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                  <text>Community calendar--.
TUESDAY

POMEROY - Financial aid
. wortabop to be held Tuesday, 7
p.m. at Meigs Higb School c:afeteria, for seniors in bigb school,
Soutbcm. Eastern and Meigs, and
their parents. Speakers, Dr. John
HiU, fmancial aid director, University of Rio Grande; Melony
Ohalek, marketing representative,
Ohio Student Loan Services, Bank
One.
RACINE - Racine Area Community Organization 6:30' p.m.
Tuesday at tbe Racine F'Jre Depanment Annex. New members welcome.

POMEROY.- Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation Disttict Board
of Supervirors Tuesday, 8 p.m. at
tbe Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District Office. Election of
officers to be held. Public invite4
to attend.

in Cbe&lt;hire.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Wildwood Garden Club, b001e of Doris Grueser, I
p.m Wednesday. Each person to
make and take a pretty valentine.

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Pbi
Sorority, will met at 6 p.m Thursday at Gtace Episcopal Cburcb
parish bouse.

THURSDAY
CHESHIRE - Free Clothing
Day of tbe Community Action
Agency will be held ·9 to noon
Thursday at tbe old sc~l building

POMEROY - Free clothing
day at tbe Salvation Army, Butternut Avenue from 10 a.m. to noon.
All area residents in need of clothing are welcome.

~~~~~
- ~
---- ~
-- ~~~~~·

roPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.Di. at tbe post home. Members
urged to auend.

over tbe state to provide mammograms and interpretations for a total
of $~5; wbicb is must lower tban
tbe typical rate charged for Ibis service, according to Norma Torres,
R. N ., director of nur,es at tbe
Health Depanment said.
Goals of tbe service are 10 reach
clientele who are over 35, bave not
ru.l a maJlUI)ogram in the past year;
and who do not have any symptoms of breast cancer. It is
designed as a screening clinic for
women.

Statistics from the National
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Mobile imaging unit to visit Meigs
To belp wanen in Meigs County bave access to early detection of
breast cancer, tbe Meigs County
Health Depanment bas scheduled
tbe mobile imaging unit from tbe
Obio State University to come to
Meigs County on Thursday, Feb.
23. .
.
Any interested Meigs County
resident may contact tl!e Heal_tb
Depanment to be placed on the list
by caUing 992-6626 from 8 a.m. to
4 p.m. and ask for either Connie
Little, R. N. or Phyllis Bearbs,
Women's Health Care Technician.
Tbe mobile imaging unit uavels

Tuesday, January 24,1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

P9 10-The Daily Sentinel

..

IN THE

Cancer Instiblte indicate tbat one of
eight women will develop breast
concern. Early detection tbrougb
programs such as self-examination
and regular mammograms are
important to successful treatment
of breast cancer.
·
Ohio State University will bill
Medicare every 24 months for
mammography. ·Breast cancer is
tbe most commonly diagnosed cancer and tbe second leading cause of
cancer deaths among women,
according to the 1994 Public
Health Services repOrt.

•

.

-.

:vol. 45, N0.188
: COpyrljht 1995

Pomeroy.:Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 25, 1995

Pomeroy hosts state's
.
first}'ccess Ohio me~ting
By GEORGE ABATE

·CALL
NOW

TURNPIKE TO HOST BROADCAST
Turnpike Ford-Lincoln-Mercury Of Gallipolis, In Conjunction With Magic 101WMGG, Proudly Welcomes Jim Cutler, Nationally Recognized Air Personality, For
A Live Remote Broadcast On Saturday, January 28th. Jim Cutler Is The Voice Of
Magic 101 And Host Of The "Nightclub" Program From 7 To Midnight. He's Heard
Coast-to-coast As The Announcer On The ESPN Radio Network, Has ' Been The
Announcer On Court-TV Radio On The ABC Radio Network And Is Heard Every Day.As
The Voice Of Over ?Q Radio And TV Stations Around The World, Including Radio
Netherlands. Other Credits Include Announcer On The New England Patriots Radio
Network, Indianapolis Colts Radio Network And Ohio University Sports Radio Network.
He's Been Th~ Voice Of Coca-Cola's "Catch The Wave• TV Campaign, And A Veteran
Of Hundreds Of TV Movie Promos. Jim Is A Three l)me Gold Medal ,Winner At. The
International Radio Festival In New York As Well As "Best Of Show". Jim Poin'ts Out
The Unique Marketing Styles And Commitment To Quality That Characterize Both
Turnpike And Magic 101, And That Rival Many Liuger Market Businesses. He Is
Excited About Being Involved In "January Truck Monti'( And Till]berline Ski Getaway
Promotion., Which Culminates Saturday, January 28th With ALive Remote Broadcast
On Magic 101-WMGG From 9:30A.M .to 12:30 P.M. "I'm Pleased To Be Involved With
Boih Turnpike. And Magic 101." Says Cutler, "As These Are Two Businesses That
Constantly· Strive For Excellence."
·

•
THIS SPACE
$16.00

THIS SPACE
$8.00

ANALYZING ACCESS omo- About CiO area residents and
otrklall eYIIluated the stale transportation plans for tbe next 25
yean lad night at the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center.
Ac:ceu Ohio II theJilueprlllt fiir 'higllwaf, rail, water, airplane, and
bicycle tn.Mportallon. Raymond Furbee and his wife, Grace, look
at the planned routa since they Uve at Great Bend. The ftrst moetlllg Ill District 10 Will hdd In PoaMroy, while tho oerond and final
._ttng will be Ill Marietta..(Sentinel .photo by George Abate)
.

9.92·2156

THIS
.
. SPACE
$12,00 1

--Local briefs,--Fire damages garage

FOR MORE INFORMATION

A garage at tbe Henry Eblin residence on Main Street in Rutland
was damaged in a fue Tue~y afternoon.
According to a spokesman of the Rutland Fue Deparunen~ fJremen were called to tbe scene at 1:30 p.m. and remained there for
about an bOUI'.
It was reported tbat tbe fire started in b'asb in tbe back of a
Chevrolet dump truck and sp-ead u)l\\1&amp;.1 into tbe ceilinB and walls
of tbe garage, destroying 5ome electrical wiring, and causing some
damage to tbe truck.
.
.
.
.
Eight Rutland fuemen were oo tbe ~e with lbree tructa and
tbe. emezgency squad. Tbe PomeroY. F'm; Depanment also respooded-witb~a:IJ'Udc,aod 1\~men.
•.
·
·

Weather causes two .accidents
Tbe Meiss County Sberiff's'Department investigated two weather-related accidents Monday and Tuesday, records show.
Adams Fisher, Jt., of Racine; was driving north on county Road
28 in Letart Township at 2:15p.m. Monday wben be lost control of
bis 19110 'Ford pickup truck. Fisher's ttuck slid off tbe road into a
. fence. ·
Mary Freeman, of Racine, lost control of her 1991 Ford Escott .at
12:35 p.m. Tuesday on Pearl Street and slid into a parked 1991
Chevrolet pickup truck owned by Max Hill Sr. of 'RaCine, records
, stated.
.
,
.
.
.
· Freeman's car bad ligbl damage, wb1le H11I's p1ckup reporU;d
none, reports stated. ·

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'

Rep ..Carey outlines problems
fa~ing southeas~ern . Ohioans
Jobs, transportation and education are tbe tbree main issues
~fectin~ s::,utbeasstem ~hio aocord· mg to e man tate epresenta.live Jobo Carey (R-94tb, Wellston).
Carey, 35, elaborate4 on some
of. the problems afflicting his distnct.
·
,
"Because of tbe possibility of
.,.,eifare reform, wbicb may limit
benefits to two years, we need to
~aree iitlsolbapeope_lebwe have 0~ .we\:
• w
v JO opponuntues,
be said during a telephone inter·
view Monday morning with Tbe
Daily Sentinel.
.
"I bave been meedlig with commissioners in each county discussing their industrial sites," be
· said. "We bave
to bave these, sites
ic de
togetecooom
velopmeot.'
Carey said be bas also met with
tbe U.S. Route 3S committee which
........
concerns Gallia and J........,., counties.
Other major highway projects in
bis district include U.S. Route 33
and the Ravenswood Connector
M
project in eiss County, the ·
Cbesapeue Bypass in LaWrence
County and upg rade s to US
· · Route

REP; JOHN CAREY

32 wliicb passes tbrougb Meigs,
Vinton and Jackson cotmdes.
To get better highways for tbe
district, Carey accomplished bis
first goal of being named to tbe
l:lou__se transp·ortation and public
safety committee.
In addition, be was named to the
economic· development and small
business committees

. c arey sees bis placement on projects - sewer, water· and stoon
those committees as an asset due to sewer projects in addition to curbneed for better transportation and side recycling -during his term as
economic development in bis districL
ma~~- the other hand. Carey
"I pusbed bard to be on those doesn't consider bis youth as an
committees," be said. "They are asset or a liability .
key to our area. Education is also
"I'm kind of in the ·middle of tbe
an area tbat needs to be addressed - road," be Sat'd, noting
· one represcnin our area." be said.
tative is 25 years old while several
"House Tort Resolution I, others in their 30s.
wbicb may go before voters Ibis
''The House bas the best of both
fall, can provide $1 billion for worlds ... a good mix of people," be
· Ohio's schools .. Education funding noted.
will also likely increase, "be said.
"A llit of people mistakenly
Until recently, Carey served as think mosl r-epresentatives are
mayor of Wellston, a post be beld lawyers. We've got dentista, busifor seven years, and worked for ness people and former tQwnsblp
former Congressman Clarence trustees," be said.
MiUer, a legendary figure in southCarey commented tbat, aa
eastern Ohio politics, for seven mayor of Wellston, be worked
years.
.
often witb State Senator Jan
"As mayor, a lot of my focus Michael Long (D-17tb, CirclevlUi!)
i ~ ... trial de 1o
"b
d ·'
=·on n.....
ve pmen~ e 3;0 ~uapates continuing lbat rela. uonsbip.
.
Carey pointed out some of his
Born and reared .in Wellston
accomplishments a.s mayor of Carey graduate4 from nearby Obiti
Wellston wbicb included convert- University in 1981 witb a degree in
· g a a t. ind trial • 'lit i
·
H
1
m v can
us
aacl Y nto - po!'tical
SCICnce. e now resides in
office spaces and tbe expansion of Wellston witb bis wife, Lyoley.
tbe WeUston Pillsbury plant. -In addition, be serves on tbe
In' addiu'on, tbe commun1'ty benHouse insurance and. fam1'I y serefited frotri several infrastructure vices commiuees.

GOP to Clinton: Follow·or get out of the way

WASHINGTON (AP) Gov. George ADen's criminal jus- Means Committee, said, "He bas Republicans with his own tax cuts.
#
Republicans responding to the lice reforms and ber own tax cuts.
looked the American people in the . "I don't think there's mucb entbuII
State of the Union address offered
Senate Majority Leader Bob eyes and embraced our fiDidamen- siasm for that at all," be sail!.
President Clinton a choice: Follow Dole, R·Kan., said tbat while Oin- ·. tal goals of a smaller, less costly
Despite Clinton's conciliatory
or get out oftbe way.
ton's message was imponan~ "tbe government, and for more and . tone, many Republicans questioned
I 1
'"'
"If be bas-changed his big-gov- more important and most powerful higher-paying jobs. The only ques- !be president's sinCerity.
No serious problems were ernment agenda, we say 'great ~ssage reouuns tbe one.tbe Amer'
tion tbat remains is Ibis: How
"In rhetoric, be's reacbil)g -out.
reported because of the outage, join us as we change America,': ' 1can people delivered in Novem- togetbei, can we achieve tbes~ ... You get to the specifics and
although the Gallia County Emer- said New Jersey Gov. Christie ber."
,
· goals?" .
that's where you fall off the
geocy Medical ·s ervice bad to WbilDian, who delivered tbe 9QP's
·:we welcome any suppor_t the
Democrats, predictably, were wagon," said Sen. Rick Santorum.
deliver oxygen tanks to about four televised response Tuesday mght.
president offers as tbe Republicans more laudatory . Senate Minority R-Pa.
bomes where electric-powered
"Republicans welcome your carry out our mandate to rein in Leader Tom Dascble, D-S.D., said
Rep. Susan Molinari, R-N.Y.,
oxygen pumps were being used. · ideas for making government not government witb less spending, Clinton· ''came tonight with an said, "The president read tbe 'ConAuthorities also bad to deal witb ' . bigger but smaller," she said, less taxes and more freedom,'' be expectation not to confront but to tract With America' and did a gOod
burglary alarms set off by tbe out- speaking from tbe legislative cbam· said.
.
cooperate and to lay down an agen- - book report."
age.
.
ber in Trenton.
R~:~~. Van HdiCIU)' of Ten~essee,
da for bipartisansbip."
_ .
'~If Imitation-is tbe sineerest
At tbe Ob10 Valley-Publlsblng
While Cllnton"'sounded pretty · one of 73ll01' freshman 1n tbe
"The real question is bow dus- form of flattery on behalf of all
Com!'any Plant In Gallipolis, pro- - Republican,'' GOP ideas are aciu- House, said. "There's no question in are we? ... Senate Delitocrats are Republicans, I tbantc tbe president
. duc~10n .began about three hours ally being put into practice at tbe be can talk tbe talk; we'll bave to not dug-in," be Bald.
for bis compliment:'' said Rep.
behind sched'!Ie.
state level, Whitman said, citing . see if be can walli: tbe walli:."
However, Sen. James Exon, D- John I!oebner, R-Obin.
Area public schools shut down · Wisconsin Gov. Tommy ThompAnd Rep. Bill Archer, R·Texas, Neb., saidDemoaats weni wary of
Democrats angrily rejected tbat
for tbe ·day .and tbe University of son's welfare overhaul, Virginia chairman of tbe House Ways and Clinton's determination to match contention.
· .
.
·
Rio Grande was operating on a .
delay.
Even Point Pleasant, W.Va .. _
was in~~ affecte4 by tbe outage. In
of coffee and gasoty Common Pleas Court of Judge . apd continued sentenCi!tg untU Ibis diet," be said. "Tbe cilse was preline, Gallla County motorists By KEviN PINSON
Joseph
L. Cain.
morning, wben be gave WolfQ .an senled, the evidence was overly in
. crossed tbe river and snarled traffic OVP News S1alf
•
Present
in
tbe
court
room
were
indefinite jail term bf 15 years to favor of a conviction and lbe 'jury
A jury of six men and six
to be served by businesseS where
Wolfe's
wife,
Terri
Thomas
Wolfe,
life and three years for a g1111 speci- followed tbe facta and reached tbe
brewers and pwnps were stiU brew- women deliberated for less tbao an
boor Tuesday afternoon before 34 Vine Street. Crown aty; a lcey ficalion. Tbe terms are to be served proper conclusion."
ing and pumping.
Defense attorney Ronald R. Calreturning
a guilty verdict in a Hunt- wimess wbo testified Monday; .his . cOnSecutively, giving tbe murderer
The outage tops last Febniary's
mother,
bls
sis!CJ
and
a
few
friends.
a
minimwn
sentence
or
18
years.
houn
of Gallipolis decHned to comington,
W.Va.,
man's
munlertrial.
. when 7,300 customers were withFriends
and
flimlly
of
tbe
vicProsecuting
Attorney
.Brent
A.
ment
on tbe verdict, but said 111m:
Michael
E.
Wolfe,
39,
did
DOl
out power for 7 1/2 hours after
wiD
probably
be an appeal filed.
lim,
Eddie
A.
Ferguson
of
Crown
Saunders
Bald
tbe
jitry
~bed
tbe
show
any
visible
signs
of
emotion
water seep¢ into a surge suppresCity,
fllled
half
of
tbe
courtroom.
only
possible
ou1e010e.
"There
usually
is in most of
·
wben'Oerlc
of
Court
Louise
BID'ger
sor at the Addison substation.
Cain accepted tbe jury' a verdict
"I tblnk it was tbe proper ver- }
read tbe verdict in tbe Gallia COI!DContlnu.d on page 3

O "'SS

.Power outage a•• ects 1 ,
lies/·Ul
.Ients' ea•ly ""day·
aI·~a
·( ;
·

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Contlnu.d on page 3
·

'94 PONTIACSUIBRD LE
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No injuries were reported following two l'ecent deer/vehicle accidents reported to tbe Meigs County Sberifr s I&gt;epartmenL
.
