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\Time Out For Tips

I

Becky Baer Meigs County Extension Agent, Family and Consumer
Sciences/ Community Development
' Now that the holiday season is here,
do you feel like you will never get ahead
....,__......:_-"-' of the bills when ihey stan coming in?
Does it seem like no matter how hard
you try. you keep going deeper and deeper into debt? Throughout the year do you wonder how to accumulate enough money

for a down payment on a house' Does it appear as if you can' t
,.

the new MONEY 2000+ program offered ~y Ohio State University Extension through the Meigs Coqnty office provides
financial education .to ao.;;sist participants to -set a financial goal
and practice strategies to meet it.

MONEY 2000t is a program designed to help participants
increase savings and/or reduce consumer debt by an amOunt of

their choice. You can learn how to set realistic financial goals,
plan and track spending. as well as ways to save money for the
imponant things. The money you save may be for a child 's edu-

cation. to purchase a much-needed electric drill or to take a longdreamed about \'acation .

For a$ 10 annual enrollment fee. MONEY 2000+ panici pants
receive a start- up packet of financial worksheets, an optional

computer analysis of consume r debt , a monthly MONEY 2000+
neWsletter and periodic. opponunities to rccejvc supplementary
financ ial education materials and participate in spec ia l programs.
For fnore · in forma ti on or an enrollment fonn·. please conta~t

the Ohio State University Exte nsion Office in Meigs County at
PO Box 32, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. The phone number is 740992-6696. and we arc located on Mulberry Heights in the basement of the fanner County Ho me . You won·t want to miss this

opponunity to do something positi ve to improve your family or
household financial well -being.

TURNS ONE - Tiffany Renee
Colburn, daughter of Brad and
Janelle Neutzling Colburn, celebrated her, first birthday on Nov.
9 with a party given for her at
McDonald's of Pomeroy.
·
Attending were her grandparents, Jerry and Connie Colburn
of Gallipolis and Bill and Sharon
Neutzling of Chester. Others
there were Christina and Bradly,
Jr. Colburn; Bruce, Becky and
Keyana Ward! lisa, Marie; Jen-.
nlfer and Jerry "Bub" Colburn;
Kay Frederick; Amy Brown; Jodi
and Krista Martin; Rick, Rene,
Ricky and Breanna Colburn;
Tracy Collins; Robert Strohl;
Boyd, Jill and Janna Montie;
Tammy and Brittany Angel;
Buck, Sue and Crystal Johnson;
Tim, Lori, and Collin Neutzling;
and Karen, Johnathan and
Jenny Casto.

held. December birthdays recognized
were Cindy Bateman, Ca.'OI Eberts,
Lisa
Queen, Sandra Tillis and Dorothy
was held by Eleanor Cin:le of Heath
United Methodist Church was held Woodard.
S.indra Walker, scholarship comreccndy at the church.
Mary Byer, president welcomed mittee cbainnan. spoke on sending
the group with a reading and gave the handwritten letters to officials against
blessing. Devotions were given by mandatory social security for teachers.
Members auending from Meigs
June Duffield. Games were played
with prill!s going -.to Katie Childs and County were Rosalie Story, ,Wendy
Megan Andrews. The group had a gift Halar, Dorothy Woodard,. Sandra
exchange followi ng the catered dinner. Walker and Nellie Parker.
The next meeting will be a carry-in
Attending were Megan Andrews,
dinner
on Jan. 2} at II a.m. at Trinity
Euvetta Bechtle, l'ylargie Blake, Abby
Church,
Pomeroy.
Blake, Donna Byer, Mary Byer,
Lynn Benschoter was a guest at the
Nancy Cale, Twila Childs, Katie
~
Childs, Emma Kay Clatworlhy, Missy meeting.
'
Conde. June Duffield, Susan Eason,
Stephanie Alexander, ,Maxine Gaskill, Zion Church of Christ Christmas
Jennifer Harrison, Megan Harrison, festival
The Zion Church of Christ cele-·
Pauline Honan, Julie Hubbard, Pat
Philson, Paula Roush. Edna Russell. brated the "Spirit of Chrisunas" with a
Jessica Evans. Juanita French. Megan dinner held Dec. I I. The theme of dec Sigman, Kay Spencer, Vemagaye Sul- orations was "Wihter Wonderland".
Following the meal. a program of
livan, Tori Sullivan, Carol Tannehill,
spec
ial music, readings and a skit were
Frances Thomas. Irene Warner, Mary
presented.
Wingett. and Mary Wise.
Attending were Grace Warner,
Marjorie Warner, Dick Warner, Eliza·Delta Kappa Gamma
A Ch11stma' program highlighted beth Smith. Carrie Wears, Virginia
the recent meeting of Alpha Omicron Wyatt , Ida Murphy. Jeff and Peggy
Chapter. Delta Kappa Gamma at the Bole. Bill , Tammy, Baron and Kaitlin
Dummiu, Don Lamben, Becky Stein,
Senior Center in McArthur.
The program featured singer Tom Roger, Connie, Whitney and Lindsay
Me Williams and speaker Rev. Mel Watson. Johnathan Peters, Mona MarFranklin. McWilliams selections tin , Helen Watson, Dorothy Reeves,
included "Let It Snow", "Winter Won- Dan and Pat Arnold, Jack Elarn, Carderland" and "Silver Bells".
.. Franklin gave the grace before the
meal served by the Senior Citizens.
Tables were decorated in a holiday
motif. The 'tandles, candy canes, and
apple ornaments were given as favors.
Second Vice President Pam Toon
conducted the business meeting. Officers' reports were given. A homemade
Christmas ornament exchange was jk
Circle boldo holiday ~nliiK't'
The annual holiday dinner party

I
t!6
99Iii • Iii· tJ
6) 6)

To off~r sto~ suggestions, repo.rt late·
breakmg news and offer news t1 ps .

-

Wed

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drivers and home owners have
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only fair to charge you less for
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.
I

•

Tomorrow: Flurries
High: 20s; Low:10s

Wednesday, Dec. 23rd
'' .
at
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ehd 1eld.e.r"' ~ ;llr,le&gt;r

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••
'

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Time Is
Running
· Out!

•
• ' -1'

*

Southern boys beat South Gallia, Page 5
Don't build your life around a man, Page 7
In defense of Hastert, Page 20

Meigs County's

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UI,IL 9:

MEDINA (AP)- A former Stale Highway Patrol trooper has admitted he wrote hogus reports crediting him wilh writing traffic tickets that

never were issued .
Timothy Housion, 31, who bad served at the patrol's Medina post,
pleaded guilty Monday to eight misdemeanor courts of falsifying records
and was sen1eneed to three months of house arrest. Medina County Common Pleas Judge J~dith A. Cross also placed him on probation for two
years.
,
Houston has been fired, but is appealing his dismissal.
Authorities discovered that several citations Houston claimed to have
wrillen between July 1997 and April 1998 were neither handed out lo
motorists nor filed with the local municipal court.
Authorities said Houston didn 'I receive any benefit from failing to
hand out the citations and the patrol doesn't benefit financially from writing tickets.
MEDINA (AP)-' A young woman has appealed her conviction in the
in a plastic bag in the basement
ofherhome.
·
"
• ,. ·
,
An illtor,ney filed the 58-page appeal Tuesday with the 9th Ohio Court
of Appeals on behalf of Audrey. Iacona, 18, of nearby Granger Township.
. The appeal said thai prosecutors withheld evidence, police conducted
an illegal search and her trial attorney was ineffective.
Her attorney, Orville E. Stifel II, asked that the conviction be dropped
and the case be returned to Juvenile court. Otherwise, he said, the case
should return to common pleas coun because of trial errors.
The case began May I, 1997, when Iacona, then 17 and a cheerleader
al Holy ' Name High School in
Parma Heights, gave binh in the
basement The baby hoy was seven
to eight weeks premature . and
weighed 3.8 pounds. •
Last February, a jury fo~tnd
Today's
lacona guilty of . involuntary
2 Sections - 20 Pages
manslaughter. She was sentenced to
Calendar ·
7
eight years .in prison. Sbe has been
-"'a"'a"ss"l"'n"'ed'-s-----''--_- -i free on bond pending her appeal.
1 18
Cargo plane makes forced
Comics
19
landing; no InJuries reported
Editorials
2
CLEVELAND (AP) - A cargo
Local
plane with ice on its wings that was low
S rts
4-6
on fuel hit an antenna as it made a forced
landing at Oeveland Hopkins InternaWeather
3
tional Airpon. There were no injuries.
The pilot was the ooly Pe&lt;son oo
Lotteries
board, said John Hogan of the Federal
Aviation Administration.
OHIO
The Douglas DC-3 qugo plane,
Pick J: 6-9-1; Pick 4: 0·6-6-4
1 by Miami ·Valley Aviation of
.
ow.ned
. Buckeye 5: 4--10-14-20-26
Middletown, made the. unscheduled
W.VA.
landing
at 12:50 a.m. Tuesday to have
Daily J: 9-0-9; Dally 4: 8-0-6-0
the ice buildup removed and be refu0 1998 Ohio Valley Pub.li.olhing Co.
eled.

Good Afternoon

Sentine

DAILY

• • •

Houre: 9-9 Friday
9-8:00 Saturday
1-5:00 Sunday

"FREE PARKING
'FREE GIFT
WRAPPI~G

Free Gift Wrap • Gift Drawings • Free Parking

'he SHOE PLACE

The board is currently considering stockpiling soil al
the construction site and beginning some work in the
spring, making the site ready for construction. ·
"It se~ms like things aren't moving very fast We wanl
them to move faster," he said.
'
One bright spot is that the district sold the bonds for
project earlier this month at 4.81 percent, 1.19 percent
lower than the 6 percent carl ier projected.
,
Although Lawrence said he does nol know at this
point what the savings will be, it means the project will
cost local taxpayers a liiUe less and allow more money
to go toward construction.
In other business, the board approved Stephanie J.
Hysmith, Kristen Bond and Ruth Dudding as substilule
teachers for the remainder of the school year and
approved Anthony Frederick as a substitute custodian.
The board also approved liability insurance coverage
for the next three years with Harcum-Hyre insurance
Agency Inc. of Columbus at an annual premium of

$2,353. The board also added elementary school PTOs,
and junior and senior high athletic boosters lo lhe insutance at no expense to lhe district, with each 'group
responsible for paying its $70 premium.
. .'
The board tabled ali agreement with MGM Drive
Righi to provide drivers' training beginning Jan. 1
though June 30 at a cost of S169 per student. The stu~
dents will pay·S I I9 each; payable in two payments, add
the State Department of Education will reimburse t11e
district $50 per student.
The board elected board member Dave Kucsma president pro tern for t~e organizatioJlal meeting which wijll
be held, Jan. II, 6 p.m. at the high school. Followjng tht
mganizational meeting, the board is to meet again with
Pottmeyer and Tokarski concerning the building projc~:
Also· present were Treasurer Dennie Hill, board Pres'
ident Bob Collins, and ,board members Doug Lillie ari~
Ron Cammarata. Absent was board member Marty
Morarity.
·

By LAURIE ASSEO
.
Aeaociatad Preaa Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - it's a short walk
across the street fro'!' the Supreme Court 10 the
Capitol, where .Chief Justice William H.Rehnquist
would preside over President Clinton's impeachmenl .lriai.
Bul the trip will take him from the relative
anonymity of the television-free court into millions of American living rooms.
Rehnquist would be only the second chief j,uslice to preside over a presidential
impeachment trial, but the first to
conduct al least some of the proceedings on TV.
While the high-profile . trial
might mean be would no longer go,
virtually unnoticed on his daily
sarolls ·outside the Supreme Court
building, mill~ coun watchers say
be is a good fil for the role.
"He will run a very fair, ef(i;
cient proceeding and' be will nol
allow it to get out of control," said
Washington Iawyer Theodore
Olson, who bas often argued
before lhe highest court.
Charles Cooper, a former law .
clerk to Rehnquist and a frequent
advocate before the high court,
William H.
predicted the chief justice would
use his authority to keep an impeachmenl trial
"focused on the facts that are relevant and keep
the extraneous or purely political stuff to a minimum."

