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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

UMass,

Pick 3i

Syracuse
. post wins

166
Pick 4:

2031
Buckeye 5:

10-11-19-28-29

Page4

Vol. 45, NO. 192

Funding plan at odds
with ·VoinoVich ideasare

~I You can be a ·rep payee I Considerations on early retire.;;;~~·
IRA'S
Many people caring fore~ly o.r elisabled people recel vmg
Socaal Secu~ty or ~SI bel!efits
!'IllY not realize • If ~ person
ts unallJe to maDB!!e or direct the
management of ~as or ber benefits,~ ~Tbetalive pa~ can be
payee recetves the
appom......

monthly check on the person's
bebalf and uses it to pay for the
pcrsoo's food, housing and other
needs. you may qualify as a repreaentatlve payee. To find out
more, contact 'the Chillicothe
Social Security office (774·5500).

·EnJOY
• your ret1rem
· ent
o

Ret~relfJent planning•..
Continued hm ~ 15

money for a youngs~ s ed~~abon
becomes a very real1ssue.
An~ the ne~s of retirement also
.. begm loomt~g larger. Recent
research mdtcates most baby
"?omers .woul~ need to double or
. tnple t~Ir savm~s rate to achieve
the retirement hfestyles of their
parents, many of whom have
enJoyed generous penstons, and a
sharp run~p in the value of their
assets durmg.the.1980s.
. Spectfic hfe msurance plans
can J'':"vtde for rapid cash accumulauon, allowmg you to make
pohcy loan~ when you need.cash
fo~ s~methmg. unexpected hke a
chtld s weddmg or starting a
b~s~ne~s. .
· . ,
":mmg . l'eCommends that mdt·
vtduals mvest tn a llextble pro.
gr:un that ?ffers reasonable premtums, adJustable death and cash
values, and even the capactty to
change the type of life
For
vmmg _no~. ·

that some insurers provide an
insurance product that can help
secure retirement years, such as
the . Farmers Flexible Universal
Life plan. In ~ddition to providing a death benefit, the plan can
be programmed to meet the
changing needs throughout your
life by providing accelerated cash
accumulation, as well as provide
a guaranteed lifetime income for
you and y.our spouse at retirement.
It can also be used to save for
a child's college education supplement an IRA, finance business venture, maximize a pension
program, pay estate taxes, or
even vacation and travel expenses. ·
Being middle-aged does not
p~t yo~ out of the insurance-plan-.
nmg ptcture. The changing needs
you face beyond your beginning
years are simply new opportuniues for the benefits of solid future
financial planning.

a'

,

More and more these days,
you run into people who retire
before 65, the ttadltional retiremcnt aae.
Well you should know that
with Social Security you don't
have to walt until 65 to collect
moothly Rlimnent benefits. You
can elect early retirement and
begin receiving benefits as early
as 62 . Of course, if.you retire
early, your benefifs will be
reduced to take into account the
longer period of time you 'II be
receiving them.
.
·
For eli8Diple, if you retire at
age 62, you'll receive 80 percent
of what you would have received
at 65. At 63, you'll receive 87
percent ... and at 64, 93 percent.
Before you retire, you can fiod
out bow much you'll receive
from Social Security. It's easy to
do. Just caiJ.I-800-772-1213 and
aSk for vour free benefit estimate.

.

·

·

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with better features than an Allstate
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Credited Interest ·'
Rates 10.25%

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992-6677

Did you know?
The longer you delay applying for
Social Security benefits, the higher
the benefit vou eventually receive
will be. People who retire before .
age 65 receive reduced benefits.
People who keep working and re;
tire after 65 have "delayed retirement credits" applied to their benefits. The benefit increases be·
tween age 65 and 69 by as much as
15 percent for those attaining age
70 in 1994. Those attaining age 70
in future years can get larger in- .
creases.

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•

.(~) VETEUNS MEMORIAL HO·SPITAL
\ ( :...::; ..

I

COLUMBUS (AP) -Never has your state govel1liiiCilt spent so much
of your money as in the new $33.7 billion budget that Gov. George
Voinovich released today.
. .
.
·
.
Voinovich proposed -. in absentia - a record state budget that asks
legislators for boosts in welfare, ediiCatiQn, prisons and other programs .
over the next two fiSCal years starting July 1. .
Tbe package represents a $3.1 billion increase over cwrent spending.
Welfare would remain the single-largest !tettf.ln the budget at a proposed $16 billion, with primary and secondary education second at $7.6
billion;andbigbereducalionthethird·mostcostlyat$4.1 billion.
.·
·Voinovich proposed spending $3.6 billion in state aid to schools during
Hscal Year 1996 that starts July 1, and $3.9 billion tbe next year.
. His $7.6 billion proposal for primary and secondary education is
almost $1 billion more than in the cwrent two-year budget but far short o(
the $9. I billion that the State Board of Education recommended.
Funding for the Ohio Department of Education in FY96 would
increase $184. I million, or 5.3 percen~ above cwrent levels, and go up
another $257 mUlino, or 7 percenl. in FY97.
.
Voinovich recommended an extra $3.71!lillion to fully implement pro·
ficiency testing In the fourth and sixth grades, and to add a science coinponcnt to the ninth-grade proficiency test .
.
' Tbe Ohio Department of Human Services that oversees welfare would
see a $421 million, or 6.6 percent, spending boost ne~t year and a $400
J!lillion, or 5.9 percent, increase the following year.
.
.
. As expected, Voinovich recommended elimination of the General
Assistance program effective July 1. Some of the money saved from cut·
ling aid to unemployed, able-bodied ~Its instead woul&lt;!, go to homeless
sh~lters and employment-emergency assiStance programs for adults.
Funding for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction
would increase $120 million, (I( 15.1 percent, in FY 1996 over this year,
and $95.41!lillion, or 10.4 perocn~ the following year.
.
.

115 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE

I 992·21 04

POMEROY
'

.

Whither
welfare?
Reform backer
says poor kids.
will not starve ·

By The .U.ociated Press
Excerpts .from a position statement the Ohio School Funding
·
·
Cooperative releasedMooday:
• Ohio must implement a ·process for detennining the CO!Dpo·
nents and cost of a bigb qualiry education, and put in place a funding system that enables every school district to provide such an education to every student.
.
_By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL
• There wiU need to be a significant increase in funding or public
Associated Press Writer
elementary and secondary education.
WASHINGTON - Republican
• Obio's school funding system must provide for reasonable
governors and their allies in
growth in local property tax revenues when the market value of
Congress .are· talking about ''a
property increases.
rairiy day fund" to prOtect the poor
• Tbe Legislature should earmark specific state revenue sources
in bard .times if welfare programs.
for public elementary and·secondary education. ·
are converted into state block
• Tbe state should establish an eq!)alized school district facilities ·
grants.
program for the construction and rehabilitation of school buildings
"We're not going to let babies
and other related facilities.
·
starve," Rep. Clay Shaw Jr., R· ··
• The constitutional mandate for providing the resources for pub- . · Aa., wbo is spearheading the effort
lie education rests with the governor and·the Legislature. Education
to dralt welfare reform legislation,
issues should be decided by the elected representatives of the peo- promised the govem&lt;ts Monday.
ple, not by rnferendum.
·
The 30 GOP governors were
• The state should not adopt any program that directs state funds
unable to muster enough Demoaway from public schools and erodes the level and reliability of
cratic support Monday to put the
state fmancial suppon for pubiir. schools.
National Govetl)ors Associa~on on
. • The state should not adopt any legislation that would result in
record in favor of the block grant
locally voted district property tax or school income tax revenues
approach.
bei11g distributed in whole or in pan to other school districts.
The governors we·re wrapping
up their annual winter conference
$2,500, called vouchers, .to send in which we take public funds and today after bearing from House
theil: children to private schools.
divert them to private education or Speaker Newt Gingrich, R.(Ja., and
•'Certainly we are concerned some such program as that," Dun- once again fran President Clinton.
about vouchers and other·choices nan said.
·
Tbe president, addressing a
dispirited group' of Democratic
governors Monday night, took a
veiled slap at GOP welfare plans,
saying the goal should be ·to
unshackle people fran welfare. "It
should not be to punish people
because they're ~r or they once
made a mistake,' be said.
·
Broadening his pitch, Clinton
issued a laundry list of goals shared
by Republicans and Democrats but
drew a sharp contrast in bow tbe
parties ·pian to reach their objeclives
To Republicans, he said: "You
want to reduce the size of go\1:m·
ment? You want to reduce regula'
lions?. Yo~ want to give more
authority to the states? You want to
privatize those things that can be
privatized? So do we.
•'But our contract is a covenant
We want to create opportunity, not
just bash government," the president said.
. Sbaw, chairman of tbe Ways
and Means subcommittee that is
fashioning a welfare block grant aS
~ •·
• .•
: ::; _
part of the GOP •'Conti'act With
• · , , , ..
,
•
America,' • told the governors they
"' , .' 1 · A . • · •
won't have to kiss anyone's ring in
" ...,.
. ,"'··• ,. ·
_.
•
Washington any more before over, .....-::
'··
hauling their programs for the poor.
Employees of the. Ohio Bridge O,rp~ C.mbrldg~ !~tailed trusses 00 the new Basban Road
Shaw said be en.v~ions a "rainy
nl
d
day
fund" in the block gnmts that
1
1
bridge over the Shade River at Keno Monday • The trusses, ga1va ze to preven eorros on, were
would boost spending on the poor
lifted Into place with a pair of cranes. Dave Spencer of tbe Meigs County Highway Department •
in hard times.
estimates tbe new $118,000 span may be completed around tbe middle of February. (Sentinel
Some Democratic governors
photo by Jlni Freeman)
.
want to keep welfare as an individ· .
•
ual entitlement that must be funded

Trusses placed on span

4,

.
.

ag·ai·n at-•.n·crease,:in·-interest-rates-·~---~rs~~yin!:~peoplo.mect. .

discussions.
These analysts are forecasting
that the Fed will increase both the
federal funds rate, tbe interest
banks charge each other, and the
discount rate, the interest the Fed
charges for direct loans, by onehalf percentige point
A group of House Democrats
and representatives of the housing
indusiry called a news conference

·
·
for tQdily to appeal to central bank
policy-makers to delay any further .
rate increases until they see bow
the economy is responding to the
credit tightening that has already
taken place.
· •
"It is e~tremely risky to raise
interest rates further until we see
bow muc~ of a slowdown we are
going to get,·' said Larry
Cbimerine. chief economist at the

..
. ·
.
Econorilic Strategy Institute.
c~~try. .
,
, ·
Cbimerine said tbat two key
To ttgbt~n f~~ther. rat~es
interest-sensitive industries, hous- u~ne~.essary nsks, Cbtme~anc
ing and auto manufacturing, 1 ~d .. The last thing ':"e need ngbt
already are showing signs of a now ~another recesston when we
slowdown. In addition, be said that bai'Cn t .~ully rccoverejl from the
Mexico's financial crisis is. lik;ely last one.
.
.
to reduce e~ports to America's
!lut other econ~masts swd that
third largest export market by as whtle there were stgns the ec~no·
· much as $8 billion to $10 billion, my .was slowm~. the Fed.bad ltttle
further depressing growth in this chotce but to ratse rates tht~ week.

"· ,_

But the GOf&gt; govemon want the
flexibility to decide who gets belp
and bow long they receive i~ with•
out waiting for permission from
Washington to launch e~periments
aimed at getting people off welfare
and into jobs.
Massachusetts Gov : William
Weld favors a 5 percent set aside of
block grant funds to be doled out
by formula to states with bigb
unemployment and other hardships.

·'GOP lobbies for needed cutbacks
as amendment debate continues

•

•

.

Governor proposes
record state budget

. . .
WASHINGTON · (AP) Despite warnings that the Federal
Reserve's string l&gt;f interest rate
· increases bas greatly increased the
threat ·of a . recession, most
cconolnists believe the.central bank
is ready to boost rates again.
A11alysls widely expect Fed policy-makers to announce a seventh
',, rate increa·se Wednesday ,at the
conclusion of two days of private

w_e wish you the best of health in your retirement. However; should you need medical help, the welltramed, capable staff a! Veterans Memorial is ready to serVe the medical needs of you and your family.
Fo~ over 30 years, Veterans Memorial - Your Hometown Hospital - has been providing health care
services to the community. We continue to improve our physical facility, our equipment and our health
.
·
·
·
care techniques,

(

·

·-~·, Economists·--·hi·nt

··-· ................... -·-·· I·; -·-··-'······-~····~. -'·-·· """.

.

995

Cooperative's position
on .Ohio school funding:

. .
.
.
.
'
are selfish, but that we
people
By JOHN CHALFANT
· children to private schools).
Associated PreM Writer .
• Education issues should be who believe that we have to proCOLUMBUS - Leaders of decided by elected representatives vide for our own children in our
four statewide education groups of the people, not referendum . own districts," be said.
Tbe cooperative proposed a sig;
bave agreed on a plan to reform (Voinovich wants to submit to vot·
nilicantincrease
in funding of pubOhio•s sehool funding system. 8 ut ers a plan.for the state to borrow $1.
lic
elementary
and
secondary edu ·
some of their ideas are at odds with billion to help fmance consuuction
cation.
Gov. GeQrge Voinovicb's propqs· projects in the state's poor~st dis·
But it offered no dollar amount
triCts).
als.
.
pending
the state's adoption of a
The Ohio School Funding
Tbe new ·education finance
process
to
objectively determine
Cooperative said Monday:
package came from the Ohio
the
components
·and cost of a high·
• A funding increase for primary School Funding Cooperative.
and secondary education should not
Members include the Alliance qualjly education.
lower aid to other districts. (A lor Adequate ·School Funding, the
Voinovicb' s proposed state bud·
Voinovich proposal would give Buckeye Associaliop of School get released this morning recomabout $33 million less money to the Administrators. the Ohio Coalition mende.d spending $7 :6 billion on
wealthiest 10 percent of districts).
for EA,Juity &amp; Adequacy of School . primary and secondary education
• Ohio's school funding system Funt)ing, and the Ohio School ever the next two fiscal yean; start·
ing Jujy I. That COJOPi!feS with
must provide for reasonable gro\Vth Boards Association. ·
.
in local property tax revenues when
Bat)ley"Dunnan, director of leg· · $9.1 billion that the .State Board of
the market value of property islative services for the administra· Education bas asked Voinovicb to
increases . (Voinovicb opposes tors' group, could find no justifica· request from legislators.
· Dunnan opposed what be said
· changes in an existing cap on infla- lion for what is often referred to as
lion-driven increases in real estate the Robin Hood approach to school were undocumented and symbolic
taxes).
funding - an involuntarily redis· education plans under review at the
Stateliouse.
.
• The.state should not adopt any tribution of wealth.
He included in that description
program that directs state money
"We cannot justif¥ taking local
away from public school.s. funding from various school dis· Voinovieb's proposal for tbe
: (Voinovich proposes a $12.5 mtl· ti'icts and shipping it elsewhere," parental school choice progrnni.
Parents. in selected districts
lion pilot program that would let Dunnan said at a news conference.
parents use public _grants to send
. "Not that we are people who could use state grants of up to
'

PAGE SIXTEEN· RETIREMENT EDITION

1 Section. 10 Pageo 35 centa
· A Multimedia In~. Nowopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 31, 1995

Copyright 1995

Low tonight In mid lOs.
Partly cloudy. Wednesday , high
In mld-405.

,.

.

ByALAN"FnM
.U.ociated Preas Writer •
W AS.HINGTON - Republicans are hunting for the hundreds
of biUions of dollars in savings that
would be needed ·to balance the
federal budg_et, as tbe Senate
launches its debate on a constitutional amendment requiring the.
elimioation of the deficit bY 2002.
-The Senate planned a second
day of debate today on the proposed amendment, which tile
Hou~e passed last week. Senate
debate on the measure could last
for weeks, slowed by outnumbered
Democrats who insist the Republi· •
cans ftrst identify ~e vast spending
cuts it would force.
"Th~ American people have a
right to 'know what it is that we're
.proposing to do," Senate Minority
Leader Tom Daschle, D-SD., satd
Monday during the Senate's first

-would·take to eliminate the deficit
day&lt;&gt;f"debate.
•Republicans countered that the by the deadline and to pay for $200
$4.8 triiUon national deb~ ·growing billion worth of tax cuts they have
.
by nearly $200 billion a year; mus.t promised.
On Monday alooe, several clues
be addressed.
"With every additional dollar emerged as to where those savings
we borrow, we throw more coal might come from.
into the fire of the runaway train· · In one session, a small group of
)VC are all riding on,' ' warned Sen. Republican senators and represen- .
' tatives met with Illinois GOP Gov.
Orrin Hatch, R-Utab.
Tbe amendment would require a Jfm Edgar to discuss dramatic
· balanced budget by 2002, unless changes in Medicaid, the rapidly
three-rtfths of the House and Sen· growing program that helps about
ate voted ·to allow. a defici~ To be 30 million poor people pay medical
' added to the Cooslitution, it needs bills_. It costs the federal governapproval by two-thirds of Senate, a · ment about $90 biUion a yeat, with
margin supporters say they expect about tbe same· amount ct;tming
to achieve. and ratification by
fran the states.
three-fourths of the states.
After the meeting, Senate Bud·
For now, the real work is being get Committee Chairman Pete
done behind closed doors. Republi· Domenici, R-N.M ., said lawmakers
cans across the Capitol are gradual· were ''moving toward an underly moving toward fil)ding the .more standin~ that we would like to
than $1 trillion in spending cuts it
(ConU'!ued on Page 3)

I

r

)

Ill"

RACil'iE WRECK- Icy roads caused Ibis
Moncbty afternoon ouUide
one-car accident
of Racine, according to emergency reports. The
Injuries· were minimal and the Individuals

~ .

•

\

.,

�•

··c Om.·ment __
ar~L
.

Tuesday, January 31, 1995

VVednesday,Feb.l

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publlsber
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.i

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

&gt; &gt;

I'

LE1TERS OF OPINION ""' welcome. They should be less than 300
words long, All letters ""' subject 1o editing and must be signed with name,
address illld telephone number. No unsi&amp;ned l~tten will be publilbed. Letters
should be in good ~1!0. addressing issues, not penonalili... ·

-Enola Gay: Just·the
artifacts, please?

MICH.

Discipline: Clinton, Gingrich lack it

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

General Manager

I

. By MIKE FEINSll.BER
.
· Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - The Smithsonian \nstitution likes to ~an uself
"the nation's attic," the accumulator of stuff tbat tells a peoples history,
from atTOW beads to moon rocks.
But now the Smithsonian is in trouble, caught in a dispute because it
planned to put something from its attic- the fuselage of tbe Enola Gay,
. the B-29 that dropped the atomic bomb- on display, and say sometbmg
;. about thai event. what led to it and flowed froril iL
•. . .
: It turns out that saying something was going_to b': d1fftc~lt. The ·
. regents of the Smithsonian, its governing body -moe Cthze_ns, SIX f;Dem·: bers of Congress, the cbicf justice of the United States and v1ce pn:s1dent,
if !bey cbose to attend .:.... now bave to decide if tbe Smithsoruan can say
· anything.
.
.
. ·
: The American Legion, other veterans groups and thetr congressional
:· allies did not like what Smithsonian curators decided to say and 5l!ow,
·: including pictures of tbe devastation of Hiroshima and NagasaJ?.
· The critics said the Smithsonian bad set out to make an anu-war state·
: menl cheapening tbe.sacrifices of World War ll's waniors,-poltraying-tbe ·
· dropping of the atom ~mb a racist act, not one tha~ as Harry Truman
· : said saved many Amencan- and Japanese - hves.
· The veterans want the re~ents to cancel tbe entire exbibilioq, and tbere
:are reports 1be Smithsonian. s chief, I. Michael Heyman; will recomm!'nd
: either thai or tbe removal of all historic commentary from tbe exb1b1bon,
· leaving only the bomber's fuselage,
. . .
. · Retired Brig. Gen. Paul W. Tibbets, wbo piloted lbe Enola Gay, called
: plans for the ·exbibit "a damn big insult." He said, "They're trying to
· evaluate evetythlng in the context oflnday's .beliefs." · . .
.
: About tbal be was exactly right In die vtew of many biStonans, thetr
: duty is just tbat, to examine wbat bas gone before in the context of tnday's
· beliefs.
.
·
.
'''Truth' doeS not have a singular .face,'· says Neery Malkonian, associate director of tbe Center for Curatorial Studies Museum at Bard Col. lege. She says the "truth" about Hiroshima was different in 1945 than in
· 199S, and will be different in 2045. '
.
.
"History falls into two categories," says Robert Archibald, president
.
or
tbe Missouri ljistorical Society and the American Association for. Stale .
•.: aiKJ Local History. "Controversial and noncontroversial. The_ noncontro:__
· · versial is tbe stuff that dQ!lsn'.tmattet:..:.:...~-·
-- ·
~: To his falber, the atom bombing of Ja_pan was a glorious event, signify·
~· ;ng victory, homecoming, rehef. To biiD, Archibald says, tbe atom bomb
:. recalls schoolday duck-and-cover exercises and 50 years of Cold \Y~_ ten- ·
:: sions· the bomb recalls the night Jolm F. Kennedy went on televiSton to
:· discl~se that the Soviets bad put missiles on ·cuba; it seemed like the eve
~ ofanuclearArmageddon'.
, .
, .
. ..
.• But there were questions even m b1s fathers day, btstonans have
:· found out
.
:: · was Japan tottering toward defeat, making neither tbe l;lombing nor an
'::·American invasion necessary, as the U.S. Strategie Bombing Survey later
... suggested?
':. Could President Truman bave ordered a demonstration bomb drop to
.: show tbe Japanese the devastation that awaited if they did not surrender?
·.: (But what if it were to fail? The U.S. stockpile cons1sted of exactly two
: bombs.)
.
.
.
. .
;.: If Hiroshi.nla was necessary, was Nagasaki necessary, too, and Just
·:: three days later, before the Japanese fully grasped bow everylbmg had
&lt;·changed wiib the release of atomic power?
.
·
..; The regents will bave to ask themselves if it is too soon ~o reopen those
~: issues. And tbey wiU bave to deal with a new~'- of quesuons unleashed
cby the Enola Gay. These concern tbe respoos1bi11bes of a pubhc mst1W·
: tion when it deals with controversy.
.
·: is a museum more than an auic? In a society as diverse as Amenca,
,: (here are many views of what the Enola Gay wrought Is it tbe obligation
: : 0 r a museum to lay that out? If visitors leave knowing no more history
.:·iban when they arrived, and have nothing fresh to think about, is the
·:smithsonian doing its duty?

. of
It' s now an anicle of conveo- decisions - sucb as . the flllllg
tiona! wisdom- and rightly so- Surgeon General Joycelyo Elders
that there are many personal simi- - without endle~s •. dignity-drain·
larities between Bill Clinton and ing public agon1zmg. H1s polls
Newt Gingrich. Unrortonately, one
of tbem is indiscipline:
.
Morton Kondracke
Clinton's State of the Union
speech suggests there's little bope
that be can get himself under coo- bave' incbed upward as a result.
Instant poII s suggested th at tb e
trol, but uiaybe Newt can do better.
Faced with perbap4 bis last public liked wbat it beard in tbe
chance to win back the respect of State of the Union, but it's clear
tbe American people, &lt;;linton sim- :ruaeadl ;;!i::pon~~r!~~p:::t:n~
ply blew it While 1be speech bad
many good elements, they got lost in Congress~ put himself in good
in a blinding 81-minute blizzard of sbilpe for re-election.
words.
For tbe most part. C.:: linton
Prior to tbe speech, White emphasized centris~ "new Demo. House Chief of Staff Leon Panetta crat" themes ~ personal responsiestimated It would last 45 minutes bility, leaner (but not meaner) govbut Clinton bad not actually prac-' emment, cu1tura1 c1ean-up - bul
liced it _at thatpoint. _andin delivery his single new policy proposal, an
be ad-hbbed extra 110es that added increase in tbe minimum wage, was
to its length.
an "old Democrat" reversion.
In tbe one urgent area where
Panetta as tbe Wbite House's
designated' disciplinarian, bas sue- Clinton could bave exercised real
ceeded in convincing Clinton to presidential leadership - building
avoid overexposure witb random support for a Mexican loan guarariTV appearances and to make some tee - Clinton dropped the ball, .