Michael J. Hawk, POmeroy, was southbound on state Route 7
Sunday ni~tbt when.be struCk and killed a_deer tbat ran into tbe patb

''Sale Pra lrldltiM GW.C FilS!:
T.me 1J1¥!r lnoontl'tC HQ.lailiea.

$fl,188**

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Df!el'lvehicle wrecks reported-

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.

ByJIM~MAN
Sentinel news s1alf

Deputies of tbe Meigs Cowity :Sberlfrs Depanment are investigating tWo incidenta reported Tuesday night.
·
Charles Yost, Forest Run Road, reported someone blisted out
two windows in tbe old Nease Settlement Church witb snowballs.
. Two subjects were reportedly seen near tbe cburcb on fourwbeelers.
.
Dean Mays and Richard VanMeter, Pomeroy Pike; Chester.
repOrted tbal around 8:45 p.m. a subject tbat bad come to tbe residence fired three shots after pointing a weapon at them.
The name of .tbe subject is being witbbeld pending charges in
county court. No injuries were reported, Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Soulsby said.
'

FIBERGLASS 1111111110 BOARDS

highway during tbe next 2S years, tbat was just paved over.... I feel
. The billy ·topography of Ibis
Sentinel News S1atr
Dowler said.
·
there is a great need for walking region precludes development of
Ohioans stand at a transpoita''The trouble is getting people to ·and bike lanes."
bike and walking paths, said Gary
. lion crossroads, said Ohio Depart- think about 20 years from now,"
Viewers co.uld
tbe state's Coburn. with ODOT~ s planning
ment of Transportation Director Dowler said. "They want to koow plans for various routes . But, bureau. B~t. AthJ:ns and Gallia
JerryWray.
wbat will happen next summer."
beyond the Route 33/lnitrsiate 77 counties will bave access to bicycle
The interstate system bas been
Yesterday's fo111!11 was targeted connector no new highways are paths in the future.
·
built. The rail, trucking and avia- at rural access, said Bob Eason, planned tbrougb Meigs County
More tban 50 percent of future
tion industries bave been deregulat- Meigs Coumy Engineer.
during tbe next 25 year$. ODOT budgets will be spent on preservaed. Recently-enacted federal law
"For Meigs and Gallia counties . does intend to upgrade existing lion of existing systems, Coburn
mandates new highways and it looks exceedingly good;" Eason state highways, such as Routes 7, said.
.
124 and 681, Dowler said.
greater emphasis on public transi~ said.
"(Access Ohio) bas been
·Wray said.
·
Raymond and Grace Furbee
Fred Hoffman, president of tbe extremely successful. We've had
"Tbe state's multi-modal trans- were impressed with the state· s Meigs County Commissioners, said good p,.rucipation and a lot of good
portation plan will pay special plans. The senior citizens bave its ob~ous_ &lt;:J!JC?T. bas put a lot of suggestions," Coburn said. . ·
attentio!l to such issues as traffic . been life-long Meigs County resi- effort mto planmng.
Tbe recent comments will be
congestion, preservation of tbe dents. Mr. Furbee said be will be
"It's probably tbe most impor- compiled witb others across the
environment and improvements in especially interested in tbe devel- .taDt thing to happen to Meigs - slate and in about four years anoth- public safety," Wray stated. - opment of tbe Ra\ienswooil con- County wl~ be to bave.really gOQd er review session of plans will be
.
Yesterday, tbe first Access Phio nector since be lives near Great highways, Hoffman satd. _ . .
held, be added.
.
meetinB in tbe state was beld in Bend.
Me1gs Coun!y Comm1ss1oner
A limited amount of state and .
Pomeroy. About 60 area residents
"We bave a daughter who lives Janet How~ Satd sbe was pleased federal highway dollars actually is
attended Ibis meeting and tbe sec- in Columbus and it takes us longer
state s plans. ·
spent on new roads. In fiscal year
ond meeting in ODOT' s Distric.t 10 to get out of Meigs County tban it by ~~
I II be really bapp~ when they 1994, about $369 miUion in federal
will be on Feb. 7 in Marietta, said does to get tbe rest of tbe way to get _the Athens to Darwm and Rock funds will be available to Obio
Jobn Dowler, district director.
Columbus," Furbee said of the ~pnngs to Ravenswood complet~" Coburn said.
.
:
Access Ohio includes plans foi rieed for better bigbways. · "We're ~~,u s. Route 33, Howard sa1d.
"It's very simple . We need to
transit via water, rail, public transi~ stiU on a horse and buggy highway
I d like to see more walldng paths plan ahead " be added
bicycle/pedestrian, avia!ion and
available."
.
_
'
·

peruse

Dej/iiiies probe incidents

BRAIIl NEW CIEVY AS1RO EmNDED CONVERSION VAN

3 Sectione, 21} Page• 35 centa ·
A Multimedia Inc. N. . .paper

I

Monday • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

••

Many Gallia County residents
overslept Ibis morning wben a
power outage quietly turned off
their a1ann clocks at6:45.
Tbe outage, wblcb affected
10,785 Colwnbos Southern Power
customers, occurred wben a conductor blew at asubstation in Addison. cSP Gallipolis Manager Ron
Mc:Dade said tbe faulty condllctor,
combined wltb a bigh demand for
power due to tbe wintry weather,
caused tbe outage.
All of CSP' s Gaiiia Coumy customers were without power,
McDade said.
Workers began restoring elec- tri.:lty at-9: 17 a.m. Tbe substation
in HanersviUe, wbicb bandies part
· of tbe city and tbe Spring Valley
area. was tbe list to be brought on
line, sbmly after II a.m. ·
Law eofoo:cmcnt and emergency agencies operate4 on minimal
power witb ~as-powered generaton
wbile motonata aawlod cautioualy
tbrou&amp;b inlersectioos where traffic
ligbta atood dart.
The State Highway Patrol and
bigbway department provided
worlcers to direct traffic at busy
inteneedons. ·

Man found-guil-t y of G'allia -murder

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Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OJIJo

•

ROBERT L WJNGETI'
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH ·
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Conjroller

- LETI'ERS OF O!'INION are welcome. They should be less than 3bO
words long. Allleners are subject to editing and must be signed witb name,
address and telephone numbg. N!! ullligned lctteB will be publiJM!!. Ltttq~

sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, DQt penonllities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio _newspapers
By The Associated Press
·
Excerpts of Ohio editorials of national and stateWide interest:
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Jan. l3
In deciding what to spare and what to slice, surely Congress' appropriators must also address the merits of individual programs. In the case of
the Coi]!Oration for Public Broadcasting, the merits are considerable.
Public broadcasting is an example of an institution that, -at relatively
modest cost, bas provided substantial benefits for Americans of all ages,
incomes and regions.
Providing a minimum amount of ·civic, educational and cultural programming is indeed a legitimate government function: At a time when
politicians on the right 1111d the Ieft are uniformly decrym~ the decline_of
civility and common decency m Amencan culture, public broadcasung
remains a modest but important reminder that such values have not van. isbed entirely from the nation's public life.
·
Tbe Cincinnati Enquirer, Jan. 22
The new Republican majority wants to eliminate programs, large and
small, that chew up taxpayer dollars and have no business _on the public
dole. It's about time.
.
Enter public broadcasting, which gets $285.6 million a year from
Congress- but shoiii&lt;IQ't. PBS would like to frame the GOP effort as
mere liberal-bashing. And yet PBS is tbe TV home of,Williarn F. Buckley, the MacNeii:Lebrer Newshour, John McLaughlin and others with
conservative appeal.
.
Even House Speaker Newt Gingrich, the Great Satan to PBS, supports
it - but not with, taxpayer money. He pledges his own cash: $2.000 a year
for five years.
So all things considered, this isn't about ideological warfare. It's about
budget priorities.
.
.
. · .
. .
Public broadcasting would remam free to conunue Its umque DIISSIOn.
Viewers and listeners would rem$ free to support it along with colleges,
ccimmunity volunteers, foundations and COIJlOrations.
Just cancel those involuntary tax contributions.

- Wednesday, January 25, 1995

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, J111uary 25, 1995

•

Oilier Vietnamese regimes.''

Americans will remember them
from pichtres of Buddhist monks
setting themselves on fu-e to protest

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
the U.S.-backed regime of Ngo
Dinh Diem in South Viemam in the

early I960s . Bi.tt soon after the
North Vietnamese overtook the
5outh in 1975, the Buddhists would
have counted thetnselves lucky to
have Diem back.
Shortly after their takeover, the
communists denied the B.uddbists
official recognition, which was tbe
"first phase in the attempted
destruction or control of the Bud·
dbist reli~ion and its sphere of
influence,' according to the cable.
They soon realized the futility of
simply ignoring the Buddhist
church, so the regime agreed in
1978 "to accord official recognition to the upper levels of the~Bud­
dbist hierarchy."

NoW, NeWTi~,

~oU &lt;:lPoLOGiZ&lt;2

To Tlie BiTcH.

(

Tbunday, Jan. Z6
MICH.

forced to t.-eak his vow of vegelarianism and eat meat, even though
meat rarely was served In the
prison camp.
Outside, in southern Viemam,
permission bad to be obtained for
any religious gathering of more
than five persons~- Texts and sermons were to be submitted in
&lt;advance, or the monks were not
allowed to teach. For most of the
20 y_ears, they have also been forliiilden 1iOOt teaaiing cliili!Rin, who
must attend governmept schools.
Many pagodas have had to close
over the years because the govern- .
ment confiscated the rice fields
owned by the pagodas, and the
faithful w.ere forbidden to bring
food to them~ .
Meanwhile, Tbicb Huyen
Quang, the 77-year-old supreme
patriarch of the church, who was
too important to kill and who was
not ex~ to break under torture,
was kept confined virtually incommunicado in central Vietnam· s
Quang Ngai province since 1982.
Human ·rights groups say be was
arrested Dec. 2!Lwhile on hunger
strike to protest the imprisonment
of Buddbist monks arrested in
.....----...,..-----.....;..;· November.
For the last 12 years, the patriarch bas been prevented from communicating regularly with his chief
deputy, Thich Quang Do. This 68year-old offtcial was confmed for a
decade to another province, Thai
Binb, and was only "let go" to a
..,___r~1~~?1 pagoda in Ho Chi Minh City (formerly S3igon), where be bas been
. CllDfmed since 1992.
Human rights groups and intelligence reports say Thich Quang Do
w.as arrested a little over a week
after the ]IBiriarcb, around !be fmt
week of January. The New Yolkbased group Human Rights Watch
said in a Jan. 7 statement that
"both temples (of these leaders)
have
now been surrounded by secu•
rity police, and it is not known
where the two monks are being
held." .
This is just the latest round in 20
years of repressinn against the Buddhist ·leaders and monks, and the
. Clinton administration shpuld consider Vietnam's human rigb~s
record before allowing more active

IND.

---------Weather-----South-Central Oblo
Extended forecast
This afternoon .. . lncreasing
Friday ... Dry. Lows in the upper
clouds with scattered flurries late. teens to lower 20s. Highs mostly in
High near 3.5. Variable winds less . the 30s.
than IOmpb becoming northwest at
_Saturday: ..A chance
of
_IO to 15 mph by evening.
ram ... Fre_ezmg
r~m ... Or
Tonight...Fiurries likely.. .Main- snow .. .Mainly southern ohiO. Lows
ly before midnight. Low 15 "l 20. in tbe 20s and big_bs in the 30s. .
Northwest winds 10 to 15 mph.
Swtday.. .FI~es.likely. Lows m
Thursday ...Mostly sunny. High the 20s and btgbs m the lower to
near 35.
middle 30s.

Area Death~-Arthur Pridemore

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MID-COURSE CORRECTION?

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Three cited to-county court
Tbe Meigs County men were Werry, 27, of Racine, owner of the
cited to tbe Meigs County Cowt on buck, Tim Lawrence, age unreportCharges of criminal damaging fol- ed; of Long Bottom and Andy
lowing an incident Monday night at Hawk, age unreported, of Racine,
the Izaak Walton Farm near according to the report.
. '
Cbestez, acronling to Meigs Coun·
Wood discovefe!) that one winty Sheriff James M. Soulsby. .
dow and a glass in the door of the
According to the report, Meigs building had been broken out.
County Game Protector Keith Additional charges are pending
Wood was ~ving past the Izaak against the trio, according to Souls·
Walton Farm on Sugar Run Road by.
. The truck sustained heavy dam• ·
and noticed the gate to the property
ba4 been run through. Upon inves, ~e in the inci~nl Werry was also
t,igal\on, Wood found a .I982 Ford Cited for driving under fiDI!DCial
pickup truck parked beside the responsibility action suspension.
1,be incident occurred following
buiJding, Soulsby said.
Inside the truck were 'Rick the club's 50th anniversary meeting
that night
.

Meigs announceme,nts

.

They are viewed in the same less·
than-favorable light as afflflllative·
action enrollees, unless !bey go out
of their way to demonstrate their
academic prowess.
The same burden follows minority achievers into the workplace.
No matter bow deserving they are
of their jobs or promotions, they
are viewed with some measure of
suspicion and, in some cases,
resenbnent by white colleagues.
Not until tbe black banker or
· Hispanic teaclier or MlliD' jOiimlilist proves his or her mettle, beyond
a reasonable doubt, are they fully
accepted by their white peers as . .
something other than affumativeBCtion hires.
· _ Clearly, minorities are starting
IC) see diminishing returns from
affirm alive action. Yet the civil
rights leadership continues to insist
that racial preferences are the key
to upw~ mobility for minorities.

urday, Feb. 4 starti,ng with the
Trustees to meet
junior
varsity game at 6:30 p.m. at·
The Scipio Township trustees,
.
Meigs
High
School.
will meet Feb. I at 6 :30 at tile
Pal!eville Township building.
Riverview Garden Club to meet
The Riverview Garden Club
Meeting canceled
Tbe Meigs County Women's will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
Fellowship meeting scbedule4 for the home of Francis Reed. Extension agent Hal Kneen will present
Thursday bas been canceled.
the program.
· Gilllle rescheduled
Services announced ·
The Meigs High School·
Faithful Gospel Church will
. Alcundet boys' basketball games have singing and JnliCbing Friday
canceled Tuesday will be held Sat- at 7 p.m. The pastor invites the
public to attend.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113-1160)
Published every Dftemoon, Monda y through

Friday, Ill Court St, Pomcioy, Ohio, by lbc
Ohio Valley PublishiiJ CompaayiMullimedia
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 4.5769, Pp . 992-21.56.
Second glan postqe paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
M*~ber: ·The Associuted Pres~. and the Ohio

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Contlnlled from page 1
of his '1994 Dodge Dakota. Damage to the tru!% was listed as mod·
erate.
Thomas P. Hall, Racine, was eastll!lllllll on state Route 7 when
be Ian over a small dee~ that ran into the path of his 1989 Chevrolet
pickup truck. Light dmnage was reported. ·

Ross County Sheriffs deputies arrested 31-year-old Julie A.
Johnson, Chillicothe, formerly of Middleport and Newport News.
Va, on a warrant from the Meigs County Court charging ber with
failure to pay fines, costs and restitution ()D 26 counts of passing
bad checks in the amount of $2,393.73 as listed on the warrant.
She faces a bearing pending bcr return to Meigs County.

I

RACINE

Tbe regular meeting of the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development Executive Committee wm be held Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. in the BH-ItVRDD offices located on Washington
County Road 9, Marieua.
•
The personnel coounittee will meet at 6;30 p.m. in the offtee of
·the executive director.
Highlights of the agenda include a contract agreement for the
Meigs County Industrial Site Study, personnel matters and commit-.
tee appoinbnents.

(614) 992-6454.
(800) 433-6203

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
Interested in getting involved in tets:
"Seud me a kiss by wire,
barbersb~ cbolits singing?
"Baby, my heart's on ftre,
If so, you !lave a great opportu·
"If you Jefuse me,
nity at the present time.
wHoney,
you'D lose me,
A barbershop chorus is being
"Then
you'll
be left along,
organired in Gallipolis and partld"So,
Baby,
telephone
and tell ·
pation is open to all men of the
me
a1ea. Denver Rlce, Mike Wilfong
"l'se your own".
and John VanReeth are already
So think old and send your
involved. Practice sessions are
answer
to The Daily Sentinel, _I ll
being held every Tuesda~~ng
at the Aerlellbeatet in
'poll.!. Court SL, Pomeroy, Box 729-B, or
Music is provided and of course, _ drop it by the Sentinel office.
tbe close harmony barbershop ·
singing is done without aa:anpaniWan_t.to be an entertainer?