Rehnquist is . keeping his thoughts about an
impeachment trial to himself.
But allhe court, he is known for his calm, gentlemanly manner 'and ability to run a tight ship.
The 74-year-old Rehnquist, nominated by President Nixon, joined the high courl in 1972.
He became the nation's 16th chief justice when
promoted by President Reagan in I 986 :
He is one of the.court's most conservative members but is well-liked by colleagues of ail ideologies.
Rehnquist seemingly hates to waste time.
He ,keeps oral arguments to a strict one-hour
limit and has shortened the justices' private confer~nces .

When a major snowstorm shut down most of
Washington in January 1996, the chief justice kept
the Supreme Court open for business.
At the Supreme Court, the chief justice acts as
presiding officer and has one of nine votes. AI a
.
.

appointment of
new 'l're Chl'ef

Senate impeachment trial, Rehnquist would have
no vote and a limited role as presiding officer.
He would rule iin questions involving evidence
II
and other incidental m~tters, but a simple majority
Pomeroy Village Council will wail uniil
vote of senators could override his judgment.
Rehnquist already is somewhat of an expert on next year before replacing Fire Chief Danny
Zirkle, who died Dec. 2.
impeachment:
AI Monday night's meeting of Pomeroy
His 1992 book, "Grand Inquests," detailed the
1868 Senate ·impeacbni~nt trial of President Village Council, Mayor Frank Vaughan read
Andrew Johnson, presided over by Chief Justice a letter from the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Salmon Chase, and the 1805 impeachment trial of Depanment, which appointed Chris Shank
Supreme Court Justice Samuel as acting fire chief following Zirkle's death.
Firefighter Tom Reed. asked if council
Chase.
Both were acquitted. would consider amending an existing resoluRehnquist said in each case, sen- tion thai currently requires the fire chief to
alors put aside partisan differ- reside within the village.
ences to reach verdicts that con· · Shank lives outside of, bul near the vii - ·
firmed the independence of the lage, off Staie Route 143.
judicial and executive branches.
Council ~cently amended a similar ordiTbc trials established that nance concerning lhe residency of· Police
"impeachment would not be a Chief Jeff Miller, who also lives outside of
referetidum on lhe public offi- the corporation line.
cial's performance in office;
Co!tncil President John Musser said he
instead, it would be a judicial would prefer to wait until the beginning of
type of inquiry," Rehnquist the new year before addressing the issue.
wrote.
He said the desire to postpone the deci"11 was nol any technical vio- sion is not a reflection on Shank, but rather
lation of the law that would suf- out of respect to the former chief.
fice, but it was the sort of violaIn addition, Tabby Swearingen was
lion of the law that would 'in accepted as a new firefighter.
Rahnquiet
itself justify removal from
Council also discussed finding a repl..,.office."
ment for Village Administrator John AndtrWhat would the Supreme Court do with Reh~ , · son, who has experienced health problems.
quist occupied ·b,y an impeachment trial?
. Musser said · one problem the village is
"I think our daily routine won't be affected by it, experiencing is finding a person with Anderbut the chief justice's cenainly would if he has to son's qualifications that the village can
preside," Justice Sandra Day O'Connor told a afford.
.
Anderson operates the water and sew"Be
group of high school students last week.
If the Senate convenes in the afternoons, .as cur- plants, village computers and writes aAd
rent rules require, the chief justice would be free to administern grants for the village.
.
hear cases argued earlier in lhe day.
Musser also said the village will have ;to
"So, presumably a little work could take place consider the issue of vacation. leave for pan(al the Supreme Court) in the mornings even lime village employees.
.
·.
though there might be a (Senate) proceeding in the
According to the Ohio Revised Code, pllllafternoon," O'Connor said.
·;
lime municipal employees are entitled lo paid
Even if he could nor hear a'rguments al the vacation leave, which has not been granted. ,
court, Rehnquist could read the transcripts and
Vaughan 'said he would check with 'lhe
vote on cases.
"Ohio Municipal League on the matter.
.
And if he truly haii no time to spare, the court
Council temporarily tabled the purchase of ·
has carried on with eight justices before.
a desk for the .police depanment, pendiilg
Ju'Stice Roberi Jackson missed an entire term in obtaining an additional price.estimate.
· 1945-46 when he served as prosecutor at the
Also present were Clerk Kathy Hysell and
Nuremberg trials, and confirmation battles kept the council members Geri Walliin, Scott Dillon,
seat eventually taken by Justice Anthony M. Dave Bailard, Larry Wehrung and George
Kennedy open for half of the 1987-88 term.
WrighL
'
.

.

Pickering: administration will resist any effort to revise .UNSCOM

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Hometown Newspaper

Impeachment role will move Pomer~y Village · ·
R:egfonal.Brie~ chief justice into spotlight Coun~il postpones
Trooper admits writing bogus traffic tickets

deal~ of a ·newhorn bab~.found smothered

One-Half Carat

Duke tames
Kentucky's
Wildcats
-Page4

Southern board gets good news, bad news on building project

Woman appeals conviction In 11ewbom's death

One Carat

.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 163

,.;}J1; ·""""

'

port s

o.c:.mber 23, 111118

Monday night's meeting of lhe Southern Local Board sures, such as using existing furniture including desks
of Education presented good news/bad news for the dis- and other items in the new. building. and by looking at
trict's building project.
different ways to do the excavation atlhe building site
The board mel with arehilecl Jack Ponmeyer and adjacent the high school in Racine.
construction manager Roland Tokarski to discuss the
Lawrence said the district would likely receive a
status of the building project, which includes a new ele- credit from the facilities commission for building on its
mentary school and additions to the existing high own propeny, a credit equal to the value of the propeny.
school.
"We want to go back to the facilities commission and
The district is still awaiting word on additional fund- say This is what we've done, now what can you do?',"
'ing by the Oh io School Facilities Commission to com- said Lawrence.
plete the project which is, according lo Pollmeyer and
The bad news is that the dilemma is threatening to
Tokarski, "underfunded" by the state by about $1,.8 mil- delay lhe project, which is scheduled for completion by
lion.
lhe beginning of the 2000-2001 school year.
Assuming cost estimates· by Tokarski are not too
The architect designing the building cannot go any
high, the distrjct is working with t)Je facilities commis- funher until he knows the dollar amount be is dealing
sion to secure more fu)lding.
.
. with, explained Lawrence. .
..
"We h~ve got no commitment from them," said
"It's getting lo the point where it's going to delay the
Southern Local Superintendent James Lawrence. .
project,• he said. "if we don't.do something really quick,
Board members discussed so111e cost-cutting mea- it's going to gel to that point."

Shop until Midnight

'

(

Today: Snow showers
High: 20s; L.oW:20a

'

.9l.CQUISifJ109{S ']19{1£ Jt£WEL9?3

~

Weath er

olyn Kesterson, Wilma Davidson, the hospital and that Margaret
Joanne Gillogly, Harley and Kathryn Amberger and Opal Hollon have been
Johnson, LoRn and Mary Coleman, ill.
Elizabeth lbuemer, Nonnan and AUe- '
A leUer was read from Bulah
gn Will, Jay Proffitt. Mm:tha Varian, Maxey. The books will be audited
Audra Morrison, Joe and Rowena Dec. 30 at Mary Jo Barringer's home.
Young. Kay McElroy and Ann LamAttending weR Elizabeth Hayes,
bett_
Doris Grueser, Ella Osborne. Joann
Ritchie, Marcia Keller, Erma Cleland,
Lillian Demosky, Eva Robson. Beny
Daugbten at America
A holiday dinner and program Young, Shirley Beegle, Sandra Wbite,
highlighted the recent meeting of Ruth Smith, Goldie Frederick. Gary
Chester Council 323, Daughters of Holter, Betty Denny, Jean Welsh,
Everett Grant, Charlotte Grant,
America. held a1 the hall.
Ella OsbOrne presided over the Kathry,n Baum, Julie Cunis, Mary
meeting. Pledges to the Christian and Barringer, Laura Nice, Helen Wolfe,
American flags were given and Esther Smith, Scottie Smith, MarMatthew . 2:1-8 were read. The first garet Amberger, Mary Holter, Opal
stanza of the Star-Spangled Banner Hollon, Thelma White, Inzy Newell
and Pauline Ridenour.
was sung .
II was reported that Iva Powell is in

*M*

HAS BIRTHDAY Savannah Rose Bailey, daughter of
Boyd and Toni Bailey, observed
her first birthday Dec. 15 with a
Wlnnla-the-Pooh themed party
at the home of her grandfather,
Roy L. Bailey.
Others attending were her
maternal grandmother, Crystal
Sellers; J. D. and Steven Sellers;·
Roy Lee, Crystal and Sabra Bailey; Tommy Bailey and Crystal;
Nikki, Vikki and Justin Young;
Dion · Jones; Damon Fisher;Dawn and Cody 'Taylor; Wendy
and Elizabeth Shuler; Jack,
Rh9nda and Stacy Lyons; Tanner, Branden and Serena Davis;
Terry, Rochelle and Dimitri
Lamm; Anita, Carnie and Courtney Callicoat.
Sending gifts were Dorothy
Bailey, the paternal grandmother; Angel Young, Jenni Sellers,
Christie Cooper and Jeremy
Smith.

The·Sentinel News Hotline

•

Social Scrapbook

We Give Mature
·Drivers, Home
Owners cind
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

SAVANNAH ROSE BAILEY

-

Tuesday, December 22, 1998

.

