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                  <text>.Ohio Lottery

Tide.
edges
Buc

.

Pick 3:
926

Pick 4:
0208

Low tonJabt around 15.

Buckeye 5:

Page4

1-8-28-29-37

Snow nurrtes. Wednesday
cloudy, snow nurr1es. High near
20.

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Vol. 45, N0.169

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1 Section, 10 eagea 35 cent8
A Multimedia Inc. 'fllewapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tu_e sday\ January 3, 1995

Copyright 1994 ·

Development efforts build on '94 results
0

By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel NeW! ·scatr
While she can pinpoint specific
economic development accomplishments in 1994, Julia Houdsashelt-Thomton believes the most
gratifying results in her post are
less tangible.
Thornton bas nearly completed
her first year as 'Meigs County's
economic de\oelopment director• ..
During 1994, Thornton cited
achievements including the loca.tion of PAMIDA, a discount retail
chain, In Meigs County, and BFG
Supply Co., a regional horticultural
supplier.
. ." ·In addition, the county saw the
establishment of the county's rural
enterprise wne. This wne sets up a
system for allocating tax· abatements to attract business and help .
existing 9'mpallies expand.
· But, attracting.businesses isn't
as simple as making land available
since many communities already

are taking th.e same ·steps. A team
must be in place to build towards
development, ,track new and exist· .
ing company•·s needs and then
ensure these needs are met, Thornton said.
"I feel that people are more willing to stop in and share their concerns and ideas. That's the most
positive thing that's happened .in
the last year," Thornton said. "I've
built a lot of relationships."
Thornton would not claim the
county's development accomplishments simply 'as the result of her
own efforts, but as the work of various individuals.
"I've seen them· work and not
give up, much more than a lot of ·
people would have," sh added.
Anyone with ideas about potential businesses, or even land that
could be available for developJULIA THORNTON
ment, should call her, Thornton
added.
··
in a way that meetS· iheir nfeds,;'
"We have to package our county she said.
'\

· Thornton and the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce are·continuing work on shorter artd longerrange projects, including:
• finalizing a strategic plan that
was started by the previous .development director. This plan organizes available sites, ipforrnation
on availability of. water, sewer and
gas lines and prospective businesses.
• defining' and. preparing the
Great Bend site, located on American Electric Power-owned property
near Ravenswood, W.Va. This project is contingent on the construction of the U.S. 33 connector to
Interstaie77.
• helping coordinate meetings
on dropping the long-distance
charge between the Pomeroy and
Mason, W. Vlj.,_exchanges . 'The
telephone companies will decide
within three months about making
these calls local, such as between
Gallipolis and Point Pleasant,

Shooting .s uspect
handed ·out fetus
pictures: re.p ort

W.Va. The county will also seek to · completed - focuses on the.coundrop long-distance charges within ty' s strengths and weaknesses,
Thornton added.
Meigs County.
"With a strategic plan we are
• preparing lpcal businesses to
actually choosing to build on our
be ready for increased tourism.
• beginning relations with Ohio weaknesses or abandon them ...
Tbj: little things have to be taken
University to tap its resources.
• developing factory outlets in care of before we can focus ·on the
tlie countyand trying to 1anu a big projects," Thornton said. "The
largest and most effective tool will
Walt Disney theme park.
People have questioned'-tbe be to have (U.S .) 33 completed. A
direction her office bas taken in lot of businesses' first question is
seeking new businesses, Thornton what are your arteries." ·
In 1995, the first new stretch of
said. But, the county commissionpavement
will be laid in more than
ers have decreed that they want her
25
years,
between Rock Springs
to divide her time between seeking
and
Five
Points
.
large and smaU companies.
SQme
obstacles
Thornton did
"Without our existing business.
not
anticipate
before
she suu1e!!
we won't be able to attmct nnyone
include
cumbersome
government
else," Thornton said.
In the new year, Thornton said regulations and time-consuming
she will focus on completing the permit processes.
A'S a Meigs County native.
strategic plan, attracting factory
outlets and defining specific sites whose returned to her roots after
working ill 'Columbus, Thornton .
for development in the county.
This plan - nearly 75 percent
(Continued on PaRe 3)

Ging~ich

tells Dems:
don't always say 'no'

"By RICHARD LORANT
president and vice president,
Associated Press Writer
respectively, of Massachusetts Citi. BOSTON - The man accused zens for Life.
in three abortion clinic shootings
He attended a . meeting of the
banded out" pictures of aborted group in February in Revere, but
. ~uscs...outsidc .a.cburcb and told M'cComish ami -Hogan said the
the•p8Stor that the Catholic Church meetings were open an(J'Salvi was
~ wasn't doing enough ·to fight abor- not an active member of the group.
lion, a newspaper reported.
. ''All we know was there was
John Salvi III is accused of . th1s strange guy han~!ng out these
killing two clinic workers and · ;~wf.ul photographs of aborted
wounding five others Frid;ty in two fe~~s, Ho~;m saJd. .. .
Brookline clinics then spraying
You JUSt knew there was
m&lt;Xe than 20 sbo~ into a Norfolk, . something wrong with this guy.''
·Va., clinic the next day.
he said. "~oone ~ver heard him
The 22-year-old student hair- talk about v1olence.
dresser from Hampton, N.H., was .
to be arraigned today In Norfolk on
The Rev. Edmund Sviokla, pasa cbatge of firing into an occupied
tor
of the Immaculate Conception
building. He was to be taken to Rouian
Catholic Church in Everett,
Massachusetts .later this week to
where
Salvi
lived for a time in
face murder charges.
1993,
said
Sal
vi complained that
The Boston Globe reported
AND THE PROTESTS CONTINUE - George Bryant •of New
the
Catholic
Church
was ''not
today that Salvi attended an antiYork,
111ember of the Refuse and Resist abortion rights group,
abortion demonstration and praye~ doing enough" in the fight against
carried a sign and passed out literature Monday outside the Rug·
meeting May · 14 outside the abortion.
Sviokla told the Globe that he · gles Baptlst Church ln Boston, Mass., 'where a small group of
Planned Parenthood clinic in
· demonstrators attempted to enter the church and Interrupt an
rebuffed Salvi's suggestion to disBrookline that was attacked.
anti-abortion group meeting. (AP)
·
"These are open to anyone who tribute pictures of aborted fetusc;s,
wishes to attend,'' said Robert but Salvi later did it himself from cans bold on abortion,'' Clinton of the abortion battle have watched
DeUery, who organized the demon- his truck parked in front of the said in a statement from Little their foes across clinic barricades,
stration. ''He mustnave just drifted church.
· President Clinton ordered feder- Rock, Ark., where he is vacation- shooting videos, clipping newslet·
' in. It's horrifying to think be was
ing. "A continued vigorous debate ters and building files. But Salvi
there and then did this. It really al prosecutors Monday to mobilize over
tion is proper. Violence has no known connections to the
task. forces to make abortion cliRi&lt;;.~
hurts the movement." ,
against tho e who hold differing organized anti-abortion movement
The Globe said Salvi bad sever- more secure.
in New Hampshire or in his nlltive
al conversations with Madeline
"I recognize and respect the opinions is not."
For years, people on both sides Boston.
~ - McComisb and Frances· X. Hogan, .~ range of deeply. felt beliefs Ameri-

a

By ALAN FR;.M
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - As Republicalls prepare to take control of
Congress for the fJtSt time since the
Eisenhower administration, one of
their leaders is warning Democrats
not to become the _party that just
·
says "no." .

"We'll m¥e mistakes," pre~
dieted Rep. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga.,
certain to be elected House speaker
when the 104th Congress convenes
W~JlS!lay. "D!!Lthe key question
is what is it the Democrats would
do for America, not just how well
can they attack Newt Gingrich."
The fiery Gingrich, who 'bas
spent much of his 16-year congre5- .
sional career relentlessly criticizing
Democrais, made his remarks in a
. NEWT GINGRICH
taped interview broadcast Monday
by C-Span, the cable television
think about is what is their better
industry's public-affairs channel.
answer.
·'· I mean, how woui(J they
!
replace the' welfare state? How
Emboldened by November elec- would they make America compel·
tions in which not one of their con- itive? ... This last election was a
gressional incumbents was defeat- ' signal to them that just being negaed. Republicans are out to reverse tive won't cut it," he said.
the direction ·in which Democrats
have steered the government for
Gingrich and the mostly conserdecades. They want to eliminate
entire programs and agencies,. slash vative Republicans who will corispending for others and transfer trol the House for the first time
power from Washington to state since 1954 set their near-term
agenda in the ' 'Contract With
and local governments.
America," their campaign com1
pendium of promises.
.
They also find themselves fac· As r.romised in their contract,
ing a thoroughly weaken.ed Demo- . they wfll spend Wednesday pushcratic Party. President Clinton is ing eight procedural changes
still feeling his .way into an era in through the House. They include
which Congress will usually be an cutting . committee staffs by oneadversary, not an ally, thanks to third, requiljng . three-fifths majori. GOP majorities of 53-47 in the
ties to bopst income taxes and ·
Senate and 230-204 in the House.
day, Given said.
apptying
all the laws that private
Democrats were bracing for a
"The State Department bas not
citizens
and
businc.,se.~ must obey
been cooperative," Given said. difficult transition to the unfamiliar
to
Congress
itself.
"Our main goal at this point, is to status of congressional minority . ·
get her and her children out of the Some of them seemed1eager' for
political battle.
Democrats planned to meet
country.
·
Asked if he believed Republi- •today to discuss how to respond to
' State Department offices in
Washington, D.C., were closea· cans would try to railroad legisla- . the GOP proposals. In private, they
tion through Congress, House conceded that the Republican Items
Monday.
Federal officials have said they Democratic Whip David Bonior of were likely to attract substantial
·
could not extradite Dr. Chhibber to Michigan replied. "We'll blow up Democratic support.
the
tracks
if
they
do
it
too
of)en."
·
Beyond
Wednesday's
activities,
the United States, because India is
' Gingrich warned that thtKfotcrs the GOP contract promised House
not a signatory to the Hague Conwould
not respond to such tactics.
votes on 10 mea.sures within the
vention, which .governs internation•'What the. Democrats ne.cd to fir&amp;t 100 days·.
al extradifion.

Area doctor's wife tracks down children
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Police brought the girls to Mrs.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
.Chhibber
on Dec. 23. Given said
.(AP) - A MilSOn Co!!ntY _woman
she
was
not
sure how Mrs. Cbbibfound ber two da!!ghters. who were
ber
obtained
the infonruition.
taken to India by ber estranged busMrs.
Chbibber
is divorcing her
. band, after she learned where the
husband.
and
was
awarded
custody
girls attended school, a state lawof
her
daughters
and
son,
Vineet ..
maker said.
·
14.
'Bhairavi (:hhibber of Point
Dr. Cbbibber is accused of'takP~=~wife of Dr. Bakshy A.K.
ing
the girls to Greece in August
C
went to India in December daughters, Preeti, .during a court-ordered visitation
and later to New Delhi, lnd1a, and
H~:rjll. 6, said Delegate Kelly
Putnam, who has· refusing to return. Vineet refuSed to
join his father on' the trip, Mrs .
befJiiC111deq Mrs.Chibber.

0

Chbibber said.
•
Given said Mrs. Chhibber is
s.taying with her da1Jghters about
three hours frotn the U.S . Eritbassy
in Bombay, India. She was told to
come to the embassy Friday to fLII .
out the necessary paperwork to
return her children home, but the
paperwork was not there, Given
said.
Mrs. Chhibbcr was told to return
today to lbe Bombay embassy and
to take her daughters to an,other
embassy in New Delhi on Wednes- r

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~ is 'Wa-s~the - ear~thCJtw_a~ irrMeig£eOIJ
unvented gas beater in her home. tal Rela1;datiqn 'and Developmental ed in Meigs County.
Some residents stiU without power; Oisabilities
and
Carleton
Jan. 22 - Special deputy and
~ed Cross open.s shelter in Racine.
SchooVMeigs Industries awarded prosecutor's investigator Gary J .
Jan. 6 - John Dowler, deputy $275,000 in a lawsuit against Ohio Wolfe accused of pointing a bandJANUARY
gun at his former wife and another
Jan. 3 ~ Heavy snow up to 12 · director of Ohio Department of ' Department of MRDD.
Jal\· 17 - The third winter man.
.
inches deep paralyzes counry Transportation, District10, predicts
construction
work
will
begin
in
the
storm
in
as
.
many
weeks
blasts
Jan.
25
Some
Pomeroy
resiprompting the Meigs County Board
fall
on
the
first
phase
·or
the
Meigs
County
with
more
than
20
dents
enter
second
week
without
of Commissioners to declare a
inches of snow . National Guard water service.
"state of emergency.'' FaDing ~ Ravenswood Connector.
Jan.
7
-Julia
Houdasbeltcalled
to assis\ as countywide state
Jan. 28 - Rising Ohio R.iver
and power lines result in scattered
Thornton
named
new
economic
of
emergency
announced.
Pomeroy
water
conu'ibutes to .road a11d
power outages.. Meigs County's
.
school closings. . •
fJtSt baby of the year. Steven Brit· development director by Meig-s · declares water emergency.
ton Mabr, is born at 4:54 p,m. at · commissioners.
. ·
Jan. 18- Meigs residents reelJan . 29 "J Pomeroy merchants
Jan. 10 - Fire destroys lwo1 ing from winter storm begin dig - prepare for flood by moying up or
Holzer Medical Center to Mr. and
Mrs. Ryan Britt~n Mabr.
bomes, one each in Middleport and ging out. Record low temperatures mQving out. Downtqwn Pomeroy
Jan. 4 - An elderly Long Bot- Pomeroy. Zero-degree weather don't help as almost 1,600 house-· blocked off to traffic.
tom woman, Madeline Marie hamJ&gt;C!S flreflgbt,ets bu_~_no injuries _ltoi&lt;!Jind ~em~Jyes w}lhout elecJan. 30 - ,Mother Nature·strikes
Swan, 84, dies- from cartion are.reporttid.
-&amp; •
tricity.
·again. Ohio River-crests at 49.7
monoxide · poisoning from an
Jan~- Meigs Board of MenJan. 21 - Snow emergency Jift- I feet in the "Superbowl Sunday"

First in s series

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flood . Some Racine households resign effective March r. due· to
displaced due to flood water; other- accepting out-of-state employment. .
wise orily minor damage reponed.
Feb. 9 - Heavy rainfall and icy
Jan. 31 -Pomeroy water emer- nighttime temperatures add up to
gency remains in effect as workers flooded, icy roads anct several acciseek cause of low water levels. dents. Meigs Local schools are
Workers clean up after flood . closed.
Pomeroy resident Carl Edward
Feb. 14 - Middleport Villaee
Stephens, .25, killed in wreck in Council agrees to remove par,klng
New Haven, W.Va.
.
. meters'.
.
FEB~UARY
.
. i Fci:J.. 15 -;- Juro~s for the trial of
1 Feb. 2 - Southern Ohio Coal · Malcolm W. Lentz, M.D., accused
Co . is fined Sl.8 million by the in a civil case of medical negJi-· '
West Virginia Division of Environgence, are sumlnoned off. street in
!Dental Protection for releasing pol- front of the Meigs County Courtluted water from flooded Meigs house:
Mine3l.SOCCOdi$u.tesfjne. .__ F.e b . 116 - Sheriffs from 22 -~. Feb . 7 ~ Pomer!)y Mayor , Ohin coun!iC£ .!l£Se!llble . in
Bruce Reed announces intention to
(Continued on.Page· 3)

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Page-2-lhe Dally Sentl'nel
Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