~?eiY
GooDBYe
To '{ollR F'~VoRiTe

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I ces to an

~evoung JUSt Six ~~th ftbe

0
1ssue that tbreatens
world eco~y.
'd Dre'er
According to RCJ?. ~VIR p ~li:
R-Cahf., c~ng~SSI~n Cli~t~n to
cans were, oo mg o .
.
h~lp put ~nd 10 paru~~ ":.~
gltng obnd 'de, oanb guarancb. ;, said
speec t n t e1p mu •
.
.
·
.
Ore
· ter.
. .
badl botch
Unless Republicans
Y
lb~1r cbance to govern or un1ess
9mton band1fs sc;::e J."f;::~:.:~
~IS.-surpnslsbapeng
Y w ·.
iion
ts m poor_ , .to. w~ re-e1ec . •
and lack of discipline IS one maJ~
re~n wby,
. .
H1~ sexu~ explOits 10 Arkans~
combined w1tb overexposure an
lack or focus 10 Wasbmgton bave
·
.. WI·th
left the WI·despread _IIDpre_ssiO!)
the public th~t wb1~~ Ch!lton m~~
mean weU, be s not presidential.
The public does not expect the
same semi-royal dignity in a speaker o~ the House, bu_t Gingrich is
~o 10 dang~ or letting controver~1es over b1s personal conduct
mterfere w1th b1s abihty to accoot-

ili

•

PRoGRaMS, '{oU
l.eFTi$T ~l.iTiST
FR~t.0&lt;.:1DeR ~UM!

8~ST

FIINDR31SeR

VJe'\le ~'JeR
Jl:i!P·

plish
his ambitious polilicallasks.
Wbetber
or not. as some pundits
contend Gingrich's and Clinton' s ·
lack of 'self-control springs from
similar psychological origins both lost tbeir fathers early in life,
had sometimes unstable upbring.
ings and marital difficulties, etc. lack of discipline is a common
. n·
.
charactens c.
Tbe most recent case, of course,
was Gingrich's speech to the
_Republican National Commiuee,'
where he'd planned a brief defense
of his controversial book deal, but
ended u in a tirade against adversaries s~cb as former Speaker Jim
Wri bl D-Texas, and House
Dem~ts David Bonior ofMicbian and Barney Frank of Masg
sacbusetts
This c~nduct is of piece with
8
Gin rich's effort on TV to explain
b' gallegalion that tbe Clinton
IS .
. . of the "counWhile H~~se IS part tha
tercu:I:C ~ ~~g~nlecen~ ~~::;
ter 0 ~:e _ a char e Gingrich
of ~gced
dmit bl should
001
was or
to a
have made.
Gingrich's 'tendency toward
excess ("immaturity," one ally
calls it) gets transferred to his
allies, as wben House Republicans
moved to .stifle Democrats wbo
wanted to talk about the book Oeal
on tbe floor recel)tly, pealing a
spectacle for evening television .
· The book deal itself is an example of Gingrich's inability to postpone gratification - in the form of
financial security desperately
sought by his wife and himself ~
in order to accomplish a greater
good, a transformillion of the entire
. .
government ...
· If botb Clinton and Gmgncb ·
. prove Wtable to controllbemselves,
the likely beneficiaries are sucb
fiercely disciplined Republican
presidential contenders as Sens.
Bob Dole of Kansas and Phil
Gramm of Texas, although even
Dole shows tendencies to get
. knocked off his game, be was on
health care and now Mexico, under
politi.cal pressure from Gramm.
·
Clinton and Gingrich actually
could help each otber achieve dis·
cipline - eacb, by looking at tbe
otber' s behavior, conld see a graphic example of wbatto avoid.
(Morton Kondncke is executive editor ot Roll CaD, tbe news·
paper of Capitol HUI.)

as

Mast er·.0 f vI•tr I•0 I g et s New
. t ed
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· Newt doesn't like being Newted.

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w~ selling bis office for person~
gam. Corporate tyc.ooos, mov1e
s_l!lrs, professional athletes and .blgume drug dealers malce tbat kind of

I don't know Ibis for sure, as I
bave oo sources on House Spel!)&lt;er
Gingrich's staff and no magical
mell!ls of diyioing bis tbo~~ts. I
Joseph Snear
am JUSI plecmg together tb1s JUdg·
,.. _
menl about bis atJilude on being
New ted (a ',variation of ''nuked,'' money, but it is unseemly for pubpronounced '_'NEW: led") from lie servants to casb .in while they
what be! bas satd Jl\lbltcly about the are still on the public payroll.
experience.
OK, Newt fumed, be would ·
As most alert ~itizens know ~Y forego the big advance and lake
now, Newt negotiated a $4.5 mil- only royalties . The opposition
lion contract to ~ecord b1_s ram- pointed out that Ibis could make
blings and recu~ng erup~ons of him even more eager to make Murtechnobabble, wb1ch would !ben be doch happy, as Newt's rewards
assembled anU markele&lt;l as a rook. would be liilked directly to the pubAcwaUy there would be t:wo books, . lisber's promotional efforts.
~ne the volume of Newt s meditaThen .came the stunning news
uons, ,tb~ other an anth~logy he that while Newt's deal was in
would ed1L ~problem IS !bat be negotiation, be bad actually met
was dealing w1th HarperColhns. a with Murdoch and one of his botpublishing bouse owned ~Y Rupert shot lobbyists. Newt's spokesman
Murdoch, the Austrahan, born said the three bad "only passed llie
med1,a _mogul who owns the Fox time of day." Murdocb's prolocuteleviSIOn network and wbo often tor said the speaker, tbe magnate
~.
bas business before. the U.S . and the lobbyist bad spent a few
EDITOR'S NOTE: Mike FelnsUber bas covered events in Wash· . Congress, balf~fwb1ch_1Soverseeo moments dis~~ssiog "br~ad
":lngtnn since 19611,
·
by the old scnbbler b1mself, Mr. natwnal ISSues. Tbe oppos111on

.
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cb~ of,!he Democratic Party.
It was J~SI · one more chapter m
tb~ c~ntinui.ng saga of Newt Gi~gnch s etbtcal problems, •' sa1d
Rep. David Bonior, D-Micb. "The
perce_ption of impn;&gt;priety, ~otto
mentmn the potenual confliCt of
interest... cannot be ignored," said
Rep. Carrie Meek, D-Aa, from the
House floor.
That's when Newt decided be
didn't like being Newted.
Let's panse here to get a beuer
idea of what Newting is all about.
It is ·lbe practice of demonizing the.
opposition by saying the meanest, .
nastiest, most despicable, squalid,
vile and vulgar things you can
about them. Newting was invented
by .Newt Gingrich biinself during .
bis backbencb days of tbe 1980s.
Tbe Democrats were not worthy
adversaries. They were "weird," ,
''bizarre,'' ''socialist.'' Speakers
Carl Albert, :rip O'Neill and Jim
Wright were a "trio of muggers."
Wright (wbo deserved censure but
not Dtalicious assault) bad a "Mussolini-likeego" and was "the most
corrupt speaker in ·lhe 20th centu-

Sara Eckel

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C 1995 by NEA. Inc.

"And so ~ the battle continues!"
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a

·Meigs announcements

l42" I

,...

Above ·normal temperatures
highlight arrival of February Accident leaves two injured

Al lT()

IIOi\IE

DISCOUNT·:

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Cox. set to fire office staff