.
ment. A resident of Huntington · Auditions for The Stepbco Fosttavels in each week to rehearse the · ter Story, an outdoor musical pregroup which is now composed of seoted cadi summer al Bardstown,
35 men~
. Ky .. are being held in six locations
If you feel like you'd lilt;e to
next month. The show which, of
give it a whirl, give DenvCI' Rice a course, deals with the compos!'r
ring and be will flllr.ou in 011 all of Foster, bas been a drawing Card for
the details. Seems like a near thing Bardstown over tbe past 36 years.
· to do. I look forward to the fll'st . I've seen it and it's beautifully
~r!lic appearance by the new orgadone.
tlon.
If you're interested in trying
your band at gertillg Into this year's
'
A card shower Is beinf planned production you can get an audition
(or James Spencer. lm will application by writing, General
observe his 9Sth b~y 011 Feb. 3 Manager, Tbe Stephen Foster
and cards will reach him at Over- Story, P.O. Box 546, Bardstown,
.
brook Center, Page St., Middleport. Ky.,40004.
He' ll be happy to bear from you.
I do have more details on what
is expected at an audition and so
-The Meigs Division of the forth so if you want to know just a
American Heart Association is ask- bit more before applying, give me a
ing all businesses and institutions call.
. '
wbo have the big outdoor signs on which they can personalize mesAnd we're not goln-,ruu:om- ·
sagi'S to call at~ntion of the public plain about the weather are we?
that February is heart month. This Other places, even closeby, have
Is the month that the door-to-door bad It so much worse. Then, too,
campaign . will be con.ducted there are those memories of last
. throughout the county and other winter. So we know we have to
fund raisers are planned by tbe keep smiling.
local group. Donna Carr Is again
beading the door-to-door drive on
!ill _-1,
•filii
behalf of the Meigs Division. So
let's see the message on so.me of
those signs.

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Will BE PUBLISHED MONDAY,
FEBRUARY 13'" IN

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PIC,.URE YOUR PE'
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111 Second Bt, Pomeroy

FLOWER SHOP

PE,. VALEN,.INES!

Hospl"tal neWS

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1161

Meigs EMS-logs three calls

3:22 p.m., Elm Street, Mike
Taylor, VMH~
.
RUTLAND
1:37 p.m., volunteer ftre depart·
ment and squad, Main Street,
garage lire at Henry Eblin )XopertY.

.BH-HVRD meeting slated

...,.---Church dinner slated
I
dido'
t
mean
to tbrow you a
The United Pentacostal CbW'Cb
c!D'Ve
on
the
last
"Wbatsa
Name of
in Middleport will have a chicken
That
Songr'
tune.
and noodles dinner Friday from 1I
Entries in the contest were down
a.m. to 2 p.m. at the church for
considerably
and no one came up
$3.50. Eat-in, delivery or carry out
with
the
title,
"My Sugar Is So ·
available. Call 992-3824 or 992·
Refined".
Everyone
leaned to "The
2063.
~_ -~
L~adlls,._a .Ira!!!)!'.'. Jril~ki!~g ,_....___.__~~ Joi
isn't my goal so I'm smy
cootestliombed for the ftrst time in
many weeks.
•
VETERANS MEMORIAL
So here's the clue on the next
Tuesday's admission - Bertha song-a real oldie wbicb bas lived
Smltb,l'ooleroy.
, . through the years and is almost
. Tuesday's discharge -- Glad~s _ alwl!yl !!_one by barbershop quar·
Walker,l'ooleroy.
·

DOWIIING CH.ILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSUUNCE

shooting . Hardings testified that
Mr. Wolfe suffered from post a-aumalic amnesia and was unable to
remember the events of the shoot·
in g.
"Despite the technology at my
disposal, I was unable to invoi,e
any memories in him," Hardings
said. He added that personality profiles made during the five -bour
evaluation indicated Mr. Wolfe
was .not the type of person "who
goes around lying."
Mr. Wolfe was artested Oct. 5
in Huntington, W.Va., one day
.after shooting Ferguson at Mrs.
Wolfe'Hesidence. Mr...and Mrs .
Wolfe were married Jan. 6 in the
tbe PrObate Court of Judge Thomas
· s. Moulton.
Tbe couple_bad lived togc:l!!!:r
and bad a son, but were separated.
When ~e shooting occurred, Mrs .
Wolfe was involved with Ferguson
and Mr. Wolfe was attempting to
reconcile their rel:itionsbip.

Units of the Meigs Couiny no injuries, Pomeroy VfU assisted.
Transfer units lilindled two runs.
Emergency 'Medical Service recorded three calls for assistance
Tuesday. Units responding includ"Say Love Wilh
ed:
Flowers From~"
POMEROY
6:13 p.m., Mulberry Avenue,
:rracy Wilson, Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
POMEROY

Women arrested on warrant

SINGLE COPY PRICE

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But an increasing number of
blacks and Hispanics and Asians
1 beg to differ. They are inclined to
agree with the soul singer James
Brown, who sang: "I don't want
nobody' to give me nothing. Open
up the door and I'll get it myself."
J,_ph Perld• Ia a columnist
for The San Diego Unlon·Trt:
bune.
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Arthur Pridemore, 71, of Radcliff, died Tuesday, Jan. 24. I995, at
McArthur.
Born Jan. 6, I924,in Dema. Ky., the son oflbe late Boone and Dallas
Pig111811 Pridemore, be was acarpentez. He was a World W111 n Army vetelllll, a member of the Little Pearl Old Regulitr Ba)ltisl Church, the Urtite4
Steel Worlctn, the.Vinton County DAV and the Joseph Freeman Ameri. . can Legion Post 476 in Wilkesville. .
·
H6 is survived by his wife, Mae Collins Pridemore; daughter, Angela
Radcliff; sons and daughters-in-law, Randy and Brenda of Berea, J:C.y.,
Skeeter Pridemore of Cincinnati, James and Linda Pridemore of Rich·
monel, Va., and Larry and Rita Pridemore of Charleston, S.C.; sisters,
Mary Garvin of Wilkesville, and Edith McKenzc:c and Aileene Allen of
Columbus; brother, Robert Pridemore or Ocala, Fla; and five grandcbildren.
.
.
Services will be at 11 a.m. Friday 81 the Maggie's HoiiiC Church near
Dundas, with elders Ivory Sowards, Paris Tackitt and Raymond Stapleton
offtciating.
·
_ J;lurial will follow in the Vinton Memotial Park.
Friends may call between I and 8 p.m. Thursday at the Blower-Garrett
FuOOral Home lit McArthur.

national debt swells nearly SIO,OOO the elimination of public broadcast·
with eacb lick of the clock.
in g. Savings: about three hours
One of my favorite memories of wCitb of interest on .the debL Rep.
the Reagan years is of his 1988 Dan Burton, R-Ind., .wants to trim
State of the Union address, when Socks-the-eat's postage bill. Sav·
be boisted a 43-pound, 3,296-page . ings:.OOOOI2 of a second wprtb of
omnibus spending bill in the air interest. You couldn't measure the
and suggested that, with a line-item beUerment with an atomic clock. ·
veto, be could trim that sucker
Still, the line-item veto is a good
down to a manageable size. There idea, and here's why: 1
·
was a $30,000 item in there for
-We would finally get Ibis rei·
cranberry research, for example, atively insigpificant item off the
that he'd cut on the spot.
agenda and could move on to big. And with that bold swipe of the ger things.
budgetary knife, be would have
- Alt!aougb the savings would
stemmed the growtl! of the national be minor, purging the pork woulit
debt for three seconds.
amount to a silver dagger in the
George Busb once asked heart of the Cllngressional vamp~
Congress to ax 68 spending pro- and that would boost the pubhc
jects amounting to $3 .6 billion m;td .. morale.
-. It could lead to the ~verdue
said he'd do it himself if they
would give him the line-item veto. retirement of D~m~crauc Se~;.
In so doing, be would've financed Robert Byrd, the_ prm';C_of pork
the national debt for about 4-1/2 and.a self-proclaimed bill1on-dollar
days.
m!lu~try ror DIS oome. state of West
Bill Clinton once claimed that Vll'gmta.
with the line-item veto, be could
Joseph Spear is a syndicated
slash $2.5 billion a year from the writer for Newspaper Enterprise
budget. That's three days and an Association.
hour's worth of interest on the debt.
(For Information on bow to
The carnival never stops. Now conullunkate eMclronlcally with
Republican Sen. Larry .Pressler of this columillstand others, contstct
South Dakota is campaigning for America Online by calling 1-800- ,
827-6364, ext. 8317.)
·

bly barmt~~~. If colleges no-longer
reserve a certain number of slots
for minority students, fewer nonwhite students will be visible on
college campuses. If employers no
longer are compelled to hire
minorities, non-whites will be
frozen out o[jobs and ·promotions.
But such dire predictions -are
· overblown. The fact is that a tiny
percentage of minority- and
women-owned businesses survive
on go~ern111ent contracts. Most
compeu:nn~tb~e free mar11et on
equal footing with white businesses.
Perhaps the most deleterious
result of race-based college admissions is the stigma it casts on
minority students. Those who fall
short of usual admissions criteria,
but are enrolled anyway in the
name of diversity, are done a great
disservice. ·
No matter bow liberal white
professors or white students think
of themselves, they cannot help but
view the minority affirm_aliveaction enrollees as "second-class"
srudents.
The perception that minority
students are held to lower admis. sion standards is most injurious to·
: those minorities who were admitted
· suictly on merit, who outperform
. most of their white classmates.

tlga1ors the d&amp;y after the Oct. 4,
Cain overruled the arguments.
1994 shooting - starements that
"There is evidence from wblcb
Mrs. Wolfe said she could not the jury could conclude that Ibis
remember maldng during ber testi- murder was done purposely," be
mony Mmday.
said.
Mn. Wolfe told investigators
When the trial resumed Tuesday
Mr. Wolfe "kept running around, morning, the JrOSCCUiion called its
trying to get a shot at (Ferguson) ... tbree ·fmal witnesses, Dr. Irvin M.
just trying to get a clear shot." She Sopher, chief medical examiner for
also quoted Mr. Wolfe -as sayinF, the state of West Virginia! Vincent
"'Where Is be? I want him, be s · Bee, chief of paramedics for the
mine,"' aa:mling 10 lll!l§gj~ Q{ Qa1Iia Coun!Y Emergency Medici!
the investigation. ·
Sen'ice; and Don Bowen, investiAt two different points during gator for the Gallia County SberTuesday's procec~ings, Calhoun iffsOffice.
asked the court to remove the quesSopher, wbo conducted the
tion of murder from the jury's autopsy Qn Ferguson, testilied that
deliberations.
· he bad died of a gWlsbot wound to
He said evidence indicated the the bead, apparently caused by a
shooting was "accidental, negli- high-caliber weapon. Bee and
gent." 1be second timt, be asked Bowen testified to what the y saw
that the jurors be given the oppor- when they--JU::rived on the scene
tunity to rule the shooting as after the shooting.
.
manslaughter or negligent liomlThe defense called only one w1tcide.
ness, Dr. Michael Hardings of
Cincinnati, a psychologi st who
examined Mr. Wolfe after ·the

,...----Local briefs...- -

Help for those who need it least
Bill Cosby boasts a net worth .of ly don't need.
$325 million, placing him within
It is because of such patenr
the exalted ranks of the 400 richest unfairness that affiJ'Diati.ve action is
Americans.
under assault on several fronts.
Let's say be decided to bid for a
Federal Communications CommisJoseph Perkins
sion radio or TV license. And let's
say be came in with lower figure
than a consortium of white guys
Indeed, the Supreme Court Ibis
who bad nowhere near tbe millions week beard a!juments. in a case
that be bas in his. bank acoounl
that will del:ide tile ~O!!SU11ltiotiali''The Cos" would still win the ty of government set-aside pro,
license. Why? Because be's black.
grams, wbicb appcirtion a certain
- Robut Goi-zueta is chairman-·percentage of sub-c-ontra-crs tO
and CEO of Coca-Cola Altogether, min.ority-owned firms.
-his equity in the beverage company
And in California, the most ethis·wortb $360 million.
·
nically diverse state in the country,
Let's say one of Goizueta's kids signatures are being :gathered to
decided to attend an Ivy Leal!ue place the California Civil Rights
school. But let's say that the kid's lnitiativ~ on the 1996 ballot. _
bigb school grades and SAT scores
It would outlaw. the- use of
were just short_of Ivy caliber._Nor "race, sex, color, etbnicity or
to wmry.
,
national origin as a criterion for
Goizueta's heir would still be either discriminating against, or
admitted, Why? Because the family granting preferential treatment to,
is Hispanic.
any individual or group" for colThese hypothetical scenarios are lege admissions, jobs, promotions illustrative of the most glaring and gqvemment conlraets.
. problem with affu:mative action as
The response from the civil
• it existS today. Because preferences rights community to both the
in government conlraets, in college .Supreme Court cballenge and the
admissions, in the ~orkpiace are California ballot initiative bas been
based almost exclusively on race prediclable.
and gender, many blacks and HisIf the government DO longer propaniCs and Asians and women are vides set-aside conttacts, !bey say,
getting an advantage that they real- . minority enterprise will be irrepara-

I

38.

Wasting ·hours to save seconds _ _
· _~........;_

_Berry•s World

•ICoiumbusl34•

•

Jack Anderson and Michael
Andenon are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc:..

The Ironton Tribune, Jan. 19 .
There is nothing wrong with helping another country get back on its
feet after any kind of disaster -,natural or_finandal.
. . .'
Recent events in Mexico as well as atd bemg sent to VICtimS of the
1 can think of three reasons to and is untouchable. Thus.the veto's
Japanese ~artbquake have some Americans scrat~bing their beads, bowev- pass the line-item: veto currently primary value woi.tld be as a
· er
· ·
·
being considered by Congress, and weapon against "pork-barrel''
· Since this .is a year of change in the balls of Congress, ,it is time to not a one of them bas anything to expenditureS - the funds that leg·
rethink our ideas on foreign aid and what role it will play in the ·budgets of do with honest deficit-reduction.
islators slip into appropriation biDs
the future.
· . For the better part of two
Isolationism is not the answer. The United States cannot remove itself · decades; you have been bearing
Joseph Spear
from the world theatCr and continue to protect its interests.
politicians, mainly Republicans but
A happy medium seem!\, to be the answer.
· also a few Democrats, spluttering to fmance bridges, buildings, highCongress should get busy finding that compromise before asking about "pork" and arguing that the ways, srudies, researtb projects and
Americans to sbell out more taxes for social programs at home.
line-item veto would curb the prof- scores of other goodies for their
ligate Congress and cure the deficit borne districts.
problem.
I would not for a second argue
The (Tifrm) Advertiser-Tribune, Jan.18
Ronald Reagan made a mantra that polk ought to be preserved, but
State officials have proposed a health_care plan that just might succeed of it: Give him the line-item veto, I will say that anyone who thinks
in the attempt to make wolk more attractive than w~lf~.
. . _
be chanted, and by would get our its elimination would even come
ObioCare is a plan put forth by Gov. George VQIDOVIch to pnvattze the fiscal bouse in order. Give him the close .to curing the deficit dilemma
Medicaid system in the srate.
_
·
.
.
line-item veto, George Busb said, should probably check their dietfor
. It is a work incentive for the poor. The plan would prov1de medtcal and be' d "serve notice to Congress ·a p{otein deficiency. The sad truth
coverage in the instances in which people dependent 01_1 welfare that the days of wasteful spending is this: In the context of trillionthrough which they receive Medicaid - 'Yguld lose benefits 1f the.y took a are over."
·
dollar budgets, pork-barrel spendjob that didn't provide health msurance.
. .
·'~)lis is pathetic nonsense, if not ing is peanuts. Trying to fiX deficits
Obio&lt;;are is expected to save the state $1 billion over five years. And outri~bt demag~guery, and I wi~l \ by slashing pork is akin to trying to
that savings should be able to fund health care coverage to nearly 500,000 expl3UJ wby I think so momentan- \Coop the ocean dry with a teacup.
low-income Ohioans who have jobs that do not provide insurance and ly. Fmt._a~vtew:
It constaittly amazes me that so ·
who cannot qualify for Medicai~.