Comfuentar

January 3, 1995

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9:07 a.m. Saturday, McNichols
WedllfSday, Jan. 4
Road, Stella Mae Durst, VMH.
Accu-Weather"' forecast
REEDSVILLE
6:48p.m.
Monday, Reedsville
MICH.
Mary L. Johnson, tB, Portland. died Sunday. Jan. I, 1995 at Camden-VFD and squad to H~ard Barber
residence, garage ftre, Tuppers Clark Memorial Hospilal, Parkersburg, W.Va.
WASHI~GTON It
b
it so they did it with Leon and AI bee" liv¢ out of the White House.
"Tbe pecplc in the White Hou~e·
A housewife, she was born June 25, 1925 in Reedsville, the cta.ugbler
Plains VFD and squad, Coolville
111 Coatt Sb:eet
"
Cabt'net
members,
tnclud'"g
'ormcr
bave
tbe
sense
thai
we
don't
get
.
may
e
Toledo
116'
and Pomeroy VFDs assisted; Tim of the late Cecil and Nora Smith Swain.
u• ''
• ,•
s one Cabinet offtcet who
remembered among Cabmet mcm- for a while.
Pomeror, Oblo
Sbe is survived by her buslland. Clyde Johnson; three sons, Bob of
Sbowal~ and Bobby BaUey treat·
· befs as. ~e day I'!esident Clinton
The story was recently related to Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen. b''a' s saatytended lhe Panetta pow••
•• • •
'net
·~·etary
who
was
have
seen
themselves
cut
out
of
tbe
New
Matamoras, Rick of Mansfteld and Mike or Patland; three daugba
On
Cab
1
b
ed
at
the
scene.
.
was mtSsmg ,. ac • .
us Y
•
-·
wows . "There is no accountability _
••
loop on key health care and budget
Shortly after the Nov 8 RepubJers, Catby Davis of New Matamoras, Jeannie Wesl of Columbus and
RUTLAND ···
· · C·
stimulus debates - not coinciden- in Ibis While House. Everyooe is a
10:42 a.m. Salurday, Mar- KrisJa Duffy of Racine; eight grandchildren; ooe great-grandchild' and a
bean blow-out, Prestdent lmton
By
J' ack
f
t It's a huge victory that
1
scheduled a Cabinet meeting· to
U
tally two of the administration s
ree agen · can walk down and
risonviUe.
Aldena Welsh, O'Bie ~ sister, Flossie Reed of Rc:edsviUe.
INO .
buck up the troops and offer a rousand
biggest political debacles.
not everyone .
(an
) ..
Sbe was preceded in death by a brother, Jake Swain, and by a sister,
ness Memorial Hospilal;
ROBERT L. WINGETI
ing plan for combating a Republi·
Clinton-style "cabinet govern- talk~~=~~~e
2 p.m. Saturday, Hiland Road, Betty Swain.
No calling hours or servtces wtll be observed.
Publisher
John Lambert. HMC;
can-controlled Congress. Gathered
Michael Bins•ein
ment" ba§ e~isted in name more
·a1 .tbe Wb'te
makes the
•
1 House
.
h
around the Roosevelt Room were
''
lban deed. Perhaps belatedly, the ct s,
The White-Blower Funeral Home of Coolville is handling arrange8
p.m.
Saturday,
Flatwoods
Coloorbuslw
prob~ is being addressed. In a twin e'!ors of trymg 10 i: ould~r
members of the Cabinet, a throng
Road, Ryan Watkins, treated at the ments.
of White House slaffers, Vice Pres· describing the day the Cabinet may series f post-election meetings everythmg_. and not laPP _g Cabtscene;
·,
CHARLENE HOEfLICH
ident AI Gore, and Wl!ite House bave bit rock bottom emotionally. held th Cabinet officials, Paneua net agenctes !~lore effeettv~ly to
12:23 a.m. Sunday, College
Controller
General M!'nager
Chtef of Staff Leon Paneua.
But it also symbolizes a deeper acknOwledged: "We have not used curry favor wtth ~" constit~n·
Avenue, Ted Hatfield, VMH;
They were waiting anxiously for problem plaguing tbe Cabinet, you well, and Ilmow that. Tell me cies. "Leon IS Cll!llmg 10 apprectate
3:20a.m. Sunday, Woodyard
Clinton to arrive - only be never which was painstakingly selected how we can use you better."
you can push lbmgs out and then
Road,
Roben M~aU. OMH;
Deblia C. O'Donnell Maliteb, 85, SteubenviUe, died Sunday, Jan. I,
LETI'ERS OF OPINION ""' welcome. They abould be leao tbllt 300
showed up. Exhaustion wa~ tbe two years ago for its depth and
Since tbe election, Panetta has you can ~U your eyes wben your
7:08
p.m.
Sunday,
Hyseii'
Run
1995
at Pickerington Health Care Cenler.
.
won!s long. All leuen ""' subject 10 editin&amp; and must be signed with nome,
W. VA.
whispered
spceulation
among
Cabdiversity
and
because
"tt
looked
held
candid
discussions
with
tbe
·
crazy.~a~met
person
does
someRoad,
Ada
Keesee,
PVH;
Born
Sept.
6,
1909
at
Sidneyville,
Jackson
Cowny,
W.Va .. daughter of
address and telephone number. No unlisnod Ietten will be publiabod. Letten
inet
secretaries
.
The
feeling
of
hke
America."
As
be
introduced
Cabinet
about
the
past
and
future,
of
thmg,
thsatdbonyprotle
offi~
the
Panet
4:47a.m.
Monday,
N~e
Avenue,
lbe
late
Arthur
Lewis
and
Gene:via
Hall
Carney,
she
was
a fashion manag ·
should be in good taste. addrenin&amp; iuuea, not personalities.
gloom and doom, already rife in bts Cabinet in December 1992, the administration . There have
Ano. er
~
.
. •
Rena McDaniel, VMH;
er ror Scars and Roebuck and a member or the Business and Professional
the wake of the Republican rout, Clmton made a pledge that be has been academic discussions about - ta meehngs w~ to tdentify !' senes
9:24 a.m . Monday, PNRC , Womens Club of Steubenville, lhe Senior Citizens Choir of Steubenville
was only deepened.
largely failed to keep: "The presi- the relationship between the federal of i~sues - cnme, educ~uon and
Clarence Cowell, VMH .
and the Christian Science Church.
•
"It was so weird," recalls one dent is only one person. Much of government and the nation's gover· envunnment- over wbtcb. sharp
•
SYRACUSE
She is survived by a sis~. Audra Hendershot of.Ravenswood. W.Va.;
Cabinet official. "I Utink Leon bad lhis administration's life will be , nors. At times the discussions bave differe~ces can be drawn wtth the
9:55a.m. Sunday, Nye Avenue, and several nieces and nephews.
genuinely though! be (Clinton) lived out lbrougb the actions of lhe grown more acerbic as Cabinet RCJ1?bhcans..
·
OscarQualls, VMH .
She was preceded in death by husbands Tom .O'DonneU and George
would show up for some brief time people that you sec on this stage."
members complain about a young
It hasn t be.en an easy two
~====~ ~::::,..;:=::.....!::....;;=: ==~::=~=
In addition, the EMS handled Malitcb; two brothers, Doyle and Brooks Carney; and one sister, Adeline
and just com~ in and do a pep
The reality has been lhat m~~&lt;:b and often imperious White House
y~ars for any of us .... and there may
Grop~&gt;ctN••
"~ven transpon calls.
Carney.
rally .. Tbey didn't want to cancel of this administration's life has
taff
be those who arc kind of lrauma•
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in lhe Straight-Tucker &amp; Roush
Funeral
Home Ravenswood, with Christian Science Reader James W.
s ·..---___,.__,.....,
Higgins officiating. Burial will follow Pine Hill Ceme)!:ry, Riple_y, W.Va
lbis (Republicdb majority) as kind
Friends may gil Weclnesday at lh~ funer;!l hQ!f!e Jw~ hour~,Jlnor !O"the _
•
The (Cleveland) Plain Deal!lr, Dec. 25
of an opportunity to, range out more
_ _
- (Conllnued-from Page 1)- ..=-: .. March 28 - J-our coal miners - service.
"Th1s ts certainly a sad day," said Dolll'llll'febr, lhe bead of the base•,- widctty and be-a little more boll!l---·1 ~ ,~~-:~·-- · · ~ Press
'
By The Associated
p.m.
and sunrise Wednesday al Pomeroy for meeting of Buckeye are injured ·in an elevator acct'dent
-oat I"players uniOn, as oWiiffi iffi~ th( salary cap they bad wanted' aU
I'm a genuine believer in this
Clear and cold weather setlled 7:54a.m.
Stare Sheriffs Association.
at the receptly reopened Meigs
notion of opportunity coming
on Obio overnight with low tern·
. w~alherforecast:
Feb. 18 - Margaret L . and Mine 31. Raben L. "Pete" Kuhn,
•
alo~gctlng Commissioner Bud Sehg de,l!vered his obligatory lines, ~oo.
wrapped
in
bad
news."
perarures
mostly
in
lhe
teens.
But
.
Tomgbt.
..
Snow
and
squalls
Thomas
E. Schwab awarded $1 formerly or Dexter, is sentenced to
saying he was "extremely dtsappomted that the owners and the players
Some
of
tbe
brightest
news,
the
National
Weather
Servtce
extreme
north~ast
.
Snow
accumu·
million
by
Meigs County jury in 3-to-5 years in prison on charge of
•
had not come to terms.
according to Cabinet officials, is a
, 'tssu"" another snow squall warning ' labn_g 6 to 12 mches wb_ ere squalls medical negligence lawsuit against aggravatell assault m lbe shooting
George R. Nicbols, 79, Middlepon. died Monday, Jan 2, 1995 at Pleasy cs, Friday was a sad, disappomting day. From the point of view. ne,imarked improvement in communi"" .ght and Wednesday in perstst. Sn_ow showers 11kel y across Malcolm W. L entz, MD
f
R'
f
f
e
net'gbbor
Jt
'
mmy
·
ant
Valley Hospilal, Point Pleasant W.Va.
'
. . o to o a orm r
•
R
p• d
for
tonl
thcr Side mentioned amid aU of the crocodile rears - that or At!'enca s
cation
between
tbe
agencies
and
f
th
rlh
S
H
M'ddl
neil
states
Born
AprillO.
1915
in
Millersviiie,
Pa.,
son
of
the
late
oland
. an
1
•
" lhe White House since the election.
extreme northeast Obm.
the remamder 0
e no · now Grande,
ayes. 1 '~por cou
Anna .Virgitiia Worst Nichols. be was a retired lumber grader for several
ba~cball fans - tt was the 133rd sad, disappointing day-since tlie players
_ nng to numes across the. south
Feb. 22'- Rolland Mayor E'd the viUage's ...,.year-old pool may
area lumberyards.
.
.
Snow accu mulations or 4-12 tape
walked out Aug 12
• .
.
By inviting three 'or four Cabinet
I
1
f
f
1
members at a time to Panetta's
. inches were torecast for the area w-Ith-Iota snow accumu auon an Martin· dies o cancer n ter two no reopen.
. He is survived by two daughters and sons-in-law, Nancy and Francis
One thmg ts for sure: This nonsense ts,a long way from playmg ttself
uut, so tans' dtSgust wtll havt\ to hold out a wbilo longer. Fortunately,
meetings- in sharp contrast to the
tonight, with additional accthnula- mch or less . Lows from near 5 years in office.
~PRill'
Tomes of Marieua, and Esther and Ralph Prather .!!f.Yil!~eot; a son and
,___ , Ca".,.
_ we.~t to the lower teens
8 -denartment
P.amida. store
Jill Omaha. --,. b •
11·ons lt"kely on WednesdaY.· The above north
there' s''" mcxhaustible supply.
largely ceremonial and fUiu...
- Feb
-- . -25 - - Meigs
.
.."f Mine
- b .31.
N bAJ!ril
.. based
chain
...ug ter·m-law- Jo-b·n and Breo da N'tcbo1s of v ·tneen'1. seven gran dch'l
'.
NWS
'said
travelers-will
encounrer·
soulbeast.
·
resumes
operattons
a
ter
emg
e
.•
.
..
.
.
•
dre
d
' 1..
dcb 1'ldrcn
The (Port Clinton) News Herald, Dec. 23
h
ell
. · ·
inet meetings w ere
nton pteua11
W d esday Snow and squalls flooded wilh water [rom an ad;oin- announces 11 wtll move mto the
nan sevr:n_grea gnut
. . .
·
The recent deatlt of two-teen-agers when a pleas!JfC boat collided with
sides over a glorified pbotiH&gt;p _
visibililjes near zew in the sq s.
e n
...
.
..
.
·ed .
Jul 11 1,993
vacated Big Wheel store near
Also survtvmg is a siS~, Ehzabetb Ben!'ftl of Vugmta; and several
Light snow tapering to flurries extreme northeast _YIIth addtuonal mg, _!:los _ mme_on y , . . -~- _
al
k
d
d 1
~
+
nieces and nephews
a bar~e pushed by il tugboat on Lake Erie glaringly points out the grmymg
re·
·wor
gets
one
an
v
ews
arc
were
forecast
for
lbe
rest
of
t.he
accumulahons.
Vanabl
_
e
cloudiness
Leading
Creek
Conservancv
DtsPomeroy.
·
· · death b
., M
Ell N''•h~• · 1""3·
problems on tltc lake
, ·.
expressed with less inhibition.
h
d fl
.
d''
A -1 10 _ Heavy rains swell
He was pfe£eded m...
Ya w~eL argaret .!!:!L h&lt;owS, ID n •-The youUts were killed when they were thrown or jumped from the
"It was a reall• animated dis'state. Accumulations are likely to wtt scattere
urr!es or snow trtct founder .ll!!.d fOf!ll l&lt;r .m~tor
_J!!l .- - --~
- -- --~ - and by an infant diiiigliter and two brolbers and two ststers
'
~ be an 1·nch·orJess. - - - -.showers elsewhere. Htghs· from- 15 Jack Crisp sentenced to 18 m_ontbs local creeks prompbng the evacua.
.
.
. ·f
pleasure boat as it was hit by the barg_e. One or the boys' ra~er and his
7 9 th
cussion,"said
one
C31linet
offiCial
Lows
tonight
will
range
from
to
20.
in
jail
on
charge~
of
recetvmg
lion
of
Burlingham-area
residents.
•
.
f'io
servtces
wtll
be
b~ld,
but
fnends
may
call tomght rom • at c
- lim1cc whe wereillse·an the boat,-sui'Vtved ~ - •
.
-·descnbmg one of the Panetta meet·
In
. Ext d d forecast· - ~-lm U ~ bonus April 13 = Pomeroy ~gets - Ftshcr Funeral Home, ~tddleport. .
. . ..
Ac~rdmg to a story by Tbe Associated Press, congestion on Lake Erie
in•s. "We talked about how be
the single digits in the west to ven e . . ••
proper compensa on· or
• $ 357 •200 from the Ohio DepartMemorial. contributtons may be made to the Metgs Count~ Semor CtU;
o
C
. Thun;day ... Aumes hkely nonh- es.
C
P
.
c:m&gt;cd by plea.1urc and comme~al bo;lts bas become downright danger15 degrees in the east. ,
(Clinton)
should
use
abinet
mem·
Snow
showers
or
flurries
are
c:tst.
Htghs
from
the
u~ger
teens
MARCH
.
DIJ!nt
of
Development
for
downzens
enter
m
omeroy
ous
bers. There was a discussion about
th
h 1
th
'tal'-·''on
Local matcb'ng
•
' fh ts may support the ·~ea to make boat operators get a license muciJ
March 2 - Route 33'""'
. ,.,ommll·
town
revt
u.au .
likeJu' outside of the~ortbeast nor east to I e ower s sou .
the format of lhe meeting itself. I
..
f
ds
bri
amount
to
$750
()()()
·
tomorrow . It will be old with west.
.tee states bi~hway proJects mo~un
ng
• ·
1, hkc a dnvcr' s license before they can operate a boat.
think we all agreed that this bas a "
highs of 15 _20_
Friday ...Dry. Lows in lbe teens. ing forward. Commltlec co-cb~April 14 - Racine Hydrauli~s
That may create a mghhDare of enforcement but so.mething must be
lot more possibilitieS&gt;."
The record-btgh temperature for Htghs from lhe upper 20s nonheast man David Lieser says work wtll and Repair. spectahzmg In
done to avoid further tragedy. According to boat owners, near colltStons
(Jack
Anderson
and
Michael
this
date at Ute Columbus weather to the upper 30s southwest.
start on Ravenswood Connector hydraulic component repair and 1 Services were held at 2 p.m.'tnday, Tuesday, Jan. 3, 1995 in tllc
arc almost an everyuay occurrence.
'
·
Straight-Tucker &amp; Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood, W.V;J., for Freda
Binslein are columnists for Unit· . •
saturday...Dry . Lows 15 to 20· project in August .
station was 64 degrees in 1897
.
fabrication. opens doors ncar Ruth Thompson, 76, Hutton's Trailer Park, Ravens~ood. who died SaturAkron Beacon Journal, Dec. 23
.~~;...--"' · ed Feature Syndicate Inc:.)
while the record low was -20 in Highs3 to 35.
· March 4 - Tbe I75th AnmverRacine .
Ci ues all over Ohio are planning or dreall\ing of new baseball or footday, Dec. 31, 1994 in Charleston Area Medical Center.
1879. Sunsettonight will be at 5:19
sary Committee selects a theme
April 17 -A barge strikes !he
hall stadiums or hockey or basketball arenas. And some of them :- espeTbe Rev. William Matics officiated and burial was in the Ravenswood
and logo to commemorate tbe
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge, closing Cemetery .'
ctally Cleveland - hope good ol' l)ncle State Gov~~ent in Columbus
_
will cough up a btg part or the cost. So, the quesbon ts: Docs the state
!75th anniversary of Meigs Coun- the bridge for"about 24..bours. The .
"'loi'IIJuly 27. 1918 in Lewis Counly, W.Va., dauglirer of the late
In 0 I
s - ty A Meigs County grand jury bridge is reopened following an Alexander V. and Lovie Gay Stout Pisbner, she~ a homemaker. She
have a role, rutd what should it be?
Well 'yes the slate should h•vc a role in these local stadipm.and arena
.
. 19 10
·
indicts 24-year-old Marie EUiolt of inspection by the Obio Departmem attended the Independent United Brethren Churc~~WRavenswooc) .
' based
'
""
... George Voinovich and stale Iaw.......
-'-~ers
.
By
The
Associated
Press
one-car
accident
on
Ohto
Po
·
Furtllermore,
gelling
majority
of
your
invisible
presidentml
candiwar
-seasoned
candidacy
is
its
your
n
proposals,
what
Gov.
Gen.
Powell:
Dear
0
0 n a charge of murder in ofTransponation.
She was also preceded in dealh by her husband, William Thompson; a
status is now a logistical and fman- dacy: a Newsweek cover story, mainstream attractiveness. For
· Ohio recorded a relatively safe Seneca Co~n:TURDAY ,
them;:~ 0 f his 6-monlh·old son.
tltd to help Cleveland build its huge Gateway ~tadtwn-and-arcna complex.
"Go for it.
son, Larry Dale Thompson; and rqur brother~. Natalino Pisbner, William
. " The Powell Scenario" ... a Wall most Americans, you are a candi·
Swtc tax dollars were used to pay about 12 percent of the Gateway
New Year's week~nd on the stree.ts
GSTOWN
k He pleads innocent four days later.
Aprii 18 - Businessman Bill Pishner Alexander Pishner Jr., and Freddie Pishner.
How neat and stmplc. Exbona- cial quagmire.
wttll
seven
uafftc
YOUN
c
March
5
_
A
West
Celitmbia
and
highways
But
as
AI
Smith
loved
to
quip,
Streel
Journal
guest
column,
"A
date
wbo
transcends
race.
Haptonslall
is sworn in to iill a seat
tions are easy for couch potato puni..:OS(
,
.
surviving are lbree sons, James Pishner of Arlington, Va .. and Wil.lianl
deaths during the four-day period. Thompson, 8~. of Young~town, .
man David M. Persons, leads law- on Pomeroy Village Council.
General for President: Then and
Conservatives are comfortable,
In Cleveland these days, there IS a lot of talk about etther fiXing old dits But only you t an decide what
L.
Thompson and Lowell (John) Thompson, both of Ravenswood; tbree
The State Highway Patrol counted' · a two-car colltston on Ohto 164 m
•. . b'gb-speed chase before
Now" ... the conl;ervative ventrilo- Imowmg you won't sandbag the
April
17
A
slip
temporarily
Cleveland Stadium for the Browns football team, at a cost of $130 mil· "it" is - a two-letter undifferentidaughters,
Lillian Speece of Ravenswood, Lois Kibble o~ Sandyville,
· ·
rrom F n'd ay Mahonmg
· · County
men
a I
Chuck Stone
quist Raben D. Novak's column, defense budget. Liberals are
...J.raffic fat&amp;httes
-- r
•
beingmarrested.
He is charged with closes State Route 338 at Antiqui- W.Va, and Becky Anderson of Riple~, W.Va:; II grand~ldren and 13
hon, or building a new stadtum, at a cost of perhaps $300 million.
. ated neutrality that appeals to
"Let's look at the record." No "The Powell Mystique" ... and the delighted with your historic breakIn Cleveland, as elsewhere, the state's contnbutton ought to be no everybody.
through M;.~Y·
c~rg::~a~~ driJ~~I i~.r~~~: felony fleeing and eluding and ty.
great-grandchildren· three brolhers, Vmcent Pishner of Rainelle, 1W.Va ..
28
third
party
candidate
h3s
ever
been
endless
stories
rollowin~
your
sucthrough.
And
African
Americans
more than 12 percent of the tolal construction or renovation cost. That
Is "it" lhe presidential candidaRudolph Pishnei or' Mount Nebo, W.Va. and Orlando Pishner of NaUen,
Tbe de MONDAY
c,;. acctdent on a Cincinnati city al\grav3!bed lbeft dalongapewtslbshoothrtleyr
April 22 - David M. Persons
gmdcline was effectively set in the case of Gateway
cy on Paul Tsongas' proposed th11d elected president. Only one lhird cess in negotiating America out of are ecsJabc with pride. If you're on
mmor c arges an esc
,
WcVa.; and a sister, Mary Ware of Nallen
,
CAMBRIDGE - Geralyne street.
thereaftef. ·
of West Cdltnnbiapo Jlrigoner in the
the Republican ticket, 50 percenl of
The (Ravenna) Record-Courier, Dec. 21
party? Vice presidcnual candidacy party presidential candidate -for- tile Haitian q113gmire.
Dent, 50, of Cleveland, passenger
SANDUSKY - Donald J .
March. g _JoAnn Eads sworn Meigs County Jail. escapes lbrougb
But lhe main reason politicians an inspired black vote will easily
For the third time in two months, the Whtte House has had an act of on the Republican ticket? Or vit:e mer President Theodore Rooin
a
one-car
accident
on
Interstate
!esensky,
45,
of
~andusky,
driver
in
as
mayor of Rutland following a window while awaiting treaboent
sevell's
Bull
Moose
party
and pundits or an persuasions sali- supponyou.
presidential candidacy on the
vtolcncc latd at its doorstep.
·
111
in
Guernsey
&lt;:;ounty.
a
two-car
acctdent
on
an
Ene
the
death
of Mayor Ed Martin .
.
at Veterans Memorial Hospital,
siphoned
off
enough
Republican
77
• vale over you like starving puppies
In the lasl 30 years, only two
While President Clinton, wbo was m the Oval Office' at the time or the Democratic ticket (only tf your for_
SUNDAY_
County
mad.
.
March
10
_
Meigs
and
Athens
leading law enforcement officials
att,JCk, was never threatened directly, the shooting appears to. be justified.
mer commander-in-chief decides votes to sneak Democrat Woodrow in a meat locker is America's awe- candidates attracted a majority of
JltJCLID - Antomo Rose, 15,
FRIDAY
county residents view two potential on a bureaucratic quest for his
So rar, the president and the While House work force have been qot to run for re-elecllon and AI Wilson to victory with a minority struck love affair with general~ . bolh Southern GOBs (good ol'
Services were held at II a.m. loday, Tuesday, Jan. 3. 1995 tn lbe
or Euclid, in a dirt bike accident on
CANTON - Karen Horsle~ • corridors for a four-lane· highway return. ·
Since Washington, we have elected boys) and blacks - Lyndon John·
" lucky" in that none of thc.assmlanL' has caused any personal harm to Gore succeeds as the logical heir of the popular vo1e.
Straight-Tucker &amp; Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood, W.Va., for Hattie
aEuclidcltystreeL
Wilson's minority-vote election II generals and one colonel (Teddy son m 1964 and Bobby Kennedy in
35 •. \&gt;f Canton, driver 111 a two-car between Athens and Darwin .
M. Dartt Ward, 83, 6907 Start"tre Drive, Reynoldsburg, who died Sa\Urapparent)
at)fonc mside the buildmg
.
April 23 - Racine's first-ever day, Dec. 31, 1994 in Reynoldsburg.
TIFFIN - Reva l . Gamens - acctdent on a Starlt; County Road.
ODOT states a corridor will be
the 1968 primaries. That kind of
While itts absurd to e•pect the prestdcnt to work and carry on hts pnor these three options, tlle last is wasn't unusual . Seven presidents, Roosevelt) as president.
f,lower Festival attended by an ~­
Ironically, your brilliant record dual magnetism is as rare as your
fehler, 56. of Warsav.!, driver m a
selected prior to a public bearing in
Tbe Rev. Jack Gwinn officiated and burial was in lhe Ravenswood
valc ltfc in a fmtress, steps must be taken to increase the security of the · the least attractive. Even with the beginning with Lincoln and ending
mated 1,200. Unseasonably
Whttc House, whose grounds are SCJ1'!f31ed from the public - including popular and more merchandisable with'Ciinton, have been elected as a general presages a hi'gher prob- blend of principle and pragmatism.
II. •
"
~"~e
October. Citing low profits, GTE and sunny spring weather a factor Cemetery.
Born May 20, 1911 i~ Deepwaler, W.Va., daughter of the late Ben F
many people hostile to the prcsidcnr- by a mere wrought-iron fence.
AI Gore, the Democrabc Pany will with lcs~ than hall the popular vote. ability of succe§ll than your untest· America needs to read your
Tu
Ui
announces Pomeroy Phone Marl
in success.
While additional forttficauons may be' aestheticaUy;linappealing, the fact go into the 1996 pnmaries as dam- The trick is to get a majority of ed , role as a politician . The commencement addresses .•They'
and Rose Lee McKinney Dart~ she was a housewife and a member of the
April 25 - U.S. Reps . Ted Women's Club of Charleston Heights, W.Va.
aged good$. wetg.hed down by electoral college votes - and unknown tantalizes tbc national resonate- with a commitm'ellt 1Q the
A. Riley,
rcmruns that Wa~hmgton D.C. m 1994 ts a far more dangerous place than
Strickland
and Bob Wise meet to
psyche.
that's
hard.
·Are
you
a
Democrat,
a
1994
DemocrAtic
rejecuons
and
a
eclectic
society
in
a
w'!ly
that
Ilion
'I
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Dudley Nelson Ward.
62, Point Pleasant, W.Va., becomes
11 was when lhe presidential restdence was built nearly 200 years ago.
"show
solidarity"
in
support
of
the
now
will
have
a
convenient
way
to
So,
those
of
us
who
would
supRepublican
or
one
of
Jesse
Jackfurther
aggravate
anxiety-ridden
to
vote
is
easier
this
Surviving
are a daughter and son-in-law, Dolores J. and Joseph Dalton '
Registering
the county's first highway fatality
two-year scorched-earth policy on
Ravenswood
Connector
project.
register
to
vote
when
!.hey
get
their
port
xou
for
prestdent
(why
does
'
son's
double
neologisms.
"DcmopDemocratic legc,lauon
'
wh1te maillS.
year as Obio:s new motor voter law
of Reynoldsburg; 16 grandchildren and several great-grandchildren; two
of the year when he strikes a
.
April 2i - Meigs County pays brothers Ronnie Daru and John Dartt. both of Ronceverte, W.Va.; and
•
driver's license.
Your secon~ least attractive that come as a surpnse7) enthustas· ublican" or "Republocrat?"
There's your real challenge,
guardratl on State Route 7 near
takes effect. ·
In addihon, Taft expects the law Chester He apparently fell asleep final honors to late President two siswrs. Lorene Morgan or Roncevene, and Nellie Karrick of Boomer,
Who really cares? The only general.
oplton is the third party because it tically commend Paul Tsongas'
"
Secretary of Stale Bob Taft said
Richard Nixon with a one-minule W.Va.
will
be a particular convenience for · al lbe wheel, t.he Obio Highway
issue
statesmanship
in
urging
your
third
for
1996
presidential
candiIS the most daunting . American
the new law will directly impact
So, go for it. Once you decide
ringing
of the Meigs County Counthousands
of
Ohioans
who
move
party
candtdacy.
despite
the
dates
will
be
the
degree
to
which
voters are passionate middle-orthe estimated 700,000 Ohioans
what "it" is, an army of supporters
Patrol reports.
•
.
every
year.
For
the
first
time
,
bouse
bell.
formidable
odds
against
its
success
they
can
renect
the
rambunctious
the -roaders. They periodically
will follow you into political baltle .
wbo have ii driver's license but are
March 17 - A Racine man conBy The Associated Press
Ohioans who have moved to anoth- tined to a wheelchair dies in a trailYour best optiOn is R~publican mood behmd the 1994 middle
osctllate between lbe two major
(Chuck Slone is a columnist
not yet ~gistered to vote.
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 3, the third day of· 1995. There arc 362 days left parties but never confer their vice prcs!dent. But relentless s~­ Amenca revolt.
April 28 - A trio of unrelated,
That's because the Bureau of er county but failed to ~ange the er ftre . Marvin J. Teai"c\rd, 26, died
for Newspaper Enterprise Asso·
(Conllnued from Page 1)
in the year.
'
Tbe mosl e~citing aspect or elation.)
non-faJal shootings, all involving
national affections on a_third party. ulation continued to stoke the fire
Motor Vehicles must offer voter address on their regtstrauon wtll be or smoke inhalation, assistant
Am Ele ll'ower ....................... .31711
said she believes in thts county's
·
Today's Highlight in History:
teenagers, puzzles county authoriregiSifation to every Ohioan who permitted to cast a so-called walk- Coroner James Wltherell reports.
.
'
Abo
.......................................
57
314
prospects.
On Jan. 3. 1777,•Gen George Washington's army routed the Briti,sh in
•
applies for or renews a driver's in ballot at their new county board
March 22 - John W. Blaetmar ties. Two are reported as accidenlal
AJblaod
011
...........................
.34
1/4
"I
really
feel
ibal
we
have
the
the Battle or Princeton, N.J
of elccuons.
is officially sworn in as mayor of and self-inflicted, while the other
license beginning Jan. I.
AT
..
T
...........................................
.50
right
people
together
at
the
right
·On tltis date:
.
The law, wbtcb implements the Pomeroy following the resignation stems from an apparent turkey
Another consequence of the law,
Bank Oae .............•.•.••••..•••..•.. .l5l/4
lime to get things done," she sat d.
In 1521. Man in Lutlier was excommumcaled from the Roman Ca!bolic
hunting accident.
Taft said, ts that 11 is likely to National Voter Registration Act ol of Mayor Bruce Reed.
Bob Evau .............................. .lO 112
•
The
past
year
was
infOrD\ell
lbe
most
complex
issues
of
conAmerican
political
life
So
is
the
millions
of
Americans
from
their
Church.
Champion lad ....................... .26 314
increase tbe number of youn~er 1993, expand.' lbe number or locaIn 1833, Britain sctzed control of the Falkland Islands in the South throughout by a national yearning temporary life . In their schemas, most recent cycle of crime in our fanns and hamlets 10 the open road,
Cbarmt,. Shop ........................61/2
tions
where
Ohioans
may
regtster
registered voters - citizens who
Atlanuc. (Almost 150 years later. Argentina setzed the islands from the ror new, persuasive answers to ,eld, clearly defined cause proceeds in historically violent soci~ty. Ergo, what do we have? Where once
to vole. They include: human serCkr Holdln&amp;-····························....29
; Briush, but Bntain took them back after a 74-day war.)
intractable problems. Or, if what stately march toward sharply delin- he concludes, the first is responsi- there were nuclear families, Mjlm
vices offices and offices that assiSt
Fodenl M111.u1 ................1....... .l0 J/1
• In 1868, 'the MetJI Restoration re-establilbed the authority of Japan's was being sought was not precisely
Goodyur
TaR ......................33 111
!&gt;le for lhe second.
and apple pie, we have lbe stck
disabled Ohioans; public high
VETER'ANS MEMORIAL
The
Daily
Sentinel
K·mart
....................................
JJJ/8
: emperor alld heralded the fall of the military rulers known as ' 'shogpns.''
new, it was definitely somelhing
Hoddii'fiiCtJgCCarter II/
In just that tradition of rigorous family chaos of today. Case made,
schools and vocational schools,
Saturday admissions - Evelyn
l..andl
End
..............................
141/4
:
In 1892, J.R.R T!)lkem. author of the Lorjof rhe Rings trilogy, was different from the status quo .
_
log•c. I offer another possible con- ca&lt;;e closed: The highways did il.
&lt;USPS m-960~
public libraries; and county treasur- Wofford. Pomeroy; Russell MeadLimited lnc. ............................ J7 718
· • born in Blocmfontcm. South Africa
Indicative was the election of comnective culprit. It cannot be by
Not persuasive? Try the discovers' offices.
ows, Pomeroy.
II
t.lultllmood.. lnc. .................... .11 l/4
;
In 193!!, the Marcb of DbDes campaign ,to fight polio was organized.
manding Republican majorities in eated effect in ways even an tdtot accident that the crime rate bas ery and widespread use of antibiPubll•hed eveoy aflemoon.
Finally, Taft said, the law makes
Saturday discharges - E)izaPoint
Baacorp .............................. !!'
:
In 1947, ll)c opcmng session of the U.S. House o[Rcprescntabves was Congress and I}OP gubernatorial can understalkl and ~lieve. .
. rocketed into the statis.tical strato- otics ·in the postwar years. Before
~~Y;,.~,:;,eo~~·~;~1s~'i,·;t£;;~!~~~i!;~q~1 a number of adrmnistrative changes beth Mclntoch, Pomeroy.
R..lanm Kl.drlc ................... 30 511
control or all but one or the most
Now. bemg a modest sort of sphere only smce man l;lroke the . their arrival you W)lld count on