TIFFANY RENEE COLBURN

____

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

save a nickel ?

_

t.:.~~~iN(tvVii=HOi=tfl~S::-ifciirnji&amp;i;rj;tif•syH;~;;Eij~::.

WITH
- Youngsters at
Eiamantary School headed up a holiday food drive for
Meigs Coun·
ty United Methodist Cooperative Pariah Food Bank. Youngsters
· shown with flfth-gradt ttacher Shelly Barr and Rev. Brian Harkness of the Racine United Methodist Church are, from left: front
• Stephania Snyd~r, Chria Burkhammer, 11aathar Cundiff,
Bradley Brown, Dani!ll Imboden and .Breanna Taylor; rear •
Amber Hill, Samantha Gray, Jonas Hart, Stacy Snyder, Ryan
Amberger and Shyla Jarrell.
I

17,000 and 20,000 will remain stationed in the
By BARRY SCHWEID
region indefinitely, Cohen said.
.
AP Diplomatic Writer
Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni, who heads the
WASHING1UN (AP) - Battling to save the
U.N. weapons inspection system, the Clinton U.S. Central Command responsible for the Gulf
administration stood firm Tuesday on lhe authority region, said for the first time that heavy lraqi ,antiof Richard Butler and his commission to decide aircraft fire forced some U.S. planes to abandon
how to operate in iraq.
· · their planned targets.
"We did not put pilots at risk to fly in for a tar"it is up I() UNSCOM to decide hqw it can be
inost effective in the pursuit of the mission," get that wasn't essential," Zinni told reponers
Undersecretary of State Thomas Pickering said of aboard a plane flying him and Cohen to the Persian
Gulf to meet with U.S. troops and Arab leaders.
the U.N. Special Commission on Iraq.
Accompanying Cohen and Zinni were members
Three or the five permanent members of the
U.N. Security Council - Russia, China and of Congress and several entenainers who planned
France - objected to lhe four-day U.S. and British to perform in a concert aboard the USS Enterprise
bombing attack that followed Iraq's refusal to sub- on Wednesday. ·
Pickering told a news conference that the Unil mit to inspections of its suspect weapons sites.
In the aften:nath of lhe bombing, the three Secu- ed·Siates would be willing to consider boosting an
rity Council members could be gelling ready to try exemption that permits Iraq to sell $5.2 billion
to lift an eight-year-old U.N. oil embargo on Iraq, won~ of oil every six months provided the prorevise the inspection oommission and force out ceeds are used for food and medicine.
With oil prices in decline, more oil may have to
Richard Butler as its chief. ·
be
sold
to purchase food, although Iraq is deliber·
Any move in the Security Council to lift the
ately
limiting
its production, the senior American
sanctions could be killed by a U.S. veto, the State
diplomat
said.
'
Depanment said.
And, ·Pickering said, the Un ited States would
Meanwhile, Secretary of Defense William
take "a careful look" at a Russian ·proposal to conCohen ordered a halt Tuesday to additional emergency deployment of U.S. forces to the region ,in vene the 22 political commissioners next month for
anticipation of a possible military counterattack an "updated assessment" of UNSCOM 's opera- ·
tions.
,
.
from Iraq that never materialized.
But he dismissed France's proposal to change
Cohen approved the return to their U.S. bases of
the six B-1 bombers, 10 A-10 anti -tank aircraft, 10 the inspection system. The United States intends to
KC-10 tankers now on the Indian Ocean island of keep relying on " the techni cal and professional
Diego Garcia, and 13 of 15 B-52 bombers, also on expertise" of Butler and his commission, Pickering
said.
Diego Garcia.
·
·
"II is up to UNSCOM to decide how it cart be
Even with these departuros, a force of between ·

most effective, and intervention by the Security
Council in dictating the work, role, personnel system and activities of UNSCOM ... would not be
wise, would not be effective and would not be
acceptable," he said at a news conference.
Pickering flew to New York on Monday to dis·cuss 'the U.S. view with U.N. Secretary-General
Kofi Annan. And Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright spoke by telephQne Tuesday with Russian
Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov.
Russian ambassador Yuli Voronstov, who was

recalled by President Boris Yeltsin last week to
protest the attack on Iraq, is due to return here later
in the week, Pickering said.
France's attempt to change the inspection team
as a me ans of inducing Iraq to cooperate with
weapons inspections was rejected Monday by
Tariq Aziz, the deputy prime minister.
" Richard Butler is a cheap pawn in the hands of
the Americans," Aziz sai.d. " He is not the is5ue.
The issue is ·the American and British position dur· '
ing the whole period, whi ch prevented the Security Co uncil from making ·any serious effon to lift
the sanctions. "

Pickering said Tuesday that the Security Coun- ·
cil would review the sanctions if .Iraq cooperated
with U.N. weapons inspectors.
"But the burden is on Iraq to demonstrate its
absolute and authoritative commitment to cooperation," he said.

"If it does not permit UNSCOM to come back,
then .it has selected sanctions in perpetuity" if it
mai ntains an arsenal of weapons of mass destruction, inoves against Kurds in Iraq orathreatens its
neighbors, Pickering said.

�·'

Wednesday, December 23, 1998

&lt;
Commentary
The Daily Sentiael
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-W2-2156 • Fax: W2-2157

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

' .

DIANE HILL

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Man~~g&amp;~

Controller

n. SentiiteJ •::rkD¥ww,.,.,. to 1M Hltor- from twdtwe on • ·rwo.d rang. of top.

•

01' leH) uw tiN INrel ctt.nc. of Nlng p b"rr..d.
J"IJ*f' , . . .,.. ,..r.n.t~ and all mq N fkllfM Efdl Mould lnciiMM • .,gnallirw.
• td ,.., •nd ' ~ plttltW ,......,.,._ S,Uty • dlife#IIINN'• ••w{olfA.C. to • ~
riDue attlcle or,.,., .,., to: un.r. to , . .,//tor, .,.,. Sentine-l. 111 Court $1.,

b. Shorl ,_,.,. (300 YIIOit»

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Olrlo of61W; O&lt;, FAX to

7~11112-215$.

.~ Fo undatI. 0 n .of
'.A
• · . 0 h1
•.0''
· ppa I.aC.h1an
jNill be a reality
&lt;~

.

·

.

.-.
.:: Everyone in our part of Ohio owes thanks to a broad
:P&gt;alition of ·political and community leaders that fought
::for start-up funding for the "Foundation of Appalach,ian
::ohio" - a new organization that has the potential to be a
" ::crucial tool in ongoing efforts to guide this region into the
•
·
::next cen1!Jry.
:; : Six months after Congressman Strickland's staff and
:;Southern Ohio community leaders met with the Appalachi:~ n Regional Commission (ARC) seeking funds to create
' ..,
~:an · Appalachian Ohio nonprofit organization, the Con::Bressman last week announced a $164,000 ARC grant for
~ jbe project.
·
·
·
• ' A
. s
1 f h
Th F
d ·
fA
I h"
.: '
a resu t o t e grant,
e oun at10n o
ppa ac 1an
~:(&gt;hio, which will be the only nonprofit foundation focused
;;solely on Appalachian Ohio, will recruit and train new
~b
d
b
d ~
1
bl" h
•: oar mem ers an
our new e(llp oyees, esta IS pro::gram priorities and devise a marketing campaign to attract
£:a minimum of $2 million in new donations for the region.
;: : "This organization will be one of a kind, the only non-

~;profit

foundalion . focused 0n Appalachian Ohio," Strick-.
::landsaid."Becau,seofitsuniquefocus,itcanspecializein
~:dealing with challenges that are common in our part of
~"0hio. I look forward to working with the Foundation of
A
1 h" Oh"10 to 1mprove
·
h 1
d
d
.=ppa ac Jail
our sc oo s, our roa san
;jiur economy."
.
~:: Once established, the Foundation will cover all 29 couhrl1.es within Appalachian .Ohio. In partnership with other
•
~~ublic and priva!e resources, it will provide grants and
~~chnical assistance to Appalachian communities for eco; jomic development, employmenl, education and training,
• •
,
~~uman s~ryices, and physical infrastructure. .
~-: In addJIJon to the $164,000 ARC grant, pnvate grant· .
~1naking :foundalions and corporations have provided the
~~
- oundation of Appalachian .Ohio with a $142,700 match•~
:~g grant
,. •
·

·•~:._J oday In History
~lbr The Associated Press

•:• Today is Wednesday, Dec. 23, the 357th day of 1998. There are eight days·
'
·
·
. .
.
:. : On Dec. 23, 1823,- the poem "A Visit from St. Nicholas" by Cl.ement C.
•:Moore ("Twas the night before Christmas ... ") was published in the "Troy
~Il'lew York) Sentinel."
·
·
:-: On this date:
,
. •:0 In 1783, George Washington resigned as commander-in-chief of the
:j(rmy and retired to his home at Mount Vernon, Va.
•
~:: In 1788, Maryland voted to cede a HXl-square·mile area for the seat of
:~~e national government; about two-thirds of the area b~came the District of
r Columl&gt;ia.
• . '
·
In 1893, the Engelbert ·Humpcrdinck opera " Haensel und Gretel" was
: first pet(ormed, in Weimru:, Germany.
'
In 1928,the National Broadcasting Co. set up a permanent, coast-to-coast

t~eft in the year.

:::~:~~~~ ~~;~n!.s~orld

;
War 11, American forces on Wake lslandsurren·
;
In 1948, former Japanese premier Hideki Tojo and six other Japanese war
' leaders were executed in Tokyo.
In 1968, 82 crew members of the U.S. intelligence ship Pueblo were
1eleased by North Korea, i I months after they ~ad been captured.
• ~ ln. I 980, a state funeral was held in Moscow for former Premier Alexei
·:t-1. Kosygin, who had died Dec. 18 at age 76.
: ..In 1986, the experimental airplane Voyager, piloted by Dick Rutan and
2•ana ,Yeager, completed the first non-stop, round-the-world flight without
.4efueling as it landed safely at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
~ In 1995, a fire in Dabwali, India, killed 540 pcople, including 170 chil·
)!rcn, during a yCllr-end party being he)d near the children's school:
• Ten years ago: Pope John Paul II met with Vasser Arafal at the Vatican.
·!rhe pontiff told the PLO leader he believed Palestinians and Jews had "an
.ldentical fundamental right" to their own countries.
~ F1ve ye~ ago: President Clinton, under intense political pressure,
!nstructed h.ts attorney to give the Justice Department all records of his
. Jnvestment tn an Arkansas real estate partnership linked to a failed savings
)nd loan company.

