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..,.

Thursday
O~ober 22,

Weather

Sports

·, Beat of the Bend column, Page 9
Ann Landers column, Page 8
Area grid previews, P. ~ge 7

Today: Cloudy ·
High: 50; Low:20
Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 55; Low:30

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1998

Yankees
win 24th
World Series
Page4

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Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49 , Number 120

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Between Strickland and Hollister

Battle continues in Ohio road funding dispute
By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
.
WASHINGTON - The political
war of words over a road funding dis·
pute ,in Ohio continues to escalate,
with Rep. Ted Strick IWid accusing his
election oppdnent of telli ng lies and
Gov. George Voinovich · backing
· Strickland's rival.
Strickland, a Democrat is being

can.

licans to remov'e that amendment.
threatening a veto if they didn 't.
Voinovich on Wednesday called
the matter "a silly thing" and said he
was disappointed that Strickland did·
n't sign on to Hollister's plan.
" He put politics above the people
he represents." the governor said.
"That's not something that I would
be very proud of."

change in the way highway money
w-ould-be-'"Q~ributed in the
Appalachian counties of southern
Ohio that are a part of Strickland's
di strict. The 6th Congressional Dis·
trict runs from Marielta along the
Ohio Ri v~r to the suburbs of Cincinnati. .
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At Strickland's. behest. White
House negoti ators convinced Repub-

challenged in the Nov. 3 election by
Lt. Gov. Nancy Hollister. a Republi·

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Just before concluding its business
for the year, Congress negotiated a
$500 billion catchall spend ing bill
that briefly included an amendment
insened on Hollister's behalf by
Ohio Republi cans.
The amendment provided for a

Hollister's plan offered the only' money from Scioto County to other,
pans of the district, Strickland said.
· "All of these projects are worthy.:
spending bi ll otTered the fastest route In fact. most of them received mon·
ey fro m lhe $25.5 million I o,btained
to congressional approval, he said_
Strickland said any suggestion for highway cons truction in this
that Hollister's plan was the only way year\ highway bill." he said. " But
I'm sure if they knew the truth, south·
to get highways built is fal se.
Hollister's proposal ac tuolly had er,n Ohioans would be outraged at the
the effect of diverting some.highway idea of stealing highway money from
a fe)low southern Ohio community."
avenue for making sure 1·~ome road
projects would be completed. and the

Both parties experiment with~
ads exploiting Lewinsky affair
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Gallla, Mason, Meigs Counties- Wednesday, October 21, 1998

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PARK DONATION- Youngsters enjoying Star
Mill ·Park In Racine will have more choices In
playground equipment due to recent additions
at the ·park. Home National Bank recenlty
donated half the purchase price of $3,500 on
the four pieces of equipment which Includes

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three rocking lciya and a slide. Shown a~ Torri
Wolfe, bank pre1ldent, with great-grandson
Jacob Hoback,.and Charlotte Wamsley and Eva
Teaford from the Star Mill Park Board. Other
new playground pieces ere schelluled to be
Installed next yea'::_
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WASHINGTON tAP) - Though
voters say they've had enough of the
Monica Lewinsky affair. they may
soon get a lot more: Republicans and
Democrats alike are experimenting
with TY ads that exploit the contro· ·
versy.
The Republican House ·campaign
committee is airing ads reaching 39
congressional districts': that accuse
President ClintOn of "double-talk" on
the federal budget. The ads, part of a
new $4 million to $5 million cam·
paign, seek to capitalize on voters'
· low opinion of Clinton's character.
said two senior GOP strategists.
, They do not directly raise the
Monica Lewinsky scandal, but
Republicans are wrestling with a way
to make the controversy a bigger pan
of the campaign dynamic. A more
direct approach alluding to the presc
ident's troubles could be a part of
Republican advenising as early as
next week. boih 'party officials said.
While the president's job approval
numbers have remained strong,
almost two-thirds of Americans tell
pollsters that Clinton does not share

Impeachment lawyers will not discard
c~re evidence submitted .by Ken Star~
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
House 's top G0P impeachment
lawy ers bluntly . told White House
attorneys they have no intentjon now
of di scarding any of the core ev(c
den ce submitted by Independent
Counsel Kenneth Starr.
That message was deli~ered
Wedne sday. according to knowl ·
edgeable oflici,\ls, during a meeting
at which White House lawyers com·
plained that they were unable to find
out, what charges. President Clinton
may face.
. .
Th e first c losed-door sessoon
between White House lawye rs and
House Judiciary Com mittee anomeys
to discuss th e impeachment inqui ry
was desc ribed as cordial. but one that
did little to forge any coop.!rative
agreements.
The meeting was described by
White House and Hou se oflicials
who asked not to be quoted by name,
and the sessio n was followed by
harsh public commeills by a White
· House lawyer and a spokesmen for.

.......

Romeroy Co~ncil
approves ro.o f repair

or.
1~800•964·3673
Ripley, WV

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end.
committee Republi can s.
Inside the Judiciary Committee
· ·" What precise ly are the charges?
meeting
room Wednesday, White
Are there 15, are there II , are there
three '!" asked White House lawyer House lawyers Charles Ruff and
Gregory Craig, who is coordinating Craig, a~d private Clinton attorney
the president 's ·impeachment defen se. • David Kendall , pointed out that chief
" It's like attac king a .man who was Republican investigator David Schipblindfolded and handcuffed. These pers enumerated 15 grounds for
potential impeachment.
are not fair procedures."
Starr compiled II possible
Paul McNulty. th.e Republican' f
spokes man, said the White House grounds in his referral to the House :
should conce ntrate on cooperating lust month , and Hyde spoke recently •
with Republi can s to e•pedite the of streamlining the investigation to
inquiry rather th an posturing over the package the allegations ditlerently,
the Clinton attorneys said. .
fairnes~ .issue.
None of Schippers ' grounds for
"Now. the allegations against the
preside nt are very serious." he said. possible impeachment rior Starr;s
"As many members of the co mmit· slightly different li st need be accept· .
tee have repeatedly said, the charges, ed by the Judiciary Committee,
if true , would constitute an attack" on which, in effect, started fresh once the
the co nstitutional sys tem of govern· House authorized an impeachment
inquiry thi s month.
meni.
Re publican lawyer: Thomas
The committee is ex pected to
Mooney
and Schippers told the White .·
begin holding hearin gs after the Nov.
Hou
se
attorneys
they should not
3 co ngress ional elec tions. Its Chairman, Rep. H~nry Hyd~. R-111 .. has interpret anything Hyde said about
said he would like to finish by year 's streamlining Lo mean core iss ue s ·
· would he take n .off the table.

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Mu sser also noted the village has
By JIM FREEMAN
received
a $14,000 grant fro m the
Sentinel News Staff
Ohio
Arts
Co uncil for a large mu ral.
Pomeroy Vi llage Cdunci l met
The
mural
requires a loca l match of
Wednesday evening and approved
repairs to the Pomeroy Junior High $2,000, he said.
Mu ~'er said the mural must be in
Schoo l building .
place
by July and is seeki ng a buildCou neil. whi ch met Wednesday
ing
for
the mural. The Sweel Greet·
instead or Mond ay due to the Nancy
ings
building
had been considered for
Hollister-Ted Strick land Congres·
sional debale, accepted a proposal . the mural. but the building's s1ucco
later found un suitable for
from the Ohio Valley Spray Foam lin ish was
.
h
t
e
project.
Company. Marietta. to put a new roof .
Counci l,also apprqved first readon lhe old school buil ding, which is
ing
\lf an on.li nance which would
now owned by the vill age.
The project wi II cost $ 12,500 and allow Police Chief Jeff Mill er to
inCludes a 15-year, no leak guarantee, reside outside of the village. The ordi·
said Council President John Musser. nancc refers to effort to altract and
"It's leaking pretty bad," Mu sser retain qualilied people for the posi ·
lion or chief of police.
said.·
Vaughan noted that Jean A.nn
"It's terribl e," agreed Mayor Frank
Vaug han. "The third tluor is in dis· Sto ut w~1s hirt:d as nt:w tax udminisContinucd on page 3
army."

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budget has si nce been balanced. and
both Clinton' and Congress are trying
to take credit. " II took this Republi·
can Congress just four years to balance I he budget," lhe ad says.
One of the GOP st rategists said
the ad was designed to " introduce
Cli nton to the (adverti sin g) d~bate,"
usi ng ·the double-talk language as a
veiled refere nce to his denialS bf an
affai r with Ms. Lewin$ky. '' He lied.•
We don't want one voter ~or .forget
that," said the olher strate'gist .
Republican officials want to gauge
the impact of the ad before deciding
whether to use a more direct'
approach. The decision could be
made this weekend, ofll cials said_
Some GOP .campa) gn operat ives
inside and o ulside Washington are
privately argu ing against the
approach, fearing that raising the
Lewinsky issue will. inflame die-hard
.Democratic voters and inc fease
turnout in cqmpetitive House and
Senate races. ·
Democratic campaign com mittee
spokesinan Dan Sal lick sa id the GOP
strategy won ' t work .

Congress .finally recesses after
completing work on ·new budget .
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
halls of Congress finally stood emp·
ty after lawmakers tinished work on
a huge budget bill that many criti·
cized and adjoutned a session that left
both parties dissatisfied.,
. The end of the IOSth sess ion of
Congress on Wednesday was 12 days
behind sc hedul e, the result of a pro·
tracted- battle between Republic ans
and the White Hou se over the 1999
budget. Thai leaves less than two
weeks for lawmakers to devote full
time to ihe Nov .. 3 e lection. when the
achievements of this Congress will be
a key campaign issue.
The Semite announced its
"adjournment sine die." or adjourn ·
ment wilhout a day. at 1:37 p.m .. ·
pa-.ing the gavel to the 106th Con·
gress that opens in Januar.y./ House
adjournment came at 5:56p.m .. after
it received President Clinton's veto of
a State Department bill co ntaining
nearly $1 billion•in delinquent U.S.
due s to the United Nations. but
includin g an anti -abortion proposal
the administration opposed.
While the se rvi ce of most House
members ~~ dOJte for the year, the
Juljiciary Committee will hold hear·
ings on whether to brin g articles of

impeachment against the president.
Technically. the full Hou se could be
reconvened by I he speaker, but 1hat is
not considered likely.
In its last major act. t~e Senate
approved 65-29 a $520 biilion budget package that combined all the
'1999 spending bills !hat were unli nished when the liscal year began Oct.
I. The House passed the bill Tuesday
night.
The bill. covering agencies under
10 Cabinel-level departments, had
something tor everyone. Democrats
can tell their constituents' about th eir
plan for 100.000 new . elementary
sc hool reachers and their success in
protec ting the en vironm ent. Repub·
licans won big chunks of money for
. de fens~ and anti ~drug programs.
But lawmakers from both parties
objected to 1he wa~ the White House
and Republican leaders crafted the
4,()(JO. page bill without the input or
understahdin£ of most members. and .
conserv atives said the m.t;a,s un:,
which included $21 billion in' emer·
gency spending that eats i.rlo the bud·
get surplu s. was far 100 !i!X.pensi ve.
Sen1• John McCain. R·Ariz ..
released a 50-page " pr~ limi nary lisl
of obj ecti onable items" in th e hill .

from the '$250,000 earrnarkedfor an ·
Illinois tirin. to research caffei nated
chewin g gum to $ 1.1 million for
manure handling and di sposal in
Starkville. Miss. "Thi s bill is a
belrayal of our responsibi li ty to spend
the taxpayers' dollars wisely," he
said. •
"I am troubled that. of Iale we are
getting omin ously careless wi th
procedures." said Sen. Daniel Patrick
Moynihan. D·N .Y.. who voted
aga inst the bill. " Members loudly
debate issues on the fl oor. but the real
decisions are made in a closed room
by th re~ or four peopl ~."
Sen. Max Baucus, D· Mon t. ,
a nother nq vole, said members we re
being asked to vote, mostly sigh t
unseen: on a bi.ll with enough mon. ey to cover lht! budgt:t of Montana for
200 years.
Clinton, in s ig ning .. the hill.
acknowledged !hat "!here's a 101 of
little'things tucked away there that I
wi sh weren't in that budget. ..

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Th~

105 th Congress had one

major achievement: the 1997 bal-.
anced budget agret!ment that was followed 1his year.by the first surplus in
30 years. an estimat ed $70 billion.

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Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentine

2 Sections - 16 Pages

Calenda'r
Classified s
Conli cs
Editoria ls
Local
Sports
Weather

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9
12-13-14
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2 ·
1'
~-5 '6-7

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Lotteries
- These three
lor the title
Homecoming Quean at Eastern
High School on Friday. They are, 1-r, Jull Hay·
man, daughter of Pat Hayman of Reedsville and
Greg Hayman, Long Bottom; Lacey ·Bunting,
daughter of Willy and Jane Burke of Coolville,

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their moral values.
In Washington state . Democralic
candidate Jay lnslee has run a TV ad
that attacks his Republican o ppon e~t.
Rep. Rick White. for voting for im
impeachment inquiry agai nsl Clinton .
DemocrJtic strategists in Washington
have expected other House cand i·
dates in Clinton's party to adopt a
similar strategy. but a similar ad has
yet to emerge .
There is di sagreement' in both par· .
.. tie s over whether- raising the Lewinsky scandal in ads would help or hurt
their candidates.
_
The new National Republican
Ca mpaign Committee ad opens with
the word "Remembe r'' spread across
the sc reen. The announcer says,
" Remember the double-talk?"
Next comes old videotape ofCiin· .
ton ~iscussing how long it would take
1o balance the budget. " We should
balance the budget ... in seven years
... in 10 years ... in eight years .... So
we're between seven and nine now
"
It's the same footage~'used in the
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1996 campaign to attack Clinton. The

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of
and Robin
Putman,
school Is In the midst
of a week of special homecoming activities In
preparation lor Friday's game, when .the Eagles
will face Trimble.

QlilQ
Pick 3: 25.1: Pick 4: 752K
Super Lotto: t -4-7- ltl -11-t K
Kkken o%630

:w.YA..

Daily 3.: 605 Daily 4: (,_1 W
0 19!J!i U\1111 \ 1 ;tllo.:~ l'u~ li ~ IHng (\,

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
'EstJliJfiJMtf m 1948

111 Court StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax 992-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Menllg8l'

DIANE HILL
Controller

Excepts from other
Ohio newspapers ··
By The Associated Press
Excerpts of recent cdltonals of statewtde and nauonaLtnterest from Oh to
newspapers
The (Lima) News, Oct. 19
What IS it about freedom that members of Congress find so dtsagreeable?
A btll, passed last week by the House of Representauves, mtroduced by Rep
Mtchael Oxley, R-Fmdlay, would make It a cnme to have the content of the
average bookstore or library available to anyone on the World Wtde Web
Oxley calls hts btU the Online Chtld Protection Act. It IS attached to the
budget bill that hkely wtll be passed by Congress on Tuesday and stgned by
the prestdenl The law would requtre commerctal World Wtde Web sites to
venfy the age of vtsitors before allowmg them to access matenal the gov-

Thursday, October 22, 19tl

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· Friday, Oct. 23

Election pundits know no_
t hing
By Ben Wattenberg
Elecuon 1998 The tmponant qucst1ons I Where are we? 2. What's at
stake' The answers I No one knows
2 Probably not much.
Perhaps nevef have so many
known so lntle abOut so much Ftrst,
experts said DemO&lt;:rats could regam
control or the House of Rcprcscnta·
uves Then, after Ken Starr's stzzltng
repon appeared. expens saJd the
Republican "base" was "e nergtzed."
whtch would help the GOP w1n sohdly m the House, perhaps genmg the 60
senators needed for a "fil1busterproof" Senate. Then. after Prcstdcnl
Houdtm 's v1deotaped tesumony was
played, a "backlash" agamst Rcpubll·
porn was Sighted. showmg Democrats
energ1zed Now. expens say Chmon
won the bailie of the hudgel y1cldmg
momentum (QUick. what dtd he
wm ')
What's up' The mne latest so·
called "genenc" surveys . all taken m
early to m1d October show that
among hkely voters Democ rats arc m
thiS poSitiOn +3 percent. +2 percent
+2 percent,+ I percent, +4 percent, -8
percent. -9 percent. ·2 percent and
dead even '111!! managmg cd11or of the
Gallup Poll should know what 's up
1
' Democrauc mterest surged over the
last two weeks, where Republican

Interest stayed the
same.. " L~dta
Saad saJd recent·
ly. "(but) Repubhcan voters are
now
showmg
more parltsan loyalty than Democrats, wnh pany
support rates very
SJmtlarto 1994 "
But m 1994, Wattenberg
Repubhcans got 53 5 percent of the
two-pany vote and gamed 52 House
scats, even though many polls had
showed Democrats ahead That ult is
nomtal: The Republican vote ts often
understated m gcnenc polls S1mply
put. a sample of a mythtcal nauonal
clccuon cannot gtvc an accurate vtew
of 435 separate local House races,
where cnucal contests often swmg on
lascr-thtn margms
llus year there's an extra Joker m
the deck Chmon's posstble impeach·
men! Wtll Rcpuhl1cans tum out to
show Clmton the door'' (Some polls
do show that 'moral values" are the
number one tssuc) Or w1ll Democrats
tum out to protect htm 1 No one
knows The surveys show only a small
mmonty who say thetr vtcw of Cllnton Will affect thetr vote, and those,;qe
spill roughly evenly pro and con But

the surveys don't tell whether these
are voters who would have voted thai
way anyway
Ignor:tnCe abOut elections breeds
labels In 1992 we were told 11 was the
"Year of the Woman." In 1994 11 was
the "Year of the Angry White Male."
1996 was named/or "Soccer Moms "
Now, some Democratic spmners are
saymg thts will be the "Year of the
W31 tress" .• 1f she votes, the Dcms
will do well (But dessen may come
late.)
The spmmng wtll, contmue after
the elccuon DemocratS are already
hypmg the S&lt;K:alled "siX year nch "
That IS, the party of a two-teJTn PrcSJ·
dent loses b1g m the elect1on held dur·
mg his stxth year m office .. an averag~ of 26 scats
"'Anythmg bener allegedly " beats
cxpectauons." But the nch law comes
mostly from the records of Pres1den1s
who won second-term landSlides, like
Franklin Roosevelt, Etsenhower.
Ntxon and Reagan As the saymg
goes "The ferry bnngs m the
garbage," the garbage he1ng con·
gresspersons who won only wnh Pres·
tdenttal help, and subsequently lost
wnhout It But Clinton didn't wm btg
m 1996, he only got 49 percent He
has hnlc congressional garbage to lose
m 1998, and Democrats have flttle

Th,e U.S Supreme Coun has rejected past congresswnal auempts to censor matenal on the Internet - and Oxley's btU may eventually be struck
down as well.
Oxley has fatled to make a case for under~uumg the Ftrst Amendm ent
under the gutse of protecting chtldren. '
.
We understand there is a legttlmate concern about shteldmg chtldren from
so-called adult matenals. It IS not, however, government's role to protect our
chtldren from whatever 1ts current defimtwn of pornography happens to he
Mom and dad, not Uncle Sam, should regulate and monitor Internet use by
their children
The Internet represents the first truly free, mternaiwnal commonicauons
forum m history. And it should remam that way

Letters to.the editor
Support Carleton School
Dear Editor,
On Fnday, Carleton Schooi!Met gs lndu stncs ts havmg an open house,
•' and l believe, that tl all the people who plan to vote agamsl the1r levy 1n
November, would take JUSt a few mmutes out of thetr ume, and attend that
open house, there would be a lot of mmds changed Go see for yourself
where your Ia&lt; dollar goes, and what IllS used for
,
People tn lvletgs County have thetr pnorlltcs mtxed all up The money
always shows up from somewhere for that stray dog or cat, and please don't
get me wrong I am not a wealthy person, but no amount of wealth could get
me to part wnh my dog, but I know where to draw the line
If you are m doubt about anythmg, go volunteer for a day or even an hour.
Your life wtll surely be ennched
•·,
There Isn't anything more rewardmg than to have a chtld linalljl respond
to hts name after days, weeks, or even months of calling thetr name, or to
earn the total trust of an 11 -year-old who can not SPj!ak a word , scared of
everything, teachmg h1m l~at a swmg (yes, a stmple swtng) won't hurt htm
;Iltese chtldren are very spec tal gtfts from God. He has entrusted them m
our care Are we gomg to disappomt the one who entrusted us wnh these
ipectal gtfts, JUSt (or the sake 'Of a few dollars?
'
: These proctous bemgs deserve the very best that we can offer It wtll be
yery tragtc tf that levy tsn't passed, who wtll care for our "spectal ones"
then ? I know what I'm talkmg about, I worked at Gutdmg Hand/Gall co and
I've seen t~c thmgs that make the changes, and I know more-so than the
~verage person because I have one of God's spectal g1fls of my own
·
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Barbara Stahl
Syracuse

Support those who support.fami!ies
Dear Ednor.
: Some men say adultery 1s a pnvatc matter, tt's nothmg to be ashamed ol'
; God tells us adultery, "Is a hcmou s en me, yea, 11 ts an 1mqutty to be pun IShed by the JUdges" (Job 31:11 ).
,
Don't he ashamed to vote for someone that upholds famtly values.
'

Isaac Colvin

Harrodsburg, Ky.

. "Today ·i n history
By The Associated Press
: Today IS Wednesday, Oct 21 , the 294th day of 1998 There arc 71 days
left 1n the year
: Today's Htghhght m Htstory
· On Oc t 21, 1879. Thomas Edtson mvcntcd a workable clcctn c lt ght at
ht&gt; laboratory 1n Menlo Park, N.)
On lhts date
In 1797, the US Navy fngatc Consti tuti on, also known as Old IIQnstdcs
Wa!&lt;oi I ~IUnchcd 10 Boston s harhor
•
I
In IK05. a Bnush fleet commanded by Adm Horatio Nelson dcleatcd a
• Frcnch-Spantsh fleet 1n the Battle of Trafalgar. Nelson however was ktllcd
. In 1917, members of the Ftrst D1v1 ston ol the US Army tram 1ng 1n
I!.uncv111e. France, became the llr:-il Amcncans to sec ac110n on the front lmc s
cil World War I
: In 1944, dunng World War II. US troops captured the German city of
AadlCn

In 1959. the Guggcnhc tm Museum opened In the publtc tn New York
I

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AccuWeatheJ9 forecast for daytime conditiOnS, low/lligh temperatures
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basis to Cite the ttch
Republicans have thetr own spm
Cbnton won 't be able to govern
because he's been a bad ~y But the
Prestdent has the Consutubon on his
sule. Thus. the recent budget negouanons were between 228 House Rcpul)..
llcans and 55 Senate Republicans ver·
sus JUSt one President, who had JUSI
one veto pen.
.
What'satstake?Notm!JChmtenns
of change. ,Beneath the partisan hubbub, both sides properly brag aboUt
the budget surplus, 'reduced welf""'
rolls and lower cnme rateS
These are not issues DemOCrats
used to bOast about The terr:nn upon
whtch Amencans play pollucs has
changed, for the better
And so 1l wtll likely remam If the
Repubhcans win ·· the status quo
remams Even reachmg "filibuster·
proof" levels won't likely mean much,
•. the PreSident sttll retams veto
power. If Democrats wm the House,
the GOP would contmue to hold the
Senate, a fine mechamsm to fotl apy
senous hberal moves
.
Most experts, notwtthstandmg lack
of data, are predtcbng mild gatns for
the Repubhcans m the House and
mtld-to-moderate-gams m the Senate.
That 's hkely The healthy economy
should help mcumhents, mostl:y
Republicans. The GOP has more
money And m non· PrestdentJal year
electtons, voters see thetr vote for
Governor as the most Important one
they cast Seventy-three percent of the
population lives m states wtth Republican governors, and some GOP r&amp;
election landslides are m the making;
Bush m Te&lt;as, Pataki m New York,
Engler m Mtchigan, Ridge m Pennsyl-,
vama. They may bring in some con'·
gressmnal garbage
If you're looking for big change,
one way or the other, wruttlll 2000 ·
Ben Wattenberg, a senior feUow
at the American Enterprise lnsd·
lute, is the author of "Values Matter
Most" and is the host of the weekly
public television program "Think

[o-Ytklil·/61.
-T·.J-.---

wntcrs regard 1L n.ot as a tal e of

tawdry sex and perJury, but ol AmerICan freedom menac ed by ayatollahs , Tourquemadas McCarthynes
and Salem wuch hunters
The

menace

lndcpcndcnl

IS

Counsel Kenneth Starr, who 1s pte·
turcd as the lcadmg agent m a nght·
1wmg Puntan consp1racy to re move
that most prccwus of all Amencan
hbertiCS
' '
• ft's not fre edom ol b~hcf or
expression according to 1thc 'authors
vent1latmg m The New York er. The
New York Rev1ew of Books and The
New: York Ttmcs. hut the 11gh1 to
engage m sex anywhere, unyt1mc,
mcludtng m the Oval Olftce du11ng
wurkmg hours
II the mtcllcctual clues have any ·
thmg to say about 11, the Clmton
scandal wtll become a more polat ·
11ed cause celebre , .t lever tor deep-

er cultural diVISIOn-- and, eventually, a dtslurled p1ct,e ul htstoncal
mythology Someday. there' ll be an
opera

..

The .trchctypcs bemg drawn by
authors such as Tnnt Mm n ~on ,
Arthur ,Mtll er, E L Doctorow and
Ethan Canm arc ol Clmton as ,,
llawed but humamstlc le ader
entrapped, vtcllmllcd and, posstblf,
marty red by lorccs of antcdtluvtan
rchgtostty
Polls suggest that " maJonty of
ordmary Amcncans comes out 111 the
same place as the mtcllectu,d s .. that
S tarr 1s btascd and Chnton ought· not
to be 1m peached ·· hut at least most

1

ply out of their mmds with outrage
that values other than free sex mtght
hold sway with Congress.
There's no quest1on in my mmd
that Starr was relentless, even excessive, in hts pursuit of Clinlon. Hts
methods deserve challenge m the
fonhcoming House Judtctary Commlltee Impeachment probe
On the other hand, the recorl!
shows that Prestdent Chnton knowmgly and premeditatedly committed
perjury on two separate occas1ons.
He was not entrapped
The first ltme, when he gave a
deposlllon tn the Paula Jones ctvtl
case 1n January, he was not surpnsed
by questions about hts relauonshtp
wnh Lewmsky. leadmg to hts false
dentals under oath He'd been lore·
warned that she would be a witness.
Indeed, before she or he test1lied,
they diScussed what they'd say.
Even more unforgtvably, he had
seven months to thlnk about his
story before he was called to testtfy
before the Starr grand JUry on Aug.
17 He diScussed the opltons with
Ins lawyers And , under oath. he ll~d
again
Is thts tmpeachable'' Well, the
Constitution provtdes that bnbery IS
an tmpeachable offense Isn ' t per·
JUry JUSt as senous,• involvmg as 11
does contempt for the legal system?
I'm not sure •that, on balance, t~e
Senate should remove Clmton from
office for the offense, but Impeachment 1s defenstble. Let the intellec·
tual s rant.
·
(Morton Kondracke is execu·
tive editor of Roll Call, the news·
paper of Capitol Hill.)

U.S. debt to U.N. caught up in domestic skirmishing over abortion
By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett News Service
WASHINGlDN - Left uut of the
$500 btllton budget deal Congtcss
approved Tuesday IS money the Clm
ton ,tdmJmstratum sought to pay the
b~1ck dues lhJs nat1on owes to the Unit ~
cd Nauons
More than JUSt .m mtcrnatmnal
embarrassment the $1 5 btlhon debt
g1ves the Umtcd States the troubling
thstm ctwn ol hcmg the world orgam ~
zauon's btggcst deadbeat mcmhcr It
also bnn gs th! s nat1on pcnlously ~.:lose
to lusmg Hs voung ngllls 111 the General Assembly, dll aL:t Tnn th.tt would put
1t m the compnny ol nations like
BwuJu.h, lr&lt;iq und Sorn,lla ,l
The tl cu~ ton of the Rcpuhllc.mconlt ollcd Congress to still the Unttcd
Nawms &lt;.:omcs at .1 tunc ol mnc .t-. mg
Amcncan dependence on the 185·
mcmhct hody tn hdr cmnh.1t gloh.tl
t.:n onsm and pollr.:c w01ld hot spot"
But th.H docsn't tlMtl cr to Rcpubllc.m
l:O JISCI \',dl \'t:S WIUJ h11 llliJIIths !Jd\'C
un;Jstcd on anar.:hmg an anu&lt;thOJ1Jon
clause- to ~my dcht repayment pl~m
What s t.hc Lo nncc tJon 1

dommate
the
1ank s ul congrcs~
stonal Rcpubh·
~.:ans h.IVc hnkcd
the tWO ISSUCS
They are " 1llmg
to gtvc Cl mt on c1
SIZ.Iblc chunk of
money to reduce
the nat1on " U N
dcht onl y II he
Wickham o
gwcs them a leg 1sb
(IVC VH.: tory l!l the
.th01t1on wa1 1h.u has raced m th1 s
coumry lot ye,u-. 1l1c .1~t1 abot11on
.un~ndnwnt they .u~ h:1wkmg would
outl.1w US ,IJJ to fotetgn organ1z.111ons th . u lobhy thcu govcrmncnl lor
.thi.llllon n ght ~ Clmton h .T!:i thrc ,ncncd
to vc1t1 .tny U N debt rcducuon lcg tslmum that! " s.t&lt;.kll cd v.llh th1 ~ cl.tU-.e
Early 111 the hut.lgct p1uccss l:O n ~
g rc ssro n.1l Rcpubh C£\nS, who have
long &lt;.hsputcd the amount uf the dcht
.md hold the wor ld body m low
1cg.ud clct:l dt:d to test the p1 cS1dcnt 's
lc... oh c. But as Wh1tc House ~md co n ~
2rcssumal ncgotlato1s worked to to1gc
.1 ~omp1 0111 1 sc hudgct last week , ClmNone
ton thdn' t bw.:k away from Iu s veto
But 111 the lcs.!l sl.mvc uamc ol threat. and the dehHeltel p.tck.1ge
ch1cken. the soua l...con ~crvat;vcs who \\o 1th !Is n nll ~aholtl o n ndcr was

•

dropped from the budget btl!
larc that has raged on the abonion
Congrcsswnal leaders, anxwus to 'issue, the anti ~ abort1on forces have
ponray the prestdent as the roadblock "used evcrythmg from legal challenges
to paymg olf the UN debt, say they'll to murderous bombmgs m an effort to
send the preSident a separate dues pay· deny women the nght to an aoonton
mcnt b1ll thts week and wtll once
Havmg lost ground m thts fight
agam attach thctr ahu-aborllon barna- smce Clmlon entered the White House
dc to 1t
m 1992, abonton opponent&lt; are flail II they do, Clmton should make ing abOut for a vtctory - even one
good on hts veto promiSe
that comes at the expense of women '"
Paymg off what we owe the Umted poverty-ravaged countnes who des·
Nations 1s a matter of national honor. perately need a full range of famtly
but fcndmg off nght-wmg assault s on planmng options
..1 woman's rcproducuvc nghts IS a far
Ltke the preSident, most Amencans
more se110us matter Ch nton should support a woman's nght to an alxirnot .lll()\1. Congress to ch1p away at a uon But the mdtcal Republ1cans care
won1.1n 's reproductive n ghts. at horne less about the wtll of the maJonty than
or abroad
they du the soctal conservatism they
Wlulc GOP abor11on foes 111 Con- want to fotst on the nalton Unfonugress champton local dec1s1on mak1ng nately, the 1cpayment of thts nation's
here tn the U111tcd Stc~tes, they want to debt to the Umted Natmn s has gotten
tmpqsc thetr Will on people · abroad
caught up 111 the domesuc sktrrmshmg
And m the process, they see k to deny over ahonton
them lhc very freedom ol speech they
But hy refusmg to knuckle under,
JC . \Iously guard for domestic .mtl~ B11l Clmton has exposed a yawntng
ahon1on protestcfs
gap hctween the Jegtslattve agenda Of
W1scly, Clinton' hds refused to g1vc congrc ss tonal Republicans and the
'" to !Ius leg lsl.tttvc blackm.ul As positiOn most Amcncans hold on
much as he would ltke to put an end to ahonmn JUst weeks before the con·
the l,J N 's dunmng notices, the preSI - grcss10nal election.
dent tcluscs to g1ve Republtcans the
Hopefully voters w1lltake notice.
VIctory they ~cc k In the cuhural war~

•

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1998 AccuWealher. Inc

---~"
T storms

Death Notice

Ram

~-·
..
~
Flumes

'"

&lt;

'

L1nda Sue Zamoch. a former Pomeroy Elementary School teacher, d1ed
on Wednesday. Oct. 14. 1998 at her home near Columbus.
She wa" a £Taduate of lhe Umvers1ty ol R1o Grande wtth add1Uonal stud·
1es at Oh1u Umverstty, the Oh1o State Umver&lt;iliY and Umverslly of Dayton
She had taughl at Pomeroy Elementary School a number of years wh1le resid·
mg m Gallipolis
.
.
She " surv1ved by her husband. Ted. daughter and 'on·m· law, Lon and
John Stra1ght. GalltpoiJS. daughters. Chnstma of R1o Grande and Jenn1ter
ot Columbus. lour gnmlisons. four broth~T\ and s1x stl\ter"'
Servtces we re he ld m Columbus and m Fnend,vtll&lt;&gt;. Md .. where bunal
took place
Former st udent s, coworkers and fnends of Lmda Zarnoch may send contnbutlon s for a school memonal m her honor to Lmda Zarnoch Memonal
Fund, Pomeroy Elementary School. 260 Mulberry Avenue. Pomeroy, Oh1o
45769.
Meags restdenls attendmg her ~ervu.:es mcluded Sus.m. Vmcent. and
Heather Kmght of Pomeroy. Suzy Parker and Tom Hysell of Rutland

Meigs EMS logs 9 calls

~ t~ ~~~~ (i,iifr @itPJ
'• ' .,'

Snow

Ice

Today's
weather forecast
'
"

Extended forecast.
By The Associated Press
Fnday mghl Clear Lows 30 to
Southeastern Ohio
· Today .Some
mornmg 35.
Saturday Clear H1ghs 1n the
clo~ds .. Otherwtse becoming partly
upper
50s.
s~nny w1th a cool wmd H1gh s near
Sunday
Mostly clear Lows m the
50 Northwest wind 10 to 20 mph
' Tonight ... Ciear wtth widespread upper 30s and h1ghs m the m•d 60s
Monday.. Panty cloudy. Lows m
frost Lows from the upper 20s to the
the lower 40s and h1gh s m the upper
lower 30s. Light wmd.
, Fnday. Sunny H1ghs 55 to 60
60s

Lack of interest in
debate could help Taft

Umts of theMetgs County Emergency Medtcal Serv tce recorded nme
cal ls lor assistance Wednesday Un1ts
respondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:26 a.m , Ftsher Street.
Pomeroy. Wilham St1vers. Veterans
Memonal Hospital. Pom&lt;roy squad
assJsted.
I 55 a m , Rose H11l Road.
Pomeroy. Judy Jones. VMH.
Pomeroy squad asststed.
3 II p.m., state Route 124. Mtd·
dleport, Russell . Meadows. Holzer
Medtcal Center, Mtddleport squad
asmted.
6 36 p m . Mulberry Avenue,
Pomeroy, Gerald Sellers. HMC.