l televtscd for the fustume.
'
!nc. Po..,roy. Qh;o
that affect the way Oh10's 88 roun·
Sunday admissions_::- Ted Hat'
~~~ 1959. Prestdent Eisenhower signed a proclamation al!!!lltllng Alaska
JlQpl!!&amp;u.Htates. .
person, I do not expect my contn- natural bonds 'Of gravity and leapt __ nature.tti..w~ out miUions of the
Seco.J14J:1•" ,..~, P!'!dlli''""'%!:""9·
· "' ty~oollfds·or clectlons·keep and pro-- - field Jr., Rutland.
Rojal
Columnists bejng. nothmg-if- not- buhon te thts -new way of- thtnltinr into space:-"One sma11 step for unfit and undeserving before they
Inc...:............................. 13
Membtr: The Auocla.ed' Pths, and the Otuo
cess eleclions records. One change
- none.
· severed diplomatic relations wtth Cuba
ch•ldren of the prevathng ethos, to be gtve!l the tumultu~us Man, one giant leap for Mankind" grew up 10 menace society. With
New1paper AnociPti~ ~~,---f-~J.I!I.UY
Birth ~ Mr.
Mrs. Robert
Wendy lnt'l............................ 14 112
•
lbc man wbo sbot accused presidential -assassm thts wnler has dectded to take the res ponse enjoyed by Gtngnch, indeed! It should no . k.c..mor~antibtotics, the gift of longer life Is-"'' "
s must
Worthington lnd ....................lll 314
•
.
.~-hmt~U--more-appeBhng-ways-of--Murra.y-;md~Herrnstcl n:-Butll~f·
an a ozcn doctoral dtSsenations bestowed upon the just and unjust
Mor1day discharges - Ted Hat- Day, daughter, Beaver.
rather than received by the
~--""-·
.............
In 1
conscrvauomsl Joy Allamson. author of Born Free, wa~ killed explatmQg the otherwtse mexpbca- hap~. JUSt perhaps, one of the fol - to flesh out more fully the still alike. People are pennitt¢ 10 live
field Jr . .:.. - ·Discharges -Jan. 1Mrs-:'(30 days prior to an election).:_
Stoek reporto are lbe 10:30
_ :_j 0_1111 rth~m_Kg_~.Y.a by.J.&lt;servant m \' wa' dispute _
,
blc a.;e wanted ~~w p~adlJlms.._ !owmg theses mat.W.Orm_l_ts w~L lihadbwy_ cau~ bonds wbicb CQn· beyond their-natural, three •.oore .
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER · Richard Rifne and son.
rnvlded by Advul
: Ten years ago: Prestdcnt Reagan annu~nced that htsd eputy clile ol lor llllniWig,~bout the world - that mto tbel&gt;ooypohttc, j]jcre!Ol)C nect die space !l'O~ram (the brain- and ten, limits. Degeneracy has fol- .
Discharges Dec. 30 - Mary
Discharges Jan. 2 - Eugenia
, staJ c Michael K. Deaver, would be lcavmg the Whtte House Soprano ts what ',:Vd)lie offered
fas!~ncd upon by fatthful diSCtples chtld of Democrats, afler all) with . lowed as surely as night follows ·
Rouse, Mrs. Roy Siders and daugh· Culwell.
; Leontyne Price .appeared m a.n opera production for the last bme, perNewt Gingnch, lhe mcommg anxtous to elaborate lite truth. If the breakdown of respect for law day.
Births - Mr. and ~rs . Antbo·
ter, Estil Johpson, Mrs . Vernie
Salmons and daughter, Rpbert ny Bonecutter, son, Btdwell; Mr.
• fonnmg the title role of V~rdt s Atda at Ute Metropoblan Opera house m speaker of the House of Rep_rese~- such IS too much to ask or expec~ and order..
..
Or perhaps we shouklloolt to a
BUSY BEES
· New York. •
taUves, ts one of my gutdes m thiS so bell. Ltke Gmgnch, Murray a~
If parusan pohucs are beneath more obvious primal agent of vii- ·
SINGLE COPf PRICE
Coughenour, Michael Yates, Gene and Mrs. James Gibbs, daughter,
Daily ... ... ..... . . . . .. .. . .. 3S Cenu
' The Busy Bee Class of the Mid· Bowyer, Bonnie Foster. ~»n. Ken- Hartford, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Ftve years ago: Ousted Panamantan leader Manuel Noneg~ surren- endeavor. So arc th~ Messrs. Mur- Herrnstem, my most devout dcstre rou, a_nd therefore you find it lainy. Television showed its Mlitrerdleport First Baptist Church met neth Haning and daughter.
dcred to U.S. rorccs •. 10 days aller talting rcf~gc m lhe Vabcan .s diplo- fay ~nd Herrnstem; authors of ts that the natwnal dtalogue be unposstble t1 blame everything on ing race at lhe New York World's
James Vaughan, son, Letart, W.Va.
SubKribcn nDl disiring to pay the earner NY
recently for a CbrisbDas potluck
matic mission [ollowmg the U.S . mvaston or hts country
1994 s great mtellectual c~se eel~- advance(\, not tllat I be personally t~c Dc!ll9~1 liS, there_ts another Fair in 1939 , went into-hiding dur·
remit in ld"ancc direct to The! Daily Sentinel
(Published with permission)
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Kennetb
on alhree, 11" or 12 monrh basis Credit will be
and gift exchange in the church
One .year ago: The \Ybtle House pronused a govemrnentwtde effort to bre, The Bell Curve . Thetr contr1· ennch&lt;\1 or empowered. Fatlure 111 hkely vtllain. Fony years ago Pres-· in lhe war then raduall became
aiven earner each week.
social room.
lean• the extent of human radiation tc~ting dunng the C?l~. War era., A . bulion. ~as to attribute vinually all such an endeavor carnes tts own ident Dwigt t _David Eisenhower a gdominaiing ~cscnc! in tbe
A gift was presented to Jerry
deadly prison riot broke out m Maracrubo. Venezucla, ·~lainl mg over 100 or mdtvtdual acbtevement to tuber- nolnhty.
. .
launched the mterstate btgbway American borne
No sub ~e riplion by Jlllll\ pcrrruited m areu
where home carrier ICI"r'ic:e Is av11lable.
Pullin,
teacher, by the -class .
lives
. ' .
.
·
ited mtelligence, as measured ~Y , What ts most stnkmg about the sy~tem, ~c most ma~sive publi~
,
·
.
'
Attending
were Rosemary Lyons, Date reset
Today's Binhdays· Comcdtan Vtnor Borge ts 86. Former U.S. ambas· IQ tests. Congressman Gmgnch s works of Gtngnch, Murray and ~orks project m the btstory of the
(Hoddlng Carter lll1 forDMr :
5:15 p.m.'Jan. 10.
MAILSUBSCRIM'IONS
Gwinnie
While,
Mary
Brewer,
sador Vernon Wa'lter.; ts 78. Singer Maxe nc' Andrews is 77. Actor !esse was to sell the pmpostuon· lhat ~e Hcrrn stcm ts thetr tmpresstv_e world. Fony years later, after Ute . Stale Department apokuman ·
The Middleport eommunhy
tnol&lt;k MelpcCaunly
Suite 112 Valley Drive
Bwm. ...
Marybetb Milcbell, Lillian Association rescheduled their regu· Trustees to meet
Wh 't 1 76 . Sportscaster Hank Stran1 .ts 72. Record producer George welfare state IS the pnmmate cau ~ relian ce on determmtS'In m thetr expenditure of hundreds of billions and award•wlnnlllll reporter, ..u..:
Pt. Pleasant, WV.
_
26
M~~1 1~ 69. Ae,tor. Robert Loggia is 65 Actor Eddie Egan is 65. Actor or most ·soctal pathologte s tn sequence or cause and eff~t. As of dollars, 'after the literal destruc- tor and
Is preskl..t of ;
Demoskey, Ruth Ebersbacb, B tar meeting for 'lhis monlb . Tile
Orange Township _trustees will
52
3Q4.875-I244
Appt.. ~r~lnfol'lllatlon
·· Betty Denny, Dorothy Evans, , meeting today lias been canceled. meet Thursday, 7:30 p.m. for an
Dabney Coleman is 63 . Jownalisl-author Betty Rollin is 59. Hockey HaD AJJtem;a.
. .
:
one example, Rep_._Gmgncb h~~on of ~ountless_ url!an ~elg.bbotFreda Edwards, Katberyn Metzg~. Tbe group wiU hold its meeting at or~l2ational meeting at lhe home
- rFamcf Boolly l'lulttr56:-Musician-Stephcn-Stllh• i&gt; 50:-A"CtreSS VIew-- - -'j'11lccrrtogelber,tbctndcas-hfr-pmntclhlut tlr.n tile welfare sllililts hoods by those gliUenng nb!x!ns of
IJWeep ........... ..........:.. ::~. :, :: rn~
Me..-r of A.etaa PPO A lleth!ral M
PPO
0 Pri ·p·'
26Weela. .. ........... . •
$9620
A"tor
Mel
Gibson
is
39.
·
the
burden
of
heavy
thmk1ng
about
the
.product
of
the
past
60
years
of
concrete,
after
the
enticement
or
p;ariy.)
Betty
Gilkey, and Jeny Pollio.
of Clerk Patty CaUaway.
52Weela ........ ............................. .
n ;t
fl CI w 15 45 · ~
.
•
,
•

lhe. O
Daily

Sentlji~l

- h~ wake·of GOP rout, Clinton opens up

\

I

.

AnJer.son

•

Units of tbe Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 21 calls for assistance
during the extended New Year's
Day weekend. Units responding
included:
MIDDLEPORT
8:47 a.m . Saturday, Soulh
Fourth Avenue, Teresa Becker,
Veterans MemiYial Hospilal;
12:44 a.m. Sqnday, South
Fourt.h Avenue, Clarence Potts,
treated at the scene;
2:36 a.lll. Sunday, Pearl Street.
Martha Stewart, Holzer Medical
Center;
4:23a.m. Sunday, South Third
Aven~. Ray Fos~. VMH;
10:04 a.m. Sunday, Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Cep~.
Stella Gibson. VMH;
3:058.m. Sunday, Cole Street,
Ashley 'Brien, VMH;
4:49 p.m. Sunday, Beech Street,
Carla Lemaster, VMH.
POMEROY
6:14a.m. Saturday. U.S. 33,
Rick McChristian, VMH;
'
11:30 am. Saturday, East Main
Street, Kale Jarrell, VMH;
1:17 p.m . Saturday, Mulberry
• Avenue, Genieveve De~oskey,
Pleasant VatleyHospilal . ~
RACINE

I .. . ..

.

c·om.

•I

MARG~~ LEHE~

Editorial comment
from around Ohio·

-

- -.Area-deaths-.

·EMS. units.record 21 calls
.

OHIO Weather

..

The Dally Sentlnei-P~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

· January 3, 1995

~~-;~:~dc.:~·:':!t:~o~~

I

Mary L. Johnson

C.

Dehlia

. .J&gt;--- - ..

Malit~h

v
Arctic air to send nighttime · The year that was in Meigs
' tempS 1"nt0 the lower teens

...

George

R. Nichols

.. __

""

NO

Some advice for Colin Powell:· go for it

• • h I" day
Seven 'd le

Freda R. Thompson .

ek

~--

Hattie M. Dartt Ward

.vo.er regiS t '&gt;!lllfJ"on J"s ma'
available through local BMV

warm

wii:;~~~~JuneJ~rold

Today in history

·Development

Welfare isn't the only cause for social decay

.·

Hosp1"ta I newS _....___

Society scrapbook

Complete Medical/Surgical.Care
for·Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including
g
Joh~ 1\. Wade, M.D.

Meigs announcements

.

'tau
!'--

A

•

\

'

.

J.

\,

.+

-·

--

'

~1

•

'

for.
-

--

'

• -

'

�-- .

,Sports

,..

..

January 3, 1995

The Daily·Se~!!~l~!

•

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S .

•

PaSJf!-4

•
••

Penn State, ,·B ama &amp; USCs
. among major bowl victors

.

•

.

I

THIS -WEE 'S
GAMES

' ·
about. We sbouldn't get a rap !bat in a regular-season tie.
we dido' t play a tough schedule .
When !bey met on Nov. 26, the
We deserve. (the national champi- Gators blew a 31-3 lead in t.be
ooship) just as much as (the Com- fourtb quarter. This time, FSU (tOhuskers) do."
·
,
1-1) controlled most of the action,
It didn't come easily, despite holding Florida (10-2-1) to a seaPenn Stale being a heavy favorite. son-low point total.
Oregon (9-4), coming off a six"It see111ed like we dominated a
game winning streak and in the little more than I thought we
Rose Bowl for the first time in 37 would," Florida Stale coach Bobby
years, gave. the Nittany Lions fits Bowden said. ''It was closer than it
with their passing game.
should have been - if we had capDanny O'Neil set Rose Bowl italized on all our opportunities."
records for attempts, completions
Danny Kane II threw for 252
and yards with his 41-for-61 per- yards and one touchdown, and halfformani:e and 4 56 yards. He also back Warrick Dunn connee led on a
threw two interceptions and was 73-yard scoring pass to 'OMar Ellisacked six times as Oregon ran up son . Kanell was 23-for-40 for
501 yards . Penn State, the best Florida State as tile teams comoffensive -team in the nation, man- bined for 774 yards passing. Dunn
aged 430.
bad 182 all,purpose yards, rushing
"We came .very close to beating for 58 on· l4 carries anil"catcbing
them," 'O'Neil said . "We just nine passes for 51, in addition to
dido 't maie t.be big plays. Our rus ·rouChdown pass to EDiSon.
defense did shut them down for the
Danny Wuerffel was 28-for-39
most part. I think they only had one for a Sugar Bowl-record 394 yards
drive. But we gave them turnovers. and one touchdown for Florida. .
We' gave them a lot of opportuni"We couldn't get the ball in the
.. ties."
end zone .. That's what ultimately
·oowJ.
- .. - · _,_. ~ . - - -- -- FIBta
·burt us," Wuerffel said. uNoiDlal ~
Joe Paterno's team was ahead
No. 3Colorado41
'!y, we actually are better scoring
ALMOST - Ohio State's Chris Sanders (17)
of tbe Citrus Bowl Monday In Orliondo, Fla.,
Notre 'Dame 24
than moving the ball."
only 14-7 at halftime before getting
almost
pulls In a touchdown pass In front or where the Crimson Tide got a last-minute touch·
untrliclced. Ki-Jana Carter ran for
At Tempe, Ariz., 1be final colCotton
Alaba0111's Tonuny Johmon In the second quarter
down catch from Sherman Williams to win 24-17.
I 56 yards and three touchdowns, lege games for coach Bill McCartNo. lJ Southern Cal SS
(AP)
• while Kerry Collins was 19-for-30 ney an'd Heisman Trophy winner
Texas Tech 14
for 200 yards passing. ,
Rashaan Salaam wasn't close.. The
At Dallas, in the mismatch of said. "But they w~e willing .to do ing big games." Fletcher said,
touchdown · pass . to light end
•
"It's really a shame that Penn Buffaloes (12-1 this. season, 93-55- the tlay, S.outhem Cal made its ftrst what it takes to be champions."
·"but I· never, ever dreamed about
Boomer Foster.
State couldn't play Nebraska this 5 overall under McCartney) had trip to the Cotton Bowl a memoOhio State (9-4) is 1-5 in bowls anything like this."
.
"We've been waitingo so long
year,'' Collins said. ''The NCAA too much of everything for Notre rable one, building a 48-0 lead.
under coach John Cooper.
Tbe Badgers (7-4-1) won four of .for South Carolina to rise to the
bas to taken long look at this. This -Pame (6-5 - 1)~ wbicb failed to give
Rob·.Johnson threw-three touchHall or Fame
their last five games one year after
top, we think we've showed the
season more t.bail anything shows coach Lou Holtz his 200th career down passes and Keyshawn- John'
Wisconsin 34,.Duke 20 ·
winning the Big Ten champicoumry
qJat we can play, that they
:- that the syslem must change." -- - victory:
· -· - -~
son caught three, including an 86Terrell Fletcber' must wish his onship. Duke (8-4) lost four of five
have
to-pay
attention to this 'team, "
McCartney is retiring ·and yarder from backup Brad Olton. season and college career wasn't after a school-record 7-0 start
For Paterno, it was his fifth persaid
tailback
Brandon Bennett, who
feet record in 19 years at Penn Salaam announced after the game Rob Johnson completed 16 of 21 ending. He's as hot ..S any runner· Iinder first. year coach Fred Goldfinished
wijb
100 )'ards Ill Shin g.
Stale. The Nittany iiorui didn't win be is bypassing his senior season passes for 289 yards and left after· in the nation..
smith.
South
Carolina
(7-5) was win the crown in four of those seasons for the NFL.
the ftrst series of the second half Fletcper ruslied 39 times for 241
Carquest
1m
in
eigbl
previoos
bowl appear-.. - -- 1968;"69, '-73 and '95.- - -~--- - McCarmey--was given tlle obli- three yards ShOtt or-the · bOWl __yards, bo!h Hail of Fame Bowl
South Carolinal4
ances
.
West
Virginia,
which won
"We did everything we could gatory !ce bath by bis_,p~ayers and record.
records , and touchdowns of one
West VIrginia 21
six
of
its
previous
seven
games,
do within our power to win the then was hoisted on thetr shoulders.
"It was a lot easier than I and 49 yards. .In.his..previous game,_ _ At Miami, Soutb..Carolina .won gave up -two -fumble..,-and -an inlernatlooaltitle.'' wide receiver Fred- . "I feel very humble," he said, thought it would be after seeing Fletcher set a career-high rushing its ftrst bowi'game, gettipg touchception,
and two .of the tumoyers
· die Scott said.
"very appreciative in my heart that them on film." Rob Johnson said. total with 192 yards Jo lead the down runs from Steve Taneybill
led
to
scores.
The Mountaineers (7In other games Sunday, it was I - a really average guy -can "We confused 'em and we mao- Badger&amp; past Illinois to earp the trip and Stanley Pritchett. Timeyhill
6)
also
turned
the ball over on
No. 3 Colorado 41, NOire Dame 24 have this elttraordinary opportuni- handled 'em. I was surprised.''
\.'!_Tampa.
also compleled 26 of 36 passes for downs twice in the final six minin the Fiesta; No. 4 Florida State ty."
The Trojans (8-3-1) upped their
" You always dream about hav- 227 yards, including a two-yard
utes.
23, No. 7 Florida 17 in the Sugar; . Salaam rushed for only 83 yards bowl record to 24-13, while the
No. 13 Southern Cal 5~ . Texas on 27 carries -more than 100 Red Raiders (6-6), lost in their ftrSt
Tech 14 in tbe Cotton; No. 5 · yards below his average- but trip to the Cotton Bowl in 55
.
'
Alabama 24, No. 14 Ohio State 17 scor.e d three times. Quarterback years. The loss was the seventh
By TERESA M. W A~_KER
just tine,'' Dowhower said at Mooin the Citrus; Wisconsin 34, Dulce Kordelf Stewart ran seven times for straight for the SWC champ . .
Dowhower beat out at least 13
20 in the Hall of Fame; and Soutll 143 yards, completed I I of 20
· Citrus
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) day night's news conference. "As
other candidales for the Vanderbilt
Vanderbilt players wanting to size . long" as the Browns are on TV and · job, thanks primarily to his resume
. Carolina 24, West Virginia 21 in passes for 205 more and accounted
No. S Alabama 24
up new Commodore .coach Rod tlle kids know their coach is worlc: Jhe Carquest. .
for two scores. •
.
No. 14 Ohio State 1'1
as a quarterbaaks coach and offenDowhower
will prob~bly have to · ing to win a championship, I'm
Rose
Then Salaam said he was turn. At Orlando, Fla., Sherman
sive coordinator.
be content seeing him on television sure that's going to have a trickleNo. 2 Penn State 38
ing pro.
Williams was the one standout in a
Vanderbilt athletic director Paul
·
until
his duties with the Cleveland down c.ffect."
, .' ·~re are a lot of things going sloppy game.
.
No. 11 Oregop 20 .
Hoolaban wanted a coach who will
1
Browns are concluded.
Dowhower' s first priority- juice up an offen·se that bas run the
At Pasadena, Calif., Paterno on at CU,'' he said .. ! ' A lot of
Williams caught a short pass
Dowhower, 51, flew iii Monda'y remains the D{owns, and he will
became the first coach to win each coaches are bouncing around, and from Jay Barker and turned it into a
option the past four seasons with a
night
and signed a five-year deal . stay with the team throull.h the rest
of the four traditional major New· - there's not a lot of stabiliity going '50-yard touchdown with 42 secnearly nonexistent passing game.
Vanderbilt offiCials then introduced of the NFI. playoffs. He has been
Year's games- th~ C,Oiton, Sugar, .on. That was the basis why I decid- . · onds remaining, giving Alabama
Vanderbilt was the only Division IOrange and Rose Bowls. His 161jl ed to come to CU, and I signed a .(12-1) the victory. The senior tail- · the Cleveland Browns' quarter- working on a list of coaches for his
A team not to throw a touchdown
backs coach as the school's 23rd staff sin~e agreeing to the deal over
bowl triumph overall also broke the four-year deal. But ... I'm leaving back was everywhere: running 27
pass in 1993 and produced only
record he shared with the late Paul with coach Mac." .
times for 166 yards, catchjng eight coach. He relJlmed immediately to the weekend, and hopes to hire
two in 1994.
·
offensive and defensive coordina- ·
" Bear" Dryaqt.
Sugar
passes for 155 yards, returning two Cleveland.
Dowhower was a quarterback at
Dowhower is due to spend tors quickly.
But it was the national title he
No. 4 Florida State 23
kicks for 38 yards. ~
San Diego State under veteran
in meetings preparing for the
He'll return to the Vanderbilt
today
spoke about.
No. 7 Florida 17
Williams' class ended up with a
coach Don Coryell and has a 29Browns' Saturday AFC divisional campus when possible to meet his
" All you can do is win all your
At New Orleans the Seminoles 45-4- 1 record and · one national
year career at both the college and
·playoff
game wiih the Pittsburgh new players, but any coaches he
· football games,'' Paterno said. won an NCAA-~rd lOth consec- championship, the best four-year'
NFL levels.
Steelers. The quick trip left no time hires will head to Nashville and
"We've gotten criticized for our utive bowl game, riding the wave m~~ in Crimson_Tide history.
He led Stanford to a 5-5-1
schedule by some people who o~ confidence built by their stunTbey..weren t always the ~ost. for Dowhower to m~et with any of start working imr:;edi~le~ Vanderrecord in ' 1979, where he coached
the Vanderbilt players.
bill officials will contifrlietecruitdon't know what t.bey're talking nmg comeback against the Gators talented, coach Gene Stalltng~
John Elway
"But in reality, it wiU work out ing.
By The Aaoclated Prus
While Nebraska returned borne
·· to a salute befitting a national
champioo, Penn Stale tried 10 keen
Its mmd on a game that couldn,.t
lift it to No. 1.
Top-ranked Nebraska returned
to Lincoln Ill\ Monday for its coronation, eve~ as the second-ranked
Nittany Lions struggied through a
38-20 ·victory over Oregon In the
Rose Bowl.
Even before their official designation as national champions, the
· _Combuslcers, led by coach Tom
Osborne, were bailed by the governor and saluted by some 15,000
screamillg fans. The c~lebration
was at the Bob Devaney Sports
Center, named for the man who
coached the Combuskers to their
only other national titles, in 1971
and 1972.
Penn State also bas won' two
national championships, but a _I2-0
record wasn't enough Ibis time .
The Nittany Lions knew they hll\1
little chance after Nebraska (13-0)
beat Miami 24-17 in the Orange ·

--

EAS7ER EAGLES
1994-1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE

EASTERN 'EAGLES
.. '
BOYS
Jan. 6 • Southern • ~way
Jan. 10 · Wellst~n ·• Away
GIRLS
•
Jan. 5· Federal _Hocking • Home
Jan. 9 • Vinton County • Away

-~

SOU7B

.. ~\-

GIRLS
Jan. 4 •-syni-meiValley· Away
---~· Jan. 5 • Millerc; H~ome
Jan. 9 • Belpre • Away

...c

Dowhower named new Vanderbilt coach

...

Basketball

AP Top 25 college poll
The lor. 2S learns in ·The A11ociated
Prw' col eae·bask:etbl.ll poll. with rlrst-

NBA slate

ptace votes in paRnlheae~, rcoord ltl'ough
Jaa. J, kltaJ poiDll billed CD 2~ poinll rQr
a fll'lt·pi!JSC VOle lhrou&amp;h ooe poibt for a
2.SUI-place vote, and previOUI rantia[ ...

Tonight'• gam..
• ladianllf New Jmey, 7:30p.m
Seattle at Wllhinatoa , 7:30 p':'m.
Portlaad at At111t1, 1 : ~ p.m.

Ium

Phoent1• Sacrlnlellto. I p.m.
8 p.m.
' llouaton alllalt.u: l :lDp.m.
Milwaukee It Utah, 9 Jl.m
DmvJt at L.A. Lu.ken, 10:30 p.m.

· 4. Mauaduuetts ............ 5·1 I ,.00
S. Klwu ........................ &amp;-1 1.324

San Autonio al Golden Stitt. 10:30
p.m.

6. Cunneclicut. ...... ,...... .. 7-0
1. Maryland .................. IO. Z
&amp;. Ken1ucty ....... 1, .... •.•. . . 6-2
9 Arizoaa ... ...............9-2

Wednesday's games
Miami lt BOiloo , 7:30p.m.
Allanta MNew Yort.1:30 p.m.
New Jmey at Orludo. 7:)0 p.m
fUt.Jnd at Charlotte, 7: 30p.m.
Se.ttle at CLEVElAND, ·1:30 p.m.
WMhinaton lllndillla. 7:30p.m.
Deaver 11 Olicaao. 1:30 p.m
Ptlllldelphialt Phocnia, 9 p.m.

Major men'li
college scores
East
Sdon Hall72 , Miami 54
Sr. J01eph '• 83, Loyoia. MJ . .53
Vermont 82, l&gt;Mlfnouth 70

Sund•y, Jan. 15
AFC and NFc championships, 12:30
and 4p.m

l,l12

I
2

3
4
6

~.133

8
9

1,102

S

1,060

10

10. SyracUJe ................... B-1 1.027
II . !Me ......................... S-2 990

11
7

12. Oeoraecown ............. 7-1

882

l2

13. Flotida ......... ...... :-: ..'... 6-2
14. Michi1an St.. ........... 7-1
IS . AtivJna St. .... :.......... 9-2

834

13

627

IS

602

16

16. 1owaSt ....... ........... IO.l

Sl6

21

17. Cllirornia ............. :: -.7·1
II. Wake Forest .... :.. ...... 7-1

512
SOB

l4
II

19. Nebr•b ................ ll· l
20. New.Mu.ico St . ....... 9-2

370 · 23
lJJ · 22

Super Bowl at Miami, IS p.m. ·
Suncby, li'eb. J. .
Pro Bowl al Honolulu , 6 p.m..

Ubcrt)' Bowl
ll!inoi1 30. East Carolina 0

Sunday'1 -.:ores ·

Oranac Bowl
Ncbt11ka 24, Miami 17

Morlday's scores

17 .

llall ul' F'-.ne Bowl

WiJCon•in

•

.

lahoma
i
YoungS ,
M.\RSHAU. 151, E. Kelll:utky 6"
O~oma
3, Georgia 3,
M~naySt. 111,AiooroSt100. - - - - Peua St . 3, Auburn 2,111inois I , N.C.
N. GWlllioa.St 19,--Winthrvp-46. Oiitlonn , Oreaon 1:NW Louili&amp;nl 69, NE LouiJliDI 66
SE LouillllltlOO, Ccatmwy 92
Soolll Aorida ~7. N.C.· Wilmi!JI(oo 38
Troy St. I I 0, Selma 14
1\daae 16, Dnlke 12

Football

.RwU

2. Pc11.n St. (I 0.5) ..... .12-0-01 ,497 ..5
3. Colorado ............... ll.J-O 1.410
4. florid1St ............ .JO- J-1 1,120
.S . A.labama ................ 12- 1-0 1,112
6. MianD ...... .............. I0-2·0 1.:249
7, Aorida ................... I0"2-I 1,153
K. Te"us A&amp;M ......... . 10-0. 1 1.117
9. AubLWn .................... 9-1-J 1J 10.
10. Utah .................. 10·2·0 9SS
·tt.Oreacni. .................9·4-0 810
12. Michipn .·............. 8-4-0 . 112
13. Southern CaJ ......... 1-3- 1 691
14. OIUO ST ............ ...9 ...0 672 .
IS. Vlr&amp;illii .................9--~0 64-8
16. Colorado St.. ....... J0-2·/J 630 •
17. N. CarolinaSt. ..... 9-3-d, Si r
!It Bri&amp;ham Youoa .. 10--1-0 .soo
19. Kans. St ............. 9-~ 496
20. Arizona ....... .......... I-4-0 364
21 . Wuhinatan St. ...... 8· 4-0 344
22. Tcnneuee............ ..S-4-0 303
23. BORon Cofieae ..... 7-4-1 236
24. Miuiuippl St. ....... II·4--0 160
25. Tew ..................... l-4-0
90 .

2
4
7
6
, 3
S
II

9
14
12

20
21 ·
IJ
IS
10
23
22
11

Transactions
· Auto raelng
~

•

SABCO RACING : Named Grca Sacb
driver for 1995,
.

'

Baseball

Nallonal IAque ·
CI-OCAOO CUBS : Signed Kevin KobetitAch, pitcher, tO1 mioor ltague cootmcl.

Nan~• Bukcthall A-1-.:~

NEW YORK KMCKS: Sianed Grea
Kih:, center-forward, to 1 one-year contract.
Nallonal foolball ....lit

16

deCeuive coordinator.

·

__

Where America Goes 'R&gt; Relax--

A brat is a child who acts like
yours but belongs to a neighbor.

'

•

II:

742·2211

985·3301

_· ( .

-·

. ··-

~n~•--r-~--~-1-4~~.~

.

•

-

' ~

•

f

555 PARK sf.

992·6611

MIDDLEPORT( OHIO

DEC. 22 .......... :.... : ............ AT SOUTHERN
DEC. 29 .......................... AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 5 ................:........ ......... AT BELPRE*
JAN. 9 ......... v ..............'..............TRIMBLE*
. JAN. 11 ............................... AT EASTERN
JAN. 12 ....................... VINTON COUNTY*
JAN. 14 ...... ................. AT RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 19. ,.................... , .. AJ ~LEXANOER*
JAN. 23 ................................... EASTERN*
JAN . 26 ................ N_ELSONVILLE-YORK*
JAN. 30 ................ :.......... AT WELLSTON*
FEB. &amp;........................................ BELPRE*
FEB. 9 ................... AT VINTON COUNTY*
*-Indicates Tri-Valley games
Coach - Ron Logan

· 3 LOCATIONS
JACKSON AVE.

Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
304·675-1121

5TH STREET '
New Haven, W. Va •

~.

304-882·2136

MAIN ST.
POMEROY .

II111/lfl
KFC. · .

· 992·5432

Always"
-·-

\o

•

r

105 MULBERRY.AYE.
"
~
- 992-2121

VALLEY LUMBER

SECOND STREET
Mason, W. Va.
304-773-551.4

228 WEST

Ewing Funera.__•

Colo~41, Notre Dam~ 24

DEC. 21 ... :...............-............ ALEXANDER

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT

POMEROY

\.

- "Dignit~ !Jn~ S~~yjee
.

Aorida State 23. Aorida 17

ERS

Bank

992•2342 \

......... .

sua.-Bowt

JAN. 2&amp; ...: ......._ .........:......... AT TRIMBLE'
JAN. 30 .............................. ALEXANDER'
.FEB.-2 ...... :.... .................. ~ ....... EASTERN'
FEB. 6.................................... AT MILLER'
" ~ FEB. 9 .................... FEDERAL HOCKING'
'-Indicates Tri-Vtillley games
Coach - Jenni Roush

·Peoples

·1·800·837·1217

110 SECOND .VE.

992·2635

-... a~ no-.'::--~~---1~
Pun State 311, Oreaon

.JAN. 23 .............;............. AT WELLSTON*

DEC. 15 .............................. : ........ MILLER*

•

Most of lile's .problems are like
highway
11. may not

21

JAN. 12 ............ AT FEDERAL HOCKING'·
JAN. _19 ........................SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 2L ................... AT RIVER VALLEY

1994-1995 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

'

L'augh and the world laughs wijh
you . Snore, and- you slleoeo· t
alone .''- -·-

. '.

JAN. 9 .................................. AT BELPRE•

1994·1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE

We Will Take Care Of All
Your lnsuranee Needs!
DOWNI,NG·CHILDS·MULLERN
MUSSER INSURANCE

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

106 N. 2ND

DEC. 15 .......... AT NELSONVILLE-YORK'
DEC. 19 ............................. AT EASTERN'
DEC. 22 ....:.............-...............: ........ MEIGS
DEC. 23 ... :............: ........... RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 4 .................... AT SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 5 .................... :.... ,............... MILLER'

DEC. 16........................... AT WELLSTON*
DEC. 20 ................................. AT MILLER*
DEC. 22 ................. AT POINT PLEASANT
JAN. 3 ................... .'.......... RIVER VALLEY
JAN. &amp;.................................. AT WAHAMA
JAN. 10 ................ ................ SOUTHERN*
JAN, 13 ........... : .......................... BELPRE*
JAN. 17 · ................ :............ AT TRIMBLE*
JAN. 20 ............. :... AT VINTON COUNTY*
JAN. 24 .............................. ALEXANDER*
JAN. 27 .......... :..... ~ ... ~ ......... AT EASTERN*
JAN. 31 .....~ .... AT NELSONVILLE-YORK*
FEB. 3 .................................. WELLSTON*
FEB. 7 ....................... :POINT P.LEASANT
FEB. 10 ...... :..... .................... AT BELPFJE*
FEB. 14 ..................................... WAHAMA
FEB. 17 ........... ............ VINTON COUNTY*
*-Indicates Tri-Valley games
Coach- Jeff Skinner

"Family Owntitl and Operaledfor 48 Years"

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;
JEWELERS
AND1RADIO SHACK

II:

.1994•1995 GIRJ.:S!..SCHEDULE

MEIGS

BOTTLE -GAS

CHESTER-

•. *

70

AND

BAUM LUMBER

A conclusion is the place where
you gotlired of thinking. •

FootbaU
· BUFFALO BD..LS: F'tred Walt Corey

Dave

• ••

J!i

'

Poftable

The perso~ who takes a stand is
often wrong. But those Ylho tail
to take a stand are always
wrong.

u·....ketball

24

By
Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture

'-Indicates Tri-Valley games
Coach - Scott Wolfe

.

1 HotSpring·
~
~&amp; .
Spiis

Future bowls

Wlld·card IICood '
s ••.,...,

Southwest

or=eco Bay 16, Detroit 12

Okllhorna St til, Alaka-AIIchan..

Mlami 27, Kan111 Oty 17

72

0

Far·Wost

&amp;.nmI .
I.Nebraska(SU) ..... I).().QI,S39.S

Ium

FEB. 2 ............................. AT SOUTHERN'
FEB. G.............. AT FEDERAL HOCKING'
FEB. 9 .........: ........................... r.TRIMBLE'

RUTLAND. FURNITURE

This Christmas!

;

JAN. 26 .............................. ALEXANDER'

JAN. 30 ....................................... MILLER•

NEm- a:o-ME
' BRUCE FISHER- Owner/Operator ·
MIDDLEPORT
. 992·5141

' Establish 1913

S.turd.af

AppaiKhill ~t. '"· Loyola, Ill. 7!5

Cololado 93, Ub&lt;fty 77 ·
Co kndo Sl. % , Hawaii 74
MiiiO\A"i 71, Wllhi~~Wn 61
New Mnico 7&lt;1, Fre.oo St: 66
St Miry's, Col. S6. 1rown 43
UtM Sl. 66, B.oUe S\ 61
WyomiDJ 6-f, San Dirao St. 56

Luc

Carq.w•l Bowl
'
South Carolioa 24, WEST VIROINIA

·.NFL playoffs

Mtdw.it

29

20

C041toft Bo..
SoUthern CaliforD\a-.s¥,-Te~ Tich li._