~our representatives
Jn lhe U.S. Senale
: John Glenn (D)-503 Hart Building,.Washington, D.C. 20510; 202-224·
;3353; Fax: 202·224-7983; or. Room 600, N. High Street Columbus 43215
z; 14-469-6697
' .
'
; Mike De Wine (R) - . Room 104, Russell Senate Office Building, Wash·
.•ngton, D.C.; 202·2.24-2315; Fa~ 202·224-6519; or, Dime Bank Building,
200 _Putnam ~t.,Su1te 522, Manetta 45750, 740-373·2317; e-mail: senator
!;lewtnc@dewme.senate.gov; homepage: www.senate.gov/-dewine.
.
.In the U.S. House
'
~ Ted Strickland (D)- 336 Cannon House Office Building, Washington,
.p.c. 20515; 202·225-5705; · Fax: 202-225·5904; or, 1236 Gallia St.,
:Portsmouth 456(i2, 740-353-5171; toll -free : 888· 706-1833; Fax: 740-353·11014.
·tn the Ohio House
; John Carey (R) .- Ohio House of Representatives, 77 S. High St.,
'()Jiumbus 43266, 614-466·1366.
In lhe Ohio Senale
Mike Shoemaker. (D) - Ohio Senate Office Building, Pirst Floor,
Columbus 432 I 5, 614·466·8156

•

Henry
C.
Hartman
Snowfall likely tonight Henry C. Hanman, 64, Long Bottom. died Sunday,

Senators can do the right thing
WASHINGTON - We're in
the hoonestrctch.
Having run the gauntlet of
Ken Starr's mean-spirikd inves~­
gation and the House of Repro·
sentatives' highly partisan
impcachment process, Bill Gin·
ton faces a trial. of sorts, in the
United States Senate.
·
··
With Otief Justice William Rehnquist serving
as judge and the Senate's 100 members compris·
ing the jury, the president is to be tried for the low
crime of lying to a grand jury about his adulterous
relationship with Monica Lewinsky and obstruct·
ing Starr's probe of his tawdry affair.
But if justice is to be served in·this quasi-judi·

By The AIIMK I I tl "'-a
.
Snow will develop in the south lak jn the day into early evening, the Nation-

Gingrich last year for "providing unb'ue informa- impcMohment vok pushed throuah the House by
tion" to the Ethics Committee. Instead of chasing the Republican majority on the final day of a
him from office, the GOP lawmakers limited Gin· . lame-duck session. Next month, when the new
grich 's· punishment to a r&lt;:primand and $300,000 Congress is ~ted, there will be five mor&lt;:
Democrats in the House, enough to have defeakd
fine.
Then there is the matter of public opinion.
the obstruction of justice ~e.
In a criminal trial, the opinions of peOple
Just as the radical Republicans who impeached
beyood the jury should have no bearing on the Andrew Johnson 130 years ago lacked .biputisan
verdict. But in the political process of impeach· support for their action, today's GOP radicalJ
appear to many to be using the largely one-sided
men~ the will of the American people ought to
carry great weight in a decision to «:move an impeachment vok to seulc the sharp ideological
elected official from office. This especially is true diffcr&lt;:nces that mi&lt;krlie the move to oust Clinton.
when the target of.such an effQrt is the president
And finally, senators should thin!( about histo+
who, unlike the House members who impeach ry's lesson.
:
him and the senators who sit in judgment of him,
Most great nations erode from within long
is put in office by the vote of millions of Ameri' before they arc conquered by invading armieS
cans from across the nation.
from without.
Polls taken after last week's impcachmenrvok
To oonvict a popular president of a criminal

al Wcatber Service "'fllOted. Any significant snowfall should be near the Ohio
Riva cast of Cincinnati. Winds will remain generally light and will DOl be a big
factor today.
Afternoon high kffiperntures are exprded to be in tbe 20s.
Tonight skies will remain mostly cloudy to cloudy with light snow and Hurries oontinuing over the north. The light snow and Hurries will en&lt;l'over much
of southern Ohio but will linger into tonight or early Thursday near,the Ohio
River.
,
The record high for today wa&lt;62 set in 1933. The record low was -14sel in
1989.
.
Sunset today is at5:11 p.m. Sunrise Thursday will be at7:51 a.m.
Weather l'onast:
TOI)ighl...Snow. One. to two inches of snow accumulatioo is possible by
dawn. Lows in the \'PJltl kens. ught ~wind. Chance of snow 90 per·
ocnt
Thursday..$now 'likely in the morning, then remaining cloudy. Total aerumulation, two to four inches. Continued cold with highs near 30. Olance of

cial proceeding, in which the
jurors can vote to override the

snow 60 perceht

judge's rulings, the ~nators lllUSt
take into consideration a lot more

than the evidence that will be presented by House Republicans.
Impeachment, after all, is a

·-Obituaries·~
' ,

'"of1 ~n°!~;.ocracy·
thepcrception
fairness is sometimes as

important as the reality of equal
treatmen~ especially in the politieal arena. So, in judging the
obstruction of justice 'charge the
House has leveled against Clin·
ton, senators should consider that
body's failure to press a similar
claim against cigarette execu·
tives.
When proof surfaced earlier
this year that tobacco companies
had systematically hidden from
congressional investigators evi·
dence that smoking is addiclive,
the
Republican-led
House
showed little outrage for their
·
obstruction of justice - and no inclination to
·accuse these cash cows of GOP fund -raisers of
any criminal action.
.
If the Senate is to take seriously the call for
Clinton's removal from office because he alleged·
ly lied under oath while testifying before a grand
jury, it should weigh it against the relative slap on
the wrist House Republicans gave Speaker Newt

.'

()Hb
toil . . pold
. . pblelwd•

,,

jatotlior550aol.com
show a substantial majority of Americans oppose
ousting Clinton. In an NBC poll:, 62 percent said
the president should serve out the remaining two
years .of his term. In a CBS News/New York
Tomes poll, 69 percent said they think Clinton still
can be an effective president.
In deciding Clinton's fate, senators also should
take into account the partisan nature of the

offense in a court of law is one thing, to oust him
from office through a fractious political process is
quite another.
'
Most Americans would accept the first as an
act of justice, but will .reject the latter as a crash
political power play that makes a joke of the
proposition that ours is a "govemmentofthe peo·
pie, by the pcople, for the pcople."

·

annual rate qf $38.7 billion, $7
billion below that of 1990,
while production expcnses in
the same time rose $40 billion
to $195 billion.
For the farmers, the chief
culprits are a lass of exports to
Asia and low commodity prices.
And some of the declines in
commodities, which include the
basic raw materials for industry,
·can also be traced to the collapse of foreign economies.
Steel's problems are prim"arily ·with imports, and in the
opinion of steel makers you can
add the descriptives "unfair
and illegal" to the definition.
Stated simply, they say foreign·
ers are dumping steel here.
Dumping is when steel is
sold for less than production ~re than half of the respOndents say they givti gills to all their family memcosts, a practice outlawed in bers, spending an average of $53 on each present.
U.S. trade agreements with
other nations'. But it is apparently Japan is up 210 pcrceni, Korea 151
Not everyone is unhappy about
occurring on a massive scale, and percent, Ausl'ralia 603 percent; the situation. It enables carmakers,
from friendly nations.
Indonesia 643 pcrcent, Ukraine 159 for example, to restrain price increas" Based on C\)mmetcc Department percent, China 143 percen~ Russia es. It helps families hold the line on
data, the American Iron &amp; Steel 115 pcrcent.
food purchases, enabling them to
spend
mightily on other items.
Institute states that t.hird' quarter
The result of the decline of marimports rose to 12.,3 million net tons, kets and the increase of imports can,
)he Commerce Department is
a 56 percent increase over 7.8 mil· . be measured in low~r prices, lower now considering what to &lt;lo, but it
lion tons one year ago.
·
earnings or none, farm bankruptcies takes a long time between the time
The percentage increases for the and · job losses, some of them in government makes up its mind and
results begin to appear.
third quarter are stunning: steel from already po,or areas of the country. .

artman

1-

Sacred Heart Christmas services
Christmas services at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy wiil
begin Christmas Eve at 7:30p.m. with a Vigil Mass wilh participation of
the chtldren, and a choral presentation at 11:15 p.m. followed by Midnight
Mass. Christmas morning Mass will be held at 9:30 a.m.
-:

Dec. 20, 1998 inCam-

Scipio Township Trustees

.

The Scipio Township Board of Trustees will hold its year-end meeting
Dec. 30, 6:30 p.m. at the Pageville Town Hall. The 1999 organizational
meeting will follow.
·
;

Christmas airing slated

.

~JOS 1V 27, Pomeroy, will begin airing "Christmas Along th~ River~·
~gmnmg at 5 p.m. c:t'nstmas .Eve and Christmas day. The program con;

s1sts of all local solmsts, choirs and groups from Meigs, Mason, Gallia
and Jackson counties. The program will last approximately six hours. :

Meeting set

,·.

The Meigs County Records Commission will meet at 3:30 p.m. OR
Dec. 29 at the officeof the Meigs County CommisSioners, followed by the
meeting of the Automatic Data Processing Board at 4 p.m.
·

Cleveland scales down minority set-asides

CLEVElAND (AP) -The city Ohio Legislative Black Caucus.
will reduce by half the number of "It's painful and sad that the mayor
contracts set aside for minorities and has to ·make this decision."
women. the mayor announced. The
Several judges statewide have
move is in response to legal chal- ruled against Ohio's IS-year-old set·
· COWMBUS (AP)- Many tt10!J1·
lcnges to the city's affirmative aside law. which requires that and-pop gas stations around the ooun·
·action program.
minority businesses be given a por· try shut down their pumps Tuesday
Mayor Michael R. White said lion of some Sl'lle contracts for con· rather than pay to upgrade or replace
Tuesday that he would cut the num· slruction and for purchase of goods
ber of contracts set aside for minori· and services.
ty ·businesses from 30 percent to 15
The judges, including a . federal
TONIGHT
pcrcent and for females from 10 per· judge in Cleveland, ruled 1hat the.
"I'LL BE HOME FOR
CHRISTMAS "'
law was unconstitutional and that
cent to 5 pcrcent.
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
The changes are an interim step the stat~ had fa·i-ied to prove discrimSTARTING FRIDAY
and will be in effect from Jan. 1 ination against minority-owned
RUG RATS•
through June 30. City officials will businesses benefiting from the pro·
THE COLONY WILL BE

Small, independent gas stations
being forced to shut down pump~

use

t~e

time .to examine the court

gram.

underground tanks tO tltC!'t federal reJ·
ulations.
About 20,!XXJ gas statioi)S w6e
expected to miss the midnight deadline.
If they keep pumping gas on Wed~
day, they face fines of up to $11,tnl a .
day per tank.
.
•
"With the law, small businesses are
out and large companies are in," said
Michael Mohaierin.
!