POMEROY
6 32 p.m . Pomeroy Levy.
Franklm Thomds, VMH.
7 32 p.m. Me1gs Mtddle School
ball tiel d. M1ddleport. Jacob Keesee.
VMH ·
RACINE
5 53 p m . Racme, Mark Walker.
treated at the scene
RUTLAND
5 53 p m , Depot Street. Mary
Day. HMC
SYRACUSE
10·21 a.m.. Waters Edge Apart·
ments, Lola Kovalchik. Pleasant V.tl·
ley Hospital. Central Dtspatch squad
aSSI~ ted

Meigs,announcements
Club to meet
The Thtrd Wednesday Homemak·
ers Club w11l meet Wednesday 10
am at the mun1c1pal butldmg
Potluck at noon ProJect, decoraung
boards.

Bashan Ftrehouse, County Ro.1d 28.
Sundav. wtth serv mg from 11 30 to
1 30 p' m Hant and ch1cken d1nners
wdl be sorved The pnce ot $5 for
adult s and $2 50 for those under 12
included desserts and beverages The
smorgasbord ts sponsored by the
B.u;han Ladle" Aux!ltdry

. TOLEDO (AP) - Not even a ty candtdate John Muchel and Zan·
deoate between Democmt Lee Ftsh· na Fe1tler, a Nuturo.l Law P.trty caner,and Repubhcan Bob Tatl seem~ to didate on the ballot as an mdepen·
be; drawmg Interest m the race to dent
.
Conc.ert planned
Havmg four candidates trymg get
l)eeome Ohm's next governor
The Bradford Church of Chnst.
Tht candtdates Will meet lor their the1r pomt across at on~.:e could m~tke located at the corner of Bradbury To present program
Juntor and Rna While wtll he pre·
f.rst debate tonight atter months of for a cluttered. con tus1ng debate, satd Road and Route 124 outstde ol
Alexander
Lam1s.
a
polillcal
sc
tence
"e
ntmg
a mus1cal program at the
h~gglmg over ihe event's format, but
Pomeroy, wtll be hosung a concen by
I
professor
&lt;tt
Case
Western
Reserve
Syracuse
Church ut the N.tZarene
whether anybody w1ll be watchmg is
• Thomas Shelton on Nov. 4, 7 p m
doubtful
Umvemty
Shelton wtll be blendmg favonte old rev1val se rvtce Fr&lt;day 7 p m The
Only WTVG-TV 1n Toledo plans
"It could cause v1ewers to lose hymns wtth more contemporary speaker IS Robert Stewart
to carry the debate ltve on commer- mterest. ·• he said
song The public IS mv1ted to attend
And
with
Taft
leadmg
by
8
or
9
Shelton was inducted mto "Who's Dinner to be served
Cial TV m the state. The station
The Wilton C1v1c Assoc1atton wtll
offered it to other ABC-affiliated sta· percentage pomts m the most recent · Whom Mustc m Amenca" 1n 1977
lions around Ohto. but most weren't polls. F1sher needs to get ht s message and has traveled.as lead smger for the sponsor a steak ad ch1cken dm{1er at
lnierested,
opting
to
carry across strongly before the Nov 3 "Gospehtes" of Caltforma. and as the Wtlkesvtlle Com mumty Ce nter
"Vengeance Unhmtted" from 8-9 elect ton
tenor lor the "Watchmen of "Oper· Oct 30. 4 to 7 p m.
at1on
Evangelae. H~hu~ airm ~ervc!d
While
Taft
and
F1sher
were
p•
· Cable viewers may be able to see preparing for the debate. thetr cam· as mustc m1n1ster for three separate Smorgasbord announced
A smorgasbord dmner Will be held
the debate on C-SPAN. and WCPO· pa1gn spokesmen were back before congregataons and youth.minaster for
tv m Cincmnau wtll show It on tape· the Oh10 Elecuons Commts'Jon two
Oct. 31 at 5 p 111 m the Long Bottom
Wednesday sni~ing at each ' other's
delay at mtdnight.
Communtty Butld1ng
, Trathng m the polls. Ftsher won't telev1ston commercmls
RACO to meet
A three-member "probable
be helped by the debate format or the
The Racme Area Commumty I.K.E.S. to meet
sparse aud1ence expected to tune m cause" panel unammously reJected OrganiZation (RACO) wtll meet at
The Me1gs County I K E S Will
,· Herb Asher, an Ohio State Un•· complatnts from each s1de that com- Star Mtll Park. There wtll be a meet Monday at the club house.
v~rSJty p&lt;lllltcal sc1ence professor,
mercaals from the other campa1gn potluck dmner at 6 30 p m
There wtlll\e a vole on Sunday hunt ·
satd low v1ewersh1p wtll stand m the overstepped the bounds of Ohto·s
ing by members on I K.E S land
Smorgasbord set .
\';ay of Ftsher's attempt to cut into elections laws
\
A smorgasbord wtll be held at the
Thtt's lead
Ftsher's carrrpmgn was complam·
· "If the debate s get little coverage ing about a Tatt ad that used a parual
it defim~ely benef1ts the tront-run· quote from a ne"' spa per arhcle lo
ner," Asher satd "Because Fisher's , retute a F1sher charge that Taft ratsed
behind there's more pressure on taxes whtle he was ij Ham11ion CounCOLUMBUS1nts Thursday as 600 lbs 2 1 00-24 00
ty commtsstoner. Tat! objected to
him."
'
provided
by the U.S. Department ot
Boar• · over 300 lbs. 9 00-11 00,
F1sher and Taft wlil share the stage Ftsher's claim that he was the only
Agnculture
Market
News·
under
300 lbs 13 00- 15 00
i,n thw first debate with Reform Par· cand1date promtsmg to cut property
Barrows
and
gtlts:
steady
to
50
Esll\Tialed
receipts 35 .000
taxes.
cents h1gher, dern.md moderate w1th
a light to moderate movement.
US 1-2. 230-260 lbs country
. The fol,lowmg couples ~_c:re ISsued marnage ltcenses rece ntly m
pmnts 24 00-26 00. tew 26 50 ; plants
the Metgs County Probate Court of
26.00-27.50. few 25.50
Judge
Robert Buck
Sentine.l.~
U S 2-3. 230-260 lb s 22.50Lorrame P. Ae1 ker, 48, and Ytckt
(!JSPS 213-960)
L Branham, 41 , both of Reedsvlile, 24 00. 210-230 lbs 20.50-22.50
Comn~unlty New~paper lloldlng" IlK'~
Sows near steady
Hermann Josef Paul Wubbolt. 42,
U.S. 1-3. 300-400 lb s. 13.00Pubhs~ed "tvery afternoon Montlny th1ough
Neuenktrachen· Vorden , Germany,
Fr1d:Jy, Ill Ccurt Sl, Pcmcro)', Ohro, by IlK:
1500.
400-500 lb s 1500- 17.00,
and Mary Joy,Harvest. 40, Pomeroy.
Qh1o Valley Pubhsht'lg Compan)' Second class
500-600
lbs 17 00·2 r:Oo. few over
poqtagc p;nd 111 Pome•oy, Oh10 r

Elites are dead wrong ·on Clinton scandal
·.congrcsstonal Republicans
ordmary
The "feral Republicans ," as they
A\Rencans
thmk Clinton were referred to by Morr1son m one
JS untrustworof the most over-the-top of all the
thy
and Cltnton defenses, are "smelling
deserves cen- blood and a shot at the totalltanan
sure or •:cen- power they believe ts nghtfully
the1rs"
sure-plus "
By COO·
Accordmg to Mom son, wntmg
trast, a dt'stm· tn The New Yorker, Clmton IS ,
gUtshed group "wh1te skm notwHhstandmg, our
o
f
mternat1 onal
first black Prestdent," and IS being
Kondracke
subjected to "lynchmg" ur even
glllteratt
dcdared last month , rc fcrrm g to
'\: ruclflx1on "
Clinton, th at " a state sman I S
, Momson wrote that Clinton 1s
an swcrahlc to fJUbh c opml(ln or to "black" ,because he ts the product of
the law only f01 hts publ1c acts" All a poor, stngle-parent Southern
else IS solely a matter of Iu s own home, love s JUnk food and ohas spe l:O II Sl:IC nL:C ,
c tal empathy wtth Afncan·Amen1111s statement assumes that c1t1 R cans
zuns have no r~ghl to .m opmaon 01
But what she tmphes IS actually
the legal system to take llOIJ CC, when damhmg Judgment about black
,, prcsJdcrtt lies to the puhhL: and , males ·· hke Clmlon, they JUSt can't
though he IS the ch1cl law enforce· avotd marual tnlid ellty and reckless
mcnt oll a.:cr ol the land, lies under 1rrcsponsJ hllaty If that 's so, there's
o&lt;Hh m a couJt procccd mg
httlc hope of reve rst ng the 65 per·
Qrgaru zcd m Pans. the statement cent rate of out of wedlock btrths
I
'
was s1gncd by notables rangmg from
among blacks
South Afn ep n Btshop Desmond
Doctorow wrote that Starrp
Tutu to lore1gn actors such as Ger· remmds htm ol Sen. Joseph .
ard Depard tcu and Anthony Hopkms McCarthy. R-Wts Starr's pursUit of
Ill Amcm.: ans like opera d1vn Jcssye hun "smells of entrapment," and hts
Norman and actress Lauren Bacall Rcp ubl1 ca n all1es are bent on
to , unlnrgJvably , 0 S lustonan " uascatmg a democratically elected
Arthur Schles111ger Jr
•preSident wtth all the legtltmacy of a
Tins gtnup, ltkc the celebrated coup d'etat "
authors who have op1ncd on the case
' II Mr Chnton IS Impeached or
tn
vanous U S
pubh cauon s, forced 10 reSJgn," Doctorow wrote
expressed a theme mcreas mgly m The New Yorker, "Amencan
~.:ammon among President Clmton 's
Puntamsm , With us punlltve lusts
defenders ·· that anythmg he dtd and ns theocrauc VISions , wtll be
pales m compan son to the "arbllrary reborn for the 21 sl century "
and U11JUSI procedures" of Starr .md
The hberal mtellectuals are stm·

.

34• ~ •

W VA.

Tank."

By Morton Kondracke
llte Momca Lewmsky sca ndal
has hn htgh culture Dtstmgutshed

PA

•

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.C

I

Linda S. Zarnoch

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, ~!..ou~II_o~n

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio weather

&lt;

ernment deems "hannful to mmors ..

The Columbus Dispakh; Oct. 18
The recent report on the mctdence of AIDS m the United St~tes mak&lt;:,s
two stgmficant potnts.
·
Deaths are falling at an amazmg rate The number m the Umted States
fell 29 percent in 1996 and 47 percent last year, the largest declme for any
maJor dasease m one year.
On the down stde, the rate of mfecuons IS holding steady at about 40,00&lt;l
a year An trony is that those who gel the dtsease now are healthter and more
active, ahp thus spreadmg 11 more than tf they were senously til.
,The steady number of new cases Indicates the educatiOn campa1gn IS not
nearly as effective as It needs to be Those who argue agamst comprehenstvc
education about AIDS should be aware they ni\ght be1signmg a death war·
rant for a young person who need to know that thiS 1s not solely a dtsease
transmllted by" g'ay people Promtscutty IS foolish and dangerous, and that
message cannot be repeated too often.
The medtcal campatgn cannot be relaxed unltl drugs are developed that
wtll stop thts scourge m Its tracks

Thursday, October 22, 1998

Page -2

'm

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BIG TREE CONTEST WINNER • Roy Holter was the recipient
of a $50 bond as winner of the big tree 'Contest. The tree Is local·
ed by the Chester Courthouse. U is 67 feet tall and has a clr·
cumference of over 16 feet. Here Janis Carnahan congratulates
Holter.

Pomeroy

Council.~~ntinued from page I

tn.Hor
Counctl approved sel hn g a J 9~ I
Ford pol1ce cru1ser to Dav1d Shuler
Long Bcmom. lor $725 Shuler s b1d
wa~ the only one rece1vc:-d. 11 w~as noted No b1ds were rece1ved on the old
dump truck
M uo,;ser s.ud the Pomerny Mer
chant Assoc1at1on re4uested a f,11l
~.:leanup day to add re~ ~ res1denttal
trash and debns m the v1llage No
.lqt JOn was taken on the request
Counctlman Larry Wehrung asked
1f Vaughan h.td con tacted n ve rlront
property owners m the K err's Run
netghborhood concern 1ng cleanup
there Vaughan sa1d he had not con·
tact the owners
Wehrung also asked tf many rent.tl
property owners have reg1ster~d the1r
property 10 accordmg wtth a n:cent
ordmance Clerk Kathy Hy,ell sa1d a
lew have registered, but not many
Vtllage Admmtstrator John Ander·
sun bnelly addressed :.1 Jn.unageproblem m the Lasley Street and But·
temut Avenue netghborhoods broughl
to council's allenllon at an e,trl y meet~
mg
Anderson satd the problem stems
from where a res1dent removed a
three-foot dram and replaced 11 Wtlh
a one·foot dram, wh1ch does not
al low enough wat~r to dram dunng
heavy ramtall II ts not caused by
clogged catch basms. Anderson sal(.l.
.tlthough those Will al so be cleaned
out.

Anderson sa1d the maHer: has been
referrell to ,the vtllage attorney but
that no acttoh has heen t.1ken He satd
the best thmg to do would b~: to p,o

To get a current weather
- report, check the

Sentinel

111 ,md do the "'urk. then h•llthe prop- :
~rty

OWfh.!r.

The clerk presented the lollowmg ·
financml report tor Septemher general lund. $71,745 27, s.1lety, $4,
816 66. street. $ 18,700.65. state h1gh·
way, $5 22) 'll. fire , $27,326 45 ,
cemetery
$3 .332.79.
water.
$45.223.43. sewer. $21.964 07. guar·
ant~ met er. S21JJg9 04 . 'Ullltty,
$9.435 2 1. ove rttme grant. $9 18,
perpetual care. cemetery. $7,329 19.
ce meterv endowmen t, $38.446.59.
poltce penston. $8,64 1 14. bu1lduig ·
lu11d ,
$4,9311.37.
rec reat ton.
$ 1 564 47. ODNR grant. $ 12.50. '
pern11Sstve lax . 57.1109 65. law
cntorcement, $4.670.37, COPS
FAST grant $ti.063 10 FEMA Ill.
$24.460. downtown revltaltzauon ,
no balance. total. $339.905 24
In other busmess council
·· Establtshed tnck or treat for
Oct 29. 6-7 p m ,
.. Granted a llood plam vanance •
for a used car lot.
-- Met m execut1ve sess1on to dJ s~
cuss a personnel matter.
Also present were council mem- ·
bers Gen Walton, Scott Dtllon and
Dave Ba11ard

Woman cited
A Mason , W Va woman was Cit ..
ed for assured clear distance followmg an accadent on West Mam Street
m Pomeroy on Wednesday.
Aceordmg to th e Pomeroy Pollee
Department. Tracy Barnnz. 27, struck
a vehtcle dnven by Cheryl Oldaker.
41 , Hartlord, W V.t trom behtnd
whtle Oldaker was stopped at the
trafftc hght at the approach to the
Pomeroy/Mason Bndge
There were no tnJune s and dam ~
age to both vehtcles was ltght

Today's livestock report

Couples issued marriage licenses
The 'Daily

•

' Member: The 1\s'ii.X:tJI,.d Press and the Oh10

Hospital news

Mcwspapcr As5oi.:Jatlon
Postm11slu: Send ~ddrcu corrcclrons ro The
Da1ly Senlmel, 1tl CouTt St, Pomeroy, Oh10

Holzer Medical Center
Wednesday's discharges
Mrs Holhs Sp1res ttnd son, robert
board. Deborah Dunn, Ashley Shaw
and Storm1e Da v1s

45769
SUBSCR!PTION RATES
By Car~er Ot Motor Roule
One Week
..
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Da1ly . , .•. . , ..
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Su~ nbcrs not dcs1nng to pay the earner may
rem1t m ad...ance thrc ct\o TI:K»Pa ll)' Senuncl on
a three , s•x or 12 month ha~s. CrediT Will be
g•.,.en earner ac'1 'hCU
, No subscrmt10r by ma1l pt:rmJtted 111 areas
where bomC cm1e. ~cr. 1ce IS o: :a1ll'bh:
~
Publrsher reserves the nghtlo adjust r.tles dur~
mg The subscr•pllOn pcnOO Subsenpt1 on -ate
..:h mgc~ m::~y be 1mpkmen rer.l h\1 chcngmg th e
11ur IIKm of rhc subs..:nfiii(,R

'

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AT&amp; T..................................... 62'/,.
Bank One ............................ 47 1%.
Bob Evans ........................... 19'i,.
MAJLSUBSC«!P'IION
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Inside 1\l~tgs County
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26 Weeks
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Stock reports are th~ 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

Qur Christmas G!fi
to you.

Your Bank#n41?...
Farmers Bank

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and

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Thursday, October 22, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Lightning blanks Penguins 5-0; Red Win s also win
lll'OIII) ' ' ' )l'&lt;.tl".,,

NHL roundup

New York blanks Padres 3-0

.

By KEN RAPPOPORT

AP Hockey Writer

Yankees win 24th World· Series title
' Oakland in 1990, and wa~ the Yan·
kee,· seventh.
no sure Hall of Famers. no one to
Also, New York won il &lt; eig hth
eq ual Ruth. DiMaggio or Mantle. Not straight Series game while the Padres
a single one of them even got elect· losltheir seventh in a row.
ed to sran this yeafs All-Star game.
San Diego was not emharm.;;.,.ed .
Their true greatness is as a team. especially with ace Kel'in Brown on
Maybe llie best in baseball history. · the mound for the last ga me. Instead.
The New York Yankees ended they were just overmatched. lead ing
lheir sea~o n Wedne~&gt;day night ttfe: for.,a total of four innings.
only way that seemed proper - a 3·
"Sure. we would ha ve liked it lo
0 vi ctory over the San Diego Padres have worked put better, bull he Yan for a World Series sweep and their kees.have a great club- probahl y
record 24th championship.
the best tram we've f&lt;itet.J all yrar."
Andy Pettine recorded the Yan- said Tony Gwynn: who went 8-l'or-16
kees' I25th victory of the year, a win for the Padre&gt;. "They did everything
that caused owner George. Stein· they needed to to win."
brenner to weep with joy. Scou BroWhile the Yankees c;elebrated in
sius \I'Pn the MVP award and that the clubhouse, Ihe ·P:tdres had their
was :tppropriate -battin g ninth .f6r .own pany. Several San Diego play·
mosl of the season. hardly a superstar. ers came out of the ·Jocker room~ to
So now, after Ihe Game 4 win. let speak to the record crowd of 65,427.
the debate begi n. Better than the ' 27
But this was New York's night .
Yankee&lt;, bjetter than the' ' 61 Yankees,
"This is the most determined
better than the Big Red Machine'
team I' ve be~n around, " Torre said.
" I think th~t will probably be "I don'! know if we have ·the best
·ralked about forever,•• Brosius said. ' team of all time. but I do know that
"The comparisons will go on and on, . we have lhe btsl r~co rd . We have to
and maybe nobody will have a defi- take a back seat to no one in,my lifenite answer. But you can look at this time."
.
year and ~ay w~ had the single best
Steinbrenner and Torre mel in thf
season of any other te am. ,,
club~ouse, both wearing hats emblaAt 125-50, the mosl victorieS ever zoned with ·.·world Champions." and the besl winning percentage They embraced. ·
since that Murderers ' Row club in
" You' re the best manager .1 ever
1927. '
had. You deserye it," Steinbrenner
'"27 ' Yankees, they may have a said.
beller club. but we had the best
"Th~nk s, Boss," Torre· said.
record." manager Joe Torre said . "To
Brosius carried on ·lhe Yankees •
me. that was the standard that I was tradition of unlikely infielders comlooking to pass because the Yankees ing up big in huge games - remem-. more impor1ant to have a Yankee ber Bucky Dent and Brian Doyle ? .
record than anything else.
The third haseman went 8-for-17 in
"You look al the Oakland A's the Series with six RBis.
clubs that won a few world champi·
Fittingly. Brosius handled th e last
onships in a row and the' Cincinnati b:tll of the year, u grnunder by pinchclub in '76t~at was always a standard hitter 'Mark Sweeney.
for me, I think we have better pitch·
"I think the biggest niomenl is
ing than ' they have," he said . "We that third out, throwing the ball and
have to 'take a back seatlo no one in knowing it's. going ·to ' end the game
my lifetime. "
and end Ihe season," Brosius said.
And ·in a season thnt brought base- " There's nothing better than comi ng
ball some truly huge numbers. from up and.seeing the players' ,eyes and
Mark McGwire's 70'·home runs lo that se nse of achievement and
Cal Ripk en's 2,632 · consecuti ve accomplishment and,e,xcitemenl." ·
games to Kerry Wood's 20 strikeouts,·
Perhaps the Yankees had somethe Yankees posted one that mny thing else going for them, lao remain for a long time.
inspiration from slu gge r Darryl
·
"This is truly. you cu n say it now, Strawberry, out because of colon canone of the greatest teams in base- cer. Alii he Yankees had hi s No. 39
ball, " a champagne-soaked Stein- embroidered on !heir caps, and they
brenner said .
chanted "Sll:aw Man' Straw Man!"
" We really worked for thi s." he in the victorious cluQ'house.
sa id. too overcome to go on .
· Bernie Williams, play ing 1perhaps
II was New York's.second titl e in his last game for New York, broke a
three years and it s seven th sweep, its scoreless tie witli an RBI chopper in
first since 1950. The Series sweep t~e sixth. In the seventh, Brosius si nBy BEN WALKER

SAN DIEGO lA P) - They have

WE'RE THE CHAMPS! -The New York Yankees' Joe Girardi (25)
hugs pitcher Mariano Rivera as two of their teammates celebrate'their
3·0 victory over the San Diego Padres in Game 4 of the v.rorld Series
Wednesday night in San Diego. The Yankees' lour-game sweep gave
them their 24th World Series crown. (AP)

Newspaper
says Schott
will surrender
control' of Reds

'i;-

CIN CINNATI I APl ~ Cinci nnmi .
Reds owner Marge Schott will be

prevented from regaining full control .
of the team \ day-lo·day operations
by a new agreemenl with M~1jor ·
1

League Baseball. The Cinciwwti
Post reported today.
.

Schott's two-year suspe nsion for

making raci ally insen!\itive remarks is
set to ex pire when the World Series
ends.
Instead. baseball officials are

fi!IARGE SCHOTT

expected to announce that Schull has .

signed a leller of intent to se ll controlling interest ·in the Reds by the

dec isions.

end of the year. The Pmt said, citing
attorney Robert DuPuy ha&lt;l received

The agreement would end her
controve rsial -14-year reign_as Red.s
owner.
" I just think it's good for the

the lett er Tuesday. officials had indi -

whole rommunity to turn the -final

A anonymous sou(ces.
'VI"
While it wa~ not clear if baseball

cated that ~cho u 's suspension would
be extended through the end of the
Red s' partnership agreeinen1 (Dec.
3 1. 2000) fo r her business pract ices
ir she does nol agree to se ll her iwo
general-partner shares. the newspaper
sa id .

·

The ne ws p:~p e r also reponed that
John Allen. who has run lhe Reds
since SChott w;ts suspended in June
1996. will contimte as managing.
execu li \·e w ~ile the team see ks new
ownersh ip. Schott would be pre-

vented· from making team personnel

pnge in this charter and move forward ." said fofmer team controller

Belte wants to stay with ChiSox

sJuro.; th~tl led to her first suspe nsion.

says he wants to remain a Chicago

White Sox and think'i, they can win ,a
divi s·ionaltitle.
·
·
'
· "I think we can catch Cleveland
for co mmenl.
next yr,,ar if 'we add a co uple of
National Leag ue counsel Roben proven 'pi&lt;~yerj ." lhe sl ug ger said in
an iillerview published 10day in the
. Kheel clcc,lined to comment.
ClliN1go Sun-Times.
Belle could beco me a free agelll if
, the te am decides not to pay him an
addilional $4.25 million over the nex t

Hockey
~HL

·

Transactions

standings

EA~TERN

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Tnni~ht' s games
St l.,, u,,&lt;tt()tlil"·'· 7 IOpm
NY l'lnntkr. . ;n NY R.m):cr,, 7 lOp 111
Nl'" JcN') ,tl Plul.11klplua. 7 10 p rn
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l'hP\;111\ ill ]),lila~. X 10 pJH

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h•wllh• .1tlktrntt. 7 ~ol' 111
('ul)!lll) .tl f\.n~hltlh:. X I'm

L"'

NFI.:

sit&gt;ility of GM .
"We played 60 minutes of hockey ... that 's the difference." Demers said .
- Tatn)lli Bay hroke the g;rmc open with a four-gnal ·
second perind. ,with the goals coming on just five shots.
Lightning goalie Daren Puppa &gt;lopped 28 shots in
recording his I Rth career shutout and lirst si nce March
26. 1996.
· : "We s.taned to play with a lillie more ease," Tuck-

1 eyre ....a.n,....u

about us ·again
'

' '

..

·"

"One of the worl~'s Top 10 trips"

h a~

a chouse in there. but I don 't know if

.

!tOIL' I~ nf' ll n;111

llil ltl" l , ollcrl\n~· ClllHth tt;unr.

KrdrarU Snlonwn. dt• le tU I\~ had,, &lt;'&lt;~&lt;u: h , Sicll'
Wc11cl. )trcngth :n111 ~:•'~m hll on m)! ,·,mc h. Co~tl 1-J., r.
!!r;~vc . rullll ill)! b.tr~~ l"o.•d•. Trcn 1 W .il t~' r~.
ltnl'bal'~c r ' ..:o;r..: h. Oar; l.;rUIWI, ' 1"'•' 1,1 1 lr ,otiH
&lt;.Oi Kh Fngt' f·'lfU&gt;. dckn~t\ t: .:o&gt;md lmlhH, Ch ip My·
t.'r' . ljll :lrlcrb:r d .' C&lt;Hldl . l'r u11 t )h \iltlnlll , l•n~I&gt; &lt;H: l ~ r '
o.'I'OI•:Ir ~l1h· 'i'r Ll'. olkti,l\C ltnl' \.'&lt;&gt;:idt. k tl h nl.tl'.

,;,q,t.lnt ~ H•' II )! Ih :onJ Ln nd u u rlllll!! no, ,qh , !)., ~ ...·

tl)!hl ~ ~~d ~ L'1•ad1. \\',uk H arm:111 . nw~ lun ~
1\ n&lt;Jrc J'allt' f~O II &lt;kll' IISIIC' lt nt:' L&lt;•;l ~ h . 1111tl
Hr1hhurd Alc~ : uukr . ""Ilk IV&gt;'I.'I\'Cr~ ~ on c h , thruug h
ti ll' f 1J9'J ~1!;1'""
NEW ENGI.ANIJ 1'1\T ~ IOT.S· St!' nct l W~ S1r
i\lav. 11 Wil~ t• n w llw prxttL'l' \\II tad
IIAI\ L;\ND k AIDI-kS · Plal'-'d IYI · Cloud(),, .
tJI\rn~ ·o rl rniurcd rt·~crw 1\rtl\ati.'J {} B P&lt;~t B ,unl.'~
l'cnrn the l'r:ltllcc ~q,mJ S1gnl·J DE 01wnC A~hm: m
111 the pr nctt~r ~l jll.ttl
SAN DIEGO CHA kGUiS l'la,,·d C B Dw :t)'nc
H.1rpcr on tnt ur cd tt'5cnc A&lt;.ln,Hl'd WR R)all
Tht.•h•dl lnun tilt' jlr:tO.: II t' C ''lii.ld St)!t\l'J RU C'ltad
l~u~l"' In 1hc pr;to.:llt'l' ~quad
Si\N I RANC ISCO .tlJI:RS N.ltnL'd Jnhn Mo.: ·
Vay ~ J ll' l.' l,.t :t\~l\111111 tu riK' lll&lt;'~aknr
TMII' A ll 1\ Y BUCCANEERS R,·k:t\l.'J WR
l'hrr' J.oLhtm ln•nl !111.· pr:ttltn· ''Jmlcl Srt:nctl TE
Lanlnnr lb llln rite l'rHchro.• '&lt;iii&lt;IJ
·'" i ~ l iill l ;

Canadicns 3, Stnatnr' 2 - llri;rn S;rv;rge. pl;rying
hi . . fir.,t g;unc of the 'C'-~'"" &amp;t iler ag rce in~ to a conlract
Tuc o,;th.t). 'cored l':trl y in 1hc 1hinl rcriod "' Montreal
heat vi,i ting Ottawa.
'
S:wagc. who ..,jgncd a two-yc01r. $1.5 million Ucal.
scnrcd un &lt;t 2-t m-1 hre;tk with Mark Rccthi a" the
Canadien . . hamlc(l the Senator" th~ ir fir ... t In\" of ttie
sc:I\OO afiL'r thn.:c vil:torie ... .
Saku Koi\'u had a ..,hort-h!mdcU gn;tl and Vladimir

Malakhnv aducu a pnwer·pliiy goal to help the Cana·
dien.., ..,no1p a two-g a1he Jo ... Jng "'lrt'ilk . Jut·Ciyn Thibault
maUl' 20 'ave\. gi\ in£ ltp goal.., ouly to Andrea' Dack-

cll and Shawn McE;rchcrn .
Oilers 4, hlanders 2 - Boyd Deverc:iux •cured

twiee in F.dnmnton'S vic tory at New Yo~k . ·
'·' ·
Palf:·,JIJnnn an ti flrll G'ru·rin al\ll&gt;"'Corc(l
the Oil'ef\. who won four of fi ve game.., on their fir~t road trip

ror

of the sea,on. Mikhail Shtalenkov stopped 28 'hots for
the Oilers, who lost 3-2 to the New York Rangers on
Tue,day ni~ht
Trevor linden omd Ken ny Jom "lon scored for New
Yor~ .

Tommy Salo. who had two straight shutouts on
the road before Wednesday night \ game, slopped 26

.