~~~~~--~_irl~~~~t~:~~~J.~a~~~st
.~J.k--1;

Tel•£1 Plio 10. Air Foroe64
Te..,.Pln Anwitu .SJ, Mlu-~lulh

)4, Duke

CIIIUI Bowl
Alabama 24, 0HIO STATE 17

IS7

:__-~1--zz=~='!'!".~·· ~

Olhu-• t«ei'rina YOiln: Vlrgioia Tech
15, Nc.1h Caroliniil 6.5 , Wiscoosin .54, lllioois 4'5;'Washington 41, Duke 9, S)Tacuae
7, Air Force 2. South Carohi)B 2.

•

Soutb

\

r.r,.h llo.t

North Carolina St11te 28, Miuiuippi
State 2•

24. 0eorpaTech ............ B·3

2.5 . Penn ..... ... ................. 6-1

Saturda.fs scores

'

24

184

College bowl action

AlamG Bowl
Wuhington State 10, Baylor J

21 . 1ndiana ..................... 8-4 246.
22. 1owa ... .................... I0.2 231
21. Stanford ......... .,....... 9-0 · 237

place vole U.ou&amp;fl oDe point for a 2!ilh·
'place ·vote. and r1nt.ing in !he previoua
poll:'

· '

Sundoy, Jon. 19

_

.BWd &amp;.WW.

l . NmhCarolinai.S4) ... ;9-0· 1.613
2. UCLA (6) ............. ...... 6-0 1~22 ,
J. Arkan~a~ (S) ............ II· I I~OS

Den~tr .11 ,¥in!M!*ota,

.

Miami at San Diego, 4 p.m.

JAN. 25 ................................ AT WARREN

FEB. 10 ....................................... MILLER~

BOYS
Jan. .3 • River Valley • Home
Jan. 6 • Wahama • Away
Jan. 10 • Southern • Home
GIRLS
Jan. 5.· Belpre· Away
Jan. 9 • Trimble • Home
Jan. 11 • Easter~ • Away
Put One Under Your Tree

'JAN. 18 ...............: ..... .......... WATERFORD
JAN. 19 ................ NELSONVILLE-YORK'
.JAN. 23 ................................... AT MEIGS'

-- FEB: 11::-.........: AT FEDERAL HOCKING*
*-Indicates Tri-Valley games
Coach - Howle Caldwell

MEIGS MARAUDERS

'

.

JAN. 12 ............................... AT TRIMBLE•

DEC. 16 .............................. ALEXANDER*
DEC. 20 .......... : .... NELSONVILLE-YORK*
DEC. 23........ .. :.. ROSS SOUTHEASTERN
DEC. 27 ........................ ..... COAL GROVE
DEC. 30.............................CHESAPEAKE
JAN. 6 .: ................................... EASTERN*
JAN. 10 ................. :................. AT MEIGS*
JAN. 13 ......................... :........ AT MILLER*
JAN. 17 ...................................... BELPRE*
JAN. 20 ... :....... :., .... FEDERAL t-k&gt;CKING*
JAN. 21 ........................ ... AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 27 ................................ WELLSTON*
JAN. 31 ..................................... TRIMBLE*
f;EB. 3 .................... ....... AT ALEXANDER*
FEB. 7 ........................ :....... AT EASTERN*

SOUTHERN TORNADOES

1

DEC. 19 ................................ SOUTHERN'
DEC. 22, .................... :.......... WELLSTON'
JAN. S.................... FEDERAL HOCKING'
JAN. 9 ................... AT-VINTON COUNTY'
JAN. 11 .............. .................... :... ..... MEIGS

1994-1995 BOYS: SCHEDULE -.~

._.!

BOYS
Jan. 6 • Eastern • Home
J~n. 10 • Meigs • Away .

1994-1995 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

DEC. 16 ...................................... . MILLER*
DEC. 23 ... .............................. FORT FRYE
DEC. 29 ....... AT FED. HOCKING TOURN.
DEC. 30 ...'.... AT FED. HOCKING TOURN.
JAN. 6 ..........r'.. ,.............. AT SOUTHERN*
JAN. 10 ........................... AT WELLSTON*
JAN. 14 ............ AT FEDERAL HOCKING*
JAN 17 ........................ VINTON COUNTY*
JAN. 20.................................... ,TRIMBLE*
JAN. 24 .......... AT NELSONVILLE-YORK*
JAN. 27 ......................................... MEIGS*
JAN. 31 ...... ............... .... AT ALEXANDER*
FEB. 3 ................................... AT MILLER*
FEB. 4 ....................................... 0AK HILL
FEB. 7 ................................ SOUTHNERN*
,_~EB. 10..... : ............ FEDERAL HOCKING*
FEB. 17 ............................... AT TRIMBLE*
*-Indicates Tri-Valley games
Coach - Tony Deem

••

lataWnt ShriDt Olll'lc,
,
Stanford, Cdl.

~ Rut~·-

weal.4p.m. (ESPN)

, · S.tiU'.f.,,,J• • lt
Stakr Bowl, Mobllt, Aa..
Nonh Yl, South, 2 p.m. (EsPN)

.

SandaJ, J-.. 2l
Hul• Bo.rl, Honohala

East Yl . Weal, 8 p.m. (ESPN)

AP Top 25 college poll

•
•

&gt;

.Straigli-f-

Your Local

&amp; !l(pusft.

·' STIHC.

![uneraf:JlOttreSTIHL .. •.