GOP lobbies for cutbacks

~RNE~~:~

.j(}

Hospital news

voe;~bu·· ~~~::.~~:0~.;•:~~ ~\i:!~.··,

.Q%t~~!ii~~-1~·~f!a-

~~~~:::::::e;:i::)d:e

dancers are not a group most certain floors," says Karen Nuss·
Americans are going to concern baum, cbair of tbe Women's
themselves with. But every Ameri- Bureau at the Department of Labor.
can - whether tbey approve Of Ibis ' 'And they bear financial responsiprofession or not- should be con- bility as opposed to making the
ccrned about the practice of requir. minimum wage.''
ing employees to pay to work.
.
Nussbaum Says there is nothing
"Tbis is an odd set of facts wrong with independent contr!ICI·
whicb raises ~ CO!IUDon problem,.. ing when the contractor bas a marsays Larry Engelslcin, an -attorney ketable skill tbat gives tbem bar·
of the Service Employees lntemJ!- gaining power, But, she says. too
tiona! Union. '• And IbiS could baJl- often tbese ''independents'' are
pen to·anybody." The 5EIU repre- janitors, painters lind farm workers
sents worlcers ·m more conventional - who can be considered indepen,
service occupations, sucb as build- dent if tbey bring tbeir own sbort
ing maintenance and health care.
hoe to work. '
Engelstein see~ a breaking down
Tbese situations, says Nuss- .
of the traditional ·system of ·baum, '.'defy any sort of logical
employment - you know, the one sense mat people are working for
"""' .,...orms
_.,
wbere a Wuuer
a service themselves."
for a employer and that employer
As members of Congress insist
pays tbem money. More and more · . that tbey want Atitericans to work.
workers ~e no longer employees; tbey would do weU to ensure that
!bey are mdependent contractors
Americans can afford to work.
francbisees, owner-operators.
'
Sarah Eckel Is a syndle~ted
. These till~ may sound iu)prcswriter fnr Newspaper Enterprise
s1ve, but lbe reality of tbe work is
Allsodation. ·
far from liberating. Not only are
(For Information on bow to
independent contractors bereft of communicate electronically with
tbe protective rights traditional
this columnist and others, con·
employees bave, many of them,
tact America Online by caiUng l·
like the Pacers dancers, must pay to
800-8.P'fi364, ext. 8317.)
work.
"People who worli in arl office
Keith and Kenny Cash, who are
building can find themselves· in the
twins, caught touchdown passes in
position of buying tbe right to clean
separate games in the NFL in 1993.
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EMS units
record .four
.c alls for aid

When it costs too much to work
When most people tbink of an dealing with strip-joint owners, for
independent contrac(or, tbey pic- . heaven '·s sake - what did they
lure some sort of tradespersoo - a expect?
plumber, an .electrician, or even a
II' s true that an experienced topbairdresser. Rarely do lbey think ol
a topless dane&amp;. .
Tbat, however, is wbat many
exotic dancers and strippers are.
They pay a fee to a lounge owner less dancer can make. $200 to $300
for tbe op'portunity to dance and in tips on a good night. But there
. make lips, wbicb tbey keep. They are also bru) nights, rainy nights,
also set tbe\r own bours and work afternoons. After doorme·n, disc
in as many differentclubs.as they · jockeys and bllrtenders are given a
like.
·
percentage of the tips - on top of
· The managers of Pacers Lounge the kickback to management in San Diego set up a slightly dif· some women found tbat lbey were
ferent system for their dancers and . barely breaking even, after an
waitresses, one that combines the eigbl-bour shift
worst ·or both worlds for• tbe
"A girl will stay as long as she
employees, an4 one .Q.Ver wbicb tbe bas to star so tllat she doesn'tlose
dancers- wbo recently formed money,' say Suzie, a Pacers
their own union - are suing. A dancer/wailress who asked mat bee
.complaint filed by tbe Hotel last name not be used. "Sbe can
Employees Union of San Diego always come ·bome with $10 or
states that lbe Pacers dancers were $20, but that's ridiculous. Thai's
required to pay their employer $S less tban minimum wage."
for eacb hour they worked. The fee
Although the attorney for Pacers
was imposed even though tbe declined Ill comment for Ibis stOry,
dancers were reg_ular employees of officials at the Hotel and Restau·
Pacers, wbo were given set work rant Workers Union say that IIUIDscbedules and, according to tbe agement's argument for the $5
union and the dancers, forbidden give-back bas been that each dance
from w&lt;rling in any other clubs.
is a product of tbe club, just a8 a
Big deal, you say . Topless beer would be, and that they are
r:' dancers make far more than tbe entitled to a sbare of tbat revenue.
. average working stiff. Plus they are
. Rig)ltJy or wrongly, topless

Ruth Bnidford, Racine, died Tuesday, Jan. 31, 1995 at bee residence .
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ja&amp;:t few GOP governors.
Arrangtments will be announced by lbe FISher Funeral Home in Middle- • Kemp's decision not to enter the
·'The aJntesl for the Republl~
port.
1996 Republican presidmtial chase presidential nomination i&amp; wide
•
bighligllled anew the enormou·s open," 'GOP Chairman Haley Barfill,.
fund-raising demands caused by bour said after Kemp bowed oul :
the race's early stan and heavily
" This creates a buge bole in the
front-loaded primary calendar.
field,"
said Ralph Reed, executive
Long Bottom church hoots
Financial aid workshop ~tel
Kemp, the former New Y.ork director of Pat Robertson •s ChrisThe Faith Full Gospel Cburcb of
A fmancial aid worbbop open congressman and Reagan ,administian Co;Wiion. "There Is an awful
Long Bouom will bost pastor to all Meigs County blgh ·school tration housing secretary. cited the lot
of money and an awful lot or
Robert Bell of Parkersburg, W.Va .. seoiors and their parents will be grueling fund-raising requirements grassroots
support that bas been
with preacbinll and singins at 7 held Thursday, 7 p.m. at the Meigs as be announced Monday tbat he waiting to see wbat Jack would
High Scbool cafeteria
Columbus
p.m. Friday.
would not seek the GOP nomina- do.··
lion.
Kemp sai4 be was likely to
Legion lllftting set ·
Board seta date
"Money raising is pure muscle endorse a candiliate'. bot not immeRacine Post 602, American and grit and tenacity, and I just
Tbe Star Mill Park Board will
Cincinnati
bol&lt;lli meeting at 1 p.m. Thursday Legion, will meet Thursday, dinner want to talk about the peso and the diately, and be would' not offer his
at 6:30 p.m., meeting to foUow at flat tax," Kemp said, plllllising to views on those already campaignat tbe park office.
ing. Among Kemp backers, lbere
7:30p.m.
stay active in the GOP Issues was instant talk of encouraging one
Revelation seinlo.r
debate from the sidelines of tbe or his close allies - Florida Sen .
W. VII.
The Ash Street Freewill Baptist Smorgubord Sunday
presidential race.
Connie Mack ~ perhaps Mississip· A smorgasbord will be beld
Cburcb in Middleport will C?J!tinue
AI tbe 1992 Republican conven- pi Sen. Trent Lon - to consider
to bosl a seminar on Revelation tbts Sunday atlbe Lottridge Communi- tion, Kemp was the favorite when
ty Center, located on Athens Coun- delegates were polled on _their pref- tbe race.
week. All are invited.
Kemp, the 59-year-old former
ty Road 53.
erence for tbe. 1996 nonunee. Now pro quarterback witb roots in .beth
VFWtolllftt
tbe title or front-runner belongs to New York and Californill, Is .an
Tuppers Plains VFW PQst 9053 Lndge to n.et
.
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole ·advocate for tax cuts at the expense
will meet Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
Harrisonville Lodge 411, 7:30 · ofKansas.
·
of. balancing the b~dget.
·
the
ball.
A
round
and
square
dance
p.m.
Saturday at the Masonic
~ Msociared Ptt~ss
The GOP jockeying Is under
wiU be held Saturday, 8 to II p.m. Lodge wilb work in the E.A .
unusually early, in part
at the ball. Tbe Smoky Mountain degree. Refreshments will be way
because President Clinton is conDrifters wiU play.
served.
sidered highly vulnerable. But an
even bigger reason is that so many
states
bave moved up their primary
By The Associated Press .
7:40am.
dates
thai
three-fourths of the conUnseasonably warm conditions
. Wea~er fore~t:
.
Tbe accident occurred about vention. delegates will be decided
A one-car accident caused by
wiU greet the arrival or February in
Tomgbt. .. Bec.ommg cloudy. icy roads resulted in no serious 4:37 p.m. on Basban Ro;~d near
in a six-week stretch beginning
Ohio. The National Weather Ser- Lows from tbe m1d 20s to around· injuries outside. Racine Monday, · Morning Star Road, recmls show.
with Iowa's February 1996 caucusvice says temperatures tonight 30.
Ms. Reitmire, 26, was driving
accot,ding to tbe Meigs County
proba!lly won't fall below 30 'aod
_ Wedn_~:~&lt;!B~·::C::~oudy. Scattered Sberilf' s Department reports.
nortb when her car went off the es. II! additiQo to Dole, the active
bigbs on Wednesday could be in ~now sliowers noftb. A ch!lnce of
Charles Whiulogton ;md right .s ide of !he road and tben candidates include former Vice ..;.
the mid-40s. ·
ram or snow shower~ S?uth. H1ghs Yvonne Reitmire, both of Long turned 180 degrees around, bitting
President Dan Quayle, Texas Sen.a- Slate Auto's already low
Some rain or snow showers may from the upper 30s to m1d 40s.
Bouom, were later treated and a tree on lbe left side of the road, Phil Gram·m, Pennsylvania Sen .. ·
premiums can be ·
occur on Wedne'sday, forecasters
.
Extended foreo:ul:
.
released from Veterans Memorial reports stated. Tbe 1984 Ford Arlen . Specter and former Ten said. ·
Thursday ... A c~ance, of flurt:Jes Hospital, according to a nursing Tempo was heavily damaged wben
nessee Gov . Lamar Alexander.
reduced even more by
Fair skies are expected Tburs- north~ast..Otherwtse ~:ur. Mon_ung supervisor.
it stopped on its side.
Commentator
Patrick
Buchanan,
insuring
bolh your car
day and Friday with temperatures a lows m the low and rrud 20s. H1gbs
No citations were issued,
Erin Reltmire, 5, and Corey
and home wilh the State
lillie cooler.
10 lbe_ 30s.
Reitmire; 4, both of Long Bottom, records show. Two ftre trucks from who cballenged President Bush in
The record.hlgb temperature f~
Fnday .. . A chance of snow sustained no injuries, according to· tbe Racille Volunteer Fire Depart· the 1992 Republican primaries,
Auto Companies .
Ibis date at the Columbus weatbe' ~bowers. Lows in lbe 20s and highs the Meigs County Sheriffs Depart· ment and the Racine emergency also is considering the race, as are a
station was 62 degrees in 1917 m tbe 30s.
.
squad responded to the scene.
ment reports.
Lei us tell you just how
while the recQrd low was -5 in
Saturday... A chance_ of fl~1es
·1955. Sunset..lonigbl wiU be at5:49 n~ast...&lt;)~se f~. Monung
much your savings can
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at lows m the 20s. H1gbs m the lower
be.
.
· ·
~~ to around 40.
. COLUMBUS (AP) - The fired. lie said hiring decisions are
state's new inspector general p~ up to the inspector general. ·
·oaAN . L~
to replace lbe entire staff of Oblo s
Some critics of the firings say
(Continued from Page 1)·
private c~mpanies collect unpaid top watchdog agency, according to tbey could bamper tbe _office's
effectiveness. ·
·
Insurance Se,·vice&lt;:
transfer Medicaid. with few if any taxes from scoffiaws. He said lbe published reports.
The
Dayton
Daily
News
report·
"Tbis
could
have
an
adverse
strings" to full state con trot In IRS believes $80 billion in taxes
return, be said, states would bave to owed every year could be collected ed today that Donald Cox would effCl:l on the ongoing investiga·
214 EAST MAIN
agree to accept less than the rough- If federal 'enforcement efforts were replace all four members of tbe lions," s3id Senate Minority LeadPOMEROY
agency •s slllff.
er Robert Boggs, D-Jefferson.
ly II percent annual grpwlb tbe strong enough.
Cox,. a former Gallia County
Deputy Inspector General
992-6687
program bas recently seen,
"It's not fair to tbe guy who
Pleas
judge,
told
The
Common
Ricbard
Emmons
said
be
is
disapRep. Jim Lightfoot, R-Iowa, . pays bis tax~" to let others cheat,
Columbus Dispatch for a story pointed in tbe firings, but recogwho chairs tbe House Appropria- Lightfoot satd.
.
Although tbe Republicans published today that be wanted his nizes Cox's rigbl to bring in
lions Commiuee's subcommittee
.State Avro
replacements. Emmons bas been
that oversees tbe Internal Revenue remain undecided about precisely own staff in the office.
"I wanted people wbo sbare my with the office s;.ce May 1993.
1nsuranc:e Companies·
·. Service, said in an interview that be where lbe savings wiU come from, ·
philosophy
in
running
the
office.
I
was intrigued by the 'idea of letting a timetable for action is beginning
bave nothing against these folks .
toemerge. .
·
It's
a very small office, and I bave
· House Republicans plan to
to
have
trust in my people," he
begin work as ·early as next week
said.
'
. on a revised budget for the current
Wbcn
be
becomes
inspector
· · fiscal year that would outline $200
biiUon worth of savings to fmance general on Monday, Cox will take
their proposed tax cuts. House over more than 50 pending cases,
Budget Committee sessions would including one involving Gov.
· Uniu of tbe Meigs County begin a few days after President George Voloovicb's chief or staff.
The case centers on allegations
Emergency Medical Services Clinton unveils his fiscall996 bud·
Paul Mifsud persuaded a
tbat
recorded four calls for assistance get next Monday, giving RepubliMonday. Units responding lnclud- cans a cbaoce to see what the Cincinnati coni!'BCu.' to drop a lawsuit in exchange for future state
. ed:
Wbite'House wants to do firsL
RACINE
Then, w&lt;rt would begin on bills business. Mifsud bas denied any
wrongdoing.
4:37 p.m., squads and volunteer actually. providing those cuts.
The contractor's lawsuit cbalfire department to motor-vehicle
Mtei Congress' spring break in
. •f ..
• f
:
accident on Basban Road, Charlie April, the House would begin work leoged tbe administration's deci: C!IL.,
·Whittington and Yvonne Reitmire, on its own 1996 budget, including sion to expand tbe minority set·
'
~· "'I
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
plans to i:ut spending by enough to aside program to Asian-Indians . .
8:2g p.m., Smitb Ridge Road, balance the federal budget by 2002. Tbe set-aside program earmarks a
Cllester Francis, VMH.
Tbe nonpartisan Congression~l percentage of state contracts for
RUTf,.~D
Budget Office says that will take min&lt;l!ity vendors .
Voinovicb ftred Cox's predeces·
5:24p.m., County Road I, Joan- $1.2 trillion in savings, excluding
sor,
David Sturtz, after Sturtz
na Stout, O'Bieness Memorial !be $200 billion costs of the GOP
announced
plans to reopen the Mif·
·
Hospital;
tax cuts.
sud
case.
Voinovich
said be wanted
'
6:51 p.m., Old State Route 346,
"fresh
perspective"
and said the
a
•
•
Cora Butterworth, OMH.
fuiog was not related to the investigation.
·
Am Ele Power ....................... .34 3/4
Cox told the Daily News he is
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Akzo ....................................... .56 7/8
aware of tbe Mifsud case but bas
Monday admissions-none.
Ashland 011 ........ .. ;................ .32 3/8
no ~onceived notions about it. ·
AT&amp;T .....................................491n
Monday discharges ..,... none.
'I'll read tbe case, tben decide

_ _ _ _ _ _,__.;..._ __
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shallow, traitors, ~atb.etic, corrup~
incompeten~ sick. '
But it is one tbing to Newt; it is
another to be New ted. -S9 Newt,
taking umbrage at the outrageous
attacks on his. worthy eiCorts to
malce himself ricb, rev~rted to bis
old Newting days. "I atii genuine
revolutionary," be shouted to tbe
· audience at a Republican luncheon.
"They are genuine reactionaries." •
Tbe Democrats we~e guilty of
distortion and tlis.bonesty. They
would "bitterly,&lt; ferociously raise
tbe pain level of any progress we .
try to make, to create so mucb
chaos and so mucb destruction ...
·that tbey can bring us to a halt"
The irony was stunning. Newt
was offering up a perfeet descriplion of himself. The tactics be was
condemning were the tactics tbal
brought bim fame and perhaps fortune.
Newt is being Newted, and by
damn it is an enjoyable show.
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
· (For lnforinatlon on how to
0
1
even compiled·a
·
wlem·•b,................. . ........... ···· ···
lary that Newtoids could use to tact Ameria Oiillne by calUng 1· ·
Teaford, Etiiet Rife, Mrs. Mark
Newt tbe enemy: "Dceay, failure, 800-827·6364, exL 8317.)
Russell and daughter, Deborah
'.
Yost, Mrs. Richard Matheny a'!d
. .

~otic~~~ ~:e~~~se to ~~n!ial. . ~j~~~~~L~)!oe~R'. l.Jl.~~s.tb~ ?::~~wt
:;f:~;=:=.:::~~~=~i
·
~~
-f
·:-~
·
J
f::f;7
.
:
.
:
::
..
=
:..
;:;:
. _:;:
,. :.. :;:::;::-:;:1: '"' · ·~~:~~~~~::.~ ,llUinl&amp;! out that smelf test; stud Sen. Gbristopber
8
~. "e
·--r-.r-y
. . . j s·- w· .. 0 rl d
Ibis
suSpiCIOUSly like Newt Dodd ,' D-Conn ., tbe new general

.;:

..

Accu-Weatber" forecast

!

The Daily Sentlniti-Pega 3

--Area Death-- Kemp takes _hat out :
Ruth Bradford
from 1996 campaign:

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

...:.,_..,!___ _ _;...___ _....;.,_P_om-eroy---:"-M--:Iddl:-:-eport_,
O-hio
Tuesday, January 31, 1995

.The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 113·9&lt;!0)

Publ i~ hed every afternoon, Mond11y through
Friday, ,JJI Court St .• .POmeroy, Ohio , by the

Ohio Valley Publishing Cumpany/Multimcdin
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Seco nd clan postnge paid 1U Pomeroy, Ohio. ,
Mtmber: 1be Associmed f're.s.1; nnd the Ohio

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'·

I

• 1 : ..

UPTO.

Stocks

Bank ()ne ................................ l9 118
.Rob..E'i'ans ..................,_ _.,•••.- .lO.l/8.

11
Champlnlllnd............ ~ .... ~... .ll 1/4 ..
not aware that the staff bad been
Charming Shop ........,_ ....- ...6 114
City Hokllng ............ ,, ___,,.28 112
Federal Mngul .... -------·17 1/8
Goodyear TIIIR ............... --.35 7/8
K·mart .....- ........ ;, .. _ ____ .13 3/4
Tbe following couples were
Lands Eitd .......... _ , _ _ • __ .16 1/8
marriage licenses
.... in
issued
Llml"'d Jnc.............. - - .. --.17 1/8
·
the
Meigs
County
··
Multimedia Inc. ·-------.27 718
Point Bancorp ......... "''"" ____ .. 19
Judge Robert Buck.
Receiving licenses wen:: Joseph
Reliance Electric ........ _ , ,,,.30 7/8
Madison Hindy, 42, and Aleondra
Robbins &amp; Myers ....--..--.171/4
Royal Dutch ......,................... Ill S/8 Dea Vaughan-Well, 29, both of
Shoney's lnc........................... ll 7/8 Middleport; Charles ~win OberStar Bank ........... :............... -.38 3/4
bolzer, 33, and Barbara Kay &lt;;ot·
Wendy Int'l ..........:... ""~'~ "'' ... 16 1/8
teriU, 30, bDib of Albany; WiUtam
Worthlnglon lnd ....................19 3/4
Henry Tborla, 46, and Cathy Jane
Stock reP.,rts are the 1~:30 Lm. Hart, 40, both of Racine: Allen
.quotes provided by Advest of Glen Arnou, 30, )'diddleport, and
Lai Faye Turner, 28, Paneroy.
Gallipolis •

-~· v~~:~~~i~/o~flie"was · ·

Marriage licenses

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~~:::.•· · · · · · · · · · · · :· · · · · · · · =~
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Pomeroy,OH

992-6914

'Rates Outside Melp County

I

'

I

�Sports

The Daily Sent~!!

•

TUesday, January 31,1995

..

=Meigs girls rally to defeat Wellston 67-55

Tuesday, January 31, 1995

UMass extends ·winning streak;
Syracuse triumphs; Cards upset
By The Associated Press
Top-ranked Massachusetts
extended tbe nation's longest winning streak, No 10 Syracuse won a
big one in the Big East, and No. 18
Missouri banded Iowa State its ftrSt
bOIIIe loss of tbe season.
But the most memorable game
Monday night involved two
unranked teams
Towson State, a last-minute
addition to Louisville's schedule,
shocked tbe Cardinals 81-69 It was
one of !be biggest wins in lb~ bistory of the Maryland school
"Tbe kids maintai~ed their
intensity and tbey played tO win as
opposed to trying to keep from losin¥," coach Terry Truax said. " I
tbmk our kids weren't to be
denied...

.
R· S ngers
end slump

By DAVE HAJUUS,
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs outscored Wellston 21-8
in tbe second period to post a
come-from behind 67-55 victorr
over the Lady Rockets in girls TVC
basketball action Monday evening
at Wellston.
Tbe win gives the Lady
Marauders a 8.3 mark in tbe TVC,
and a 10-7 mark overall. WeUston
drops to 0-11 and 1-15 overall .
Meigs will battle Eastern on
Wednesday at h0111e.

No. 10 Syra&lt;:use 76, No. 13
Georgetown 75
At Landover, ~d., Lawrence
Moten scored 19 pomts,Jobn Wallace bad 17 points and nine
rebounds . and Syracuse took
ad'!antage of horrible free !brow
shooung by Georgetown. .
.
The Hoyas (14-4, 7-3 B1g East)
were only 9-for-26 from !be line,
compared to 18-for-24 by tb~
Orangemen {16-2,~1).
Freshman Allen Iverson led
Georgetown with 2~ points. Hoyas
center OtbeUa Hamngton was beld
to two points on 1-for-7sbooting.
No. 18 Missouri 80, No. 11 Iowa
SL 71
At Ames, Iowa, Jason Sutherland and Kendrick Moore made
key 3-pointers and Missouri overcame sensational long-range shooting by Fred Hoi berg.
.
The shots liy Sutherland and

By BOB GREENE
AP Sports Writer
The New York Rangers found
the perfect antidote to cure their
early season blabs: the OUawa Senators.
Tbe defending Stanley Cup
champions lost fOtil' of tlieir frrst
: WASHINGTON (AP) - Base- system tbe next clay. Spring train- five games in Ibis truncated season,
ball owners B!ld players are about ing is scheduled to start on feb. 16, and scored a total of only nine
·to talk again, just as Pnlsident Oin- and teams already have been sign- goals.
Then the Senators came to town.
-ton ordered. The problem is ll!at ing replacement players to sefVe as
The
Senators, wbo have yet to beat ·
:Cven !bough they' n be in the same strikebreakers.
room, the two sides seem no closer
When the latest negotiations the Rangers since coming into the
:tOgether.
collapsed, management was insist- league two years ago, have yet to
: Cecil Fielder, lobo Franco and ing on a plan designed to eventual- beat anybody Ibis season.
"It's not much fun to play tbe
otber striking players and union ly reduce tbe percentage of reven_ue
Stanley
Cup champs when they are
~ffici als met for about six hours
going to players from 58 percel\t to
in
a
hungry
mood," Ottawa's
Monday. Management' s negotiat- 50 percent. Tbe union's 1110st
Alexandre
Daigle
said . "They
ing ~ommittee was scheduled to recent proposal was aimed at matwere
all
over
our
net.''
me~ today, one day before bar- . ing sure tbe gap between small and
None more so than Adam
·gaining resumes.
,
large markets didn't get'any bigger.
Graves,
wbo recorded his fi ftb
. "We'll see what they've got to
"If we get a proposal from tbem .
career
bat
aick and added an assist,
.offer," Fielder said. "If they don't !bat is not significantly different
and
Petr
Nedved,
wbo scored twice
·tiave anything to offer, then we!re from the last one, our response will
in
the
Rangers'
6-2
victory of the
just going to be talking about the not be significantly different froin
Senators
Monday
night.
.same old things. What they have on our last one," union' bead Donald
"It's not a personal thing,"
·lhe table isn't anylbinl! .worth con- Febr said.
Graves
said of the four-point out:sidering."
· .
Last week, Clinton ordered !be
burst
"We
needed a win, period."
. Chuck O'Connor, the owners' talks to resume. He set a deadline
In
other
NHL games, it was
·c hief Ia wyer, admitted there of Feb. 6 for progress, and said that
2,
Boston
1; Toronto 2,_
Florida
·wouldn't be any "maja- changes" if there isn'tany movement, be will
Dallas
1;
Detroit
4,
Edmonton 2;
:in tbe new proposal they intend to ask mediator BiU Usery to come up
and
San
lose
2,
Chicago
I.
make.
with bis own prop!!Sal for a solu"We're going to talk abou.t it lion.
.witb our committee tomorrow," be
Neitber Clinton nor Usery can
Said. "We're going to put a menu force a settlement. Clinton, bowevbefore tbem.''
cr. could ask Congress to enact one
Talks broke off Dec. 22, and as law.
owners imposed their salary cap- · Otber politicians, meanwhile,
are pressing for some action.
Tbe Division II girls' sectional
touroament at the University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Center will run
from Monday, Feb. 13 until
Wednesday, Feb. 15.
Meigs and Waverly will play on
· The Eastern Jr. High girls' has- foe Federal Hocking . 74-14 in Feb. 13 at 7 p.m. Tbe winner of
ketball team bas been putting another lopsided tilt. Brannon led that game will face top-seeded
together a great season and is cur- !be winners witb 25 points, Karr River Valley on Feb. I 5 at 7 p.m.
bad 19, Hayman 12, and four each for the upper-bracket cbampi.rently undefeated at 11.0.
Eastern claimed a 42-17 win from Wiggins, Mary Styers, and onsbip.
over Southern. Eastern was led by Leah Sanders. A. LinscOit bad five
Following that game, Gallia .
Jessica Brannon's 19''points, while · for Federal.
Academy and Jackson will play at .
Finally, in its last game Coach 8:15p.m. in the lower-bracket tide
Stephanie Evans and Valerie Karr
teamed up for' six points. Southern Paul Brannon's troops 'claimed a game.
49-13 win over Vinton. Brannon
: !Vas led by Kelly Sayre with 12.
Tbe upper-bracket champion
· In mixed 1\(:tion, Eastern defeat- · led the parade with 20, Karr bad will play in !be district tournament
ed cross-county foe Meigs 33-18, nine, Evans eight, and Hayman at Chillicothe High School on
·
. 'ed by Brannon's 16 points. Valerie five.
Wednesday, Feb. 22 at 8:15 p.m.
Eastem bas a couple regular sea- The lower-)lracket champion will
;Karr added seven, Julie Hayman
·hx, and Ste.phanie Evans four. son games and is entering tbe play in !be district tournament at
:Meigs was led by Tricia Davis's Mtller tournament with an 11-0 Chillicothe High School on Thursmark.
·iix.
day, Feb. 23 at 6:30p.m.
:; At Southewestern, Eastern real:ly came to life at Southwestern,
·taking a 37-6 halftime advantage
: ~n route to a 72-12 finale. Brannon
:bad 27 points, Karr bad nineteen,
·Ann Wiggins six, and five each

:aaseball talks to resume

Division·II girls'
sectional tourney
pairings posted

Eastern junior high girls
:unbeaten in 11 starts

t
'11:1

1994 HO)t;NiDD~APAiSSF~

~994

CIVIC
4DOOR DEMO

$1400 .

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (!&gt;,P)
~ When Forman attacked Marshall's strength and won, the Paladios were well en route to winningthe game.