. CLOSED DEC. 24

Dominic Ozanne, president of
Ozanne Construction Co., defended
White, saying the mayor would
maintain the city.'s existing set-aside
program if he could. "The mayor's
doing the right thing given the legal
environment that exists right now,"
sa id Ozanne.
White said Cleveland was the
. only Ohio city to change its rogram
·voluntarily and not under threat of a
lawsuit.
,
' "This country is a fundamentally
· different place on the question of
minority business enterprises and
female business enterprises than on
the day I started i'n this office,"
White said. "To disregard it would
not be in keeping with our responsi- .
bilities as public officials."·

448-0923

Sat···n
· g ·J·obs hl.gh.on .
y
:~~o~e ~i~!!~E!~n~?.!~e!e r~~dl~e~ Taft's priority 'list

. ~riends may ~II ':Vednesday, Decemper 23,1998 from 7-9 ·p.m. at the
. Ewmg Funeral Home m Pomeroy.

calls for assistance Tuesday. Units responding includedlc
•: .
CENTRAL DISPATCH .. "\
:; 2:07 a.m., Bucktown Road, Let~rt Falls, Catherine Wolfe, St. Joseph's
!'Hospital; ·
'
·
:: 5:51 a.m., Hysell Run Road, Rutland, Shelby Davis, Holzer Medical
·Center, Rutland squad assisted;
.
; 8:22 a.m., Main Street, Middleport , Walter Green, Pleasant Valley Hose
;pital;
,
·
· Hl:18 p.m., Arbaugh Addition, Tuppc~s Plains, Lisa Tucker, Camdel\·
:Clark Memorial Hospital, TupperS Plains squad assisted.
CHESTER VFD
"
2:55 a.m., Texas Road, garage fire at Alica Russet'! residence, no injuries
:reported, Pomeroy VFD and squad, Bashan VFD assisted. ·
'
POMEROY
,
: · 1:36 p.m .' , Holzer Meigs Clinic, Thomas Brown, HMC, Central Di'spatch
.squad assisted,
'
RACINE
4:56p.m., Oak Grove Road, Emma Adams, treated at the scene.

.,

.•

Hospital' news
Holzer Medical Center
, Discharges Dec. 22- Allen Durham.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Frank Doss, daught er, Gallipolis.
· (Published with permission).

·stocks

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 21'·%0)
, Community Ntws,;apcr Holdinp,lnt:,

Pubh5hed eve!)' afternoon, Mondar through
finday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Oh io Valley Publishing Comp~ny. Second class
postage paid at Pomeroy, Oh10.
Member: 1be Associated Press and the Ohio
Ncwspa~r Association.
Postm•ster: Send addr~s corredions to The
0Hily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

45769.

'
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

tion equipment, including a 5,000·1iter fermentation vessel, that . could be used in a bi'ological
weapons program.
The Russians secretly protested this find and
maintained thatlhe Iraqis had promised io use it
for "civilian purposes." But there's no evidence
that Iraq ever told the arms sellers that the vessel
was for pcaceful us 0s .
The behind·the-scenes Russi'an involvement
with the U.N. inspcction teams is part of a pattern
that U.N. and U.S. sources say is aimed at helping
Iraq (and Russia), not fuhheribg Western inter&lt;:Sts.
For instance, Primakov .labored tirelessly . to
put pro-Iraq Russian inspcctors on the U.N. teams
•• not just to satisfy Saddam, but to use those
inspectors as spies to pass information to Russian
intelligence. When several Russian inspectors
began to take their jobs too seriously and conscientiously ·• looking hard for evidence of banned
weaponry in Iraq's arsenal ·• Primakov secretly
threatened to cut off their paychecks.
The U.N. special commission on Iraq
(UNSCOM) responded by quietly putting the
hard-working Russian inspcctors on the U.N.
· payroll.
All . Russian inspcctors have been visited by
Russian intelligence officials to tip them off on
UNSCOM targets. After one such shakedown, the
U.N. team w.S blocked by the Iraqi military from
making what was supposed to be a surprise visit
to one site. They obviously had foreknowledge~
and UNSCOM officials presumed the source to
b~ Russian.
It is also, then, not surprisinJ! that Russia and
its prime minister continue to apologize for the
despot's deal-breaking. They have their own sub·
stantial overt and covert interests td protect.
Copyrlght11198, United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Announcements:

den-Ciark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
A constru~tion worker, he was born April 8, 1934 in Lebanon, Pa., son of
the late Percy and Florance Collins Hartman. He was a member of Local
1!185, .Parkersburg, and the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Pomeroy.
He is l'Utvived by his wife, Nara Hanman; two daughters and sons-in·
law, Marcella and Keith Weber, and Carla and Randy Kimes, all of Chester;
. seven grandchildren and one great-granddaughter; thr~e brothers. Perky
Hartman, Ralph Hartman and Kenneth Hartman, all of Lebanon; and two
sisters, Jean Swartz and Nancy Salsbury, both of Lebanon.
He was also preceded in death by two sisters and one brother. •
Services will ·be 10 a.m. Thursda in the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, with the
Rev. Victor Roush and the Rev. Amos Tillis officiating. Burial will be in the '
Chester Cemetery. Friends may call at the Ewing'Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
' rrom 7-9tonight.

cases and de.velop a new program.
City Law Director· Cornell P.
',
•
Carter described the reducrion as
Heniy. c. Hartman, 64, of Long Bottom, died Sunday, December 20, 1998 "an appropriate middle ·ground" ·
inCamden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, West Virginia.
during the transition to a new proA construc1ion worker, he was born 'April 8, 1934 in Lebanon, Pennsylva- gram that might be better able to
nia, son of the late Percy Hartman and Flora'nce Collins Hartman. He was a withstand a legal challenge.
member of Local 1085, Parkersllurg, and the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel '
"It's only a matter of time before
Cleveland's
program is challenged,"
inPomeroy.
He is survived by his wife, Nara Hartman of Long Bottom; two daughters Carter said. "It's a national trend."
and sons-in-law, .Marcella and Keith Weber, and Carla and Randy Kimes, all of
Cleveland's Minority Business
Chester; grandchildren, Josh and Jeremy Casto, Derek Weber, Christie Mills, Enterprise and Female Business
· Jessica, and Jason and Carly Kimes; one great-granddayghter, Kiera Casto; Enterprise .priigrams were models.
three brothers, Perky Hartman, Ralph Hartman and Kenneth Hartman, all of for· other cities considering set-aside
Lebanon; and two sisters, Jean Swartz and Nancy Salsbury, both of Lebanon.
plans.
' In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by two sisters and one
" I' think this action will be one of
brother.
·
pain for those people who had the
, Services will be held Thursday, December 24, 1998 at 1o a.m. in the Cal- benefit of this program," said Rep.
. vary Pilgrim Chapcl, with the Rev. Victor Roush and the Rev. Amos Till
1 1s offil · C.J., ·Prentiss, D-Cieveland, a sl~te
..ciatinj1.. Burial will follow in the Chester Cemeterv.
.
senator-elect and presideQt of the

Russi an .0 b j ect i0 ns· are S(;! If.- motivated
By Jack Ander.son
because it "divert(ed)" the forces of
and Jan Moller
Iraq and Iran from the struggle against
UNITED NATIONS
u.s. "imperialism."
,
Russia's unseemly objec\ions
The former Soviet apparatchik
in the U.N. Security Council
now dresses his objections to Ameri·
to the U.S. bombing, of Iraq
ca's Middle East policies in different
are prompted by their self·
language .. but the root is the same.
interests -- and constitute an
He deplores America's lone superpow·
attempt to hide more covert
er status, and meddles with dictators
support of Saddam Hussein,
and despots iq the Middle East as a
according to U.)'l. and intelli·
way of putting Russia back on the pol·
gence sources.
icy-making map.
"lt.is not coincidental to us
It also helps cement the Russ·
that the first ti m·e Saddam
ian-Iraq business relationship, contin·
Hussein caused a crisis in late 1997 about the uing a decades-long alliance between the two
inspection team Was the same time when we nations. Once U.N. .sanctions are abandoned,
began to uncover evidence of Russian involve· Russia expccts a hard-currency bonanza from a,
ment in their weapons programs," a l).N. official grateful Saddam regime. Among other things,
told our associate Dale VanAtta.
Saddarn has publicly pledged to buy thousands of
At least three times in th e last year and a half· tanks from Russia once the sanctions are lifted.
. before the latest bombing·· Russia has scored (·Both France and China, also in opposition to the
victories for Saddam against the Clinton adminis· . U.S. military strikes, expect arms and other pur·
tration and U.S. interests. In falll997, and Febru· chases from Iraq once sanctions are gone.)
ary and November of thi s year, the United States
A third reason for Primakov's support is to
was prepared to strike militarily to force Sad- protect Russia's covert support of the Iraqi mili-.
dam's compliance wiih U.N. weapons inspections tary complex.
before Russian Prime ,Minister Yevgeny Pri ·
The current crisis with Iraq actually began in
makov·intervened. Even the most casual observer late 1997, when Saddam first evicted U.N.
now understands that these diplomatic victories inspcctors by saying he would not accept a team
have rested on the word of a pathological li ar.
with Americans on it. He claimed the Americans
Primakov's mastery has been in negotiating were CIA spies. A precipitating factor for Sad·
deals that let Saddam continue doing what he dam's move was the discovery of initial evidence
wants while stavi ng off U.S. military attacks.
that Russia was secretly selling material to Iraq's
He sees great ben~fit for Russia in these biological weapons program.
·
effo(ts:
With a surprise inspcction, the U.S.-Ied team
. First, it has established a weak Russia as a had come across a documented 1995 agreement
strong player in at least one international arena. In between lh.e Russian government and Iraq to pro·
the 1980s, Primakov deplored the Iran-Iraq war . vide Saddam with highly sophisticated fermenta ·

-··-lhon

harMs. Oblluarloo

Henry C

N0 t a't 0 t aII y ha,ppy· h0 1•I d ay season

By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEWYORK(APJ - Whilegov- ernment and consumers have more
than enough spending power to
make this a financially successful
holiday season, there is gloom in
two ·important areas of American
business.
,
This is not to say that farming
and steel are alone among domestic
\ndustries with problems, but they
are certainly dealing with rrore than_
their share. And both ar&lt;: basic to
Ameri.ca's well-being.
Farmers have had a monumental
financial coU~pse, rather little of it
their o.,.)n doing. And despite spcnding $50 billion on modernizing since
the 1980s, steelmakers are losing ·
market share and jobs to.imports.
Assessing the cause isn't diffi·
cult: In each instance·, the collapse of'
Asian economies is at the root of the
problems. The Asian nu has indeed
.spread, no matter that some of Wall
Street discounts .its impact.
.
. The contrast with the general
well-being of so many ·areas of the
economy - consumers are on a
spending spree, government boasts
of balancing the budget, carmakers
are having a record year- is stark.
Net farm income through the first
half of the year wa' running at an

·,

Thursday night...M&lt;Nly cloudy. LDws in the mid teens.
Extended forecast
Christmas Day...Cioudy with a' chance of light snow. Highs in tbe upper 30s.
Satunlay...Cloudy with a chance of light snow. Lows in the mid 20s and
highs in the upper 30s.
'·
Sunday...Cloudy. A chance of light snow during the morning. Lows in the
20s and
in the
30s.

politic;tl, not a legal, process.
Whichistosaythatitisgovemed
more by the vagaries of our
democratic system, than by the

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

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Congratulations &amp; Best Wishes _to
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We have enjoyed the time that you
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From your Farmers ~ank Family.