.
.
. The line-1te~_veto_ wo~id e~le ,many politicians, and particularly
We urge our legislators to follow through on this proposal, which not ~e _chief executive to strike spec.if- pit ~buli Republicans, fixate on
only reduces govetl\fllent spending on health care but also extends the sys- 1c lle_ms from the gargantuan picayune projects while ignoring
tem tu induue mure OWuans.
spendmg measures that Congress the huge expenditures and entitle" now sends to. \he president on a ments that spout red ink like ge}'-. - -_ _..:.__ _.:.._ _ _ _ _ _ _--:------:----, !ake-it-or-leave-it basis. The catch sers gush water. They moan about
15, that tl!ree-fifths of the budget IS
money ·spent on fish farms and
'
devoted to mandatoty expenditures bicycle paths while the $4.&amp; trillion

these caseS." be saJd.
Jurors dismissed Calhoun's
closing argument thal the shooting
may have been aocldental.
He direcled the jury 10 testimony by Mrs. Wolfe that the defen·
dant was holding the gun Ill waist
level and that Mrs . Wolfe was
shielding Ferguson with bel' body
when the shot was ftred.
"Would be shoot from tbe bip if
(FerguSO!I) w.as covered by the
woman be loved?" CalbouD asll:cd.
"Was be firing a warning sboiT'
Saunders reminded the jory of
evidence lbat indicated Mr. Wolfe ·
PurJ&gt;osely shot Ferguson - that be
bad driven away after a CODfmnta.
lion with the! victim and returned
witb the l!un in his band, and that
be bad fought off Mrs. Wolfe's
auempts to take lbe gun away from
him.
.
Saunders also used Mrs.
Wolfe's statements made to invea- .

Accu-Weatbet" forecast for

The cable adds 1bat the next
phase of the persecution be~ in
I98I and destroyed the in endence and credibility of the uddhist leadership. It was replaced
with a state-supervised Buddhist
or11anization called the Viemam
Buddhist Church.
Since then Buddbists of tbe old
Unified Buddhist Cburcb have
been terribly repressed - some
have even been killed. ~~ny
monks and prominent l!uiJi! ISIS
· were jailed or sent to re,educatinn
camps for indoctrination while on
meager rations.
Some were shot outright or
locked for months in metal cargo
containers left behind by American
troops. We learned that some prisoners smuggled messages to West·
em relief agencies, begginl! for
cyanide capsules to end their misery under the· crushinl! repression
of the Virmamese government.
Aside from outright execution
and torture, .tbe Yiemamese government bas regularly tried to
bumiliale_Buddbist leaders to break
them in ~camps. One who later
escaped reported be bad been ·

trade.

Man found•. ,. ...:..eon_lln_Uid_fro_in~.,._:_1"":"""""':~------------:""""'

OHIO Weather

Vietnam contin·ues t~ oppress Buddhists
WASHINGTON - Officials of
the Viemamese government arc
masters at the diplomatic equivalent of sleight-of-band: They can
trample on human rights and terra·
ize dissidents while showing a
kinder, gentler _face to the West, in
particular the United States, with
whom they now want to trade.
Hanoi is 'trying to hoodwink the
world again - even as it wages a
brutal campaign of P~ers.ecution
against Buddhist dissidents who
have dared to defy the government
for 20 years. The wrath of the Vietnamese government is focused on
the Unifieu Buddhist Church,
which ·was once the largest religious organization in South Vietnant
·
"Viemamese authorities have
demonstrated determination to con·
trol Ibis important ethnic and reli·
gious minority," a confidential
cable from Ban~kok bas explained.
It adds that wb1le "communism is
essentially hostile 19 any religion,"
the Vietnamese Buddhists are
"considered to be esjlecially dangerous ... (because of their) bistQry
of effective dissidence against ...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Sports

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Wed~ay,

\

The Dally Sentinel-Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'ednesday, Januarj 25,1995

The Daily Sentinel
'

.

..

Page--t

January 25, 199!

Arkansas loses 88-70; UMass triumphs
FAYEIIEVILLE, Ark. (AP)- MassachusettS 10-3. Duquesne 53;
Artansas' sbooling was coosistenL and No . 14 Georgetown 88, St.
Bad, but consistent; 12-fpr-34 in . lobo's 71.
Arkansas' shooting woes
the fust balf, 13-for-36 in the second.
- weren't limited to' the stars. !Clint'
CorliSs Williamson, a 59 percent McDaniel, the only other"Razorshooter from .the field, made three . back averaging in double figures
of nine in the first half and four of this season was 1-for-6; Alex Dilnine in the second. Scotty Tbur- lard was 1-for-5; and Dwight Stew·
·
man, a 50 percent shooter, was 3- an 3-for-11.
"It
was
one·
of
those
nights,
we
for-8 in each half.
just
couldn't
get
them
to
fall,"
And nobody picked up the slack
for the ninth-ranked Rawrbacks oo Alkansas coach Nolan Richardson
Tuesday nigbt, so the result was said. "Guys wbo needed to shoot
predictable, but surprising nonethe- . the baD in the bole for us dido 't.''
For Alabama (13-4, 4-2), it was
less: Alabama 88, Arkansas 70.
It was the ftrSt loss for Alkansas just the opposite. Jamal Faulkner
(15-4, 4-3 Southeastern Confer- was 8-for-9 in the first half and ·
Eric Washington bit seven of nine
ence) in Wal10n Arena. their home
in
the secood half. Faulkner scored
the past two seasoos, mfit ended a
16
points in the firSt half as Alaba26-game bome winning streak. It
ma
built a42-331ead and Washingwas the defending oatiooal champiton's
outburst included a 4-for-5
on's worst bome loss since a 74-52
effon
from 3-poil)t range and 19
defeat to Missouri in 1967-68,
Tuesday nigbt also saw tbe points in the second balf. Overall,
the Crimson Tide were 33-for-62 ·
nation's longest bome winning
streak snapped as Michigan beat from the field.
Washington missed five of six
Indiana 65-52. The Hoosiers bad
won 50 in a row at bome, the last shots in the first bait before bis
strong performance in the second.
loss 10 Iowa oo Feb. 21, 1991.
"I told him to go in and keep
Top-ranked Massachusetts DOW
shooting
and l!e would break out of
bas the nation's longest home winit,"
Alabama
coach David Hobbs
ning sll'eak a.t 39 games.
said.
In other games involving ranked
Arkansas' last lead was 13-11,
teams Tuesday ni~t it was: No. I
and the last of six lies was at 19-19
-~-

. ~GHT-yOR:BALL - Indiana's N~U Reed, rlgbt, wrestles tbe
ball from Mlchlgao;s Travis Conlan for a steal in Tuesday's Big 10
game at Bloomington. The Hoosiers lost 65-52, (AP)

OU in first place all
alone afterB0-68-win

when Mlltvin Orange's driving him to 10 minutes in a loss 10 Viilayup started an 11-0Aiabamarun.
Ianova on Sunday . .Against St.
Richardson was bit with a tech· lobo's, he played 37 minutes and
njcal as tb4 balf ended, and that was 9-for-19 from the field
enabled Alabama to start the sec· Michigan 651ndlana 52 ·
·
' ond balf with Washington's free
Ray Jackson and Jimmy King
throw and 3-pointer.
ba~e something today that eludedNo. 1 M•sua:busetts 103, theu former Fab Five teammates.
Duquesne 53
. ·
.
Tb~ two seniors finally know
·Marcus GamilY scored 23 points how 11 feels to beat Indiana in
as the Minutemen (14'-1, 6•0 A!semt&gt;Iy J!all- srunetbing they
Atlantic 10) won their 13th in a never expenenced as teaminares of
row overall, lOth straight in the .fellow Fab Five members Chris
conference and seventh in a row on Webber, Jalen Rose and Juwan
the road. Massachusetts sbot 63 Howard before tbey left college
percent in the firSt balf to take a 52- early for the NBA.
26 halftime lead after Duquesne
.Bo_th te~s are now 11· but
opened the game with a 9-2 run . Mtcbtgan chmbed to 5-2 tn tbe'\.
The Dukes (5-10, 2-6) lost their conference. Indiana dropped to 3-3 ·
fifth in row, and it was their worst as it was beld to season-low in
loss since a 92-27 defeat to Stan- points.
ford on Jan. I, 1938.
"This is tile firSt time, honestly,
No. 14 Georgetown 88, St. John's since I've been head c.oach at
71
Michigan that I'm happy to be
ADen Iverson won the matcbup here," said Fisher, after his team
of freshman stars wjtb Felipe ended what bad been the na\ion's
Lopez as be scorell 19 of bis 21 longest current home winning
points in the firSt balf as the Hoyas streak.
{13-3, 6-2 Big East) took a 51-30
Indiana bad two cold spells that
balftime lead. Lopez finished with proved fatal. .
19 points, but bad ·ooly two in the
In the first half, Indiana fell
first balf as the visiting Red Storm .behind for good when it went .6:38
(S·7. 2-6) lost their sixth in a row.
wtthout scoring. After Brian Evans
Iverson showed little effects bit a 3-pointer to give Indiana a 9-5
from the sprained ankle thai limited lead, Michigan scored 14 straight
·
points.
.

A Cerdlnal·

Afflll~ted · SuJ!!!nnarket

!·

a

a

.,

By The Associated Press

Baseball owners hail court decision

Hunter said. "This win will put a
little pressure on the rest of the
Mid-American."
Dayton was defeated 73-68 at
NEW YORK (AP) _ Baseball Freeman McNeil and other players
home by Souther!! Utah, Sean owners bailed the court decision
filed an antitrust case as individu·
Allen rallied the Tbunderbirds with
als.
On July 10, 1992, a jury ruled
tile go:abead basket with 2:02 to ~t said_unions can't ftle anlittu;U
the
league's
Plan B system violaled
play and ftnishetl with 17 points.
~utts. U~too bead ~nald Febr S31d antitrust laws,
and the following
Jim Crosbie bad 16 points for . tt doesn t mean a thing.
.
agreed
to a contract
Jan.
6
the
sides
Southern Utab (8-9) and Keitb
Baseball players hav~ lobbtc;&lt;l
through
the
1999
season
that
Berard added 15. _
Co~gre~s to re~ove theu sport s
widened
free
agency.
Ryan Perryman led the Flyers antittust ex~mpnon. Base~ , «?WI!·
If the baseball union files an
e~our games are scheduled (6-9) with a career-high 21 points. ers b~ve swd the exemption tsn t antitrust
suit, it probably would be
tonight in the MAC, with the most Sbawn Haughn bad 17 and Rodney releval!t t~ the strike, and the 2nd
in Philadelphia, wbere U.S. District
be' M' · fOb ' ·
Horton 12.
U.S. Ctreull Court of Appeals ~led
sig!l·ifitcant mg tanu o . to s
"I'm embarrassed t'n tbe way . Tuesday that antitrust laws_can the Judge Jobn Padova ruled last year
clash with Eastern Micbtgan.
that baseball's antitrust exemption
Miami is 5-l in league play and we played,'' said Dayton coacb us~~ as loo~ as ~ co~lective baris limited to the rli)serve system.
will go back into a tie with the Oliver Purnell. "I'm not taking gw?,mg R:lanon_sbtp extsts...
However, tlie Philadelphia court
Bobcats by winning. Eastern anything away from Southern
The upantmous dectston by
may cite Tuesday's decision and
Michigan is tied for third with Ball Utab. They bad a game plan and the federal .a~.s court validates dismiss the suit unless the basebaU
State at 4-2.
stuck with iL"
~e owners . po~tll~n that the spe- union decertifies.
Gary Trent scored 22 points and ·
Mount Vernon Nazarene (8-2 in cia! exemption ~~. urel~van~ to~
"In light of tbis decision,' '
Gus Johnson IS for Ohio as coach league play) just barely beld on to current dtspute, . Sehg 531~. It
· Selig said, "the clubs are hopeful
Larry Hunter won his IOOth game its one-game lead in the Mid-Obio holds tba~ the antitrust laws _sunply
with the Bobcats, wbo bave won 19 Conference by defeating Obio do _not apply to a labor ·dupute. thai the union will now abandon its
activities in Congress and return to
of their last 20 MAC games. Ohio Dominican 89-88. Malone (7 -3) Tb~s should put an end to the
the bargaining table $0 that we can
took: sole possession of second with nou!l'l, o~ce and for
~ base· put
built a 50..35 lead by halftime.
an end to this dispute."
Joel Bums scored 13 points for an 85-80 victory ov.er Rio Grande. baD s antitrust exelllpUon ts some·
Baseball's antitrust exemption
In other conference games, it was bo.w ~~ blame for the players'
tile Broncos.
.was created by a 1922 Supreme
"This was really a good team Findlay 73, Tiffin 66; Shawnee strike.
.
win. But Gus Johnson was reaiiy_ State 77, Urbana 63 and Walsh 87,
0~~ owner, spe_akin_g on t~e Court decision' that held baseball
wasn't interstate commerce. The
stepping it up with his shooting," 'Cedarviiie 65 .
condition be not be tde!!tified. S31d
·
another owner called biDI and was
decision was upheld in 1953 and ·
1972, but the bigb court said
from Washing·
Congress bad the power to elimi·
nate it
A Senate bearing into basebaU' s
another.'.'
antitrust
exemption is likely to be
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) there and be prepared for a fight,
beld in early to mid-February, Judi·
and
I
think
that
I
am.
It's
not
like
"It's
been
33
days
since
they
- As Grand Slam tennis tournaciary Committee spokeswoman
ments go, the fust five rounds of this is my fll'l:t Grand Slam, and I walked out on the negotiations,''
Jeanne
Lopatto said. The bearing
•
t
know
what
il'
~
like
to
be
in
be
said.
"It
takes
a
little
bit
of
gall
don
the Australian Open have been lit·
or
five-setters.
I'll
take
.
to
keep
saying
we
should
bave
tough
four
tic more than organized public
them any way I get them."
negolialioos wben they are the ones
training sessions for Andre Agassi.
Agassi watched Sampras beat wbo walked ont. We'll still be there
"Quite honesUy, this ·bas lleen
Jim
Courier in a four-hour quarter· whenever they want to maiCb their
incredible practice more than anyfinal
on Tuesday night in which rhetoric up with what they do."
thing," a business-like Agassi said
Sampras,
upset over hi$ ill coach
The 2nd Circuit became the sectoday after defeating Yevgeny
Tim
Gullikson,
broke
down
several
ond
appellate court to adopt tbe
Kafelnikov 6-2, 7-S, 6-0 10-advance
times
in
the
fifth
set.
Sampras
stance.
Wbile other circuits aren't
to the semifinals. "To play three
sobbed
iniO
bis
towel
after
the
fust
bound
by
the decision, the ruling
sets every other day is not taking a
game
of
the
final
set,
and
on
severposes
gn:at
value in setting a prece·
whole lot out of you."
al
occasions
also
wept
while
on
dent.
·
"To get ~e matches over with
court
an!!
serving,
Fol_lo_wi?g
the
NFL
Players
·as efficiently as possible, to conSampras
and
Courier
both
said
Assoctation
s
fatled
24-day
strike
. serve your energy but make sure
of
the
most
intense
and
in
1987,the
union
filed
an
antitrust
it
was
one
you're executing your shots," bas
suit. In 1989, the 8th U.S. Circuit in
been Ag:issi's maxim all week, and ' •dr'aining matches of their careers.
"That was absolutely incredi· · . Minneapolis ruled in Powell vs.
he's sticking to it after wiilning 15
ble," Agassi said. "It's an extraor· ~that collective bargaining situ·
straight sets.
Agassi, malting bis fust appear- din;uy thing. to see what Pete bas anons were exempt from antitrust
~-·
·
anee here, will be matched against manag~d to d0 . He's an incredible, law.
The union then decertified, and
the winner of the Aaron Krickstein· ' gifted person. He's a deep person
Jacco Eltingh quarterfinal played as wen, who obviously feels a lot
later roday. With Pete Sampras and and is going through a lot of things
Michael Chang in a semifinal on at the moment with Tim.
.
.
Thursday, a win by Krickstein
"Just to have him still in the
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)would give the Americans a sweep tournament, it's an asset, it's
U.S. Davis Cup cajltain Tom Gul·
of the quarterfinals.
inspiring."