Furman sliced tbrough Marsball's full-roun press Monday to
post a 77-68 win over tbe Herd. It
was MU's fl.ftb straight defeat.
"We did get a lot of easy bas·
kets. That's the price you pay for
pressing," said -Furman's Steve
·
Harns.
"The coaches kind of looked to
me to step up and handle the pressure," said Furman gu!lfd Pat Marshall. '.'Once we beat tbe pressure,
!be key to the gaine was finishing
it. We bad to make them 'pay for
'extending the game to 94 feet."
. Billy Dono;van, Marshall's ftrS,I·
year coach, agreed tbat Furman s
ability to handle the press was the
k
e~.'Tbey didn't guard anybody."

1994ACCORD
' DEMO

SAVE

$2000

Wagon, 7passenger. air,
automatic. y~k&gt;w. woodgrain .

$7939

Per
Mo.

Hoc:.kllll Dlvblon
I

Federal Hockins .......7
SOUTHERN ............8
Alexander .................5
Miller........................ s

2
3
4

90.DODGE SHAD.OW
2 door. wh~e. 5 speed,
one 0Wf1er.

9 4
7 7
4 8
4 8
3 10

8
9
5

7
7
9

EAS1ERN................2

6

3

trimble
.....................2
•.

7

2 10

Tonight's pmes:
Aleltander
Hockin8 at Milh7
at Nell-York
II Southern
County at WellSIOD
•Welbton

ROd, 5 speOd,
air, power moon roof.

$4995

3

.

ATHENS IIC•l~t•m· CARS
618 EAST MAIN ST., POMEROY
OPEN MON.-FRI. 9--6; SAT. 9-5

MaaterCard!Vla&amp;IDiscover

992-6674

TJl'E !J{j{ppY :Jiof){,v5t noPL'E
810 E. STATE ST. ATHENS OHIO 594-8555
l ..;a;~a..a;~-.~maull..aa:B~~~~~ii~~~· ~~Zial~;r,
'.) ·
;-..,,·,~·1' ~

{

said other factors also were
involved.
"At times, we took some bad
shots," Moore said. "We didn't
execute down the stretch. lbey
Tb bad
•
us congested in tbe paint.
at s
wby we bad to sboot some many
threes. They did a good job breaking tbe press. We got a liltle
.fatigued in tbe 'end, and they got a
lot of easy looks."
Harris and Jeff .Sexton led Furman (7-11, 34 Southern Conference) witb 21 apiece. Moore led
Marshall (10-8, 2-4) with 18 points
while Trqy Gray added 16 points
and J1nk Brown bad 11 .

354

l. Collllold .

(2)13-1

222

6 , W001ter Triway

1•2

7, Oilfield HIS. Trinllr
11·2· 1•1
I, LOodoa ·
1·2
11
9, Wilrleoo
(I) 12·2
Sl
10, Vu Wert
12·2
-49
Othen receivtftli 12 ot ~poilU : 11,
Twl,.bur'J Chomberlio (I) 36. 12, Cob.
St. Ol•le~ M . 13, New Coacord John
Oluo 21. 14, St. Poria Orobom 26. 1!,
1'"'"""'
2, Cob.l!alti•J

~

..

.

Zanesville swept around Canton
McKinley and into second behind
Cleveland Heights, which owns a
55-point lead over the Blue Devils.
Springfield Nortb was fourth. and
Toledo SL lobo's fifth.
Making their fnt appearanc~ in
tbe top 10 were defending Division
II state champion Wauseon, now
eighth, and Archbold, in at lOth in
Division III.
River Valley and defending
Divisioq 1 state champ Westerville
Nortb, which fell from fourth to
ninth with a pair of losses, each
dropped five positions for the
biggest falls of the poll.

I , Ma-ioo Ri•er Valley

10, Ardlbold

1).2

12· 2

l,Oidfart
6. 11ol....
1. lloiJorJ

Cell.....
10.
l'bll.

I, Corrli..,tal

89 NISSAN 4X4 TRUCK, 14840, AM/FM caaa., cuatom
lab·loe,a. rear alicia., aport wheala ...... :..................... $88Q5
811
RANGER XLT, LONG BI;D, 14837, A!T, A/C,
AM/FM i:aaa., topper, aport wheela, bed mt.......... $511115
90 NISSAN TRUCK, 14824, black, auto. Irena., bedllner,
A/C, AM/FM ............................................................... $8785
89 CHEV. S-10, 14807, brown, AMIFM cua., rear atap
bum1111r, dual mlrrora ............................................... $48115
90 MAZDA EXTRA CAB TRUCK, 14740, rear aiata,
AM/FM caaa., Rallya whnla, low mllaa ................. $711115
91 CHEV. S-10, 14822, red, cuatom atrlpea, aport
wheela, bedllner, rear allde, AM/FM Cllll ............... $5885
92 CHEV. S-10 SUPER CAB, 14780, Tahoa, V-8 eng.,
rear flip aeata, A/C, tilt, cloth Int. ............................ $1995
93 NISSAN KING CAB, 14785, rect, AfT, AM/FM C. .l.,
rear flip aeata, bedllner......................................... $11,195
91 PONTIAC TRANSPORT VAN, 141132, V-8 eng., A/C,
AfT, till, crulae, 7 Pua., P. wlndowa, cloth Int. ...... $1800
89 CHEV. S-10, 14809, aport whtlela,-ftberglaaa topper,

«bb Robab 70. Tea.ae.ee Tech 64
Te. .· Pan America~~ 70, Loulafua

Ill

9·2

66

41

N........ _....,_."

dual mlrrora, AM/FM ............ :••~ ............ ~ ................... S5M5

'rd=

AtAGI-

. 17 ..... ~......

. AI'IW•U'I' .
EASn:IIN CONFKIIKNCE .
Atloork tii,Woo

,

W L

3l I
New YCI't .... ,..
21 14
8&lt;10i!IP·..........
16 l6
New l.,..y .. ..... 17 29
Orludo.. ........

,

(I) 14-0 291
(I) 12.0 231

12-1
12·1
11·1
10.1
11·2

Samford n .. Mercer 73
Soulhoro U. 11•. SB Loulaluo 108
Teu.-M.ua 76, Mtddle Tema. 69
Tua.ee 62, Soulh floricll 57
TealleiHC·St 1l, Muray SL 65
TOWIIOD St. II, Lou II ville 69
VM112, 1'11.-chodarloop 63
MIDWEST
Allllio ....! 19, SE Miuour163
CleYIIIIId Sl 10, S. Utah 6l. ar
Detroit 69, Wii.-MiiWMllee .59
B. DliDOil 72. Buffalo 71
EYimville 66, SW Ml11ouri Sl ,57 ·
lllloola Sr. ll.llldiaa Sl. 12
MillouriiO.Iowa Sl. 11
N.lan 59, Wlc:bltl Sl jB
Sl Loull Ill, Clllc:qo Sl 71
1
TroY St. 94, Mo.·~ City 93
ValpiniiO 72. Youoptowo St ll
W.llliooil 52, Coal Co.-Jell Sl

FAR WIST
Orud Cuyooll. CS Noclhrlclaell
Lo'l Beecb St74,1JNLV 73, C1r

DIVISION IV
· ·
I,B«IIaHillllld
(21)1S.0
340
2, Worthlolll&lt;&gt;• OuWJu
(l)ll-0 317

3. Plodlay Ub.·Be•""'
4, B-IYille Brill&lt;&gt;l

S. Ctrollna St 18, Flnridl AAM 61

Tecbl3

OtJaJ receiviqll or JnDn; polau: 11,
Cia . N. Colleac· Hill (1) 31. 12.
Clutn(llc CliDtOD·M•Ie (1) 315 . 13,
Ch lllleolhe Unlolo 31. 14, SearniiD N.
Ad&amp;ltll 29. U, Minford (I) 24. 16, Chill·
eoihe Z..oe T111Ce 23. 17, Mwtlu Peny
11. 11. Sprloj. KiDiob Rldje 16. 19,

Carey 14. 20. Wei!Jton 12.

NE L.Oulllaoa 12. bcboa St. 71
NIYy 6l, Riclunood 6Q
Rldlar&lt;l 71. N.C.-AalleYillo61

94

3,0..al'loriroyot (I) 10.1 242
4. Delta
13-2
200
s,worr.. awr.,loo (1)11·1. 190
6, OrTYille
(I) 9·2
16'7
7,Col11·2
1:17
9, Gern\IDtowD Valley View

. VI
·S ALE!

20f
N.C.-Oreer11boro 67, Uberty ·5 ·

maD &amp;II,

X•vter, atJall, Loyola, 01.75
SOIJ'I'IIWUT
Art.·UtUe Rock 102. Soulh Atamo

3ll
2ll

(30) 13-0
(2) 11·3

E. TeaDCIM SL 76, Ci*'tl $1 .
Pllrnao 77, Mronhall61
oeorp Soulhero l9,lloYidaoo 52
Ooorila Sl 12, Floilda AUorrlic 63
Mluliolppl St. II, Nicbolb Sl. 6l
N. C..IIDo A&amp;T 93. Bolhuoo-Cook·

47 .

Bellcwell. l6,M•o• 13.
DIVISIONW

9.

•

12·2

B. Kelltllcty 7$, MoRheod.Sl6l

Miami ..........

w..l .... a .......

14

21

II 21
PhiladeiFfti• .... .... 12 11

1156
139

"'-

Ga

.6$9

1

.219

" 23

.114

.311 18 Ill
.310 l9lll
.m 20 112
.212 22

C.tralotrillo-.

m

CbarloUe ..........
CleYIIIIId .........

11

lodlul ...........
Clllc:qo..........
Atluta ...........
Muw.. tee .......
lle&lt;roll ...........

Ia.

New
'l'lllc:nw• cc 11-2 10
Otblnrecd'f'i!llllormorepoiiD: II,
DeClrol! Rivenide rtl ol6. 12, Porra~R&gt;ulh
Eoal (I) 16. ll, S 01. Cllh. Ceol. 1!.
foft Lonmlo (I 12.

26 16 .619
26 16 .619
2• 11
.m
21 21 . .lOO
19 24
16 26
1• 26

llll

5

.4t2 71n.
.311
10
.3l0
II

r--...

r.

93 &amp; 92 Models, 60 Mo. 9.15% APR; 91 &amp; 90 Models, 54 Mo. 9.20% APR; 89 &amp; 88 Models, 48 Mo. 9.24% APR;
80 Models, 38 Mo. 11 .08% APR; 84 Models, 24 Mo. 11 .13% APR •
.
.

~tern at

WELLSTON • Andrea Wyatt
2-0-0-4, Mandee Argabright 11-02=24, Sandy Sickels 1-0- 0=2 ,
Nikki Downey 3-1-0=0, Dana Stevison 5-1:2=15, TOTALS 22-l5=55.
Meigs
10 21 22 14=67
Wellston 17 8 7 23=55

BARE
BONES

tio1Pll3

M_,.. 11

5

5

'
(21) 16-0
(3) 13-ll

. C'hlritMOD Sol1hmt 10, COIIlal C.·
ollna63
Call. or 0\arletton 82, Aa. 1Dic:ru-

.

~L~L

Belpre .......................? 2
Wellston ... ... ~ .. ·-= ---~ 4
MEIGS ............... :.... 3 6
Vinton County .......... 3 7
. Nelsooville-York......2 '1

.

llla67•

c...,bell73. Cool Florida 61
c .... oory 16. s~e~aoo u. ar

LOS ANGELES (AP) - After Gercbas claimed she saw four men
WES'RIIN CONFKIIINCE
months of anticipation, OJ. Simp- running from near the aime seene
1•.
MWw.. ~
son fmally revealed his alibi: night tbe night of the murders.
W L "'Gl
Utah ............
ll 10 .767
horll 'b
, ....
Cl!!r~ l!l~o plans to show four
golf.
.
·
Su Alltoolo....... ll 1• .641
6
IIJb.~ .... ~
· He was bitting golf balls toward minutes of Ql!ttakes from 'Sil!lpaARaAIL '
.
.....
"''"""'"'
u
·~
.§1~
§
1/.l
19 22 .ol63
13
Aao.n ... u his children's sandbox shortly after sen is recent exercise . video, wliicli
Dallil............
lt'i 24 .400 15 Jn.
TORONTO BLUE 1AYS- Si1ilod
.shows
the
ex-running
back
stretcb·
10 p.m. on June 12- the same day
MiaoetOll .... ....
10 12 .211 22 1n
IJoyt Ridtlrdl ud Villar Rojol, pltdlen.
PodlkD!bat. his attorney told jllfliS earlier, ing, marching, complaining about
N-IAI'Itoalil .......... . 34 9 .191
N£W. YOIIK MBTS-A.reed to
Simpson bad suffered an arthritis bis lmees and later doing pushups.
s-te............
29 II
.125 3 Ill
tonna wllb Tim McC1ner ud Bob Mut·
LA. 1.Wn ........ 26 13 .1561
6
flare-up so severe be struggled to Tbe prosecution presumably wants
;'~-... l&gt;otwo-,_co_.
Sacruneato ....... 24 17 .SIS
9
·to counter defense arguments !bat
· shuffle cards.
Portlud
..........
22 19 .ll7
II
N..-llodlq._
"I have no doubt that tbe prose- Simpson's football injuries would
Ooldea s... .... ... 12 27 .301 20
ANAHEIM MI(lllrY DUCKS-ReLA. Clippera .........1 31 .1!9 2111l
called M•t Perrter. defeaNmal, rrom
cution will have a field day with have prevented bini from commit'
Su
Diqo
of
lht
laten.•tloaal
Hockey
Ma.llr'• c-.
the varying images of Mr. Simpson ling the murders.
Selttle 109, Phlladelpbla 104
But Clark won't be allowed to
.
Atlaob 9!, Miami 91
'
~NTRBAL CAIIADII!NS-Soot
botb playing golf and being artbrit,
Phoea1a 19, Cleve11Dr112
DonakiBI'Mhw, left wm1, UJ Predfricloa
ic within a very sbort amount of counter Cochran's statement' that
De&lt;roU 102, LA. Clippon 9l
orlhe AmericiD Hoc:bly . _
·
Utah Ill. Ml-10
time," said Southwestern Universi- blood found under Ms. Simpson's
NEW YORit tSLANDBRS- ReNew J.-.ey 99, Pcwllud 91
cailed 0arW T1ylor, CCIII«, &amp;om l)gwr
fingernails didn't match hers,
ty law professor Myrna Raeder.
oflhe llltnlllooal- .._.,
-~GThe alibi also appears to contra- Goldman's or Simpson's . Clark
Ooidal Stale • New Ycwk,7:l0 p.m.
PtTISBU~OH PBNOIJll'IS- ReClwloaoiiW. . i....o,lp.m.
clllled
Philippe
DeaouYille,
palle!Jder,
argued
!bat
Cochran
quo!Cd
lines
diCt previous testimony from
llollll II Mll,...toe,l p.m.
·
rrom Oevelud of Che lalenliiJonal Hoct·
limousine driver Allan Park, wbo from a blOod test report out of conlloo"".
Houatoo.l:)() p.m.
ey ·Leque. AuiJaecl ClUe Suadltrom,
CbleoJOM LA. ....-,tO:lOp.m.
aoollodw,toCieftlood.
said Simpson answered his buzzer text.
Su AntoniO Ill SICI'UIM!DIO, 10:30
Cochran
resumed
bis
opening
at 10:56 p.ID. claiming he bad overp.m.
.
M.Mq 'oM¥o~ .....
., no. _ ............
w~~'•G....
slept and just gotten out of tbe statement Monday, setting the
. C1wiDilo" a...... 7:30p.m. .
IIABI'
stage Cor claiming a frame-up br
shower.
New/mel: 7:30p.m.
a
..
""
u.
6'7, Holy c,_,.
Woobl....o lll'blloolelpliii, 7:30
-- In all, Monday wa:s not a good investig&amp;tof!l eager to nab a celebri·
DiiQuolae 62. Tqle 5!
'p.DL
.
!Jo(... 96, Army 76
day for Simpson, who is charged ty ..
· , De&lt;rohaMlaml,7:30p.m.
' Lo:yolo. Md. 12, 51... 17
He told jurors that some of
witb murdering his ex-wife Nicole
Ooldu 511116. All•ta. 7:30p.m.
M•+·•• 19, St. ao....-...,1
Cleftload .. larllaoo.7:30 p.m.
s-16.0-•7l
Brown Simpson and ber friend Simpsqn's blood. ·given to police a
llollaro at M i - l p.m.
Well
VltafaiiiO,
Oocrp
W..tdiJ"
day after the killings, is missing,
Ronald Goldman.
Dea .. • Vllb. 9 p.m.
toD 11
'
LA. lAkin at "-lz. 9 p.m.
Superior Coun Judge Lance Ito and the blood of bis ·dead ex-wife
SOVTB
Su Arltooio .. Portlaod, 10 p.m.
AppalochlaD Sl ~. W. Coroll,.ll
unisbed defense altomeys for ~id· appeared to have been smeared on
ng witnesses ft0111 the pmecunon. a pair of Simpson's &amp;Ocks . onlbs · '----------..:........;;...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~
And in a move be called virtually after the murders.
Now, Cochran asserted, not all night of the murders, contending
unprecedCnted. Ito allowed prose"The evidence will be shown to
cutors. to make an additional 10 be contaminated, compromised and of the blood withdrawn from Simp- !bat Simpson was at his estate the .
minutes of'opening remarks today corrupted," Cocbran said. "Tbe son's arm the day after the slaylngs whole time.
"He did n&lt;it, would not, could
to address tbe defense transgres- gatba-ing of evidence was a com- can be accowtted fa-.
not,
in the time frame, commit
He
also
accused
authorities
of
plete
disaster."
sions.
bloodying
a
pair
of
socks
months
these
particular killings," Cochran
Deputy District Attorney Marcia
Cochran said the lead investigaaf~r
technicians
repmed
seeing
no
said.
Clark will be allowed to d1scuss lor carried a vial of Simpson's
alleged inconsistencies in ·the state· blood in his pocket for hours, tak- blood on those items found at the
ment of Mary Anne Gercbas, one ing it from police headquarters to foot of Simpson's bed.
Figure skating on ice was i~troCocbnui also sketched out, in
of tbe swprise witnesses mentioned Simpson's estate about 20 ·miles
duced
in Vienna by an Amencan
detail,
what
the
defense
believes
last week in defense attorney lobn- away ratber than refrigerating it at
ballet
choreographer
in 1864.
0
was tbe sequence of events tbe
nie Cochran's opening . statement. tbe aime lab.
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stereo.

Dlv. OveraU

Iam

DIVISION D
I , lloYer
2, c...-

211
3.-oiaNonlo.U (2) 12·1 251
4.a.... vA-SI.1ooopb . (1)12-3 221

said Donovan, who often refers to
bis players as "they."
"Down tbe stretc~. we took ~oo
· maqy bad shots,
be s.a1d.
','Tbllre's no reason wby a team
like Furman should shoot 55 pereenMt.'ar' shall forward Sbawn Moore

Simpson offers alibi

4 door, blue, air, automatic,

Ohio Division

.

overtime victory over nintb-ranked Ignatius that droppec\_ the Vikings
New Pbiladelpbia Tuscarawas Cen- two slots.
Conneaut moved up three rungs
tral Catholic Saturday night couldn't shake Worthington Chris- - !be biggest climb in the entire
poU - to second, with Macedonia
tian.
The Warriors, runner-up to Nordonia remaining in third. After
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley in St. Joseph came Canfield.
Aurora's lead in Division Ill Cell
the state finals a year ago, won
from
I 00 to 93 points over Columtwice including a 95-93 victory
bus Hartley. The next five teams all
over No.10 Centerburg.
Following the top two in order took advantage pf Marion River
were Fmdlay Liberty-Benton, Bris- Valley 's .68-54 loss to Lexington
tolville Bristol, Old Fort, Holgate, (and accompa!lying five-spot fall)
Dalton and Continental. With the to move up a notch: Creston Nor·
losses to the top teams, Centerburg wayne, Delta, Warren Champion ;
and Tuscarawas Catholic switched Orrville and Coldwa1Cr.
In the big-school division ,
spots, Centerburg taking over
ninth.
.
Dover's lead in Division II was
expanded from eight points a week
ago to 67 this time 31'QUnd. thanks
in large measure to second·ranked
Cleveland Villa Angela-St.
Joseph's loss to Cleveland St.

ll&lt;•- . . . . .

TVC boys•
cage standings
...

Furman hands Marshall
five fifth straight defeat

SAVE

.frob.f)e~s~~:'-l~~~;t_eaeb
bad four Cor Southwestern.
· Against Hannan Trace, Eastern
was again impressive, Ibis time
defeating the Wildcats 58-8. Brannon had 23 points, Karr 14, Davis
1ix, and Hayman five. Hineman,
Roberts, and Dmy each bad two for
HT.
- Eastern defeated future league.

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cruise. automatic.

MEIGS- Amber Blackwell 14-3=17,. Cynthia Cotterill 1-0-6=8,
Melissa Clifford 0-0-3=3, Kristen

Dusaylva 2-0-I•S, · Vanessa ·
C0111pston 5-1· 1,14, Anne Brown
0.0-0zO. Cheryl Jewell 6-0-3•15,
Taryn Doidge 2-0-0:4, Jaclyn
Swartz 0-0-1•1. TOTALS 17-S,

BeriJn Hiland mai·ntains lead in Division IV poll

.........

•

Brown, power windows &amp;locks,

II liOOf l6i'eC pOiiit l'lillje. Well$toD
bit five of 14 from tbe line for
36%. The Lady Rockets pulled in
42 rebounds wltb Nikki Downey
grabbing 14 and Agribright 10.
. Meigs rolled over Wellston
47=26 in tbe reserve game. Carissa
Ash and lenny ClifCord led tbe
winners with 10 points each. Brandi Meadows at!ded nine . Spetch
scored live for Wellston.

Scoreboard

Honda Cars

SAVE

scored stVCII poil\ts ill the ~oil. '"lliC Door nailing 22 of 48 ineluding
while Jewell added six more to five of 10 from tbree point range,
8ive Meigs the 19 point lead bead· Meigs bit 18 of 32 from the line faing into the fmal period.
56%. The Lady Marauders pulled
Mandee Agrabrigbt scored 11 down 34 rebounds with Melissa
fQurth period points and Dana Clifford grabbing seven and CotnpStevsion added eigbt as Wellston ston six . Meigs had 22 turnovers,
outscored Meigs 23-14 to close the eight assists led by Cynthia Cotter·
gap, but the Rockets fell 12 points ill and Blackwell with three each
~ Compst_
on added eight in the and· Meifs h~d 2l steals led ~y
penod for Me1gs.
Black we I wltb seven, Cottenll
Blackwell lecj tbree Marauders added five .
in double figures with 17 points,
Argabright led all scorers with
Jcwell added 15 and Compston 14 24, Stevison added 15. WeUston bit
to pace Meigs. Meigs hit 46% from 24 of 64 Cor 38% including two of
;,
.
.

By The Associllled Press
The battle between Berlin
Eastern held off an 18-10 Miller cbarity stripe where Karr .bit 5-6,
Hiland and Wortbington Christian
rally in the fourth quarter to claim a Nelsoo 2-2, and Evans 1·2.
in Division IV continued in the
58-53 Tri-VI!I!ey Co!!ferenal victoEastern bit 17-56 for 30.3 perfourth weekly Associated Press
ry over tbe Falcons bere Monday cent. while connecting on 24-37 at boys higb school basketball poll,
night in girls' bigb school basket- the line. Karr led Eastern witb 10 released Monday.
ball action. ·
. of the team's 43 rebounds. ·Eastern
Tbe top eight teams in tbe
Eastern is now 8-7 and Miller 3- bad 10 steals (Karr and Evans three
small-school division remained in
12.
.
each), 21 turnovers, I 0 assists
lockstep, maintaining their same
· Eastern was led by Jessica (Karr 5), and ten fouls .
position for the second week in a
Karr's 23 points that included a 13Miller bit 24-74, connecting on
row in voting by a statewide media
16 night at the line, ten rebounds. 3-9 trey's, and was 2-7 at the line.
panel.
and five assists. Amy Redovian Miller bad 31 rebounds, led by
And Hiland again was the No.I
had a great TitS! half, scoring ten in Hero with 13 and Plant seven, . team, followed closely by Wortbe opening half for twelve overall. wbile grabbing nine steals (Hem
thington Christian.
Redovian also grabbed SIX 4) , hayiqg 16 turnovers, eight
Joining Hiland as No.I teams
rebounds. Nicole Nelson and assists (Lanning 5) and27 fouls.
were Oeveland Heights in Division
Rebecca Evans had dual nine point
Eastern won tbe reserve game · I, Dover in Divisioo II and Aurora
effOrts. Evans additionally bad 3.6-34 led by Crystal Holsinger in Division Ill.
eight rebounds.
with ten, Martie Holter eight. JoanHiland came into the week with
Senior Jessica Radford added na Gumpf 7, Tracy White six, and
a 19•point lead, but tbree impresfour J&gt;oints and Beth Bay one point. Michelle Caldwell five. Amy
sive wins - il)cluding an 85-83
For Miller, Sandy Hem led the Hughes bad nine Cor Miller. .
Falcons with a team-bigh 19 and . Eastern goes to Meigs WednesHalcy Berry addcil 16. Jenny Plant day.
·
added twelve and Julie Lanning
Mlller (53) - Sandy Hero 9six.
1=19, Kathy Pompey 0-0-0, Julie
· Despite Redovian's six point Lanning 1-1·1=6, Corrie Cook 0-0ftrSt quarter, .Miller led 10-8 at the O, Liwrie .Ward 0-:0.0, Angie MerBop AP lllliiP
.,,.A..c~
frame's conclusion. Eastern ral- ckle 0-0.0, Jenoy Plant 3-2-0=12,
How a ar,te paoeJ rliP'(I'tl writtn and
lied to a 2()-10 second q~aner rally Angie Taylor 0-0-0, Mindy Hal3sz
- - O h i o hlp rdlool bop
blltdboll leolmiD ll1e lounh weeily ....
to lead 28-20 at the half. Eastern 0-0-0, Stepb Merclde 0-0-0, Kelly
u..-..e.oa 1994-':B poll ror The AaJOd ,
put together a fine third quarter, Gossman 0"0-0, Haley Berry g.
- · Pniu, by Ohio lUll&gt; Sd&gt;Ool Athlttlt
outscoring Milla- 20-15 for a 45-35 0=16. Totals 21·3-(2-7)=53
Aaacx:lalloo dlvl1ioas, wilh WOD·Ioat
record lhtouab ·aamu oil••· 19; linttally entering the fourth round. ·
Eastern (58) • Melissa Guess
piiiOO Y«e~lap.-eatbele~:
Miller's Haley Berry bit four 0-0.0, Amy Redovian 5-2-=12, JesDIVISION I
I,CievoloadHra.
(21)15-1 3&lt;9
field goals and dominated the sica Radford 1-2=4, Jessiea Karr
2, ZuCIIVUIO
(5) 14-0
29-&amp;
offensive boards in !be final quar- 5-13-16, Nicole Nelson 3-3=9,
3, Cuton MciOaley
12·1
216
4, Soriol· Nonh (
· 4) IS-O
2l3
ter, while Sandy H~ added, seven Rebecca Evans 3-3=9, Beth Bay 0!, lot. St. Joh11'1
Jl-1
219
in great Miller rally. Eastern s lone 1=1, Martie Holter 0-0-0, Tracy
6, E. U•crpool
(I) 13-1
160
1, To!. Scdl
11·3
Ill
field goal in tbe fourth quarter · White 0-0-0, Michelle Citldwell 0I,Cio. Woodwlld
13-2
,19
came on a follow-up Evan's 0-0. Totals 17-0-(24-37)=58.
9, WNltrVille North
ll·l
•1
jumper from the paint, while the Miller 10 10 15 18=53
10. Y0110p.Chooey
10.2
21
Otbcn rcec:i'riua 12 or more pol..: lt.
rest of Eastero 's tallies came at the Eastern . 8 20 20 Hl=58
Cia. Oai Hilll 26. 12, WapalODetl. 25.
13, Tol. Cool Cllh. (I) 2•. 14, Tal. Sl.
p,.,.;.·20. IS, Middle""'" II. 16 (Ue),
Akroo Ellel. t.lkew00&lt;117. II, Lo..,l3.

BLOCKS SHOT • Syracuse's John Wallace, left. blocks a sbot
from Georaetown's &lt;&gt;thelia Harrington during Monday's game In
Landover, Md., Monday. No. 10 Syracuse edged No. 13 George.: town 76-75. (AP)

o At Athens

Wellston jumped out to a -17-10
lead after the ftrst perit,Jd, but the
Marauders came back witb a bal·
anced scoring attack to take a 3125 lead at the balf. Cheryl JeweU
sparked the Marauders with seven
second period points, Amber
Blackwell added six on a pair of
three pointers ad Vanessa Compston added 14.
Meigs opened up a 53-32 lead
after three period on the strength of
a 22-7 scoring advantage. Blackwell n!riled two more trifectas and

Eastern holds on to
edge Miller girls 59-53

0

.

.

Towson Stare (8-9) wasn't even gave the Tigers !be lead Cor good.
on Louisville's scbcdolc at tbe stan
S~ Walker scored !8 points
of the season.
for L~UISVIIle, playmg Its th1~d
The contest was arranged after game m five days. But Crum srud
LouisVille learned tbat its games in overco~dence bwt bis team more
the Great Alaska Sbootout than faugue.
wouldn't apply toward its _regular"Our guys didn't have an ~onseason total. T~ till out their sc:bed· est re~t for Tow~n State, be
ule, the Cardmals 11dded £ames sa1d. Once they fmally f1gured
38ainst Dayton and Towson State.
that they could get beat, they .
At the_ time, the Tov.:son_game . cooldn't ~.ake the shots when they
seem~ like~ a~tomabc VIctory. bad tbem.
.
That kind oftbmking proved costly
In Top 25 games, top-ranked
for L~uisvi~e (12-8), wbicb won ·Massachusetts beat St. Bonaven11 of 1ts prev1ous 15 games.
lure 79-62, No. 10 Syracuse edged
"You,have to play we!l to win No. 1~ Ge~getowo 76-75 and No.
-. l,~on t ~~ who you re play- 18 M1ssoun downed No. 11 Iowa
mg, Louuhlle coach Denny S~ 80-71.
&lt;::rum said. "I just couldn't con- No. 1 Massa.c husetts 79, St.
vmcethemlbatTowsonStateC®Jd Bonaventure62
beat them, so they got beat." .
At ~erst, ~ass., Derek Ke1Ralph Blalock scored 26 pomts logg bit two 3-pomters during a 10and DeRoo Robinson .bad a career- 0 run early in the second half !bat
bigb 20 for Towson Stare, includ- helped UMass win its 15th straight
ing seven during a 15-4 run tbat game.

The Dally SentlneJ-Paga 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

92 PLYMOUTH VO)'AGER VAN, 1~, blue, A/C, AfT,
AM/FM caaa., dual mlrrora ...................................... $8385
111 CHEV. S-10, 14828, red, A/C, AM/FM caaa., cloth Int.,
bedllnar, aport whaela ............................................. $88Q5·
92 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN,II4734 .. A/C, AfT, AM/FM
caaa., cloth Int., crulae .......................... ;................. $1420
90 NISSAN TRUCK, 14823, AM/FM caaa., bedllner,
aport wheela, dual mlrrora ...................................... $8315
92 DODGE CARAVAN, 14778, 7 Pan., till, cruiH, A/C,
AfT, AM/FM eaaa., P. equip...................................... $11520
90 TOYOTA TRUCK, 114727, AM/FM Cllll., A/C, tool
box, rear bumper......................................................$84115
92 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN SE, 14818, A/C, AfT,
AM/FM call, till, crulat, air bag, P. loeka ............,. $9735
91 CHEV. 5-10, 14784, 2 tona paint, AM!FM caaa., rMr
alldt, cloth aeat ................................ ,.......;......., .....,. M4H
93 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER.VAN, 1'1111, 7 Pa:n., V-8
eng., AJC, AIT, AM/FM, tilt, erulH ..... :................... $12,1100
92 DODGE DAKOTA TRUCK, 14772, white,
AM/FM/caa,:, Toneau cover, aport whHia ........... ~$7525
93 CHEV. L'UMINA APV, 14775, white, A/C, AfT, AM/FM
ca111., tilt, crulae, P. wlndowa ............................... $10,190
PONTIAC GRAN AM, 14834, A/C, A/T, tilt, crulaa,
AMiFM caaa., cuatom wheela ...................,............. 55?115
CHEV. LUMINA, 14829, red, A!C,AIT, AM/FM, cloth
~eet,tlll, crulH .......................................................... $5195
90 DODGE DAYTONA, 14810, A/C, AMNM Cllaa., tilt, air
~g. rear d~r~ter ......................,............................ $549~
89 HONDA CRX CIVIC, 14808, blue, A/C, AM/FM eaaa.,
rear defroater, aport whMla ................................. ;.. $51165
90 MAZDA PROTEGE SE, 14121, A/C, ctulae, AM/FM
caaaette .................................... :................................. $5495
91 DODGE DYNASTY, 14818, black, A/C, AfT, AM/FM, .
air bag, rear dafroater .............................................. $6675
112 DODGE DYNASTY, 148113, A/C, AfT, air bag,tllt,
erutH.-clotli lnttrlor ............... =,.....-;;...... ;;;.....,;.. •7044
93 ·PONTIAC GRAN AM, 147111, red, A/C, AfT, AMIFM,
cruiH, tilt, P. locka, V-4 trtQine ...............................snes

93 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME, 14827, A!C, AfT,
AM/FM, P. aeata, tilt, erulH .................................. $11,750
92 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE, 148111, red, AfT, A!C, tilt,
crulae, air bag, AM/Fir, rear dllfroater ....................$811115
93 DODGE SHADOW, 14754, white, 2 door, AfT, AM/FM,
aport wheel a, cloth lntarlor ..................................,... $7871
Poymemllgt.&lt;od w1111 _ , ~ DIII .OOO cool\ or rldo piJSiilc 1.,. SOl -lor drilliil.