.

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Am Ele Power .........:........... 46'~.
Akzo ................................. .......44
AmrTech ............................... &amp;o';.
Ashland 011 .......................... 48'/•
.AT&amp;T ..................................... 73~.
Bank One ..:.......;..................... 52)•
Bob Evans ............................ 251.
Borg· Warner ....................... :.48%
Broughton .......................... .17'\.
Champion· ........ :...... ,............. 10)•
Charm Shps ............................3•
City Holding ............................ 28
Federal Mogul ............ :........ 56''1.
Gannett ................................. 67i.
Goodyear .............................. 511.
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Limited ................................. 26'·
Oak Hill Flnl ............. :.,...:...... is \I
OVB ....................................... 41 ),
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Peoples ................................. 22~.
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AD/Shell ..................................49
Sears .................. :..................41 ';,
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.·
'
By PAUL SOUHRADA
with other slates, Ohio has no choice.
"We have to be competitive in
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio '(AP)
Ohio," he explained. "And we have
Gov.-elect Bob Taft said state eco- taxes that are not competitive, particnomic development officials will do "ularly the pcrsonal property tax on
everything they can to keep General ' inventoi-y.
.
Motors from closing its Lordstown
"It's not good policy to give a tax
assem.blx plant.
incentive to move from One part of
"The Lordstown situation is a ·the state to another, but if there is any
major economic development priori· kind of a real prospect that a COIJ1pa·
ty.~', Taft said in a year-end interview
ny is moving out of state ... we have
this week." It's vital that we keep the ' to take that into account," he added.
Lordstown plant."
Company-specific giveaw~ys are
Reports las\ spring that GM great, but what business really wants
planned to close the plant near is a busineS.-friendly state, said Jim
Youngstown sent a jolt through the Woodward, chief lobbyist for the .
Mahnnirig Valley region, where 5,200 Ohio Manufacturers Association.
hourly employees put together
That means continued tinkering
Chevrolet Cavaliers and Pontiac Sun- with the state's workers' compcnsa·
birds.
tion system, deregulating the electric
GM responded to the reports by industry so companjes can shop·
saying that no decision had been around for their supplier, and getting
made. al:xJut the factory \ future and rid of taxes such as tOhe invent.ory tax,
that efforts have been made to cut which companies say puts Ohio at a
production costs at th~ plant.
disadvantage, Woodward sai'd.
The company "s response didn •t
"Those are the things thut really
calm the fears of area Obusiness lead- figure into decisions," he said.
ers and politicians. who lately have ·
Taft pro'mised that electric compe·
been trying to put together a package tition and eliminating the inventory
of state and local incentives similar to taxes would be priorities of his
the $250 million deal Chrysler Corp. administration.
got this year to keep its Jeep plant in
But the taxes on utilities an'ct
Toledo. ·
inventory account for a large percentTaft didn't say whht the state will
age of the budgets of local school disdo to entice GM to stay. It alre~dy has tricts . . Until lawmakers figure out a
a mngC of economic incentive proway to restructure the tax system
grams that range from low-interest
without destroying school budgets,
loans and tax breaks to job-training the state will continue to rely on indi·
grants.
1 , vidual packages of tux incentives, the
Taft also said he would cioS.ly governor-elect added.
watch the situation in PiketOn , whefe ,
United ,.States Enrichment Corp. is
taking control of a uranium enrich·
me~t plant the federal government
formerly·owned.
. Lockheed Martin previously opcr·
ated the plants. The transition is
expected to be completed early next
'
'
year. the company has said the south·
ern Ohio plant .a.similar plp~t in Pad·
ucah, Ky., need to become inore effi·
ci~nt to meet foreign competition.
USEC, which employs 4,000 pco·
pie at the two plants, became a private
company in July after a public stock
offering. The plants were built in the
1950s, when they produced uranium
for nuclear weapons.
· Taft said that although he doesn't
want to engage in e~-onomic warfare

~

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OH 45769

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Member F.D.I.C.

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·-LEND£R

�•

'
•

Sports

•

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page4
Wednesday, December 23, 1998

Southern boys beat
South Gallia 67-57,
get first win of year

No.
2 Duke beats No. 3 Kentucky 71-60
..

By The Associated Pr~s
: Duke got revenge agatn st
~entu cky. and Georgia Tech got
some pride back against North
Carolina.
: El1on Brand scored 22 points as
second-ranked Duke beat No. 3
, J{emucky 71-60 Tuesday night in- the
Jimmy V Clas,ic at East Rutherford.
N.J .
: TraJan langdon added 12 points
fllr the Blue Devil s (Il-l), who
avenged a heartbreaking loss 10
Kentuc ky in last season's NCAA
!touth Rcgtonal final.
• "They had the killer instinct.''
Kentucky coach Tuhby Smith satd.
~ Every time we made a btg shot,
they had an answer."
; Georgta Tech. coming off a 41 Jtoint los s to Kentucky. rebounded
with a &gt;tunning 66-64 upset of No. 7
~orth Carolina at Atlanta.

• The Yellow Jackets (8-2. 1-0
ACC) won c,·en though they failed
to make a licld goal in the final cigh1
tpinutc&gt;.
"We have a lot of heart." said
J.as&lt;in' Flmd. who led Tech with 18
point~ . ·· \\'e were really embarrassed
(hv the Kcntuckv loss) and we wantclto come out imd ... prove that we
\\~T!.!n'l a tcrrihlc team ."
Georgia Tech led 62-50 after
Ah•in June ~ hit a turnaround jumper.
but managed only four free throws

the rest of the way. Nonh Carol ina
(12-2. 0-1) cut Tech', lead to 66-63
with 1.52 left on Max Owens' threepmnter, but couldn't complete the
co 1eback.
fa
ey were blown out
ltke that m their pre,·ious game).
you knew they 'd come back ready to
play," said Nonh Carolina's Brendan
Haywood.
h) ·their NCAA tournament
matchup last season. Duke blew a
late 17-point lead to Kentucky,
which went On to win its second
nati onal chan;pionship in three years.
On Tuc&lt;day 01ghl, however. the Blue
Devils took a 16-point lead early in
the second half and refused to let the
Wildc·als back in the game .
'' We didn ' t want what happened
to u&lt;Jast year to happen again," said
Duke guard William Avery, who had

Regular-season action

Regular-season act inn

Ea~l

t-:a'it

Cui gale 52 Q1unmpt;te -'9
Rulgtm Rl. 1\.lar)land 61
\':~ n drrll tlt KO (icorge W:.Js hmp.wn 7:!. 1! OT!

B o~to n

U 66. Mnnhanan -l6
l 'a nl ~m ~ K!l . Duquesne 71
Cem Conne , ucu t St 72 Nortlk·a~tt:rn 07
DLlkL' 7I . Kt·ntut-k)' 60
Geor~t'tn\\ n IJ.l. Md -E~ ll' fll Shnre 66
Lafa)'I.' Ue 79. Tuwmn 7b
l'ut ~b ur~h 7S. Howard "'1
Pu rdue ~U South Carohna 6-l
Rul!!l' r ~ 60. Pnnct:ln n -19
St. John's Bl. F;1tr l c1~h Dtckln; on 5-'
Vill anO\ a S6. R1der 7J
West V•rg_rnta K2 Robt.·n Morns 67

South
?0. Cm•: 111na11 59
l'onland S1 6·&amp;. Nrw Orleans 61.
Somh Caroltna 98. S. Carolma St Ii i
Tulane 7-1. Southcm Mi ss 52
Va (ommonwcJit h ~6 ." Sacred He;u t 58
LoUI~vtlle

.\lidwt!sl
IJ6. E. MKhtgan 71
N [llmois~O.Ind ·Pllr- l ndpls 55 .
TnlL'do 70, Wts.·Gthn Bny 65

Cent

Suulh
E Tennessee St 98. Ferrum S6
Fla lmernanonal 7-1. South Alabama "'3
Flonda 11 7. MlPrdrt'ad St 70
Grorgta 112. East Caro lrna 65
Georgta St 99. Vn Comnmnwt'alth RO
Gcorg1a 'fr:eh 66. Noeth Carol ina 64
I.SU 74. Troy St 56
Mt&lt;1mi 80. Memphi s 64
Sourh Aunda R5. Long Island U. 54
Tenn~Hel' Y2. UNC-Greensboru 60
Virgmm 82. VM~64

72. lndinna St. 52

Ctnci nnau 115, Houslon 7R
Creiglt ton 78 Miss Valk~ St 55
Hofstra 6 1. Youngswwn S1 S9
MinnesOtil 78, Momilnil St. 6-1
Mi smurt 67. llltno1s 61
Missuun· K :rn s a.~ Cay IOlCal Poly-SLO 97
N lll1nm s 7J. Sal'rilmemu St. 58
OH IO 7fi. Ball St fW
SW Mtssourt S1. 67. SE Massoun .'i6
W1 s -Grl!en Ha y 77. Va lpatatso 50
I
Southwest
Arkansas St. 7-l. Oral Robert s 72
Baylor 68. Jacksonvi lle 5.1
Te~a s·E1 Paso 67. Ark..-Littlc Rul·k B
Tc~3~-P:m Amarcan 84 Lou1 S 1~n;:tlt' c h 7H .
F:~rW~t

Ariwna St

R~.

Mansi 77

ll m~eSt6 1 . 1 d:~hoSt6010T)

CS Nnrthnd,e.t• 77. brnc~ /lhdtsr•n 6"'
Cal SI · Fulktwn 96. Q1111h:V 6fi
E W••shllt ):!llm 9\ Ev~t !! ll'~n St 66
(j,-, n;a~:l

94. l.lnho

~5

N~w Me~r ro

.St 66. San Dt~gu S1
0~1.11111 m a St Kl. UNLV (,9
OrC)!Il ll t)() V;nJ.t~rhlit 70
$;tn Juw S t 1-!, l'onkual .'i~
UC lnull' K~ l1t1clt;uu y,)tlll~ 7~
Ut:th 7 ~ .'it Fr:m,tt~. 1':1 49 .

