker, being held on $100,000 one hearing to d~ermme whether a
bond, would face stiffer penalties if youth should be tned as an adult.
.he i~ convicted as an adult. He is

I

I

Under Juvenile Court procedures,
two hearings are required to try a person under 18 as an adult. Prosecutors
have to prove the youth probably
committed the crime and then show
that the youth co11ld not be rehabilitated within the Juvenile Court system.
The new law allows for mandatory bindovers after a judge rules there
is probable cause for 16- and 17-yearolds to be charged with aggravated
murder or murder. Bindovers are dis-

cretionary for charges such as. robbery, rape and kidnapping, unless the ..
teen has prior convictions or used
gun.
.
Last year there wete 28 bindovm,
said assistant Prosecutor Dennis
Hogan. There are 13 cases pending,
he said.
.
Lias said the law reduces the dis• '
cretion of judges in handlins juvenile·
crime but it hasn'I been de1erniiDitl .
whether the legislature needa to
cbange the process.

a

•

,.

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