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�.f lee ~The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlepgrt, Ohio

Tuesday, January 31, 1995

.

Reader finds out herpes is not always sexually C£?11!!~!=:!..1..
JY,,IefiM·
gouen it from anyone but me. I was
single for 15 years before our
Ann
· marriage, so it was assumed that I
brought this disease into our bed. Her
Landers
doctor told us that since at least 80
percent or herpes viruses conLraCtcd
=:~.:.,";"
inthegenitalareaarehcrpessimplcx,
or genital herpes, we should assume
Dear Ann Landers: Recently, you Mary's was, too.
eaponded to the mother or a teenFaced with a most uncomforUJble
• daughter with herpes. From the situation, we insisted on further
line or the mother's letter, there was testing. It turned out that she had
•doubi she thought the disease had herpes zoster, the result of Mary's
\een sexually transmiued. Howeve~ having had chicken pox as a child.
•
is not necessarily so. I believe The virus reactivated because or
JGur readers would appreciate stress involving Mary's new job.
,~~!owing the rae IS . ·
.
So, please, doctors, don't be so
. 'My wife, "Mary," broke out with quick to judge. Give your patients the
~.and it almost caused a divorce benefit of the doubt until you
tecauseshckncwshc couldnothavc complete al.l your tests. Thanks for

·,,...,LOO_

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listening, Ann.-- READING, PA.' ·
DEAR READING: Your point is
well-taken. The admonition,
however, should be directed to
parents, sweethearts and spouses.
Physiciuns rarely do any "judging"
whenitcomestodiseases.Thosefew
who might are in the wrong
.profession.
·
Dear Ann Landers: l'lost my wife
recently, after 53 years and nine
children. My only regrets are the
things I didn't do often enough.
For your readers who still have
their wives, here's the list
I should have encouraged my wife
to play the piano more, take more
walks with me, travel more and spend
more time. on her hobbies. I should

TUESDAY
PORTI.AND- Lebanon Town·
.IIIIP Trustees will m~t in regular
~~t~don Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
IIMmShip building.

. .

is a shortage of blood supplies,
.I)onna Grate, county chairman
advises. She urges residents to
donate blood.

:

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•
·.
·

••

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was elected cbair~ of the Meigs Soil and Water
Cunservation District at a re.cent
illileting of lbe board.
Other officers elected were
'l'llomas Theiss, vice-chairman and
Omrles Yosl, secretary·trea.•urer.
:committees appointed included
J I calion, John Rice and Diana
Kimes; equipment, Yost and all
t!oud member~; information Jef-

THURSDAY
SYRACUSE - TOPS OH
1895, "Bring a Friend'' night, Syracuse Nazarene Churcb, Thursday, 6
p.m. Additional information call
Debbie Hill, 949-2763. ·
POMEROY - Meigs Hfgh
School financial aid workshop
Thursday, 7 p.m. at MHS .cafeteria.
Open to all Meigs County seniors
and lbeir parents.

. RIVERVIEW CLUB
A holiday dinner party was held
by the Riverview GIU'den Club at
Columbo's Restaurant in Parkers-·

'

Anyone who would appreCiate

·CALL

a thoughtful
wo'rd from
you!
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in the heart z--and mail along ·
with $6.00 to:

ti
••

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\ML.Isical, 'Ev1ta,·

q~.~s~

992-2060

• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTI~ATES)
. V.C. YOUNG Ill

Umestone
&amp;.Gravel
Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING.

11)1511mo

614·742·2138
. 101211iM11fn
SMITH'S
CONSTRUOION
ICutllom Building I Remodeling

• New Homes
•Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
· . • Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
· FREE ESTIMATES
992·5535

·•

.

'

$16.00

THIS SPACE ·

$8.00

Umlt
20
THIS SPACE

$12.00

GRAY'S

G(aded Bene1it Whole Lite is now abailable. Tne .
plan offers coverage of up to $10,000 with no .~.
physical exam and no health questions asked on
the application. Ages 40-80

One year warranty on work performed
·Valid on all nationally advertised.
brands only
We service most makes &amp; models

MR. VACUUM CLEANER

Mont atul .Jae•

368 W. Main St. Riply WV. 304-6144

Mobile Welding
. Diesel Injector SVC
Injector Pump SVC
Tune-ups
985-3879
(Lime Stone Low Rates)

WICKS
HAULING -

J

poet's corner

Kerosene
Heater
Repair

50% off

.Ode to a Child

' •s
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FAST!

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·.&gt;)

American General LHe &amp; Accident ·tna.-e6: U ·
P.O. Box 189
'"!l
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
,: :~
614-843-5264

One Step Complete Auto 8ody .R•~~~tr

.DAN'S
IPPLIAICI
· SIRIICE

Potlce

ROCKY R. HUPP

Li fc • Medicare • Cancer • Fire
'Health • A&lt;.:cidcnl • Annuity • IRA • Mongagc ~r.~._t;

6

FOR MORE INFORMATION

··s""

1·6 "'1 mo. pd .

All for only $14.95 plus parts

The Soul . .

-~'''-'

"We Loan You Ca$h on Anything of Value~'

What? More .

.

The State Certified
Pawn Shop

Tel. (614) 992-5846 . · ~~,,.

:I ·

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n:

·

''Your Neighborhood Lender" .~~
115 W. 2nd St.- Pomeroy, Ohio !NJ

1

F

985~44,73

992·6215

Pomeroy, Oh1o

' Business ':.
"We Are Now Open For

t•

.WALLPAPER 'AND
..·.BLIND-SHOP

~·
NewHomes
Garages
,.,,,,.,·
Complete
.,..
Remodeling
&lt;1:
Stop &amp; Comparlt
FREE ESTIMA,T~f

"''""

:1

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' u

-'

.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

- 1- t-1'be· sp_eotHular international ·~ .as "Joseph and lbe Amazing~Tecb- ~ Opening- whh- tbe dramatic :
·BASKETS
' musical hit "Evita" will come to nicolor Dreamcoat" and "Jesus announcement of Eva Peron's
Custom Dtdgntd Gift
.(Speclllze In driveway
Templeron-Biackburn Alumni Christ Superstar." The higbligbt of .death in. J952 at the age of 33,
Baskets For AU Occasions
·
,spreading) ·
:· Memorial Auditorium. 8 p.m. Evita's · celebrated score is the "Evita"launcbes into a fast-paced
I Run Rd. Pomeroy
. Lllflestorie,
Thursday. Feb. 16, as part of lhe · hauntingly beautiful "Don't Cry musical biography. Latin rbylbms
992-5914
. u ,. Ohio•University Performing Arts For Me Argentina"
.. ·
and fiery dances punctuate Evita's
Gravel, Sand,
Series.
The colorful, compelling slory meteoric rise from near poveny to
Top Soli, Fill Dirt
Tickets are now on sale at the of Argentina's c.baris~Ualic Eva a national popularity verging on
BINGO
614-992-3470
; Auditorium Box Office from noon Peron, who rose from poverty to adoration as the beautiful First
Racine American ·
: 'to 5:30 p.m., Monday through Fri- become one of the riches!, most Lady of Argentina. Abroad she was
Legion .Post 602
j • day. Tickets are $12 to $14 and powerful women In lbe world, pre- aq;orded "star" status; at home she
Now
having Bingo
,, : may be ordered by calling (614) miered at the Prince Edward The- was loved and haled, feared a":d
,-e'very Sunday Night
· ~ l 593-1780
·· atre in London on June 21, 1978, worshipped, but· never unde~csU· ·
Starting 6:45 pm
· ~~
"Evita" boasts music and lyrics followed by lbe Broadway open- mated. Throughout Evita's gripDoors
open 4:30 pm
~: by the remarkable team of Andrew ing, directed by Hareld Price and
ping story, lbe ·Stu~ent re~olutionThe more people
: • Lloyd Weber and Tony ,Rice, choreographed by Larry Fuller, ary Cbe, as an anu-Peromsta comt; whose CS1llaborative eveols include Sept,2S,.1979.
.
menta.tor, challenges Eva to justify
· playing the bigger
For All Major .
the
pay-off.
lrancls ·
such ~liUiding Broadway credits
her lifestyle and_ actions.
.Save ad ·for 1 free cand.Used Appliances
949-2038 or 949-2044
Stlltures
for Sale
you can
z·~
Many
children suffer vehement
If you try to please·all, you're oolbCall
bruises and fractures.
lng but guls .
-~'··taxes""
Hll I
• • • •
KII'IIPPLIIICI
. 614·992~5515
·· · Either that or else you are just plain Inside their hearts they silently cry
10111ftfn
And
some
ask
the
questioo
.
'
IIIIICI
·nuts ·
:;
We
want
more
to
protect
our
of8Ctory
Autl)orlzed
Porto
Because.lbey
want
to
know
why.
1
Whatever ·you do, fault wi.ll be
• Service
rights
·
found
·
oAIIIIokeo
0142 Yoaro
~· · We wantlhem.there both days and , So try to keep both feet on the We love children but do we sbow
ofoll Reliable Senrlce
I ~ ilights
· .
·
lbem lbe way
.
nd
.
•Waahera - Dryara ~ Range•
:'., Just wbat do you think you were ~ooe can live it up to lbe letter
To the right aspect of life so lhey
-Refrigeratora •Freezer•
. ! eIected.101'.'?
•DIItn¥11hlf1
.
l!fr
I doubt if your critics can do any don't go astray.
ott.W.
HNI8rl
: :•. Wllatever you think, we want betu;r.
Michelle Stobart
Parts I Service on Moot
•-·• much, much more ·
. ·
Tim Coals . -Microwave• •Diapoaala
Mary F. Snilth
Make• Racine Mower
•Thlnke
llelgo
&amp;
·; ··~ We want actioo the very minute we
Barbara James,
Clinic
Middleport
Surrounclng
Ar
..
•
'" call
.
.
.
· Pomeroy
(6141 985-3561 or ·
All of you.badges beaer set oo the
992-5335 1&gt;11: ball
..
. "In Stock".
• 1 : If we speed lhrougb ~ ~ · We love children but do we show
QrtgQn Chain Saw Bar•
lbem the way ·
·· l ! other way · ·
·
Once upon a time wh'&amp; govern·
949·2804
B. 81. AGIO
To
the
right
aspect
of
life
so lbey
' : You know it's a fast W«ld we live
ments
don't go astray ...
Were friends. :.
· ·· • in today
·PAINtiNG
•
And
falnilies
were
migbl
y
.
·WHALEY'S AUTO
"t'or.
Crtuh It .. We I'~ It"
• •
: ; We want better streets, roads and Can we all say to lhe man on top of No wars began ...
32361 Dewlna Run Road
PARTS
.lbe COIJIOOite )add~···
. ,
Long Bottom, OH. 45743
' • freeways
·
••
Specializing
in Custom
Portable Welding
:··! We .are tired of roa4s of the bone He· gives to .chanty - . so wbal s There lived a poor soul (too close
lbe matter?
. · ·
Aluminum &amp; Steel
by die riverside) ·
.
.·
Frame Repair
' : and buggy days
Maybe
his
ba~ds
touch
no
heart
.
(strengthened
by
sun
and
mild
ram
.up
to
'I•
Inch
.
: • Fill the pot boles and straighten
NEW &amp; USEO PARTS FOR
.
Call Anytime
and lbey"re not w31Dl.
showers ~ .
· 1. •• each curve
.
·
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS t
John Krider
struggling at times) ....
· . · To drive on some roads sure takes
614-843-5192
99:;!-7013 OR
·
T.o ·the woman who bas a busy · from all bigb tides power.
· •.. a lot of nerve
Harold
Pen10n
· • : We want mon: nest stops, diis you career.
.
992-5553 Ofl
614-843-5285
! · should lalow
·
Two kids at home an_d she's really
Sometimes unsll!"e of Yictory '~ las)e
.
TO~~ FREE 1·B00·848cOe70
tan:ie.d Ibis soul ...
. 1: when Mother Nature calls, it's sincere
DARWIN, OHIO
' :time lben to 110
.
She re~lly does care and ullh a toiled always there
7131/91 TFN
·and little did make ...
: ; Wilh no stations, no woOdland, rest ~ood game
..
· •, •• stop, ten Dll·1e
ul she leaves lhe k.ids borne all
did not waste nor did wan.
, ; :.Do you know wbat could bappeo In alooe just the same.
TREE TRIMMING
Though innocent and simple
, •iust a short while?
·
539 BRYAN PLACE .
,,...
Some grandparents who wa)k lbe Bless he with no name.
AND REMOVAl
MlDOLEPOIIT
892·2772
l : The Trustees to, we have yet a children in lbe parit .
· . One middle hour with river.
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri. Ug-ht
Haiulli'lg,
so calm .. ,
.j... word ·
.
by lbe waJ.. . . •.·
8:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.
Done wilh a day's work
,,;We demand here 1111c1 oow our vole- Aren't always what diey seem.
VInyl &amp; Alum. Skiing,
Shapec;t
Shrubs
: ~es be bean!
·
Don' 1 recall they should
The soul rested on ...
Roofing, VInyl
: Yaear the snow off the road ere it . Ye.t somehow neglect !be concept
and Removed
Replacement,
Carne people from upground..
_: 'hits the ground
to wean.
Windows,
Blown
Misc. Jobs.
: 1. 'Y011 know your reJ)Iacement coukl · Inflicting bruises on these. toddlers
. Offering help and ils ~ke ..
lnaulatlon, Storm
l· ~asily be found
·
· .
Which they recall as a teen
Beguiled lbe poor soUl into
Doora, Storm ·
Bill Slack
.' bet lbe Ice off the scene befon: it's · These children ot children ·
this sinful life.
Windows, Garages.
I..;froze
· ·
· ·
To no way demean.
992·2269
Free Estlmatet
111W'Itn
• '-Wate up and get to it, it's 110 lhne Their minds come and go
As days dwindled by·and sin
: ; ~0 doze
·
·
.:-;cr They have no where to lean.
mowttcd higb~
. ··
:: '\YI!en~wealheril!;!lldaQd.I!!I!W
_. _ , _ _
_
•
·-· ~ The)i9orsoulknew ·itwould _
:: ~s deep
·
..
To a ~ne00 at a ta~ern .
Cause him to die ...
~ l ~Whatever it takes, these dellllllds- -Wbo JUsl-lurned-htS-~dU--~' -so be WIUidened-llimlessly-without. l ;you mustlc.cep
Said be really loved clilld,reo
Care or thought..
·
·
1 •
BUt all of his were dead.
back to the river to·that very
akeA
!)low do we pay for these services
spot.
: ·)ve need?.
The poor people .who struggle with
Once upon a time lbere was a poor
: :J)on 't raise our taxes, we have a life evctyday
soul whose brow knew sweat but
Wilb no money !X spirit
• :family to feed
· notsorrow
t ~ou need notll&amp;k us for bolp In any And no place to stay· .
' :way
. ·
.
They go without nolhing
Simple life was his way ·
Thank him with no name on
\ U you raise our tues we'll refuse Wilb IOIII!llbing to do for
·on
In hope for 'their children
eyeryday.
.
,
Let IJs Help
•.;' :pon
... Jllll.t lay anyone off,
. you need
.
they ...........
Pray the sun will come out
They
...,..,...., more.
Dannen, Vehicle Lettering, Magnetldc
,,.every one
tomorrow
1
Si~,
Menu Boards, Commen:ial Signa, Warning
Tbe
policeman
who
walks
his
: Though Impossible to IICCOmplisb
beat... stem and bold
·
The time bad come for the
&amp; AD,A Slgnage, Logos Designed OR Reproduced,
: To&lt;e want it dOne
e
Passes
many
children
end
1:J'eople want more and more, yet
DOT Numbers
For be who bad found sin.
:· pay lesS
. • Wbo are out in lhe cold.
He gives lbem the _eye'as be .passes For be who has found Christ
': It's a mixed up world, wouldn't
Has found life and a true
:':_you guess? ·
.
'
m~ bcart turns away' ~is sight be friend.
Ask About Our
Tim Coals
Superior Shirt,
~- No ope on earth will ever please .., dellies.
1
Barbara
James,
Hal &amp; Jackel
every ·man
·
Pomeroy
Cbild
abuse.
comes
in
all
forms
and
So do your job lhe vtzy best ~t

:

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1-6

• Crllltaman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loada of Mlac.
Buy-Sell·Trade

Spec_
ial offer includes: ··
·
1. Clean motor
. 2. Grease Roller Bearings
3. Clean &amp; check agitator
4. Clean ali moving parts
5, Clean &amp; check filter system
6. Check Belts
7. Check electrical system
8. Replace filter bag
.

ming to Athens .

·~ !•- ·

Call
•

Onemlleout
143 from Rf. 7
Tues.- Wed. - Fri. - Sat.

·rouff

. t-., '

II ~ ..

17x42,23x42,24x72,
· .2$x64·, 31x42 .

THIS SPACE

Words!

The Daily Sentinel
Valentine Hearts
111 Court Street.
Pomeroy, OH .~5769

992-2156

:i

NOW

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HAULING

J&amp;L INSULATION

~

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••
•••

IN THE

....•...............•......
..
· · ~n.: Print your message
•

HiHo,HiHo
It's Over
The Hill
You Go•
HappJ40th
WeJ.ove

t:
~ .
'

r:

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters .
Downspouts
-Gutter Cleaning ·
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

DAVE'S
SWIPSHOP

~-

All Val.entine Hearts will be published in tite February 14th
issue at acost of only $6.00! ·

1'

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. ...

MUST BE PREPAID!

...

'

f ~ ·

:

The Daily Sentinel
•Sweetbearts
•Moms&amp; Dads
•Grandparents
. •Teachers
•Babysitters
•Friends

•

'·

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"

..oward L Writ...!

Vacuum Cleaner Service Special .

..•••• HOUSEC
.
ISA
.•• WANT AD
.i:

BULLETIN BOA.RD

Remember that special someone' Ihis
Valentine's Day with a melisage in

'.

. ·'

Every Wednesday IO:oo-2:00
NO COUNTRY, NO RAP,
NO DiSCO
ONLY THE BEST ROCK &amp; ROLL
From The 7o's, 80's and 90's
SPECIAL ON DRAFT BEER
NO COVER CHARGE

065

'.NOW
AVAILABLE

949·28231/3111 mo.

'

Names of area OSU .graduates _posted;

•

All Lotio•s ~ OH

ROCK &amp; ROLL NIGHT

recently.
·
· Emocy Weekley is visiting his
daughter, Mrs. Larry Stiffler of
· &amp;flnor Ciit Downs A'Vallablt
Thorn ion. While he was there
. . All 1st Quality
Sharon's ·car was stolen by four
·
AILABLE - Ruth· Poweri, Meigs County librariteenagers while she was in the post
an, dlspla)'ll the new Local History and Genealogical Resources
All Sales Final
. "
.Guide to Southeutem. Oblo wb.lcb Is. now available at tbe Meigs
office. The vehicle was totaled dur·
ing a police case that ensued.
County Publk Ubrary, The llllllerial Is In two volumes, both availfor SlS. ·
·
at the
• Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bowles,
Pomel'Qy, were recent callers at lbe
.~
home of her sister, ~lores Hawk.
Nancy Hulse ·called on Georgia
II!IIORI4L BRIDGE APPILOACN ON
.;,-IUAAV...Jio\III(I!IIIIURQ
Mount recently.
The Ohio S!a.te University Leigh Cleland, Long Bonom, . Andrea Leigh Cleland; Lotig''Bot- "
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Groeneveld issued lbe list of seniors and gradu· . Bachelor of Arts, magna cum ·. 10m; Barbara· Joan. .~nderson,
MON.-FRI •.9-8:30
r~cently spent lhe weekend wilh . ate students who received degrees laude; Andrea Dale Rockhold,
Pomeroy; Jeremy Wtlham Buck"' ' 'SAt.
9~5::3
Ada Bissell.
' .. ,
• '•
• l '
'
a! !be Autumn quarter commence· Reedsville, Associate Applied Sci- ley, Pomeroy; Nichola Dr.wn Pick:
To place news noles, residents · men1 exercises on Dec. 9, 1994, in ence.
.
·
. ens, Pomeroy; A.odrew Dqvid
·may write to Melody Roberts, P.O. St.John Arena.
Local students named to lbe Wolfe, Pomeroy.
Box 7, Long Bottom, Ohio 4S?43.
Local graduate~ include: Andrea A;ut~urnn~~~~ho~no~r~ro~ll~in~c~lu~d~e~:==~~~~~:=';=.====
· '~·~.:~'~~~~~~-~-~~~~;;

fers; resource conservation and. tractors wmbbop set for February
development, Joe Bolin; budget, 2 at lhe Athens County Extension
Theiss and John Rice; fiscal agenls, Office was discussed. It is being
Bolin and Theiss.
·
co-sponsored by the Meigs, Vinton,
· The multinora"rose program Hocking and Athens Soil and
was discussed. Applications will be Water Conservation Distiicts and
taken until Mardi 15 with applica- . ~Natural Resource Conservation
tion approved at lbe March board Service.
meeting and lbe completion date of
The next meeting will be FebruJuly 31. Rules for lbe program are ary 22 at 8 p.m. atlbe Meigs
lbe same as .me .past years: A .con- SWCD Office.
· .

.lS Sessions. .51500

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
STARTING THIS WEEK

.'
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the:

WRITE A MESSAGE TO YOUR SPECIAL VALENTINE

j

Long Bottom, OH. 45763

n~

b.,evolions in keeping wlth
season were' given by Grace.Weber '
and concluded wilb prayer. Gifts .
were exchanged by those attending,
Margaret Grossnickle·, Marlene
. Putman, Gladys Thomas, Betty
Boggs, Dolores Frank, Frances
Reed, Janet Conn.o lly, fan ice ,
Young, Mljry Grace Co)Vdery,
Nancy Wachter, Marilyn Hannum,
Grace Weber, Mary Alice Bise,
and Ruth Anne Balderson. Mrs;
Reed will host the nextmeetinll.

•

)..

Society .
scrapbook

34110 Sugar Run Rd.

A benefit for Russell HolsinJier.
P.O. Box 62, Chester, will be belil
Feb. 4 from 6 to 10 p .m at the
Coolville Lions Club. Holsinger
suffers from cancer.
Holsinger, ·n, is a lifelong residenl of lhe area, sei'Ved in World ··
Warn, and is a member of lbe Disabled American Veterans. He
retired from LA Pipeline in Belpre.
Tbere will be an auction, live
music, and food during the
evening.
For donations to Holsinger or
lhe fund-raiser, residents may contact Daphne Young, 985-4381,
. Sbaron Swain, 985-3487 or VirgQ
Holsinger, 378-6253. · ·
·
'

Jeffers to head Meigs S&amp; WCD board
Man;o Jeffers

CALIFORNIA IANS

=

BENEFIT PLANNED

._.__
~-LQng_Botton,i 11~WS,Rutb Stethem, Ada Bissell,
...ie and !lrandon Fitch a,nd Alta
lallard are among lhe communi"'sill residents.
.
: Mr. and Mrs. Mark Miller,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs . Tom
Oroencveld, Worthington, .and Mae
~Peek, have been. recent visitors
W Ada Bissell.
.
' Ruby Brewer was a recent visitilr of her sister, Pearl Powell.
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Yqung have
tJeen vacationing in A&lt;irida. ·
·, 'Betty Ross, Middleport; Phyllis
"llins-Bowers, Louise Pullins·
Nawell, bolb of. Springfield; Mr.
• Mrs. Roberl Hill; Mansfield;
ltfa. Betty Jackson and -Kara
Olbome of Coolville Road called
.... ibe Paul Hauber residence_

C:O.... T•n Wftft
MeAt

bel:a

.

WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
. ROGj{ SPRING - -Salisbury
IJietary Glob, 2 p.in. home of Mrs.
tidrcit' Parsons. Mrs. Dewey Hor- . Township TrusteeS meeting Friday,
• to review "Ohio Pioneers" Mrs. 6 p.m. at Rock Spring Fairground.
aon Reynolds to review "The
SATURDAY
laltnstown Rood".
POMEROY - Quiet Day at
POMEROY - Red Cross Grace Episcopal Church, Pomeroy,
lioodmoblle will be at lbe Meigs 9 a.m. until noon, Anglican Mystic
· · Qlunty Senior Citizens Center, and renowned aulbor Maggie Ross
,- . Wednesday from I to 6 p.m. There will lead the observance.
. l

recent tetanus shoL When I satd. .
ake sure dleir
"No," the nurse told me about' a openers c
·, . m
date•
·
woman who commcted tetanus (we ;, felanu&amp;"dQJ.I -Ire up-to- . 1··
1
used to call itlot;kj;lw) from a cut she LAKESJDE, CA{JF. ·
received while opeiling a can. 1'1\81 ' DeAR MKESIDE; Afte; I ~
poor woman died.
.
,;; Y?Ur .le!!er,, I ,went rt~ht mto the
Ann thelidofacanissterilewben kltchenaridscrubbedmycal)_ope~
it's fi~st opened, so I could'ri"l · I:II
lotpf:r.caders ..wtll, tpo.
understand how thi'a happened: ' Thiu)ks1"or'tbe'lllld8e: '; : ·
:
However, when I rellimed hbmc lllld . F,tel!.,~g· prtp!frtd 11!: ha": ,f!~?
looked at my electric can opeiiCI; jJ How -w11l·t""ed
you. "~lit
made perfect sense. It wasn't lhecari· ·· !~;Ann~. '"?s' booklei"Sexand:lhe
•• it was lhe can openu. The rotary lun -ager. · Sen~ a self,addrrsr,ed,
cutting wheel on the one I was using long, bustness·Sirt envelope CUI4i ~
was caked with crud. NO" one ever check or mQneyorder for $3.75 (thiS
thinks to clean iL I immediar.cly got · includes posrage and handling)·to:
an old toothbrush and scrubbed both Teens, clo Ann Landers, P.O. f!ox
the wheel and gear teelh of lhe calf /)562,
Ill. 606ll~562._(1n
opener.
'

enealogical resource .

~Community calendar, The Community Calendar Is
, ...bllshod as a free service to.
•n-proflt groups wishing to
•nounce meeting and special
e•ents. Tile calendar Is not
••lgned to promote sales or
Iliaci raisers of any type. Items ·
. . printed u space permits and
...not be guaranteed to run a
ifec111c number Df days.

have told her I loved her every day,
without fail , kissed her more often
and brought home nowers for no
special reason . I ulso should have
made sure she went for her annual
physical checkup. Maybe the last was
the most important of all .-- A
LONGTIME READER IN ST.
LOUIS
DEAR ST. LOUIS: Don't be too
.hard on yourself. You sound as if your
marriage was a very good one~
Fifty-three years and nine children
sounds like a rretty together family.
I'll bet you were u sweet husband and
a good dad.
··
Dear Ann J.anders: Recently, I
had LOgo to the emergency room ·or
the hospi.wl. I was asked if I'd had 'll

Pomeroy~lddlepor1, .0hio

. PRECISION-AUTOMOTIVE
Chuck Stqtts
614·992·6»3 ·
Free Estimates
·,_.,
Insurance Work Welcome . ,
Stale Rt.}3
Darwin, Ohio
1Ct/211M1tfn

MODERN SAirrATION ·''1
POMEROY, OHIO
. ,t'lj
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets renliidt
Dally, weekly &amp; monlhly rental rates: . " ·"
Job sites • Camp Sites • Family Reunione &amp; PartleiM
...:,.,~~;

t

NOW OFFERING G ENERAL HAULIN G

Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A -1 T O P SOI L FOR S ALE

Llcenaed l

.,il

Bo- 20 eara e
992-3954

l::. nlCr qe ncy Phone 985-3 4 18

,, d

111

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. . ~""
New Homes • Vinyl Siding Newj ', ·
Garages • Replacement Windows _
Room Additions • Roofing ,~~~
COMMERCIAL nnd RESIDENTIAC&gt;i
FREE ESTIMATES

614-992,;,7643
(No Sunday Calls)
2/12/92/lln

Kenny's Auto Rental
.Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.
We H•ve C•~• and V•nsl
Kenny's Auto Center
264 Upper&lt;'River Rd.
Galli olis, OH. 45631

· 1,800 _486 . 1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971
,.,..

.- MORRISON'S
BEA,ING 8 COuu

,

EPA and RSES Certified

Your authorized
American Standard Dealer
.J . Low Rate Financing Availabl~ . ..
-·call992-7434 for more Information•
-

lfll/85

'

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
•Cuttom Made
•Soli• tllnyl
,replaetmlnt
. widow•
•Frei E1tlmate1
•$200 lnlft1114
·. Call for D1talla
.

•vJSIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

"Look for the Red 1nd White Awning"
992·4119 AI Troni11; Owner 1·800·291·5600

�Tuesda~Janua

'

31,1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword }'uzzle
Joanne 4 7 It' I off to work

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

14 Magician'•
word

53 Sea plant
55 Part or a

15 Actress

Announcements

BEATTIE BtVD.® by Bruce Beattie

44

32 Mobile Homes

tor Rent

fMw1115 Rednw1 14114, 2 . . .

BEAUTIFUL APARTMEHTll AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jo&lt;koon Plko
lrom 1222 to $285. Wolk t.o ohop
' movleo. Coli 114-44f.211e&amp;.
EOH.

'*

Comlr Lot Pill&lt; Lono IIOblio

CotJrt. ~ 11t
44f.778Z

ue noe,r

446-31145.

1ttl5 Mx70, ln&lt;IW. 111111·
IIIli, • - blo&lt;ko, 1 yoor
homao......,. lrwu.....-.ca. arid I
montM FREE tot rwrl CJnly
St20 - . ond tiM por mo.

Mix, Block With Whlto, 814.,2418100.

6

Lost&amp; Found

11

L.oet-in Rutland .,.., male
Boxer, If found, ~eeu call 614•
i'll2·2045, raward.
Loci. Beeglas, BetwiiDn VInton
Elament1ry and Mt. Tabor Ad.
Black/Ttn Fam•la. BlackiWhlta
Mlllt. Slua Collarw 814M388·1001.
Loet: · Brown Oec:h•hund, Blr·

notto Rd., onoworo to ·~
chltd'o pot. 3~5-1715.

~

313

=c:·:c:-':::----::= ==
Equlpmont
llolntononoo
Mochonlc: Locot Finn NExperienced
lllchllnkl
To

Pertrom Full Ra~ Of Al~li'
IMalntenl~ Functlonll On

Houllv
-lcloo Afld Rolltod Eq... 114-4(e.ma.
.
morr~.
Sltlh
- o d.
Dota Entry, Truck Drlvor Noodod, COL R.
Phono Worll, And Devloo TOll· quiNd. Fut~nme, Laaol Drl¥lna

arcu.....

I~

Involved. Knawlldall Of

GU, OtMII

Smll ~1M I

Hydroullc ilrot- RoquiNd.
COL RoquiNd. E1,_nl Wogo

Sond Rooumo
To: Mochonlc
~~~~~~~~~! 1/BonofM
P110kogo
Avolloblio.
P.O. Box 200'-_!llo Grondo, OH