'

.CLEVELAND (AP) - The con- 1955 to begin a five-y~ar majordi(ion of injured former Cleveland league career.
ln(Jtans broadcaster and pitcher Herb
Score was upgraded from critical to 'Eastern, Southern
sefious but stable at MetroHeahh ·'to play in SeCtiOnal
Mrd•cal Center.
.
l Score, 65, who was injured Oct. 8 VOlleyball tourneyS_
in•a New Philadelphia traffic acci·
· The ninth-ranked Eastern Eagles
dent. remained on a ventilator
%dnes~ay to aid breathing,' said
and league-conlending Southern Tor'
nadoes will be playing in the Division
sppkesman Jim Gosky.
. ; score joined the Indians TV IV sectional volleyballlournamenl al
brj:&gt;adcast team in 1964, moved lo . Alexander High School Saturday
ra~io in 1968 and retired in 1997. The afternoon.
·
Conch Howie Caldwell's Torna·
leh-hander won the American
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I'J'JO.

Panthers I, Kings I - Kings goa lie Manny
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shots as visiting Los Angeles tied Florida:
Legace. 25. was ,caUed up Monday from lhe Long
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•,
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•
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.,
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BATTLE '!'OR PUCK - Plllsbur!jh center Jan Wednesday nlght.'s NHL contest in Tampa, Fla., ' ·
Rookie defense man Mike Crowley assisted on all Hrdlna (38) and \ampa Bay center Darcy Tucker bat· where the Lightning struck the Penguins with a 5· . ·
lie lor the loose puck during the first period of · 0 shutout. (AP)
three' Anaheim goals.

t Brendan

. Smatt Mdney magazine

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bten recO\•ering from offseason he;lrl and knee replace nlenl surgery.
..
..
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Belle said he has great respecl for
White Sox manager Jerry Manual
and appreciates White Sox mnnagement for "letting me be myself " after
th e agony he went throu gh in Cleve·
land while a member of the Ind ians.
Belle has been suspended and
fined seVeml times during his career.
Manual said he would be glad to
have Belle back aft er the slu gger hit
.328 with 49 home runs and. 152
RBisin 1998.
·•
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..We hav\! the mu~ic nn in tht.• mom - I hope the
gu)'s realize hnw good it feels tn win.' ' Totmpa Ba~
'cnurh Joacqul!s Demers s;1id after Wcdnc"llay nigJlt 's 50 triumph over the Pillshu rg h Penguins. "'There's a lnt
uf pressure off all of u ~."
.,
The -.:i.ctory hmle :1 15-game win lc..;s streak fur lhe
lighrning. who hmJ not won ~ int.:l! a 3-1 triumph on
March.JO Ol'«lhc New Ynrk Rangef'. The Lightning
( 14- I) aho stopped a fmnchi se rccnrd·lying 10-game
winless streak at' home ..
"I think evcryhndy in the orguni1"ation is ju"tt a lit tle bit relieved," said Darcy Tucker. who had his first
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. Last week. the Lightning lired general manager Phil
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Nutinnall"taguc
tl OUSTUN MHROS N:um:ol Paul H. u:ctann t
..:ou nhn alt'r nf p wf~~~ron; tl ~L:OUTi ng and To m 1
R nlllL'n~~~~ 'i]~rt:ol a~~•g nrtlt.'ll l &lt;..:oul
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SAN FRANC ISCO GIANTS hn,·tst·J thctr
191J&lt;J "f'llon' on .~ B l'h.uhc H . I )'L'~ :t tld RHP Jul ian
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I&lt; HI' Orl'l H t·r~IIIH'I

4

j
j

three years. according to a contract

that calls for him to be one of the
three hi ghe st-paid players in baseball.
But Ihe S 1111 · Times said Bell e hinted he might remain in Chicago anyway and follow through on .a five year, $55 mill inn co nlraCI he signed
after the 1996 season.

•

W~~STt:RN CONFE RENCE ·

r~:~r?!,,

Lru~ul'

CLEV ELM'iU IN DIA NS : R~·a s~ igncd AI Bumbry, lir ~l ha ~c-n urficiJ cXl;il"h,, Johnn y, Gq ryl , inlici J

CON FERENCE

Atlnlllfc

1J:llln

CHICAGO (AP)- Albert Bell e

The ne wspaper said it h :~d tried
un succe"l'ull y to reach Scholl; her
allcirney. Robert Mart in; and DuPuy

·

po' l'":'son. gelling the last four outs ·
for
hi&lt; third save of the Senes.
ie Ricky Ledee hit a sacrifice ITy. '
Including
the playoff wins O\'erTexas .
The· Padres tried to rally in the
Cleveland.
he pitched 13 113
and
eighth: when Gwynn's single fini &gt;hed
Peniue. A single by Ken Caminiti uiT licorel e'li i'nnings and recorded ~i'l ·
Mar(ano Rivem loaded the hases wilh ~3\'C"i.
Wi lli ums tini,hed I -fo~- 16 in) he
two outs. but Jim Leyrilz. a pu!-&gt;t..,ea-·
Series.
H e~• eligible for free agency.
son hero in the past for the Yankee&lt;
and
there's
been talk 'that he might'
and San Diego. nied oul to Williams
leave for Arizona, Colorado or anolh· ·
in center field.
cr
club and a salary of more than $10
Petti lie won just six days aftt!r hi'
.
million
a sea.;;on .
falher underwent• hcaft bypa»
Brosius,
the hero of Game 3 with .
'urgery. allowing fl\·e hit ' in 7 113
two
home
runs
, is also eligible for· ·
innings. It was reminiscent of hi' perfor mance in Ga!Jle 5 of lh~ 1996 free agency. Yet after being acquired
World Series, when he beat Atlanta I· in the winter after hitting ·.203 for .
Oakland, it's doubtful he 'd want to .
0.
.
.
"This is ·more gratifying l~ a n the play any~¥here else. .
Brosi
us
and
Ledee
provtded
the
Game 5victory." Petlitle said·. " It has
been an up-and ~down year. especial- . last of several highlights for the Yan• .
ly with the si tuation· with my dad. kees th is year,·a season that included David We lis· perfect' game and the. •
He 's home walchin g. I know he '' at
debut of Orlando " j::l Duque .. Herhome with a big smile on hi'\ face."
· Rivera closed out ·bis spectacul ar nandez.

J

\t)

down their tirst victory in Ill goune~.

i;lcd home a run. and o:;urpri~ing rook-

_w as the first since Cincinnali upset

Tim Saho, whose wrongful-firing
lawsuit against Scholl included lesli:
mony that flfSI revealed the racial

Scoreboard

. Afl~r hcing down

up for the tmuhled Tamp&lt;~ Bily Lightnin g. ll1cy've hml
a shnkeup in thl! front nl'fit:c UJI(I now they've m1ilccJ

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Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 22, 199=:

Pomeroy •.Middleport,_Ohio

•

Thursday, October 22, 1998

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

•

Meigs puts six-game win streak on line vs. Alexander

OSU's Germaine says Heisman chase u·n important to him ..·
,.,e

downs iri
Buckey"'' 45-15 v1cto"I don't know 1f we've ever had
ry.
a foner playeron our progmm than Joe
In iu mo&lt;1 recent issue, TheSpon- Germaine," ,aid Cooper. v.ho al-.o
ing New.r said Germaine would look had 19'J5 Hei&lt;man winner Eddie
good holding the Heisman.
George.
" I don'tthink it's that much of a
The senior from Me&lt;a, Ariz .. ha.&lt;
stretch at all " associate editor Tom quietly. guided an offense that i's averDienhan said. "His name doesn't gel aging 39 points and 504 yards a .
mentioned with the other guys. but game. He's completing 63 percent of
he's definitely wonhy."
hi ~ pa&lt;ses for 11 touchdown' with
Tho&lt;e other guys include quaner- only three interception&gt;. That puts
bach Cade McNuwn of'UCLA. Tim him 13th in the nation in pa.&lt;s effiCouch of Kentucky and Daunte ciency. ahead of McNown but bchond
Culpepper of Centml Flonda and run- McNabb.
ning back Ricky Williams of Texas.
Cooper poini~ out, though. that
All mo•ht be better known around the Germai ne not only lead&lt; a balanced
count rye than the fredle-faced kid 'attack that a(m ~eatures t.oilback
whose idea of a touchdown celebra- Michael Wiley.~but also has , tacked
uon is 10 t&lt;w a teammate-on the shoul- up strong numbe'1 against a &lt;ehedule
der and ,,;,,(e.
that ha&lt; included three ranked oppoOhio State coach John Cooper oients Ohio State has out.&lt;eored Q7-4S).
stepped up as Germaine's keynote
"As a maner of fact. Joe ha.' not
speaker this Week.
r'' ·'\ t:d h; · he~l ~arne:· Cooper ~a1d.

· By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)- Ohio
State quanerl&gt;ack Joe Gennaone isn ·r
doing much slumping for the Hei•·
man Trophy. ·
An Ohio Stale co-captain. he
missed the school's annual "Captains Breakf'!-•1'' on Sunday.
Was he out doing interview~ on
CNN? Chauing it up wi1h ESPN
. radio or the guys from SportsCenler&gt;
· No. he drove two hours to Kinla!ld. Ohio. population 5.881 . to
speak to a Monnon youth group.
• ··1 just felt that talking for my
church was something that l needed
to do."' he said.
Others are domg the talking for
him.
.. He's everyt~ing you want in a
quanerback:· Minnesota coach Glen
M~n

scud la.l\t week after Gennaine

passed for 339 yarili and .two touch-

lookong ahead to the Bucleye,·
remaining games again" live
unrmked opponent&gt;. "One of the-.e
j!ame&lt;i he', going to light you up with
25-of-27 or 28-of-30 or 15 complelion.-. in a row. He' Capable of doing
that...
Gennaine ha• pa,&lt;ed for more
than 300 yards in Ohio Stale's ""'
two games- a streak that may contmue. None of Ohio State's next four
opponents ha&lt; a wi~ning record. If
Germaine continue&lt; to pile up big
number.&lt;- and the Buckeye&lt; aren 't
blind,ided - they woul~ be 10-Qand
a solid No. I goong into the or annual
,howdown on national TV with
Michigan on Nov. 21 . A bog j!ame
apinst the Wolverine' and Germaine
might not .be lost on the &gt;huftle anymore
"What a great honor that would
~

•

be, to be awxiated with thut group
of pla)eN." Germaine o.aid of the
Hei &lt;man hopefuls. " If l"m lucky
enough to he in a plhitoon like that in
November, that would be great. It\
pretty humbling to think about."
Three year. ago. Ohio State .ent
out po'tcard-. each weel "ith
George\ ,tal\. So far. the university
ha.&lt;nt even done that. The -.choor,
'(lOft' information do rector \aid that'&lt;
becau.e it wa• hard to single out a
Germaine over linebacker Andy
Katzen moyer. cornerback Antoine
Winfield or wode receover David
Bo&lt;ton.
" What's hap,..ned the la&lt;l couple
•· throwing for more
of weeks. with Joe
than 300 yards and getting more
national media throwing his name
around. that's an&lt;wenng our questoons;· Gerry Emig said. "Now that

.

Missouri s~ek_s upset of No. 7 Neb.raska in.. Big
College football picks
By RICHARD ROSENBLATT
AP Football Writer
Frank Solich gets a sideline v1ew
, of Missouri this t1me .

No. 19 Missouri (plus 20)
week. the Corn huskers were stunned
at No. 7 Nebmska
by Texas A&amp;M 28-21 after barely
All
good
home winning streaks
beating Oklahoma State 24-1 7.
Agamst the Aggies and Cowboys. the nust come t~an &lt;:(!d .... MISSOURI.
Huskers were outrushed 434-214.
28-24.
(,
No. :rexas Tech
Nebraska ran well against. the
weaker Jayhawks, piling up 466
(plus 10) a!'t'.o. 8 Texas A&amp;M
Aggies looking-to end three-game
yards to move into founh place
nauonally at 270.4 per game. But losing streak vs. Red Raoders. ...
.~
Nebraska isn't playing Kansas any- TEXAS A&amp;M. 27-20.
No. 9 Wisconsin
more.
...
The Tigers, led by Devin West and
. (minus 6 1/2) at Iowa
optton quanerback Corby Jones; are
Ron Dayn~ set to top l,lJ90 yards
fifth ~alionally in rushong at 266.3 and Badgers set to go 8-0.... WIS·
yards per game. West is ~1111 the CONS IN. 28-21.
nation's Second-leading l-us her al ·
No. 11 Georgia
(even) at Kentucky
175.1 yard.• per game even after
'
.
' being held to 93 yard' la.st week
against Oklahoma.
As if Missouri needed any more

,5_

Last sea&lt;on. Solich celebrated
"The Catch" upstairs in the coaches'
booth. hugging and high-fivmg wuh
olh~r Nebraska assistant coaches
after Man Davoson's remarkable.
last-second tdllchdown grab forced
ovenime and the Huskers went on to
beat Missouri 45-38.
Now, Sohch is making all the calls
for No. 7 NebrJSka (6- I, 2-1 Big 12).
wiJ.ich plays host to No. 19 Missouri
(5-1. 3-0) at Memorial Stadium on
Saturday:
·
"Call it a miracle or whatever. but
they made it hap'pen."' Solich saod
earlier this season. "It wa• a tremendously exhausting game."
That was then.
· "To us, the play's history," Solich
says. "It can't won us anymore ball
games."
.
Missouri coach Larry Smith tnes
his best to forget. too. ·
''That game is over, it's behmd
us," Smith said. "The call. the catch. ·
all thatos done. That's not what we're
thinking about"
But... "I use this game in just one
sense. We know how we played, we
know we played with them nose to

nose."
Yes they did. '
Th1s year. the Togers are betterand the Huskers aren ' t.

"

The coaching translllon from Tom
Osborne to Sofich may have been a
smooth one, but Netfraska's feared
running auack is not so scary anymore. And the defense. among one of
the hardest hitting around. doesn't
swarm the way tt has in nattonaltitle
.
seasons past.
Before a 41-0 rout of Kansas last

--

charge. Thai'~ two days before the
Raiders play the Ravens on Balti-

Ro.mlers fans," Gruden said Wednes-

day. ''I've lemned someth1 rig~1
&gt;Gruden. who cou ld face up 10 six
. rnonths 1n jml and a fin e 1f convict .· ed. was 111rested whi Je drh in£ home

nary actton by the NFL.
"If an NFL employee i' involved
in an alcohol-related Vlolu tion of the

"I've apologized to lhc team.
I've apologized lo the R.oidm orga·
ni zatoon. And I'd like to apol,ogoze to

· a week Jgo from

c1

party followmg

his team\ 7-6 victory over the San
D1ego C'hargero;;
A blood tesl wken at the lime of
his .1rreo,;t .,howed Oruden had a
blood-ulcohollevel of . I0. a spokeswoman for the Alameda ,Coumy Cll..;-

trict atwrncy\ office ~ ai&lt;l Wcdnesdny. The lcgallomol os OS.
Gl'uden was charged TuNI.ty ;md
j.., Uue

tO'appear f01 .~rra1gnment Nnv.

6 in A lamed&lt;~ County Supt:IJOJ Court

in Plcao.::uuon on the mP. ,h.: meanor

ESCORT LX 4DR

"'~998

second and third quaners. the Trjm-

ble Tomcats lambasted the Southern
Tornadoes 51-7 to spoil th&lt; · 1998
homecoming festivities at Roger Lee
Adams Memorial Field in Racine.
Trimble is now 6-1 and Southern
2-5. Southern looks for a different
fight this week when they host the
Miller Falcons. who are without
their main offensive weapon Heath

feated Bowden this season .... ·
TULANE. 42-17,....
.. .
No. 23 Virginia Tech
.
(minus 20) at Ala.-BinninghamBlazers won 't be a pus hove
especially after Hokoes were embao'
rassed by Temple .... VIRGINI:
TECH. 24·1 0.
No. U Mi'i&lt;issippi State
•
(plus 9 1/2) at LSU
•
Bulldog~ on six-game losin
streak vs. Tigers; LSU on three-gatr~ .
losong streak, period .... LSU, 31,-2-,;

$10,988°0

$26,988°0

$15~988° 0

One thing about this game is ots my
Sentinel Correspondent
·home school. so it gives me a liule
This week the Eastern Eagles incentive. It's an opponunity for our
entenain 15th ranked Trimble in an kids to step it up. We're better than
important Tri-Valley Conference our record shows. I feel Trimble will
•Hocking Division matchup. Eastern. take us Somewhat lightly and that
0--7 lost 27-6 last week at Federal · could be to our advantage."
H0::king, while the Tomcats
"If we can play with some intendestroyed Southern 51-7 in Racine. · sity we'll be fine. We also must be
Eastern has continued to improve , consistent. It's going to be a cold
over the pa•t several weeks, devel- night and you ne~r know how they
oping some young players in key (Trimble) will react. !I'• a great
positions. Coach Scott Christman opponunity to show we are ~ner
has done a good job since inheriting than our record."
two consecutive 1-9 Eastern teams
"I told the kids, 'If you let it be a
and is trying to overcome the demon Iaugher it will be; if you don't it won't
of subpar athletic records in boys be. This week, we must stay healthy
spons the past couple seasons. Only and keep it clOse. We can win these
the ba.•ketball team has posted an last few games. "
above .500 season sirice Eastern's
Christman said, "LAlsl week, we
football championship three years were more productive on offense and .
ago.
some of our kids ~it career and seaChristman said, "We face one of son milestones. AI times, we played
the best teams in the state of Ohio this wtll, we just needed to stop their bog
.week. They have a lot of weapons. plays and we didn't. We played a fair-

Last week: 17-2 (straight); 8-1 .
(vs. spread)
- .
3eason: 106-26 (strai ght); 69-5'.

$12,~88° 0

:•

RANGER SPORT
SPORT PK8, STEREO,
OWL TIRES
'

..

law. he or o;he colllcl face possihle discip lin:l l')' action hy, the commissiOner," "aid Lesln~ H.unrnorul. cllrcctor

of mcdi.t se1vices for the NFL. Such
d Lsc 1pl1nary actiOn rnuid 1nclude a
fine .
The Cahfon ua H1ghway Pat1ol
sa1d Gruck:n w;1s speeding hy ahout
· IS 01 J.O mph, :Jncl strachJitng l.me"
\\hen he w,1s urrested. He was hcl&lt;l
• at the S.ml&lt;l Rito1 Jail fm .thout th1ee

By RICHARD PYLE

NEW YORK (A PI .- Darryl
tum al hat lor the
Amcric:~n .C;ulccr Sncicty II\ hi"' frr'-.t
public .. appearan~· e ~ incc bcrng
c1

98

RANGER SUPERCAB
XLT,AIR.ALL POWER
EQUIPMENT,4X4,A8S,4.0L
EMili ME

$17,988°

hnur" Oll1cer~ "'aid Gruden wns
c:oopcn1ti\ e "hen he was .u rested.

betry's l,orgc 1111cstone. They said he
mu't undergo chemotherapy ;,ftcr he

CHEV'/ CONVERSION VAN,AUIO...ll IOIU.OilYI61i IIlii
988°0
0
'98 VILLAGER, auu sun. ~uu rowu,Lonu ............ 118 1988°
0
98 DO DOE NEON R/T, LOADED. IRIOHT RED .................. 112 1988°
~~ 1998 TAURUS
0 ~ LEATHER, MOOMROOF,
1
98 RANGER. SUPERCAB 4 DOOR. AUTo, m. LOADED ... 17 1988°
97 EXPEDITION XLT. LOADED ..................................... 125!988 80 CD CHANCER, SPORT DROU
ABS, EVERY OPTION
0
97 EXPLORER XLT, LOADED', ONLV, 17DDD MILES ...... :...... 1221988°
0
1
97 F1SO 414. AIR CONDifiON ....................................... 1151988°
.
'
I
DO
97 RAMCER SUPERCAB 414. AUTO, KlT ...... :......... .-.... 17 I 988
0
97 RANGER SUPERCAB 414. m ............................. : 1151988°
0
97 THUNDERBIRD "ERiiiE IRVAM SERIES",va LOAm 1 1S~988°
96 EXPLORER EDDIE BAUER, va. LOADED .................. .'22,8(10°0 1
'
I
oo
95 R'ANGER 4X4, AIR CONDITION................................ 9988
.
.
.
$
98800
95 F1SO 414, XU, VI , AUTO ;LOADU ......... : ................. 151
.
I
oo
94 CLUB WAOON, VI, LOADED ................................... 111988
00
9J BUICK RECAL, AUTO. AIR ..................................... 1S1 988
. 19, 988°0 AIR CONDITION,. STEREO,
9J. BLAZER 4DR, AUTO , AIR, POWER .................... ,.......
96 $10 SUPERCAB 4114, u. ¥6 , AIR ....... ...... ,............ 1131988°0
0.
0
1
97 LINCOLN TOWN CAR, LOADED ....................,.•.'........ 24,988°
'
· 1
................
71988ao
97 ASPIRE, 4DR, AUTO , AIR ....

0

TAURUS LX
AUTO, AIR, V6, LX PKC

$15,988°0
l

1

w:p, rclea,eU from a ho!-.pitall a..,t Fn day and had remmned ;: rt hnmc tx-t ore
he turned ur Wedne ~d.ly 'at a midtown sporting gomJ... s lor~ , wlm:h I"'

chapter
On Oct 3. doctor' removed a
tumor and a lfi-mc h ... ectrn n ot Strmv-

.,

l-k l.'rt!ditcd his wife. Chari'I ~ C.
\\'llh 11l..,ist111g that he get the r h.eck-

ho,.pitul's hqu1d diet
"I'm very fortunoue . I was n:ry
htl'k) t(l get rn ut ;,m e;rrly ..,tagl' and
rca lite the prohlem th;H I wao,; hnv,;1g," o,;;ud Str:m berry. c:tlltug that a
lc-;so n for othero.;
1
"The bc... tthtn g IL".IIl do j, try to
let people undel\tand tllill tltingo.; do
h.trpen . und j1 L~U l h.tppcn to you ."
he ... ud "Tiu.: ,Jl)Ctur' h.t w eduL·.ned
me vr:ry \\~o:ll o~hout thi -. di -.~:•a,L' . "

$JJ .988°0
MONDAY-FRIDAY 900 AM-700 PM
SATURDAY
,900 AM-5 00. PM
SUNDAY
CLOSED

!:!.~POWIRIOUIIIIiURfiii.IILITV.VCP.(OAti

SAVE UP TO 110,000°' OM VANS

•

177 EXIT 132

RIPLEY, WV
(304) 372-3673
(800) 964-3673

iy good defensive game the first quarter."
. Eastern saw freshman qu311erback Garrett Karr throw for his first
l!JO-yard game hmi ng 10-17 passes
for 101 yards. Also, Adam "Butch"
San&lt;!ers rushed 23 times for 103
yards, his first centurion mark of the
season.
Eastern. again nearly saw itself, in
a scoreless first quaner, but Federal's
~layton Mayle changed the complexion of the close game with a 78yard run at the 3:42 mark of the first
quarter. A Jack Sechkar k1ck followed
for a 7-0 score.
Eastern put together a good little
combination of "Butch Sanders and
the Sundance Kod" Aaron Schaekel.
Sanders rushed 23 time s for 109
yards and Schaekel rushed S limes for
49 yards. Karr had some good runs
erased by sacks, but ended up with
four net yards. In passing. Karr was

10-17 for I01 yards, showing more
poise each week as he begins to show
leadership for the Eagle offense. ..
In receiving, Jeremy Casto caught
a pass for 33 yards and Josh Brodetick 1-23. Federal Hocking's Dan
Whitlatch was 1-23 and Mayle l-3.
Tnmble is explosive: one of the
reason's tts ranked 15th on the state.
Sc~nng 33 pomts m .the second
and thtrd quarters. the Tnmb.le Tomcats lambasted lh~ Southern Toma·
does. 51-7 to s~tl the 1998 homecomong feslovohes at. Rog~r Le.e
Adams Memonal Fteld m Racme Fnday night. Trimble is now 6-1.
Robbte Cooper. wh~ last year w~s
the Tornado ktl[er. agaoo sleweth hiS
loes. wuh a three-touchdown, 110yard rushing. punt-blocking. safetycausing Herculean elfon: Trimbl~'s
Brady Trace was a mere stdeshow m
the Southern corcus. Cooper's only
flaw was when he threw an inco111-

nowhere near that thing. I was ih my through the Saints' medoa relations
bed sleeping the whole time. I never office.
.
said thr~e words to that kod."
"Our , club· attorneys have
Jones sa1d his roqm was on the informed me thai a suot has been filed
first floor and he wai not even ques- by Jeff Danish in 'the State of Wistioned during the NFL investigation. consjn. At this time, we have not seen
Royal, who admoned to NFL the lawsuit and will have no further
inves.tigatofs that he took par.t in the comment until we can discuss Jhts
gauntlet, was traded to Indianapolis. mauer with our attorneys,"
Jones and Davis'were cui.
.
Kuharich 's statement said.
Davis, Mitchell and Smith · all
NFL' commissioner Paul TagHrefused to comment on the suit.
abue said Sept. 19 the league found
The lawsuit says the Saints knew "no basos for the commissioner to
hazing was planned by veterans for ' take league disciplinary action." ,
rookies because Smith posted a
Coaches smd they had no way of
nottce on a bulletin board in a meet- knowing the gauntlet was planned,
ing room used by Corey and the although Oitka had i&gt;Sued a general
defensive 'line.
warning against last-night misbe''Players put a lot of stuff-on the havior. •
..
.
bulletin boards." Corey saod Wednesl.l spoke about it th.at nig~t and
day. "If I knew that was there and said don'tlet anything happen, don't
what 'it said I would have stopped 11. do anythin g stupid. don'ttear up the
Nobody would let thai go on."
dorm. 1 went through the whole
The Snints said in Septemberthey thing twice al camp," Ditk~ said.
were. unable to odentify the 20 to 25
Danish said the hazing violated
players who formed th e gauntlet and NFL regulations against physical
had not been able to line or pui)Jsh abuse of players. Hos lawsuol also
them.
alleges viotlitions offederal. state and
Saonts general mana ger Bi II local laws.
Kuharich was at a seminar on
No criminal charges were filed.
Wednesday and unavaolable for com·
ment. But he )ater issued a statement
,.

t

II

.

CINCINNATI (AP)- The worsr sacks in six games, but at least k·new
'
defense in the National Football what he was doing:
"If somebody needed to know
Le~gue has lost its most experienced
linebacker for at least one game.
The Cincinnati Bengals expect to
stan three rookie linebackers and a
second-year Iinebacker against the
Oakland Raiders on Sunday because
of an injury to Jnmes Francis.
Francis. an outside linebacker in .
his ninth season, is hampered by a
groin pull and is not expected lo be
able to play Sunday. The Bengals will
use third-round draft choice Steve
Foley and undrafled free agent Adrian Ross at his left outside spol.
That leaves the Bengals relymg on .
three rookies- Francis· replacement
plus 'inside linebacker.&lt; Takeo Spikes
and Brian Simmon$ - and secondyear linebacker Reinard Wilson .
It's a predicament for the Bengals
(2-4). who already have the lowestranked defense in the league and are
Don't Forget Bob's ...
giving up an average of 400 yards per
game.
For Fresh
They also start rookie Arlrell
Hawkins at cornerback. With Foley
Fall Apples
and Ross forced to fill in for Francis,
·Great to eat ...
the Bengals will have one of the
least-experienced def~nses in their
history th1s week.
"We don't know the playbook
Warm
page by page," Foley said. ''We're
just trying to learn as much us we can
Apple
a.&lt; quockly as we can so both of us can .
be ready to play."
Pie!
Fnincis had only 19 tackles and no

.,

something. you could just ask James.
He could help you." Wilson sl\id.
"Now you have to know before you
"

get cut thcr~."
Coordinator Dick LeBeau's
defense is based upon Iinebackers
makr

Come On Over to Bob's •••.

. . IINOPTIOII

$20 988°0

, By MARY FOSTER
versity· of Wisconsin- La Crosse.
. NEW O~LEA~S (AP)- Rook- sparked both players' complafnts.
te Jeff Dantsh clatms he was forced Rookies were attacked as they ran
to run a gauntlet of New Orleans between two lin~s of veterans.
Saints players who were hitting,
Danish. a- 23-year-old defensive
kicking and pounding on him with a tackle from Richmond, N.Y.. broke a
bag of coins, leaving him injured, " dormitory window when he hit it
shaken and unemployed.
after running the gauntlet in a thirdDanish 'is suing the Saints, noor hallway. He required 14 stitchdemanding thai the team pay him es to his left ann and hand, the law, more than $650,000 for physical and suit says. '
emotional suffering. lost wages, medMcCullough had ' severe noseical expenses, humiliation and loss of bleeds for ·a period after the hazing.
enjoyment of life.
Gould said.
'
"lt'snotabigdeai,"Saintscoach
Other players hazed were No I
Mike Ditka said of Danish's suit. "If draft pick Kyle Turley. second-round
this is the avenue that he pursued, pick Cum Cleeland and No. 6 pock
'!hen fine. Let lhe couns figure out Chris Bordano.
what it is. He took his chances. We'll
Cleeland missed time with
take our chances."
headaches and blurred vision in one
Another rookie - seventh-round eye.
"Good for hi~.'' Ckela~d. now .a
draft pick Andy McCullough-;- also
Still bears scars from the event, but starter for the Samls, saod ol Danosh s
has not yet decided iF he will sue, his suit.
agent said. ,
Danish flied suit Tuesday in U.S.
"That was a lerrible incide?,llh~t District Coun in' Mad1 so n. Wis .. and
never shOuld have happened, sa1d named the team, assistant coach Wall
Jimmy Gould ofCincin~ati. "llth~w Corey and players. Andre Royal,
Andy off track and left hom struggltng Troy Davis, Brian Jones. Isaac Davis,
to get back to where he should be." Keith Mitchell and Brady Smith.
A hazing incident on Aug. 20,the '
"I don't know where this kid got
last nightoftratntng camp althe Unt- my name," Jones said. "I was
•

.