·
l,ickson
selected Jared Palmer and
The 24-ycar-old Agassi, admit·
Top seed Arantxa Sanchez Richey Reneberg-to play doubles in
ting that the last time he felt this Vicario and Marianne Werdel Wit·
strong was when be won last year' s meyer will play a semifmal Tburs· next montb' s first-round match
U.S. Open, figures there's nothing day after easily winning their quar· against France in St. Petersburg,
Fla. Todd Martin and Jim Courier
wrong with a series of easy match· terftnal, matches roday.
earlier
were chosen to play singles.
'
es in the frrst 10 days of the touma·
ment.
"Not if I can do it for two more
matches, there's no danger at all,"
he said. ''You've just got to go out
Ohio University is all by itself
in f1tst place in the Mid-American
Conference - at least for one
night.
Toe Bobcats got the jl!mp on the
rest of l!!c: ~onference ~Y defeating
Western Michigan 80-68 in a
regionaU y televised game Tuesday
nigbt. The victory boosled Ohio to
1)-4 overall and 6-1 in the confer·

will be conducted by the subeom~
· mittee on anlitrus~ monopolies and
business rights, chaired by South ·
Carolina Republican Strom Thurmond.
Baseball players currently are
cbaUenging the salary cap tlupugb
the labor laws. Both sides have

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filed unfair labor practice charges
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Wedneed•y, JMU8ry 25, 1995 ;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

parents. What should I do, Ann7
We eventually discovered lhatlhis
Please
help
me
make
the
right
friend
did not go to !he lheruet She
Ann
decision. --TORN IN TEXAS
claims she never received Jerry's
Landers
DEAR TEXAS: By all means, Jcll .P~One message.. Now my.husband is
lhe p~nll of tllesc childreo about _out $130 for her unclaimed tickets.
1995, ~ Ang.IM
your experiences with !hat family
T1moo Synd- ond
Should we insist !hat she pay for
CtN10tss~·
member and wge tllem 10 speak to these tickelS? She swears up and
their children or penn it you to do so. down that she has ·never had a
Dear• Ann Landers: When I was To keep quiet would be a serious problem with hctanswering 1118Chine
7, I was sexually abused by a family sin of omission. Never mind what before. We would like your opinioo.
member. When I•finally told my your parents might think. They let ., CHAGRINED IN CHICAGO
parenlS, nothing was done -- it was a . you down in the wont possible way,
DEAR CHAGRINED: The friend
diny little secretlh31 1!&gt;'85 swept under . and you are ilot obligated to proccct who asked for lhe ticlccts owes Jary
the rug.
.
tllcm.
$130. Apparenll): She aSked him to
During !he past 20 years, I have
If you have not IOIIIht counseling, get l)er "good seats," and be complied
struggled emotionally and psycho- I urge you tndosoatonce.You have witll her requcsL The f!!Ct !hat she did
logicaUy 10 get over tlie nightmare. I suffered a great deal because of tile . not pick up lhc tickets is not Iary's
have had tunnel vision all !his time early sexual abuse, and !here must · faulL
in regard to what happened to me. I still be a 101 of pain 111d unresolved'
In lhe fuuue, I suggest tllat Jary
never tllought about what could be problems in youi lift. Please, dear, not depend on an answering machine.
l]appening to other children.
read \vhat I have written, and act on He should talk to a live person and
There are other children, ages 610 it immediatdy.
get a conf11111ation.
10; in this same branch of lhe family.
Gem of lhc Day: Ufe in the animal
Dear Ann Landen: My husband
· It suddenly occurred to me that this is an actor in lhe touring company of and insect ;.world is not very diJferent
hideous thing could be happening to a Broadway show. Wbcn friends and from ours. ·I overheard a mama fly
tllcsc young girls, and ! am deeply family members.want tickets, "Jerry" say 10 lhe papa fly, "I'm dead tired,
· concerned.
often arr:anges for them Ill get lhe and lhc baby is stiU sick. I had 10 walk
Do 1have a moral obligation to let best seats i1 the house.These friends, lhc ceiling all nighL"
someone know what I went through, of course, pay for the tickets. Many
"A Collection ofMy Favorite Gems
or is it bener to remain quiet? 1 am people do not realize that cast of tht Day" is tht ptrftct llltk gift
becoming increasingly terrified !hat members do not get tiCkets for free. for that special sonuone who is
oilier young girls in lhe fami ly might
Recently, Jerry left a message on a impossible to buy for. Send a selfbe going lhroug~ the same horrors I friend's answering machine·, addressed, long, business-size
experienced, and 1am unable to sleep confirtningtllat he had purchased the tilvtlopt and a chtckor money Older
at !!ight.
.
tickets she R!quelllel!. He instructed for $5.25 (this inc/tufts /lostagt and
If I speak out, it will probably cause her to pick up lhe ticjl:ets at tile box handling) to: Collection, c/o Ann
problems between me and my office and reim bursc him later
Landtrs,l'll. Box 11562, Chicago,

COCA COLA
PRODUOS

11

291 SECOND ST•
POMEROY, OH:
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUAimTIES
PRICES GOOD THRU $ATURDIY, JAN. 28, 1995

By Tloe Aaocbiied Prea
Scottie Pippen's season of frusIIBii&lt;&gt;n bad hbo seething again.
The unhappy Cbica8o Bulls forward got downright mad Tuesday
night, tossing a chair across the
·court of the United Center after ·
beinl! ejected in the flf81 half. No
spectators were hurt, but lhc Bulls
were, forced to play ovenlme without their leading scorer and
rebounder.
If Pippen had stuck _around, he
would have seen San AnloJ]iu's
David Robinson make a spectacular play to give the Spurs a I 04- 102
victory. But Pippen was long gone
by the lime the 7-foot-1 center stole
a pass, dribbled the length of the
court and mll!le the winDing layup
with I .7 seconds leO in overtime.
In other g~mes, i! was New
York 10~. Portland 99; Detroit 116,
Philadelphia 105; Miami 107, lno.liana 96; Orlando I 10, Bostol\ 97;
Phoenix HlO, MilUICsota 1!5: llous-

12 PI 120L

STORE HOURS
Monday t•ru Su1day
IAM-10 PM

..

7 UPOR DR.
.PEPPER
"

"

15PK. 12 OZ. CANS

Porter and the Meigs County SatelIf tile recent snow fall and cold March 31.
lite
Office, 39350 Union Ave.,
weather have created a beat related·
The Regular fiEAP program
emergency, Emergency HEAP offers beating assistlllee once per Pomeroy, accept applications Moo.funds are still availablt tllrougb the heating season to low income day through Friday, from 9 a.m. Ill
Gallia-Meigs Community_Action 'households with de&amp;aying the bigb ~12 p.m. and from liD ~:30 p.m. No
Agency.
cost of home beating. Regular applications are taken at the
Emergency HEAP . provides HEAP paya .a portion of elil!ible Cheshire office on Fridays.
assistance to households that have households beating bills for
Regular HEAP applications are
had utilities disconnected, face the December, January 111d February. also available at Senior Citizens
threat of disconnection or have 10 The amount of assistance is deter- Center, Depanment of Human Serdays or less supply cif bulk fuel. mined by,total household income; vices, Social Securitr. Office,
The· program allows a one-time the number of people in the house- ODES, Post Offices, Uulity Compayment of up to $175 per heating · hold and the type of heating fuel panies, bulk fuel vendors, and variseason to restore or retain home used. ·
ous businesses throughout Gallia
beating serviq:s. Homeowners or
The inoome J!ilidelines for both and Meigs County.
renters may qualify if their total programs are the same; however,
Additional information regardhousehold income is at or below Regular HEAP requiles the previ- in!! these programs may be
1SO percent of federal poverty ous 12 months income while the obtained by calling the Cheshire
guidelines.
past three months inOOIIIll is accept- CAA office 367-7341 or 992-li629;
Emergency HEAP income eligi- able on F.mergency HEAP.
the Gallia County Outreacb Office,
bility can be for the past three or •
Applicllloos for both programs 388-8232. or the Meigs County
twelve months. Those not qualify- can be made at tile Gallia-Meigs Outreach Orfice at 992-5605. The
ing on three months income are Cdmmunity Action Agency 1011-free number for Regular HEAP
asked .to present their full twelve Chesbire ortice, Monday through inquiries is 1-800-282-0880 or for
months income·to see if eligibility Thursday from 9:30a.m. 10 12 p.m. the bearing impaired with a
can be met on that basis.J'fbe dead and from 1 to 3:30 p.m. The Gallia telecommunication device for.the
line for Emergency HEAP is .. County Satellite Orfice, Porter Rd., deaf('IDD) is 1-800-686-1557.

$ 49

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ·
Ohi\l'State's Rick Yudt is trying to
be hopeful despile his team's bleak
stan in lhe Big Ten Conference .
"llatow things don't look good
and we're G-5 in the conference,"
Yudt said. "But I think tbe attitude
everybody bas is it's not over yet.
We still have some -lime to do
things.
"li's like starting in a .class and
taking three tests. You get an F on
the flrst. you· ve got two more and
you've got to do well on tllem.''
There is no question that the
Buckeyes have a failing grade so

ZESTA
CRACKERS
LB. BOX

MIXED

.

far·.
.
,.,_ An NCAA probation, the dismissal of three players for disciplinary reasons and the transfer of
two others have gutted an Obio
State team that w.oo Big Ten titles
in 1991 and 1992,
Tbe J;luckeyes (4-11 overall)
have lostlhose five Big Ten games
by a_n average of more than 18
points a game~
.
Oliio State's records are incollipleti: prior 10 World War II. But if
the Buckeyes lose to Iowa ( 12-5, 23) tonight at St. John Arena,it is
believed that it wiU be tile fm;t time

·(

Parts•••••••••••••••••••~;49

2 CHEESE PIZZA·.
REG. $1.99 LESS
55¢ COUPON ON BOX

44
DttMONTE
·SQUEEZE
CATSUP
280Z.

..
'

-

•

~

'•"

MISTER

~

•''•

..,.

COUPON

1:

COnOHELLE BATHROOM

~

.'

::I'

TISSUE
.

'I

$_229

:: 12roll

1:

;_
~

Reg. $1.49

'

1'
Good Only At Powoll'o Super Volu
:I'
Ollor G - lhru January 28, lilts
·,1
'- ~ - - - - - - - - - _l,lf!!lt...1..PV S'IPIS'l!•! ___________ o1

•••••••••••••••••••••••

FORD RED C-A RP-ET
•Preferred Equipment Pkg. IJ70C
·7-Pass Bkt. w/Adj. Seat Track
•Air Conditioning - CFC Free
•Windows -All Around Tinted
•Deluxe Wheel Cover
•3.8L SEFI Engine
•4 Spd. Auto. AID Transmission
•P205!75R·15 BSW
•Floor Mats
•Speed ControlfTilt Strg. Whl.
•Prem. Stereo/Clock/Cassette

*

•

PER •
MONTH

~·A•A•A•AP•••••~A·A·A·~

1• . .

::
::
:1

. .

COUPO~

BErrY CROCKER .
CAKE MIX
18.5

••

3/$2

oz.

G- Only AI Pa-H'a Super Valu
Offer Good lhru January 28, 111115
Umll3 per clialomar
•

o

1,
lo

_ _ _

,1

.

- Car :For Less'Ifian Yoz;
' %ougfi.t!

11

•

COUPON

I

.:

DOMINO

::

SUGAR

s .LB.
'

1

10

~ )39

··

G- Only At Pa-ll'o SliP"' Valu
Offer Good lhru January 28, 19t5

:1
11

11_ ...... •.,"" • • •"" .. l:!"!ft..1ptf!:U,!t~~·! .... - _ ...... - ·---'I

3#Bag

bc:4tlvucnd. 92, Xtllla 4J
BtDJanuo l..o&amp;an 57, Medul.Wabwa
13

Sprioa. 69
Canfield 11 , Howland 51

l:aotoa GJeoOU 62, Ull!ootown lA-:

ll

69
(]e . Glln\001' Aead. 61 . Cle. hu:kpt"tl·

dencc 49
Cle . JOOn F. Kea11cody 7o4, Cle Wa:r
Tech 69
C"' . JM11I .. y 65. Cie. f..allllli&amp;h 5-4
Cle . M.l. K.io&amp;fi..PS S6, Cle . Janr:
Addair. 41

Cle. Oranae 67, ctwdoa61
Cle. South ltip! 70, Cle. Joha Mar ahall S7

.

Clillloo ·Mu•i~: S2, Ced.ville 46
Cc.~l. CcoteiUlial 60, Col. Wtmtooe

l:ol. E.utmoor 66, Col. WIJaUI Kidac

61

Col. Joriepe.adl!.ace 7o4, Col. South SS
Col LiDdu-Md(.iolry 80, Col.
Bcedlcron 45
Col Mw!uo -Jirukl ia %, Cool. Briap

lO

E PalCittM 61 , l..alboo SY
Elyri11 t-'lrlll Bapt 12. 1...U R.idp
A&lt;iil . !I
.
Eucltd 76, Stuw 7t OT
Ev~ar«c70 . Woodwwd 63
Fau-banb 6 1. Rtd&amp;emool Sl, OT
Fa.irbwo70, Spriaa South62 . 0T
hLI'i«*I 71. SiildyVIII SO
fedti'al lloc.tJna 11 , Vu)loa Co. 53
FW:Id ll7 . GlllletU\¥ille 12
frltiJJkhn 78, l-AaewQOd'69
Glltlao.ID 62' 'Upper ArhDJI.Oil 50
G1raway 62 . Lakeland .t7
Gll'fleld Hll.. 5S. Nornwody 46 .
0.-fadd Hll. . Tri111ty 61 , Mealor Lair
. Cllh 41
Genoa. 51. KaDIII U&amp;ko... 45
GleavtUr U . Cit. lttlode.: 1')
Grand kJyu A&amp;lld. 72 , WLJiu- 1-1111 53
Greenoa 52, l&gt;ly. D.Nwooci4Y
Grove: City 61 , Hamiltoa Twp. 41,1
IWniltuc b6 , I.Jma Sr 63 .
H.11wl.en Sd1ool ~. &amp;.dlwuvd • 2
llld:ory, Pa. 71 , Brwk!ield S l
Uubtwd 67 , WWTCII Keaoedy 66
Joho Gle1111 ~4 . MCIIdowbrooa 4!:1
K~naton M. Otqrto Falla; S7
Ktotoo 69, Linlll Shawoec 62
Kenmo11. Pwrooar 10. Wayo.r 5K
Kutlaod S4. Pymaturuna VIll i 46 .
I..IW,oYJood 70. J:: Cl~¥ehwd Shaw 42
l...ebuoo 60 , M1aJU."burg 59
Luna Calli. 7$ , I.Jnlll8tUl 6U
Ut~cola Bllp'l. 5K, Mllfin11th• t'hr ~
1..-lllClllD~I~W 72, I·Ort Reeo¥ety SCI
Luc&amp;ai 66, Dan¥1llc S9
l..ut.berao E. 7) , Cllllr oo Jl(fllllic 72 •
Lutherae W. 65. Broubi1d-: n

Madooo 60, Alhtabul•

M&amp;nlric:ld
Colwnhian 62

MIKil~ouo

·n

14,1\ lfiD

2 LITER

FRESH

Bakery Glazed Donuts
$ 99

2 $1

doz •

lb.

c
··~

f

Frozen Orange J~ice

Chicken Noodle S~up .

oz. _
______
12

c

Wesson
Oil
$1-.7--4

GROUND
48 oz.

6~9 LBS. AVG.

.~~

I

_99 c Net cost

10.75 oz.

•

19
LB.

.

HALF HAM

$- ' T9~

.1

$

Clorox Bleach

KAHN'S BONELESS HAM

• .75 Coupon on bottle

•

BEEF
101

Cm.oa S. Sl. l..ouiJYIIIe 43
Cardinali I , Grall.d Vall. 67
Cc~1111 . Clew l ~rk 49
Ctwu:J17, Hoi y N~~me 61
Clc .. . Tectl 72 , Cle. Jc.ilo Adam1o

47

t: Koo• n . Nonmi!ac 12

{';

BffbltiJe 49 , TIIOO.,iOil UdaotnoJll
42
.