Ravenswood, WV· (304) 273-2152

Preneed- Atneed- Poatneed

7 SHOWIOOMS

SERVING JACJ(SON f.:NV.) MASON (WV.)
AND MEIGS (OH.) COUNTIES
ROUSH
~~~

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, I

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Dealer

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SALES·· SERVICE • PARTS

II WAREHOUSES

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'RIDENOUR SUPPLY

Rutland_Eurniture

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KEEP UP
ON All
YOUR
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915·3301

742il211
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-- .

CHESTER, c·nlllr t-

N. 2nd AVE.

LOCAL.HIGH SCHOOL
ATHLETICS
MIDDLEPOIT
•-•~-..........,b--...., aily S~ntinel .
~

,.

•

�•
•

.

•

;: Sports

.

January 3, 1995

The Daily Se~!!l~!
.

,The Dally Sentinei-Page----6

.

•
•

\:· Pen11 .State, 'Bama &amp;USCs
among major bowl victors

By The Aaocl8ted PnM
about.'We shouldn't get a rap tbat
While Nebraska returned home we didn't play a tough schedule.
to a salute befitting a national We deserve (the national champichampion. Penn State bied to teen onship) just as much as (!he Comits mind on a game that couldn't huskers) do."
lift it to No.1 .
II didn't come easily, despite
Top-ranted Nebraska returned Penn State being a heavy favorite.
. to Lincoln on Monday for its com- . Or~gon (9-4), coming off a six:. , nation, even as the second-ranked game winning streak and in the
· Nittany Lions struggled through a Rose Bowl for the first time in 37
.· 38-20 victory over Oregon in the years, gave the Nittan' Lions fits
• Rose Bowl.
with their passing game.
.•
Even before their offiCial desigDanny' O'Neil set Rose Bowl
nation as national champions, the. records for attempts, completions
Comhuskers, led by coach Tom and yards with his 41-for-61 perOsborne, were hailed by the gover- formance and 456 yards. He also
nor and saluted by some 15,000 threw two interceptions and was
screaming fans. The celebration sacked six times as Oregon. ran up
was ai the Bob Devaney Sports 501 yards. Penn State, the besi
Center, named foF the man who ·offensive team in the nation,
coached the Cotnbuskers to their aged 430.
only other national titles, in 1971
"We came very close to beating
and 1972.
them," O'Neil said . "We just
Penn State also bas won two didn't make the big plays . Our
national championships, but a 12-Q defense did shut them d~ for the
record wasn't enough this time. most part. I thiillc they only bad one
The Nillany Lions knew they bad drive ..But we gave them turnovers.
linle chance after Nebraska (13-0) We gave them a lot of opportunibeat Miami 24-17 in the Orange ties."
.. ;._ Bowl. __ ~ _. __ ..
Fiesta
·
Joe Paterno's team was ahead
No: 3 Coloriiclo4i .
only 14-7 at halftime before getting
Notre Dame 24 ,
untracked. Ki-Jana Carter ran for
At Tempe, Ariz., the fiRal col156 yards and three touchdowns, lege games ror coach Bill McCartwhile Kerry Collins was 19-for-30 ney and Heisman Trophy ·winner
• for 200 yards passing. .,
Rasbaan Sataam· wasn't close. The
"It's really a shame lhat Penn Buffaloes {12-1 this season. 93-55State couldn't play Nebraska Ibis 5 overall under McCartney) -bad
year," Collins said. "The NCAA too much of everything for Notre
has to take a long look at this. This Dame (6-5-1), which failed to give
season more than an'ything sllows coach Lou Holtz his 200tb career
that the sysrem must change."
• victory. ,- · .
For Paterno, it was his fifth perMcCartney is retiring and .
feet record in 19 years at Penn S,alaam annouqced after the game
State; Tbe Nittany Lions didn't win be is bypassing-his senior season
lhe crown in four or those seasoos for lhe NFL.
- 1968, '69, '73 atrd '95.
McCartney wasgiven'the obli,
, "We did every"thing we could gatory ice bath by his players and
do within our -power to win tile then was hoisted oo tlieir shoulders.
national title," wide receiver Fred· "I feel very humble," he said,
die Scott said.
"very appreciative in my heart that
In olher games Sunday, it was I - a really average guy -can
.No. 3 Colorado 41, Nttre Dame 24 have this extraordinary opportuniin the Fiesta; No'. 4. Florida State ty."
.
23, No.7 Florida 17' in the Sugar;
Salaam rushed for only .83 yards
No. 13 Southern Cal 55, Texas on 27 carries- more than 100
Tech 14 in the Cotton; No. 5 yards below h~average- but
Alabama 24, No. 14 Ohio State 17 scored three times. Quarterback
in the Citrus; Wisconsin 34, Duke Kardell Stewart ran seven times for
:- 20 in the Hall of Fame; and Soulh 143 yards, c'ompleted II of 20
· Carolina 24, West Virginia 21 in passes for 205 more and accounted
• the Carques!.
· for two scores.
Rose '
Th¢n .Salaaln said he wa~ tum,
No.l·Penn State 38
ing pro.
No. 11 Oregon 20
"There are a lot or things going
At Pasadena. Calif., Paterno on at CU,"· he said. "A lot of
became ihe first coach to win each coaches are bouncing around, and
or the four traditional major New· · there's not a lot of stabiliity going
Year's games- the Collon, Sugar, on. That was the basis why I'decidOrange and Rose Bowls. His 16th ed to C!lme to CU, and I signed a
bowl biumph overall also broke·the four-year deal. But ... I'm leaving
record he shared with the late Paul with coach Mac."
"Bear" Bryant.
Suj!ar
·
But it was the national title he
No.4 Florida State 23
spoke about
No.7 Florida 17
"All you can do is win all your
At New Orleans, the Seminoles
· football g3jlles,'' Paterno said. won an NCAA-recoro lOth consec"We've gotten criticized for our utive bowl game, riding the wave
. schedule by some people who of confidence built by their stun-don't know what they"re talking ning comeback against !he Gators

man-

,(!'

•

'

in a regular-season tie.
When they met oo Nov. 26, the
Gators blew a 31-3 lead in the
fourth quarter. This time, FSU (101-1) controlled most of the action,
holding Florida (10-2-1) to a season-low point total.
·
"It seemed lik.e.we dominated a
little more than . I thought we
would," Florida State coach Bobby
Bowden said. "It was closer than it
should bave been - if we had capitalized on all our opportunities.''
Danny Kanell threw for 252
yards and one touchdown, and halfback Warrick Dunn connected on a
73-yard scoring pass to 'OMar Elli- ·
son. Kanell was 23-for-40 for
Florida State as the teams combined for 774 yards passing. Dunn
had 182 all-purpose yards, rushing
for 58 on 14 carries and catching
nine passes for 51, in addition to
his touchdown pass to Ellison.
• Danny Wuerffelwas 28-for-39
for a Sugar Bowl-recoFd 394 yards
and one touchdown for Florida.
"We couldn't get the ball in the
end zone. That's what ultimately
h~ us,'_' W.l!~rffel s;Ud. "Normally, we actually are better scoring
ALMOST- Ohio&gt;State•s' Chris Sanders (17) . of the_·Citrus Bowl Monday In Orlando, Fla.,
than moving the ball.' '
almost
pulls In a touchdowil'·palM' in front or where the Crimson Tide got a last-minute touch" ' ""''
Cotton
Alabama's
Tommy Johnson in the second quarter down catch l'rom Sherman Willlaltl'l to win 24-17.
No. 13 Southern Cal SS
(AP)
t
Texas Tech 14
At Dallas, in the !Dismatch of sai&lt;!. "But they were willing to do ing big games," Fletcher said, touchdown pass to tight end
the day, Southern Cal made its first what it takes to be champions."
:'but I never, ever dreamed about Boomer Foster.
trip to the Cotton Bowl a memoOhio State (9-4) is 1-5 in bowls anything like this.''
'
"We've been wfliting so long
rable one, building a 48-0 lead.
under coach John Cooper.
· The Badgers (7-4-1) won four of for South Carolioa to rise to the
Rob Johnson threw three touchHall of Fame
their last five games one year after top, we think we've showed the
WISconsin 34, Duke 20
w'inning the Big Ten champi- country that we can play, that they
down passes lllld K'eyshawn Johnson ·caught three. including an 86Terrell Fletcher must wish his onship. Duke (8-4) lost four of five have to pay attention to this team,''
yarder from backup Brad Olton. season and college career wasn't after a school-record 7-0 start said tailback Brandon Bennett, who
Rob Johnson completed 16 of 21 ,. ending. He's as hot as any runner · under first-year coach Fred Gold- finished with 100 yards rushing.
•
passes for 289 yards and· left after in the nation.
-smlth-:· Soutll Carolina (7-5) was wintbe first series of the second half . Aetcher rushed 39 times for 241
qarquest
less in eight previous bgwl appear- · 1
three yards sliorf of the bowl yards, both-Hall' o!Fame B'o wl .
South'CaroHna 24
ances.West Virginia, which won
record.
records, and touchdowns or one
West Virginia 21
six. or its previous seven games,
"It was a lot easier tblm 'I. and 49 yards. In his previous game,
At Miami, South Carolina won gave up two fumbles and an interthought it would be after seeing Fletcher set a career-high rushillg its first bowl game, getting touch• ception, ani! lwo of the tumovers
them on ftlm," Rob Johnson said. total with 192 yards to' lead the down runs from Steve Taneyhill . led to scores. The Mountaineers (7·~ ~~We confused 'em and we manBadgers past Illinois to earn the bip and Stanley Pritchett. Taneyhill 6) also turned 'the ball over on
handled 'em. I was surprised."
to Tampa.
also completed 26 of 36 .passes for downs twice in the final six min-·
The Trojans (8-3-1) upped their
"You always dream about bav- 227 yards, including a two-yard utes.
bowl record to 24-13, while the
.
·
66
RedRaiders(
• ),lostintheirflrst
trip to the Cotton
Bowl in 55
_
Y'
years.Tbe loss was the seventh
•
By TERESA M. WALKER
just!inc," Dowhower said at Monstraight for the SWC challlp.
Dowhower beat out at least 13
N,ASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - . day night's news conference. "As other candidates for the Vanderbilt
Citrus
Vanderbilt players wanting to size long as the Browns are on TV and job, thanks primarily. to his resume
No. 5 Alabama 24
up
new Commodore coach Rod the kids -know their coach is work- as a quarterbacks coach and offenNo. 14 Oblo State 17
Dowhower will probably have to iog-to win a championship, I'm sive coordinator. .
At Orlando, Ela., Sherman
be. content seeing him on television sure t1!.at' s gojng to have a trickleWilliams was the one standout in a
.Vanderbilt athletic director Paul
until his duties with the Cleveland down e~fcct."
sloppy game.
,Hoolahan wanted a coach who will
Browns are concluded..
Dowhower' s first · priority. juice up an offense t.b3t l!iiS run the
Williams . caught a short pass
Dowhower, 51, flew in Monday remains the Browns, and he will
from Jay Barker and turned it into a
option the past four seasons with a
night and signed a five-year deal. slay with the team through the rest
50-yard' touchdown with 42 secnearly nonexistent passing game.
qnds remaining, giving Alabama .Vanderbilt officiljls then-introd.uced or the NFL playoffs. He has been
Vanderbilt was .the only Division I(.12-1) the victorv. The senior tail- the Cleveland Browns' quarter- working,on a list of coaches for his . A team not to throw a' touchdown
back was everywhere: running 27 backs coach as the school's 23rd starr since agreeing to the deal oyer pass in 1993 and produced only
coach. He returned inimediatel y to . the weekend, and hopes to hire
times for 166 yards, catching eight Cleveland.
two in 1994.
offensive and defensive coordinapasses for ISS yards, returning two
Dowhower was a quar!f;!rback at
Dowhower is due to spend tors quickly.
kicks for 38 yards.
San
Diegq State under veleran
He'll return to the Vanderbilt coach Don Coryell and has a 29- ·
Williams' class ended up with a today in meetings preparing for the
45-4-1 record and one national Browns' Saturday AFC divisional campus when possible to meet his . year career at both the college and
championship, the best four-year playoff game with IIJe Pittsburgh new players, but any coaches he
NFL levels.
Steelers. The quickrtrip left no time hires will head to Nashville and
mark in Crimson Tide history.
He led Stanford to a 5-5-1
"They weren't always the most for Dowhower to meet with any of stan working imr.~ediately. Vanderrecord
in 1979, where he coached ·
bilt officials will· continue recruittalented,'' coach Gene Stallings the Vanderbilt players.
John Elway
.·
"But in reality, il will work out ing.

THIS WEEK'S
ES ·

1994-1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE
DEC. 16....................... r .............. MILLER*
.DEC. 23 ................................. FORT FRYE
DEC. 29 ....... AT FED. HOCKING TOURN.
DEC. 30 ....... AT FED. HOCKING TOURN.
jAN. 6 ............................. AT SOUTHERN*
JAN. 10........................... AT WELLSTON*
JAN. 14 ............ AT FEDERAL HOCKING*
JAN 17 ........................ VINTON COUNTY*
JAN. 20 .....................................TRIMBLE*
JAN. 24 .......... AT NELSONVILLE-YORK*
JAN. 27 ................................. ........ MEIGS*
JAN. 31 ::........................ AT ALEXANDER*
FEB. 3 ................: .................. AT MILLER*
FEB. 4 ........................ :.............. 0AK HILL
FEB. 7 ................................ SOUTHNERN*
FEB. 10 .................. FEDERAL HOCKING*
FEB. 17 ........ ~ ................. ~ •... AT TRIMBLE*
*-Indicates Trl-Valley games·
'
Coach - Tony Deem

EASTERN EAGLES
BOYS
Jan. 6 • Southern • Away
Jan. 10 • Wellston • Away.
GIRLS
.
Jan. 5· Federal Hocking • HC:me '
Jan. 9 • Vinton County • Away

Jan. 6 • Eastern • Home
Jan. ·10 • Meigs • Away
'
-~· GIRLS

L

'

Jan.·4 • Symmes Valley· Away
Jan. 5 • Miller • Home
Jan. 9 -. BeiFre • Away

'.

Df;C. 19 .............................. ,.SOUTHERN'
DEC. 22 ................................ WELLSTON'
JAN. 5 .................... FEDERAL HOCKING'
JAN. 9 .......: ........... AT VINTON COUNTY'
JAN. 11 .....................................: ..... MEIGS
JAN. 12 ................:, ............. AT TRIMBLE'
JAN. 18 ...... :........................ WATERFORD
JAN. 19 ................ NELSONVILLE-YORK'
JAN. 23 .................... ~ ......... :... AT MEIGS'
JAN. 25 ............................, ... AT WARREN
JAN. 26 ............................. .' ALEXANDER'
JAN. 30 ............... , ..........-............. MILLER'
F.EB.
AT SOUTHERN'
FEB. 6 .............;AT FEDERAL HOCKING'
FEB. 9.................,..................... TRIMBLE'

2.:...........................

•:;-Indlc~tes Tri-Valley games.

Coacli - Scott Wolle

1994-1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE
DEC. 1.6 ................. ~~·-- · ··-- ALEXAN..!&gt;.!'R*,.
DEC. 20 ............... NELSONVILLI;:-YORK*
DEC. 23 ............. ROSS SOUTHEASTERN
DEC. 27 .......................... .'.. COAL GROVE
DEC. 30 ................. .'........... CHESAPEAKE
jAN. 6 .................... ................. EASTERN*
JAN. 10 ..................'; ................ AT MEIGS*
JAN. 13.................... ,............. A:r MILLER*
JAN. 17 ...................................... BELPRE*
JAN. 20 ....... ,.......... FEDERAL HOCKING*
JAN. 21 ......................... :.AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 27 ................................ WELLSTON*
·JAN. 31 ...................................1'TRIMBLE*
FEB. 3 ........................... AT ALEXANDER*
FEB. 7....~.: ................... :..... ATEASTERN*
FEB.. 10 ................................. ...~ .. MILLER*
FEB. 17 ............ AT FEDERAL HOCKING*
' ·*-Indicates Tri-V:alley games
Coach - Howle Caldwell

1994-1995 GIRLS' SCHEDULE

-..l..

-

-

OEC. 15 .......... AT NELSONVILLE-YORK'
DEC. 19 ............................. AT EAST~RN'
DEC. 22 .......................................... MEIGS
DEC. 23 ........,. ................... RIVER VALLEY
. JAN. 4 .................... AT SYMMES VALLEY
JAN. 5 ......................................... MILLER'
JAN. 9 ............. .'.................... AT BELPRE'
JAN. 12 ............ AT FEDERAL !'lOCKING'
•
JAN. 19 ....................... SYMMES VALLEY
JAN: :21 .................~....ATRIVER VALLE\' .
JAN. 23 ........................... AT WELLSTON'
JAN. 26 ............................... AT TRIMBLE'
JAI)l. 30 ..................... ,........ ALEXANDER'
FEB ..2 ... :.. :.......... ;...~............... EASTERN'
FEB. 6; ............ : ...................... AT MILLER'
FEB~ 9.,.................. FEDERAL HOCKING'
*-'-Indicates Tri-)/alley games
Coach·- Jenni Roush

ERS

.

.

MEIGS MARAUDERS ·

-Do.wh_
ower named new "anderbl"lt coa·ch

1994-1995 BOYS' SCHEDULE
DEC. 16......................:.. :.AT WELLsTON*
DEC. 20 ................................ .- AT MILLER*
DEC. 22 ... ~ ............ AT POINT PLEASANT
JAN. 3 .............................. RIVER VALLEY
JAN. 6 .................................. ATWAHAMA
JAN. 10 ................................ SOUTHERN*
JAN. 13 ...•...•..• ~······· ................... BELPRE*
JAN. 17 ............................. AT TRIMBLE*
JAN. 20 ....... : ......, .. AT VINTON COUNTY*
. JAN. 24 .............................. ALEXANDER*
JAN. 27 .............................. AT EASTERN*
JAN. 31 .......... AT NELSONVILLE-YORK*
FEB. 3 .............................. :... WELLSTON*
FEB. 7................. ....... POINT PLEASANT
FEB. 10 ................................ AT BELPRE*
FEB. 14 ................................... :. WAHAMA
FEB. 17 ................. .-..... VINTON COUNTY*
*-Indicates Trl-Valley games .
Coach -Jeff Skinner

BOYS
Jan. 3 ··.River Valley.· Home
Jan. 6 • Wahama • Away
Jan •. 10 • Southern • Home

-GIRLS'
.

\

'

Jan. 5:• Belpre • Away
Jan. 9 • Trimble • Home
·Jan.· 11 • Easter~
• Away
.

'

.

.

1994-1995 GI,RLS' SCHEDULE .

SOU7HER 7JIRNADIIES

SOUlHERN -TORNADOES
BOYS

EAGLES

•

1994~1995 GIRLS' SCHEDULE
DEC. 15 ..............................:... ,.... MILLER*
DEC. 21 ............................... ALEXANDER
DEC. 22 .......... :................,AT SOUT.HERN
DEC. 29 .......................... AT GALLIPOLIS
JAN. 5 .................................. AT BELPRE*
JAN. 9 ...... ,..., .... ................., .. ;... TRIMBLE*
JAN. 11 ............................... AT EASTERN
JAN. 12 ....................... VINTON COUNTY*
JAN. 14....................... AT ·RIVER VALI,I;Y
JAN. 19 .........................AT ALEXANDER*
JAN. 23 ................................... EASTERN*
JAN, 2&amp; ..: ............. NELSONVILLE-YORK•
JAN. 3D ........................... AT WELLSTON*
FEB. &amp;......................... : .............. BELPRE*
FEB. 9 , .................. AT VINTON COUNTY*

*-Indicates Tri-Valley games •
Coach- Ron Logan

..

Put One Under Your Tree
This Christmas!
Basketball
Tonight's gam..
llldiaJUIIII New lmey, 7:30p.m
" Scatlle II WuhiDj(OD, 7:30p.m.

..

' Port.led at AU.uta. 7:30p.m
Phoeni1 • Sacramento, I p.m .

Denver Ill Mln~. 8 p.m._
Houlton at Dallu, 8:30p.m.
Milwaukee at Utah, 9 p.m

Wednesday'sl!ames
Miami at Bmon. 7:30p.m.
AtJ&amp;Dll al New Yori., 1:30 p.m.
New Jeney at Orludo, 7:30p.m
Portland at Charlode, 7:30p.m
Suttle ll CLEVEL..AHD, 7:)0 p.ril.
Wl&amp;hla!l'oa llladia.Da, 7:30p.m.
Denver ll Chlca,o. &amp;: 30 p.m.
Pllilldelphil d Aloenir, 9·p.m.

Major men's
college scores

s•

- . -SIIulh ·

Coli. or
Duke 107, S. Caroll~~a St. 61
" Fla. l.n.ll!tDihoDal 7,, Ge«JII SL 64

237 . 184

25. Penn ......................... 6-1

157

' Peac:lrt Bowl .
North CaroliDa State 211. Miniuippi
'SLate 24

~------------

Thlee 116, Orate 12 ••

Appalldliao St. U, Loyoiii, JII. 15

Wiacon&amp;in 34, Duke 20

17
...

j-

Coft

S~~them ~aliCornia

.

.

S, T~~ Tech ~ 4

Penn Slile

li~ Oi-eBO-n ~

£.1-Wn~, ShriM

364

15

344
303
236
160
90

24
16

·

B.. ketbatl

Nalioo .. Ba~letball A..ocl•lkln
NE\f' YORK KNICKS: Sianed Grc1
Kite, ce~ter·Corward, to a one-year con-

""''-

FootbaU
Natlonal li'oolhaliiA•ue
BUFFM.D Bll.LS: Fired Walt Corey,

defensi¥e coordinator. ·

985·3301

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.•

Weat, 8 p.m. (ESPN)

AP Top 25 college poll

..

:Funera£!J{cmte

Ravenswood, WV- (304) 21a-:21 52
l'reoeecf. Atneed- Postn'eed
SERVING JACKSON (WV.) MASON (WV.)
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I

'

II

lnact.

I

S.:nkr Bowl, Mobile, Ala.
North u . South, 2 p.m. (ESPN)

Chiclao at San Fraoci&amp;co, " p.m.

I

496

Cl-nCAGO CUBS: Signed Kevin Kobclitlich, pitcher. to a minor leAgue coq-

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Ful!lre bow!S ·
s.. urd•r ·

•
S•urday
CLEVELAND It Pitt&amp;bur.Jh . 12 :30

••

18. Briaham Yoona .. 10-3-0
19. Kan.u. St. ............. 9·3-0

a

•

BOTTLE GAS·

BlUM LUMBER

S"ll• Bowt ,
Florida State 23, Florida 17

Dl•lslonal playoffs

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ROH Bowl

llula Bowl, Honolulu

Far Weot

1,153
1,117
1.110
9ll
110
132
691

driver for 1995.

AND

Where America Goes 'Rl Relax--

J1iita BOWl
Coluntdo 41 , NOlle Dame 24

CLEVELAND 20, ~ew Enaland 13
0\!cqo 3.5, Minrwota II

Anaicaa .53, Mlaa.-Dululh

1. Aorlda ................... I0-2- 1
8. Teru A&amp;M .......... 10·0- 1
9 Aub&lt;n ................. 9-H
10. Uiah .................. .10-2-0
. II. Of:e~&lt;_~D ............... .'..9-4-0
12 . Mtchipn ............... 8.~0
J3.SouthetnCal ......... 8-3-1
14. 01-00 ST............... 9-4-0
IS. Virainia .................9·3-0
16. Colorado St ......... I0-2-0
17. N. Carolina St, ...... 9·3-0

Auto ra&lt;ing
SAD CO RACING : Named Gng Sack&amp; .

Dave

.

21

.......

Tu•EI Palo IO,'A.Ir Force 6-4

7
. 6
3
3

By .~

.

Carquut Bowl
Soutll Caroliaa 24. WEST VIRGINIA

·'Oreen Bay 16, Detroit 12
Miarri t7, Kuw CiJy 17

.

4. AoridaSt. ............. IO· I· I IJ20
5: Alabama: ........... .... I2-I-O 1,312

6n

Transactions

1
2
4

~1.HotSpr.in{i
~&amp;
Poitab/e Spas

.

•

•••

.Aiobo0..24~~~TE. I7
/""'

Wlkl-aanlliljores
'

Okllhoml 51. .1 12, AIMta-Anchcrq:e

Cokndo St 96, Hlwaii 1..
Miuour17J . Willlli...,D 61
N~ Mnioo 74, fre&amp;DO St. 66
'-! St. Mary't, Cal. 56, Brown 0
lJiah SL 66, ..... SL 61
,
- -WyomiDJ 6&lt;, S1111-Di•IJO SW6
.

~~:-~-~~::~

NFL playoffs

Midwest

. Soulhweot

...

Lu&lt;

20. Arlzou ................. 8-4-0
21. Wuhinatoa St. ......8-4-0
22. Tenneuce .............. 8· 4-0
23. BOlton Coffeae .....7-4-J
24. Miuiulppl 51. ....... 8· 4-0
25. Te.w. ...-;,.-;~':i...... . ..... l-4-0

o.-..ae Bo..-1
Nebruta 14, Mi11mi 17

Football

TroySt 11 0, Sclmal4

+--.J

Sunday's Korea

13
IS
1·6
21
J-4
18
23.
22

24. Owf&amp;la Teda ............ 8· 3

South Aorlda "· N.C.-Wilmiqtoa 38

' 29

12

. Vii'Jinia II , Genrii_._St . 10, OHIO 8, OJ·
labolria 7, Tuu 7, Brigham Youn11 5,
Oklahoma St. 4, florida St. 3, Oeoreia 3,
Peoa St. ), Aubullll 2, Illi11oia I, N .C .
_ _Oladnlle.I ,.Orelfln -1- - - - - -

NW l...Ou'lttama09, NIB.iiulaiaoa 66
SE Louisi•• I00, CealeWy 92
,

Te.u~-Pu

Ahi..Oiowt
• W~tahin~ton Stme 10, Baylor 3

17. XAVIER (OIDO) 16. Ml11iulppl Si. .•
J S. Providence 14, Utah 14, Uwaii II ,

f1orida Atlantic 61, Carneli&amp;-Mellon
-MARSHALL 19, E. K•atucky 6&lt;
M~.n~y St. Ill , AJcora S1. 100
N. Caroliaa St. 19, ~111~ 46

.

Uberty Bowl
lllinola 30, East Carolina 0

Olhen ru•Jrina v~: Virgin.ia Tech'
1~. Not1h Carolma 6j, Wisconsin 54 Illinois _45, Washington 41, Du.tc 9, Syr~use