.._,

Block &amp;
Tycoon Lake,

Expo~o~
Rllo Ptuo ·Good Bonuoi

T........ rllolor

4511111.0200, EUI:..

"""

Some

........

sona

RROifl1'o&gt;om!Moo To: CLA Bor 345, c/o
Goltlpollo Dolly T~buno, 125
Thlnl Av.,uo, Oollpotlo, OH
45131.
Wonlod- r.r1 tlmo vlltogo

emplorw o work In nrloUe
dotiortmorrt•
- R- StiOof,
II
VItiligo Hotl,••237
lllddlopoll, Ohio, llm-3pm

245-tl$2,
=-"'=---:---,---llnotollotlon /Sorvlco Tochnlclin
7
Yard Sale
For Alonn Syotomo And Sotollbo
T.V. Syllomo. PnlgNnlvo 1 IEJI.
l:::l'"ll Locol Coinpo~
•
Gallipolis
Dopond~
To 1.,:
&amp; VICJnlty
IIIII And Sor.tco And IEJI.
lotlng Cuotomora. Erport- In ·18 Wanted to Do
lion .Sot, 9:00 ·1li:OO ot 148 Elocfronk:o 0. ' Low Voltogo .,.--::--::-.,.--::--~-:-­
Third Avo. Golllpolto.lloy'o olzo Wiring 1o Hlolptul AI Compony A&lt;•l- Sorvlco. Cornptoto tNO
11-10, oomo Bohr homo: Top WIU Troln Quollllod Cond-. CM'O, 20yto. oxp. 6 lnouNd, INo
"ot::;c.::,.::--:-:::-:-:-:::====~· ! R•ll•bto Tronoportotlon Ito A ootl-•. 114-441-11tt or 1.-.
.,Ptu6. Poy Sclll llqod On lEI· !108-1181Z
-.,---::·:-:-::--:-:-:::-:-!:,'"n~~ ~Boot tho Sprl"ll Ruohl Got your

:==========I

-r•.

::J:::O,..

$!10,000 Roqutrocl Sond Lottor

T~bu"!r.125 Third
Avenue, GlllfpoU•, utt 4513l

lull tlmo auctlonHr, comploto Upollo Dolly

euction

servlc:8.

UcenMd

181,0hlo &amp; Wool Vlrglnlo, 304773-5785.

Auctlon ..r Cot O.Cer E. CUck. 757-1828.
Llconoo I 754-IM &amp; ~ondod,
30HI5-3430.
loooJ buolnoA

•

C.._n Late Modal Cll'l Or Local UomtDifller ,.... PoetTruckt, 1987 Mod... Or Newer, lion- muol
hO¥o _ . .
Smhh Buick Pontloc: 1100 knowtldga In c:arpentry, plu•

.... -rtcol, - · ..

Eutorn Avonuo, Golllpotlo.
ttmltl"ll lnct ...... Sond
Oecorat~ stoneware, Will tal• rooumo to: Tho Dolly Sonllnol,
phones, ·old lampe old ther· P.O. Box 129-BL. Pomoroy, Ohio

SUn . Volt.r Nu~ _ 8choot,
Chlldcoro 11-F lo~:3Qpl!t A2-K, Young Be- Aao Duling
Summor. f Dov- por WHII MinImum 6~3157.

21

Business

OpportunHy

Appllo,.,.l,

Loold"ll lor ono lull-time ond
porHimo penon. 11...
Fnoozl!l, VCR... Wah.w, know lo doll whh tho
o.,- Etc. 114.,21f.1231.
T. V. 11,

Financial

Antlquas.

Aua1 Moor•, owner. 614·992· loooJ Tul Sor.tco Hiring
Dloplt-.o
And
Drlv...
2526. Wt buy astatas.
Drlvoro Muot 8o 21 And Dido&lt;,
Don~ Junk HI Soli Uo Your Non- 114 Ul 1341.

Color

Refrtg~raton,

public,-

-·pro-..

bo

dopon&lt;loblo ond roll·
oblo. ii'uot otoo hovo g - d~•·
1!111 , _ ond bo oblio to moko
dolvotlee. moth aklllto ond
oHico akllto holplul. Mull bo
TlmborCunlna
Wontod,
-·
Cloor
Avolloblo.
FIN- On
Slto Eltlmifoo. 20 y..,. Ea·
.,.,tance, 81t--367-1088, Or • •

to reuan::h

for

INGnCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBL18IINO CO.
rocommendo thll you ~buol­
.... with poop1e rou k
ond
NOTtolllld-=ho
moll until you hovo lnvoot od
the offering.

Vlildtng:

Won~

Got Rich Quick.

Will Gel A $ t - Cooh tncamo.
Priced to SoH. t-4oo-azo.435S.

!ttl7-7054.
Otd bunona, Coslume ._..,.,

Rea l Estate

old tlg!IION lrDn oklltoio, DIC-

tu-, Stor lvoro, gtuo, cblno,

Worood To Bur: Junk Autoo
With Or Wltltoul llolorw. Coli

MatuN,

Aaaponelbte

GAHS

9tudo&lt;lt (JR Or SRI To Tutor
Eighth Grodor After School (t ·2
Hro.l Tlvoo Doro Por Wook. Witt

Pravkte Tl'llrwpartdon Home.
SO.III /HR. If lnt-tod Ptoooo

Sond Lonor Ollntoreat CLA 347,
c/o Oolllpollo Dolly T~bune, 825
Third Annw, G1lllpoll1, OH

45131.

Help Wanted

AVOM IJGW71-14ZI.
All - · I ShiMr
SpooN,
.

AvoH to buy ,. oon, lllrl"!', tnd_.,w rep. -·:le4i&gt; or

·-tlll2.e351.

AVON SELLS "SELF
CUh tor Wlntor Bttlo?
Avorogo ll-f15 II WO&lt;k -Homo.
TorThO&lt;W ()pllonol. lndlp. Rlfi.J·
IIIJO.lll2-4731.
.
aiito1111or -Hni11·
Colt 81W4tlo41'58.
c-tort
Air Hl~ng Somco
TochnlciMo. "EXCELLENT" Por
With Export- And CMIIJcO.
lion. A- AI: 243 Thtnl
A-llofltpotlo. 8--4'114.
Domlno'o Plua In p..._ lo
ht~ng ~-. Avorogo ..
pir hour, •-.m4.

1

91do Br Sldo Btocl&lt; ~ lloo

•&lt;

...:,t'

Nlco 2 bodroomo, torgo yord zg
PoRih Sl, Konaugo, OH 6f4.44f.
Jlln
·
Nlco 2 8od100m 14170 h50i1olo.
• Etoctm &amp; Wotor, Bot-n 5 .P.M.
515. .
Trlllor For Ront, 8M.:ZI58-6SJII.
Unfwnl-, Vtr~ Nlco, Mx70, 2

Merchandise
1 ctoon
.............. B • w T.V.

1m CilovY S/4 ton, 3!10, 4 ...,.
Nl, 11200.104~

Flohono
tonkl
lor got.
.,.
ton,
10 aollon,
ono
202i
go11on
long, ono :zG- hlgll, IU 10- tm OIIC Plcll-4.1p, 4r4, Mony ',.
Portol Good Rumina Cori- I
- - wllh tonkl, 1 - . dllon,
12,1100, --1021.
21111•
•
Oomtu
Stwpftord - Pupo, 1Hz ChriY $10, VI, 350,. MW ~
-or I point loll, Fulltnd, Big eon., WonMd,
Both Po-• · On Proml-. No
moo; 30Wfl. . ~

w-.

Adul -lkorhs~~·•ldo • - P8pe;r8 $7S, 114 , .. 1541
mode, $31 or
. M•l CII'NI,
4 prong, $10. Glucomotor ~ HMtor Pupo, 1om 12/tliM, lSI
f25. llodpono, liM
Each, t'M-:mt-2831. ,
Alghon, 120. 304-tfl.
Mole hot!
Bull
hot!
3laal. tt.hrenll
- wlall
pup, _
- _.

-all

.

T-.

ooiloo.lguono. llQ4.1711.4312.

-her.

•s. I
0322, 3 mllol out 8ulevllle Rd.

Houl'l: M~,
F....

44

Apartment
lor Rent

I

o.uv•ry.

PICKENS FURNITURE
N-1\Jood .

'""j;;;;i:~b;;~;;;t~~~i;
applleitcH,
·HouNhold
!
opollmonlo, Na
nlohlng.
tr.l mi. Jorrlcho
Rd. ru,..
Pl.