5 .~

Tuurnaments
Colll'j.!C of Chark~tun Clas~ i( ·c h ampi un~ hil'
Coil l•l Chiirbtttn KO. Dd:t11:1r1' ~~
Third plarc
Clmrlcstun SmlllWIIl til. Sinn~ llrnnk 11~
CiMtr ~ l.i~ ht Cla~~ic- li r.s1

round

S1 t,q_ C'lltt\1,\!n St 71
Mt nnll Uh1u 5~ S.ut I)~~~" ~1
Fre~no

G••lden Uear

C l a~~ir-~ hamp iumhijl

C.!ltlnnu~ IIJ "i\\ !.nm~t.lll,l (l_'i
~h ~\ t ~5 t p p•

St

Third piMI'
E Kl'ntu L ~ Y f12

7~ .

, l'curlll urlmr Uas~ i r-~t· mirin tll~
W. 01e~ u n St ,1'1
t1111.' ht1.!;111 Sr ''~ lul •.t 'S
,,
Cnn ~ol 11tinn lmll' kt•t
'J~~;" T~r h 7~. l' ~ ppl'idt u ,_· 7ft (:!. un
\~' ~· h,·t St I I. IIYU · H.l'' -111 6~
1\lah.tu~a

l'lll'rto Miw

Mt r ht~iln

SouthMrst
Snu1hcrn Mcth 71. Nonh Texas 6-1
far w~st
CS Nonhndge 70. Oral Rohem 5~
Ha~&gt;.·au 69. )ilmcs Mad1son 5 1
Oregon fl6. DrPiiul S7
Texas Tech 82. Loyola Marymount 59 ·
Utah 7-'. JJ,dlU S1. ~9

Ohio H.S. boys ' scores

Midwest
Bmdl~ y

Holid~J\ ( ' la .~\k·~l' lllirinal~

f&gt;h ,\I~~IJ1j'l 7\. fl~l,,)l;,mo~ 7!

Ohtn S1 l'l l N Car.)lt n.l 'i t h4,
Con so latinn hrack ~ t
· .\l.1 - Bunun ~h.1111 K .~ \l1dJk ktllll'\~~·c 00
Sl Jt"•l'f'h '~'il'i \rn,·n, .m L' 1' I&lt; ~~
'
!'OI:tnrurd lu• i!iltiu na J.ch :un'jJil'n ~ h ip
~l.tllln111 '1 4 S.1111.1 C'br.1 49
Third plan·
\\'dh.1 111 ,\. tii.II J lUI llon hlj

Arthur Lee hit five three-pointers

and Stored 19 pomls as the Cardinal
won the Stanford Invitational.
Mark Madsen added 15 points for
Stanford (9-2). which has a 27-5
record in the hofiday tcmrnamenl th:H
started in 1981. Nathan Fast had 16
. seve n assists and six rebounds. "So points for Santa'Clara (4' 6), which
. we kept. attacking an'd we played to has been decimated by injuries this
win ...
seasqn.
In other Top 25 games. It was No.
No. 9 Purdue 80
4 Cincinnati 115. Houston 78 : No. 6
South Carolina 64
Stanford 9~ . Santa Clara 49; No. 9
.In the opener of the Jimmy V
Purdue 80. South Carolina 64; No. Classic. Jaraan Cornell rvade a sea·
14 St. John 's 81. Fairleigh Dtckinson son· high five three-pointers and
54. No . 15 ¥ichigan Stale 68. Tulsa scored 20 points as Purdue won its
5S; No. 17 Mmncs01a 7g, Montana eighth ,qraighl.
Stare 64: Mi ssissipp i 75. No. 2J
The st reak is the longest for the
Oklahoma 72 ; No. 24 Pittsburgh 78. Boilermaker~ ( 12- J) since winning
Howard 42; and Nn . 25 Oklahoma II straight at the end of the 1995-96
State 81. UNLV 69.
season. South Carolina (4-6) has lost

NCAA Division I
women's scores

NCAA Division I
men's scores

No. 4 Cincinnati liS
Houston 78
At Cincinnati, Alvin Mitchell
scored a career-high 21 points and
Pete Mickeal added 20 as the
Bearcats routed Houston in the
Conference USA opener for both
learns.
The Bearcats ( 1'0-0) posted their
highest wint total since a 116-63
victory over Dayton on Feb. 12,
1995. Gee Gervin led Houston (4-5)
with 30 points.
No. 6 Stanford 94
Santa Clara 49 • '

Akron Cen tr&lt;li-Hower 96, Louis\lille Aquinas 55
,u:ron Hobiln 73, ''kron Garfield 72
1\kron Springfield 110. Mnrlington 62
AII J&lt;uKe M.11 ljngtqn H2, Akron Spri ngfield 60
Ashtnhu la 56. Ashbbula Edgewood 48
Ashtabula Harbor 78. Jefferson Area 67 ·
Baltimore Liberly Uni on 5 1. Millers port .~-1
Bnrnewilk 65. Old Washm~lo n Buckeye Tmi l

"

Beachwood 4J. Cu~ah ogil Hts .W
Bcallwtllc 91. Btshop Donahue 4W Vil.) 74
Bedford 80, L~· ndhus1 Brush 71
O~d ford Hts .Chanel 77. Chardon None Dame·
Cmhedral Latm "'-4
IJclbi rc 74. Wheeling Cem Cath. 3:!.
Hclmont Unton L oc;~l 76. Brld~ ~IM.)rt 52
llc lpre :'\9. Vince nt Wmn·n -IS
lkrltr1 HtlanJ 75. Tusc arawas Ca1h -19
lkH•rl) Ft fry e M Sll..-nandoah :'9
Bh:k Rt1•cr til . Ckw Fork 56
Ul (lfllil·&lt;.arroll ."iH. Catial Wiul'ill'stcr ."i7
111ull'tna'JI CLli)·Rawsun 6.~
1~uwer\!lln Conomlll V;~l 62. nclltlrtl' S1 lohtl ~

Elrna Carh 76. J'Jrma Hts. Holy Nan)e ~8
Eur!Jd 'X&gt;. Mentor 76
Fat rficld 85. MiJtlktown 6.'
F:u rpnn llarbor 60. Lordstowp 5J
Fo~wnn St Wendclm 76. Senrca E 7-' .
h.m~hn Monroe 7.~. Tri - Coum~· N ·t1
Fr.•ck n ,·~tovm 5J. On!Jrt o 50
Fh·mom Ross 77. Fostona _1H
hcrnom St Joseph 76, Hopewdi-Lolhlon ~-I
Ft knmng~ 7'1 Como}' Crest new -'7
Ct~h on 7 '· Belle\ ue 56
Galhp ol t~ 6~ . Fwrl,mtl 60
Gtrard -1'1 Cnmpbd l Mcmonal -l7·
Grand~· tew ~hs . 78 M:1rion Cm h 4S
Granvdlc 60. Ln.:king Hetght s ~1
Grun·port 67, Cnl HrookhMcn 66
Hamlltoo-n. Cirl . Svc:mmrc -'2
Hammn uU Bapti ~t .'i\ Lima Christian -19
Heath 62. Herne Umon 55
HJrimge Chmti:lll 71. Faith Chnstian 53
Htlliard Darby 58. Westen·illc S. 47
Htllsboro 6*. Eastern Brown 5 I
Hubbard 72 l.ll lha,- 15
lr omon 7R. Coal Grove 70
Jad;son Ccrucr 63 , Dc~ r aff Riverstdc 50
JohnMow n Nortimdgc 52. Uan\'llle "'':1
Johnstown Nonhridge 52, Dan\•tlle "'9
K1dron Ct'n t. O rr 67. Sandy Valley 51
L1f:tyc11e Allen [ .~ 6. Arhn~ron -19
LaGrangt' Keystone 1'17. Lormn Rmobtde 60
Lak.d:md 64. Jewett-Scto 46
Lnnca~ t cr 55. Co l Eastmoor -'6
Lm1castcr Fisher 55 New AI han)· ~ 1
Leh:mun ~I. O;rkwood .~5
Leeto'ma .\5. Western Re so:r~e 31
Ube:ny Union 5 I. M illc r~port J-1
Lima 80, Ci n. Colerain 67
Ltma Ce nr . lath. 5-1, Wapakont:la 46
lim11 Perry 41, Confinenrol J.S
Uma Sr. 80. Ctn . Co leram 67
Lima Temple 52, Parkway 50
Lum in Ckarview 76. Wellingron 55
l..nr~ rn Mtd~· tew 58. UberiJn 47
l..nu donvillc 68. Medina Buckeye .'iS
Loui sville 5.~ . Wcsr Branch 46
Madi son 5R, Eastlake N 54
Malvern 67. f'lcwcomerstown 57
Manche ster 55, Tu scar;rwas Valley 51
Man sfie ld 51 Peter's 60. Cardtnal Stntch :"iB
(01')