$16,988°

IUlOI EXPEDITION EDDIE BAUER
LEATHER, MOON ROOF, EVERY OPTION

Meigs on the other hand i' &lt;eoring
27.9 a game. while giving up 21.7 a
game.
·· ,
•

Francis' injury ·makes B.engals go young at LB

I

~~~

I'm not going to do anyth1ng .1hout
lt."

selling $l9Y "Darryl S1rawbcn y 'i up I hat rc,·cak,llhccanccr. The 1.111ky
towel..,," w1th ~I from c.u.:h gq.#_t,l\..g.·t~J · sl ugger vi~tbly lost weight on the
cancer re~~ arc h .
"Durryl Str;1wherry . hil' -.tcppc~l
up to the! plate so many tmu~.., over the
year" rn cntrl.',JI-.itLwtiml..,, .uld today
he ... tcp ... up to the pl:llc (l~l hehalf ol
the Amr:rit:an Canl.'er Snu~ty and tts
effort\ to get people to learn ahout
colon ~o:anc l' r. to le:un ahnttl way--. or
early tlete,tinn.~ · sa id Rnlph Oeo.; ttno.
chmrman ot the New Ycuk City

·$2r,488°

ICtmn-; next week to Cali forma.
where he grew up.
,..
Strav.-hcny sard he.h;ul'\;clntjuuell

relense&lt;l lrom the ho,po!&lt;tl .tfler 'I' play b:tschall for two months
undergoing, surgery fpr colon c.tncer ' dcs pite not fcelrn g we ll . th111king that
The 36-yca r-old Yankee ..,lugger "rt u·~ not aniOJllfY I c:.m sec C)r feel.

Alex;mder i&lt;;tveragmg 17 point&lt;
a g;:nne. while g1vmg up 27 a co nte't.

Bentle) ha' pulled do" n 28
for 397 yard•. J.T. Humphreys I8 for
235. John David&lt;On II for 148 and
Roush three for 105.
On defen"' the MaraudcN are
showing improvement with every·
conte&lt;l. John David&lt;On lead&lt; the
Marauder&lt; wilh four interception&lt;.
Ryan Ramsburg and Angelo
Rodriguez has two. and JO\h Hooten
one,
La&lt;t week the Marauder de fen..,,
~II but shut down the highly potent
Nei\Om·olle-Vorl olfeno;e led hy quarterback Ben Robey and taolback Eric
Glass. In that conte&lt;t the Buckeyes
had 269 yards total offense. includ-

mg lbl in the atr b) Robe). But Slf
of thoo;e yard' by Robey .. a, on the
final minute&lt; of the conteR
•
"We feel that Alexander is a bet-

.

ter team than their reconl mdical'es,"

Marauder head coach Mike Chancey
says of this weeh opponent. "The~
have a very good taolback (Metts) and
a very good quanerback (Stump). We
will have lo make sure tharwe show

up and are ready to play football. We
have had a good week of practice:· .
Chancey said. "And I feel that we
will be ready to play football. "
Kick -off os at· 7:30 from Alexan'
der High School.

come.
Josh Da,•is rushed 12 times for 75
yards, Josh Ervin was 8-51. Brice
Hill h5. and Matt Ash 7-13. Receiv i~g- wise Adam Cpmmgs was 2-43
woth a touchdown. Man Warner was
I -30 and Josh Ervin was 2-15.
Southern had 224 total yard s.
Southern head coach Dave Barr
said. "We've practjced Oat this week,

but we can't feel sorrY for our~.ieh·c, .'

We have a lot of good football left in
u&lt;. There is no reason, if the kid s ri ~
to the challenge. thai we can't win
th~:se

last three games and como
home with a re&lt;p&lt;ctable record ." :
"Tonoght we are going to OOo.tthe
intensity. The

~rds

are going to hm•e

to meet the challenge.:·
Game time

1~

7 ·30 m Rae me.

plete pa« on a flea-,flicker· play.
Cooper has kolled the Tornadoes songle handedly each of the last three
seasons.
,
Trace, however. threw three
touchdown passes, scored one himself, scored an extra point, rushed for
47 yards, punted twice for a 47.0
average and passed for 182 yards.
Not bad when you ani playing next
to Hercules.
·
Tnmble had 373 total yards
against a Southern defense that held
East~rn scoreless. Trace was 9-23
pa&lt;stng. 10-47 rushmg and Cooper
~as 10--101 with Kyle Andrews havmg 7-23. Cooper also caught four
passes for 110 yards to push ht s game
output at 211 yards total offense.
Trace, an athletic 6-fool-3, 210
pound quanerback, wears #1-0 and is
theor best player overall. He can run
and throw the ball and has a good
backfield male in #41 Robbie Coop-

er. a six-foot, 175 pound tailback
Cooper has pretty good speed and
was characterized "as an above average tailback" .
Trimble runs out of multiple formalions, but. primanly the 'T'. They
also show trtps. no backs. quads and
. run just about ev~rylhing to try In gel
the second~ry confused m order to
make the b1g plays.
.
Agaonst Nelsonvolle-York, Tnm·
ble had 345 total yards. 196 of 11
came on th~ arm of Trace, who hu
pnmary recetvers Cooper (5- !05) and
Cody McCoy (8-51) McCoy s recep·
, lions were mostly of the short gain·
er vanety. Phol Faores also caught a
pass and ts another THS target.
McCoy alsu passed once tor 44
yards. Overall. Trace was 16-28 passingand led the ru~hing woth eight curroes for 84 yards. Trace . alone
accounted for 280 of Tnmble s total
yardage.

. Danish ·files suit against Saint-s i"n wake of .Qaun.t let incid~nt
I

$10,988°0

week .

P"•'''"

Meig&lt; i' led by tailback Ju-.tin
Rou .. h. Rou•h. a 5-10. 210 pound
junior h., carried 214time.Cor 1229
yards. LAI't week he rushed for 204
yard1. and had a 91 yard run called
back. it wa• the third time he went
over the 200 yar.f mark this ....son.
Also doing the job on the ground,
i' &lt;enior wingback/f~llback Jeremi·
ah Bentley. Bentley ha1 rushed for
492 yards in 86 carries 15.7). Fullback Shane Leach has carried seven
times for 48 yards.
Junior Gmnt Abbott continue&lt; to
have a good Season for the maroon
and gold.at quanerback. He is 58 of
110 152.7%) for 854 yards. Jerem iah

Howdyshell.
Jesse Little caught Brady Trace good running from Josh Davis put
Miller fell to defeat at Waterford behind the line several times for loss- together a 60-yard drive that ended
last week.
es. and Adam Cumings. Josh Davis, with freshman Dally Hill's pa-. being
Clifton Cox scored two touch - and Ryan Hill upended u fairshare ol . intercepted in the end zone by Roben
downs for Miller last week, but · Tomcats with hard licks. This group Farley.
Waterford came back to win the 13- played woth some itensity throughout
Southern's Brandon Hill had a 37
12 game in ovenime. Tied at6-6 after the good and bad momentum swings yard kick-off return.
four rounds, Waterford tonk advan - the Tornadoes had
Southern's last drive produced a
tage of a missed Miller extra point to
Southern threatened late in the boost to the overall slats. but their
win the game.
game as younger players along with mistakes were just too much to over·
Last week, Willie Collins and

I
By SCOTT WOLFE . I .II'~'
-

~~~999

EXPLO'RER XLT

a 5-7. 175 pound ...,nior. h•' ru&lt;hed
for 637 yard' 1n 133 carri~' - Mett&lt; i'
a two-year st311er at tailback and at
cornerback on defen&lt;e.
Alexander also ha&lt; a good quarterback in 6-1, 215-pound o;eniorCarl
Stump. Stump ha&lt; completed 35 of
104 for 519 yard,. He favorite rec&lt;i•er is ~phomore Eric Gabnel.
Gabriel. a 5-9. !55-pounder. ha'
pulled in 14 paso;es for25~ yards. He
caught four pa&lt;&lt;es for 116 yard&lt; la&lt;l

Eastern'I to play 15th-ranked Trimbl~ in
d~vision bout Friday
.

1991 MUSTANG LX
ESCORT ZX ·2
CD PlAYER, 4DR, TRAILER ~IR CONDITION, CRUISE, POWER, HOT PKO, AIR AUTOMATIC,
AMIFM CASS, LOADED
TOW, ALL POWER, LOADED SPOILER, LOADED, AUTOMATIC

4C'tl, AIR CCIID,
STEREO

Grudcn also could face discipli-

·Strawberry assists ACS ;.
:in promoting cancer research
Stmwberrv look

Last week, scoring 33 points in the

•

12 .bout Satur~ay

per game, ' Dawgs D allowing 11.7.
N.C. Stale (plus 10 1/2)
... GEORGIA. 31-27.
at No .. l6 Virginia
'Southern California
Wolfpack WR Torry Holt vs.
(plus 7) at No. 12 Oregon
Cavs' DB Anthony Poindexter could
Ducks without RB Reuben be quite a show... . VIRGINIA. 31Droughns as they try to rebound from 24.
tough UCLA loss.... OREGON . 41No. 17 Colomdo
2R. . '
(minus 8) at Kansas
Miami (plus 4 l/2)
Jayhawks porous defense makes
at No. 13 West Virginia
Buffs offense lotlk potent .. COLIn '96 'Canes came here and won ORADO. 31-21.
jcOn,blotk~(l-punt in final seconds ....
Army (plus 22)
WEST VIRGINIA. 27-17.
· al No. 18 Notre Dame
Northeast Louisiana.
Sounds like a good gan1e, anyway.
(plus 34) at No. 14 Ariiona'
· ... NOTRE DAME, 38-14.
•'A nice breather for Wildcats on
No. 22 Tulane
middleofPac-10 race .... ARIZONA.
(minus 22) at Rutgers

•

Cuyahoga County. The MaraudeN
are ranked lith once again in Division Ill's Region II in the Ohio High
School Athletic As&lt;OCiation's computer rankings.
Alexander is 1-6 overall, and 0--2
in the Ohio Division. but the Spanan&lt;
are much better than the record indicates. Alexande(s lone win rs a 24-6
win o~er the Southern Tornadoes. ·
Last week the Spartans played the
Vioton County Vikings tough before
dropping a I 4-13 contest. In that
game the Spanans held a 13-0 lead.
before Vimon Countr scored two second half touchdowns to post the win.
Alexander is led by their outstanding back. Danny Metts. Metts.

••

Southern football team to h-o st Miller. Falcons Friday

more

The rookie gmch. who at 35 is ihe
you ngest in the NFL. wus urrested hy
the Caltfornia Highway Pntrol on
Oct. II while reltornin g to his
. Pleasnnton home from n postganlc
party follow1ng the Rniders' win
· over the Chargers in Onkland.

for the mcident.

I

. By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Co11111po.·aut
The Meigs football team will put
its six game winning streak on the
line Friday evening wh&lt;n the
Marauders travel to Albany to play
the Alexander Spanans.
·
Meigs will head into the contest
with a 6-1 mark overall and a 2-0
mad in the Tri-Valley Conference's
Ohio Division. Meigs has first place
to itself after Wellston's 35-28 win
over previously undefeated Belpre
Saturday.
-Meigs makes its debut in· the
Associated Press state poll this week.
Meigs is toed for 16th wiih Hunting
Valley Univenity. a boys school in

mcentive against Nebraska, how's

this: The Tigers have lost 19 in a row
to the Huskers.
The pocks:
No. I Ohio State
(minus 28) at Northweslern
Buckeye Express pickin' up
steam .... 'OHIO STATE. 49-14.
No.2 UCLA,
(minus 14 1/2) at California
Bears' stingy defense - lg·.7
pomts per game - no match for
Cade McNown and crew.... UCLA,
44-24.
'
Alabama (plus 15)
at No. 3J'ennessee
ThreeT's at Tennessee- Travis.
Travis and Tee, spell victory.
TENNESSEE. 35-13.
Iowa State (plus 35)
at No. 4 Kansas State
K-State biding its lime 'tol Nov. 14
showdown vs. Nebraska. ,..
KANSAS STATE, 49-17.
No. 6 Florida State
(minus 12 1/2)
at No. 20 Georgia Tech
Seminoles have a defense, Yellow
Jackets don't ... FLORIDA STATE.
35-27.

· Oakland· head coach faces
:drunken driving charges
By ROB GLOSTER
ALAMEDA. Calif (API - Aday
after being charged "'ith dro vong
under the innuence. Oakland Raiders
coach Jon Gruden expreNd regret

we're halfway through the sea\011.~
clear Joe 'Hbe leaderoflheteam.. &lt;.
could fill in with somebody a~ JUSI'
about every key spot. but what tf wt.
didn't ha~e Joe'!"
Ohi(
But ot s •toll not as ~hough
State wtll mail out T-shons or coffe&lt;
mugs with Germaine's likenes~: 01
coon catchy nicknames such a• Ja&lt;
Cool" or "J-Tmon" .Germatne. Mos
likely. hi-. picture woll be featured 01
the school's weekly news ~e~~~
and he woll do mo~e mtervoe ·
reach even more Heosman voters. ·
But don't look for hrm 10 sial
trumpeting him&lt;el f for the award.
" I'm sure my mom would hav~ .·
. 1 ~or ·r
1 ••• he sate • •
space on the mante
"But that's a long ways down th
road and I'm really more. concer:n~abou~. ,playing Nonhwestem ngt•
now.
•
·'

•

HARDY .FAU PANSIES
"Plant Now For Beautiful Spring,
HAJWr FALL G.HWEN .UUMS

s2. 98 ea or 4/SJJ
.

Wl1ile (JfliiiiUties lnst
-

Bulbs•••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2So/o off

Items••••••••• 20% off
At our Gallipolis Garden Center
· All Jail Seasonal Crafts including:
Jail ]lags . Wreatlrs· rJows and nlbbpns
TWO CONVENIENT LOCAHONS
1/4 mi. Rt. 33 (1/4 ml north of
Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge Mason, WV
- Alao2400 Eastern Ave.

(Across from K·Mart) Gallipolis, OH

-

-

TVC footbal.l standings (
illllll

:n:

MEIGS ......... ....... 2
Belpre ................... 1
Wellston ...... ,......... I
Nelsonville-York ... 1
Vinton County ....... I
Alexander ..............0

Ohio Di ision
L PF V PA
0 53
33
74
I 76
,I
53
55
I

49

]5

I
2

32
52

47
61

w
6
6

L
I

5
5·
3

-I
2
2
4

I

6

Overall
PF
195
151
272
172
2]4
146

u

172
125

124

151
17K
190

-1.

illllll

:n:

Tromble ............... 2
Miller ................ 1
Federal Hocking .... I
Waterford ............. I
SOUTHERN ...... I
EASTERN ...........0

Hocking Division

L ri

0 66
I , 32
l f.7
r )5
I l'4
2
6

.

w

fA
19
13
26
27
51
34

6
2
!.

Saturday's score

1

Wellston 35, Belpre 28

3
2
.2

u

L

·· Overall
PF

I
4

172
105

4

13S
86
87
44

5
5
7

u

106

151
18 3
191
170
• I K7

�- - - - - - ..

•

(
'

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel'

Pomer~Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, October 22, 1998

Sou.thern FFA places first in county soil judging

PageS

Thursday, October 22, 1998

Beat of the Bend ...

The Southern Soil Judging
teams placed first in both county .
Agricultural and Urban Soil
Judging Contest held recenlly at
the Marco and Gene Jeffers Farm ,,
in Columbia Towpship.
The contest was sponsored by
the Meigs County Soil and Water

Long term love affair is what this woman wants - don't feel sorry for her
agreed.
Ha,·mg-llad a

Ann
Landers
~nd

with a

orrended by that assumption. Ann.

1"'\11 L·"' Anrck" Ttnle•
'n~J·-~~~

r~lauonship

married man for 19 years, I am

..

c,~_,, r~

everyone makes choices in, life. and
we·all have lU live with the results of

those choices. For 19 years. I have
had a remarkahlc love affair with a
Dear \nn Landers: After read - ' prominent member of the ~.:omm uni ­
lng :our T\:~r'm"c 10 ·· sad in Con- · ty. I cnt,ered into thi~ affarr with my
n~..'l"tlcul.·· l f~..·el l.'ompcllcd to \Oicc
eyes wide open. There ha\'e been
.tn ~~rmwn !rom another camp. Some difficult times. but we both
.. S.1J" tuiJ :OilU hll\' hi:, mother put worked hard tn slay together. We
ur \\ lih hl:r llu..,hand-, lung-te rm had jomt therapy s cs~ i o n s. We CO it; r.tlt.ur. h.: II~\ tn~ 11 \\aS worth it.
tain together and tra,clt o interesting
.-\f!l·r both hh. Parent!~ died. "Sad'' places. He is hkc.a so n to my mmhhlunJ a rhotiJ ot a love ly young er and J ,onfidant to mv sis ter.
~'llfll.m 1n fll.., L1thcr':-. houom desk
Unless h 1 ~ wife" ha~ had a lobotoJu\h.'r 1-k fi !:,' Urctl 11 wa'l the g1r\my, I am catam she is aware of our

• fnen&lt;! and ""J .. " I wo nder what

relalionship. Apparently. ·she enjoys

life -.ht· h'Jd with him . It
cn uldn't ha\L' hecn g reat." You

hci' tifestyk. Joc "!n 't want to risk

' l 1nd n(

los mg it and has chose n to rcmam

hope he has an uncle who can serve

siiJ:nt They .do. nol fight or argue,

as a role model.

Dear Ann Landers: I live in Taibut their marriage i ~ with out paswan
and read your column in the
sio n. t.jy beloved is a fine father to a ,
China Post It 's a wonderful examwonderful teenage boy.
While I do not ~rcl:ommentl this ple o'r how our cultures differ. How
do American husbands get away
wilh havrn g girlfriends on the side?
erableand unrulfillcd . I may not he· Here, of course, il is managed by the
lhe ben~ficiary of his li fe insurance · wea llhy, but working-class men
policy. but we share a Jeep. spirit ual could
,,.,.., never get away wilh it. -~ Mrs.
and profound love 1ha1 is ljre
cnhan cmg for u.s hoth . -- Pa1red Pc rDear Mrs. ???: PhilanderiQg is
fec ll y in 1hc Palisades
_
not ~cographi c. nor is il strictly for
Dear Perfectly Paired: Appar- ihc rich , Il's hormonal the world
ently. you t-wo have m&lt;.~nagcd bo over, and working-c lass people do it,
far) to have your cake and cat it. too . too.
The arrangement seem~ to he li nc
Dear Ann Landers: I'm wriling
lifcslyle ror everyone. please don'l
mi~ ­

assume all wo,nen like me ;:uc

wi1.h you, your marncd fn c nd and
hi s wife, but what kind of rm:ssagc is
this se nding to hi s .teenage :;o n'! (

ahout i hc leiter in your column from

" Lone ly and qld in Vaneou,ver."
1

She was a

m i'dd le~aged WO~l)an

who

had never married.
There are 4 million women in the
· Uniled States who are o~er 40 and
'unmarried . They will live longer,
happier and .more productive lives
because !hey don'l have the stress of
children, husbands and in-laws.
Being alone, they will take better
care of lhemselves because they will
have the lime; energy and money 1o
do so. They will be more successful
in their careers than their married
female co-workers because of these
advantages. They will also have
more free time to travel and pursue
other interests.

A mother spends the tirsl 20
years of her son's life trying 10 leach
him to be independenl and how lo
lake care of himselr. As· soon as he
gets married, .he · forgets ewrything

he learned and becomes dependenl
all over again. Tell "Lonely and
Old" that a dog will give uncondilionarlove and not expect! mything
in relum. And· once lhe dog is housebroken, she won'l have to mop
around the base. of th.e commode
every tihte he relieves himselr. -Facing Reality_in ,Kentucky
.
Dear' Kentucky: Sounds hke
somebody .br.oke . your heart. Too
bad. I assure yo~ that millions of
women whose husbands have died
would be happy lo mop around the

By Bob Hoeflich

Conservation District .

..

commode again.

Send questions to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tory Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Calif. 90045

·

~

•·:

O'lllene." \lcmorial Hospilal
nffl'rs Frel· mammograms
O'Bk·nc,, f\km on J I Hospital is
n1n\ P lknn~ frc~ mJmmogrJms to
\\Clllll'll \\IJO 4uailfy for rarticipati i) Jl tn the Southeastern Ohio
Brl'a..,l Jnd Cc1 \ Jl' al Cancer Proj c~.: t
1SEOBCCPJ

,
Th-= free mammograms avail·
ct hll' focal ly a n.: pan uf.a!l effort tQ
in~.:n.·ase

women's '&lt;tw arcnc ss of
how breast and cc rvic:tl cancerS can
be detected early When more treat·
mc nt options are a\'ailable and
~he fore the cJnccr has spread.

Women who arc 50 or older.
whose household mcomc is at or

hclow 200'k of 1he povcny level,
and who do not l1ave insurance that
wi ll cover .a mammogram may be
~i'igi ble

ror lhe SEOBCCP lo pay

for a mammogram at O'Bicncss.

lnlcresled women may call 180(1-236-6253 for mor,c informalion
or 10 delcrmme cligibi llly. The
SEOBCCP is a I 0-county women's

dcr~mmcnl at

59:!-

prog ram .·

In addi1ion. O ' Biencss now has
removable

s tic kers

displaying

breast se lf-exa mination instructions
thai can he placed in lhe shower
and on a
mirTor that show the correct way to
do hrca~t se lf-examina\ion To
rcquc5. l the ~t i c ker contact the c_om-

November, the group will fo1.: u;.
their discuss io n on Rc so u h:~ Shar-

R&lt;;ceives scholarship

Brynn M. Moss. son of David
and Jeannette Gmtc of Long Bot ·

Books by 'Mail program reviewed
by OVA.L

The Board approved Ihe new
OVAL mi ssion stalcmenl. a dirccl

The 'Books by Mai l prog ram and
the lm.s of federal funding for .,the
projcct whirh nearl y -double ~ · the

result oflhc planning process.
The quar.terly rncmhcr cvaluation was accepted h y the Board Qn

tom. has . bccn awarded the Academic Achievemenl ·scholarship at
Cedarville College for the 19992000 academ ic school year. The

cos1 ror member libraries was dis - "'the motion of Charles Mcntgcs of
cu!i,sed whenlhc Board of TrOslecs Ihe Garncl A. Wil son Public
or 1he Ohio Valley Area Lrbranes Library of Pike Coun1y. and scc(OVAL) mel at WellsiOn last week. onded by Mark Oakley of 1hc NeiDireclur Eric S. Anderson lalked ' so ~ ville Public Library.
about 1he scaled down projecl ,proThe dental insurance coverage
posal made lo lhe Librarians Advi- was renewed. The Board also
sory Commincc (LAC) lhe pre vi- approved a renewal or health insurous week. He said thai large fixed ance through McNelly-Palrick &amp;
cosls, pnmarpy poslagc, make it Assoc. The proposal was unani difricull lo reduce lhe project cosls mously approved.
below a certai n point

OVAL Js a cooperative re gional

Each member library is discussing
this iss ue at therr meetings and the
rcsull,s will determin~. the course of

library sys1em chartered by the
Slate'ofOhro 'in 1973. Its mission is
to provide continuing education,

thc .program , Anderson ·said.
' tesoui-cc sharing and iniwvati vc
In a related issue. it was unani · services to and . foster cooperat ive
mously agreed that advertising be efforts among l1brarics in the so uth-

ern Ohio COUnlies or Alhens, Jack-

merit · bascd scholarsh ip recognizes

hi s exce llent secondary sc hool
achidvement and potential for high
achievement in college.
A student at Ohio Valley Christian School, he plans to study engineering in college.

Garden Club meet
Repofls on club acllvtlles
including lhe Counly Fair flower
shows, the Come Home to Rutland
event, displays al Expo, and civic
plan1ings were given when the Rutland Garden Club met recently at
1he home of Pauline Atkins with
Belly Lowery as hostess.
Members who helped Atkins
~xpo

C&lt;Jtalogs.

son , Lawrence, Meigs, Pike , Ross,

with arrangements for

S1cphcn Hedges. direc10r of the
Nelsonville Public Library, reporlcd on 1hc progress 1hc Librarians·
Advisory Commillec (1.;\C) has
made on t.he planning process .. LAC
has made a rirsl review of Continuing Educalion , Technology and
Books By Mail. Services. In

Scio10 and Vinton.
Wanda Eblin serves on lhc
OVAL Board as a rcprcse n1a1ive of
1he Meigs Cou nly, Distrfcl Public
Library.
•

Lowery. Marjorie Rice and Donna
Jenkins who also rurnished limd
'
planted
.m' ums atlhe two planters in
Rutland. Eva Robson and Atkins
reported on Chester Club's open
mecling in Augusl which they
attended·.
It was noted 1ha1 the Region I I

were

According

to

ALLTEL C·ustomers Report-Feeling of Euphoria!

best use of the soil considering .
crop·s. pasture , wil~life and.
woodland. The studc nl s then
make recommendations as 10 the
best practices to rollow.
.
The urban contest is designed
to delermine slope. td'pography.
whether the soil is subject to slippage or flooding, texture . high
water !able and depth lo bedrock .
Based on lhc rindings, SIU-

teenagers . .He 's been l:Onfined to the Grant Medical Center but is

'

home now. He is a brolher of Middleport's CHuck Stobart who is
an assi stanl rootball coach at Ohio State Universily these days.
'
•
.I menlioncd recen tly in a cblumn 1ha1 a Randy Thompson had
round a batch or pi ctures dealing wilh Meigs County m a house
!hat was beino lorn down.
·,
·
Thompson had orrered lhe photos to wbomeyer they might
belong. It's amazing that he 's had many calls from Meigs Counlians and is still getting lhem. However, calls to Randy are in v~in
at this point The photographs were turned over to Mrs. Hazel
Turner and are now in the possession of Mrs. Twila Buckley.
Twila says there is a lot .of interest in the pictures and several
people have slopped by to look a11hem and you, loo, are welcome
lo do so. Family names involved in the photo's include Karr,
Humphrey, and Robens. There is a photo or the old Long Bot1om School and of the Pomeroy United Methodist Church in
Pomeroy when it was new.
Those feeling that the photos might include some of their family rrom back when can contacl Twila who is auempting to place
them in the proper hands:
Let's talk about Christmas. I know it's early but this is a
requesl which might take a little lime lo fill. .
The Pomeroy MerchantS Association is looking for the dona.- tion of a Christmas tree, I 5 to 20 feel, 10 be used as a pan of the
community's decorations for the holiday season.

If you have such a tree that you would like to donate and have
removed from your property, please call Mrs. Annie Chapman or
Mrs. Nancy Thoene, b01h of whom are officers of the association.

' suddenly appeared along
I hate the big billboard which has
East Main St .. near where all or the river bank work has been taking place lately. Remember when we used 'to have all of those
signs posted at the traffic light entrance IO the town? Miraculously, they went· away. I hope 1he village has some regulations

''

contest is

obtained, students determine the

a mara11)on ruli when he was anacked and bcalen by a couple of

at least lhey'll disappear in a few more weeks. Meantime, do
keep smiling.

LOCO-ECTOMY 100% SUCCtSSFUL!

The agricultural

designed to check slope. dep1h of
1opsoil , depth or soil, texiUre and
drainage polential.
From
the
informalion

tile reports , Stobart was out jogging"' prcparin~ for

or some influence ·in getting the new billboard removed from the
site. Heaven knows tAe political candidateS signs are enough but

'

.

The Rivcrhend AI:(s Council and the Meigs County United
Way Fund will join hands to present a musical at the Middlepon
High School Auditorium at S: 15 p.m. on Friday and Saturday
nighls , Nov. 27 and 2S.
The musical has be~n named Riverbend Talent Revue and talented Myron Duffield is in charge of the production. He is being
assisted by a committee from the arts council .
All those wishing lo lake pan m~y contact Duffield at 9924197 and Ihe cutoff d;nc for accep1ance of those calls is nexl Tuesday. Myron will explain lhe details when you make ·lhe conlact
Rehearsals are beginning immcdialely for lhe rail musical. The
sponsoring organizations will share in the proceeds.

You migh1 have noted over the pas I rew ~ays a sto,ry on lelevision dealing with William Stobart of Canal Wincheslcr.

..

ing.

excluded from the Books by Mail

cancer
~crccning

munit y relation~
9 .1 00.

==':··~'\r~filf~[,~,:.:;~;::&gt;:~~J,~,:.·:~··
..,;{~:;;'" ~ , .. "';
Garden Club meeting will be held again, or red to the birds.
Blackwood talked about the
Saturday at the Rockland Mclhodist
Church at Belpre. The Meigs Goun- ' varieties, ~izcs and colors of sunIY clubs mel on·Oct. 19 at the Mei gs nowCrs and said that contrary to
myth, su~tlowers do not turn their
Library.
Lowrey, Rice and Aikins reporl- faces toward lhe sun on ils daily
ed on floral arrangemenls provided trip from cast to west.
Rice talked about ·the pawpaw
to churches. The traveling prize furnished by Clotine Blackwood was tree which is nearly pest free ·
won by Rice. Dorothy Woodard ahhough it does draw the swallow
1ail bun~rny.
won the door prize. ·
She said pawpaws are high in
An aniCie· on sunflowers was
read by· Blackwood. She noted thai Vitamin C. potassium, iron and
sunflowers ·are a favorite garden manganese , surpassing the nutri~
bloomer and that scientists have enls in bananas, apples, or oranges.
She also discussed how to split
discovered remains of the plant in
the Mammoth Cave National Park daylilies. She said this should be
aiea of Kentucky that date back to done every three years so that they
flower bener and .discussed the best
1500 B. C.
Sunflowers, she said, were most method .for separating the bulbs .
Reports were given on the two
,likely first cultivated in the United
Stales by Native Americans who A-H clubs whose leaders are Rutused the sunflower extensively. land Garden crub members. Aikins
Early explorers to· the New Wprld ·is . assistant leader of the Ha~­
carried sunflower seeds back to risonville Club of 14 members, who
Europe and the sunflower quickly had projects al the Meigs Coun1y
became an imponant food and oil Fair and the Ohio Stale Fair.
She has been ra leader for more
crop throughout Europe.
She said thai one reason for lhe !han 54 years and 'was recognized at
sunflowers favorable reputation is the fair. Sharon Jewell has worked
its ease of cultivation. It enjoys full with 4- H for 34 years and also was
sun,, ~equires no coddling, easily presented a plaque.
Jenkins had 12 members in the
withstands droughts , and is not
bothered by major disease or insecl Rutland Raiders II Club with pro·
problems in a heallhy garden. The jecls al the fair. Co-leader of that
·
seeds can be eaten, saved to plant group is Cathy Lcntes.

Individual winners were as fol lows, in order: ·agricultural judging - Amy Wilson, Brady Boling, Kacy Ervin, Matt Wilson ;
urban soil judging - Lori Sayre,
Counney Haines. Jo.sh Larson,
Chris Yeauger. Olhers parlicipating were Chris ProHitt and Sandy
Smith.

Congrmu lations io Allen Ball who ~ill. mark his 97th birthday
tomorrow. October 23. Ball resides althe Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Ccnlcr on the Rock Springs Road and messages
will reach him there .

-----'.-_ ______;____•So.CJ.ety Scr·a.~p,·b·· ~.,·.•· o····. '.·1\:.riL
.' &gt;~
;': ·';""cc~:~
;;.;::;. ;,qss.~
''''~k"'~
', ____,...----~
I

denls rnqle recommendations as

..

to lhc su ilability for buildings
with basemenls, sept,ic systems .

. SOIL JUDGING TEAM- The Racine Southern FFA Soil Judging team,.both rural and urban,
placed first in county competition recently. The team is shown here with Bob Mulligan, Athens County
Soil Specialist. Shown are, from left: first row, Josh Larson and Chris Yeauger; second row, Lori Sayre, ·
Amy Wilson, Kacy Ervin and Brady Boling; third row, Mulligan, Chris Proffitt, Matt Wilson, Courtney
Haines and Sandy Smith.
placed nin th and the urhan t~o: a rn
roads and driveway s, lawns and · improve th e si tuati on.
In Dimict I 0 FFA co mpel i- placed lOth. There were 21 t c&lt;~.r n '
gardens. If a problem ex ists. stu dents re commen d ways to fix or lion, the agriculture so il learn competinhg. ,

-~--~-'----Community
The Community Calendar is published as a free service· to non' profit
groups wishing to announce m'eetings and special events. The calen:
dar is not designed to promote sales
or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.

,; THURSDAY

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi,
Thursday, 6:30 p.m. Lulheran
Church. Members 10 wear Halloween shirt Martha McPhail and
Margaret Stew an, hostesses.

!

\

....,

/

• I

CAUSE

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just visit your nearest ;\t.LTEL
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Exhllaratjon

ments and games. S3mc hours Satur-

POMEROY - Tom O'Grady,
program director of the AthensHocking Solid Waste District,
speaker at Ewings Chapter SAR,
Thursday, 6:30p.m. at Meigs Museum, Pomeroy. To discuss Ohio
Canals and their history through the
;. use of colored slide~. .New QJ'fic~rs
. to be elected and by-laws to be
reviewed and anproved.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club,
Thursday. 10:30 at townhouse : Luncheon lo follow.

BIRTH ANNOUNCED - Marc
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW
and Lesley (Carr) Michigan of Post 9053 , Thursday, 7:30p.m.
Athens announce the birth of
·their first child, a daughter, Lllly
Elizabeth Mlchlg\ln, born · at
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital on
:
Aug. 28..
She weighed 6 pounds 12 ·
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ounces and was 19 1/2 inches Robin . Williams won't exactly be
long,
.
. · bagging trash now ·· 1h~t he hus his
The maternal grandparents own st(etch of highway roadside 10 •·
are Donna Carr and Ronnie Carr keep clean.
of Pomeroy. The paterr}al grand- William s has "adopted" part of
parents ··are Robert and Lo~a ­
Highway I 0 I ncar Candleslick Poinl
Michigan of Dayton.
sou1h
of San Francisco, meaning
, The maternal great-grand·
for cleaning up lhe
he
's
responsible
mothers are Marie Hauck and
.junk
people
loss
out
of their cars.
Ruth Carr ol, Pomeroy, and the
Bul he won '1 be spearing old .cans
. paternal great-grandparents are
and
yukking it up for motorists. He
Joseph and Larane Masclanto;.has
hired
a contractor to do the dirty
nio of Carnegie, Pa .
work. Authorities say lhcy Rrobably
wouldn 't let Williams bag Ihe trash
LILLY ELIZABETH MICHIGAN

Joy .

• STilESS n'STs
ECHO CARDIOGRAPHY
• DIABETIC MANAGEMENT
• CHOLESTEROL COUNSELING
• BLOOD PRESSURE
• THYROID
DISORDERS
.
• DISEASES OF
THE LUNG
'
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.
• CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE

OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 8:30-5:00, WED. 8:30-NOON

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'

,

Meigs County

Veterans Service Cmitmiss ion . 7:30

p.m. Monday at the Veterans Service
Office, Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.

FRIDAY

SATURI;&gt;AY

9:30 am • 8:00 pm

9:~0 am • 4:00 pm

~

day.
LONG BOTIOM· - Uniled
Methodist Church, Friday lhrough
Sunday, revival service, 7 p.m.

nigh1iy, speaker Philip Scarberry.
Carry-in dinner preceding Saturday
at 5:30p.m. preceding service.