~

~~~~~~u=n~tu~m=l~ot:lld:·
roqulrod, no ·

poto,
1 Bodroom Abovo Avorogo,
Convonlonl
To
Hoi-,
Economlcol Goo Hloot, 1251/llo.
Dopoolt Roqulrod, IM-4411-2157.
2 Bodroomo, !10 Gropo Stroot
Ootllpollo,
1250/Moi. 1200
Dopoolt, 111 F'-, No ~til, 814·

~

Pl.... WV,· ==----'-cell 304-f71.1410,
8811~4~4~48~o~4~48~
SWAIN
AUCTION I RJRI«TURE. 12
Olivo 91., Golllpolto.- 6 Uood
lumhuro, ~~~ W....., I
Work booto. I
31511.
VI'RA FURNITURE
4111Un Out Rt. 141
614o4o4&amp;-3158

-All real eiiate advSniSinQ In
thl&amp; nawspnper Ia subject rn
the Federal Fair Housing Acl
of 1968 which makes It illegal
to advenise ~a ny preference,
limitation or discrimination

Woohoro /Oryoro

.

2br.,· 2nd floor, kltcMn -lur· HOifi'ilon.• 911. w -wiil. w ;
nl-, woohor/dryor hook-up, Don~ Forgot Our REPO. 1rr. 1e-. no poto.JIOW15.1135Z 1 ~,
~p1rtman1

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

"'

.
11114 Dodge
Eltfndod Cob, "'"" ,. !
a-~ "- 121!10 0110; 1
1183 ono ton Chovr 4WD, runo
grwl tool boX111 ' ll«**lnn
iiondltlon, IIIHIS OliO; c:.oll eMo
iiZ-4111 ovontngo.

!

!
I
~

,,

llockad,
wormed,
· - · ......
lltttporUtonl,
IIIIo
Ca alvlllll, 111-1174404.

l

Mu81cal
Instruments

a::; pr.no, mo.

ID+Ifl.
11182

Rt. 2 - · .... ,._.,._
115-411120.
· GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Bedroom•,
BuJit-ln
Ster.o, Woohoro, dryws, rohtgorltore,
Buln-ln
Mlc:rowave
Walk rang... Sk•ooe Appllancee. 71
ArOund Stovo In ICHch.n Gor· Vlno Stroot~potllf4.4ole.73111, 1·
don Tub And Shower Stoh1 • Sit· I00-411J1.34w.
tlng On Prlvlle Lot, 6 Mil•
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
From Glttlpollo on SR 218,
$309JMo. Hud Welcome. 814- C..ploto 1tom0 lum~l~
446-7800• .

;rr .......

11114 Ford F·1501,_ ~ry Cloonl
Bchni...W puppln, - - 10,0!1!.Orlglnolll- M... Soli
AKCI chlillplon ~lnoo, •~r-1117.

Farm S u p plt es
&amp; Lives toc k

COUNTR'I' FURNITURE
Codlor Bedroom SUNo, S7ttl.
IIIHNIO Sot, f8l up. 3p&lt;. CIE .
Tobin, Ill ·up. 2pc. Uvlng
Room SUho, IZII ""' TUio, 4
Chotro; 1141 up. cwto., 4 ' ·•
Drowor ChOIIL. $44.111 up. 1m1.

-.:z

tor renl In Ponwroy,
$175/mo.; houN In New Haven, Wlalw,J)ryer, Cci1or T.V., CB
S1251mo.; 814-912·7511.
Rodlo, •lc:lowovo, Rllrlgorolor,

•utomatlc:,

BORN LOS·ER ·

111H Chevy FuN Slzo 4114 Air, "·
AIIIFM CUeolto, T-r. H-,•.
1 Ownor, 5 ~&amp;::od1 lOOIC Mltoo,
Vtr~ Wolt
NO For, 'lory ;
DoJ&gt;Ondoblo, $1,000, 114-44J. ,

,.Y:JAAT5 Tf&gt;J(.l~ ~

1110.

~ WIT\-1,

~TEPOO IT,

M.Y

\.Jill. YOU I

'

.
-Hondo
200

-tor. oxc: ',

-40

•lr cond. 3Q4.57I..

lly Rod Wlna ChtTo 40 Dog-1l.H. Br..n

~-.._..

........ Tho

Livestock
63
sr-eoto.iM 448 4222.
.
Concroto • Plolllc Sopolc
Tonko'- 300 Tltru 2,000 Oottono
Ron ~vono Enlo'IM'IoH, Jock·
eon, OH ~0.. F..,__ Truolt Cob. 8hM·
bod Truck T - . ProgromMI~
Fronklln comautor wn.ootL !log. Tonn. Wolklr Hcno. 'lory
DWP 30 Toncly Prim.. 304·773- Cleiltle, z SecldiN, i llrldllt,

....
·=
=I,
HOl

.

......

Chol Ringo Ml; O.i.

I

'11151.

-

•

bur1na I eollng Joliiwon'o Vltlio, IIJd.

lopoll.l--3481. ·

1700,114 4tl 1811.

64

74

.,.,~~··
wv.-

.

----·

Motorcycles

47

r o - . - rocko otort, SIOOO, lt4-t1112'-iio3:

: •&gt;

52 Writing tool
54 Here (Fr.l .

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C el~buly

·c

l- (!hel cryplagrams a•!t OU!I Iad !rom quolallon s toy lamou'l people, past i!nd p•esenl
Each leHar In th e Ctphor stands l or anOI~er - rooa~ ·s cl!lt' P eauals R

MCACHZL

AND YOUR

I)OU"TONN1ERE
~HOU l. D 1'\A1CH
1'\'{ CORSAC:.E

1&lt;.E. NrN, WILL YQU STOr
BE lNG SUCH A '&gt;OUR PUSS&gt;

rr ·s

JUST NOI

IN KEEPtNC, \&gt;liTH THE

4411.-m.

DI'NCE 5

F J G Y.

B VC H

V G

IJ P F

8 J T I F

F J

Accessories

Home
Improvements

TIIArDIILY
PU ZZLII

Rearrange let~ers of
0 four
scrambled words

J M

H VG

..',

law to farm four words

TICUND

I 11 I I I
I

OHREN
2

I

3

1

1

I

I

.

.

1.

.

Mybrolher ls achroniccom·
p laine r, but insists that he
doesrt 't want to bother anyone. Dad says he suffers in
silence · · · · · · than anyone.

..

G)

'T'HEMf: !

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
.

(;O()DY .
THERE 'S
A THEME .

THESE SQUARES

UNSCRA MB LE ABOVE LETTERS
10 GE T ANSW ER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
"Just keep one t~lng tn mind," the boss told his son. 'You
don't get something for nothing , you jus t haven 't gotten
BILLED yet. "

SO I'M SUf!'(lStD TO i&gt;.~OI~
SAl~~ BARS 011 ~E OFFfWII&gt; .
CH~NCE 1\1~T

1&gt;\ER'E

~y

BE

WAnER,. 't&lt;l~tN ~C\) GI;.T PI
, 1HIO Gt\Rill\f!l.O

CHAN~£.

B'ti\NS NI:ED

~ ~FILL I

AOWP,Rf, 1111111 1\ ~Q LV, IN ThE

t

...
'

ASTRO·GRAPH

BEDE OSOL

LEO. (July 23·Aug. 2~1 Make ~ure to get
~stro - Graph pre d•Ct10ns for lh e. yea r
ahead · by malting ·$ 1 25 10 A s t ro - Gr~ph .
clo th1S il~wspaper . P.b Box 4465 , New
York. NY 10163. Be sure Ia slate your
"lod•ac s1gn
•

ever ything •n writ1ng today tf you · r ~
'p ull•ng tog ether a com merc•al deal.
Leav~ nolhing up to chance or verba l
agreement!.
·

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 201 Advane&lt;ng

m•ght become •nyo lved w•lh&gt; a person
who 1s e)(t reme ly abr.,1s1ve . Try not to
complicate lhts Silualion by emulat1ng
h1sl her behavtor

2 mory g~i-age, betide NM

your sell -•nleres ts -.w•ll seem 1mportan1

Superm•rtcet, . bottom

r&amp;rry: btil oon'l let 1our 1ntenMV lor lul-

compl••tr rem cdaltd.. 2
bop: (lront bor 40'1121', - r
blr 3a'x23'1, 100'r40' lalt,
floor

hllmg your a1ms alienate you r compan-

-=n.ooo. -·2783. .

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl . 22) Today you'

•ons
ARIES (March 21·April 191 Th1s wlif be

LIBRA (Sept . 23·0ct. 231 Unfortunately,

worse Ieday.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 221 If you lake

unpleaSant taskS w11t not perfor111 them one of those days when others seem io selves today. B11e 1he bullet or hold your
have more control over your dest •ny than · nose ahd take care ol those nasty l:ttte
yoU do . Try nol to make a bad s•tuation ·duties .

Classified a
Wednesday . Feb . 1. 1995

84
'

·· In th e yea r ahead . establi shed fr1 endSFj1ps m1ght lake on new SIQ01f1cance :

.'

You and your fnends will do whatever 11
la kes to help eac.h other ,. drawmg one
another ever closer togeth er

Aller 5:00 P.M. 1 - - .
Bob Soundoro.

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20·Feb·. 191 II your

Pet• tor Sale

l1nanc1al Slluallon 15 a hftle pinched today .
rem'ember th ai you were the one who d1d
!he squeez :ng. There 1s no one lo blame
but yourself lor your costly sel f·l ndu,l·
gence 1~ !he recen t pasl . Aquar1us. treat
yourse lf ~o a birthday g1lt. Send for you r

-Flotlurltlg~- Blllt.
0!.-.Jng.
Jult
Wobb. Cill
441 02St.
AKC Por'*llliln IIUIIIIIIo; I
,mot., 1200 I UGD. -3044fl.
1471, nlfltla I w I ...

VG

the
be·

.

.31 Homes for Sale

-

JAIO

ldl,.d bv CU. Y R. POLLAN

I

Transpo rtation

-

Z: M

d~ '1) £\.,. .( ...;,. f} 'C ~c_:f'woiD
0 \!::1 l ' QU L" J,. ~ (:.1 (/• -;::J OAM I

I
- I

.

Oklo ·Cutlooo Supromo 2
Door, FutuN Clooolc, Mint Con- ·
dNion, Don~ 111M Thlto OMI

HVG

MC L H X

H V G

.-

81

vJ

FTAAG.
MZAIGO
R.
LC XG .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Everybody looks at the glamour side ol all thiS , but
foolball is a ruthless bus1ness ."- (L.A. Ram) Robert Young .

@

OH ,'

STRIKE .A BLOW IN THE WAA ON
HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CLASSIFIED$.

~OUR 1'\I:URO\ IC::, 6\:R)I,I'\IOBIA R~?S

SQuare bal.. mixed hlly lor

8

Relish - Adopt· Plumb • Heckle · BILLED

1-\~V - ~011'1 Wi TQ ~IN
t.W ME~l 'IJ~ ONE: Clf

. . . 814.,1112-3113.
.
.._.,.,. M ..., tf.211ea., never
-RKI....S.Ohon
Woyno
Rouolt,
Ad., IM.,-

N C A

'

EAGB

\I

Auto Parts &amp;

Serv1ces

c

Z X

6
Com plete IM~ cMudle quoted
.
_
.
.
_
-~'1 l •ll•ng •n the ' m·~~mg words
L-.....L-.L-l_-L_JL-...J you de11elop from step No J be low

With Elllroo Aoldng: 84,!100, 114-

76

word
~+-+~+---t-t--f 50 Hebrew
mea•ure

I. I I 1 I

Ill(; NATE

75 Boats &amp; Motors ·
for Sale

Telepho~e

Hrvice
(abbr.)
48 Coup d' 49 Auctioneer's

-+-+~+--1

ROBOTMAN

.2217.

I'
I

TAURUS (April 20·May 20) SoCial obhg·
a lions .r.rught take precedence over act•v•tle s you pre fer l oday . 11 thts occurs.
behave grac•ously and overcome your
dtsappo•ntment

GEMINI (May 21·June 201 Avoid 1ntroduc1nQ elements of compe tttton mro your
dealings today. When you th1nk the oddS
are •n your favor. they may actually be
stacked aga1nst you .
•
~

a nsk today wtthout carelully weigh1ng
the 'poss~ble ga1ns. you might play a large
gambl e l or something .almost werthless
:n the end_
.SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21 I II a
lamtl'f problem anses _today , suggesttthat ·
everyone sleep on it 1nstead of trying to
hammer out a solution . Tomorrow calmer
hei9,ds w111 preva1l.

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jen . 19) Take
CANCER (June 21 · July 22) OUit wh&gt;le . care nat 10 make caustic or arguments ·
yo~· re ahea!Jioday. Do r:tDI let 11 be sa •d
that you are a person who snatched
defeat froi'Ththe Jaws of v1ctory

.

.

t1ve comments today. Your lrame of mind
may make it difficull to express yourself

Rei&lt;ue 911 ICC)

lightly .

.

·.1 '

.I

,.,-+-f-+-+--1

Si&gt;-l~OS?

56

38 Swloa river
41 Praloe
42 Shed 1ooro
43 Hawaiian
dance
44 Sea In Ruaala
45 Carry .

m-+-+-+-t--i
=+-+-+-t--i

•vllle'l~urpllla.

llpollo•.

stoneware

37 Space a tine
In from 1he
margin

'I'"""'R-:-1'"'z::-:E:-=P-::-P---,1

BERNICE

I•

,-+-+-+--4

R£STI&gt;.UPANT1 W\10 Ll~tS

Sovorol Uood VCR.. For Solo
F""" flUI To St1UI; Jlrl
Tochnotogy, m Rt. 110, Qoi.

Your Key to Great Buys

Pa ss
Pass
All pass

Uiii*iiZiiOICMiMi;iiijiie.-;m;
·, :
SUzUki 250 follr.WL . tier with-'-'

...

CLASSIFIEDS ...

4 NT
5 NT
7•

new rnccor, uc. cond., 11100. ,~

1110. -~

'

Pas:-;
Pass
Pas s

~

Will rwtnr. 114 lit It t1.

This newspaper will not
knowlingly accept
adllertisements for real estate
which Is In vlolaUon olthe taw.
~ Our readers are herGby
. . lnlormed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper ·
are a\lallable on an equal
oppOrtunity basis.

25 Presses for
payment

not
,...,-+-+-+-+--+-~ 30 Snow field
31 French

.

And - n l - tt00 And Up,

blue blbbo $11. combol - ·

21 Plural of Mr.

-.-+-+-+-f--+--1
28 Alrlcan lond
-c
29 Believe - .:.

r-Ur-Y..,L_
· ,s~o......~~· : :_~,
I Is I . . ..

~d'art~

Uml1atlon or discrimination.·

22 Arab, e.g.
23Brecklnrldge · ·
24 Oeblor 'o lnita.

.,...,11""""11r"""''II!""Tn-TI'r"1

4

For llrot ond outtina 100 lb. IOUnd boiM Of hoy,
cotTIM...-31.

771-6341.

8:0C!J&gt;m FJI.Sun. Jr. camllougo,
...,. lnoulotod covwolto $30,

32 Mobile Homes
for $ale

10 Concerning
(2 wds .l
11 Roman roa d

12 Actor Calhoun
19 Possessive
pronoun

26 Author Zane

I ':

2041.

byS..Idrvllo-

·446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

·
9 For lear that

46 Actress

(

Rlclnge"A-Mg..:
~-~ or
HP e'M-"t4
onglno,
taas,
..

Slim'

3 BodiOOIIIO, 2 Bolho, Pump. 0.. Furn1ce, 1 Aan,
Gorogo, Actdloon Arlo, 112,000,
114-3B1-721Z
,
· .

7 Epic poem

B Sob

40 Viper
42 Which thing

1187 Honda 250A 4-whHiw,· ,:

Flrot I Socond Cunlng Orchord
~GJ!I-. Nov"'; wor, 1 - - .

trodo
onllquo
nowIKMwohold tumWtlngo. Will buy

.

Treckor Pro 1 1 - Uood Vory Uttlo, 38 HP lllon:ury

Hay&amp; Grain

Alpho Andllllod Cln:ltonl Clnt•
$2.00 To $2.21 A Boll :J04.8fl.
11143, 81W7114714.

Rl8 Fwlllluro. Wo buy, Mil ond

SoCondBt.,
Rocky Poo-..

5 Compass pl.

empire
39 Exhausts

1111 FO&lt;d F2110 4r:.:yl., SOpd., ~

based on race , color, religion,
seM familial status or national
oligln, or any ln1entlon to
make any such preference,

Hav•n

6 Sawllke pall

~

oond. $2400. 30W75o31124.

114-258ot2311.

Ronch
strto · 3 A1m
Bod=
FR,
Laundry
RoOm,
KNchon, Wolt lnoulltod; Nloo
Yoid, 138,100, 114--S.

.,

Household
Goods

Amon• Stdo Bv Sldo ,.._,..
teo &amp; Ylltor In ~-':!k• NoW,
Yu.r Wernnty $~; AIMnll

N.w home under conMructJon,
oomple1e construction In lelu of

c:oll 1114-4112,3711. EOH.

Larry Lively. 814 388 ··~

11

51

In Pt. Plo-nl,

54 MIKellaneOus

......

qulrod. 'soW75-4431.

C:':r.
lor I
-1858.

1:00

w•-.- -..
'*

Merch andise

Ouotltr Ho..ohold Fumlohlngo
2bdrm. epta., hllal electric:, 1p. And AppliancH. Mattre• S.U: 1
plllnc•• tumlahed, leundry saa.oo: otnenaa .• $141.00i
room facllftln •CJou ta achool Llvln~~ Roo St -e.oo --...
In tow•.
··•
m
~., A~tlcotlono onlloblo rooma
St. · ·..
•
.,.t~t.OO;
It: Vlll•a• ,..,. .Apia. 148 or Refrigerator.
• Aengn ~

Worood To Bur: Babv ~. Fltr
condnlon, 11. . . .. IS"n.

Employment Serv1ces

~- ·

PDWmo.

44$.0544, 514·388·1708.

CU"A:
...
. 'J1141.

fumh~a.. tool• or
••••· o.Dy Martin, I

T9D Jt!!:!! Pllld: All Old U.S.
CO!no, llolil Ringo, ·Sit¥ii'l:iilna,
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
lSI Socond A...,uo, Gotllpollo.
Wontod To Buy Uood llobllo
Homo. Colt 814-44&amp;4175

..-,.,.. ,..

In o.mtry,

·-y

•10
A9 742

Are you pla.nning a new partn ership'?
If so. how are you goin g tO agree on
yo ur biddin g method s'' One way is to
buy a new book. "Partnership Bidding"
by Canadian champion Mary Paul. It is
.-ivaiiHblc fnr $11 _45 from Th _
cB
World. 39 West !14th Street. New
NY 10025-7124.
Paul 's hook l'Ompri .sef; many
tionna ircs. which each of you answe1k
When. you di!Sag:ree. yuu.can msru:'"
which style to adopt.
Today ·s deal feat.ures those little ·
k1l own tonv r nt10ns . ~lavman a nd
Blackwood.
·
Against seven hearts, West leads th e ·
club queen . It loo kS too easy. As ytJLI
hf!V C no potential losers out side the ·
truinp suil , th e "no rmal " play IS lo cash
lh e heart ace and play a heart to dum ·
· my's queen. If the trumps are :1-2. yhu
claim. And if West·discards on the second round. yo u take th e marked lincssc
of you r heart HI. draw Eas t 's las t
· trump and claim.
Ho\Vever. there is a pote ntial snag
against an erudite opponent. Suppose
you win lh e lirst tri ck in hand, cash the
heart ace and see lhe nine drop froni
East. Suddenly you.have another possibility. If Easl has just played a singleton nine. ·you c&lt;Jn pi ck up Wcsl 's re·
maining J -6-5 by cashing your king ·and
finess ing dummy's eight.
Ho~ do you kr'tow which way to tum?
You don 't. But you ca n make life more
difficult for a wily East . Win the firs t
trick in thr dummy and lead a low
heart. Now 1t is dangerous for Easl to
falsecard with the nin e. beca use hi s
partner might have a singleton 10.

PEANIITS

Bur ., .... ·Antlquoo,
IGI E. - . on RL 124
-~ _ , II.T.W. tO:itil

a.m. to :GO p.rw.,
to 1:00 p.m.l1t - • •

• 97543

Opening lead : •Q

Antlqun

Security lnc:ludft Weter, 114- C.rpet., 114-441-'JIM4.
:~M.-711.. 614·2116-1337.

momlltal"', old clocks, antique 45781.

Mo)or

Specelor Rent

4 River in France

34 Ancient letters
~5- -Lucy
36 Early mideast

By Phillip Alder

lor Rent

wanted to Buy
..
- _, lollroqulred.
• Son..
_
R~ - c/0
Pl.
1
Wontod To Buy: Booglo Puppr; -.rt_Roototor, ...,
lloln St.,
814-446-4477.
Pl. P-nt,'WI 211110.

Wortdng

46

• J965

Ours

A good place
for the first steps

2 Bod

9

Riverine

304·7'13o5MI, Meton wv.

S Bod,_,. Homo In Country,
VInton, LoJao Lot, WI- Dryor, Mobile homo lot lor ..... F...,., lfavt, a Retrlg~Ntor dlo!rolt,
ott utllll• iinltoblo.
Inch dJ 1, PIUI Trull Pfck.UO, . 304.-ez.:rgge.
PSO'IIo. $200 DoiiOOI~ hlo Polo
In Homo, 114.,311-0302.

u-...., Pol::':!

now hl~"ll
quollllod olllgnmont tochnlclln,

furniture.

•r.:; on rtnr.,ult.,
All

hook-u~. Ca t •liM' 2:00

Lody noodod to u... n ·~
todr, roloroncoo roquiNd.

~r;;:,.,=:;· :C,';l:'"'f:

Rick PNrson Auction Compeny,

Also trlller

2br,, lluon, will HUD qualifY,
$210hno. ~:~~u• duotlh, •v•ll•bfli
Fl. 111. 304-773-111134.

Corpot &amp; Vlnvt In Stock IS.OO Yd
6 Up 110 Pottomo 01 Klt&lt;hon
roomo, 5 Millo, Rt. 218, Corpot tn .Stock. OV... sa Pol·
Gollpollto,
$250/llo., · 850 tomo Vlnrt In Stock. llollohon

T~bu"!r.121
Third
Avonuo,Doltv
GolHpotlo,
"" 45131.
Know Tho Rootouront Buolnou
lnoldo • Out? Looking For Ea·

PubliC Sale .
&amp; Auction

' 81
1580.
::tl~t!:. ~~531 .rou por ::,91,:-oo,:-pl.,.:ng=,.,.,....:..:....-.-wtt=h-ooolclna--::::::-:-. 53

Of Interest, CLA 348, c/o Oil-

~~~~t~~:.:~:~llpotlo

8

211r. llodtoon Avo., -

• J

33 Alma -

II •

~':~~"rt..":l'~:

41 Houses for Rent ·

32 - ·, Mine and .

'5 .

81(8 Rlllo ..... 111111 Uno
ltooll And lllng, 1110; . - .
1CIII.
.

Rooms

EAST
• J 1·0 7 li

2.

THAT'LL BE $5.00
FER YORE PILLS.
LOWEElY

t31011no., . .

YNr
Wamnly, - $211;
ront, .tocotod on H~- CNOk 1
Rd.
off
Crob Crook Rd. 304-524- Rolrigorotor F - FNo t150;
2773.
.
.
Wolllior llloftog 1 Y•r WlrnlniV
$205; WuMr 1J.E. llodof,
Thrte
bedroom hom1
Jn $150; Wuhor Wlllrlpoot EacoJ.
trlrnmera I hiOWif'l _.,Iced Syii&lt;UM, both lnd 1/2, toni Condblon, 1110· hOot, portlolly coJpOtod, lull Rongo 30 Inch hi; OM llllngo
·,_II
flldoni
Equlpmont
Com-.
(lillY. :J04.87&amp;.1Ut.
-~~~. gorogo ond .outbultcl- 30 fnc:h .... Orvor o.E. 11•r Wornlltr.
oonorot
~sm:o~ind":'~lty
~ Qlo;Drvor
JlKMo
Yon! WI- w
MW•te~ 114-112:·2441 betwNn
$1110; All In l E I - Cotllpm.
dftlon. And Sold With Gou,...
=-~·'C.:t.:'~o~~; lpu:
::~::--:-::-:-----I
loot sb-Appllo,_ 711 Vlno
114-4411--&lt;
42 Mobile Homes
~~":.4.;'~C:.'"' 8M*7311,

wt\l:
Reaume To: CLA 341, c/o Gill-

BARNEY

52 Sporting Goocl8

45

1 Lampreys
2 - up(keep
quiet)
3 Stockings

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: Sou th
W.st Nor1h Easl
South
I NT
Pass 2 •
Pe~s!'i

tlow. 12300. 304-t7W7tl.

depoelt, no Nt8.114112 1121.

Fumlshed

DOWN

. 9 8 .:;

WEST

'

FO&lt;d T·Bird Turbo Coupo, (
toedld, looka • rune uc., ~ r '

bedroom
·r tl\111111.,,
utHnt.o pold, ..,..... · polldnJI,

a

57 knack
58 Female relative

• A H5

1'WD

viM,

seafood

17 Plnlall duck
18 Tear
21 Par1ners
23 Tiny Insect
27 ApJlearing

A i\ ;\ 2
WAK1l17
• J 8 li

81711.

Rentals

..... -

TlV'IT~ c:o.uJRI&lt;:t-\T
PR€SICl€.\.lT IAL

car..srDJT

56 - raltng (ol
gaoollne)

20 Conservative

~

SOliTH

Twin Rlvoro T -1 , _ - lngJ;\t,lciiiOM "" 1lr. HUll
oubo_.,. op1. lor ~ ond
hlndlcoptlOCI. EOH 30W7Io

rtv...

Ht;:-;

·" K 3

• QJ108 ,

-

-oy I

Mlddlopoll, · - -

2 br llU, In

.toe- eo. wv. 11D4-1711-at1.

Ttme /On Col Ctoonlng 'Tnlclono. Muot 8o DopOndoblo,
Anp ;Mibfe, Committed, Wllf..
tng To 8o Trolnod. Sond
RMumo To SCC9 P.O: Bol 11311,
Korr, 011 4!1643.

-

-.mr Yl J:WP._€ (/¥.) 5A'r

. -

1111 C.leb;rtly Eura Spart • •
tlon
wagon,
nk:e,
auto.,
air,
--•nd
,_,or
-.y, $22!10, I
1.:11711 or
114-tMII-2045.

c'

.

Common:lol rlvor-llont pomor
lalt, lllddllflo!l1 Oh1 out o( llood
..... Ill Lilli- "" 2 inobllo
homM, StS,OOO. -2·261.

11a110n Co. Df llltw•• Maon,

--•=N,

0

ApM:ment,

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Smott loooJ Finn S.ldna FUll

Found: Male l•egle· 3-4 v.. ,.
Old, Rt. 35, Folrgroundo, 814.,
31JB.!1387.

VI-

-

Real Estate
Wanted
+I· tOOoc. linn, locolod In

Help Wanted

0

.

51'1:0 HE.'S 1-.XlT r.Dt-XJ
10 CO ::OME'mi/VG C:VMB 7AAT
11€ 3\tO t-It WOV!.D C:O...

oor.:o ""'" ,

11114 Tompo, 1131
· ~ rougn,
ITI-28011.

13195

+A K Q 2

GIIJSRI(t\

1114 Monte C.rlo Zdr., PS, PI,
AC, MW tlrM, new pelnl, exc.
oond. 304-11715·1238.

••e.

36

"Of course I'm nervous about eating this .
There's no nutrition label."

'

, _ opoll- ot
Minor
ond
lltv.olilo
.A.rtllllllloln l l l l = " ' $232-GII . c.a ·- EOH.
Modem 1 Bulwn
114 Ul Q®O,

• QH4

EEK &amp; MEEK

GNclouo living. t lnd 2 bod-

Colt1.-Mnl.
NEW BANK REPOBI OnlY 4 t.ltt
-IYod ln. ~78&amp;-nlt.

PuppiM: BO&lt;dor Como, Sponlol

NORTH
., K 0 4

Fumlohod EHictency AU Utltltl•
Pold, DownotoiN tl85/llo. ttl
Soeond Avonue, Gollipollo, 114.,

LIII"ED OI'FiRI now 14r70 2·
3br., $5ttl DOWN, hlo Poymorrto
ottor 5yro. FrM Dottvory l
Sotup. 304-7SW5811.

Old, BM-441.o505.

71

for Sale
,_., Totol Eloc:trtc, U.-plnnl"ll· Roody To Into on

s Boogie Houndto Full Blooded,
Two t" y.._,. Old: 0nt 1 Yu.r

Apartment

.. .
.. '
...
..

printing prttl

Louise 16 Cocktail

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrtgbt

Answer to PreviOUI Puzzle

t Reverberations
7 Chocolate 51 Frince'e
13 Plaza girl
continent

I
• L

'

I

•

•

· ·

�·I
Page-1o-:The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, JBI)uary.31, 1995

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Early 20th century ·Amedcan art~st~ highlighted at literary club
The topic "Early Twentieth- by artisis who bad studied ·there,
Cent ury American Artists" was sbe said. The name derived rrom
presented by Jeanne Bowen at a 11-one or Monet's masterpieces titled
recent meeting of lhe Middleport "Impression Sunrise" wbicb exhib'Literary Club, cbange from tbe iteil certain identiftable effects giv· usual book review rormat of tbe ing it &lt;l,Uite a different lcbaracter
group.
from previous ait procedures.
Sbe fnt gave a brief overview
Mrs. Bowen' s lively cornmenof Impressionism, m art movement tary brougbt out bow Impressionist
popularized in France by tbe works were composed of splotches
famous painter, Claude Mone t. or pure brigbt colors laid !)n the
This style of painting originated in canvas, then blended by a fealher
Europe during the mid-1800's and brush stroke. Tbis produced brilwas eventually brougbt tO America liant intages and background wbich

seemed as ir light were radiating
through tbem, sbe said.
·
Sbe explained that colors were
vivid,gray and back were never
used, md tbat the paintings were
asymmetrical, emphasizing a new
use of perspective . Oftentimes
cropped images were balmced by
an impression of limitless space or
emptiness, sbe said. Nlolher development was the change from heroic
and mythical characters to scenes
of casual daily life. American
Impressionism reached its peak of

BETH WU..LIAMS

IfRI'ITANY WILLIAMS

Brittany, Beth and Cody
Williams, cbildrep of Ricbard and
Barbara Williams of Middleport,
celebrated !heir birtbdays with a
pool party at the Super 8 Motel in
Gallipolis.
Brittany was II on Jan . 18,
Cody.wa~ tbree on Jan . 19, and
Beth will be eight on Feb, 5.
'
Eacb child bad a birthday cake.
Brittany.' s was a Rutland Red
Devil's basketbalt'cake, Beth's wa,o;
a Lion King cake, and Cody bad a
·Power Ranger cake. Winning
prizes Were Kara Musser, Mallory
King, and Madison King.

CODY WU.,LIAMS

ications about the spiritual life md
will also be available to answer
quesiions and share· some of ber
own experiences as a solitary and
mystic.
Ross is the 1995 Tbeologian,in
Residence in lhe diocese from Jan.
II to Feb. 14. According to a
church publication, "(1\tercbange"
she bas been variously described as
a hermit, a mystic, and a person

who ties ber spirituality to action in
the world. Sbe bas said lhat sbe
does not call berself a bermit,
"because it conjures up too many

ron:umtic notions."