-a~io Cellkt Wi6lcto ~e ~l .
J.ckaoo· MiilOD ]7
Dutiai-IJ I•nd 64, Su-ubura 55
Bulry 41 , Cul Sr . Chlllei -40
Bia Walour 67, 81.u:i.e~r Vail . '3
Bowllna Greco 66, Maumoe 51
Briatol63, fairport llarnor 61
Cldil 51 • U11100 Local 49
Caaal fuJtoo Northwm ~~ . Akr on •

CAMPBRL'S

"~·

$

Bllbcnoo 73 , Cu100 Tunbo 67

TROPICANA

......

$

•••••••••••••••••••••••

Bqu 66 , Bloomfie ld6l

Uay. CJi&amp;lflUlldc •JUI.Jea~M: M , Cu1
Mudla ~l
·
-U.y C hnal.IIW 'XI, ~Y NaWGaJ
Tra.ll73, OT
D1y Palenoc JOJ. Day Jcff«loOII t12
1hy Stcbbtllli 1tl Mtlton-UnKtn 6 3
Jld.. w..-C' 65 . J-rank.lto Ht. 64
DuYCI 9,, J..wani Jc AqUIU162

Margarine

' ::
••

AuttiolOWII· FilCh S2. 'tOWII-8owd. man 11
Awoo JI.Jih 60, lmaia Calh 59

Co¥ilijlt0n jl , Miln1i E. Sl

Cru twOOd 72. Mopdon 6S

On·ions

~.

l:

62

COoYOy C".telilview ll, Pwtway 6 1
Cwhocloll 66 , W. HollllCII 52

•

12 oz.

I

AIU:I&amp; 62, Hou.lula 50
Ardlbold !9,lbll1Dp !!
Aitubula FAaewood 5.S , Gme¥a 44
A$h&amp;Abula I~ 63, JC'ffenoo AI«~

·PARKAY

CARNATION:·
EVAP. MILK

~·A·A·A·AP•••••~A·A·A·~

!9

Albawcc 67 , New Philad.ejplil46

YELLOW·

11

••

J'hrough Ford Motor Credit
.:
-24'-M
rpet-rnlsef'la ..-·l..,. -l--·· :
• Includes Complimentary Roadside Assistance
•Free Rental Car'During.Scheduled Maintenance
•"Peace of Mind" Policy

~

Akron N. 59 , A.Uoa K.eo11101t lJ

'

'

• ------------------~--------------·
••••••••••••••••••••••

I'

'.Drive 51 'J.[ew

::
::

..

..'·"

$1''

Cot W•llaad lOl , CoJ W•71
66. LIKOI.A·WMI 61
Col ~mbaa " · Elyna()pul Door 10
Col ~mbt&amp;Oa JOO, Soulb«al...ocal 71
Col.umbWUI CICIIt'Ww 60 , SabriGf: 41
CODDCaUI llO. Pal• "'ll• ~y 47
COIIOUOII v'all 66 . Bell&amp;lle Sl. Joho
CulUDw~

Garftt.ld41
AbQII CovcDiry 64, Thllaw 49
AtrOII EIJel 72 ' AkroD 8ud:td IH
Akroo filraLOnc 66 . AU'oa E. 44
Akroa M~ II , E. CuLoo 71

y

•·
•

20 LB.

U.2 oz• .

c

"

CHATHAM
DOG.FOOD

n

for 40 .minules;" guard Doug
Etzler said. "There's always cerlain lags in the game where we're
not perfonning up to our capabilities. I think we've got talent. I
don't want to say' they ' re overmak:hing us. Sometimes it's a matter of fatig~e. They have maybe a
few more players than we have.''
Ayers said he has no complaints
with his team's effort.
"We're not go1ng to quit . We
didn't when we were winning
around here," said Ayers, whose
teams lost six games, while winning 30.

3i

Altoa Ccal .· llDwer fl . Alll'oa

E

~·A•A•A•AP•••••~A

1'

since joining the nig Ten in 191213 that they have been 0-6 in conference play.
"Hopefully, we'll prevent that
from happening,'' Ohio State coach
Randy Ayers said.
How to prevent it is the big
question. In the Big Ten, the Buckeyes are shooting 38 percent from
the fiel(!,
pc:rcem from 3-poim
range and 66 percent at the line
while being outrebounded by an
averal!e of nine a game.
"There's just a lot of lulls. At
times we're playing pretty well, but
we haven't been able to play well

Potato Chips

r

,,,

89c

Pizza•••••••••••••••3

T...., 'tlliMiu

Col. Mollball. Col. Euo 70

Cot Nof1hlu.d 4l , Col Btootbl""

THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, ·1995 ONLY
Coca Cola ·Pro.ducts
Ground Beef
oscAR .MAYER
Lunchables Fun Pak
c
·C
..
$119
. lb.

28 oz.

TONYS

-·-..,,-Nil

Ololo.,'b. ............. ,.._

ONE

BOY-AR DEE.

1995 FORD WINDSTAR

nioc of the Spurs' II points in the Plotona) 16, 76ono lOS
Detroit again defeated Philadelextra period, cap(ltd hy his winning
phia as Allan Houston scored a
layup.
Robinson, whose 16-foot . career-high 32 points and Terry
jumper tied the game with 6.1 sec- Mills bad 28.
The Pistons are only 12-25, but
onds left in overtime, scored the
winning basket after going around have beaten tbe 76ers four times.
Will Perdue to steal Jud Buechler's Since Dec. 6, Detroit is 3-0 againsl
Philadelphia and 1-18 against the
inhounds pass.
"I didn ' t want to foul, but I rest of tbe leag~~eMills made five 3-pointers in
thought I could get my hand on i~"
said Robinson, who finished with the first half. helping the Pistons
lake a 60-43 lead.
30 points.
Hul 107, Pacers 96
~nlc:u 105, Tnll Bluen 99
Glen Rice keyea a third-quartrr
John Starks scored 26 points
spurt before injuring hi&gt; nghl knee ,
and Patrick Ewing 25, leading New
York 1\)lts fifth sltaight win and its and Miami won at home.
Rice scored .15 poinls, including
13th victory in 14 games.
.
'10
in the lhird perigg wheoo lhc
1!.o!l Suicklaild scored 3:6 for
visitiRg Ponland, which led by II Heat broke away from a lie al 60
points with 3:19 left in the third and look a 13-poinl lead.
Rice was hun when I!J; cqlli&lt;Jed
period. Tbe Knicks held the Trail
Dlazers without a basket for the with Indiana's Sam Mik:hell in lhe
rest of the quarter and closed to 83- last minute of the third quartrr. lie
did not play again, although Ileal
79.
Ewing scored II points in the lrainer Ron Culp said Rice' wuld
have come back if needed.
founh quarter.

Scoreboard
.

Ohio State hopes to improve despite poor league start

•

.

.

1on 115: Mliwaukee 99; Seattle
II I, Denver 89; New Jersey 106,
Golden State 93; and Sacramento
110, Dallas 109 in double overlime.
Pippen ran afoul of referee Joe
Crawfllfd when tbe forward complained that San Antonio was committing 3-second violation&amp;. Finally, Pippen drew a technical from
Crawford, and Pippen's angry reaction got him lhrown out.
Teammates B.J. Armstrong and
Luc Longley tried to keep Rippel!
from going after Crawford, ,but
they cuuldn '1 slop him from tossing
the chair;
"I tried to think of llic team . I
knew we peeded Scouie," Armstrong said. ' 'But be had a pOint to
make. Whatever that point was ,
I'm sure be gol itacmss."
Robinson made two free throws
with six-limlhs of a secund left in
regulation tu send the game intll
uwnirne 111 11VH. lie then scored

-

Ill. 6061/-0562 (in Canada, $6.25).

HEAP applications still being taken .·

The D•lly Sentinei-P-ve 7

Spurs post 104-102 victory over Bulls

•'

Victim of sexual abuse should
warn 'other family members

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, J•nu•ry 25, 1995

j

gal.

LB.
..

298 SECOND STREET
. POMEROY, OHIO

90

PRICES EFFECTIVE JANUARY 26, 1995 ONLY

''

•

'

•

�Page

The Dally Sentinel

8

Pomeroy-llliddleport, Ohio

.Family
Medicine

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaragteed to run a·
speclfic nUIIII)er of days.

Joh n C. Wolf, D.O.
Assoc iate Professor
of Family Medicine

•

•

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Community Planned Parenthood to
calendar launch fund raising campaign

Oh io Universi ty
College of Osteopath ic Medici ne

•••

Wednesday, January 25, 1995

Question: I've often wondered automatic -respollses our bodies
why people shiver and get goose mall:e. It is the rapid contraction
bumps in cold weather. I've also and relaxation of muscles done to
WEDNESDAY
noticed that I get goose bumps increase the amount of body beat.
POMEROY - Wildwood Gar_when I'm frightened. What causes Fortunately, the com_b ination or .den Club, home of Doris Grueser, 1
!hese things and w'l_at purpose do these methods works very weU. In p.m Wednesday. Each person to
they serve1
the winter it isn't unusual for me to millce and take a pretty valentine.
Answer: The human body bas a become chilled and develop goose
marvelously complex way of bumps along with shivering, and
THURSDAY
responding and adapting to changes then become warm. This is )lart of
CHESHIRE - Free Clothing
in our environment. One of these the joys of winter in Ohio. Howev- Day of the Community Action
i9teresting adaptive responses is er, you can be in a sufficiently cold Agency will be held 9 to noon
the "goose bump'' reaction that you environment that the body, even Thursday at lhe old school building.
mention. As you indicated, this . with these adaptive measures, isn't in Cheshire.
reaction can be stimulated by cold able to keep you warm. If you get
temperature or a perceived lhreat.
cold, then have goose bumps and
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
The way our bodies respond to a shivering, and the shivering stops Plains Veterans or Foreign Wars
stimulus like cqld weather, finger- but you are still coldQyou are in Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30
nails squeaking along a blackboard potentially big trouble.. Get inside p.m. at the post home. Members
or a scary movie invokes 3 compli- to a warm place before you get urged 10 attend.
cated interaction between every frostbite or an even more serious
system of lhe lxx!y. This involves · cold-related injury. ·
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
the muscles, lhe heart and the ner·
Question: I catch cold more Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
vous systemQincluding the senses ·often in the winter. Why?
Sorority, will met at 6 p.m Thursof sight, bearing, taste, touch and
Answer: A cold is that common day at Grace Episcopal Church
smell.
affliction from which we have all parish bouse.
In c~ld weather.exposure, lhe suffered. The cold's symptoms of
!lodY tnes to ma~ntam the optimum running nose, cough, sore throat,
POM·EROY - Free clothing
1~ternal temperatur~ so that our and body aches are caused by day at the Salvation Anny, Butter~·tal organs can co!"u~ue 10 func- infection from one of the more than nut Avenue from 10 a.m. to noon.
~onp~perly. The mlbal response 100 members of the rhinovirus All area residents in need of clolh1s to shift the flow of blood to v1tal family.
·
ing are welcome.
organs and away froll! the b~y
The cold virus is amazingly
parts that are not esscnual f~ I he- contagious. In other words, all it
DEXTER - The Meigs County
Qlhe fmgers and toes. Th1s 1s w Y takes is a gentle cough or sneeze Women's Fellowsbip meeting will
from your infected co-worker faro- be held at the Dexter Church of
your fmgers get cold qmckly.
The ~oose bump rea~ll?n ~ol- ily member or passer-by to ;pread Christ, 7:30 Thursday night.
lows qu•cldy after the redtSII'Ibuuon the virus to everyone within 20
of blood flow . Goose bumps arc feet. 11 is actually amazing that all .
SUNDAY
caused by the a~tomatiCally con· . of us don't have colds more often
MIDDLEPORT - Song(est,
trolled co_n~act10n of very ttny than we do.
Ronnie Lemley and the Glorylaod
muscles w!thm the skin named the
rortunately, our bodies' defense Grass, 7:30 Sunday at the Silver
erector ptlo_rum ~~scles . J'hey mechanisms are adept at fighting 'Run Baptist Church.
.
cause lhe harrs -to stand. up and off the invading cold virus . The
b7come a better msulatmg coat. reason for this is-lhat our ancestors
Stnce we ~umans have a rath~r who weren't able to fend off the the opportunity to catch a ·co!d.
sparse coaung of fur, all .we see 15 attacking cold virus died from it. Second, the dryness of indoor winthe goose bump effect of the con- Therefore, we have been geneticaltracted muscles. My cats, ~n ~e · Jy selected by' our environment to ter air and lhe irritation it causes to
the lining of the nose, throat and
other band. ~m to do~blc ~ SIZe be able to deal with rhinovirus lungs makes it easier for the cold
when they nuse up therr fur 10 an · infections.'
virus to invade the body.
.
attempt to keep warm _or to _look
During the cold weather months
''Family \'tfedldne" Is a weekly
more feroc10~s to a VISibng fel~e.
we have two factors that conbibute column. To submit questions,
You men boned that you shiver to increased frequency of colds. write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
as well as get g~sc. b~ps when First, we all tend to spend more Ohio University College of Osteoyou are_cold. Shtvenng •s another time huddled together indoors pathic: Medldne, Grosvenor Hall,
of the mteresttng complex and where it is warm. This increases Athens Ohio 45701.

'The 1995 annual giving campaign of the Planned Pareolhood of
Southeastern Ohio Board of
Trustees to fund client services and
community program will get underway in February.
The Chocolate and Champagne
Afaire wiU be beld·on.Feb. 11 from
6 to 9 p.m. in Alhens at lhe Oh,io
University Inn, Galbrealh Room.
Over 3,000 invitations have been
sent to Planned Parenthood donors,
prospective donors and volunteers
throughout the agency's service

in his 20th when be discovered· his
The agency Is a private nongift for charitable fund fllising. He profit organization. Information on
bas been a development consultant events may be obtained by calling
for lru\jor universities in California 593-3375.
and seve[aJ Planned Parenthood
Affiliates. His colorful iUustrations
of success and failure in donor
development will aid in.-teacbing
PUbliC Notice
•the 3!t of negotiation for significant
monetary commitment from
donors.
·
PUBUC NOTICE
NOnCE TO
Planned Parenthood of South-·
CONTRACTO.,_
east Ohio provides family planning
Quallllad cantractaro
and related preventive health care
lntaroatod In bidding on
area.
to -8,400 women and men each· year
job~ for lha Malga County
An array of chocolate desserts, at sites in Athens, Cbilllicothe,
Ohio popartmonl of
candies and- novelties will be Chesapeake, Gallipolis, Jackson,
Oovolopmant Cammuntty
offered to guests and volunteers to Logan, Middleport and McArthur.
Houolng Improvement
sample and enjoy. Committee cbair
Program lor tha VIllage af
Racine which lnvotvaa tho
Lorraine Myers said (hat she
~rehabilitation
of
expects thai at least 75 different
oubotitndard
houolng,
chocolate items, donated by indiohould como lnta tho Matgo
viduals and area businesses', wiU be
County Annex ot 311350 .
served along with champagne,
Union Ave, Pomeroy, next
punch and non-alcoholic beverdoor Ia tho Uttar Control ,
· Olllco, to rocelvo and ftll out
ages. Tickets are available for a
o Contractor'o Stato-nt of
$15 donation at the door.
~Gina Molter of Racine, a UniQuottftcotlona. Phone
On Feb. 18 the Brnifd will host - versity of Evansville student, is
number - iii4:ee2=2733 . .
and participate in a training retreat
Contact poraan, · Joan
among approximately 800 students
wilh PPSEO volunteer fundraisers.
Truooott,
Grant
at UE named to the dean's list for
The retreat focus will be learning
Admlntotrator.
When
thlo
outstanding academic achievement
form Ia roturnod II ahould ·
personal solicitation skills and
during the 1994 fall semeSter.
by accompanied by proal of
strategies to raise funds for Tamily
She is the daughter or the Rev.
liability
lnauranco and
planning and related programs.