7, Air Fuce 2. Soulb ·Carotina 2.

llwU &amp;:WW.

6. Miijffii .............. ;..... 10-2-0 .1.2-49

Saturday's scores

78 , M1rque1tc: 76, MinncaotaJ6, SL..•
Joha'• 52, St. Louis 50, Tulane 31, Vir- 1
ainii Tech 26, Wiscoaain 25. Villanova

16,"tenl Cuna~ St )J
C.. laton 72, Campbell 41

n

College bowl action

3
4
6
II
9
5
10
II
1

23. Stanford .... .. ...... :...... 9-0

point for i 25th-

I. N'ebrlllka(51.5).... .1J-0-01 ,5 39.5
2. Pon~ St. (JO.l) ...... 12·MI,497l
l Colotado .............. JI-1 -0 1,410

Pro Bowl as. Honolulu~ 6 p.ni.

2

238

thrOUg/1 ODe

poll:

Iulll

Sunday, Feb. S

:ru..
....... &amp;:WW.I'
I. North Carolina(54) .... 9-0 1,613

Olhcr rccei.-lal •ote•: IA!uis¥ille 123,
ONCINNATI 9H, Alabama 9.5, Miuouri

-~ Alabtil'-

66

SuncbiJ 1 Jan. 'zrJ

Su~ Bowl at M!fnti , 6 p.m.

_•

22. 1owa ...................... :10-~

vote

and 4 p.m.

ll ..lndiana~ ........ ...... ....... B·-!1 . 246 - ..J-_4 _

Seton Hall72, Miami
S1. J01eph'a 13. Lo~ola. Md . 53
V~nt 82, Dllrtmouth 70 '

-

.

4. Masochusetts ............ S-1 1.430
5. JC.am;aq .................... : ... S-1 1,324
6. Connecticut ............. ·... 7-0 1,312
7.,MII')'Iand ..:......... ., .... I0- 2 1,133
I . 'lcntucll:y ................... ,6-2 1,102
9. Aritona .......................9-2 1,060
IO. Syracw;e ................... &amp;-.1 1,027
u.Duke......................... &amp;-2 990
12. GcorJC(Own ..............7-l
182 '
U . Aorida ............. :........&amp;-2 83-4
14. Michipn St. ............. ?-1 627
Jj:. Arizona St ...............9-2 602
16. Jowa St. .................. 10-1 Sl6
17. Cal,ifornia .................7;.J Sl2
II. Wlltefaeat ............. 7• l 508
19. Nebrub ..1 ............ . 11-1 370
20.-New,Mulco St. ....... 9·2 331

p.m.

AFC and NFC championships. 12:30

..

2~1h-(l ac:e vote, and pn:¥ioUI rllllki'[:

2. UCLA (6k,............... 6-0 1,lll
3. Alton ... (l) ............. J 1·1 1~05

Detn:nt at LA. Ulkcn, 10:30 p.m.
San A111onio 11i Golden Stare, 10:30

~

.

pi~

place vote, and ranking in lflc previ ouA

• Su.nd•r, Jan. IS

lbe lof. 25 team&amp; in The A11ociated
Ptea ' cui ea:e·butetbal l poll, with flflt·
place Yotea In parenthesa, record throuJh
)~. ! , total poinll baicd on 2~ point&amp; for
1 flt'lt·p,lace vote lhrou&amp;h ooe point lor 11

NBA slate

East

Miarui at .San Diego, 4 p.m.

AP Top 25 college poll

Peoples··
· Bank .

RUTlAND FURNITURE

.

N. 2nd AVE.

. CHESTER, OHIO•

MIDDLIPORT

.

'

.

•.

�.

•

•

-~ Browns · to

•
•

.

face Steelers-Saturday

tagefor Satur~ game - ' by
beating Cleveland 17-7 at~
Riven Stadium tbree weeks aso.
"The last two lillles, they oulbit
us and outplayed us," Jones aaid.
"The last time we played them,
befom the game started, we didn't
have lbat look in our eye like we
did the last two weeks. We have to
get.lhal back."
So intense is the rivalry, Jones
aaid be won't be able to put it out.
of his IJiind Ibis week. Specifically,
he'll be seeing Piusburgb linebacker Greg Lloyd lurking around every
comer.
1
''When I go to sleep, wake up in
the morning, everything I do is
focused on the guy I'm playing
agains~" Jones said. "I can't take
my eyes off him . If you take a
break, he'll make lhe play. He and
I ha~e had some_great battles over

the years. Hc'sagmatplayer."
gave us the experience we' ll need.
Unlike the Steelers, who have We're just happy to have the
been in the playofts each of· the opportunity to play them again .
past-twe-yean,.mQ§t_Qf the Browns Celtainly this is a game where we
had iio playoff experleneeiJntH--can redeem.ourselves."
ihey· beat New England 20.. 1'3 in a
wild-ard game Sunday.
' The two ieams, like the cities
Yet Cleveland's game in Pitts- they represeut, am strikingly simiburgh on Dec. \18 bad playoff lar. The Browos gave up the fewest
implications thai made it feel like a
points in the NFL (204), and the
Steelers yielded lhe seoond-fewest
postseason game to everyone
.involved.
·
(234). The Browns ranlted 161b in
the league offensively, the Steelen
" I think it's made us a beuer
· team," Browns coach Bill
13th.
The Browns surrendered the '
Belichick said. "It was rough down
fewest quarterback sacks (14) in
there, but it's going to be rough on
the league, while the Steelers led
the road this lime of year. We don' t
have any excuses. They deserved to
th~ league \n sacking the quarter·
win il ' '
back (55).
"Because it was for our division
"It's exciting. To !Je in a playoff,
the way these two cities hate
·championship, it was a playoff
atmosphere," quarterback Vinny · each other, it's going to· be wild,"
Jones said.
Testaverde said. "Hopefully that

~: In other AFC piayo« action,

:~Chargers

·

.

IESI IECEPIIOI

'I
. I

would like to thank all
for their cal'ds &amp;
was very much
Iappreciated.
'Thank You
Jerry &amp; l.:inda Jacks

I

I

BINGO

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PRODUCTION TECHS
A well mana'ged, ·automated. manufacturing facility,
located in Northwest Ohio, is seeking individuals
with mechanical and/or electrical skills. Background
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necessary. Wage range; $8.50 · to $10.00,
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Send resume to:
Daily Sentinel
?.0 . Box '729 P
Pomeroy, OH 45769

·.

to-host Dolphins ·sunday

::By BERNIE WILSON
the blitz picku'p offensively up Diego late in the 1993 season, a foot injury and give 1be running
:
SAN DIEGO (AP) - The front that we've got to get, also."
Marino was out. with an Achilles game a boost. He's been inactive
, : .Miami Dolphins are coming to
· Ross said the Chargers seem tendon injury. Chargers running thelastthreegames. .
.
·: town, and coach Bobby Ross wanrs· more pmpared for the playoffs this back Natrone Means had the best
In the playoff g;une two seasons
:•his San Diego Chargers to thipk time. After all, their 1993 playoff . game of his rookie, season, 118 ago, Stan Huinprhies bad three
: t995, not 1993.
appearance was their first in a yards.and three 10uchdowns, as San passes intercepte~ in the_s'ccood
. :'..;.
1
• It was two years ago that Dan decade. Plus, they're healthy aad Diego won 45-20.
·quarter, and Manno captlahzed
~ari!l'! the Dolphins en'!ed, the rested.
,
A good running game by the each time with touchdown passes
BREAKING AWAY - Cleveland wide receiver Michael Jackson
. • C"hargers' surprise playoff run, 31"Ani:ll sense tliat: right now Chargers could help keep Manno-- enroute to a 31-~rvictory. -- .
(left) breaks away rrnm New England cornerback Ricky Reynolds
: 0 in the· rain in Miami.
we've gotten that confidence back off the field. But Means, who was
"It was bam, bam, bam- three
(21) to toltlplete an 18-yard pass play In the second quarter or Sun: · · Revenge won't be on Ross' to where we were at midseason," fourth in the NR. with 1,350 yards turnovers in a row and we were out
day's AFC wild-card playolf game in Clevebjnd. The Browns won 20· mind as the Chargers prepare for Ross aaid.
.
during the regular season, knows it of t~e ga111e, ·' Ross sai~ , ''And
13 to earn the right to race tbe Pittsburgh Steelers in Pittsburgh Sal• .
: Sunday's bome divisional-round
The Chargers started 6-0 before won't be as simple as that.
that s what can happen wtth a guy
urday. (AP)
· game against the Dolphins.
finishing 5-5.
"Any time you've got a guy of like Marino. You've got to be care: . "All we've got to do is talk
WhiletheChargerswereofflast his abili.ty on the field there's ful."
: about playoffs . I think that's ~e weekend, Marino ou~duel~d Joe always the threat of the quick
Ross feels better about San
: mlll!iC word and that's what were Montana as the Dolpbms eluru~t- score," Means aaid. "We've been Diego's chances this lime around.
• talking about," Ross said Monday ed Kansas Ctty 27-17 m MtaQil on talking about it in meetings where
"I think that we've goi a com-:- arterlhe Chargers returned after a -Saturday. .
· ~theremight tie limes when we nave petitive· -chance,'' ·· Ross- said.
: weekend off, their reward for earnThts wtll be the fourth _playoff 10: or 13-play drives and ·score. "They're good, but if we do what
:)ng the AFC's second seed behind game bet~een the Dolphms and and they ioight come back and bit we have to do, v:e'ye got a very
.
.
~:Pittshur~h.
,
Chargers! but the fust to be played it in three . .That's something that good_ ch~e of wmrung. There are
.• "I thmk the focus and concen- m San Dtego.
we.'re going to bave to expect.
certam thmgs that JUSt .bave got to
- milioil tilda}' was- very -good. Very-, -~Marino is 0-3 against-theCbarg"Our mliiii tlliifgngbt now is to - genlone, and !- think it starts wil:h ~-.
: very focused, making calls in the ers at Jack Murphy Stadium in reg- try to keep the ball and keep them not giving up any big, easy,cbeap
· secondary that we have to make ular'season games. ·
off the field."
·
plays ilefensively. And offensively,
: that are going to be critical, making
Wben these teams met in San
The Chargers hope that left · don't tum the ball over. And get a
guard Joe Cocozzo can return from balance to our attack."
·

PubliC Notice '

'·

Charlie's
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Delivery
Service
992•7553

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614-992;..f447

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PUbUc Notice
are

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Department
of
Tranoportatlon and the
office of the Dlatrlct Deputy

1~11/tln

HAULING
Uinestone
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...............
Joe N. Sayn

SAYRE TRUCKING

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GUN CLUi
GUN SHOOTS
FRIDAY NIGHTS
6:30P.M.
STARTING DEC. 30
12 Gauge Only

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121281141tfn

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replacement

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IIOWOPEN
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Onemlleout
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Tues. -Wed. • Fri. • Sat.
1-41
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Loads of Misc.
Buy·Seii-Trade

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NEW &amp; USED

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic; tanks cleaned &amp; portable toltet,s rented. .
·
Dally, weekly.:&amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites• Camp SltH • Family Reunlonal Parties

~MS ·

7

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Middleport
Hours: 10:00 A .M.
to 4:00P.M. Dally

992-2060 101011 mo.

NOW OFFERING GE NERAL HAUl

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal .

1112Mfn

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Public Notice.

WE HAVE A- I TOP SOIL FOR SA LE

Llconsod &amp; Bonded

KIN'S IPPLIANCI
SERVICE .

be~nllillas~~~lm~.
·; each
time they have put up more of

can

&amp; Service _ ~ ~·
•All Makee -42 Yeara
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•WaShers - Dryers - R~nges

•Diahwashera
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tH.W. Heaters
-Microwaves•Diapoeal•
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Surrounding Areee
(6t4) 985-3561 or
992-5335

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Rapair Also

S~~·st,ll9y~~~record
18 touchdown receptions.

. :: aineeling,
fight than
they3,did
in that first 8J!(Il5
Favre still
threw. for 2,
763figures
yards
on Oct.
1993.
touchdownsboth
· . "That fust lime, . I sensed, you exceed Troy Aikm:tJl' s totals of
. know, the bole in the r()(jf ... Here 2,676 yarils and 13 touchdowns in
we are with tile Dal~ Cowboys ... 1m.
.
.·
:And the cheerleaders over behind
Injuries to Aikman..Cknee), run:your bench," Holmgren recalled. ning back EmmiUSmitb (bam•"! don't knQw if we were as string) and widelreceiver Michael
:focused as we could have been."
Irvin (thigh) threaten to slow the
: lbey weren't as distracted .in the
playoffs on Jan. 16. but still succumbed 27-17 as Dallas, for the"
.second straight season, went on to
-defeat lhe 49ers in the NFC title
.:game and Buffalo in the Super
-nowl.'
: .. Then, third-string quarterbac
Jason Gariett led Dallas to a 42-31
victory over the Packers on
. Thanksgiving despite four touch: down catches by Sterling Sharpe.
• Until Chicago's upset of the
• Vikings, the Packers were antici•State Auto's 'already low
:pating a second-round !11atcbup
.__ eremil.'!.llS can be _ . "
; with San Francisco. Holmgren s.qd
·-\t was Uke being asked-Ill pick your ..• reduce(feven~more by
poison.
· insuring both your car .
"We've played Dallas in 1be
and home with the State
:last two years more, and so we're a
AuJo QqmR=
an~ie~s~,-:--· · more, fami)i.ar...with them~
Sllid. "We know ; how.. -ev_er, tbat both are great·teams .
Let us tell you just how
::Both
picked lll play eacb olber
much your savings can
· in the championship game,_so it
be.

l

992·5251

Society for tfie Preservation
flnd 'En.ciJuragement of
'liar6ersfwp Quartet Singing
in .9vrferica" bivites
. ,,
'Basses, 'Baritones,.LeadS, amf
Tenors to:Come o/isit,
Join, Sing and 'Enjoy.
Meets 'Every Tuestfay 8 p.m.

John

O&amp;E ELEt:TRIC

Resident a.nd Small Electric-al Repair ·
(Lamps Welcome) .
·
Home Repair Also

992-5251
John,

,h~t;~ ·

'

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TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

... ,..•..:-:.....

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Chuck Stotts
. 614-992-6223
Free Estimates
· Insurance Work Welcome

!\26 Second Ave. - Gallipolis .
For more Information:

446-1

· Slate .Rt. 33

Rates' f T:axati".on fior 1'99'4

Darwin, Ohio

o'

.

In pursuance of Law. I, Howard E. Frank, Treasurer of Meigs County, O~io, in compliance with revised Code No. 323.08 of State qf Ohio, do hereby give
notice of the Flates of Taxation lor the Tax Year of1994. Rates expressed in dollars and cents on each one thousi!nd dollars .lax ~aluation.
.
DISTRICTS
CORPORATIONS
,

CHESTER

YOUR INDIPENDEIT
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Basenenls, Footers
Mobile Home Set-ups
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214 EAST MAlN

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sistencies, the Cowboy~ appear a
notch below the squads that won
back-to-back Super Bowls.
"'As long as they're the Super
Bowl champions, you treat them as.
the Super Bowl champions;''
· Holmgren said. "They still have
the same great players and we
· respect their team.
..
"We're not afraid to play the
football game, but there's a healthy
respect there," Holmgren added.
"But the fact we've played them a
little bit better each game, ·like 1
said, maybe we can sneak up on
them this time."
=::::.:=:=.:;:::;:~::-:-:'::::-::----

..

20

l:.mergenc; Phone ClSS-341 8

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attempt to win. a fourth -straight
NFL rushing Iitle.
.
..
. Wilb all tbc;ir injuries and incon-

For Details

, •vtSIT OUR SHOWROOM•
WHALE'f'S AUTO

~ Packers to take 6.n ·c owboys
Sunday
,
.
.
wasn't a great choice there for us.
Cowboys scoring machine.
"But we're exeited about it.
Although -!Ill are eltpected to
We've been able to play a little bet- play, it's been more than ;j month
ter- in each game with them, so I since they've been in sync.
hope this is the one we ~an ge.l
Holmgren said the .loss on
them."
.
Thanksgiving serves two points for
1 Although the ·cowboys, I 0the Packers in the pfayoffs: After
point favorites, are clearly the bet- taking a 17-6 halftime lead, the
ter team, Green Bay is .unquestion- Packers' offense is confident it
- ably_the hotter.
.. ·
·
execute at Texas Stadiwn. And sur- ·
The Packers (10-7) have won rendering five straight touchdown
rour in a row. Dallas los't two of its ·. drives to begin the second half will
last three to finish 12-4 in coach serve as ·motivation for the Green
Barry Switzer's f1nt year since tak- . Bay defense.
ing over for Jimmy Jolm8on .
"! think~ that game . on
Both teams are hurting.
Thanksgiving, we were playing
The Packen are without Sharpe, well for a while. and then all of a
who needs surgery to fuse two ~udden the bottom fell out," Holmbones in his neck. BuUbey..slill gren said. ".T hey'll remember that.
have quarterback Brett Favre, the They probably have a little extra to
second-leading passer in the NFL prove now because of that.''
behind San Francisco's Steve
"'We'd like to rectify the
Young.
·
·
impression we left in that one,"
.Favre threw for 3,882 y\lfdS and Green Bay defensi.ve coordinator
a. team-record 33 touchdowns and Fritz Shunnur agreed.
was intercepted just 14 times, 10
Dallas bas gone through its
fewer than last year, when he le&lt;! share of wrmoil this year. All-Pro
. ,the league.
I offensive tackle Eric Williams•sufEven when you subtract fered a season-ending knee 'injury

'

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. • $200 Installed

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.In one NFC divisional playoff,

•

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Umited: 740 ·
Backbore,680 Front

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
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•Electrical &amp; Plumbing .
ooflooflng
elnterior &amp; Exterior
Painting alao concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.&lt;;. YOUNG Ill
992-41216
Pomeroy, Ohio

.lldftWII. .

Just below Hobson · ..
on State Route 7 ·
New &amp; Used

Ol,.ctar.

~AnEtiTIOtl

· By ARNIE STAPLETON
.
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) . Face your fears enough and they'll
- begin ·to fade.
·
,
. . That's how the Gn:en Bay Pack: ers • awe of the Dallas Cowboys
: was whittled to polite admiration."
- "'itJ, when the.Cowboys take ,the
:next step Sunday on the road to an
: unprecedented third slfl!ight Super
Bowl title, Jhey won't find tbe
:same wild-eyed Packers they rout· - · ed 36-14 just15 months ago.
: . . Thanks to a 16-12 victory over
: the Lions in which NFL rushing
: champion Barry Sanders was held
· to minus-one yard ·on 13 carrie~.
:and Chicago's 35-18 upset of Minnesota, the Packers will make their
.fourth !rip 'to Texas Stadium in the
, last 12 months.
:
~ ·we know them about as well
:as "any team outside our division.
: because we've played them a nurn· ber of limes," Packers coach Mike
· Holmgren· said ... ' 'Whether that's
: enough, we'll see. They're a fine
· football teain."
. Although the Packers haven't

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~ After beating the Patriots 2D-13,

.
:
BEREA, Ohio (AP) -The
' Cleveland Browns and Pittsburgh
, Steelers aren't what you'd call
· friendly rivals.
·
"The two cities don't care for
:. each other. The players don' t care
; for each other. It's going to be
· everything 'it's byped up to be,"
: Browns ofrensive tackle Tony
·. JoneJ; said Monday after the
. Browns began formylatjng plans •
: for Saturday's _.divisiOnal playoff
: game in Pittsburgb. ·
· .
·.
Cleveland and Pittsburgh, oppo: nents in 90 regular-season games.
:. remarlqlbly have never met in the
.. playoffs. Tbe Browns lead the
·. series 52-38, although Pittsburgh
: won both meetings this year and
· has won five! in a row at home.
· The Steelers clinched· the AFC
&lt;;entral - ~home-field advan-.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Januari 3·, 1995

The Daily Sentinel

: By CHUCK MELVIN

\

,. ,

.. '

· Page 6

.

'

(No Sunday Calls)
.

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
-

.

Guftera...
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning_
Painting
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_.......J.._

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Specializing In Part-color.for lhow ·and componlono. ·
Stud •rvlc:e &amp; puppM.,;
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114'-1484417''

�a

Page

The Daily Sentinel ·

-

(

•
•

•

The Daily Sentinei--Page-9 '

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

1995

January 3, 19~

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

An~wer to Pr~viou s Puzzle

ACROSS
1 AtHSO
4 More-louo

PHILLIP
ALDER
'

21

BEATTIE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie ·

Announ c em enls

Bullnen

Opponunlty
3 Announcements

YENDINO:

....,.,.,..blo

0o1

one and thnle

AU real pstate advertising In
this neWspaper Is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes It illegal
. to advertise "any preference,
limitation or dlscrlmlnatlon
based on race, color, rellgk:m,
se• familial status or national
orlgln, or any Intention to
make any sucn preference,
limitation or discrimination.·

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Loot: malo dog, -

- ....
spota, ..... ...,. nMr AEP boet
landing, A.w•rdl 304.:111-11t2.

Yard Sale

Employment Services

· Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

'
1117

_:~~~t:=--~ odH~_:~:~

112ml. put
Ntlrence I

.712'1!

304-37W330.

.......

.

s..,....,.;

Houalllold
Goods

55

Dock I A Rooi.O.or. Control
HIA1 lloporato Dining Room W
/ChN Clooll, Light Wood
"-nollng, 8omo Dry Will lntor·
lor, Aroo For WID. Cornor l.ol
Loto 01 T,_, Cloan, Woii eo;;!
For. $38,15011.00, IIOWIII-437'3.
3 Bedroom . HOuoo &amp; 2 Cor
o.roao, For s.1o "'
01
Rio Orondo. 514-3711472 Af..

W.Nod

buy- . Uorlol

to

080,':n~1o. $35:000

~Fiyor-·­
. ......1 FNd.e-.

IIUIIOo

~II,

door, ......

.,.2-3802.

'

72 TruckaJoJ Sale

•,'

REALIZE YOU WE~E
S.USSTITliTE ..

so wtto l'lllhl

1tml Ford 1 ton truck, duollyl

3481ohr I pm.
11182 Qed~ Rom
dor, Auto Trano,
'!'V~..,-~ _Aurw
~

.

THilS't VI,TUAt, llEAt,lfY
f)CPEf(lfNG~S vJOULf)
COUNT!

;

ISO, I Cvlln-:
15,1111 Mltoo,
Gr.t $3,500;.;

Pupa, -

·~~ v ~ ,

•k

Pu

Wonnocl,
1 Fl.. $JOG, 114-2111'
ll33a ...... • A.ll. or Att•l:30
P.M.
"-..-., Roto, Lovoblnll!,
Cockotlo~ ole. Roll Tonk I Pol
241 •- • --..
- • - • Avo. Point
,o...,. -

pi,

=PI:.:;-,=::;::-*=.,:-475-.:..::..:2':::~.:..:'=.....,---.J
Four -

Pol

a.-•• .,.

~-U::::~~ S::

'"'""

i£iiO
orr '1'12-·1'1U7.

14.x":l.:,nc·oldrt·
kl, 1 yoor

-n

•loll 1n 'II, '"'""

·•

· ··

·

CFA nglot- -~~ HlmoiiiJIIn
..., -ldtton, -mod &amp; ftrot
"':':UIIIIMNinod, onlY StiO,
I
241'1 -~··
Roglol"'*i IIOYI!aln Squlrrot
.._ :10W71-a4A.
!!oglol- ....-.. Pupploo,
lloin 111211114, 114-3111-2l112.

v.i,. Auto,

$3000, 114-1112-7281.

-

'

r.1erchandise

51

Household.

Goods

Rentals

Loadod1

Work, $1,!100, 080, 614-

!

441.-.
1.184 Ford F·110, 114-44e·1SII.

1115 112 Ton 454 Au!o, N ·"-lnt, U,OOO 080, Randy 614••,~
- -·
1187 OhM 11-10 .BtoZO&lt;; 1889
Ford Llrlot 4x4 PU; 11188 GMC:
PU M~~11188 Cho¥ 4x4 PU;,
1151
DokOio BIIOrl PU;o.
1151 Chov 11-10 PU $2~85; lWo•
1189 OhM 11-10. 4K4 •U; 1tiP,
Ford 8,..,_, H $2,115; ttl84,
Chov 11-10 PU St 11115· 1808a.ov1
11-10 Ex. Cob 4x!i Pil; 11188 Nt..l
un 4x4 PU; 1!185 Fonl Rongor'
PU; 11184 Ford llronco 1112,31~:·
1180 DodQe ·o.so PU ~795;o
- 1 ......_ PU'o Aloo In•
Slock. BID Auto Solu, Hwy. ~
110 NL 4 llloo N 01 Holzor'o,:
114 44111811;
•.
1
111111 Chovr 11-IO' lllblio: ohofl.'