SUNDAY
ANTIQUITY - Baptist Church
homecoming,. I0 a.rri. SundaY., rollowed by · lun ch. Paslor Jesse
Wingrove welcomes public.
ATIJENS - Revival, Columbus
Road Church of.God, Athens: Evangelist, John Elsw ick, special si nging.
Sunday 6 p.m. through Wednesday.

anyway.
.
· "II wouldjusl cause havoc on the
highway~· ·

said Ke ith Robinson ,

coordinator of the Adopt ·A-Highway program.

Williams slill docs sland- up comedy and won an Academy Award for

'

Vi4mlm11S · :N ·

~ofii

"The New Jewelry Store In Town" ·
&gt;

'

Phone (304) 675-7600
201-B 6th Street
· Pt. Pleasant, WV
(Aero.. from the Mason County Courthouse)

Jeannie Saunders- Owner
www.gilllpolle.com/karat

-SPECIALSI /S Ct TW Diamond Stud Earrings Selin 14K Gold 539
300fo off al Otl1ens &amp; Pulsar Watches
Selected 1OK Sport &amp; Ccwtoan Chams (Reg. $1 5) s9.99 ea
1OK Rope, Herrlngboae &amp; Fig~ nedtlaces s1 0 per gram
14K
&amp;
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(

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his supporting role in "Good Will
Hunting.''

RANDALL F. HAWKINS,

'

~LltEL

·

MONDAY
'POMEROY -

SYRACUSE Bruce (Sta lnaker) Stone. singer and songwriler,
Sunday, 6 p.m at lhc Syracuse
Nazarene Church. Free will offering .

POMEROY- Caring 'and Sharing Support Group meeting Thursday, I-2:309 p.m. at Meigs Multi- FRIDAY
·purpose Senior Cilizens Center.
POMEROY ~GOD'S Net.
Topic: Report on a trip lo Main Street, Pomeroy, open to ~eens ,
Alzheimer's Care Unit in Colu111bus. ' 6 to 10 p.m. Friday. Free rerresh-

Board Certified Internal Medicine

•

,

7 p.m . nigh1ly.

......

•

time offer. De-ller participation may vary.

Calendar-;__-_____,_ _ __

MIDDLEPORT Salisbury
Township, special meeling, flood
hazard miligalion, Thursday. 7 p.m.
home tlf clerk, 463 Hooker St, Mid'
dleport

Robin Williams to clean up highway

.

. The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

I I
Medical Office Bldg., 2520 Valley Dr.
Suite 212 • Pt. Pleasa WV

Ends Saturday 5:00pm
Just our way of sa ing THANKS!!!

.

�•
Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

•

. .

•

Thursday,Ckrtober22,1991

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

RUNS.

c
.
. .-=. -td~ c'Y'Zllt.J.

992-~196 MUFFLER SHOP

.....;::_.

NO'IlfiNG
UKEADEERE"

Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn

992-2196

Muffler &amp; Tail Pipe

668 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis
Across from Gallia Auto Sales on old Ate. 35 West
New Summer Houts Mon.-Fri. 8-5: Sat. 8-3
(614) 446-2412 or Toll Free 1-800-594-111

•s 1 souTHTHIRo

PHONE992·2 196

llfiODtEPORT, 0"'

Starting at $79._95

106 North Sec:ond Ave. • Middleport, OH

Guaranteed Service

992-2825 .

THE WINSTON CUP CIRCUIT
THE WINSTON CUP SERIES
COMING UP: Dura LubaiK[llan 500K
WHERE: Phoenix International Race·
way, Avondale, A[iz.

WHEN: Sunday,

Oct.25

DEFENDINQ CHAMPION: Dale Jarrett
EVENT QUALIFYINQ

~~~-........ 0 I If •Dat•tAC DtlloO . _

3:3i p.m. • ...,llld'y e TBS. ·
. . . . . Duro~2 p.m. • '&amp; .ndlly. n..

.

·--~~·
6~

RECORD: Bobby
Hamilton, Pontiac,
131.579 mph,

Oct. 31 , ·1997.
RACE RECORD:

·

Qale Jarrett, FOfd,
11P.82"' mph, Nov. 2,

p.m. • SUnder •lNH

•. ,997.

·oTHER FORMER WINNERS: The late
DaVey Allison Is the only driver ev8r to
win here twice sirtce the Winston Cup
began holding races In Phoenbt, Ariz .,
10 years ago. Single ~ time winners

P'OIIITS STANDINGS

IQ

0

.....,.

.-roNCIW

1. D. E.-rlwdt Jt., 4, 1~1

1. .lc*. Sp-..,..., J , 76,

~ - MMt Martin, 4 ,451

2. Mitt~- 4,018
J . M. ~. 3,815
• . Rlnct)' l.AJollo, 3,~
~ - Etlan &amp;.wy., 3 ,257
6. BliDI s.cier. 3,178
7. I'M
3 ,168

:2 . Fion~. J.~1

3.

Dell'*"-"· 4 ,18 7

4. Rult)o WMicl, 4.043

'-~~.3-~
Boll1on. 3.830
7. -.my~- 3,826 .
• •"0.111 &amp;l'rlhM:I. 3.4510

e. M

JEFF WARNER
Insurance Agency
113 W. 2nd Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45799
Ofllce: 992-5479
1-800-742-3868

"""'" .

1. JlltOoraon. 4.1117

8. TtrTy uabonte, 3,473

1d . .:.om~· a,m

p...,._

!1. Tl'n FINWNL 3 ,1&amp;1
e. 8uQ,Nhoi Jon~~". a.1 20
10.
5ecltr. U84

r

'
FROM
WINSTON CUP SERIES
N. Daytona Jeff Gordon
earned his 11th victory or the

IA~WIEK'
Madison, Ill.. noar St. louis.
Bad luck en~od a memorable
banle between Earnhardt and
Buckshot Jones, whO had an
oil line come loose on his

season, the ~Oth of his career

and the

5. TCW"')' Allnet. 3.365
8 . St.cy Ccmplon, 3,:288
1. Jii!VnyHwlslty, 3.~67 11
B. Rick c.tlli. 3.007

9.

firSt ever in either

Pontiac near, the end.

October or November. So .
much for the notion ·Of Gordon
, stioklng to t)is third Winston

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES

Cup title. By winnii-lg, he

Dennis Setzer drove a Dodge
improVed his Winston Cup lead to victory at Mesa Marin (Calif.)
ov« 16th-place ftnisher Mark
Raceway, passing Mike Bliss'
Martin to 358 points with just
Ford with 11 laps to go. Jack
three races to 90·
Sprague Improved his point
, lea!fto 28 points over Ron
BUSCH QAAND NATIONAL
Hornaday with a second ~place
Dale Earnhardt Jr. padded his finish . Stacy Complon was ' ·
point lead with a victory in
third and Hornaday fourth .

i

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011)

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I

cSI
;:,01

:ell)
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-C&gt;

&gt;CIS
-:I:
CIS CD
CD IV

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1-

0

. CIS

.'

The, Daily
Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy
992-2155

Phoen~ is tun of quality eating
establishmentS, inckJding Pinnacle
Peak Patio 110426 E. Jomax Road,
Scottsdale}. Roman's County Une

t10540 W. Indian School AoiJdl,

Roman's Oasis (16825 W. Yuma

Road. Goodyear) and Sluart
Anderson's Black Angus t5929 W.
Indian School Road}.

1 "'

1997.

include the late Alan KulWICki, Bill
Elliott, Dale Earnhardt, Mark Ma,rtin,
Terry Labonte, Bobby Hamilton and
Ricky Audd.

.

NOTABLE: This hiS1oric venue hosts a
wide var iety of events, including CART
Championship cars the annualfes~ival "
known as the CoppercWortd Class1c.

~d at a race, I saw his gasman
wcari ng a hebnet, and I also_
saw somt ot~r gasmen with
hclm:ts. Why?
Andrew Ogilvie
Crestview, Fla.

Dear Andrew,
Being a gasman is dangerous
because of the possibility of fire.
Helmets afford facial protection.
.Gasmen also wear firc-rctar· ·
dant suits.
.

.

De-ar NASCAR This Week,
I keep seeing the ' lc.ners
"MIJNA" oti sign~ and as span~
sorS ofcevents, even on.car No.
22 belonging lo Ward Bu~on .
Would you please tell me what
.the iniJials stand for?
A.W. Enfield
Port Charlotte, Fla.

CHit.:OREN: Shawn Marie

(28}.'Aichard (26).

'

raised in Wausau, Wis.-, lives
in Avery's Creek, N.C.
CAR: No. 71 Realtree
Chevrolet Monte Carlo, which
he owns.
CAREER RECORD: 724
starts, 12 poles, 5 wins, 75
top fives , 180 top 10s, nearly
$6 million In earnings.

FIRSTS: Start (Feb. 20,

John O~AA Thifl Weei&lt;.

Dave Marcls says he .,lans to nm in. the Winston Cup
Series next year.

front. ~

•·I

one ·wrong mOl/e."

outstanding on
restrlc:::tor~ plate tracks
this year, has lour top-1 0
linisl1es 1n the last fl¥&amp; races.

and 14 pole positions. I've
had a good career. There are
I'd like to be a team owner
a lot of guys with goOd
one day, but I can't afford to
teams, plenty of money and
put anyone else in the car
- lots of peOple, and they don't
right now. My plan right now
h'8ve any wins. There is a
is 1o spend another year as a tremendous amount qf free ~
driver. I wou ld like to be in
dom also in being your own
the DaY1:ona 500 in the year
·Doss. I love it. It's been my
2000. Then I'd make a decilife. I'm really proud of being
sion about putting someone
able to hang In there as an
else in the car."
indePendent, one of the little
WHAT KEEPS YOU
guys. I've never had to lay
GOING? ~ ~ don't know. l'v6
anyone off. I've been able to
been racing since I Was 16
pay for things as I go alor:~g. I
years old. 1 love to drive the
sent both of our children
race car. There are days
through college. Helen and I .
when you say. I'm not comare proud of that. I've got a
petitive, I'm tired of this deal , · good name l'n the spo rt . I've
but there are days when you
got a good reputation, a lways
are pretty competitive. I've
kept my nose clean in t~at
got five Winston Cup wins
'
respect."
team, but I really enjoy the

If you'vit got • quHtton or 1
· comment, wrlle; NASCAR

Thls Week Your TUm, c/o '
The Oaatorl Gazette, 2600
E. Franklin Blvd., Gastonia,
N.C. 28054

:q; 0

N~.9-

ana:=
' I'G ·

.N

.

"

~

-----""'1'-.;_....,...,....,...,
...
T R I V I .A

~-----

Valley
Lumber &amp;
Supply Co.
555 Park St.

(,._1

sport. It's been my whole life.

..

~ Wbo'snot
fi""'V WHO'S HOT?
l!ttttr Bobby Labonte,

:r:

8....a. a:"D·0
~
.!!

Dear A.W.,
MIJNA stands for "Merchants
Bank of Nonh A,merica." And
lhe No . 22, driven by Ward
Bunon, is owned' by Bill Davis.

TOP TEN

FEUD Of THE WEEK .
Mike Skinner 111. Darrell WaHrlp
When he got sent from ·
NASCAR Thlo WHk
fourth to 11th in the Daywriter Monte Dutton
·tona draft, Skinner radioed
glvoo his opinion: "For
h~ crew that the lapped
what it's wMh, I thought
Pontiac ol Waltrip caused \ Waltrip was out of the way,
him to get oul of line: "It ·
Skinner had a strong car,
he'd have just gotten out of and lhe rest of the leaders
the way, I'd still be up
were just lyinQ in wait for

Exl104

'
Dc:at NASCAR This Week,
I am a big fan of Jeff Gordon,

·• WIFE: Helen

-

Dave Harris

Ldwlf,..O. ......

NASCAR This Week
Dave Marcis is perhaps the
only holdout - and cenainly
the most- notable - in a long
tradition of struggling independents. He hasn't won a
race since 1982, yet still he
keeps coming to the track ,
doing his best to be
competitive.
While Marc is rarely runs at
the front anymore, he is
. widely belav~ by NASCAR
fans who respect his perseverance and determination to
succeed against incredible
odds.
, AGE: 57

1968, at Daytona), pole
(March 7, 1971 , at Richmond), win (Sept, 28, 1975,
Weekly ranklngs,by NASCAA This Weell. ''M'Itet Monte Dutton. Last
at Martinsville).
week's ranking ls In parentheses.
HOW DID YOU GET INTO
1. Jetraoroon 111
6. Rusty Wallace (61
RACING? ~Basically, it all
bega'n in Wausau, Wis. , on
Game, set, match
Good year at Daytona
just a little short track there.
2. Mork Moltln 121
7, Torry LObonloiNRI
1decided if I wanted to get
Fading at the end
Getting it back together
into racing for a living,
needed to come down to
3. Dalo Joi'Nit 131
6. Oolo Earnhardt 181
NASCAR. Racing was pretty
Victim of bad luck
Trouble on pit road
seasonal back in Wisconsin,
4. llobb)' Lobo_l)lo 151
9. Mike Skinner 191
and there were only about
A tad 100 late
Not for lack of effort
three months per year that
. we could really race. I've
5. Jell Burton 141
10. Rick~ Rudd (10}
~ • seen so many things change
Two wins.and holding
· likes next two tracks
in NASCAR over the years in
the growth of it. It's growing
so fast , so big, 1don't ttl ink
any of us real ized it could get
•_ ON THE SCHEDUI!
so big,"
WHAT'S IN YOUR
lllf1W~ Pole
FUTURE? ~My plans·are, for
0&lt;:1." Din lubeo'Kmart 5001&lt;, Avondale, Ariz.
Jerrell
Ham~ton
1999, to run in the Winston
~v. t
AC·o.lco AOO, Roc~lngham, N.C.
Hlmilton
B. lllboniB
Cup Series again . I think we'll
Nov. 8
NAPA 500, Hampton, Ga.
B. Labonte
0 Bodlfl! .
have an announcement rea l
shortly· that Realtree wl[l be
witH us again. We are a small

Call 992-2156

~'IJ!l:W ·

Br Monte Dutton

HOMETOWN: Born and

ADVERTISE
ON THIS
PAGE

·For More
Information _

RACE RECORD: Joe Aultman. Ford.
103.942 mph. Nov. 1. t997.
OTHER FORMER WINNERS: Jack
Sprague won three PhoeniK races in a
row before Ruttman'a victory last year.
Mike Skinner is a two-time winner of
this race.
NOTABLE: This mile track hat a ·dogtag• on the back stretch . It i$ the nextto-last event on the schedule.

Dave Marcis

•-:Jar S..:.... 3.385

Rlndy Tollml. ~.1172"
10. Ron a.Mid. ~.97 1

CIIAFTSMAN TRUCK SERIES
COMING UP: GM Goodwrench
Setvice/AC Delco 300K
WHERE: Phoeni)l International
Raceway, Avondale, Ariz.
WHEN: Saturday, Oct. 24
DEFENDINQ CHAMPION: JO. Rullman
TRACK QUALIFYING 1!ECORD: Joe
Aultman, Ford, 127.741 mph , Oct. 30,

AiMOSr HOME COOitUIG

PIIOfll.l

3. Joe RultrT111'1 . 3.568

Middleport

· 992-6611

•

• Jeff Gordon put
an October~ Novem ­
ber Jinx behind him,
taking advantage of.

lhe typically 1ine
work by crew chief
Ray EvernhBm and.
the Rainbow Warriors with a Pepsi .
high 11 raCes this
season.

·Fan Tips

AU the unique paint jobs
put on display at Daytona

in hefty activity on the

WHO'S NOT?

~:&gt;0\~

Wl,i pUI Hl-lJO:!lU

Derrike Cope has not finished
in.the top 10 since Atlanta in
November 1997.

(IJ9fl '£

JelfltJ •:)lis
.\1-"~ I "M

·z

.or ' I

ll:jJMtNW

c'o llectlbles front. From
Johnny Benson 's red
Betty Crocker paint job to
the other-worldly color
scheme on John
Andretti'S No . 43, the
souvenir market should
be glutted for months.

SI7HJ.:,
www.stlbluu..com

See._us for Your Stihl•
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

FROM THE ARCHIVES:

Spencer, Petty have different views on restrictor plates

The rich history ol NASCAA

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

Ridenour

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -

Jimmy Spencer, who won th e
Pepsi 400 four years ago, and
Richard Petty, who counts three
wins in thi s race among his 10
at Daytona International Speedway, otTer differing views on
the current status of racing on
NASCAR's most fa mous layouL
"A lot qf people don' t like
restri~.:tor plate s," noted
Spencer, referring to the cnr bu retcr' attachme nts that have been
used to slow the cars at Daytona
and Tal ladeMa for the past II
seaso ns. "1 don 't like them. but
the thing about tlu: restric tor

plates , they make grerrt races,
and we need great races. We
need.lfte rcstrictor pla tn to
keep the speeds down and keep
the fans happy. You've got to
admit, we~
~ome boring
races lh1s J.,'

think they can shOw it. He's got
a better cha nce' at 215 (mph, the
speed at whi4h racin8·would ~
take place wi~hth e plate})
~an what he
ght now.
" They (NA
) did ii for
h fet y and'lll th y did is cause
Petty, w ~ n 'l/)0 races
more trouble . It's 11on of like
before rcWring in 1992. minced 'Soing oUt on the intc'rs lale_and
no words when nsked about the
watch in' 4p cars go by. You gel ·
pl&lt;~,tcs.
"
" out of line and 15 people pass
"I new r was a remictOr-plate , fou, and that's not racing, that's
adVoc qtc," he said. " I alw ays ' running. ~ always h11 ted lo work
thought it wa s a race. Let's go
and work and pass, somebody,
wide -open. Yo.u g'et 40 peop le
and n couple of guys work
who all of a sudden beco me
togetlicr and So right' back by
good' (a~.:e -car drivers because
· you."
.•. /
{ they got good ca rs. As far as a
FUTURE PLANS: Uirry
p~~s on with the tal ent , 1 don :t
McReyno lds has commitied to 1

il

J

one more year with Skinner and
Rkhard Childress Racing. After
that, the velcran &lt;trew chief is

Planning to MO in business for
himself.
"You never ~ay never, bu t
Larry McRe ynolds ' phlns are no
secret to an ybody," sa1 d
M~R ey nold s, "larry
McReynolds' plans are to give
thi s team every ounce of energy
and fo cuS I clin give it •for four
more races this year and 3Dplus next yeu r. Larry
~cRe yno_ td s, along with John
[)angler, IS workmg ver y fev e r ~
ishly, wi th John doing 90 perce nt of the work right now. This
is wht:rc Pis work kicks in."

'

RACING ON rHlwEIIIi

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In other key portions of 1he meeting. describ.:d
lhe knowledgeable officials:
,
-The Republican' appeared to lean again&gt;! expan~·
ing lhe inquiry. Schippc" re;ponded in the negali~e
when chief Democralic investigalur Abbe Lowell ask&lt;id
•pecifically whether Ihe inve&gt;tiga1ion ~ould_,cxpand (o
lhe _Whttewater real eslate tran.,.ctlpn;, firm&amp;' al t~e
Whtte House travel office and m1suse of FB I files. .
But lhe message was sull cloudy because ll.,looner,
repeated the Oflen-stated GOP view lhal any eviden~o
beyond whal the committee already ha~ must be ro~;
sidered. ~
_
.
•;
~The .Repubhcan lawye" . ack~owled~ed at the
meelmg lhal 1hey were compthng hst5 of mdrvrduals
who cou ld b.: deposed, subpoenaed or even grame(j
immunity, bul did not shar~ any names. Lowell prolest:
ed lhal lhe Republtcan s dtd not onvolve Democrals 1~
1he proces;. _ .
,
.
--:-Ruff f'TOmtscd thai the White House would mak~
admm1stra11on offictals ava1lablc to teslify, but he sa1~
some offic1als have pnvate lawyers who would lie giV,
1ng lhe1r chcniS adv tce.
.
_
~Lowell asked the Republicans whclhcr lhey woul~
be w) lhng 10 work wnh Democrats to obtam maten.al on
huw Slarr was. allowed by Attorney General Janet Ren&lt;!
to expand ht ~ tnve,togaiJOn 10 Ihe Lewt~s ky maner. Th~
GOP law yers promrscd to discuss it wllh Hyde.
.

~ New fedef

·plan would enhance Both parties expt:, ""t:'" wu11 aas
police ab1 ity to tap cell phones exploiting Clinton-Lewinsky affai

WASHINGTON (AP) - Law
enforcement officials say lhey need to
know where a suspected criminal is
when he 'Vakes a cellular telephone
call. Federiil regulators are proposing
to give them the capability to find out.
The liederal Communicalions
COmmission was expected to propose
today that cellular phone companies
make technical changes so the FBI,
pOlice and other law enforcers - as
long as a court approves - can locale
ayersop talking on a mobile phone.
. This and other addilional wiretapping capabilities being proposed airn
~ help law enforcers keep pace with
technology.
: With some 66 million . cellular
p~one customers, police want the
authority to legally tap cell phones to
tritck down drug dealern, terrorists
,al)d kidnappers. But 'some groups
~ny that such a ·prafY!ice could violate privacy.
'
_: The location proposal is pan of a
l~iger plan to implement a 1994 law
ihat requires telecommunications
Companies to make changes in their
rtptworks so police are able 1o cany
out coun -ordered wiretaps in a world
ot.digitaltechnology. The proposal is
£»,sed on a plan from the telecommunications industry.
•; "~~ t~j?!&lt; .fh.\li..is a positive step
~twdrd," said Stephen Colgate, the
Jvstice Depanment's assistant attorney general for administration. "In
many kic!napping cases, it would have
~n very helpful to have location
information."
-: But James Dempsey, counsel · to
tile Center for Democracy and-Technplogy, a privacy group, said: "We 're
prepared to fight this one every step
ot the way."
·
FCC Chairman Bill Kennard
stressed that police would have no

WASHINGTON (AP) - Though valets say lhey've
must give police, as long as a court
had
enough (lf lhe Monica Lewinsky affair, they may soon
·approves, additional. capabililies get
a
lot more: Republicans and Democrals alike are cxper" A lot of people are '!3ying the beyond minimum technical slanimenling
with TV ads that exploillhe comroven;y.
FCC will tum mobile phones imo dards already proposed by the
'llte
Rcp,ublican
House campaign rommittec is airing
!racking devices for the FBI and induslry -'- so their ability lo con39
rongressi~nal
dislricls that. accuse Presiads
reaching
inv.ade Americans' privacy. I don ' t duct wirelaps "won't be thwarted.
believe thai will be lhe case," KenThe additional capabilities being dent Clinton of " double-talk" on lhc federal budget. The
nard said.
sought by the FBI and' expected to ads, pan of a new $4 million to $5 million campaign, seek
to capitalize on votets' low opinion of Climon's character,
With a court order, police already be advanced by Ihe FCC include:
two·senior GOP stralcgists.
said
can legally listen in to cell phone ron- Giving police the abilily to
They
do nol directly raise the Monica Lewinsky scanversations, and, in sb'me instances, get listen in on the conversations of all
information on the caller's.location.
people on a conference call, even if dal, bul Republicans arc wrestling with a way to make the
But not every company has the seine are put on hold and im longer controversy a bigger part of the campaign dynamic. A more
direct approach alluding lo the presidenl's troubles rould be
technical ability to provide a caller 's talking to Ihe large! of a wiretap.
a
pan of Republican advertising as early as next week, both
location. This proposal, if adopted,
- Giving police the ability to
party
officials said.
would sci up a nationwide require- get information when t~e wiretap
While the president 's job approval numbers have
ment for rompanies to follow.
target- has put someone on hold or
remained
slrong, almosl two-lhirds of Americans tell pollThe legal standard for obtaining a dropped someone from · a conferslers
thai
Clinton
does not share their moral values.
localion is lower than the standard for ence call; and to know if the wiretap
In
Washington
slale, Democratic candidate Jay lnslee
a wiretap order in which police must target has used dialing features ·has
rup
a
TV
ad
that
anacks' his Republican opponent, Rep.
show a judgelhere is probable cause.. such a.s call waiting or call forw ardRick White, for voting for an impeachment inquiry against
of criminal activity.
ing.
Clinton.
Democratic strategist&lt; In Wash)ngton have expectUnder the proposal, police would
- Giving police the number
ed
other
House candidates in Clinton's party lo adopl a ·simonly need to show the location is rel- dialed by a wiretap target when the
ilar
slrategy,
bul a similar ad has yet 10 emerge.
evant to an investigation. Privacy suspect, for instance, uses a credit
There
is
&lt;lisagreement
in both,panies over whether raisgroups say that means the govern- or calling card at a pay phone.
ment could easily track the movePrivacy groups and the telephone ing the Lewinsky scandal in ads would help or hun their
· .
ments not only of a suspect, but also industry contend the additional , candidates.
·
The
new
National
Republican
Campaign Comminee ad
of associales, friends or relatives.
capabilities sought by lhe FBI go
opens
with
the
word
"
Remember"
spread across the
It woulct' give police the ability to beyond the 1994 law and arc an
screen.
The
announcer
says,
"Remember
the double-lalk?"
obtain the cellular phone user's loca- attenipt 10 broaden wiretapping
Next comes old videotape of Clinton discussing how
. tion at the beginning and end of a po~ers . The FBI ·says it merely
long
il would take to balance the budget "We should balwiretapped call, according lo industry wants to preserve the ability to conance
lhe budget ... in seven years ... in 10 years ... in eight
sources familiar with the plan. They duct legal wiretaps in a world...qf
years
....
So we're between seven and nine now , .. "
spoiCe·on condition of anonymity.
constanlly changing technol.ogy.
the
same footage used in· the 1996_campaign to
It's
The proposal would proiVide
The FCC is involved because the
·a
!lack
Clinton.
'The .budget has. ~ince b~ery balanced, and
police with that informalion based Justice Department, FBI and the
on the cellular tower, or "cell" site, tclecommunicalions industry, after both Clinton imd Congress are trying lo take credit "It look
where a call originated and ended. three years ·of negotiations, were this Republican Congress just four years to balance the
That would give information on the unable to reach agreement ori the ~et," the ad says.
caller's location within several city larger plan for implementing the
blocks in an urban area to hundreds 1994 law.
.
of square miles in a rural area.
All interested parties will get a
· The Fj:ll had been seeking more chance to offer opinions on the proexact location information. :
posal, which could be revised. · KenThe FCC also is expected to ten- nard wants a final plan adopted by
tatively conclude thai companies the end of the year.

One of lhe GOP slrategisiS said Ihe ad was designed to
" introduce Clintm1 lo the (advertising) deba1e," using the
double-talk language as a veiled reference to his denials of
an affair with Ms. Lewinsky. " He lied. We don'l wanl one
voter for forgelthal," said the other strategist. ..
Republican officials want to gauge lhe impact of the ad
before deciding whether to"'"' a more direc1 approach. The ·
decision could be made this weekend, officials said. So~&lt;&gt;
GOP. campaign operatives inside and uulside Washington
are privately arguing againslthc approach, fearing 1ha1 rais-;
ing lhc Lewinsky issue will inflame die-hard Dcmocmtic:
voters and increase turnout in competitive House and Sen-..
ate races.
Democratic campaign rommittee spokesman Dan Sal-:
lick said Ihe GOP strategy won 't work.
''The presidenl has a high job approval. People give him:
credit for improving the economy and balancing the budget:
and tbe ad probably won 't ring true ," he said. "Vote,; arc:
smart and Ihey know a political ad thai is misleading when.
1hey see it"
.
.
:
'"This ad introduces lhe presi9ent inlo lhe political:
debate on issues lhat matter to the voten;·and il dues it usi11g"
his own words 10 point out his shortcoming," ~OP
House committee spokeswoman Mary Cri1wford .
,The Clinton ad is part of a new batch of GOP SP.&lt;JL~ thar
also promote the pany 's educalion rerord and tailor 1vatious
messages 10 specific districts.
The educalion ad,• reaching 13 congressional districts,:
urges vote,; to call tlieir local Republican candidale and:
"tell him icacher testing and smaller class sizes are impor~ · .

access to localions without a court
order.

Minorities account [or 26 percent black, Asian, Hispanic or American
of the total U.S. population . But in Indian j·ournalists accounted for
its 1998 survey of newsroom I 1.46 percent of newspaper editors, _
employment, ASNE found that ' reporters and photographers.
·

~

tant. "

, The tailor~d ads are !}'aching 22 congressional districts._
In Michigan, an ad attack.' vulnerable Dcmocrattc Rep.•
Sander Levin 's affirmative action recorO. '' Discrimination:
is wrong, but so are quolas. " the ad says.
.
In Florida, viewers are told thai Democratic Rep. Corrine Brown missed 187 voles in Congress. Shelley Berkley;
a Democratic candid31e in an open Nevada dislrict, "tried:
to get away with billing laxpayers for travel she got for:
free," another ad says.

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1•. ' . ~ ....,.•. '

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ttes.
The Census Bureau says women

Supply
Chester

~X

Schippers enumerated 1.5 ground• for po1en1ial
impeachmenl.
Sum compiled II pos!&gt;ible grounds in his referral to
lhe House las1 month, and Hyde 'poke recenlly of
weamlining lhe investiga1ion 10 package lhe allegalions differenlly,_the Clinton aUomey' ""id. .
None of Sc.htp~rs' gr~unds for poss1ble rmpeachmenl nor Starr s shghlly d1fferenthst need be accepted
by the Jud1c1ary Commtnee, wh1ch, m effect, Slarted
fresh once lhe House au1horized an impeachmenl
inquiry thi' month.
Republi':"n lawyer Thomas Mooney and Schippers
told lhe Whtle House altorneys they_s~ould n01101erpre1
anything Hyde said aboon sl reamhnmg 10 mean core
i"'ues would be 1akcn off the table, the ,;ou rcc' said.
Both Sian and Schippers found thai Clinton may
have obslructed JUSliCe, tampered wtth wttnesses and
hed under oath 10 trymg_to conceal hiS admuted ly mappropnale rclallonshrp wtth Momca U:wmsky, a fQrmer
While House mtern.
._
..
..
. _
Schippers told the meelm~ thai m comp11t~g h1s 15
allegalions, he was asked Stmply to determme whal
cnmes could b.: charged - bul not whal offenses were
committed agar~st lhe Con_sltlulton. 1he sources sa1d.
Committee offi c1als have satd offen ses ,a gam" lhe ~n st itution. such as abuses of power, &lt;!o not necessan ly
have lu be criminal acls.

assistant managing editor of th~ St.
Louis Posi-Dispatch and pres1dent
:or the Journalism and Women.Symposiun\. ".We think you can gilt
information on what women arc
doing on newspapers . withoul
detracting from focusing on mmon-

~

..

Whitt House should
concentrat e
on
cooperaling wi1h
Republican s
to
expedite the inquiry
rather than pos1uring over the fairness
rssue.
"Now, the alltgalions againsl Ihe
presidenl are very
serious,'' he said.
" As many membe.rs
of the committee
have
repeatedly
Rep.Henry Hyde
said, the charges, if
true, would ronsli1u1e an attack" on the conslilutional system of government.
The committee is expected to begin holdmg hearings after the Nov. 3 congressional elections. Its chair· man, Rep . Henry Hyde, R-111., has said he would like
to finish by' year 's end.
Inside the Judiciary Commiuee meeting rbom
Wednesday, White House lawyers Charles Ruff and
Craig, and private Clinton auorney David Kendall ,
pointed oul tha1 chief Republican investigator Oayid

r~om," said Marg'ie Freivogel. an

A d oflliavK-AM 101

'

. : WASHINGTON (AP) - The House 's top GOP
Impeachment lawyers bluntly told White House anor·neys they have no intention now of discarding any of
the core evidence submined by lndependenl Copnsel
Kenneth Starr.
.
That message was delivered Wednesday, according
to knowledgeable offtcial.s, during a meeting at which
:Whtte House lawyers compl~ined. that they were
.unable to find out what charges President Clinton may
.face.
The first closed-door session b.:tween White House
:law.yers ·and House Judiciary &lt;;omminee anomey to
:diSCUSS the impeachment inquiry was described as cordial, but one -that did litlle lo forge any cooperative
agreements.
·
· The meeting was described by White House and
Mouse officials who asked not to be quoted by name,
and the session was followed by harsh public comJ)tents by a White House lawyer and a.spokesmen for
oommittee Republicans.
: "What precisely are the charges? Are there 15, are
t~er~ 1_1, are there three?" asked White Hou.o;e lawyer .Gregory Craig, who is coordinating the president's
impeachment defense. " It's like attacking a man who
was blindfolded and handcuffed. These are not fair procedures."
. Paul McNulty, the Republican s

Census of women in the news-

tr~ racing: Fun s~e
thtjl'is w01t'Worth a vlait. . . ,
kground Info: ThiS'&amp;
alntainoct by Doug •

Pet"''burg, Fla.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Republicans say no consideration riow of di.scarding evidenc~

WASHINGTON (AP)- Leaders
of'the American Society o( Newspaper Editors say they would like ~he
staff of every newspaper 10 Amenca
to reflect the racial composition of
the place the paper serves. But they
say their first goals along those, lines
were too ambitious.
·
In 1978, the society approv~d an
inrention of making newspaper
staffs match the nation's racial composition by 2000. A new ASNE missi~n statement pushed the large! date
back to 2025.
The society's direclors al~o
decided to include gender. m
ASNE's annual' survey of newsroom
·e)nployment, a change that wonicn
journalists had lobbied for.
· · " We're thrilled that we'll ger a

aM Talladega will result

1, Who was the last to drive a Mercury tOa champlonehlp?
2. W.ho waS the last to drive a Chry:sler to 8: championship?
3. Who were the two driv,ers lo drove Hud:mns to championShips?

. Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Newspape-r editors sef new target "'
date for achieving racial parity

400 victory. Gordon

has won a career-

AROUND THE GAUGE

When Bobby Hamilton
drove Richard Petty's
Pontiac Into victory lane
at Phoeni)l two years ago,
11 marked the first victory .
for Petty since he won his
200th race at Daytona on
July 4, 1984. The race was
alSo a notable achievement for the injured Terry
Labonte, who had broken
.his wrist in a practice
crash. He f(nlshed fifth en
route to the Winston Cup
championship.

•

. Thursday, October22, 1998

ATTENTION ADVERTISERS!!
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conslitute 56 percent of the nation's
editors and reporters, but lhat hgure
includes those not working for
newspapers.
•
ASNE Presidenl Edwarc;! Seal on,
editor in chief of The Ma.nhattan
(Kan.) Mercury, said the redueclton ·
of the diversity goals, approved thts
week at an ASNE board mcetmg tn
Miami , "slrongly reaffirms our
commitmenl to h ~vi ng n~~ S roorns
that reflecl the communities they
Cover."
"
.
. Vanessa Williams, a Washmglon
Post reporter and prcsidenl ~f the
3 OOO-mcmbel Nal1onal Assocmt1on
of Black Journal iS!S. expressed conCern that the society may relax tis
divcrsily efforls.
· .
. "We arc lrnubled lhttt.the goal IS
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~~~~~----------~----~~~==~=-~--------~~~~~·~

Thursday, October
--

22 I 1998

T h e Daily Sentinel • Page

Jewish settlerS block West Bank roads· ~~

BElT H -\GGAI. WN Banl'(A P)
- J ~\\ ''h ~ttlef\ oppo~d to an
1-rad• trn&lt;1p "ithdra" al bloc led
more th.m a d'-'zen \\'er,t Banl road~
hk.!J~. 'toppmg 1raffic near an.~a'
th::u mu!ht ~-.· ome unW:r Paler,tmian
('Ontrol."'

In mo't vf the pr01em. pollee did
nm lntl:'rfen:. rerouting Paler,ti nian
rnotori''' in,trad. Hmh~\.t!r. at 1\\0
JUOI.:tlon ... polkcmC"n !\Cuffled wuh

derntm ... lr.Uof\, and nine ~Uler-. were
detamed.
Near the Je" "h -.ulement of
Beit Haggai. 70 ;ettle" wearing
blad-and-" hue fnnged prayer

,hav..J, carried t\\o Torah ''rolls into

the middle of the We;t Bank\ northsouth high'way and 'conducted morning pra)er~. blocking traffic
Oppo&gt;ition to a troop withdrawal
ai\O grew ""ilhin Pnme Minh.ter

Benjamin Netanyahu's coalition.
"ith three Netanyahu loyalim in the

era! who killed Israelis.
Israeli media quoted Netanyahu
Cabinel '&gt;aymg they might vote aides as saying the prime mini,ter
agai "'I an emerging agreement at the' might call snap election\ if he
Mide"'t 'ummit in Maryland 1f Israel be lieves he cannot get a wirhdrawal
made too many concessions.
agreement passed in the.Cabinel or in
· •&lt;flntice Minister Tsahi Hanegbi
parliament
"'id he would ohjecllo any deal that
The opposition has said it would
does not include a promi..: by the support ~n agreement with the PalesPale,tinian Authority to hand 0ver 36 linian~ in parlia'ment. protecting
wamed Palesti~ians. including sev-

Western officials push .to ·.
achi~ve peace - in Kosovo
,,'

.-

PRISTI~A. Yugmla\ia lAP)\\ ·~..,fern offiL·ralo; pre,,ed PrC~ident

Slotxod.Jn

~ldo&lt;;evic

and the ethnic

Alban1~.m ... \\hu oppo-,e him w do
more! 11xla~ to achkve la~ting pt!ace
. inJhc cmbartled prm uu:e of Kosovo.

·The French forei2n minister ~
"arncd that Milo~vil; ,(ill must pull '

out murt.&gt; truop't, and U.S. en~oy
Chri,tophtr Hill and European
amba,"'adur-.. began new talks in the
pro' mcial capital of Prist ina with eth nic Albanian leader Ibrahim Rugova.

Ten da)' after the breakthrough
a.grcement on Kosovo brokered by

Ameri can diplomat Richard Hoibrooke. there are scattered renorts o,r
~ h elling

and !&gt;~ hOOting incidents (u
night in the separatis t province. but

.,

no apparent figh ting.
NATO '"" given Milosevic until
· Tuesday to wi thdraw more mil itary
,;tnd !&lt;!pecial police fOrces from Kosovo and return others to ·the ir garri~on
i ~ t h~ 1 province or face the threat of
aJ rstnk:e.;;.

becau..: or expected !iefecrion; by
hard· liner; in his coalition.
But the Sllfety net offered by
hr3eli moderates has a large hole 10
it. They will ,uppurt "p&lt;ace. not
Netanyahu." as Yos-i Sarid. leader of
the dovish Meretz party. pul it.
The implication i' that when a
mOiion of no confidence on a nonpeace issue .come.;; up. moderate!&gt;

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Vahlcloo moy be ann at the
Shtrlll'l Olllce. .
Bid papero may be picked
up at the Sheriff's Olllce.
James M. Soutsby, Sherlll
of Mol go County
(10) 21,22,23 3 T

! ' &lt;&gt;•• .,' • • , i"' ··-

CARPET
PLUS
740-698-9114 .

Public Notice

J._....._ -'·

Howard L Wrltesel

6/ 11/98

•Bobcat Service
•Concrete
•Masonry
•General
Commercial and
Residential
Free Estimates
No Job too Small
Brian Morrison
(7 40) 1!85-3948
8125/98 2 mo. pd.

985-4473

2.99/mln. Must be.1B.
.Serv-U 6t9'645·B43~

1' 1?' 11 mo.

·

•New Homes
·Garages .
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
.
FREE
E'STIMATEES ..

(Lime Stone·
Low Rates)

'

WICKS
HAULING
Limestone, ·
J

Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil , Fill Dirt

614-9~2-3470

•

.

-

7122/lln

'
'

ASK QUESTIONS,
GET ANSWERS'
CALL AMERICA 'S 11 PSY·
CHICS 1· 90 0·740·6500 E)(! .
3596, www. thet10tpages2 .com/nsl

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Limestone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
Reasonable Rares
. Joe N. Sayre

psychlc/2S029t. htm $3.99 /Min.
1 Serv·U 6 19·645·8434.

a.

Found · pot·bellied plg , west Au·
Hand vicmity. 740·742-2123.
Found:' white and black male
spaniel. red r..ollar, older and genlle . O.U. victmty ~ call 740·589·

6.120.

Lost "C•ncly". wh ite/ apricot poodle, 8 lbs, blue collar. Pleasanton
area . Athens , large reward, 740·
594-6710
lost: lemale Stamese. dark bfOwn •
markings. beige ~ n color, 20 years
old, never been outside, S100 reward , last seen 519 South Front
St.. Middleport, 74(}992·3947.

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
ALL Yard Sllea Must
Be Paid In Ad\fance.
OEA QLINE: 2:00p.m.
the day before the ad
lalo run. S unday
ldltloo ·2:00p.m.
Friday. Monday edition
• 1 D:OO a.m. Saturday.

Friday, Saturday. 8 ·5, 6153 State
Route t 60. 3 Mites From Holzer
Hospital. Store Going Out Of
Business Sale! Plus Building Sup- •
piles. WindoWs. Doors. Shelving.
Show Cases . Farm Fence Pos t,
Tools, Clothing , Lots New /Ol d
Dishes, Bedroom Suites, Furnl·
lure .
Movi ng Sate : 1 83 Br'entwoo d
Drive, October 23rd, 6:00 A.M . To
4:00P.M.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:00pm lhe
day before t he ad Ia to run, .
Sunday &amp; Mo nd ay e dltlo~ 1:00pm Friday.

Four fami ly yard sale Saturday..
October 24th. 9am:3pm, DaVtd
Spence r's, Main Street, Racine, .
men's, women's and girl's winter
cl othe s, toys 1 hquuhold items
and misc.
80 ~

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full lime auc ti oneer. co mplete
aucti on
service.' Li cen sed
186,0hio &amp; West Virgin ia, 304·
nJ-5785 Or 304·773·5447.

.Wedemeyer's Auction Se r vic e~
Gallipolis. Ol11o 740·379·2720,

90

Wanted to Buy

Ab solUte Top Do llar: AU U.S. Sil·
\l er And Gol d Coi ns, Proofsets,
Diam onds, ~An tique Jewelr y, Gold
Rings , Pre·1930 U.S. Cu rren cy,
Sterling, Etc. Acqu isitions Jewelry .
. M.T.S. COin Shop, 151 Second
·AII'E!nue, Gallipolis, 740·446 -2842.
Ant iques. top prices paid , River·
lne Antlqu es, '·Po mer oy, Ohi o,
Russ Moore owner. 7 40· 992·
2526.
Antiques &amp; clean used rurniture ,
wil l buy one piece or comple te
household, Osby Martin, 740.t
992·6576.
..

Clean Lat e• Moda l car11 · Or
Trucks, 1990 MoQels Or -Newer,
Smith Buick Poni iac, 1900 l;ast·
ern Ave nue, Gallipolis. ·

J '. &amp; D 'Auto Parts . Bu yi ng
Nrecked or sa lvaged ve l1 1cles.
lOH73·5033.,
Wanted Td. Buy For Family Pe t:
Dachshu nd. Pup Or Young Dog,
:all 7:40·.446·2342 E')(\. 1 &amp; 'th en
20 Diiys; Or 304·675·4293 Evenngs. ·
Wanted To Buy: Junk Auto's Any
::ond1tion. 740·446·9853.

wanteQ T~ Buy: Used Mobile
Homes, Call 740·446·0175, 304·
675·5965.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

,30 Announcements

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIC~

SOUTHERN
OHIO DISPOSAL

•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomer.oy, Ohio

•Residential· ·
$11 .00/month
•Commer.cial '
•Senior Citizens
Discount
•Dumpsters
•Monthly Payments
Call for best prices:

J&amp;LSIDING &amp;
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding ·Soffit
•Fascia
•Seamless G utler
•Roofing
•Replacement
Windows
•Stationary Docks
•Blown Insulation
•Garages •Decks
24x24 Pole Building
starting at $5995 '
. 740·992·2772

1 -800-809-7721
d.

HOWARD'S
TRI·COUNTY
SANITATION
MIGHTY MAC
AERATION SYSTEM
New light weight,
fiberglass state and
county approved with
two·year warranty.

740-742-2S66
D. Howard 10/1&amp;.'1 mo.

New To You Thrllt Shoppe ·
9 West Stimson, Athens
740·592-, 1!42
Quali ty clo thll'lg and Muse hold

Items . $1 .00 bag sale eyery
Thursday. Mqnelay thru Saturday
9:00·5:30.

40

Giveaway

1OFI. Aluminum Satel!lle Dish w!
Pole . 4 AI. Windows 304·882·

2755.
2 males. 1 lemale, Black LaQ and
Beagle puppies, l ree to lovin~t
hOme, 740·985-414 8.

3 Kittens 8 weeks old, !·all
white. ! ·black, 1 gray/spots. Liter
, trained: 304·675·3777
5 Mon th Old Female· Spitz, Great
With Child ren. Very Friendly!
740·446·1127
6 BeaUtiful Puppi es, 6 Weeks Old
112 Lab Mile Also 1 Killen Aller
3:30PM, 740·44 1·1707
Bed Side Potty Chair. Real Nice .
304·675·3734
Free Firewood You Haul. Away ,
74Q.446·2796.
Free Firewood . Allready Cut and
Slacked In Gallipolis Area . 740·
446-0695.
2 Very lovely Ki ttens to a goOd
Hemal 304·675·6720.

11 0

Help Wanted

AV,ON I All Areas I Sh1rley
Spears, 304·675·1429.
Accepting apppcations tor lull
time news repo'rter at the Poin t
Pleasant Register. Must have
strong background in Englis h/
Writing . type a min tm um or 40
wpm, and have a va li d driver's II·
cense. Computer sktlls a plus.
Send resume to: Mindy Kearns,
Ed itor , Point Pleasant Register,
2.00 Main Street , Pt Pieasant,
wv 25550.

Computer Users Needed. Work
Own Hrs .. $20K ·S·75K /Yr. 1-800·
349· 7166 E)(t. 11 73. www.amplne.com
CosmetOlO giS t Wanted, Fu ll &amp;
Part -Time, Hourly Versus Com·
mission, Paid Vacations, Other
Benelits OHered, Fantas tic Sam's,
740·446---726 7.

-

Addihonal Ortvers Needed lmme·
dlately Are You Ready For Winter
Driving ? 'L ocal Fam il y Owned
Company ·~e rsonallzed Dispatch
•paid Employee Hea11h &amp; Llle In·
surance ; Dental Insurance •
Home WeeKends 'Run OH To
The South And Southwes\ •401K
'latll Model Freighthner Con~en·
tlonals Requirements : Age 23, ·
Class A COL And Good Driving
Record Please Can Toll Free 1•
B88·790·000r!. Ask For Garnet Or
Angle

I

'

•

·

Found . male Boston terri er.
BaShal') Ad VICLMtty, call 740·949·
2610 to claim.

Stan da ting to nigh t! Have 1dn
playing the Ohio Dating Game, 1·
800·AOMANCE, extension 9015:

614-742-2138

10/ 1 3/ 1· mo .

Personals

005

Lost and Found

Black Angus Bull. Reward! 304· /
675·1204 or 740-441..0768

Free Estimates

ANNOUNCEMENTS

SAYRE
TRUCKING

· ROBERT BISSELL ,
CONSTRUCTION

ON·LINE

SENIORS!!!
Medlcare/Med·Supplement
Cancer Protection
FREE SEMINAR
Where: Senior Center
Mulberry Height,
Pomeroy, OH
When: Nov. 11 , 7 p.m.
•Pre-registration preferred
For Info contact:
Allen King
(740) 992·3104
1-800-677·0521

60

740~378-9807

,,

!:

'

mo.

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
,,
ROAD
GUN SHOOT
SUN., 1:00 PM

10/25196/tln

.•

COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP

www.desre.com

101111

a.

SERVICE
Agri9uitural Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
':· Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester; Ohio

20.Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones ·

Public Notice

We didn't mean to make the decision tough, but with a lull-line of products priced like
this ~ we understand if It takes you awhile to make a decision. This sale is for a
limited time so hurry to your participating John Deere dealer today. ·

7 40-992-2068
10.' 11 mo.

DUMP TRUCK

Custom Built Computers, Networks Modem's, Hard-

~···

325 .lawn &amp; Garden Tractor
• 17· hp air-cooled eAgina
• 44-inch mower deck
• Hy~rostati c drive

Joseph ~pcks

"Your Computer :shop"