Kenneth and Jane Molter of
workor'o
componoatlon.
A
Bob Bason, vice president for
!toting of quoltftad
Racine. To attain the dean's list, a
development at Planned Parentcontractoro will bo provided
student must have earned a 3.5
hood Federation of America, will
to homoownora who win
average while carrying 12 or more
Qffer the five hour interactive trainroquaat
bldo
for
hours of credit. The University of
rehabilitation work ' tram
ing in the conference room of lhe
Evansville is an independent, cothooe llotod. Office houro
Soulheast Psychiatric Hospital in
educational
United
Methodist
oro
fram 9:00 a.m. - 5:00
Athens from 9:30a.m. to 2:30p.m.
p.m., Monday lhru Friday.
Church
affiliated
institution
located
Bason was a Methodist minister
(1) 18, 18, 20; 3TC
in soulhwestern Indiana.

J J QASSIC Gin
IASKm
Cwtom lksip•d Glfl
Bmktts For AU Ckcmlom

H1sell Run Rd. Pomero1 ,

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

(Speclllze In driveway
epreadlng)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

FIBERGLASS RUNIING IIOAIIIIS
• ArJJI-b'j!:!! Bra~ _
• Air COnditiOn

• Automahc Overdflve
· Vista Bay WindO\';'S

• Power Steermg •

.-Power Brake-s ---• Ti~ Steering
·-Cru1se ·
• AMIFM Cassette
• Power Windows
• Power Locks
• 4 CaRtain Chairs

1 card of Thanks

1

card of Thanks

The family of
we, the family of
Kenneth Marklne,
Marvin L. Kelly •
would like to ' thank
wishes to express
friends and neighbors
their gratitude to
for their klndneiS,
friends and
food, flowers, cards
·-neighbore-for their
and prayers, and _all
. love and support
who
helped during the
In our time of
illneiS and loa of our
bereavement
' hueba_n d, father,
A apeclalthsnksto
grandfather and gniat: Rev. AI Hartson, The
grandfathtr. · A speChurch of Christ,
cial thanks tn Rev.
. doctors, nurses, aids
Jimmy Cundiff for his
at the Extendlid Cara,
coneollng wordl. Aleo
Veterana Memorial
Rev. Willet and Rev.
Hospital, FenneyAcree for their kind
Bennatt Post 128,
words of comfort.
American Legion,
The elnger1, Rachel
Tha American Legion
and Heather Hood, the
Auxiliary for the
Wells sisters, the Carijraveside
penter .brothers who
preaantatlon and
were pallbearers, Dr.
~nMtt.following, ·
- Wlthersll and n11rslng
· the Fisher Funeral
staff at Veterans MemHome end all who
orial Hoepital, Ewing
offered comfort to
Funeral Home, ' the
Racine- American Leour family in any way.
gion
for military
God bla~a you all.
service at cemetery.
ChildrenYour klndnees will
Ann, Mary, Curl,
never be forgotten ..
Jack, tom and Mark.
Public Sale
&amp;Auction

PUBLIC
AUCTION

No 0oc Fees OeiMJIIf

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY
S·SERIES PICKUP-

350V-8 POWER,:II!AII AIMIEAT -

• lnd1reCt L1ghting
• Prem1um Wood Pkg.
·Full Convers1on
· Fiberglass Runn1ng Boards
• Loaded!
· ·~p·fll

• Driver Side Aw Bag
· • Mti·Lodf !!rakes
• Raised Roof
·
• 350 V-8 Power
• ~r Condition

• Caor TV
·PIS, P/8 •
• Tilt Sieering
• Cru1se
• AM/FM Cassette
• Power Windows
• Power Locks

• Automatic Overorive
• Vista Bay Windows .

• Rear Anti·locl&lt; Brakes
• Power Sleenng

• 4 Captain Chairs

, SolaJSed

~ -Power

• fndirec1 Ughting •
·Premium Wood Pkg.
• Aluminum
Running Boards
--Loaded!

.Brakes-

• Custom Cloth Interior
• Steel Ba~ed Tires

Pt. Pleasant
nursing lfOme. ·

King Of N. Main,
retiring to a

$18,888"

I

· -'94 PONTIAC SIINBIRD I.E

414 PICKUP

Cond~10n
• AutomaiiC
• PiS, PIB

• Power WinOOws • Steei Be~ect T1reS
• Rear Defroster • Custom Cloth8ucll:el Seats
• AWFM Siereo • l oaded'
• Power Door Locks •ConSOle
·.wrno~ ~e Avol11301e

·Mlnwtic

•Y-IIFI&gt;wer
• N.Mmlt£
•IWCrollon

POWER

•SleeMg • Cllise Control
•1.. 1one l'aitll
•
-&amp;al&lt;"
•
Cusrom
Clod!
S...
· •_~m~cas..ne · Aaly••
WeiE~

'

-

•Automaoo

.-Du~ ~rbags
• P..er Brakes

·•
• Custom Cloth Interior
• Loaded! ·

BIWIIIEW '95 BIICIILESAIRE ·
~ Air Condition·

•Jll«rv-6 Power

• PO)I'er Steering

• Power Bral&lt;es

• Dual Airbags

' Power Door i.Dd&lt;s

• Anti-tack Brakes

·Power Windows

~=~::r~~~:- ut~da~e~~=~

WATERS
-· EDGE APARTMENTS
Syracuse; Ohio
-~.

~

~

Now avallble FmtfA Orie BR apts.

Salt &amp;
Chairs,

Baskets, ) Sofa, - Bed, 3pc. Bedroom
SuitQ, OICI Marbles, pesk, 9il Lamps,
TVs, Quilts, Blue &amp; While Coverlet, Pots,

• At.IIFM Stereo
•Tift Steeling
·Custom C~th lnterilr
• loaded! .

Pans, Doilies, Much Much Morell!

RICK PEIRSON AUCTION CO.
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
APPRENTICE AUCTIONEER: KEVIN MEADOWS

TOU FREE 1·800·822·0411 • 312·2844
.344·5941• 422·0156 .

Basic monthly Rent $269.00.
Resident pays electric only Range,
Refrigerator, AJC on ·site laundry,
Community Room, Management,

Equal Housing Opportunity

·:ou - Eanfp, - or

. IA1-116
LUNCH , ..
MASON, WV
773:5795
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH I. D.
Not responsible lor 8c:cldents or loss at property
Ucansed and Bonded In Ohio, Kentucky,
&amp; West Virginia 1166

Monday • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
· Sunday: Noon • 6 pm

· Ta•as. Tlii9S. f ltle Fees e.tra. Retlate included in sale prq 01 new ~ hsled where a~. On~ end. Nol responsbe lor 'WOO'~ llf'l'm .

..

lEn IECEPnOII

For the best In satellite
sales and service contact
Bryan of
Best Recepdon.
·We have even better
and quicker SIIIVIca;
·Over 10 yrs
elQ)Orience
· Service on all system
types . .

'- Best prices all around
the area.
992-2903 or 992-6320

. Charlie's
Lime Stone
Delivery
Service

992-7553

B.

530 BRYAN PLACE .

MIDDLEPORT llii2-:mf
Office Houri: Mon.-Fri .
11:00 a.m..:l:30 p.m.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roollng, VInyl
Replllcement,
Windows, Blown
lnaulatlan, Stonn ·
Doors, Stonn
WlndoWII, Garagee.
Frao Eatlmateo

"'You Cro.la It • 'We FU
·32361 O.wllta Run Road
Long Bottom, OH. 45743

Portable Walding
Aluminum &amp; Steel
up to 'I• Inch.
CaHAnytlma
John Krkle•
614-843-5192
Harald Parson
614-843-5285

.

~

_ _R~stata General

FOR SALE

Dleaellnjector SVC
Injector Pump svc
Tune-ups .

BY OWNER

Located in Meigs Co.
Secluded

Home-

All

electric,

three

bedroom, 2 bathroom, utlltlty room, large
deck, 2 car garage w/garage door
openers.
Central · Security System-

985-3879

ELECTRI~

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also
992-5251 992-7162

• mM~

John

Doug

One Stop Complete A11to Body Repair

PRECI$10N AUTOMQTIVE
Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates

......

Insurance Work Welcome

~

State At. 33
Darwin, Ohio

1(614) 985-4495

t0121/t41Hn

mo.

MODliN SANITATION ·

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP
One mile out
143 from At. 7
Tues.- Wed. - Fri. - Sat.
1-6

• Craftaman Toole ·
•Toye
•Guns
Loada of Misc.
Buy-Sell·Trade
992-2060

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Dally, weekly &amp; monthly i'ental rates.
Job 1ItH • Camp SltH • Family Reunions I Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAI.JLING
Llmeatone, Sand, Graval and Coal
WE HAVE A· I TOP SOIL FOR SALE

u

ed'a

a

.

ded 20
•• •• rlance
992·3954

E mrrgrncy Phone 985·341 R

11 11 !!11

101511mo

Kenny's Auto Rental

C&amp;J
FURNITURE
Just below Hobsqn
on State Route

7.

New&amp; Used

992-7508
New 2 piece living

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental. ·
We Hare Cars and Vansl
Kenny's Auto Center
1-S00-486-1590
264 Upper River Rd.
Bus. (614) 446-9971
Galli olis, OH. 45631
·
11111rn

room sets $300.00

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New

TREE TRIMMING
· AND REMOVAL

Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Rdofh1g

Shrubs Shaped

. COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES .

and Removed

614-992-7643

Misc. Jobs.

(No Sunday Calls)

Light Hauling,

Bill Sl~ck
992·2269

DAN'S
APPLIANCE
SIRIICI
For AltMalor
Bra•••

UIH Appliance•

for Salt
Call

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
•Cullom Made
•Selld lllnyl
repl11eme11t
wlndew•
•·Free E1tlmete1
•$200 l111talled
Call fer Detallt

614·992·5515

'VtSrrOUR SHOWROOM'

10111Mn

1111'1 APPLIIIICI
IIDIU

ofoct&lt;Hy AulhO&lt;tzocl Parte
.. Service .
•AN Mikel '42 Yura
ofut Rallablo a..,tce
•Waohera- Drywra - AIIIII'IO
oflalrfgerator. of,......
oOiiinwaaliiii

oti.W. Hettero

oMicrowa- •Diapooala

•Thlnko Malgo a
Surrounding " ' " '

(614) 985-3561 or
992-6335 12/14/lfn

110 Co11rt St., Pomeroy, Ohio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"

992-4119 AI Tr011m, Owner 1·800-29H600

Vacuum Cleaner Service ,Special
Special offer includes:
1. Clean motor

2~Grease RolleF BeaFiAgs_,.

3. Clean &amp; check agitator
4 . Clean all moving parts
5. Clean &amp; check filter system ·

6.

._7.

Kerosene

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Primestar Cable Satalile, central air &amp;
Specializing In Custom
heat w/heat pump, triple payne storm
Frame Repair
windows &amp; doors, well insulated, maint.
NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
Parte I Service on Mott
Maku Racine Mower
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS t
free siding, approx. 2 acres. Recently
Clinic
1.
992·7013 OR
remodeled - $59,000
·
992-5553 OR
Call614-592·249ibetween Bam -7 pm
TOLL FREE 1·800-848.007
"In Stock" .
or 614-797-3378 After 7 pm or leave
.
Oregon
Chain Saw Bilra
DARWIN, OHIO
message. Ask for Chuck Hupp
949-2804
7J31181 TFN

Heater

Repair

50% off

•

1-ti-1 mo. pd.

Resident and Small Electrical Repair

JAY'S EXCAVAnNG
DOZER&amp;
BACKHOE SI;RV!Ct:
Septic Tanks
Leach Beds Installed
Basements, Footers
Mobile Home Set-ups
Land Clearing
Road Building _
Free Estimates

1/1Mtn

GRAY'S

614-992-6419 TOO 1

St. - Pomeroy.-Ohro

"We Loan You Ga$h on Anything of Value"

O&amp;E

Pllll'l'lll

1212:111

J&amp;l: INSULATION

2nd

Tel. (614) 992-5846

Maintenance provided

, I

I

115 W.

1125/06

UCINE
GUN CLU.
GUN SHOOTS

Refrigerator, Tappan Microwave, Speed
-Queen Dishwasher, Wardro~.- ~uffet,
Twin · · Beds,
Oak
Dresser•. lGreen
Depression Miniatwe

'" .Your Neighborhood Lender"

Low Rate Financing Available

to environmental revlewa,
of the Houalng and declolon-maklng, ond
··
Commun 1ty Deva 1opmon t action;
and
that
theoo
rooponalblllloo havo bMn
Act ol1974 (P.L 93-383) lor
the following prolect: FY83 aatloflad. The ter.t effect of
R 11 11 11
tho ceitlflcaUon a that upon
ti)
owntawn
. evto .oanatruct
• za on Ita approval, the VIllage af
FRIDIV,1 NIGHTS
CDBG
Program
- hllh 811 1
th 1 Pameroy may uoe the
on Imp
or a ong
CDBG fundo, and tha State
6:30 P.M.
Rlverfrant Perking area, of Ohio will have aatlolltd It
Improve 20 bulldlnga In tho
STARTING DEC. 30
Vlllago'o Central Buolna11 reoponatbllltlaa under the
Dlotrlct, lnotatt otreot National Environmental
12 Gauge Only
lighting and making Polley Act of 1969. Tho
liltlttd: 740 l~e,
lmprovementa to tha State of Ohla will accept on
Rlverfrant Parking Aroe tor . objecttan lte appraval D1 the
680 front
ototalgrant of $357,200.
· reteeae of !undo and
t:l/281114111n
An Environmental Review acceptance ol I he 1----....,.....:.:::=;;,;;;;t
Record regarding the above · certification only If It lo on
prolect heo been made by one of tho follawlng baoao;
h 1c h a) that tha certification w•
YOUNI'S
Ih8
V 111
· documents
age, w tho not In fact executed by tho
CAIPIIIIEI
SIIVICI
envlron-ntal revlaw of tho chief oxo~utlva officer o• • Room Additions
proJect. The Environmental other Office .o r applicant
Review Record II on file at approved by tho B!•to ol • New Garages
the VIllage Offlceo, 320 Main . Ohio; or b) that appllcanto • Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Street Pomaray Ohla environmental review • Rooling
45768: The Vlll~ge wilt record lor tha pralact
• Interior &amp; Exterior
undertake the project tndtcatoo omlealon of a
Painting .
duarlbed above wlllt CDBG required declalon tlndlng,
Also Coi}Crete Work
lunda under Title 1 of tha or ttop applicable to tho
(FREE
ESTIMATES)
Houalng and Community proJect In the environmental
V.C.
YOUNG
Ill
Oevelop-nt Act af 1974. ravjaw proceoa. Objacttona
992-6215
· The VIllage Ia callfylng to muot bo proparod _a nd ·
the State ot Ohio that tho aubmiHod In accordance
Pomeroy, Ohio,_
Village and John Bloettner, with
tho
required
the Mayor ·. af p 0 .., 1 roy, prDCOduraa (24CFA Part 58),
consent to accept the and may be oddraaaad ta
jurladlctlan of the Federal the Stale of Ohio, Office al
Courta If an action t1 Houalng and Community
BINGO
brought to enfarce Patnerahtpa, PO Box 1001,
Racine
American
roaponalbiQtlea In relation Calumbua, Ohio 43266Legion
Post 602
0101. Obleotlano to tha
Now having Bingo
3 Annount:emtr~Ut
releaoa of lunda on baaaa
~===::::::::~=:::::; other then thoao llatad
every Sunday Night
r
above wilt not be
Starting 6:45 pm
NOTICE .
conaldered by the State· of
Doors open 4:30 p.n
Lowell c. Shin~n TraC.or it movinK·
Ohio. No obJection a
Our new address will be
received lfter Febru1ry 18,
The mo(e peoPfe
m• S&gt;ote Rt 160 North .
19115 will ba canaldared by
playing
the bigger
We wilt be lh~ !hl.rd bulldina nor1b the State of Ohio.