whool - · v... loPMd,hl3,000
ICIUIII mlloo, - · w h 10'1.
- h - . ctoon, $3650, 614843-6450.
•.
'

CELEBRITY CIPHER~
.

Good

Folrmanl Z a.d.-n
Troi,. For Ront, Unfumlohod,
lnclucllld $30CIIIIo. 8200
Depot~~. 114-381 &amp;Iii If lnte,..

0-o="'

"'"·

I.Gwool Prlcoo, 1ho
Shoe C. II, .14 411 is

li':"
~.,:,r,:. ..'!:·
_.., a z Ttor Ko,tooonl;
Aloo

CondltTon, 1321. .,....

........
Concltlanl tlVD, ·~
Zl2D AFTER I P.ll.

,...,
Fort Donold
R '""~
ro
-.. - ·

•

lntomollonol 7M DloMI Tractor,

ti,IIO; I N Ford Point,
Ttroo, Blodo, I Buoll Hoa.
82.1111; ,....,. 11100 Dl- "1
Point Hlch, 82.4111; 114-1122.

w.,.,

tmUIIIIHI//III/HIIHIIII/IIIhlllll/11111/llfiiiiii/HiiiiH//IIIIIIIIIIHIHIJ/11/11111

~n~ ....u.. 101 tractor.
Olivo 1110 d - troctor. AC no
tiH _ , plonl•. Holtond
711.
hoybl~. lit good
273-4211....
. oond. -

fum-

LAYNE'S FURNIT\JRE
Corl!plol!l homo
MouN: 11o1
N. ·~
0322. I oul -•1111 lid.
F- lloflvory.

a•.

63

Uveatock

lobr plgo lor-· col 114-MI-

, _ ...... ond · ~Nil•

:ICII••tt•IPIIL

fuH olat..... - . $35,114-111121060.

.,, r--:::;:::::::::::--7\o..IIL~-""

, Tt\E
CN-\Ol..E. I~
ffiE.R£
FOR

~(_1

_ · f___

Hay &amp; Grain

FlrOI DUlling, Clrchlrd Gra•

By GARY lARSON

~ - : $1.5CIIbiiL 104-

SqUIN So.. $1.110, Polliblo

IJONvOIY, .,.111.11Wf7.71!10.

buying •

oolllng vkloo

Tttlluno PhOiogropioor Avoltoblo

lor

w-.ao

I "O!hor Ennto

... -

UVB T

..,V S..X , ..0 - Z- T, -· .
'

'

T UP 0 Z

very privileged to be both healthy and in wo~~ -

.

111AT DAILY

Kenneth Branagh .

S©l\lllA-~t.trss

::!:

PUULII
- - - - - - - - - - - - Ui,.d ~y CLAY I. POUAN -..:....---------

O four
Recmang• l•ners of
, scrambled words

tho
bo·

low ta lorm four warda.

P'

:&gt;lOP

BLOI.Jl~G

rrour ...

Tilt~ lSI-II f\i..iYOt-1£'~
e,JR.l"I\1»-Y I

..--., live purpose. Later , when East win s
with his club ace, he will switch with
· effect to diamonds. .
Always bear in mind thi.s " logical
, switch" situation when silling over the _
dummy.
1

1

While traveling one spring .1

at a

- . Is

0 MB I l
I "':·;.
r.--r...,-T-r-1
6,..--i·
L.-'--..J....-·...11_.!..~

.

stopped
small rurarstore '1
overheard a farmer tell the
clerk, 'I don't throw away the
~ ·seed packets, !bey may be
r--=o-U:c-:R:-:-P-:-A-W,....__,Ijust th~ right ize to-· .- the

lI

~·

I ·I: I'

~~Q- ~'0
you

~

lete the chvckle quoted
ldl.ng in the m1SS1ng words
velop lrom "step Na 3 below.

I 1- I I
SCRAM·L~TS

. STRIKE ABLOW IN THE WAR ON
: HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CL·.. ASSIFIED~.

,.

ANSWERS

r.

1 stood looking at the dessen buffet The real trouble
with food 1 concluded is that the food that mells iq your
mouth usuanwtur.ns solid on your WAISTLINE.

-- ~

'

Ford. · - II XLT, r
'r1dM. 17,800; 1181 Ford ~.!;
gor XLT 15,200.114,441.61158. ,•

11t0

76

Auto Parts &amp;

.,

t
ono ton lnlck t

0

Accessories

:"=

r.·

lonkl.

aEE 1

Er r
"

..... lloor
R- Aul~fptoy,
WV.-·:~
104- \

lie. 0
372-31133or1

m.mt.

~

=~ 4~PA':r: =38~1H&gt;n
~
'
t

t'

•

:81____________:_____ · ~.·

Home

."

~

____kn~p~nw~~em==e~m~·~-~

IIAIIEIIEHT
••
• WATERPIIQOFINQ
llfollmolurillahed
•~~~--...
... local r•,.,.n~:•
t-too.217-G5711 or &amp;14-23~ .
o::.~.:::a m'll.
ro Wol-fing. Eo- ·
t
•

1••-

'"'" per.

P.o: BoK -4-465 ,

New Yor-k, N·Y

·10163.~Be sure to state~your zodiaG sign.

Transportat ion

·

-··-···--··'"'

CM:MJr
'
CU:rthday

ly. Do not let someone else's bad

Your

Opportunity
INO'J'JCEI
OHIO VALLEY'PUBLISHIIO CO.
-W!t~
thllyau
youknow
do - lnd
,_
poopll
1
NOT to ooi&gt;cf·monor through tho
01011 UNit J0U ho.. lnwoollgolod
lh.ohtng.

.

'

t:·

••

,,

- 1 o r ...... , _

.

"'""'"'· oolobllohod Hno of
-~ raquiNd, Honto Forms,
14880 811124, Porttond, Ohio,
_ , . . . , . , illlfvt Joll. '
.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Keep track
of lime today and try to ma1 nta ln your
schedule. Leaving critical tasks unlil the

'

--·• -

L. • •

tor. tulfill~ent and sue -

last minute coultl cause the quality .of

e&gt;eas look good in the coming y~at .. if you your pertormanceto suffer. •
keep your pro1ects down to .a ma~age· &lt;&gt;TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Aesosl the
able numtMJr it can only help
impulse lo take risks today il the. odds
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jan. 19) Pay ani stacked against you . It mighl be diffi·
. strict a1tention to what 'f.OU say today or : cult to maintain control, but you must do
rou might lind yourself on a _collision l it. .
.
.
r8e with another strongly opimon~ted t ·GEMINI (May· 21·June -20) Yc:ur tem·
.:VIdual. Caprtcorn. treat yourself to a · perame.nt

...
I

p~lities

~

-I-

~ehav·

ior .tarnish ypur rmage .

:. -ul

Wednesday, Jan. 4, 1995

than Jon \ , .... :1114-

CANCER (Juno 21 · July 22) G"' ng
someone a piece of your m1nd today writ
only--rnomentanly -iipp9ase yo ur tru stra ·

19) Mon1for" ' 'o ns:lhe damage you incui. howe ver.
BEDE OSOL
your resour.ces carelully today and try to , could be lasting.
your budget balanced . Clear up old 1 LEO (July 23-Aug . .22) E•erc ise caution
/:...:.2.1&lt;-'---~-.,.----&lt;&gt;biigal:ion'•-t&gt;elcne.~assu•nin,g_,inV~· n•iw iillfay_il!ben_haodllng_y.our p[iW PQsses.·
stons . If you leave somethmg valuable
ones.
PISCES ·(Fab. 20·Morch 20) Today you laying out in the open , someone might be
-~
rniglil be judg e'ifbyt~e comj5a~v yOU tem'Pte.IITolake ' .
VIRGO
(Aug .
23·Sept.
22)

•~

21NIII.

•

IRV~ CSG

Marrow - Lousy - Unfit.· "Entity- WAISTLINE

I:OCI!In! ' " " - Jr. cornttouao.

BuSineSs

0 S R H., u ~

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I don't want to sound too incredibly pnssy, but I I eel

•

-.......
... blioi
WW. ..
L ctw6M II-Uchlnoel

21

_ s,_c

'

•

:;ms:=:,;.-:..~-=

Financ1al

•

l:ll PRINT NUMBERED
~ LEITERS IN SQUARES

Roam,.,,

p.m.

OVK

L.--1..--.1..--.1.--..1.--.J.L.......J

FICA CoW T.V. 41" wtlh
81-, -8100; Wing Duo To
UDii Of
141 1835

Col Koyln _fJ+.MI,IIIIII Allor I

v

,I R 0

G ·P bOTHH ." '

•·

:Rit-IIiC!i:... - -AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feti.

-

'

dia mt,nd king, many West s wou!~. pas·
sive ly r eturn a major. Yet, as you can

1111 Oodgo ....:. Flflr Royolo,,
~~ - . $3800, 614-.

c.u

-~··
ileport,
11t IIG ltll.'41dio, -llld-

'

,J_ iN T,. XC B T C 0 _

9 _.P G Z __J1 _Z _T_

PCESBITOTCD ·. ·

No\el PoN.CE.I
I

I
~
van.
'
~":I"'
eMuu.,,t.-za
. ' · .:

Serv1ces
64

Luis Campos

by

ne r has th e club ace and declarer the

~----~·~---------'· :
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'e .· :.:

.

.

Each rene• •n the c1pN!r srandi lo • anolher Todlfr"s due J IJQWJI ~ G

•

F'- lllrbl Yan; 11Jl11 Chow

Equipment

·

Celebr~y Cipher c,Yp10grams are cfe3ied lrom quo!at1onS by laml)us pf.;Qple , pa:'i.! oii111 pr'l:!•.m11

er spade lead will se rve no coristrut-.

BORN LOSER

1m ChiV, Co20 Work Von Or:

lr Rod Wlna Ch!Dwn
...o
To -10 o.g..., 'lt.H. Brown 61 Fann

Plor- Dlltorant lnoti\Jmontol Ell·

IPioooUwtna-SoiJCioln,

1111

Cou":l~=11184.
Wol Onn,

~Top,

-·11141.

41 Houses for Rent

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

...... -Colli- ......,.,

0no ocro wfT.C.W. top ond
- . rood hontogo, Apple
Grovel OoroM Ad., CR - 28,

tloor...."::•""' pont, ........,.,

675-1333

Lavinthal signal s. He provide s good
example deals to highlight th e po ssi·
bililies and he notes the drawbacks of
'each .
Many player. would fail lo de feat
this four -heart contract, for fear of
sw.itching from A,Q-4 . But Wool sey ex·
. plains why il i s the only play in thi s
deal.
West leads the spade j ack. After de·
elaFer- wms wil h du·m thy 's tu:e,-E'a sl

.. buy. Indo• 1tl2 Ford F-110 c.iotom pickUP:"'.
tor larp doo. flh4...tiea..ao&amp;3 aftlr ~ kM mi..., excellent con--... 1 .
lpm.
· dillon, opluh g&amp;Mrdo, bodralto,' :•
bod ~~ !!Jdlng roar Windowj , .
phone IJM-W2-72"40.
)I'

4 Ar:roo 011 Addl_, Pika• Cor·
nor 01 PoMum Trvl And o~,~Dr
Rood, $14,000, 514-38J.78111.

Opportunhy

...
llonoworo,IIIIGIZinoo,
&amp;tor w.. ond Sl11 Troli • Ooby ·~In,

992~2156

If you would like to read a workman·
like analysis of I he major signalling
melh!!!l~. bYY Kjt WQots~y 's " Modern
Defen s ive Signalling in ContraCt
Bridge" !Baron Barclay, 800·274·2221 ,
$7 .95) In GO pages, Wnolsey' discusses
standard , upside-down, odd-even and

-

lltlhioro. mali -

446-~342

J

see , thi s defense doesn't defeat lh e
contract. Declarer draw s trumps and
runs the dubs.
However . if West has confidence in
his partner, be will switch to diamonds
at trick three . ~· rom the dummy , "it is
obvious to East that diamond s is the
logical switc~ for West to make . If East
cannot stand a ·swilch to that suit lfor
example, he has the club ace and not
the diamond king), he should encour·
age in spades, even if he knows anoth ·

"

1883 Ford Ranpr, 2.3 lllre ~:

1184 112 Ton

lead: •

drops a discou ragi ng lwo . Now comes
th e- losin g t rump hnes sc. producing
th e critica l mom ent. Afraid that part-

With Sldo KH 210 lnc:h
Aluminum lox'!", 114-3711-22110.

AKC Rogl- . ~ spilnlol
Quolly, HHn..,, P!Moio

-

ElENC.H, HUH ?

1m lntomotlonol Truck 4300 a ·
18112 Tronocratt 48 ·A. Tttltol

wlutlllty bod, 11815, 614-1192•

s,-

IN 0~~ Tj.:(E

Wontod to bur· 'II or nowol
Coprloo "CioHico m.., INI
Braughomo or LS, ~~~. loodod, 4

2lllt.

AVII!Oblo, 11447W7211,
AICC
Huoky
l.lghl Wolf 0.0,. 'Fomolo'o .,..
~..,SW.OON 080. 114o448-

Coli 1-.:11'3238.

1121011-6.

0tc1 clgorotto

Cock•

CAME RIGI-H

I APOLOGIZE AGAIN ,
MA'AM .. I DIDN'T

~T.o:T~..:~~':; Jl,.~:S:.~ oxc cond, 12,000~

lng, • hom 1 • ..,. ln•rance. and I
montho FAE£ 101 ront. Only
lt20
ond $1114 por -

your oxportonoo, For on op.
DOint.- coli Sandy 1-«JCC.531·
Equot
Employer.

.

,.._
CMmplan
1-lno, z Utloro To a F-, Boin fo'1Z I wtMM, Tallo
~-~-a... ~

, . _ , WV" • - H ,... 110
ooll«a~or with o~llty lo work
with !Into ....... · - · · thlo ...,
be tho lob lor yau. 8tarti1
• - wll bo ...,_, Sl50
15.10 . on hour . . . _... an

a. 11257.

Halt

S1IO

f:'cld

.111111

pl.,.,_tn

.=::,o. linn."'=
Pu-=
ICOn

For .... b)' - · ..... 1 112
It~ _.._. bedroom, MW c.r!..it bellmont, loellod ion

-

TALlER AND

PelS tOr Sate
a-~--~~~~.
Fool~
Both. • .Mr.i

~ -

OVR REGULAR
TEAC&gt;lER 15

.I

56

1118 Rodmon 14d4; 2 llodraom, TOIII EIIIC!rlc, Undsrptn.
nlng. Rooclr To Into On
Comor LOI Pllk Unl llobllo

--

'

.

'{OV1RE . SURE S~E'S ~'&lt;·

~~.. Equl!tillint, -

311113 Evonlngo.

111 Ul 3553

·-

Building

o...,. _ _

Ar:-. Lollrt1 OH. Ellcollont
CondMion, u.. Now 114-24J.

18U.1teo.

114;•.

WEARS "'"'""~"I

1181 Cloyton'il'rallor. 2"1od....,.,
1 112 lllitho. 14x24 Room
AddMion. Sltuotod on 1 112

Wan1 to buy: Okln Yoorboob,

12.500,

7 Sclled. abbr.
8 Mualcal
movement
lin -(aoa
whole)
10 Jacob's son
11 New York

By Phillip Alder

SuppUea

32 Mobile Homei
Sail

MEDICAL IIIWNO SPECIALIST
NEEDED. We oro -ndlng our
lloclcll Billing lloplln thl Point

" " "·

·1 Smell children
2 Author Jean
M.- ·
3 Medlc•l plcl""'
4 ActreooWinger
·sAnger
6 Cleaning cloth

Short book,
much information

MISS
PRUNELLY

PEANllTS

14'd4' On 113 2 Bdr., 2
Bth, 5crMn Porch, Awnlnga,

Cou~.- ~~.

ACCIDENT

""":

31 Homes for Sale

unfu,....hld, I roomo and both
-olro, olumlnum aiding. 4
roor old 1&lt;101,- pcrchoo ono
- - . . . 121,000, 114 181 l58t.

~

Fronl.a.
.....

Real Estate

-7787.

I WAS AIMIN'
AT MARY BETH!!

IT WAS A
PLUMB

11110 11111oru ~&lt;&gt;y... 4 o-t'
Slight Dorn0go To Front Fo..W,

1111 Ford Eocort, 2 door, , .
...... taaoo, 114~12-6864. . • .

lloc:lno, 1 112 olory lumiollod or

Nood to buy llrgo cogo lor
. , . . 101!1

~-:-::-~-..;,_-1 ~J~.acm.~.

54 IIICIIIaneoUI
.Mln:flaiiCIJse

AICC

114 ' •• 4040.

BARNEY

. YO'RE SJAYIN' AFTER
SCHOOL FE.R WHACKIN'
J.AMEY WITH
THAT
ERASER!!

DOWN

Vulnerable :·Neither
Dealer: South
South
West North
East
Pass
3
•
Pass
I •
4.
Pass Pass
Pass

••

drlv..

11118 Plymouth Sundo110o, AC.
Auto, Cool. ~t-.
. . . _ , Aoldng 12,500, 114-44601171.
.
11118 ~ euu..

w,!l!!. Ci11

'il:

damo~o

- . 150,000 mi._, PS, PB, PW,
At;, unltm ...... automM:Ic,
tMZI.
~-~llonHSpm
or
114-1141 2144
m.
·,

.

- -.,ung Alllll'"lllono For
DomlnO'o Pliia
a.JIIpcllo,

•AJR6 2
• J 8 ,5
•A4 3

•

-ngor -

olo7 6

SOUTH
•K&amp; .

118'7 Uercwy Coua•r, minor

TERIP.IL

8 · . Public Sale
&amp; Auction

~

SPMd,AC, AMW•
Ex-.. CandNion, Now lira•\.
BraUo, ft,$00 Fkm, 114--44&amp;;

Vtlllr

ALL Yord Soloo 111111 Be Pold In
- · DEADUNE: 2:00 jl.m.
tho dof bllara tho od lo to run.
~ siiiiCIQ , ~Odltlon
• 2:00 p.m.

wortfl.'-.
•.

~.I

Zbr.

•Q954 2
• 7 5
oK 9 6 2

•K3
•A Q 4
I0 9 5 2

Covoll"!i-~

CMvroMt

20 Entrance•

22 Swimmer
26 Steno'a
blunder
29. Unlock (poet.)
30 Playful child
34 Flah trap
35-Tinlln
(movie dog)
36 - Chrlo11an
Andersen
37 Article
.
38 Soak, ao flaK
39 - -Rhythm
40 Copter'a kin

EAST
.. J 10 8 3

PonL 101111 IW t1.000, I*'
_.321Cirl14-441-l11011.
,I ·

adver1isements rOr real estate
which Is in violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an ·equal
opportunity basis . ..

~ ~~...-"-~
- . Good Cornnounlootlon

•Qt "0 94
• 10 7 3
.,..KQ JB

auto.,

tngint,

-

knbwtlngly accept

Help Wanted

•A 7 ·

•

........ or,~
wort!, $210. -.a7&amp;.32a
"'"l
.....
, •:

This newspaper will not

"-1 llodicol Equipment ComHoo lm-olo Oltonlng
For 1ho , _ , . . Fuli-Timo
Poellorw:
SeeN~
18: .....,. Setvlce Ttlchnlclon Noto DrMr To DIIIVOf

7

--·
. .
w1llion,

Doociolt, Ooo - · .,..._..,.,,
114-:z!i&amp;.1337.

~~oubii~P~S

•*

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2 a . d - • Ill..... 211,
OaliiiiOIIo.
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:.:n=~~rr;~~
w l - dogs, .,...,...7144.
Four
pupPol
lio/Rotr1ovor I B•v

1tl7 - .-cl Clllt,
condition,
runnT1141
moiO&lt;,
lutDIMIICI and air, $2000,
IIZ·7211.
..
"

-..

for Rent .

a.

party
16 started
17 Southeaot·
Aolan holiday
18 Craftier ·

1·3·95

Mobile Homes

1 pui&gt;OI•, HIIIIIY- Huolly.
~.

1 d1 oom

IM.II&amp; 1Uitift•lpm.

42

3pm.

t

15 Afternoon

'

In P~, . . nlpp:tJ ldlat....
~. - v
,....Nd,

1112.

Giveaway

aoine\ftlng.

71 . Autoa tor Sale

Phone: 114 4II 2tl1.

Rich

Quieti. Wit Ool o Bloody, CHh
- . . _ Plloo to SOli 1~

I will 1101 be
lor lll1J
deblo Olhor than my - . GnO
"-ell.

4

Won,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright.

41 'HoUies for Rent
- F o r - : - 7 Nooth,

9 - MBhltl
12 Poa ... olve
pronoun
13 Mu,. of poetry
.,. Gravel ridge

wul· set

the tone in yoyr

de~l~

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•

Independence is 'an admirable quality,
pro vi ded it is n ' t ca rr ied to extre mes .
lns istrng on hav ing your owry way w1ll
invite· a hostil e re sponse today.

•
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•

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Thete are two
co ndit ion s wh rch cOuld negatiVely. affect
your work today. One Is watching th e

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••

Cl oc k . The other IS hav1ng people peer
over your shoulder.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Try to avood 1

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••

becoming financially irivolved With fri ends
'today . Money m1ght trigger a senous misunderStanding. ~

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(CCI

SAGITIARIUS (Nqv. 23·Dec. 21) II will

birthday gift, send lor your Astro·Graph ings with others today .." !hare's a chip ·be up to you to en"d the disruptive inllutJilHR;T;:::J;;;-iiiaii;;;,.....---1;;;;::]i~;;;;i:i;;;;;;e;;:;r4=:fiioo:c;;==-:"t:.~~~;';,;g:::-1
P,edlcllcins lor the year ahead by malilng'-"on-yeur-sooulder , 11-won 1 be hard flnd•ng ences in your household today. l:!ar-lhr•-1 +-· 1-'~
.l~~J.
-'i.l~!£;..J.;~~..J;...;.,
l______:__...;.J!~=~l,-J.
door to troublemakers ·
•
$! .2)&gt; 10 Astro·Graph, clo thiS newspa· someone to knock il off.

l.J!.__

I ,

.I
....

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-

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,-

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...
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\_

ByTh'e Bend
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The Daily Sentinel
January 3,1995
Page-1G

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Soclal Security and ·farnily yalues
Manager In
All tbe talk about family values
reminds me that family values is
what Social Security is all about.
The benefits the program provides
10 families is designed to protect
the family against the greatest
tbrei!ts tb its economic wellbeing.
Many people simply don't real- ize that Social Security is as mucb
about the protecli,on of _the Ameri-

. THREE GENERATIONS JOIN CAMEO SOCIETY-. Tbese ·

three membe~ of Meigs Collllty's Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, are charter members
of the new Cameo Society, an .organization with a goal of promot·
ing passage of genealogical lnformatlo'n fram one generation to the
next. They are from the len, Linda Cleland Bohner, with her
daughter, Amy Bohner, and her mother, Anna Circle Cleland.

e

Three . members of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of ihe .American Revolution, are
·charter members of the Cameo
Society, a, new organization geared
to promote understanding and fellowship between generations and 10
encQUJ3ge the passage of genealogical information, family histories
and patriotism to subsequent generations. .
The charter Cameo Society
members froni the local chapter are
MrS. -Ailiia Circle Cfeland, her
daughter, Mrs. Linda Cleland
Bohner and bl!f. great-granddaugh- ter, Aiil.y Bohner.
·
. C'ameo members must" he mem"'hers- onlle lflAR and show current
active-membership in conjunction
with a mother/daughter. .
The National Society of the
Daughters of the American Revolution was founded Oct. II, 1890 for
historic, educational and patriotic
pu'rposes. Any woman is eligible
for membership who is not less
than eighteen years of age, and
who is descended from a man or
woman who, with unfailing loyalty
to the cause of American Independence, served as ·n sailor, or a sol-

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich

JoinS membership of
Angus Association

•

Well, did you welcome in the
new year properly? "Properly" bas
a lot of meanings-different
strokes for different folks-so you
b I did ka
pro ab Y 0 Y·
Pomeroy's Carolyn Kom certainly had a new experience to
Angus Associa- beH
ncewl yebar atcUni.versity
.
'th
cii d It
osp1 m o um us. aro yn was
21000
uon,. w•. over ··• . a ve a u
one of four patients confined there
and luruor me~bers, IS_ tb_e I_argest waiting for a heart transplant. She
,
::: ca~l~ reg•stry as~~atlOnr:I;, was taken into the opemting room
·
.
. wor · ts coml'utenz reco
Sunday night and the.Qptmtion was
dier or civil officer in one of the mclude d_et_a•led ~nformahon on performed . Reports on Monday
several Colon!cs O[ States, ,or m.the. _Qv.er 12..DUUton regtsleredAngus._ _ were that Carolyn is getting along
Umll,ld Colomes or States as a rec. ~e Asso~lallan records ances- fine.
ogmzed pablo~ or rendered ~aten- tral mfo~uon ~nd keeps records
Her operation really kept the
al a1d dunng the RevolutiOnary ofproducllon on mdlVldual animals local telephone lines busy as the
War.
for •ts members. These permanent news that her transplant was taking
. Mrs. Cleland, her daughter records help membe~s select and place spread'through the communiLmda and grandda~ghter Amy mate the best _ammals ~n therr _h~rd~' ty. She was on many prayer lists
have docume~ted the•r ances~ to . to produce h•gh quahty, effiCient and the community is certainly
the Revoluuonary War P~tnot, breedmg ~attle wh1ch are then pulling for the well-liked•Carolyn.
~chael Circle who_ se_rv_ed ·~ ~~e record_ed_ With the Amencan ~gus She entered the Columbus hospital
Dunmore County V 1rgm~a Mlln_13 Association. Most of the re!!lstered recently and was to remain there
under the. c_ommand of Cap tam ~Ang~~ l!!'e Jlsed by !lie ll;S. f~ll ,... until ·a·he.i.rt suitable 'for trnlfsplalllJohn Holman. Early C•rcle_ances- and r-.mchers who _rruse h1gh 9ual1ty ing to her was donated. It's amaz~
tors m•grated _fr?m ~e Palatinate _m beef for consurnpuon.
.
ing that one came so soon. Some
Q~111U1Ilo/, amvmg 10 ,l'h•!®clpJ!•a.
- ~
- - ·
- -, - wait for months on end,- confined to
They erst sel!let~n th~ Shenantbe hospital.
.
doah alley_!ll__ 1!8!Dla. Later, ~"- - ~
,_- earolyn- of course will remain
som~ descen~ants came to Ohio,
A candle lighti~g service ':"as a r.'at Universiiy Hospital, under obsermaking the tnp by the well-known feature of the. Christmas serv1ce at '):'i .
d
T
.
Contestoga Wagon trail when tbe
the Alfred United Methodist vauon an tr~;atment. here _s
area was still- wilderness They Church ·
al':"ays 3 chance that her bo&lt;IY w•ll
helped clear the land, buill .homes
Eloi~e Archer and Sarah Cald· :J:S: ~eta~~ ;;:sgou~J~~~:~~~
and provided schools and churches
well were in charge and each' per- .
.
.
o
·
·
·
:
mfecllon.
Mrs. Clel an·d •s
tbe _dau~hter of sol) rece1ved a candle to hghl Mter
Everyone- but everyone-is
the late Otha and Lms C1rcl~ of that they gathered at the table hoping for smooth sailing for her .
Racine. Linda and Amy are the
where a birthday cake for Jesus
·
granddaughter and great-gra ndwith a lighted candle was placed.
H
. opplng back 10 Ch~istmas,
Doris Dillinger read "Christmas
daughter of-the. late &lt;&gt;Fioyd and
Chuck and Daisy Blakeslee of
Neva Cleland, Rutland, aRd the late Prayer", and the group sang "Away Pomeroy traveled to .Rockport,
Otha and Lois Circle.
ina Manger" ,md "Happy Birthday,
Jesus" before cutting the cake Ind.,.to spend the holiday with, their
"
which was furnished.by Mrs. Cald- son-in-law and daughter, Jirri and
W:ell.
.
Jennifer Butcher, and their faniily.
Holiday visits included April Jeff, Julie, Jessica and Joanna. The
. Nely and Jeff Noble bf Fairborn to . group was joined by Patty
Marguerite and Delbert Stearns; . Blakeslee Circle and her son,

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J0 In
Th ree. generatlon s
.
·
.DA·R am eo SOCiety
·

. can family as it. is jabout 'prorec;ting . dren, widow(er)s or parents of
the el!letly. Fully 40 percent of the retired, deceased, or disabled work42 million people receiving Social ers.
Security benefits are not retired
When a worker's earnings stop
workers; they are t(Je spouses and or are decreased ~ause of retirecbildren of retired workers or are ment, long-tend disability, or
receiving disability benefits or sur- death, Social Security benefits
vivors benefits as the spouses, chil- · re11lace a portion of the. earnings.

Jo~~- ~~rican

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·•·
holiday

Alfred New Notes

Nine Robinson and Clara Follrod
to Janet and Bob Robinsons of Belpre; Sarah Caldwell to Doris an!!
Tlie Golden Rule Sunday meeting in January. The men of the Ben Ewings Of Pomeroy;· Mil(e
.School Class of the Middleport . class will have charge of avalen- Weber of Charleston to Brenda and