~~~·~IJrfM~~~~~

•13· hp overhead·valve engine
• 38-inch mower deck
·
• 5·speed in· line shift trans axle

Dozer, Endloader,
Backhoe, .
Sight Preparation;
Utility Lines,
Build Roads
!.icensed for Septic
1 (740) 367-0280

Free Estimates

TRUCKING

New Hol)'les &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yrs. exp.
,Licensed &amp; Insured
Phone 740-992-3987
.ttr..
Free Estimates
!lli!i
Owner: John Dean

LT1ll Llwn Tractor

New Roofs,
Repairs, Gutters,
Coatings, Siding,
Drywall, Painting, .
Plumbing

Computer Porlonnanca Upi!!,ldto

•,

JS60 Wallt·Bihind Mower
• 6.tl-hp engine
• Seven culling heights·
• Handlebars fold easily for storage

PERRY'S
CONSTRUCTION

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

R. L. HOLLON

• • I

,. . l

.· POMEROY, OHIO
'
W. VA. #023477 •\

MINIMUM PURCHASE MAY BE REQUIRED

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

• New Homes • Pole Buildings

•

'·

"-

Sill UP TO 93 UNITED INCH IS IN
EIISTIIIG WOOD DOUIU HUNG OPENING
.'OPTIONS IYIIUILE

•

Two Beauhlul Ferns 7&lt;0·256·
6431

10/15/1 mo. pd .

-:~~""'lilY

110 COURT ST.
1-800·291·5600

AA/ EEO

0

Free Estimates

'

JNSUL4TED GLASS .
TILT-IN fOR EASY CLEANING

• "Witere Qrmlity Does11't Cost _More"

• Fall Speclal3 Rooms' &amp; ~all

Roofs • Decks • Garages

·au VINYL Do.uau HUNG.· "

~

HERB

CARPET &amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANING

$195.00 INSTALLED' ,·

Guldellnea

JENNETI'S HEATING &amp; COOLING

23 &amp; 24

ALL PRO

AL.COA

,.CAI.L MR. FORD '
(740) . . ... . . . ..
1.4. . .7,.1-8178....__.

5 Parts Warranty

.._

REPLACEMENT WINDOW
r.;J
SPECIAL

~~·

Computer Graphics
Desigl'ls
. AII .Landscaplng &amp;
Lawn Services
. •Commercial
•Resldenllpl
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Chesler, Ohio
7 40·985· 4422

$59.95

1 40•142•3411

No Embarrailsment ...
Vo1,1're Treated with Respect!
Call Now
,.,. for Instant Approvalll**
.,

~lr Conditioners · ~. Low As •28 a month
*Free

1-800-809·7721

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

'(Maximum 500 sq . ft .)

WORRYING!!!

Over 1/re Pltorre Bnrrk Fi1'11111Cillg''l

l

8627.

Six ·year old female Baagte,
housebroken . spay ed . {40·992·
764 '-

Minor Repairs • Cabinets • SldlnQ
Insured

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

••

•

&amp; Saturday

per mo.

CREDI'r PROBLEMS

.

PLACE

$25.00

12/21/18 1 mo.

Residential &amp;Mobile Home
:Air Conditioners &amp;
Heat Pumps
. .

•

more families

Utilities

12118/lln

New Construction &amp; Remodeling

Businesses Save Money, Too!
Call Ken Young
(740) 985-3551

"'fr:nov

per mo.

Septic System &amp;

(614) 992-3838

SUNSE,. HOME
CONSTRUCTION

Small Dumpsters

~·Dryer

.,

· T30C String Trimmer
• 30cc enQine
· • 17-inch cutting swath
• Tap &amp; Go strinQ trimmer head

Ott 45769

per mo.

$11.00

'

44087 Wlpple Road (Five Points ~rea)
Pomeroy, Ohio
Nick and Eleanor Leonard

(Cut Out lor Futuro DIIICOUnt) '

~ Washers

LOWEST PRICE EVER
'

Pomeroy,

(740) •z..att

"Need repair on any maker'

.;:=:::::=::::::::::::::::::::~~

·- •

$2,799*

44087 Wipple Rd.

· Pupo1es Boston Tamer. &amp; mix·

~ !.ilrul CJ~ating.&amp; _-fr
· ~304~-882~·2';,:,7e:..__ _~Grading
$1benan Husky Young 740·446·

Call for appointment
{740) 992-2036
OHIO VALLEY PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Computer Balancing &amp; Mounting

Work•

: :':!d~";!:~e Oatmallan mu;ecl

Estimates

Thne to gel .,our furnaiCe
ser~il[~d for winter

· New &amp; Used Tires

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

Umestone Haulin.g

House &amp; Trailer Sites

Pomeroy, Ohio

2/12112/tfn

L &amp; L Tire Barn

.:,.

GOOD TIMES Presents
MUSIC BY SWAIN
Friday, Oct. 23
SWAMP JEUCE Live .
s ,.tmct•v Oct. 24

D.J.

992-2284

DISPOSAL
JHE APPLIANCE MAN SOUTHERN OHIO$10.00

MEIGS COUNTY FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL MEETING
Tues. , Oct. 27,'7:10 PM
at Meigs Senior
Citizen Center
Adultd $5 .50, Child $3.50
Entertainment "Earthen
Vessels". Door Prizes.

October

614-992-7643

1 Our Customers Are Special

Remodeling

t998 Martin Street

· ~ Refrigerators

Friday

·-.

~omeroy, Ohio 45769

GUN SHOOT
RACINE GUN CLUB
Nease Hollow Ad.
Every S unday 12:30 pm
Limil sao·sleeve
·'
.737 back bore

WAYNE'S

THE FABRIC SHOP

{No S unday C a lls)

10/1/mo.

..Build Your Dream"

•

Please a pply or sen d resumes· to: .
Plea sant Valley Hos pita l
~
C I 0 P er sonnel
25 20 Va lley Drive
Pt. Pleasant. WV 25550
Fax (3 04 I 6 75-244 7

FREE ESTIMATES

' '

. CAlL OUR OFFICE AI t9~!•21

Various specla illes a nd s hifts availa ble.
. Full-time a nd' Pa rt-lime employment.
Competitive w ages a nd b e n efll s.

.

MBJ

• c

Pomeroy, .Qhlo 45769.

LX173 Lawn Trac.t or

'

Custom 'Homes

Get Your •ssagelcr4d(
Wit~ ADallr S.Jtl•el

BULLETIN BOAID
··•700 column inch we1tk~la
1900 column Inch.SIIMII•Ji

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

• Hartwell Hares
In Historic Downtown Pomeroy
992-7696,

.. .. '

~ Room~p.ddition~.· RoQf!ng

L

• Soap • Baby Gifts

•

• Singer Sewing Machine Dealer
• Sewing Cabinets, Sewing machine repair ·
• Dry Cleaning Service
· • Scissor Sharpening • '1\~Xedo Rental~
• Sign up now for quilt classes

Garages • Replacement Windows

Birdhouses • Clocks • Frames ·

Golden Lao. Pup 1n Camp Conley
:Jl4.&lt;37,_220 ,

HOWARD
. .,..
EXCAVATING CO, : ~~~~ ~~~~

The Fabric Shop

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

Antiques • Lang Calendars • Candles

numerous r•pelr •nd
malntenonce parts.
TEAMS OF SALE: Ceoh ·'
on doyoloale.
Jameo M. Souteby
(10)221TC .•

description of the
eo fo llows:
refrigerators,

(11) 5

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Toland Flags • Camille Beckman Lotion

and chatttll .

To offer story suggestions, report latebreaking news and offer news tips
check, or ~ lett~r ot' credit
upon a solvent bank In the
amount of not leas than
10% of the bid amount In
favor of the aloreeald Meigs
County Commissioners.
Bid Bondi ohall be
accompan lei:l by Proof of
authorl1y of tho olllclal or
ageQI signing tho bond.
Blda ahall be aealed and
.marked as Bid lor Racine
Volunteer Fire House HVAC
Pro1ect and mailed or
delivered to: Meigs County

another 13. 1 percent of the West
Bank to Palestinian civilian control if
the Palestinians agree to Israeli condilions, mosrl y about security.

Public Notice

The Sentinel News Hotline
project.
Plano, Speclllcadono, and

bring dvwa Netanyahu 's soveniS ::
ment.
In the negotiations with the Pales- •
tinians. l~rael ha.~ agrMd to lum over :

Giveaway

Free Pupptes _ Adorable! 5
Weeks Okf 1/2 Bnttany Spamel,
740-256·9340

:N:e:ta:n:ya:h:u:'s=g~o:ve:m:me
::n:t:fro=1m~t=a=lli=n;g~w;o;u;ld~v~o;te:w;;ith;rrh~e~·;ha;r;d~~in~er~s~t;o~~~~===;~;:~:;.~:::- .

D I B1 0
Wagoo,
e v e · c lnaurance
n
Milosevic launched an offensive
Hill ha&lt; been working to ge t them varloua
agai nst ethnic Albanian guerrillas to sit down for ta lks wi th Serb roqulremem., various equal to the Shorlll of Melgo
t!ight momhs ago in KosovO. a authorities. while making dear inde· opportunity provlelono, and County, Ohio, Issued out of
the requirement for 8 the Common Pleas Court of
province in Serhia. 1he main repub- pendence is not an oplion . .Western payment
bond
and Meigs County, Ohio, in the
lie ,,in YugQsl.avia. Hundreds have nat ions fear an independent K9sovo
ceee of Home National
parlormanco
for 100% Bank. Plalntlll, vo. Jimmie .
beeh' killed imd abou.i300.000 people would trigger similar demands by of
the contractbond
price.
No bidder may .withdraw L ¥oung, et al., Defendants,
have been forced fwrn their homes by erh nic Al bania n com munities· in
his
within thirty (301 upon s Judgment therein
the lig hting. .
Macedonia and e lsewhere in the ·' dayobid
alter the actual date of rendered ~ being · Case No:
"The withdrawal of fo~t:es is very Balkans.
the opening thereof. Melg. 0 98-CV-63 Ia aald Court, I will
The rebel' Kosovo Li beration County Commissioner offer tor sale at Athtll 11front
advanced. but that is not enough."
Fre nch Foreign Minister Hilbert Army h a.~ bee n fighting for indepen· reserveo the right 1o waive door of Ken'e pp once
114 W. Seco,nd
Vedrine said today on France's RTL dence for Kosovo. But the West con- any Informalities or to re)ecl ServiCe,
Street, Pomeroy, Meigs
County, Ohio, on tho 6th
radio , warning that the conflict could siders Rugova. a moderale ethn ic any or all bids.
day 0 ·r November, 1998, at
explode again. "(NATO must) nor let Albanian leader, and hi s negotiating JeMft Howard, President
Me I 9 s
C 0 u n 1 Y 12:00 noon,_the lol~lng
go."
team rhe legiri mate represe ntati ves of
Mi losevic also mu~l rooperate the Kosovo Albanians, who account
with war crimes investigations and for 90 percent of the province's 2 mil efforts to aid the 300,000 et hnic · lion people.
.
:
Alb.,nian rH ugee&gt;, and agree on a
Meanwhile, the 54-nation Orga"To be the r eso ur ce for
timetable for .talks givi ng Kosovo ni zation for Security and Coop&lt;rati on
communi ty h ealth service neer.js"
Alban ians self: govern ment and their in Europe was set today to formally
ow n police.
' approve a force of roughl y. 2,000
Plea~ nt Va ll ey Hospita l is c urrently
But the ethnic Albanians must also international monitors' who will
accepting applications/ resumes· for the
conse nt 10 politica l negotiations, and. ensure th at Yugos lav ia keep ~ its
folloWing positi ons:
many re main relucta nt to g ive up promises in Kosovo.
their goal of oulright indepe ndence.

992-2156

40

13

•

-'

�•
•

•

October 22, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel• Page 15

NEA Crossword Puzzle
PHU.I.IP
ALDER

- ..--

", . ,...

33 Dewnga~$
34 Torrid
37 L•
..S

ACROSS

1 ...... CCupJ

7~.....

13 Pr8yeJ
40 Badly
14 Lying_, on 41 SOUl (Fr l

320 Moblje Homea
Certifted day care provtder as
6i&amp;tance available 740-7-42-()6 12

Garpenter e.peneneed only .., all
phases or reslctenttat wor11. Apply
k'l person only Derw&amp;en 8 11 am

\JS 33 Po- Ol&gt;io

Electric ma1ntenanee servtce
Wlr ng breaker boxes ltght fix
ture hea11ng systems &amp; More
304-674.0126

~Nu.....,Aol•­
Certifled nursV'IQ asistants need
ad b' facility staffing ll'lthe Ra¥

Furniture repa1r ref1nish and res
tOtatiOn also oostom 01ders Ohio
V.fU&amp;y Aeflnashlng Shop larry

.Monday thru Fnday Bnng reler

encee Pullins

E~tavaiJflV

33334

-~~.. ~pay ·

Phillips 74{).992-6576

, . _ SCheduling s;,
monltls e.:petiMOe pteterred For

Have 2 Openu'lgs For 24 Hour lfl
Home Care Of Etderty Or HaflCt

rmre lntormanon rontact Pleas
aN Valley Pnvate Quty at (304)

-7404111536

67S.7400 AAIEEO

for

Sale

$500 Down on anW" 1~x70 In
stock limlled number free dehv
ery Cali1...8CJ0-691~m
$999 Down Dn any 98 model
Doublew1de m stock Free Deliv
ery Call1-aoo-691-67n
Abandoned Home Take Over
PaW"menls Or Make Offer 1 800-383-6862

Mature chnst~an lady will baDysit 1 .;::::==:;:.:..~.::::.:.:::~---,
home depandabkl excelW1ndsor 10x56 two
lent references 740-742 2091
room very good condillon must
move from long Bonom Onlo
Wdl g1ve ptano lessons m my 304-675-8782
home .also teach chordmg and
transposmg If Interested 740
1969 Commumtv mob1la home
992 5403
121156 askmg $2300 740 843
5310 days or 740 843 5147 alte•
Born
FINANCIAL
210

OpportunitY
INOT ICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBliSHING CO
recommends lhat you do bus•
nes~ w1th people you know and
NOT to send money lhrough the
mall unt•l you have tnvesttgated
the offem"tg

HOSPICE CASE MANAGER.
Full T1me 8 00 - 4 30 Monday
Through F11day W th Rotatmg
Evenmg And Weekend On Call
Flespon&amp;lbll•lles Oualif•caltOns In
elude One Year Recent Clln1cal
Expe ri ence In Acute Care Or
Home Care Benel•ts Avatlabte
Wllh Opporlun•ty For Advance
ment Applicartons Avattable At
280 East State Street Athens
OH Or Call74o-594 6226 EOE

AMERICAS 11 CO OPENED
UN-ITED KINGDOM Ground
Floor Opporlunlty Unlimited Ae
Zldqle Inco me Frie nds? Rela
lives? You? Free Msg 888 571
8753 .

lmmed•ate tanttonal help needed
1 800-484-6800 code 5452

230

0 &amp; A Home Repa11 Free Es·
llmate 0 Doelrlll Owner J Ad
k1ns Manager 740-388-9638

Centurion Management Group A
Progressive Long Term Care
Company (Med•care &amp; Medlca•d
Certified) Is Currently Taking Ap
pllcations For MOS Nurses Ex
csllent Working Envtronment And
Benefits Ouahf1cat1ons Include
Oh1o RN ltcense Bachelors De
gree Preferred The Successful
Candidate Will Need Strong Clmt
cal SkUts And Expertence In MD$
SubmtssiOn Please Subm1t A Re
sume To Terry Outnn Director Of
Quality Assurance 215 E Weng
er Road Englewood OH 45322

'

• A Ullle Counuy m Town' .Pnce
reduced large restored V1c1onan
home situated on 12 acres V11
lage of Middleport Secluded and
pnvate close to schools and
churches Private bnck circu lar
dnve brick patiO modern kitchen
famllr room wlflreplace 3 4 bed
rooms two baths large formal LR/
OR large Ioyer lour onglnal
stained glass windows 30
minutes from Athens IS 20
mlnu1es lrom Galllpohs For ap
polntJMnt call740 992 5696

Needed Immediately Ohio U
censed Physician To Assume A
General Practice In A Heallh
Care Pro~lder Shor'lage Area
Present Phys1c1an Will Be Leav
lng ~ovember 14 1998 Approx
lmatety 1oo 000 Patient Flies
Current Phys1c•an Has Pract1ced
For 39 Years Call 740 286·4104
As Sooo As Possible!