·
the pay-off. ·
of Haffell'' Carpd Mill Oullef
John BIHttnar, Mayor
Phooef.willrem&gt;in614-4&lt;16-1044 (1)251 tc
Save ad for 1 free card.
941H036 or 949-2044
~----=~__;_:---"
44
Apartment
for Rant

SEE MANAGER FOR RENT UP SPECIAL

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

.

NOnCE OF INTENT TO
REQUEST RELEASE OF
SAYRE TRUCKING
FUNDS
To alllnt-ted agenclea:
614·742·2138
On or about February 2,
1995 tho VIllage of Pomeroy
will requeolthe Ohio O.pL ~------of Development, Office of
Public Notice
Hauolng and Community

Pictures. Flatwall Cupboard, Whirlpool
Washer (like new), Metal Cabinet, , Small
110 Maytag Dryer, Linens, Frigidaire
Deluxe 30" Range, Frigidaire Frosl Free

Glassware, Owl ~ookie Jar,
Pepper ~·hakers, Fans, Old
• De~y Wipers

-

. Coffee Table, End Tables, Rockers,
Books, Lamps, 1950 Chalk Pieces,

No Doc Fees. OeiM!raJ·

• A11

· Power Sleeong
• P..er lmr LOcks
• At.\'FM Stereo
•nn Steering

who Is

-PARTIAL LISTING~
Country Blue Early American Hydabed,

NoOci::Fee:to..ed'

·Air Condit1on

IHIOnabl• laltl
Jot N. Sayre

Senior, Disabled, Handicapped,

Sfl188*~
'

Located on Rt. 33 at the Auctloo
eenter In Mason W.V• . Items of Mrs.

The State Certified
Pawn S~op

•

Your authorized
American Standard Dealer

·

10:00 A.M.

•SotaJSed--

·· Umestone
&amp; Gravel

614-992·3470

SATURDAY, JANUARY .28, 1995

• E.Ireoded Chass•s
• Dover $1de A1r Bag

HAULING

Public Notice

$8,688**
BRAND NEW FULL SIZE RAISED ROOF .
3/4 TON CONVERSION VAN

Building I AornodJIIng
· •New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• RemQdetlng
• Siding ·
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
l~14) 992-5535
614i 992-2753

CUIIO~

WICKS
HAULING -

Rehab Center
Movie "In and Out of Time"
will be shown.
EVERYONE

8

BRAND NEW CfEVY ASTRO EXTEUD CONVERSIII VAN

SMITH'S
CONSTRUOION

(Lime Stone Low Retu)

"We Are Now Open For Business"

EPA and RSES Certified

. 7rwt4

FREE ESnMATES
949-2168

Group Meeting
Thursday, Jan . 26th,
1 :00 PM Pleasant
Valley Nursing &amp;

MORRISON'S
111!111 I COOLING

Call992·7434 for more lnfprmatlon.

985-4473

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Alzheimers &amp; Related
Disorders Support

.

.

Remodeling
Stop a. Compare
FREE ESnMATES

5116194 TFN

The office of Dr. George Kusnir, located in the Meigs
Medical Building adjacent to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
will officially close on,Tuesday, January 31.
.
. However, office personnel will be on hand through Feb.
15 for the convenience of patients who wish to transfer their
medical recocds. Patients may call Dr. Kusnir's office at
992-7463. After Wednesday, Feb. 15, they should telephone
Veterans Memorial Hospital at 992-2104
in regard to their
.
.
records.

Ooc Fees DeiMJed'

~complete

Howard L. WrlteHI

EMPIRE
FURNITURE CO.

OFFICE CLOSING

1

992-2927 992-5914

EMPIFtE
FURNITURE CO.
12 MONTHS SAME
AS CASH SALE HAS
BEEN EXTENDED.

Molter named
to dean's list

$17888**

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUcnoN
•NewHomea
•Ga111gea

Check Belts

'

Check electrical system

8. Replace filter bag

All for only $14.95 plus parts
One year warranty on work performed
Valid on all nationally advertised
· brands only
We service most makes &amp; models

MR. VACUUM CLEANER
-368 W. Main St.

Rlply

WV.

304-6144

�The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1995

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

REA Til E BLVD.® b y Bruce Beattie

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrillht
AAJ 6532

•J 7 2

F.F.K &amp; MEEK

t 9

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64
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tA Q ; I O
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ACROSS

Announcomenl s

43 Nobbed
45 Roman e50
47 Yorl&lt;ahtN river
SumiiC
4 Animate' coato 411 Alf?rmetl..
51 Footbal? d?v.
crur one
12 Roman 3
53 Foahlon
57 Filled with
13 Plaint ?ndion
r wondlr
14 Au.thor ol
60 Forerunner ol
. Picnic
15 Writing tool
the CIA
Itt Shower
61 The Way We 62 CoM For small
Hab"uate
- Vogaa
ortlc?ea
Agt. .
63 Fled
Youth arg . .
64 Bow all
24 Pro - (lor the
veasel
time being)
65 Actor Bruce 26 Exacerbate
66 French .
30 Cornelia summer
Skinner
34 Scooby DOWN
35 Haolta11on
1 Cry ot pain
aounda
2 Appearance
36 Realde
,37 Glowing piece 3 Japanese
native
ol coal
4 Conser·
39 Fruit drink
vatlontat
41 Roman 12
1 Entar1alner -

a

5 'l'fpe ot lizard
6 Agitate ,
7 Law-making

I •

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4

2 - ... 1111• tlllnod, •
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~-.::=:=-

"Know what I i
we didn't have to
drink water that tastes like loose change!"

. . . . old puppy, port -

-

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~~~~

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....,.....
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Torrior .,.....,..., 1 - o1c1. to __.....;,;;.;.;;:..:..:t:..:o:.;B::u~y~­
good- 304-175:3311.

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Plllilt Woorjng Purple
Co?For,
Stilt Town Am,
Row•dl.-zun.

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bod. .. .;

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64 . HaY &amp; Grain

76

All pass
lead: • K
4•

r.o.u

l'£'fWru.l

· Phi!lip Alder's new book , ''Get

..._:-----1 Smarter at Bridge," is available,
autographed upon request ,Jor
from P.O. Boi 169, Rosiyn
Hts .. NY 11 577·0169.

Auto Pans&amp;
Accneonn

$14 .95

414 .:
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created lrom q uol&amp;1100! by lamou !l peopiCJ

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THE~·RE

I'.LL HER£

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CHA.ME:LEON .
1 MOVE

SELOo-IC,

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BOXROSO
LYRKB? .
.PREVIOUS SOLUTION : ··A man who Iivas, not riy whal he loves but by whal
he hates. is a sick· man ." - Archil&gt;ald Mcleish

'=~~;~' S©\\.~lA-L££trs·
GAM?
lolltt4
I . POUAN "" - - - - - - 0. four
Rearrange leners of the
scrambled words beWOlD

~~CLAY

low to form four words.

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AGVRY
5

.

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I was so upsetthall aiuldn't
think straight. Mysistertold me
that.. "A really smart person
puts away their problems tor a

~
~

chuckl· quo••d

by ldl 1ng in ·the mti!mg word s
yov develop from step NQ. 3 below.

•

1

Autos for sale

=..,....,.;.~;_;.;,..:;:.:..:.-:!.
Oootttt Dart- 12100, .,..
--1411..

Knotty. Anvil IN/Jarf - Stigma • WORKING
Over the years I've observed people in the work force.
Many people believe that life would be better ~they didn't
have to go through it by WORKING.
I

• STRIKE. A BlOW IN THE. WAR ON
i HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CLASSIFIEDS,

._,_NX,I~--.1

. . . - . - ...... good_,.
olltlon, to?dng 13100, .... .,..
112-6Giatwlpm.
1m I j y , - N lotr, PS, PI,
~ 01 p ..... 72,00G Aet.
II. Good Colo
IZ.IICI!!;.!tu_ ~ Door1
Cii: liLa~
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Hiltt., iii
rn.P?r.
1

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.
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Services

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ASTRO-GRAPH

""""' 1'14011 - .
- - ... lor

LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) ResiS t the oempMail $2 'to Matchmaker,
New York, NY 10163.

IIIII;

0

BERNICE
....---~-..-:.,'-- BEDE OSOL

a

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77 .~

~~

-

AU real esrate advertising In
this newspaper Is subject 10
the Federa l Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which ma kes It llegal

Classifieds
446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

""" ·.
......................

to advertise •any preference
· umttatlon or discrimination '
based on race, colo~. reKglon,
se x familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
rnak!9 anv such preference
limitation ordlscrlmlnadon .~

Ttis newspaper wtU not
knowlingly accepl
advertisements for teal estate
which Is In violatiOn of lhela,..
Our readers are hereby
lnfoomod lhat all dwellingo ·
adve'ltis.od In this newspaper

are available on an·equal
~

OflllOnunlty basis.

D'

-.

tan .._.,., ,.,.,.

n

Thursday. Jan . 26 . 1995

----ond--.

In the year ahead , you c-£~ uld benefit
greally by gaining more knowledge aboul
your fi eld of work . Take ad v antage ot
every opPortunity to expand your educa·

~•u••m.

f!l?tl -

lid -

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01

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lion.
AQUARIUS (Jan. :zo.Feb. 19) Do nol act

011 whims loday . If you lei your guard
down . you could open the flood gates .to
foolish extravagance . Try,ng tp patch up
a br&lt;&gt;!'qn romanc e ? .The A slro-Graph
Matchmciker can help you to understand
wh3t tp do to make the relationship work .

P.q

Box 4465,

laHon ·to taK e undue ri sks or buck heavy
odd s today . Try to ~e cautious instead of

PISCES (Feb, 2Q·March 20) Sometimes ca p11c1ous
the worso thmg lhat could happen is oo •VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sept .
Make sure
h3ve your e•pectat1ons meT K9ep this Tn- Y?Or rt'la t er s~l n Ciud ed
m1 nd today wh en yo u es tatlti sh your making process fbr important lam1ly mat·
ters today. If a choice 1s made withou t
ob ect1ves .
1
ARIES (March 21 ·Aprll 19) You might hoslher 1npuo. problems will result
'wanlo o do something uncharacteristocally . LIBRA (Sept . 23· 0ct. 23) Today yo u
spitelul today to someone who wronged . m1ght spend more lime and ener~ y figur -.
you 1n the past. Your attempt to gel even , ing out ways to dodge ta sks than 11 wou~d
could cackf~re
take to do rh·em. Th e unre so lved woll
1
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Even when • remain ·unresolved.
doing Dusiness with !hose you know and SCORPIO (Oct.. 24-Nov. 22) Try to be as
trust today, spell everyth ing out so that gEJ nerou s with frie~ds today as they are
1
there won 't be any misunderstandings . with you, In S1tuat1ons where e.xpenses
later.
· are oo be split . pay your fair share .
GEMINI (May 21·Juno 20) You migho not ; SAG?TTARIUS (Nov . 23· Dec . 21)
f ind easy an swers to to u·gh ques tions . Although you may make ~very eft~~ .to
tod ay . so be realistic when evaluating ' be a niee guy today, ther e 1S a posstbthty
·
I
.
bl
possible solutions. Take off your rose col·
you will enc?unter someone tmpossl e
· to please.
ored glasses .
CANCER (June 21.July 22) Before get· • CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan .. 19) LISten ·
ting 1nvo 1ved m a new endeavor. know carefully today and ask pertm e ~! quescxa ctly what ram ifica tion s to e Kpect.
lions if you want somethmg. ctan!.1ed. _
Do
Surpnses could be ~ounterproduclive at
not prete nd you ~ nd e rsl ~ nd whatts be1ng
this 11me.
said if you really don't.

l
I

i

•
•

·-. .. X R R I

Each .lener '" lhe etphet slallds lor anome r Tooay·s clue L eQuat5 D

•ron.
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W:

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Celebnly C1pher cryptograms are

SCUM.lETS ANSWERS

71

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TECHNo· GEEK~.

C,ROUP&lt;;7

WHAT
C.ROUP

Joanne -

43 -E.
Neumann
· 44 Gel
. 46 Feline
· 4tt Harsh cry
• 49 Pilcher
1 50 Danloh Island
52 Adorable
54 Dayaol -1
(way back)
55 Future LL.Bs .'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

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

BIG NATE

SUpped
Buck'a 11111i
Termlnela
Actre11

slave
58 SUtch
59 Mongrel

~

&lt;;TOLL WoRKING
't'UP ~
ON THAT
P,RAIN~• .JOCKS.
LO&lt;;T Of

- Naataae

exam
56 Anglo-Saxon

7,.-;TI,. . :.;A:.,I:.:.~-1;.1. .:o~l"'v. :'..,l-9--~1 e;·~~~p;:.:'"ih.

I Fl. Truck T - NO; 1111 '

=m.,.

Russian rule r
+--1 ' 31 School book
32 Tennis player

....-+--4-

.

12 Ptaoenlx cttl cl•-. 1 floollw, :Ill DU. ln. Chw. motor, fallt :
~'
11 t:lll; 1 Pr. Gul- tto; -~202--.
1 Pr. To.rUrt Sle; 1 T- -n.to.,,
110, 114:8--

lliiA?Iitl P.ll

lm-+-

wear·
29 Former

33
36
---1-+--J-~:· 38
40

In yesterday's deal. th e hard part
was lhirtking of the be sl play. But if you
did th ink of it , you knew immediately
that il was right. Todai s dea l is simi·
lar , exc ept that il is even harder to
think of the best play.
Don't peek at the East·West cards.
600D .IN Mr.( NOVEL YOU 'RE
You reach four hearts after Wesl has
A GOLDEN RETRIEVER ..
overcalled in diamonds. He. starts the
defense by cashing the two top trumps.
Ea sl following both times. and switching lo the spade nine. What now ?
North, with three hearts and a side·
suit singleton, was tully justified in dri ·
ving lo game.
South won the third trick with dum ·
nfy's spade ace. ruffed a spade in hand,
cashed the diamond ace, ruffed a dia·
mond in the dummy and ruffed another
spade in hand. When the suit didn't
break 3-3, South fell back on the club finesse. It lost, however. and a diamond
to West's king spell one down .
Did you spot the besl ·play? After the
first spade ruff in hand , South should
lead the diamond queen rrom hls hand'
When West wins with the king, as he
surely will. he may have no good return. Another spade, if We st has one,
will probably establish dummy's suit. A
diamond is into South's A·IO tenace, allowing a club to be thrown from th e
dummy. South can then ruff his club
loser in th e dummy. Finally, a club
switch by West giv es South lwo
chances . He plays low from the dummy, winning three club tricks whenever
West has either the 10 or the queen.
,.
""''I j As John F. Kennedy sa id , "You can't
' depend on your judgment wh e n your
YOJ~ ... TI\(ON£ E'£1'~
ya)~Of'PER ~D 1 imagination is out of locus."
(}1£:) I

~TEen\

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_
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11
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12 ond

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

.

.

t&lt; ocmtST ~0 COOLD T~~
1'-----.o:--~""' OS!£ a= TAAT I'AG

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&amp; VlclnHy

8

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l;'" ~~.lor-.

Yard Sale

'!WI

YOli CAN MAKE A FEW
MINOR Cl-lAN6E5 IF 'I'OlJ

'(OU KNOW, THE MAIN
CHARACTER IN '(OUR NOVEL
DOESN'T HAVE TO BE
E)(ACTL'( L.IKE

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trodo, prioo 111g04117111, I1W6 I
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46 Space for Rent

7

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Ry Phillip Alder

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A TREE??

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Help Wanted

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CCIPYIIIGHT 11M • '!liE KIIOOIII CO. ITEIII AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,
JAM)Nft 22, TIIIOUCIH SAl\JROAY, J/114UN'rf:za, 11111111-0Y.

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WE IIEIIEIIVI , _ AIQHT TO UIIIT QUANTITIE8. NONE 1101.D TO DEALERS.

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