Pltst Baptist Church gathered at the tine party for the wives. Visitation Gaty _.Johnsons; Kay aDd Larry ·
home of Manning·and June Kloes was discussed.
Spencer and family of Racine 10
for a holiday dinner party.
A "goodie" auction was held · Doris and Floyd Avis home; Pat,
The Rev. Mark Morrow gave with proceeds going to provide " Bob: Bobby, Matthew and Kevin
grace preceding the pollock dinner. Chrisunas for an adopted family.
Keaton to Imogene and Lester
Attending were Mark and Vicki Keaton; Sharon, Gary, Matt, and
Devotions were given by Mrs .
Kloes who read "Time :for Christ- Morrow. Randall and Carolyn Kim Michael to Poole-Parker fami,.tnas" and"Let Chrisimas Happen to Davis, Lawrence Eblin, John and ly.
\ You"..
·
Marilyn Fultz, Sharon Hawley.
Nina Robinson is a· nDIJUnlci,,g
Mrs. Klocs presided at tbe met- Manning and June Kioes, Glenna · the birth of a great-gmndson,
ing during which time it was decid- Riebel, Marjorie Walburn an.d Douglas. born on Dec. 23 to ""'''~--+---~· ed that the same officers will con- Phyllis Young.
·
·
,, _bie Robinson and Douglas Roach,
tinue for 1995. There will be no
. ',
Williamson, W. Va.

reunion.

Ruth Simpson or Racine had
wrapped up 4-1 years in banking
Saturday wh~n she retired from the

gintalth~

den
, R"
I·e .'.cIass
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G
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Observes. ·ch.rl"stmas·
-- ~

·'Vi·chita,w~:~~ :~ !~~~~~r1~n,!

George and Nancy _Collins,
Reedsville, are new members of the
·American Angus Association,
reports -Dick Spader, executive vice
resident of the ·national organi7.aP
tion w.ith headquarters in St. .

~aa~ign~e~oo~~:.;~~i~~~c~t:~d ~~:

P~e4

BenJtts paid to the worker with a
spouse and two or more children
may replace as much as 90 percent
of prior earnings f&lt;!r low income
families. In 1994, the average family henefit'paid to a widow(er) and
two cbildret\ was $1,328; for a disabled worker and spouse with one
or more children, $1,088.1be maximum benefit payable to a widower
and two cbildren of a worker Who
died at age 25 was $2,430; for a
worker who became disabled at age
25 with one child, $2,073.
· Although to qualify for retirement benefits a worker needs to
haveworked at least 1!l-years urider
Social Security, he/she can qualify
for survivors and disability benefits
for hislber family with as lillie as a
11/2 years of work. The amount of
ric eeded d
ds
the
k
wo n
. epen on
wor er's age and increases to 5 out of
. the last10 years for workers 31 and
older.
,
Benefits are paid to spouses,
children, and even dependent parents in..lhe case of dec;tased workers. The benefits are paid on the
earnings record of either worker.
.Since two-worker families are
becoming mrire.and-more common,~
most families now enJ'.oy double
proll,lction.
Divorced spouses and divorced
survi·ving widow(er)s may also

.

DAvin

o.- SURDYKA,

KFC

Means ·More ·Meal

For Your Money.

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~-~---'---, RACINE .S-o uliiiii~:::OC~~~~~~~-~-~S~po~~rta;,;.l'\l~u~rl~es;;:;•~-l'ra~ct~ur~es;_:•;~-w~o;~~k~l'\l~u~rt~es~c~,~~-"~-~~:I::IJ:=:;:-·-'-::::-:::=::=:::=:--:-::....:::_... ---------'.,_..,~~
WEDNESDAY
--'-·~ ~~~~l.Ll

'-".'.'l.L==

II

"''"~~v.a l.,-~_,, c.......~l ,~

elievers I:ellowship Minimy.
New Lima Road, Rutland, Wednes- .
day through •Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
Rev . Dee .Miller, Nelsopvillc.
speaker; special singing . Public

Society scrapbook
•

.
CHRISTMAS TREATS .
Santa made li visit to the Rut. llw.d Fjrc Department and ~ave _out
treats to 190 children. The proJCCt
was sponsored by the Rutland rue-

men who extended a's~::·~~~c!j~

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MOVING DIRT ...:.. The loll(!·awalted mov"
ing of dirt on the nrst phase of the ltavenswood
Connector Road began recently with Columbia
Gas of Ohio, Inc.'s relocation of gas lines. Here
workers using heavy equipment move gas lines
In the vldnlty of Meigs Hlp School Tuesday

.

l
. Tfle~ ye~r· 1994 'i·n re\tieW;r
(Se.cond in a series)

'

ilther.;::~~!~~f~~~~::~,~

ille"
.In•60ard
Vaughan to
of zoning
and
reappointed
Leesa
appeals
"j • .
Murphy, Eugene Triplett, Joseph
. inajot thunderstorm rumbled
Struble and Larry Wehrung io the
through the area knocking out elec- zoning bOard.
trical equipment.
..
The board also ad&lt;!pted rules of
June 27 - Pamida store offi·
order and established regular meetcially opened with. a formal ribbon
ing times as '7 p.m. the ·firsl and
cutting, entertainment and refreshthird Monday. nf each month.
·
COMMISSIONER - Meigs County Board of Commlul011ers
ments .. ·
Council approved appropriaJune 28 - Middleport Village . tions of $1,361,428.44 for 199S · . Prestdent Fred Hol'rman, right, W.U omclally swom In u a Me!p
County .Commissioner T~y afternoon by Judge Fred W. Cro'!'
Council began its search for money compared to $1,3-20!j34.~1 for
ill or the Mel~ County Common Pleu Court.
to repair' the ·pool, clo.sed because 1994.
.
. .
of structural problems which

May 27 - · Bengy Rboades,
MAY
Mi(!d(eport,
pled guilty to charges
·May 2 - Jessie Wbite was recof
tbeft
and
gross
sexual imposition
ognized by Veterans Memorial
in
an
incident
May
15 on the Flood
Hospital for nearly 14,000 hours of
volunteer service in the Women's Road just outside romeroy involv·
ing a 42-year,.old ·womim.
Auxiliary;.
May ' 3 - Joe Clark was
. JUNE
· appointed downtown·revitalization "
June 3 - Gene Tripleu was
project coordinator to handle the
.grant monies awarde&lt;ilto Pomeroy, named new exec~tive commiuee
.and Councilman John Musser was chairman of the Meigs County
appointed chairman of tbe Pomeroy Republican Party. · ,
June 5 - Meigs Cout¥y lhreatenthesar;;:;swimrners.
llusiness D.istrict Committee to
:wortc with' Clark in carrying out the observed its 175tb liDfliversary with
a reception in the c(!unroom of tbe
July I Gov. George
The resignation of Tom Roserevitalization.
. May_4....-- More than 42 percent ·Meigs County CoW111oqse. William Voinovich awarded $92,400 in berry as' a member of the·Siluthern
of Meigs voters turned out 1o nomi- Grueser, 97, of near Rock Springs, siate funds
th!l new water line Local Board of Education was
was
the
oldest
attending
and
was
·
projecUn
Rutland
, Scipio and · accepted at Tuesday night's meetnate candidates -'- Fred Hoffllll!!l
(R) and Jack Slavin (D) for com- recognized by the celebration com- Columbia Township.
ing of 1tbe board. at Soutbem High
mittee,
along
witb
WiUiarn
Radford
missioner,·and Nancy Campbell for
. July 4 - Ground was broken. School.
Appllcations·are now being
auditm;;.and to approve a five-mill · who lives on the homestead of the for ·skinner Park. Twenty-three
localed off 'Skinner Lane in taken for Roseberry's seat. He l!l\5
· Meigs Local -permanent improve- Radford family who came here in
ments levy, al)d a one-mill EMS 181.8, one of severn! same family · Pomeroy was donated to tbe Prut. one year remaining' on his term.
landowners dating bai:k 10 the early District and the part was nal!led for Anyone interested in being named
levy.
·
Maj . Benjamin M. Skinner who to the board is asked tO submit an
May 6 -. National Day of years of tbe county. .
June 6 - D-Day remembered settled ber in 18S4.
· application to Supt. James Ray
Prayer was observed on the CoonJuly 4 -Celebrations in Rut- l.awrence by Jan. 13. The vacancy
bouse steps with singing, scripture with at\ anniversary publication by
reading, prayer and patriotic ol;l"ser- Ohio Valley Publishing including · land, ~inc. ilild Mkkllcpon fea- must be filled by Jan. 18 ;_ ~nie
vance.
·
. reflections on tho~ .World War II lured parades, fireworks, games Hill, treasurer, said.
and foods. Rutland's parade-theme ·
J~ (Susie) Grueser was elect'
May 10 - Mark Elliott pleaded years liy local veterans. .·
June 12 ..:.... Meigs Countians carried out tbe 175th.anniversary of ·
·
·
guilty to charges of child endangerment alJd assault. fourth-degree . were given a glimpse of l!te. past
Plains
felonies in connection with the during_Heritage !;lay weekend at
the Meigs Museum. Tbe .uniformed Regional Sewer DisCrict.was given
death of his infant son, Ty.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) May .-1 - Fifty-seven Meigs 91st OVI. Co, B. set up camp and · a $.500,00!l grant from the Ohio That elephant stampede that s~
Gounty a,.:ademic achievers were· conducted memoliaJ services at the Public Worlcs Commission.
with tbe Nov. 8 'eleclion has finally
. recognized .and presented trophies Civil War moniunent on tbe CourtJuly 7- Worlc at the site of the rumbled onto the Capitol grounc!s.
·· at the 10tli annual academic excel- house lawn. Downtown there was roc)\ and land slide at H:obson was
Republicans who won conlrol of
lence banquet held at Me\gs High music, classy cars, a canoe compe- completed at a cost of more than a tlie House for
first time in 22
tition; and duck derby to entenain miUion project. 1be slide occurred years opened a new legislative sesScbool.·
·
..
May 16 - Grand opening was visitors.
in tbe sprins o( 1991 and resulted sian Tuesday with election of a
June
15
-.
Hundreds of resi- in damage 10 several houses weD ftrSt-ever woman speaker.
held for the new Meigs.Motel near
dents turned out to participate in as the higliway.
Pomeroy opened by Frank Herald.
And lhal was juslfor starters.
.
May 17 - Pomeroy Council tbe Ohio River Sweep, a projected
July 10 - Meigs County
Gov. George "Voinovicb takes
put the parking lo~ a populfU' night headed up here by Kenny Wiggins, received $80,000 from tbe state as the oatb of office for a second.term
spot for area youths, off limits from Meigs County Litter Control direc- reimbursement for costs due to Jan- Monday after winnil)g 72 percent
11
to, dawn, and threatened tor.
uary's snow emergency, . EMS Of the vote. Inauguration also is
June 19 - The heat was on ,Di!J;l:l!!f Bob liY«J!!IIIPUn~.
vic~~tors with a_trip Jo juvenHe
scbeduleJ! for O!h.er statewide
·. July:-12-- Miilaleport=voled to ~:- ,
- ~ --r
Wltlrl~tOO:ni9SileiDJJ
May· 18 - Valedictorians were recorded around Meigs Gounty . . W!th~w fro~ the Big ~end Water
.
.. .
pamed at the three high schools, Meigs 1jobless rate began a fall, District.
from 11 .6 to 11.2 for May,
Andrew Daniel Wolf at
12 - , Rutland
WASHINGTON
.

to

Repu~licans

as

.

./ 8 Pieces F._ried Chicken ·

trauma fractu,..,. and recoMtructlve ou'IIOrieo

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me

M_.o~

Trelltlns ..mtety of Joint and muecle dleoiden,
l!noe anll .h!p R)!!~enta. •
·

Appropriations for individual $7,212.77 ($6,212.71). ·
.
funds are, . with 1994 figures lis~
Clerk Kathy Hysell said the viiCouncilman John Musser was in. parenthesis: general fund , lage will carry over $280,.950.79
re:elected president of Pomeroy $529,650 ($526,725); street fund. from1994.
Village Council at Tuesday night's $162,500 ($171,472.74); state
Mike Stroth, consultant for the
combination council meeting and , highway, $5,400 ($6,615.99); , village' s downtown revitalization
cemetery
fund,
.$13,0(10 project, updated council on th~
organizational meeting.
Musser was the only nomipee ($10,767.88); recreation, $2,500 · venture's progress.
.
for the seat and was elected unani- ($5,409.16); federal grant, $21,000
Of the 20 businesses coopemtmously by other council members. . (new fund) ; fire .and fire truck, ing in the program, estimates have
Mayo{ John w. Blljettnar $112,625.32 ($116,509.52); utility, been completed for 19 of them, be
appointetl the entire council as $12,500 ($12,957.72); law enforce- said. In addition, renderings, artis. · "committee of the whole" on vii- ·ment, $2;568.62 (new fund); safety, lie dra:wings of what ~uil~ings. will
lage flnance and insurance commit- $9,500 ($3,800); perm1ss•v.e '!'•· look hke after revltai1Z31ian, ha":C
Jees, lMteaH"ofonlythl'eememti'm-. - SlO,SOOi($11,137 .!II); bmldmg been co119'leted for 17 of thebus•per committee 11!1 was customary. (u~4. $6,500 ($7,191.92)~ water, nesses With two more expected to
In another departure, other tradi-_ $247,873.80 ($318,062.83), sewer, he~ompleted soon, he a~ ..
tiona I committees cmisisting nf ' S154,235.12 ($165,147.65); guarIt mtg~t see~ the proJ~Its not
three members were replaced by ante_e me!Cf, $20,000 ($26,681 .09); movmg qmcldy, he said, but the
. ' (e. ·· bet appointme ts - · -- pollee
pcnSIOJI, ~$:i ,744 ,24- actual grani, WBS-1101 Signed (al· the C"'
sm~p;:"ted _were: Sea~ Dilion, ($~;359.76); cemetery endowment, s~ level) until September." " ·
grievBDCe; BiU Haptoristall, safety; $38,118.57 (same); perpetual care,
' Continued on~ 3 _
~ ·i.t'
. ..... .
Musser,. graliJS IID!!..iiCvelop"'. - , \.l ·r~-•h'"'t 't- John
---~
ment;
I;Mq_ Wehrung, zoning;
. . ..... ~
-·~ ''.~" "r'i,_....,·. Q
-~
&lt;»
..... "
i"·"· ~
Wrigilt&lt; OSHA and com- .
George
.•
munily
relations;
William Young, .
a~rnoon. 'lbe work Is beiDg done ID IICc:ordiuace
ordinance
and
parks
and recreation.
with a plan approve«! b)' .tile Ohio J&gt;epartment
Council
approved
seven paid
of Transportation, said ODOT apokeawoman
villa¥e
employees
holidays
for
. Nancy Yoaehlllll. Plans llave yet to be approved
including New-Year s Day, Memofor electric, telephone, cable and water Une relorial Day, the Fourth of July, Labor
cation, she added.
Day, Thanksgiving, tbe Friday fol'
..
lowing Thanksgiving and Christmas.

Memio~nty'sr~~~~

I

School District hold' organization- ,
al meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
high school.

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By JIM FREEMAN
Selltinel news staff

acres

'ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY

• 2 Sectlono, 12 Pogeo 35 centa
A Multlmedlo Inc. New8p.lf*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 4, 1995

Roseberry resigns -South,ern board post

Announces the Opening of His Medical rractlce In

MIDDLEI'ORT - Middleport
Masonic Lodge # 363 will meet at
1;30 p.m. Tuesday m the lodge. All
Masons il)vitcd.
.
.

~

·

Low IOillallt UOWid 5.
Wlncly. Tbundays111111y. HIP Ia
201.

_
P omeroy Council

i

invited.

CHESTER - Eastern AtJilctic
Boosters Will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Eastern High School.

BuckeyeS:
11-30-33-34-35
.

- ·--~-

Tyree Blvd, Jan. 4-8 . Dave C~n ~
field, commissioned evai\gelisl for
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport tbe Church of the Nazarene, will he
Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday,__ the speaker. Services at 7 p.m.
Meigs County Public Library. Mrs. Wednesday through Sa!urday; SunRichard Owen to review, "One day, 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
.
Writer's Beginnings" and other )
selected writings by Eudora Welty .
P6MEROY - The Big Bend·
For roll call members are to give a · Cloggers will resume regular class- •
New Year's Resolution. ,
es at 6 p:m. Wednesday at Pomeroy
Village Hall . AU interested beginRA CINE- Special ·services. ners shoUld attend. For information
TUESDAY
.
CHESTER - Chester Town- . Racine Church of the Nazarene, c&amp;)l Vivian May at 992-7853.
ship .Trustees, 7 p.m. Tuesday,
town hall, for year-end meeting and
organi7.ational session. ·

..

6805

Musser to head

cheon and was presented gifts from
her co-workers and the bank .
You've had a long haul, Ruth, so
do enJOY your rellrement.
~
_ _
_· ·
Mr anu Mrs. JoliiiBaxter who
reside in the Burlingham area are
extending big, big thanks to all of
their friends and neighbors WhO
pitched in to provide patbroom
facilitie~ at their home. Workers qualify for benefits, generally withcame out in droves to help with the out decreasing the benefits of the
project. a real necessity at this time ~~~to~a~e~~~~~;,· ~;l ~8~!~e
due to Mrs. Baxter's illness, and
After two years, the divorced
the Baxters are extremely gmteful.
So, thank you.
spouse may qualify (or retirement
~
__ _ _
_, _
benefits if both she/he and the
Kathy McDaniel of Long .Bot- · worker are age 62 or older, even if
tom and. her mother-in-law, Gloria
the worker does not retire at !bat
McDaniel, Point Plea•an"Wc-Vac;, -'--'1im
= e. - - -·- --have a point of pride in common . . .
· E 1\ h
- - 11
E lacS as two sons w o are
Oops.
ag e ~o~ts.
_
The correct song title for tune
Gl9na s sons, .. Mark of
20
ill Whatsa Name of That. Song
Culpe(J!!r, Va., _and Matt of Bayard, .
.EW. Vas., eacbdauainethd the rank.of contest was "Blues in the Night"
and not "Birth of the Blues'1 as I
ag 1e coul urmg eu scouung
years while growing up in Point 'incorrectly informed you. Those
Pleasant. Kathy's sons. James and
Ad
·
f
· listed in an earlier column did 'have
the title correct, "Birth of the
am, more recent1y, o course,
Blues''·
Somehow I always mix up
. became -Eagle ~couts., .
those
two
songs altho_ugh I'm sure I. ·
Th1s many Eagles m one ram· q01·te n accompl'shment
··
know
both
the tune and the lyrics
1·1.Y •s
1
a
of
both.
Forgive
me?
·
smce, only one percent of bo~s
en_tenng scoutmg actuall~ al!am
this top rank m the org~•zauon.
And this gem from my dear
friend, Ferndora Story:
Kathy attnbutes· heF s'!ns ~uccess
"Age is just ·a number and
to her, husband, ~uke S, lifelong
mterest and parllClpauon 10 the_ . mine's unlisted".
Boy Scout Program.
Do keep smiling.

-------Community calendar· -The Community Calendar is
published as a .f ree service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The cale.ndar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers or any type. Items
. are printed a.• space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run ' a
speclnc numbe~ of days.

Pick3:
867
Pick 4:

Yol. 45, NO. 170
Capyrlght 1994

--Ill

.,

.Ohio Lottery

Raiders
knock otT
Marauders

( 6 Hot Wings' Pieces
. ./ 4 Biscuits.

GOP

arge asrle"' Btato~s~ . ~.!- 1~arge,BakeifBeans ---

ed board _ presid~nt and J.oseph
Thoren, v1ce pres•dent,,dudng the
organizational part·of the meeting.
Other board members are Marty
Morarity and C. T. Chapman.
'
The third Monday at 7 p.m. in
the high school cafeteria was set as
the regular date for meetings.
Members als(! set their salaries at
. $80 a meeting for.not more than 13
·meetings a year.
.
Membership in the Ohio ·Scbool
Board Association ·was renewed
.ll!ong. witho peJformance · bonds for
the board members_. tbe superinten·

dent, treasurer, and assisiimt trea.surer.
, Bids on two new- busses wen: .
. aceepted, International chassis witb
Thomas bodies. The bid for blldics
was accept¢ from Edwin H. Davis
Co., Danville, and die cbassis from
Stow Equipment Co., Marietta.
Bill Justis was empfoyed as a ·
substitute bus ddver. · .
. Next regular meeiing of the
board was set' for Jan . 23 at the
high school becaqse of the obser. vance of Martin Luther King Day
on Jan. 16.

·

choose woman for. speaker
officeholders whose eJections set
· precedents of their own.
Speaker Jo An~ Davidson, RReynoldsburg, · who commands a
56-43 majority in the. !:louse, said
during opening day ceremonies Jhat
·legislators will not be judged on a
partisan basis, bUI on how they
worlc together to make government
work.
"I hope th
1 two years are
marked by opennes , imess and
spirited debate. One llf
mos.l
important things we can remember
is that partisan politics has its

··n charge

place, but not wlien it stifles the
search for the belt solutions to
Ohio's problems," Davidson said. ·
Davidson said the change in
control of the House marks the start
of a new era in which changing·
public attitudes are the driving
for:ce.
.
''Elected ·officials .. , ate under
more challenge toda~ than the)'
have ever been before. It's because~ "
the American public bas lost some
~f its confidence in its govenunent
and is looking for that to be re·
esJablished,'~ she said.

· -- ----

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em.
. . River Sweep went on as ·scheduled to give assistance in ~g dQwn a
· · congn:sshmal takeover
-----,~- ·- - · -·~~ ~,~.~~-~ -~·~··--"-'~~...,.;.....-..+
. .-. _,__ .
' ' - ,-= ·
~--~ May 19 - Matthew F. Morris, and was .a~suoo:ss.aulozens of res; - -old~Rutland-Hish-Sdlool-bulldlng;~
. ·----!lbi!Lne...w_Ho_use_ail~ ~enate _GOJ&gt;
='
17, was in critical· condition at idents swarmed·11vet the banks . July _17- Dismantling of oJd leaders vowed today will bring ·
Available only at pa rticipating KFC• restauran ts. lnclud"s,Whiteidar\1: pieces: N~ Coupon Necessary. U~ited time otter.
2907. Jackson
Avenue
Grant
Hospital where he was taken pic~ng up debris.
Cross Mill building in Pomeroy· .Americans less government, lower
.
.
~FC
1995
I
•
by
LifeFlight
11
helicopter
after
June
22A
vacant
house
on
began as the first step in tbe move taJ(esandareformedCongress. · •
·Point Pleasant, West Virginia
crashing into a traffic sign pole on New Street in Paneroy .was gutted of the strucrure 10 Star Mill Park in
"It's a different day," Sen. Bob
Of!lce Houra: 9 a.m. -' p.m.. l'londa)' th!Ough l'rlday
Stale Route 7 near Meigs Hlgb . ·by .a fire, Wilh temperatures above Racine.
·
D!Jie, tbe incomlng , ~enate MajoriSchool.
.
90, tbree firemen were overcome
July 24- Proposal for a Meigs ty Leader, said today just hours
May
22
-.Denny
Fa~myer
of
by
the
beat
and
were
talcellto
Vet·
.
sales
tall boost was made. Colnlliisbefore the newly elected Republiror •ppolntmenta all:
Facemyer Lumber Co:, Inc . of erans Memorial Hospital for treat- siooer Fred Hoftinan said it should can majorities in both .the House
(304) 675-1784.
. Middlepon. was presenied a gover- ment,
.
.be something for the people. to . and the Senate took their Qiltbs of .
.'
.
excellence
in
exporting
award
·
June
23The
polsibility
of
a
decide and If they don't want it offtce.
nor's
.'
•
during a ceremony· in Columbus by regional jail came to the front when then other ways to n:duce expendiGov. Georg!l V. Voinovich.
a pledge was made by the State to tures wiU bave to be found. .
. "A lot of people didn't think it
May 26 - Racine and Letart provide 100 percent funding for the
· July 26 - Middleport OK' s would happen in tbeit'lifetime,"
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
'
COUNTY COURT JUDGE.:.. Judge Pattlck H. O'Brien, ...
Elementary Schools were giYen construction, architectural fees and $1J million '95 budget
Rep, Newt Gingrich said of tbe
The family of professionals
·
·
riKbt. wu sworn In Tueaclay afternoon for llnotber term u Melp
$25,000 by the state in what is land acquisitions.
•
July 29 - Racine Council new Republican House majority
·
at20v...,om.., ..... P....._wv~ (304)11H340
228 W~st Main
County Court judge. Here O'Brieh Is sworn Ia by Jucip Freel
--'-- 1~-+--~ '"'c--· ··~~...:.~~~~~~~~-=-~~=~-~~:::1=~-=~~~~~~";ve~nture capiu!l"for an
June 25 -.Nearly 3500 bouse- appro¥ed· a budset of $218,328, that was poised to elect bim speat.
__
Crow
_!II of ~e1 Melgs Co~ntr Common Pl~~urt.
+.
;::.
~ching pregram;
ho~ were w1thout po~ after~ ~- ~nUnued on~ 3
er.~"~~re very e.xclted.'' .
'

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT

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