2 Bedrooms t Bath DA LA
Kitchen Ut1hty Room &amp; Attached
Garage WID &amp;. Refrigerator
Stove Included 106 Klneon
Drive 740 446 3488 740 446
1540
3 Bdrm House on Jay Dr Close
To
HMC
C1 ty -Schools
$62 000 00 740 448 6541 or 740
446 1990 Both After 5 OOPM

Occas1onal BabySitter Needed
For 2 Year Old Our Home Must
Have References Be Reliable
74().44Hl118

140

Business
Tralnlng

Gall Polls Career Co lege Spnng
( Valley P aza 740 446 4367 t
800 214 0452 Accred•ted Mem
ber ACICS Reg J90 05 1274B
150

Schools
Instruction

Magic Years Day Care Pre
SchOol spaces ava able e~tce
lent skills tor your chtlds deve
opment Can us for more 1nforma
lion 304-675 5847 M F 7 30 5 30
180

Wanted To Do

Georges Portable Sawmill don t
haul your logs to the m•IJ tusl call
304 675 1957

3br living room din ing room
fam •ly room 1 bath central air
newer carpe t &amp; roof replacement
wmdows family neighborhood
privacy lanced yard 2411 abo~e
gro und pool many upgrades
move In cond Priced m 70s
304 675 2924

l

4 Bedrooms 1 112 Baths lR OR
FA /Fireplace Corner Lot 1 1/4
Acres sm Orchard 2 Car Ga
rage Heated W/ Shop Barn
Building Heat PUmp CA Deck
Natural Gas Co Water Cheshire
OH $85 000 Good Family Home I
740 367 7401 1 BOO 835 0726
Ext 367
6yr 2 3 bedrooms to ft tongue/
groove pellet stove HPfCA ap
p lances garage spa acre Bula
vii~ Ptke 740 367-Q286
By Owner (Relocated) 3 Bed
rooms Bnck N nyl New Vinyl &amp;
Deck Great Condlhon 2902 An
n1ston Onve f1&gt;1nl Pleasant WI/
Price Lowered To Upper 70s Wtll
Consider Ren!lng 304 675 4054
(Lori) Or 740 441 0135 (Kent}
bY OWNER
6 Miles N of Buffalo '" Maso'l
Co 1/2 m1le all At 62 BliCk
home on 1p acres w/2 400 sq ft
l1111ng space: oversized double
ga rage 3 large bedrooms 2
bat~s large family room w/llre
place bonus room large ut lily
room new carpet ceramtc llle tn
baths &amp; kitchen new6r heat
pump &amp; appliances Large rear
deck 24 above ground pool
very pnvate but conv•ently local
ed on blac~ top road wiCI'r!j water
Pnce $139 000
Call for appl ..
304"158-1635
By owner tnree bedroom fenced
yara pool double lot m Ga hpo
lis Ferry can 304 675 1105 after
6pm
Cunmngham Realty Broker 372
5969 Jackson/Mason Co lme Jo
calion ' Mmt condll on Syr old
bnck rllnch on mostly I eve 4 6
acres 3 car gara ge workshop
formal llvmg &amp; dmlng canning
k lchefilut•llly/pantry
fu lly
equipped k•tchen $179 000
Tombleson Run 4 46 acres+! t /
4 m•le 011 nghl $21 000
Great Locallon Close To Gelllpo
lis 3 Bedroom Home 1600 Sq
Feet New S1d1ng New Central All
Fueplace 2 Car Garage Large
Deck Ap p lances Stay Price
Reduced• 740 446 9664

AU real estate advertiSing 1n
th•s newspaper s subJect to
the Federal Fall Hous1ng A.CI
of 1968 whtch makes •t 11iegal
to advertise any preference
l m1ta!10n or d1Scr1mtnat•on
based on race color rei g1on
sex fam•llal status or national
ong•n or any •ntent on to
mako any such preference
llmi1ah0n or d1scr1m nat•on
Th•s newspaper w u not
know•ngly accept
adven sements tor real estate
wh1ch •s m v olal1on of the
law Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwell•ngs
advert•sed '"thiS newspaper
are ava !able on an equal

1971 Hillcrest 12k60 two bed
rooms washer dryer stove &amp; re
lngerator a1r underpmning
$4500 740-992 00:19
1978 14Ft X 70Ft Mobde Home
Needs Work $1 800 00 740 367

0632
1988 Oak"ood 14X70 2 Full
Baths 2 Bedrooms Heat Pump
Very
Good
ConditiOn
$11 500 00 Negollablel 1304)
n3-5103
1988 Skylme 14x70 three bed
room two bath excellent condl
11011 mside and our central alr and
v1nyl underpinning II'ICiuded 740
992-6227 anytime
1990 14k70 mobile home two
bedrooms one bath appliances
central au mctuded ~r.~ust move
74~7-%30
1
1993 Clayton 14X70 2 bed
rooms 2 Full Baths Osume The
loan 304 675-1553
1994 Noms Clayton 14X70 2
Beelrooms 2 Baths 2 Decks CA
8X10 Metal Bulldtng 740 256
6851

Double wklt Cteer~nce Sale
Oouble-wtde Dream Homes
Only 1999 Down 6 99% lnte(8St
Rate Free Satellite Dish w/Pur
chaoa
Only at Oakwood Home•
Nllro WV
304-755-5885
2 Bedrooms 2 BathS 14x70 Mo
u!e Home Gas Heat 740 245
5628
,
5 Beelrooms 3 balM wilh over
2 OOOsq ft Under $350/mo t
800-251 5070
5 Bedrooms 3 Baths W1th Over
2 000 Sq Ft Under $350/Mc 1
800-251-5070
8x30 one bedroom lull bathm
kitchen stove refrigerato r and
fumace $1500 740 742 8282
ABANDONED HOME
3BR Assume loan
low Monthly Payments
Financing Avala.ble
304-755 S566

3 4 Bedrooms full dry basement
fire place forCed air/gas lurnace
A/C fenced corner lot 36 Wmd
sor Cl 304-675 7285
1

Pl1111nt Vllley Hospital 1s cur
rently accepting apphcallons lor
a Pharmacy Technician The ap·
pllcanl must be registered tn the
state of West Vtrgtn•a or certtlled
In another state or certlhed by the
Pharmacy Techntcian Boarel The
individual must be able 10 pro
vide proof of certification/ regis
trallon at the 11me of application
Contact Personnel at Pleasant
Valley Hospttaf (304) 675 4340
or Ia&gt;&lt; lo (304) 675-2447 ANEEO

Work At Home
Growmg Company Needs Help
Now $2SO $500 A Week Part
T me Full T1me Easy &amp; Fun We
W It Tra n No Experience Need
ed SeriOus lnqunes Only 1 BOO
204 7048

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes for Sale

Needed Expertenced Tree Climb
ers And Bucket Operator In The
Mercerville Area For Information
Call740-592 4585

Wanted Substitute tlyglenist for
materntty leave December 18th
~ through the second week of Fe
bruary Excellent workmg condl
!Ions •n a mOdern oMtee with great
1 "pay Please call 304 773 S620 or
It sene! resume to P 0 BOll 380
Mason WV 25260

Professional

Services

MDS NURSE POSITION

Over the Road driver Needed
Flat bed Experience Needed I
~C.:a.:ll.:304.:....6.:7.:5..:58.:7.:3~----·.
wanted HVAC Installer fServlce
Technician Must Be EPA Cerll
lied Send Response To ClA
455 c/o Gall pols Dally Tribune
812S Third A'.lenue Gal lpotls OH
45631

Business

Home for sate three t:ledroom
one bath n•c&amp; hOme priced nght
740 949 3228
House In Middleport three bed
room bath and 112 $59 000 price
nego11able., call 740 992 346S
New y Remodeled 3 Bdrms 2
Baths Brck Ranch LA FA DR
Hardwood Floors New Carpet
Cus tom Built Oak Cabinets and
Tr m Througt\out
Mercerville
Area 740 2S6 6577
REO BRICK RANCH Style
House e.~~cellent Condition Par
II ally Ftn•shed Basement 2 Car
Garage Senous lnqulnes Only II
740 ~33e5
Sandhlll Ret All bnck 3br 2 bath
den 2 car heated garage plus

• a•&gt;•''- - •.l work &amp; storage area 1 2 acres
1• - •o•p•p•on• u•'"'•y• lr.
$' 27 500 304 675 8959

S Acres w•th 2 Mobtle Homes '"

Mason County

0646 "
6/acres
mmutes
owner
~ 500

good bU1Id1ng sites 10
from town public water
f!nancmg ava•labfe
30H75-S911

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Onve
from S279 to S3S8 WaJk to shop
&amp; movie&amp; Call 740 446 2568
Equal HouoW1g ~

Double W•de New $999 Dawn
$237 per mo Free delivery &amp; set
up 1 800-691 8m
E·Z Finance
Renters &amp; 1st Time Buyers
2 &amp;. 3 Bedrooms
Under $200/mo
1·800-251-5070
Ea sy Finance Ren ters &amp; 1st
Time Home Buyers We Have 2 &amp;
3 Bedrooms Around $200 Month
limited T•me Only! 1 800 251
0070
For Sa a/Assume Loan 1994
C ayto n/Eastwind 14x60 two
bedroom one bath 304 675·
0056
large setectton 1)1 used homes 2
or 3 bedrooms Starl ing at $2995
Quick deltvery Call 740 385
9621
Mob le Home oleler Model Trailer
furni shed Pus Washer/D ryer
(304) 675 4075
New (4x70 SSOO Down $199 per
mo Free air skirt 1 800 691
6777
NEW 14x60 3BR
GLAMOUR BATH
$199 Month Only At
OAKWOOD HOMES
NITRO WV
304-755-5885
New 16x80 $500 Down $245 per
mo Free air skirt 1 800 691
8171
New 1998 14•70 three bedroom
Include s 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes skirting deluxe steps !
and setup Only $187 08 per
month wllh $1075 down Call 1
600 837 3238

Meigs Co
We ve Got The
County Covered' Just 011 SR 7
Below New H1gh School Kee
baugh Ad 5 Acre Lots S14 000
Ea Near Carpenter pyesvtlle
Very Remote 11 + Acres
$10 500 Rutland WhileS H11l Ad
Just Off New Lima 11 Acres
$14 000 Or 9 Acre~ $12 000
Public Water Oanv•lle Briar
Ridge + Goff AdS - 7 Acres With
Nice Pond $12 000 Or 8 Acres
$13 000 Or On SA 325 N ce
Wooded 17 Acres SIS 000 City
Water Too Many To liS~

We Finance Land &amp; Home With
As l1tUe As $500 Down 1 606
928 3426
340

Business and
Buildings

Commercial 011 ce or Relall 87
Milt St Middleport 1 450 Sq Ft
$400 mo Corner BUIIdmg 740
992 62SO Acquisitions (nex t
door)

350 Lots

&amp; Acreage

t Ac re Land On 554 1(1 Kyger
$5 ooo 00 Cash Or $6 000 00
LaM Contl"acl 74{) 367-Q632

N1ce Clean 2 bedroom relerenc
Washer JOver Hook.lJpl 304-67S
5162
Now Tak1ng Apphcat f'on~- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments Includes Water
Sewage Trash $295/Mo 740
441 1616 740 4~6 0957 740
446 6S15

Flat acre off Jerry Run Ready lor
bUilding• Apple Grove Mobil
Home 12X65 smoke and some
water damage Inside New Fur
,..,.,, (304) 576 2890

One bedroom apartment m Mid
dleport all u11~11es pa1d $100 de
post! $270 month call 740 1992
7806 Sam Spm

Scenic ValleY. at App le Grove
wv BuJI&lt;hng lo ts s•ngle wldes
accepted public water 20
mlnules from new Bullalo Bndge
on Jerry s Run Ad Clyde Bowen
Jr 304-576 2336

One bedroom apt '" PI Pleas
ant furn ished eklra n1ce &amp;
clean No pets 304-675- 1386

Sever1l 5 acre pareell remote
beautiful land Me1gs Cotinty Sci
pto Twp SA 692 ((just off SA 143)
owner flnancmg ($1800 per acre)
Call !or good- 740-593-8545

One be1,1room furmshed apart
men I 1n ~•ddleport 740 992
9't91
Tara Townhouse Apartments
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 112 Bath Fully Car
peled Pallo No Pets Lease Plus
Secuntv OepoS!I ReQUired 740
446-3481

Vacant lot In Middleport 75x120
deed restnc110ns 740 992 2326

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy land 30 500 Acres
We Pay Cash 1 sao 213 8365
Anthony land Co
RENTALS
41 0 Houses for Rent
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths $300!Mo
304 736 7295
1 ·5 BEDROOM HOMES FROM
$4,000 loc'l Gov t &amp; Bank
Repo s Call I BOO 522 2730 X
1109

Three bedroom house near the
locks at Apple Grove on At 2 No
HUD ava1lable 11 /1198 304 576
2642
420

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1 Bedroom Trailer In Galllpol s
NICe Yard &amp; Porch $250/Mo
$200 Deposit Refe1 ences Re
qwed 740 446-9342
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes air
condlt•oned $260 $300 sewer
water and trash ncluded 740
992 2167
2 E&gt;edroom Mobtle Homl). On Krln
er Road $:265/Mo InclUdes Wa
ter Trash $1 oo Oepo s t No Pets
Inside 740-446 9569
2 bedroom trailer In Tuppers
Plams $200 per month plus Cle
p.OSII &amp; utilities 740 667 3487
2 bftdroom trai ler In Ractne 3
bedroom lratler 1n Mtddleport no
pets 740 992 5858

2 Bec;1~nom Mobtie Home lor
Ren t If lnwested ca ll 304 675
6512

2 Bedrooms 14x70 Mcbtle Home
S400!Mo $400 Oepcs•t 740
245 5628
~

Bedrooms W W Carpel Natu
rat Gas Heat In Ga hpolls 740
446 2003 740 446 1409
Trailer For Rent Beautiful Rtver
V1ew t98 Rtver Street Kanagua
DepOS it References No Pets
740 441 0181 Foster Trailer Park
Two (2) Bedroom Mobile Home
Route 21 B $300/Mo Rent $300
Deposit • References Required
740 983 4607
Wmdsor 14x65 Mobtle Home For
Rent Or Sale On Land Ccntracl
1989 Cavalier S1 200 740 4461610
440

Apartments
for Rent

2bdrtn apts total electric ap
pliances furnished laundry room
tacl ll ties close to schoo In town
Appl•caiiOns avatiable at Vtllage
Ureen Apts 1149 or call 740 992
3711 EOH

Coal

DIABETIC PATIENTS You Ucn•
Be Ent1tled To Recetve Your 01a
betic SuppHn .Itt No c;ost To
You For More ln~rmaliOn 1 888

6n-656'
Electric ScootNS Whee lchair&amp;
New And Used Sta1rway Eleva
tort Wheelcharr And Scooter
Lifts Bowmans Homecare 740
446-7283

Space for Rent

490

For Lease

Equipped beauty shop ale heat
ed &amp; ready to gc 740 992 5370
'

MERCHANDISE

510

Household

T

Goods

Appliances
Recondttloned
Washe'rs Dryers Ranges Aelrl
gra tors 90 Day Guarantee!
French Ci ty Maytag 740 446
7795
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dryers refr tge rators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
VIne Street Call 740 446 7398
1 888 818 0128
Used Furmture Store Below Holl
day Inn In Kanauga Twin Beds
Complele $115 Full Beds Com
plete $135 Hutch $75 Oak
Ta b e 4 Chai rs $80 Dressers
Couches 740 446 4782
530

Antiques

Buy or se ll Riverine Antiques
1)24 E Main Street on AI 124
Pomeroy Hours M TW 10 00
am lo600pm Sunday 1001c
6 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner
540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise
'WARM Uf!

Furnace Heat Pumps &amp; Air~Con
dlllonlng Free Esttmate~1 If You
Don 1 Call Us We Both Lose
740~46 6306 1 800 291 0098
12 Ft Rowboat Wtth Motor 2 New
Seats $25000 740 446 1473
12 hp Cub Cadet 1ractor and
compos tar also need ~a 2 bed
room tratler 740 992 2378
29 People Wanted
To Get Paid$$$ For
The Pounds Or lncnes
You Will lose In The Nexr
30 Days All Natural /GaLJranleed
Call Tracy At740 441 1982
3 1f2 ton Bryant heat pump w1th
1OKW20 electric furnace good
concfltion $700 740 992 3102
511.8 uhl ty trailer with wooden side
and till bed $450 '740 992 4144
alter 8pm
75 Gal Aquar~um with Wood Cab
net a 1 accesses S t so 00 Bel
Radar Detect er $75 00 304 773
5608
Atmof'ld Wh irlpool Washer $100
While Whirlpool Dryer $75 White
Whirlpool Aefngerator $100 2 GE
Washers $75 Each 740 446
9066
Beanie Sables collec l•on !or sale
70t curr&amp;nl/relired no duphcales
$10$100 each or all $1300 74_0
992 2066
Church pews for sale 12 twelve
fool 4 ten foot $200 each 740
949 2217

ffench Crty Pet Grooming by Appolf'ltmtnt ·unre
R•thlng
System• 650 Second Ave GaH1
polis 740-446-1528

Musical
Instruments

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

New 5 Ft Oa~ Vamty $400 oo
741J.446.3758
Oh1o Valley Bank W1ll Offer For
Sale By Pubhc Aucrlon A 1-997
Yamaha YFZ350J ATV 1128868
A 1984 Pontiac Fiero 1278965
And A 1997 Kawasaki KDX300
H3 01rt Bike 1021014 On 11nl98
AI 10 00 AM At The 01/B An
nex 143 Third Avenue Gall1pol
Us OH The Above Will Be Sold
To Highest Bldcfer ".b 16 Where Is" W1tnout Expressed Or
Implied Warranty And May Be
Seen By Callmg Ketth Jo~nson AI
740 441 10:38 OVB Reserves
The A1ght To Accept Or ReJec t
Any And All Bids And Withdraw
Properly From Sale Prior To Sale
Terms Of Sale CASH OR CER
TIFIED CHECK
Prlmester $49 Installation only
$25 99 per monttl tree bonus
800-263 2640

Slate Shingles 22"x 11' 740 441
1983
Unlden Pr o S10 E 40 Channel
Sldebend Base I Year Old Ha s
Con Ex Board 0 104 Mtke
$150 00 Firm Also Delta Tool
Box Will F11 Ranger S 10 Or Oa
kota While 740 245 9100
Wanted advertising collectibl es
Coke Pepsi etc Including old tin
s1gns 740 992 5053
Waterline Spec at 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI
$37 oo Per 100 All Brass Com
pression Flntngs In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 BOO 537 9528
We buy anltques and parttaf or
complete estates baby Items and
old F1e6taware Jean s Furm1ure
&amp; Antiques Tuesday through Frl
day 1 1am 4pm 14S North Sec
ond Middleport
Woodbur ner &amp; Coal Add On To
Furnace Blower 130 000 BTU s
28 Logs $300 740 367 7413 Af
ter 3 PM
550

Building
Supplies

Block brick sewer p pes wind
ows lin tels etc ClatJOe w nters
Rio Grande OH Call 740 ..245
5121
560

620

Wanted to Buy

Wanted to buy Mason or Galllli
area 100 Acres More or Less
Farm wood/Land Call , (30 4)
6756363
Wanted! Troy Built Tiller With
ElectriC Start 740-441 1013

630

AKC Poodle Male 1 1/2 Years
Good With Chtldren Shot-s
wormed $75 00 740 256 6162
AKC Registered Chthuahua Fe
male Shots And Wor ad Excel
lent Disposit ion $2 0 00 740
446 0119
AKC Reg •s te
hmese Pug
Pups 2 Mates 3 Females All
Fawn Colored $250 740 446
4816

18 month old hereford cross bull
1200 1300 lbs 740 992 7458
Custom Slaugh te r and Process
log Deer processing and sum
mer sausage wv Sa usage Co
907 4th St New Haven WV 304
882 3194
l1mousin bull 6 years old gen
tie reg1stered 304 4S8 1727
Special Fall Feeder Calf Sale
Saturday October 24th 1 PM
Cattle AcCepted Alter 4 PM Frt
day f'.ll Consignments Welco me
Hau llnb Available Athens LIVe
olock Sales 740 592 2322 740
698 3531
640

Hay

&amp; Grain

Large Bales ol Hay $11 00 each!
304 675 136S
Round Bales Of Hay Stored In
Barn 740245 S117
TRANSPORTATION
710

92 Probe 3 ftr 5 speed mr 75K
can 740..992 3701
93 Chell'y Caval•er 5 speed
81 ooo m las S2650 740 742
2357
1980 1990 HONDA CARS $100
$500 Pol1ce Impounds All
Makes Ava lable Call 1 800 522
2730 E~t 4420
1982 C~.ttlass Supreme 2 D 2M
VB Good Cnnd ltlo n $1 500 oo
F~rm 740 992 4S69
1984 Cavalier eKcellenl cond•
110n $1100 740 378 9S06
1986 Mercedes 190 E Ntce car
second owner $6 800 304 675
6539

1990 Mltsublshl M~rage Aula
air am lm 72 ooom as Fail
Condit on Wou d make a good
work carl 304 7735155 after Sp~

Copper nose Beagles 5 months
o e1 $50 each 304 675 2075

1990 Plymouth Laser 1 8 4 cy
1mder 5 speed loaded! 304 937
2681

HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE
Recogn .ozed Sale &amp; Eflectlve By
US Center ~or Veternmary Medl
cine Agatnst H oo~ Round &amp; Ta
pew G:~r ms In Dogs &amp; Cats Ava11
able 0 T C J 0 NORTH PRO
OUCE 740·445·1 933 BROWNS
TRUSTWORTHY HOWE /740·
446 8828
(www h8PPYI8Ck
Inc com)
Homing Pigeons! Excellent For
Trammg B rd Dogs 740 256~
1671
One year Old mate Beagle 1r col
ored e~tcetlenl hlJnflng blooelllne
s11e Kla iber s Btl! dam Ramsey s
Cricket II alsc trl colored lull
blooded Beagle pupp es AKC 3
males 31emales 740 742 1049
Poodle puppies tiny white males
shots and wormed 740 667 3404

t 992 Cavalier AfS All Opt ens
$2 69500 1991 Dodge Shadow
$2 495 00
1988
Beretta
$2 295 00 Cook Motors 740
446 0103
1993 Grand AM GT 4 Door Red
69 000 M•les $5 000 740 3670219
1995 Dodge Neon Automatic &amp;
AIG $4 850 080 740 379 2726
1995 Pontiac Fireblrd 3 4 V 6
52 000 Mnes Full Power TTops
New Tires Excellent Condltton
740 446 2300
1997 Dodge Stratus PW A~
tomat1 c A!C 26 ooo Miles
$9 300 OBO 740 379 2726
720

Trucks for Sale

1985 Chevrolet 1 Ton Dump
Truck 10 Fl Bed SS SOO 00 OBO
740 386 9354

M\J5~VM

;

machine
35 Laot aylt.bfe
of • word
36 Mo sumac
38 Kind of
gasoline

39 Political
relugw
40--my
hurt In San
Frenclaco

42 Behllvl
Ule8trtcelly

448reld
11pr11adl

49 11c· - -toe
50~oh

CELEBRITY CIPHER

A~T

to get home).then move back mto the
sunshme (make the contract)

c-..ny qNr ~.,.~from quo&amp;dDnl by !lmOUI 1*1* pat end prH801
Elld'IIMIIIf n !he dpfW llllndl tor MOihllr TCJrdil:n dw W 1qU1W U

~

Here you get to SIX spades West
leads the club kmg After wmnmg
W!lh dummy's ace, you take an

••
•

1mmed1ate spade finesse Good news
1t wms, bad news -~ Wesl dtscards
a club What now?

10

:THE BORN LOSER

South could h ave opened Wllh a
strong two-b1d W1th a fit. two aces

'£No\ PUZZL£0, fo\1:. I/Erelf.f€")uz;

r

.YJ")T Wi-'.1'\t 1'¥£YCU.

52 Autumnmo
53 Important
time

(p~use for thought) wa1t for the
storm to blow 1tself out (find a way

~
~'&gt;7

YOU 00 NOT WI\fliT ~ID:.-"

~

~

01\, t !(.NO..! t'fo\ ~~ IN.FEY-101:.
l f\P..\IE ~ I&gt;.DE.QU~(.'{ ~I

\")TIC.') Of~ t!lfEI:il:l~b,

opposite a strong two VIrtually
always equals a slam, and no doubt

by Luis campos

' D

0 V L' Y

SVFY

D Y' F

PI A K l

BVL

AL

JALN
KVX

LA

MNRVHN

VA

TINJJX
BNIOWIX
I
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "To become a celebrity •• to be&lt;:ome a brand narM
There !&amp;Ivory Soap, Rice Knsp~es and Philip Roth • - Phlhp Rolh

T~~:t:~' S@~J.\lA-Lt~tfs·
141to4 ~. CLfoY I

•TOP 2.0 CABLE VIDEO
NETWORI(S ' 5E E
\T 7

KOSTEC

NYR0

12 tnck s five spades four heans. two

RIGHT AT THE

d~amonlts and one club

TOP OF THE. !'AGE

r

The ures were pan of an an1fic1al
reef thai had been bu11i ott sHore

'

Budget Pnced Transmissions
and Engines All Types Acces~
To Over 10 000 Transmission&amp;
740 245 56n

IT
HAVE
CARTOONS
't'Oll BE INTERESTED IN
Sl!BSCRISING TO OUR ''GREAT I IN IT?
,PUMPKIN'' NEWSLETTER?

6000 MORNING

DOES

WOULD

W~ATS T~E NAME
OF THE 6l!V
Wi-lO DRAW5
''DILBERT"?

'(OU S~OULO GET SOMEONE
TO DRAW CARTOONS IN IT

~

~R_v..,..K_;:....E
....:.J~~ ;;,,
16 I I ..
5

1•

.

.

A ch1ld s defm1110n of etlquette 'Etiquette means be-

•

I
I~7:;--ri;8....:.;1,_;..,;19;.-;TI_;_'I'-j Q ~,.plele

.-----..J•t-~-=-:_, · havlng yourself a little better

•

ITHURSDAY

•

91 Motor Home 460 Ford Englnl
30 000 m1 Loaded Super Clear'l
Demeo Ka r Kaddy II Tow Dollt
304675291S
I

---.

For Sate 28 Ft Camper Price P:•
dueed Also 18Ft Nomad 740.
245 96 13 740 446-9833
•
SERVICES

Home
1

•

Refrigeration
Residenllat or commercial wlrlnO
service or repairs Master ll
censed electrtc 1an Alde nou
Eleclrlcal WV00030f:i 304 875

8

PRINT NIJMBfRED
LETTERS

_

.

.

.

chu~klo

lhe
quo!od
by lll•ng m the m•n~ng words
you develop from step No 3 below

1
I'• 12 1
r I' I' I' I" I' I

II I I II I I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Heifer- Thank • LilaC - Vtsual - FAIL to TELL
what they FAIL to TELL

19~2 Terry 26 ft Oak Dlnnel/ Cabll
lnets CA Ce nter Heat M[!
crowave Twin Beds Exce Con
d•lton 304 773 5996
1

Electrical and

.

After listenmg to the candidate my fnend
commented ' People reveal a lot about themselves by

'

S llord Roodmg Shingles anc
new roots Free est 740 886
9887

.

•

1983 Motor Home Chevy Chas,
sis Sell Contat11ed Generator ~
Gas Tanks A/C A 1 Ccndltlo~
740 367 7093 or 74C 367 7070
,..

Protess to(la l 20yrs experiencE
with all masonery brick block &amp;
stone Also room additions ga
rages etc Free estimates 304
773 9550

.

than -- • - -- • • • '

. , UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
•

J

C&amp;C General Home Main
tenence Patnt ng vinyl sidi ng
carpentry doors windows baths
mobile home repa r and more Fm
tree eshmate ca I Chet 740 992
6323

POlLAN

ltearronge letters of the
four acrambled v. .ordl be
low to form four simple word1

s A y ETy

Appliance Parts And Serv ce AI
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
perlence All Work Guaranteed
French C1ty Maytag 740 446
7795

WOlD
&amp;AMI

0

Return to dummy w1th a heart to the
ace complete the th1rd trump tinesse.
draw the misSing trumps and cla1m

NOf!CE THIS ITEM

Accessories

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
•
Uncond11tona Ulet lme guara ntee
Loca relerences furnished Es
tdtlltshed 1.g75 Call 24 Hrs (740)
446 0870 ' t 800--287 0576 Rog
ers Waterproofing

v

T AI

r

When you see the 5-0 spade
break, you see m to have two sure

&amp;

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

YR N

works lake a second spade tinesse

Summers no t over! Kawas~l
STS Jet skt stm under warran.ty
three seater 83 hOrsepowef
bought new July ol 97 thre'
matching Kawasaki ski ~ests ilnd
trailer all go wJth 1t Priced to sett
$4200 740 949 2203 or 740 94~
2045 will cons dar trade for J
good pontoon boat

Two Win ter Snow Tires With'
Studs Mounted On 1S" Wheels I
For GM Cars $60 740 446 0195 )

DL

YR N

low heart to dummy s I 0 When that

1990 Stratca 20Ft F1sh &amp; Ski
175 HP E~lnrude Call For Details
Best Offer 740 24~9109

New gas tanks &amp; body parts D 6;
A Auto Rip ley WV 304 372,
3933 or 1 800 273-93.29

IAOZDLP

s1x spades would have been reached

need two dummy entnes to p1ck up
the rest of trump su11 Yet you don 1
have those entnes -- or do you?
There are two entnes 1f West has
the heart pck AI lnck three lead a

I

0 VI I X

RVHN

D

KVX

losers (one spade and one d1amond)
along w1th a poss1ble hean loser You

140-446 1315

&amp; Motors •

28Jog
30 Sieve
34 BUicher a

pamc Put up the hurncane shutters

MOP EM

AllT
.,.,.

Motorcycles

Stock Cam &amp; Carb For 87
200X $40 Each 740-448 7376 "

26 Btemlah

tract. )OU walk mto a sudden squall
• perhaps a foul trump break- don"t

"

Of

MOl&gt;~~N

1983 Honda Odyssey 250 Lors
01 New Part$ Runs Good With
Extra Parts Odyssey 740 446
6861
---------198S Harley FXR customlze.tt
lowrtder several trophys too
much
llsl 11 ooo miles no
cr~aoon••ble olter refused lor Info
304-67S-6539
::..::..:.:.:...:.:::~-------,
1991 Honda CR125 Completel)Redone Race Aeady St 800

1186

layered

24 Spring or
aummer

m our paper of a b1km~-&lt;:lad woman
sunbathmg on a beach that wa~ cov·
ered m car 11res Where d1d they come
from?

•

MUSEUM
OF

1982 Kawasakt 750 CSR ne~
rings haad gasket new pa1nt job.:
must see $2000 740-742 8282

840

(2wda)
12 beatltute
19G(eue
22 DOUble-

When )n declanng a bndge con

j:~~~----.:....-­

Improvements

, c::d

7 Klu
8 Prickly .-1

Life must go on

FRANK. &amp; EARNEST

Chevy S 10 4 WO Air Tltt 1
5 Speed $13 100 740

810

':=:

SignDAI

left a waterlogged coa.~tal Nonh Car·
olma last August, there was a Jlhoto

'222

790

9 .ldr.q...tlty
org
10 Puutlng

5 Spaln"a Colla
del-

By Phillip Alder
The day after Hurncane Bonme

1995 S 10 Blazer 4x4 low M1le1,
Garage Kept Loaded Must .See,
740-256

Auto Parts

3-4=1 Tutype
2 Soldered

Operung lead • K

BIN60 !!

WAYS U

1995 Chevrolet Tahoe 4x4 Ex,
cellent Condition 44 000 Milts!
Garage Kept Loaded! Dougla~
Runyon 740-446-1272

1987 Ford tempo $700 00 304
37S 6339

Now Open Sundays 1 4 Man Sat
11 6 Ptsh Tan k &amp; Pel Shop
2413 Jackson Ave Poin t Pleas
ant 304 675 2063

TONIGHT AT

tiAMBLIN 1

Autos for Sale

1988 Bonnevtlle LE maroon 4dr
new I as &amp; brakes good cond
$3 200 304 67S ~792 after 5pm

Hand tamed cockatiels 304 882

SNUFFY GIVE UP HIS

1988 Jeep Cherokee l1mited 4 0
L power everyth1ng AC 4 wheel
drive CO player $4200 080
740 742 2367

760

..,........

oow,.

PIIS!I

1985 Ford 4x4 4 Speed II 8
Price $3 000 7.40 387-0219
740 367 7272

for Sale

11101-

%7 Trlengulllr Nil
211PI&gt;olo-(cameracllcldng-)
31 Singing

Paoo

1984 Chevy KS Blazer Cam~,
Speleaf 4x4 AI; AT New Tlrea I
EKhuast Musl Sell! $3 500 OBO
740 446 3580 leave Measau,11
before 500

750 Boats

1 Yearling Filly Colt and 1 Year
h'lg Paint Stud Colt 740 446
1179

AK C Registered mtnl dachshund
pups 740 992 9989

3436

-

Livestock

57 Ek op II
lldroltly

Both

see you

I TRIED TO MAKE

..-. .....