Ross is an Anglican solitary,
wbicb means sbe is officially
under the wing of the cburcb
though not attached to a religious
COIIWIUnity.
ijefore ber profession as a solitary, Ross managed a winery, co-

---:_-_---.;...._--~· Reedsville
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wbitcbead
bosted .their annual holiday buffet
at their home. Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. BiD Meredith of Beverly;
Roger Meredith, Vincent: Mr. and
Mrs . Wade Myer, Matt, 'Eddie,
Matlhew Ryan and Kaley, Norlh
Canto11; Julie Henscb and daughter,
Lisa, Massillon; Lillian Pick~ns,
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Weber and
Mark, and Mr. and Mrs. David
Weber, Morgan and · Erin-,
·Reeds"ille.

Pvt Matt Martin of Eustis, Va,
Micbael and Angel Martin, Akron;
and Shannon McComas of Rutland
were recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh Martin.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Weber and
daugblers, visited with Mrs. Shirley
Taylor, D.ayton. during the. bolidays. · . · .
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wbitebead
spent lh,e boliday weekend witb
Juli and Walt Henscb and children,
Lisa.and Joi'dan of Massillon. Join-

founded a wi!dlife preservation
trust,. edited books, worked on the
restoration of buildings, and lobbied for en\jronmental issues.
.Last summer sbe lived on a boat
in Alaska to testify in lhe Exxon
Valdez trial on bebalf of the environment aM injured parties. Sinee
1983 sbe has served as guest lecturer on tbe Englisb faculty at
Oxford University, England.
· The purpose of the tlieologan-

Others attending were lhe cbil- .
dren' s sister, Brooke, paternal ·
grandmother, June Williams ,
Brook Bolin, Racbel Garey, Alison ·
Hayes, Renee Bailey, Amy and
.Brittany Hysell, and·Amber Snow·
den.
Sending cards and gifts were .
maternal grandparents, the Rev .
and Mrs. Amos Tillis ·or Columbus;
Sue Tillis of Columbus, Joe and
Faye Tillis of Cincinnati, Becky
Tillis of Gallipolis, Don, Gina,
Julie and Ben Tillis of Rutland, and
Justin, Susan, Mallbew' and
Andrew Sayers or Glouster;

Dave
Grate

Vol. 45, NO. 193

.

Ross, it is reported, is interested
in lhe opportunity. to meet witb
small groups to teacb about or
explore topics related to prayer,
justice, the environment, and ways ·
of living faith in everyday life.

Rutla!ld
Furniture
If

at ·first you don't succeed,
y.o u ' re
running ' about
. average.

•••

One good thing about the
new TV shows - the kids are
doing their homework again.
•• '*'·

• • •

Sonie people wilT believe
anything if it's whispered to
them.

•••

Income tax time is when
millions · of citizens test their
po~er of dedljCtion.

s-mith_M...;..el-issa_an_dB-rm-do-n.

· Holidily guests at lhe bome of
wv
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Smith were Mr . . Te~~~on,smitha., a~· a;:.~:!:
and Mrs. Jobn Smith and children, Reedsville, Mr. arid Mrs. ·Michael
Melissa and Brandon, Weston, . Smith, Samantba and Adam of
W..Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Mark Smith Heatb, and Mrs. LueiUe Smith.
and Shelby, Mrs. Jodi Bissell and .
M
dM L
B
Darci, all local.
·
r. an
rs. yle alderson
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. · were boliday guests of Mr. and
Melvin Sinith were Mr. and Mrs: Mrs. Jay Long I!Dd Courtney, VinJobo Burns and Jeffery of Logan, ceo~. md Mrs. Denver Weber and
and Elizabeth Duffy, ~oy.
Mark were recent dinner guests of
Holiday visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Weber and
Grant Smilh were Mr. md Mrs. l;blloe, Long Bottom.

7 SHOWROOMS

II WAREHOUSES

Rutland Furniture
Rt. 124, R1tland, OIL

742-2211

Human .se·rvice -workers st.ri.ke begins .in Gallia
Memb~;rs of Communications
Workers of Aoierica Local 4320
coouneoced tbe first day of a wOtt
stoppage against tbe Gallia County
Department of Human Services Ibis
morning iQ its continuing ' contract
dispute with management
Pickets set up outside of lhe
DHS office at861 Thitd Ave.· and
. at tbe Cbild Support and Enforcement Agency office operated by
OHS at 19 Locust St shortly after
6 a.ni.
CWA Local Vice President Jack
'Huber said pickets will not be
maintained on a 24-bour basis at
the DHS sites. Picketers at tbe

Tbird Avenue site marcbed in front

be said.
Clients who bave scheduled
of the building, jeering supervisory
staff and security guards inside the appointments are tirged to contact
office and cbmting "job security the agency to determme if it's necessary for them to come to tbe
- not scab security."
Tbe inain office remains open office. Barnes said.
No new talks in the dispute have
for business and is staffed by
.supervisors, DHS Director Jerry · been scheduled .
"It's a waiting period now,"
Barnes said.
Tbe agency wiD be open during Huber said. "We sincerely regret
its normal operating boors of 8 am. the inconvenience to the people or
until 4:30 p.m., Barnes added. The Gallia County. Secondly, lhe peofood stamp office is open from 9 ple of Gallia County should be outa.m. to 3 p.m., md tbe cbUd sup- raged at the expense of lllring secuport office is also open for regular rity for the office.
operation. Tbe days wben food
"We bave repeatedly ask.¢ for
stamps are issued remain the'\ame, ·security for our members in lhe

t aocFees.Defr.6e:r

BRAND NEW '95 CHEVY

FIBERII.ASS RUNNING BOARDS -

• E•tended Chassis
• Driver S1de Air Bag
· • Anli_Lock Brakes
• A1r\!ondihon
- • A UIO~Iie- OV~n!fiVI!

• V1sta Bay Wmdows
• Power Steering

• 'Power Bra~es ·
• Tih Steering
·Cruise
• • AMIFM Casse«e

• Power WiMows

• Power Locks
• 4'Captain Chairs

S·SERIES PICKUP

• Sola/Bed
·looiri!Cl L\!olng _
·l'!emrum Wood Pkg .
• Full COnversion
• rllli!tglass Running lloards

• Rear Anti-Lock Brakes
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• Power §t~nng ·
- ..Steel BeHed Tires
• Power Bralies

-.

'94 POifTIAC SUNBIRO ~ .
• A• Condrtoo · · • Powr. Windows
• Automahc , .. • Rear Defroster
• PIS, PIB .
· • AMIFM Stereo
• Power Do01Locks • Coosole

BRAIIIIIEW '95 POIITIAC ao.v11! SE

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
bruised and hysterical Nicole
Brown Simpson told 'police that a
Nc.w Year's Eve figbt wilh ber busband began soon after he bad sex
· with anolher woman in their bouse,
im officer testified.
Ms. Simpson said her busband
climbed into bed witb ber after
having sex wilh the woman, Detective Jobt\ Edwards recalled Tuesday. Although tbe altercation itself
bad already been widely reported,
Edwards' testimony made the fight
loot even more damaging to Simp-

• Air Cor&lt;!~

• Steel Belted Tires
· ·
• Custom Clottd3ucket Seats
·• Loaded+

• Cllise Ctlfll1d
• Delay Wl&gt;eB
·Custom
Ooth lnteriOf

•.Dual Airbao

• All~lod&lt; Srai&lt;es

·Automatic

'AM/FM ca.wrteAv~

•Power

AUTOMATIC/V-I POWER

. ·Power SleerirJJ • Cntse Controf
·Two Tone Paint
• Power Brake! • CLSom Ckth Seal Ava•able
•Allf~ Cas..ne · ~ Wlteelo
• Wei E&lt;&gt;il&gt;tled

·Loaded!

'r

.

EXPLAINING PROGRAM - Paul Ger;
ard, chairman ol the Melp County Community
Corrections Local Plannln1 Board, updated
boolrd -lllben on the 1oc111 community correc·
tlo111 PI'IJII'Illll'• electronically monltOriil hoiilie
· ·. .

arrat'program at the boar_d 's meet11111 TutSday.
The board b01ted Chris Murray, seated-rear,
state coordinator for colillllllnlty non·raldenU.I .
)II'Gil'NIII In tiM Bureau of Commdnlty Servlca,
· who explained the necessity for loatl community
corredlo111 JII'OIIrams. •

Local corrections board
hosts state coordinator
·

By 11M FREEMAN ,
Sentinel news stall'
Members of the Meigs County
Community Corrections Local
Planning Board met Tuesday with
Cbris Murray, state coordinator for
community non-residential programs in the Bureau or Community
ServiCes. who explained the neces- ·
sity for local community correc·tions programs.
The local planning board, consisting of 15 members including
judges, law enforcement officers
and community and government
leaders. met in its fmt meeting of
1995 . The board is scheduled to
meet twice yearly.
The board oversees the Meigs
County Corrections program in the
common pleas court wbicb seeks
alternatives to committing non-

dangerous offenders to state penal
·
institutions.
The ·program receives all its
casb fWtding from a grmt administered by lhe Ohio Department or
Rebabilitalion and Correction. Tbe
board of county ·commissioners and ·
the common pleas court provide inkind assistance by providing office
space, equipment, supplies and
other support.
Program personnel include an
administrator-project director, a
community release officer and a
part-time secretary-data en'try
worker.
•
Board Chairman Paul Gerard,
bailiff for the Meigs CoWtty Common Plea~ Court, explained some
of tbe program's goals.
"We bave to find other options
for j~dges," said Gerard. "We are

~,.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- The Environmental Protectlon .Agency ..yo It will test .only1mrtlons of fish Instead of
wbole fisb for, dioxin at the site of a proposed pulp mill In
Mas!lll County.
Environmentalists criliciZA:d the de&lt;:lslon, saying those lesser
tests IIUIY underest111111te the level of dioxin alnoady In the Ohio
River.
Dioxin Is a byproduct of chlorine-based. pulp bleuchlng process. Researchers bave linked dioxin to birth defects and cancer.
Parso111 &amp; Whittemore Inc. of Rye Brook, N.Y ~ was Issued 11
wasle-water dlscbarge permit last summer by the state.
Tbe EPA Region 01 oMce In PhUadelpbia wanted to review
tbe permit and test dioxin levels In tbe river at Apple Grove
after environmentalists .protested the permiL
Gov. Gaston Caperton, a iiilllsupporter, complained to EPA
Administrator Carol Browner, who last week sent Caperton a
letter saying ber omc:e would review the 11111tler.
Vicky Binetti, water permits cblef for EPA Region IU, said
Ibis week tbe a11ency llu decided to test llnly 11s• ,fllleiiJ Instead
of whole lisb because that Is tbe portl!lll people eat.
West VIrginia's dlmdn r"'lulatlons "'!II for sutb tests to usr!
only lisb nuets.
But dioxin concentrates In fatly anl11111l tissue, so testing only
fiUets means that fatty tissue containing most of the dioxin will
be Ignored, said Peter deFur, a dioxin expert with the Environmental Defense Fund In Washington, D.C.

.not probation officers, but we try ...
to malce probation work. better."
One program includes eleclro!licaUy monitored bouse arrest, Gerard said.
"We can monitor them wherever
they are," said Gerard.
"(Electronically moniiored
bouse .arrest) should be a preferred
option for the offender," said Gerard. "They get to stay at bome."
It is also a lot cbeaper than
keeping people in jail - lhe program costs about $6 a day wbicb is
paid by lhe offender or, in cases
wbere the offender is unable to
pay, by the program, i)e exp,Iained.
"It gives us an option, ' Gerard
noted.
Other options include community service, Gerard said.
Continued on page 3
.

• ol-

•

--

'

Rutland Mayo·r Eads~urges
residents to insure water lines

· As giant pbotos or a,bruised Ms. ·
Simpson were projected on a courtroom screen, Edwards told jurors
tbat sbe emerged from busbe'S
.
/
Rutland maintenance crews
wearing only a bra and muddy By GEORG£ ABATE
were called to bebind Henry
sweatpants and collapsed in bis Sentinel Newt! Stalf
arms in tbe darkness, crying, "He's
Rudand residents went without E,b lin's garage .at about 4 p.m.
water
ovemigbt Monday wben a Monday and worked until 9 p.m.,
going to.kiD me I"
service
line broke, viUage oflicials said Dale Hart, village maintenance
- "I said, 'Wbo's going to kill
supervisor.
slaled
Tuesday.
you?" recalled Edwards, wbo was
A service line behind Eblin ' s
. But, Rutland officials warned
a patrol officer responding to the
garage
burst, Hart said. As tbe
plllpCrty owners they could also be
911 call. "Sbe said, '0.1.'
water
and
mud began tn freeze up
"I said, '0.1. who? You mean sock,ed with outrllgeous water costs
that
night,
the
workers gave up.
to repair lhe 40-year-old service
the football player?'
Early
Tuesday
morning, water
"She said, 'Yes, O.J. Simpson lines that run from tbeir bomes to ·
was
·
restored
to
the
entire town
the new main lines.
tbe football player."' ·

~~m'tK-1m500lR&lt;4x4 PICKUP

tomer &lt;;omplaint leuers in person- system the DHS uses.
Employees were informed in a
nel ftles to evaluate employee permemorandum
Monday to perform
formance .
·
"manually,"
their
duties.
.Huber said the union suggested
Barnes defended the action as a
the letters be kept out or the Iiles
way
of shielding both clients and
and rormal worker evaluations
employees.
sbould be conducted.
"AU bargaining unit employees
"Tbe department should have
were
de-activated from the comjmtlhese letters to determine if there 's
er
system
primarily as a safeguard
a problem, but that's apparent! y not
for
clients
and !heir benefits, as
what management wants to use
well
as
for
the
employees' protecthem for," be said.
tion,"
Barnes
said
.
The job action comes ftve days
"There bad already been some
after the last management offer was
rejected, and two days after union incidents or tampering with commembers' identification codes were . puter information, which was in
Continued on page 3
erased from the CRIS-E computer

·Environmentalists
criticize EPA's decision

.

jlrobation. ·

·Loaded' .

past, but we were .told the money
wasn'tlbere," be added.
Tbe union, representing 32 DHS
employees, has worked ·wilhout a
contract since Dec. 3I. The union
rejected management's final offer
last week and voted to strike.
"Negotiations bave been conlial,
but we didn't come close to any
agreement," l!e said. "Several
issues remain on the table, but the
primary issue is job security. If we
can get pa!l tbat one, we cuuld
reacb a swift settlement."
The major slicking point on job .
security, Huber added, centers on
management's desire to keep cos-

::Detective
.
· testifies in
Simpson case

~tern IIIIo liiUIOunced they
wanted to Cl\ll Ronald, Sbipp, a
retired police officer md friend of
'Simpson. Defense. atiomey Carl
Douglas identified Sbipp as tbe
myscerious ..Leo .. in the opening
pages·of a "Raging Heart," a new
• book about lhe Simpson case.
The book says Simpson met
with Leo the day after the murders
;~od revealed baving dreams of
killing Ms. Simpson. Later in the
book. Sbipp is mentioned by name
as a friend wbo counseled tbe
Simpsons in tbe days following
their 1989 figbt
·
- It wasn't clear iftbe judge
would aUow Sbipp' s testimony. In
a private conference at the judge's
bencb, defense attorney Jobnnie
Cocbran objected to portions of
Sbipp's ·proposed testimony and
said be would not question Sbipp
himself because tbe two are
cousins.
.
Tbe ~ was put on bold until
today.
Prosecutors allege that Simpson
killed bis wife in a jealous rage
after years of abuse. Tbey used tbe
1989 beating as a launcbmg pad for
their case.
Tbe fltSt three witnesses were an
operator wbo took her 91' I call and
two officers wbo investigated the
case. Simpson eventually pleaded .
·110 contest and was sentenced to

$17888**
.

...

2 Sections, 12 Pages 35 cants
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 1, 1995

son.

BRAND NEW CIEVY ASnm EXTENDED CONvERsioN VAN

Low IOnlght tn 30L Partly
cloudy. Thursday, blgb tn mldJOs.

of

persona/s-----....-1-ob-n
w

ing the Wbitebeads at the Henscb
bome were Jean and Sarab Frydman of Columbus and Jane and
Wade Myer, Mat~ Eddie, Matthew
Ryan and Kaley Marie of Norlh
Canton.
Visiting recendy with Mrs. Nell
Wilson were Mr. md Mrs. Robert
Sams.ofWeston, W.Va.
Mrs. Lona Chevalier was a dinocr guest of Mr. and Mrs. Zenith
Chevalier and family at Belpre,
recently.

Page4

Copyrtght1995

What you don't know may not
hurt you, but it will certainly
amuse a lot of people.

iu-residence p_rogram is I!!.J!IQYid.e
opponunities for people, especially
lhe laity, to explore lhe rel,.ationsbips between failh and lhe work
they do from Monday through Sat,
urday,

Pick 3:
540
Pick 4:
7616
Buckeye 5:
5-7-19-21-28

By

Maggie Ross to lead quiet day·at ·Grace Episcopal Church ·
Renowned author and Anglican
Mystic, Maggie Ross, will be leading a quiet day at Grace Episcopal
cburcb m Pomeroy Saturday, from
9 a.m. to rioon.
·
·
As explained by Father David
duPiantier, rector, a quiet day is a
. brief but nourishing lime focusing
on individual and corporate spiritu. a1 development. He said that Ross
will guide
in med. . the congregation
.

All three
Meigs teams
po~t wins

popularity berween 1885 ma 1915. certlmd iQ Boston aqd New York. log wilh tbe !heme, sbe sang "A
Mrs. Bowen demonstrated lhe Resources for .Ibis presentation Picrure No Artist Can Paint' ! by J.
flavor of Impressionism by display- were American Impressionism Fred Heir, "JiJSt Plain · Folks" by
ing five prints or the artists Childe ·written in 1984 by William .
· - Maurice Stonebill{ the amusing
Hassam, Frmk Benson, Edmond Gerdts, Hassam's New York by case of "The Cat Came Back" by
Tarbell md Jobn Si11ger Sargent . Jack Slavin and catalogs from the
Harry S. Miller and "Someone is
These refleet the po'silivc, almost Metropolitan Museum in New Waiting For Me" .with words by
contemplative aspects of life, York. City.
Andrew Sterling and melody by
nature and cityscapes, scenes of
Mrs. Roy· Holter, the bostess 'for Von Tilzer. Audience participation
gardens wilh figures at quiet ease. the occasion; then entertained with was included on the last two songs.
The artists of a group of Impres- a musical program accompanied. at
sionists, "'The Ten" and their sub- lhe piano by Mrs. Chester Erwin.
jects frequently represented tire Mrs. Holter cbose music from the
wealthy class and their works are tum of the century, ballads whicb
.
are songs that tell a story: In keep-

Three Williams children
celebrate birthdays

Ohio Lottery

when the village crews dug away
from lhe lines and found anolher
point where tbe water could be
turned off, Hart said.
Rudand Mayor JoAnn Eads said
residents sbould buy leak insur-

ance.
"We've bad several people with
large leaks. Had they bad msurmce
they wouldn't have bad the
expense," Eads said. "They put in
Continued on page 3

. FIXING RVTLAND'S WATER SYSTEM-. Rutland·VIUage
shut down Its water system overnight Monday due to a service
water line break according to Dale Hart, Rutland m·alntenance
supervisor. Rutland's Dave Davis, In the bole, and Joe Anderson
flnlsb fbillll tbe broken line on the Henry Eblin property early
Tuesday momlng. (Sentinel pholn by George Abate)

-

·-Ree·or-d-state-bud·get ·h as hi.g.her licensing fees
• Air Con&lt;ition
·Automatic
·Du~AirbagS

• Power ilfakes

• PO'IIer Steering
• Power Door LOOI&lt;S
· • AMIFM Stereo
· T~ Steering

' De~yWipeB

• Cu~om Cfolh Interior

• Loaded!

BIWIIIID '95 BliCK I f $ • Air Condition

• Power Steering

• 3tKXJ v~ Power · • Po.er Brai&lt;es
• Dual Airtlegs
•Ant&gt;Lock Brakes

• AINft.l Stereo
• TiH Steering

• P...r Door Loclcs . • Cu510m Clotl1 lnteriol
• Power Windows. •loadedl

TOU FREE 1·81lJ·B22-Il417 •-312·21144
' 344-5!147. 422·0156

·Si'"""
•
~X4

•350V~Power

311DY.. PIIWEMI.~ -

• Rear Air.ttoal

•P/S,Pnl

• AM/FM

ea...., · Fr.ty

l.oade&lt;!

•P&lt;JwOfUQO' I" ""

Mam1day - Saturday: 9 am - 9 pni
S!ln,day: Noon ~ ' pm

' :The fee increase philosopby is
tbis: no new fees, no new state
fees, and no fees tbat go up by
more than the inflation rate. That's
the framework for decision maJc,
ing," Browning said.at a news conference.·
For example, tbe Division of
Watercraft in the Obio Department
of Natural Resources wants to
inctease~ fees. cbarJ.ed fOI' reaisrering canoes, kayaks, row boats,
inflatable watercraft and five classes
of boats.
es.
. I
Increases vary from S I to $1 S
But fee increases worth $-5.3
million lhat seven state agencies. . depending on lhe type of water·
proposed in lhc. budget are not craft
Brown ins said niO·re 'money
counted In the 'tax category.

By JO~ CHALFANT
Auoclated Preu Writer
COLUMBUS - ·Boaters, brokel'll and some barbers face bigber
licensing fees in the record $33.7
·billion state budget tbat Gov.
George Voinovicll proposed. So do
doctors and nurses.
R. Gregory Browning, director
of the Office of Budset md Management; outlined · the proposed
two-year speodins plm Tuesday .
He said it contained no tax inaeas-

'94 CHEVY SUBURBAN 4x4

••

from boat oWners would translate'
into better services provided to
them.
·
~ .'We. bave been told by tbe
department that, in fact, boat owners wbo care to communicate about
i't say that they want Ibis to bappen," be said.
A watercraft registration fee
increase would raise about
$600,000 a year. It would belp
replace outdated computerizec!.
records to improve ~ney management and informauon services to

brokers; denti.sts who have their X ray macbines inspectell; nursing
home admuustrators; doctors, nurses and olher medical practitioners ;
and o~ner~ of dams.
.
.
Vmnovtcb proposed a $3.1 btlliqn·increase in spending as .part of
a record state bu~get ~at could
grow faste~ th~n mflalloo or the
average Ob10an s persortal mcome.
Browning.,Voinovicb's top budget officer, Sllld. the proposal for the.
two y~ars starting July I reflected
tbe tbud-lowest growtb rate m
boaters.
more than 30 years.
Oiher fee increases would affect
The budget tbat now goes to
barber scbools and barbers wbo legislators recommends a 6.8 perrestore expiJ;d licenses; real estate _cent spending increase in budget

I

f

..

'

..... ,,.

year 1996 over current levels, and a port staff, 429 new employees for
6.1. percent boost the next year.
expanded meptal bealth services,
InflatiOn was forecast to grow and 336 new employees for other
about 3.5 percent in each or the . prpg1111ils.
next two budget years,. while perVoi.n?vicb proposed spending
sonal mcome of Obtoans was. $3.6 billion on schools 10 the year .
expected to increase 5.4 percent the that starts July I, and $3 .9 billion
fmt.~ear, and 5.1 percent the next.
the next year:
Pnsons, scbools, ~~I fare and
The budget provides more help
colleges all wopld rccetve above- for- the poorest of the state's 612 .
inflation inc~. . I •
local districts, but reduces aid to
Total pnson spendm~ would the 60 most wealthy systems. .
.
reacb almost ~920 m~lhon next
Voinovich is appealing a Perry
year, and for the ftrst ume top Sl . County Gommon Pleas Court rutbiUion in budget year 1997.
ing that declared lhe school fundOverall, tbe budget would ing system inadequate and :
~utborize 1,563 new corrections. inequitable.
employees: SOS guard\, 29~ sup-. ·

I
,

I

7/

•

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