I

rota

PIIS!I
PIIS!I

' 800-290-2262 X 3901

7 40

s

24 Kll
2511c&gt;mlng

32Cook•-

4-WDs

1980 1990Tr.-SUJO-$SOO
Poloce lrrc&gt;CJU!l(ls

Agco-AIIIt Special
Trac1or ~670 63 PTO H P 4
wheel drive world famous a1r
cooled diesel "Snglne Goodyear
Rad1al tires all 4 wheels lnde
pendent 540 and 1000 PTO Hy
draullc wet disc brakes all 4
wheels Differential lock Iron! &amp;
rear dual hydraulic remotes
ROPS alld CanoP';' 16x:16 Trans
mtsston tullv synchronized for
ward &amp; reverse shuttle zmc
coated shea} metal 4 year or
4000 hour duve train warranty
Check your JD MF FNH or CIH
dealer and see how long they
warranty there drive tram Keel
er's Service Center St At 87 Pt
Pleasant &amp; Ripley Ad leon WV
25123304 89~ 3874

6

23 -

Eul

19vg Dodge Mule van 318 auo
tomalie S250 7-4()..992 3342
~

2• USED TRACTORS
STOCK
Fmancmg As low As 6 9% W1th
John Deere Cred t Approval On
Used Tractofl Carmichaels
Farm &amp; Lawn Galltpolls Ohto
740 446-2412 Or 1 800 594 1111
Also See The 'New" 4000 Senes
Compact Utility Tractors ·Several
In S1ock

Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Resldenllal And Commercial
Lawn E(lulpment COmpact Utility
Tracrors From 20 To 39 HP All
Sizes 01 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Tractors Hay E(lutpment Jonn
Deere Skid Sreer loaders Check
With Us About Financing On
lawn tractors And low Rate Fl
nancmg On New And Used
Equ1pment Carmichaels Farm &amp;
lawn Gallipolis OH 740 446
241218005941111

&amp;

col._llieol

Dealer: South

For sale, 88 Ford Aanger truck
call 304-675-401~

IN

Pets foF Sale

A Groom Shop Pet Grooming
Featuring Hydro Bath Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Rd
740 446 0231

"Vulnerable

Vans

a

• z

Ford Truck 'so XLT S3 600.

730

10

to

• AK4

304-675-361~

33HP"0Tesel 85 Hrs $13 000
1996 JO 513 Rotary Cutler
Sf 000 t997 SuSh Hog 60 06
Gradmg Blaele $500 Call 740
44&amp;-1208

• Q

liolall!
• A K J 10 9
• K Q 4 3

90132.

as

•QB752
.. v 6
•

u..- .

47 Buick
nib lig1n (Int.) 41 o.mu. of 1n1&amp;
11 Dllll&lt;x"aliltteN 51 NarvOUII
211 Puolllat1u.l
(2 wdal
........
54

- · · org. 55
BullligiiiM
21 IIIJwwta.n
56 Loat«&lt;d--ound
lnqully

£1111&amp;

•J875
• J 9 1 3
•KQJ94

1993 Ford 112 Ton XLT 2 Wheel
dnve 46 000 Miles 7~0 381

t~ JD__Ql.O Utility Tractor 4WO,

Kenmore gas dryer $50 740
992 3575

• A 7 3

..

4111hink,

tllnl-·a bad
17 Ccw lalnlug

w.......

• a&amp; s z

1993 Chevy 4Xo4 Z71 boad,ed,
350 s Speed Many Extrasf
Sooke S 14 000 S 11 000 740
245-9099

K1mball Spmnet Jllano Call after
2pm 304-675-' 879

Gas Furnace And Air Condition
lng Unit Used 2 112 Years For
Rent 1 Bedroom House In Gall•
polis 74().446.0893

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repared New &amp; Rebuill In Slock
CaH Ron E...,. 1 800-537 9528

• '4 3
• A.IO Z

EEK.&amp; MEEK.

ha"

_6_1_0_F_a_r_m_E_q_u-ip-me--n-t--1

Grubbs P1ano tunlno &amp; repairs
Problems' Need Tuned? Call the
pcano Or 740-446-452S

10..224

' 992 F«d c...,., I10aVy
IOh.
6 cylinder, good cond1t10n IOOktgood, Tonneau cover new 6 ply
hres standard sh1ft O¥erdnve ..
$5500 call 740 742 7605 seave.
message

For Sale Fill Olrl Wtll Oehver
304-675-6734

Gateway 2000 Computer Less
Than 1 Year Old Askmg $1 40.0
Or Best Offer 740-367 7893

-

307~5244

W••"

FIREWOOD
Cu1 Soil. Oeliwlreil! ....... 740us 6566 Chad 7~1271

SATELLITE SYSTEMS 18" RCA
Dish $19 99 per Month Ask
Abour Free Progremmtng No
Credit Check From 8 QO AM
9 OOPM 1 800.325 7838

Circle Motel lowest Rates tn
Town Newly Remode led HBO
Clnemax Showl1me &amp; D1sney
Weakly Rates Or Monthly Rates
Construction Workers Welcome
740 441 5698 74().441 5167

s

1991
tO 2wd New Tuet.
Brakes Shod:.s Ban Clutch u ..
Jo.nts 4 3 5sp Air lltt CrutH
Sunroof Extras $4 000 FtrrAI

(304,._3111

570

450

Furnished
Rooms

-·-·-15
S . . 43-hanl
45--..cl

Pets for Sale

.Mate Boxer Puppy
weltks old
AKC RegiStered Fawn $2SO 00

SALE Kitchen Cabmets 63%0FF
hsl price tl purchased by the end
ol October Free In home est•
mates Trl County Oistnbutors
Inc t 8()()-352 3147

Mobile home Site ava1tab!e bet
ween Athens and Pomeroy call
l40 385 4367

Rent 4 bedroom r;'R basement
AC large yard Lmccln Avenue
304 675 3402 ava Iable prompt
ly

Combust•oneer Stoker
SIOYe $500 740-388-9n1

560

7

Merchandise

APT AVAILABLE NOW
Twm Rivers Tower now accepting
appiiCSIIOns for 1br HUD subsld
lzed apt lor etderlV and handl
capped EOH 304-675-6679

House For Rent 2 Bedrooms 1 1I
2 Baths Full Basemen t Patriot
140 379 2882 74().379 2855

Pomeroy four bedroom HUD Wf
D newly re modeled ne ar play
ground references SIO call 740
992 6886 after 5 30pm

Miscellaneous

Red &amp; wh_lle concession tra•ler w/
cotton cal'ldy.. &amp; funnel cake ma
chine fo untain drinks etc Meets
health dept requirements/sup
pllaS $6 000 304 882 2246

460

New double wide 10 Mason three
bedrooms two baths sunroom
very nice 304 882 3826 faler
6pm

540

Th re e bedroom rn New Haven
area stove relr gerator all utHI
t1es mcluded $425/mo plus de
pos1t 304 773 9171 leave mes
sage

FURNISHED 4 Room House
Close to Downtown Nc Smokmg
No Pets Deposit Reqwed 740
446 '956

2 Bedrooms $375/Mo Plus Ut II
ties &amp; Deposit No Pets 740 446
4313 740 446 0879

s

Newly Remodeled 1 Bedroom
Apt Gafhpolls Ferry Large Yard
Oepo&amp;tt I tstmonths rent' 304
675-326911304-6756131

Commercial Or Restdenttal Tnple
Lot With Income In Crown City
On Route 7 $53 500 740 256
1426

Repo s For Sate 2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms
Ouahfy By Phone 1 800 2515070

House tra•ler on B~ead Run Ad 2
Miles lrom Sporn Plant 3br 1 112
baths 2 addeel on rooms lot ga
rage 2 A/C s housetloid Items
17 000 304 882 3426

Lafayette Mall Galllpolts 2 Bee!
rooms 2 Batns All Uld1t1es tn
eluded $450/Mo Deposit Ae
qUired 74Q.441 1005

Call For Free Maps + Owner Ft
anc1ng Info Take 10% 011 l1sted
Pnces On Cash Purchases'

2 Bedroom Tra•ler n Small TraUer
Park Deposit and Aetrences Ae
qu red Nc Pets 740 446 1t04

Aepoed Double W1de On Lot
304 736 7295

Graaous llv1ng 1 and 2 bedl'oom
apartments at V•llage Manor and
Atvers lde Apartments in Mtddle
pori From $249 $373 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Houstng Oppor
tuntlles

South 01 Town On
Fnendty R1dge 8 5 Acres $7 500
Public Water Ctty Schools Half
Wav To Huntington 10 Acres
Teens AtM\ Rd $12 000

NEW SANK REPOS
ONLY 3 "EFT
Stttlln Warranty
OWNER FINANCING
AVAILABLE
304 755-5885

REPO Sl
For Sale
2 &amp; 3 Bedroom
Quality oy phOne
1 BOO 251 5070

Furril&amp;hed ~ Rooms &amp; Bath Comp~tety Redecorated Clean New
carpet: No Pets Of' Smoking Ret
erence &amp; DepoSit Aequrr.ec:l }lso
Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath Up
&amp;ta!J5. 7 4()-4.46.: 1519

G1llla Co

\

•

1 Bedroom Eeonom•cal Gas
Heat W!O Hook Up Near Cinema
1279/Mo Plus Uti!""'• Deposil &amp;
Lease Requered 740-446-2957

Approximately 3 S Acres Perry
Twp For Sale 740 446 ~609 or
740-446-1104 Attef 5 OOPM

360

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. fur
n1shed and unfurn•s~d sectmty
deposit reQutred no pets 7~0
992 2218

4 Bu11dens

130 000 Contact Lee (3041 532

14x76 95 wut lndle&amp; mobile
home IWQ bedroom two bath
oenttal aU' 7&lt;10-992 5428

m your

Duector 01 Nurs•ng Reg•ste red
Nurse w•th tour oc more years su
perv1sory nursmg expenence a
proven trac~ record "' genatnc
nursmg admm1strat1on and a
vahd West Vug1ma nursmg 11
censs requued Knowledge ol
state and lederal regulatiOns and
OBFIA gu ldel•nes a must Con
tact Kelh Gamson Pomt Pleas
ant Nursmg &amp; RehabllllatiOn
Center Slate Route 62 N Point
Pleasant wv 25550 A Genes1s
Bdercate Facil ty EOE

440

.~~A~S~T~R~O~·;;G;::R~A~P=H~~~~~~:·~y~m~':s~tead

n today

II

mg ol the mmds Make I he l1rst move

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Try to

make everyone feel uncomlortable 1f
you try to assen your des1res over

and the other guy will follow sUI!
GEMINI (May 2 1 June 201 It san

help a fnend 1f you can today, but
draw the hne atloanmg any money
ThiS 1s especmlly true 1f It mvolves
funds you have earmarked l or essentmls You may never get them back

1he1rs
AQUARIUS (Jan 2~Feb 19)
Don"t lhmli. you won 1 have to pay
the pnce later lor steppmg on some
one e lse "s toes 10 get what you want

Know where to look fm romance and

today You m1ghl gel away w1th It

"you"ll

fmd

11 ~

ot buckmg

You

~ow but he or she w1ll even lhe

' SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)
Should your mate not be as accommodaung or cooperauve as you 1h1nk

score
PISCES (Feb
20 March 201
Although n·s not your style to behave

she or he could be. lind out why

m an mharmomou s fash1on. you be

before soundmg off Your spouse
m 1ght be mvolved 111 somethu•g

may be called upon to stand up lo
someone who behaves hke u bully

equally as nnponant
SAGITIARIUS (Nov

Do so Without heSitauon
23-Dcc

ARIES (March 21 Apnl

19) If

21) Chances are problems you re
confronted w1th today could be the
result of past procrasu n auon on your

you don't want to max out your erect11 cards tod ay. pul Jelin1te II nuts on
what you mlend to spend before you

pan B 1te the bijllel und get them
done Stop sweepmg them under the

go shoppmg or w!lhdraw any money
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20)

rug

negol~almg an agreement
today be prepared to make some rea
sonable conce&gt;S1ons to foster a meet-

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan

When

19)

Go alone w 1th lhe w1ll of lhe maJor·

asset that

yo~u

re ,m easy go rn g per-

son, but don 1 go overboard by a llow
1ng someone to dump .1 11 h1s or her
responS1b1h1 1es on your lap l oday
That s JUst plum masodusuc
CANCER (June 21 July

22)

Avmd hangmg out wllh ''" mdiV!dual
who likes to lhrov. lm or her we1ght
around ThiS person "nolon l ) l1ke
ly to emb.~rrass you '" pubhc but
draw you mtl~ a ~.:ontront.1lron us well
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) ~hould
you leel knocked •• round at work or
abused by the cruel world l~uv~ your
pent up emot1ons at your doorstep

Don t take out your lrustrat10ns on
the fam1ly
VIRGO (Aug

21 Sepl

22) So

what 1t a comp.tnton 's uptnron:-i LOn
It s our personal

tl1c1 w1th yours l

nghl lo d1Rer If you make 11 a h1g
de.tl

11 could rum ,\11 o1herw1se

fnendly rel.1110nsh•p

'ocTOBER 22 I

'

�•

Page 16 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Thursday,Ckrtober22,1~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Microsoft cites
Netscape e-mail
as defense
against antitrust
charges

•

Friday
October 23, 1998

Weather

Sports

Sermqnette, Page 5
Ann Landers column, Page 5
Volleyball preview, Page 4

Today: Sunny
High: 60; Low:30
Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 60; Low:40

Arizona
State
triumphs
Page4

WASHINGTON
C AP ~
Microsoft Corp. executives are using
an e-mail by . the chainnan of an
archrival company to defend itself
agai nst cl aims it violated antitrust
laws.

T!]e 1994 message was sent Dec.
29 ar 3:01 a.m. by lame Clark, cofounder and board chairman of
Nel~ape Cbmmunications Corp.\ Its
signifi cance is tied to a meeting the
following June in which the governDISTRICT WINNERS- A trophy for their school and individual
ment cl aims Microsoft illegally
cash awards were presented to the Southern FFA winning team
offered to di vide the marker for
In the agriculture district land judging contest at Tuesday night's
Internet ''browser" ' Software with
~SWCD banq_uel . The winners were left to right, Amy Wilson,
NeiSfapc.
ftrst;
Kacy Ervtn, thord, and Matt Wilson, fourth. Second place win- .
1 During the third day of a landmark
ner was Brady Bowling, not pictured.

1998
.PARK AVENUE
.
.

' 824

used the \l'essage to suggest the
computer software giant's approach

1998 PONTIAC

TRANSPORT 4 DR.

agree on n deal for Microsoft to adopt
Netscape 's browser:
·· workin g together could be in
your sel f- interest as well as ours," he

II

1988 BONNEVILLE·
Very low miles. 4 In Stock. Power seal,
cassette, aluminum wheels, -well equipped.
Exlrl~J_clean cars!

' 818

'

.

'

Josh
of Southern FFA,
left to
were
scoring
on the
In the
judging contest. They were presented e trophy for their school and cash
awards at last night's MSWCD banquet. The second place winner, Courtney Haines, was not present for the Tuesday night's
banquet held at Meigs High School.

"Netscape was burning· through
money and not making much cash,"
Barksdale recalled, "and I think Mr. '
Clark was looking \o get Microsofi to y

1997 GRAND AM·4 DR.
Power seat, cassette, power windows. Balance
·
of new car warranty..
WAS$16,900

make an investment."·

ln. written testimony he submhted
earlier to U.S. District Judge Thomas
Penfield Jackson, Barksdale said
Clark described the e•mailro him as
Barksdale was to return today for
a third day of testimony in a trial that
is inching along. Jackson. who is
hearing the case without a jury, urged
Microsoft attorneys dUring a private

earned $45 million from the soft\vare

in 1995. Since then , Netscape 's market share has fallen to roughly 50 percent". under stiff competition rrom
M il:ru s'o l't's own browser.

HAY SHOW AWARDS • Plaques for placing first In their respec·
tlve categories of exhibit at the Meigs County Fair hay show were
presented at the MSWCD banquet Tuesday night at Meigs High
School. Recipients were from the left, Howard Ervin Roy Holler
and David King.
'
'

Poll: GOP candidates keep edge
despite souring opinion of Congress
WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican congressional candidates had a
slight lead among 1\kely voters in
June, says the Pew polling organization, which measured public opinion
again after four months of noise

about President Clinton's !roubles,
Monica Lewinsky and impeachment.
Repl(blicans still have that slight
·lead. says the poll released Wednesday.
The GOP advantage- 48 percent
to 43 percent - can be lraced.to the
party's support among Americans
who are most likely to vole, accord;ng to the survey by' the Pew
Research Center. In the larger pool of
all registered voters. support for
Republicans and Democrats is about
even, the poll indicated.
."There is little indication that this
is a race about 'Bill Clinton and his
'J&gt;roblem,s," said .Andrew Kohut.
polling director of the Pew Research
Center for the People &amp; the Press.

Microsofl argues that' its immensely successful .business stm,egy .has
. "it's like most congresSional racfs:
been legal -: to build browser tech- ll 's about local issues and the candinology directly into its Windows date:s' character and experience."

products.'
The
government
contends
Mkrosuft" s behavior violated federal anritnJ'\t laws, in part because

l'n congressional elections when
there is no presidential race. the

oppllSition party often makes gains.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich on
Mi crosoft bundled its brows&lt;r with- Wednesday forecast Republican
in WindOws to hurt Netscape. ' '
gain .s of anywhere from I0 to 40
In addition to its antitrust trial .
House seals on Election Day. The
Microsoft also faces a separate law.
House ~ urrently has 228 Republis~ i t hy Sun M1crosystems of Palo
cans,
Alto, Cali f. On Wednesday, a feder- dent. 206 Democrats and I inilepenal court in San Jose un -;ealed more
" If everything breaks against us,
than 100 pi1ges of internal Microsoft
my
guess is we ' ll be at about pluse- mail.
'
10," Gingrich told reporters. "If

~e~gs

everything breaks for us, we'll be
much clt"Jser to plus-40."
, - - -·; ..._..;._.,..______,

1997 SUNFIRE 4 DR.

Loaded, power windows, power mirrors,
cruise, till. Remote Keyless Entry

1996 RIVIERA
Light Teal metallic, 3800 super charged V·
6, Astro roof, CD and cassette. Luxury!

HALLOWEEN
NAPA BUILDING BLAZE- Becaua81he century-old building's roof had been damaged In
the June 2 hall storm, flames shot through to
~ the top and the fire's glow was 'tlalble from the
Spring,Valley area. The GVFDI"pokesman said

PREIIMTID BY
LIBRARY ItiDI YOUTH
October 24. 1998
I 1:00am to 2:00pm

''If{'"

1997 FORD CROWN·
I

VICTORIA LS

Only 2500 miles. NOT a mlaprlntl
Power seat, leather interior. Local trade.

Structure vacant several -months

Local owner, aluminum wheels, V-6, power
windows. Sharp!

F~re

7,495

8

~ea l ch Recov~ry S.ervices

and a vi5it from Hoo la t he Hi pp o
The wi"1ner of the my%ery

writi~ g 'con te 9t wi ll

be . anri oL,J nced at ::OOpr1
d u r ing

t he c;Jr"'~ival.

Come j oin in the re,1di,.,q.
f un ,Jn 'd :Jctivit

1995 BUICK CENTURY

1991 GRAND PRIX 2 DR.

White wfth blue simulated convertible roof,
beautiful car. Only 29,000 miles, power seat,
windows; etc. Gold accent pkg.

Power seal. aluminum wheels, whiie with red
cloth interior.

r:!:?.

guts old Tabit building in
Gallipolis; cause is unknown
Fire of undeterf~ined origin gutted
the old NAPA Auto ~arts building in
Gallipolis late "(hursday, sending
tlames shooting our of the structure's
·_. previously-damaged roof before fire,
fighteiS from several area departments brought the blaze under con·
trol.
The last set of firefighters left the
scene at 162 Third Ave. around 5 a.m.
today. while city officials were
expected to determine the three-story bri ck slructure's stability after the
blaze destroyed the tloors.
Cause of the

fire remained

unknown today, and a spokesman for
·the Gallipnlis Volunteer Fire Department said the GVFD would investi. gate a prohabl e cause with the assis·tancc of the state fire marshal 's

oflice .
The department did not offer .a
source of origination for the blaze
until the investigo1tion is completed.
• The GVFD was notilied on the

1992 MAZDA 929
Top of the line luxury car. Power sunroof,
leather interior, Loaded! Local 1-owner.

0~~ . ~7

ilie ilrewaa brought under control within 30
minutes, with the GVFD pouring In water overhead and ladder trucks from Point Pleasant and
. Middleport assisting.· Photo by Chuck Baker

1993 LUMINA EUROSPORT

Gameo;,:,, .W:::efre5hmen t e-.
Da re (fin gerpri nting). '

County will be ptoviding grant funding to qualified h~meowne~s
w1th.m the Tuppers Plains .. Sewer service area for the sewer hook-up and
seph_c tank abandonment required by the District. This funding is
prov1ded through a CDBG CHIP and Formula Allocation grant. ·
·
The work will be bid out to those qualified/experienced contractors that
are bonded, carry Workmens Compensation; if applicable, and liability
insurance. The work will be bid in groups' of five _(5) hook-ups/tank
aba.ndonm_ent. Contractors must warr.11nt the work for a one (1) year
penod agamst defects. Contractors will be paid by the County grant when
work is completed and approved by the Sewer District and the Meigs
Health Department. · .
·
I
The Meigs Grant office is requesting any quaiified ,contractor who wishes
to receive notice of the request for bids on these projects to contact Jean
Trussess, grants _Office, at ?,i0-992-7908.

campaigning.

message that would stop negative

"I s anyone else tired nf this? I'm

reall y tired of this," Mrs. Feitler said ,
draw·ing of!e of the

loude~ t

cheers of

night lrom the crowd of ahout 300 at
the University of Toledo. '
Taft • and Fisher spent month'
arguing whether they should alloi;V
the other two candidat~s· in the
debate. Fisher wanted tel face Taft
one-ori-one. Taft said he wouldn't
debate unless a lithe candidates were
included.
They are running to replace Gov.
George Voinovich, a Republican try ing to take over for retiring U.S. Senator John Glenn, D-Ohio. A second
debate is scheduled for Wednesday in
Continued on page 3

· Be sure to set your clocks and
watches back one hour at2 a.m.,

Sunday, Oct. 25 . ·

8

Township performed similar service

defeat an effon to ban mouming dove
hunting in Ohio, according to documents flied with the secretary of state.

for the GVFD in case of an emergency. ·
Streets surrounding the .~cene were
blocked off during the lire . The city
kept the 100 block of Third Avenue.
and Grape Street between Third and
Fourth Avenue, dosed today until the
Continued on page 3

"Farmers. hunters, anglers. mem:

bers of the medical comm.unity, veterinarians, wildlife professionals and
many others have been organizing for
the defeat of Issue· I and the animal
rights movement behind ;·r," Roben
Teater, chairman of the Ohioans for
Wildlife Conservation commhtee,

came from.Columbus-based Wildlife
Legislative Fund of America. which
gave $39.000 in cash and paid campaign consultants another $J0.6Jg .
The National Wild Turkey Federation
an_d its Ohio affiliate contrihutcd

million over the past two years lo

The top contribution thi s year

Gieport assisting.

Because the century-old building's
roofhad been damaged in the June -2
hai I storm, tlames shot through to the
top and the fire 's glow was visible
from the Spring Valley area.
"The rest of the tirpe wus taken up
putting out the hot spots and overhauling Ihe fire," th e spokesman '
said. •·The tlooiS are gone. You can
look inside and see straight out of
what's left of the roof."
· The spokesman noted that while
Rio Grande and Gallipolis fought the
blaze. the Centerville VFD covered ·

4·

a.m. Sunday. Forget and you

will be an hour early li&gt;r church. work '
or whatever on Sunday.
Exempt from the change are reside:nts of Arizona. Hawaii. th~ part of
Indiana in the Eastern time zone.

Puerto Rico, the ·virgin lslands .and
A'merican Samou. Those ureus do not
are on standard reckOning.

I .

'

were hired as baskethall coacht:s.

pending certification.
· Renee Carson was appro\led as a

substitute secretary, and James Spangler and Lois Wilsoll as substitute
custodians.

,

Larry Haley was fipproved as a
teacher for

hom~

instruction for an

SBH student.
Gwen Hall wa.' approved as u volunteer parent.

The board also:
·- Approved the cost of connecting the Administrative Building in
TuppeiS Plains to the Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer District:
•• Hired Industrial Appraisal Company to appraise and tag all property
inventory for both the high school
and Eastern Elementary Schools:
-- Approved the purchase nf preleased Cn!l\pUteiS ·from XL Connect ·
at $495 each:
··Approved the purchase of magazine subscriptions for the high
school library.

$30 · A)," · ·~e Ballot Issues Coali rep1.:senting hunting and
tishing groups from :.1round the couil-

lioa, .-

try - gave $1 5,!XXl. The•Ohio Faron
Bureau Fedemtion, the League of
Ohio Sportsmen und the International Bowhunting Organization 11f the
USA, which is based in Vertnilion.
Ohio,each chipped in $1 O,!KXI.
The pro-hunting campaign has
used the monc)' to run un extensive
television campaign intended to
brand the backers of Issue I as ani mal rights extremists .
Save the Doves, which collected
rht signatures to pla&lt;·e the issue on
the ballot, reported contributions
totaling $521 .680.
The Humane Society of the United States and The Fund for Animals
each gave about$ I30,000. Columbus
resid~nt -Ritchie Laymon cnnlribu~ed

$g8,000 - induding $70,000 to pay
Continued on page 3

Good Afternoon
Today's

Sentinel

I Section · I0

l'u~cs

5

Calrndar
Cl:.tssificds
Comics

WASHINGTON (AP) -, Folks
. who have been Jeeling tired since last
spring tinally get back thut lost hour
of .sleep this weekend .
II is time to set the clocks back to
standard time.
Set the ~lm.: ks back one hour 011 •
Saturday: The change becomes offi..::i~l~l2

•

.
.
COLUMBUS ( AP) - State and
national hunting and fishing groups
joined with more than 325,000 indi·
vidual contributors to collect $:1,.4

said at a news conference Thursday.
The group collected $681.834 in
cont_ri.butions between June 6 and
Ocr. 14, according to the campaign
finance repons . Anot~er $1 . I million
was generated from the sales of
sweepstakes tickets,, The rest of the
money was collected lust year, said
Rick Story. c~,mpaign manager.

Rio Grande's territory and Guyan

Michael Barnette and Bill Shepherd

Ohio hunters collect $2.4 .million .to. defeat dove issue ·

Standard time
returns Sunday

F.a/1 back

995 ,

fire ar9:03 p.m .• and responded with
fo4r I rucks and 30 volunteers: With·
io ·minutes, mutual aid calls were
made to Point Pleasant, W.Vu., Middleport, Vinton and Rio Grande.
The GVFD spokesman said the
fire was brought under Cllntrol within 30 minutes, with the GVFD pouring in water overhead and' ladder
trucks from Point Pleasant anu Mid-

observe 'daylight time. so they already

'

auacks and asked voters to send a

" will tell the truth."
Taft, a Republican, insisted that

C4RMIVAJ.

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS

.

said. Ohio needs a governor who

By 'BRIAN J. REED
.remained in storage at the respective
Sentinel News"Staff
buildings since they were dosed last
·
The Eastern Lbcal School Dislricl spring.
· ··
approved the sale of surplus items,
They. were previously offered to
including memorabilia, when they other school districts through stale
.met in regular sessiorion Wednesday publications.
evening.
The board upproveu the payment
Auctions will be held on Novem- of the following invoices to contracber 7 and November 14, r~spective · tors Qn the district's building pmly. at Tuppers Plains and Chester Ele- gram:
Wesam
Construction,
mentary Schobls to sell surplus items $57,655.23; Pioneer l?lpe, $13.9g I:
no longer needed due to the con- Vargo Cassidy Ingham and Gihbs.
struction of Eastern Elementary $2,378 : Geneml Tempemture Con-School. The items will include. stu- · orol, $37,!!02; and Mandeville Crodenl desks and other furnishings, son, $44,025.87.
l,._. mi:IDi~~~bJ·i~iannd other iJiims.,decnwl , "' :fbe OOar(f.dpjlM~ TJm -Dillon,
unnecessary by the board. The prop- Mike Douglas, Robert Reodand Brierly has been or will be removed an Bowen as volunteer personnel for
from the district's , three elementary the varsity football program, Mark
schools and will be sold to the pub- GritTin for varsity basketball and Larlic at auction.
ry Heines for varsity softball. all as
The propeny has been deemed volunteers.
' unnecessary due to the purchase o(
Joyce Hill was hired as freshman
new desks, shelving, cabinets and aa:iS advisor and John R~duvian as
other furnishings for the new ele- sophomore class advisor.
mentary school. The items have
Melissa Sisson,' Roy Johnson.

8
SP.ICIALAT 14,880!

"a moment of weakness.' '

The trial's outcome could determine much about the future of the
computer industry at a time when it
is increasingly i'mportant 10 virtually
all aspec ts of modern life.
'
Netscape enjoyed almost 90 percent of the browser market . and -

'

Eastern Local School- Board
.
plans sale _of surplus items

t

other rnjlrkds, such as Internet software . .I

.

~·

Fisher has been just a.&lt; untruthful in
his campaign ads. specilically one
of: the negative tones dominating their that cJaimed Taft doesn ' t 'upport 'a
race for governor.
' property tax cut.
. "We've "both run ads that" have
.But they didn't let up on the
attacks during their first debate made mistak.S," Taft said . "The difThursday night. trading accusations ference is, I've taken responsibility. "
about' television ads and tax plans.
Caught in the middle of I he alle Fisher, a Democrat, spent .much of gations on stage were Reform Party
the evening saying ihar Taft qn ' r be candidate John Mitchel and Zanna
trusted, citing an Ohio Elec'tions Feitler, a member of the Natural Law
Commission ruling that found a Taft Party.
~.
,
ad about his oppone11t was mislead- ~
AI . time~ they 'were a buller
between Taft and Fisher, but by the
ing.
."'
In his opening statement, Fisher end they had. grown weary of the

lawyers.

meeting to move along more quickly, said one attorney who -asked not
to be identified.
; Microsoft attorney Mark Murray
defended the pace.
.
"Netscape has spem past three
years lobbying the government to
bring a lawsuit against Microsoft," he
snid . ." Now. we _won't take any more
time than necessary, b~t Microsoft
deserves the opponunity to refute
Netscape 's groundless allegations."
The lawsuit by the Justice Depanment and 20 states claims Microsoft
illegally used its influence as the
maker of the dominant Windows
operating system -the central nervous system crucial to most 'personal computers--'- to try to dominate

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Fisher, Taft don't let up
attacks during debate

900

.

couldn't

said.
Clark ended his e-mail by.offering
" to quietly share some of my think·ing with you. No one in my organization kn~ws about this message."
Netscape's chief eXecutive officer,
James Borksdale, testified about the
e-mail Wednesday in his second day
of cross-examination by Microsoft

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 121

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) --,- Lee
Fisher and Bob Taft say they are tired

Clark , in hi s message, expre ssed
com~anies

. '

Hometown Newspaper

'M·i

own inv itation.
" You might take an equity position in Nel&lt;eape. " Clark wrote.
The message was sent during a
period·when Netscape was the leader
in browseiS, which let people see
informat ion on the fntemel. '
regret the rwo

1998 BUICK LESABRE

Leather interior, memory power seat, autom.atic
Climate Co'ntrol. Choose from "3" Factory
Program cars! Low Mfi••J

' federaJ court antitrust trial . Microsoft

wa."' merely a resporlse to Ne.t scape's

Meigs County's

I

FIRST--HA.ND LOOK- Sen.
Shoemaker, left, and Rep. John Carey visited the
Pomeroy Elementary School Thursday morn·
ing to gel a first-hand look at the Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development's
Seniors Teaching and Reaching Students
(STARS) program. At the school 11 volunteers spent 1 0-to 15 hours a week tutoring
students In · kindergarten through fourth

grade In subject areas relating to the fourth
·grade proficiency examination. Pictured with
students from the left, Mike Ball, Meguml
Swan, Felicia See, Cassandra Patterson,
Candy Lambert and Alex Johnson, are two
of the volunteers, Ethel Wolfe, standing, and
Ellen Johnson seated front. The program Is
funded through the state with volunteers
receiving m!laage and a stipend.

6·7-~

9

Editorial~

2

Lor.\ I
Sports

.1

.t

\Vcather

.\

Lotteries
' Q!i!Q
Pick .1: 6t&gt;J : Pick .t : 'll70
Bu~·kq' l• S : ~ - tl - 11 · \ 1 ) -14

W.VA.
o;oily .1: (}) ~ naily .t : 214.1

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