Maple Ht s. 51, Pann&lt;l44
Maplewood 511. Southmgton ~7
tl·lamm River Va l. 42. Mari on Pleasant .l 6
Mnruns Ferry 7 3, Hannibal River 5 I
,• M n~o n 41'1 Ro s~ -l2
'Muss1llon Washi ngton 81. Camon 'lim ke n :'\4
t-.h:Arth\11 Vrnron County 7-1 , Pmtsrnuuth 7J
lOT)
M.:Comb 7:!.. Ar..:adt:~-1 5
McDI'rmnu Nort hwe sl 7K. LLI CJHtllc Val SR
McDortul.d :'\ 4. Windham Sl
M._.,hn;1'6:!.. £ht:1.J;~ vi llc .'i-1
Ml' tlt or L1kc C:11h h-'. Ciarficld Ht ~ TnnJty .'i6
llnslill4 7. Ashtnbuln Sl John ~ti
Middlcburp. Hts Midpark 84. l kr~n 40 .
l! wn ~ h n .1-(S, ( 'u hltnht ~~ 67
tl hddkt c'll'll 1'1!11\.\. tck 6-1 . EJ~ev.uud ·17 ·
Otn1i•·fd S-1 You ll n.1rJrm n ~J
r. hdJicl ,, \l"n Mmli snn xo c.1rh&lt;l,, 7 1
Catllotl !lk Kntk} .'i.\ Tol Sro tt..jiJ
M1lfurd 77. Ltkot:l E:1~1 ~:!.
Cmltn ~ ll)n "Ill c~·ute1but~ 60
J'. lut!'l\ :1 7.1. Can10n S&lt;&gt;u th M&lt; f() I' I
C trl'\ 7o. N n.,hllnnn· ,~
tl h n .&gt; t ~r 70. Ft Lnranul' q
C;ul L,J IIt nn S:!. . (anal Fulton NW -17
N l'an10n Hnll\W .~i\ . Mn5.\ tlh lti i'L'IT\ ~\
l'l'dandk ~S. Gtwnlit·ld ~kC I~ m -1()
N Lc11 !Shlltl! l'n:1d 76. S Ch:u lc~ t n n
C' h ~&gt;api!: th· 7h llun!ln)!lOn Sr Ju~eplt (\\' \1;1 I
Sl1U ihl' .1 ~ tcrll 6!
.
N R11y;tltnn 60. N Rt{if!l'l'llk q
Chdlt,·nthl· (,\ , WJ !~II L'&gt; ~knw tt:tl ~K
Na\, IITl.' F~urk ~~ ~X. Alnm Cu\l'lllf\ ~ -'
Cm C'illllll\ Dn•· ~'i C1n St. lkrn:uJ 5-I tOT!
Nd~l)tl\llk York 62 .-\1h~ 11 ~ 51
·
C' 111 l·. ldc1 ·70. !Cn1 lll,!! tPn Ky 1 H o i~' Cross 6S
N1'1\ H n~11 m M. ll!!,lll'r [:~q~rn 5~ lOTI
10'1 )
Nev.
Cn·ltlk
l'c cu m~l.' h
5~.
S[1flllf!.
Cm l'ttlnt'\1111\11 (,..j_Ci n Wtflt(lu \~\,,~,1 ~ 6'1
Nl\1111\H''Il'rn .~ I
L'111 1\l.idl-; t;t Kl . Spnng Cathnh&lt;' 77
N,•" ·l'htl.t•k·l11lu a (, ,1, lndtan \'al J-1
Ctn M r .~•cJt,,las 7l Cm Tuq'm .17
Nl'l\1otl 1-:tlh 1-'. nt ,,u ~lte l d 59
Ctn Mudlcr 77. Cnt l'ur~l"'l Mmtan ():!,
Oh~ 1hn Fir~· land., 71 ,\l'on 06
Cut N•'!lhv.l''i 69. C'tn 1\nder~n n ~S
Utt~,_, .t·Cilattd,,rf 72. ·HtlW ]t nJ! Green 6~
Ctn Sc'\&lt;'11 IIIli , 70 Ctn L1mlrn :n ~ Chr "'5
Ottlll't!IL' 57 i\n twl' rp Jl
C111 S1 Xtt&gt;tet64 .C tn Htl !! h ~~~ 1
~
Oxfqrtl Tal:tw:111dn 7J Lc-m11n Mmm1l' 7'J.
C111 Sunnmt C"llllltl D:1\· lJ.1. Fah"tledllc .~I
l'-~rm :1 Normmnly 79 darl'tdd Hl ~ 6:!.
Ctrt lntllc H F;t trft;. IJ Unt"n ,1(,·
flarnt.J P:1dua HO. Clc C..:: m. Cat h. 57
Cui. In till· [.,r~atl Elm 70. Tenys V:•lk y ~ti
Plnl n 76. n wrrl\ tll1· Shl'rtilan :'\.~
Ck 1:1' 1T..::,h 7(1 lui l.thhcl 61
i•tdl'tllt~t u n 52. ~11 Vcrt1 L1tf ~ 1
l'lc' ~I 1(!11.tl t1J' ~ I . f{,ll'l~ Rt~ c'! 6~
Pnrl\tnm11h Clay ~ 7. Synm~~:s VJI 66
Cui 1-f &lt;H mlt nn Town, h•p h~
,\ m.lllli ,IPnrt~lllOLIIh Notr~ Damr fi!. Pnrl snmuth E S8 , 1(
CI~·.IId..::d O{l
l&lt; artn._. Soulht•rtt 67. S Galli;~ ~7
{'pi Rt• :t•h ~~ \\'L'S I Jc'! l&lt;' l ~flfl "'l) tOT)
ll. nvcnna 56. W,Jt..::rloo ~ 7
('p] St cf1:Hk~ t)l) Cnl Walnut Rt,l cc· ,1( 7
.R1chmnnd Ht ~ fi 7. lnJcpcntkn,·e 61
('.,1 W;tlti.'IWII -1~ . (i;lh;tJlll:l ~ _'!
,
I&lt; C1rl y Rt1·er Lutheran West 60. Gales Mtll.&gt;
c,,nnt'.lnl ~n G..::n,·l,, o~
Gtlmnur 32
l\•rliand Ll~._.vt~\\ O:! l! adc~·r -IS
S W~h~ 1er ?I. Oak Hill 69
l 'l" ltnl.tl•fl ~ 7 D011.'t -17 ~
Silndusky 79. Frndlay 75
(\ •mrl:m,t tll.IJ'I'''I""J ~S . Stlll tlun ~ lnn Ch: tl kcr
Sha,lvs1dc 7 1, Caldwd l -IH
Shelby 76. Nor wnlk 7.1
Slterwu1'd h1irv1ew 59. Li~rlY C'l'lllcr .'i6
South l'o11i1 ~Y. M;u1e1 111 -15 ·
Sparta Hl ghlaml 70 M1 Ctka.J -15
Spun g. Nnrtlt 01. &lt;;: emerville -1:!
Spnn g Nonh..::a 1:l• rn 72 , Kenruu Rklgc ...j5

four in a row.
No. 14 St. John's 81
Fairleigh Dickinson 54
At New York. Marvis Thornton
scored 15 points as St. John 's extended its winning streak to seven.

Ron Artest 'and Tyrone Grant
added 13 points apiece for St. Johns
(I 0-2). off to its best stan after 12
games since 1990-91. Baldor
Olafssoo scored I 0 points for
Fairleigh Dickinson.(4-4), which lost
its third straight.
No. IS Michigan St. 68, Tulsa 58
AI laie, Hawaii, Morris Peterson
scored '2 1 points as Michigan S4te
reached the final of the Pearl Harbor
Classic .
Peterson scored II points during a
15-4 run that gave the Spanans (8-3)
(See TOP 25 on PageS)

FINGER-ROLL LAYUP
Kentucky's Heshimu Evans prepares to put in a finger-roll layup
as Duke's William Avery gets
there a little late during
Tuesday's night's first-round
action in the Jimmy V Classic in
East Rutherford, N.J., where the
second-ranked Blue Devils won
71 -60. (AP)

Spri ng. Sht~wnec 71. Bcllcfnnlatnc ~6
Sr Cl:rtrS\·illc 51. Rayland Buckeye Local 46
Sl P~m Grahnm 72. Mtanu E 65
Stt•ubenn lle B•g Red B. Weirton 62
Stow 66. S10w Wal~h J~suit 60
Suongn•1lk 97. llrunsw1ck 70
Strmhers 60. You AuMtntuwn-Fnch O'
Str}k~r 5J Dt:lta 51
Sycamore Mohawk 95. [lerm·dk 52
Tallmadge 55. Akron Elle r ~ 2
Temple Chnslt&lt;m 52. Parkway 50
Thornpson t.t"dgemont Jfl. Bloomfield JJ
Tifftn Columbiar1 6J. Bucvru~ ~6
To I Howshet 72. Maun.ee 56
To! Wlutme r 64. Bedford 60
Toron10 61. S1~ubenville Cent Cath -II
Twmsbur~ 66, Shak~ r Hts . Umvers tt y 6]
Uhrkhsvi lk Claymont 45, Cambridge-' I
Upper Arltryg ton 61, Co l Westland 58 (.lOT)
Urbana 58. Gree non 44
W Lafa}·e ur Ridgewood :'\4, _Strasburg 51
Wauseon 71. Swanlon 59
Wilvctly 62. Minford 46
Wellston 7.l, M~ig s 62
Well sville 56. E Palestine 55
Wheelersburg 7 i. Portsmouth W. 1'1.1 (OT)
Wlmchouse Anthony Wayne 41. Bryan .~ I
W1llard q . Uppc=r Sandusky 42
Willoughby Sout h 74. Mayfidd tH
Woos ter 70. Uruu ntown Lilke 64 OT
Wooster Trtway, 72. Wesr Holmes 70 (0T)
Worthingr on K!lbourne 45. Dublin Sc!Oto 41
Wo11hington Thorn. Worthington 5ti . Man ~
Madi son 5J
You. Chaney 70, You . UrS!Jhne 57
You Chrisl ian 84, Rhema Academy 64
You. Li berty 54. Warren Champron 47
You . Rnyen 4~. You. Mooney 36
Zanesville Rosecrans 74, Ca l. EteSales 56

JO

Kalida l!l Columbu~ Gro,·e -'L
Kenton :'\1. lndi:m Lake JO
Leesbur~ Fa1rlleld .'i O. FrunHot t Adena 4-1
Leipsic :'\ l PnnJnm·G •I bo":• -'.:'
,\1nson 79. Lak0ta E 17
Mercy 62. Cin. Ursu l itlt'.~ -~
Milan Edt ~o n -1-1. Oak Hnrbor J7
Murrow Linle Minm1 6.'i. Kin gs .I\. hil s ti I
New Ri chmond 50, Loveland J9.
Newark 55. Mnnsfte-ld M&lt;ldtson -17
Nmw ;rlk St Paul 61. PI} mouth 26
Pembcmlle EilStwuod 57, Woodmore W
PeTTy 6l Orrwcll Grand Va l. 44
Spring Northwestern 6_l, Xen1a Iii
1110rn,·1llc Shend:w 57. H~bron L.akeYoood 4:!.
Tiffin Ca l"e rt !)2. L1ber1 y fknlon 45
Utltontow n L1ke ~2. You Wilson .n
Van lluren 68. New Rie~el ~6
Van Wert Lmco Jn,·tew S7, Sj)t'!k~r vi ll e .~0
Washingron C. H 5tl. Miami Trace 40

Hockey
NHL standing~

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
'
Ashl.1nd Crcstvtew. 60, Western Reserve 57
Aurnra '42. Newbury J7
,
Bellbrook 58. Middletown Madi ~on 47
Bellevue 5J. Lexi ng1o n 4'1
Bethei-Tate' 49, Goshen 4~ (OT.J
Bunon Be rkshire 61 . Chagrin Falls 48
Castalt,t Marga rcrta 95 , Port Chn ton J6
Celina 58. St Henry ~5
Ci n. Harrison -58, E Cemral 44
Ctn Hugh~s 5J, Se ton 51
Cin Mothe r of Mercy 62. Cm Ursuline

'

Academy .U
Ctn Sycilrrn,,e 61. F;urllcld ~lJ
Clydt' -12. St Mary n
O;mbury Lake ~tde 17. To I Chnsttnn 6!J
Elm~.~-ootl·S ... r-hll bu1 y 1.-i!ke JO
Genoa 7 J Dlsel!n -II
Gm·nftdd ~:!.. ~ladtson Pl:uns .17
Grerntidd r-.l cCI.un 5~. Mad1snn l'latns J7
Greenwtch South Cent ro! .~7. N..-w I .ondon -ll
Ham ilto n Bad1 n 72. Cin Purcell Martan 25
Holy Cross ~CovingtOn . K)' ) 69. Readtng 57
Huron 51. Sandusky Pcrkms -'9
Janlt'~IOI\fl Grt•cn~\le\1 58. Ri\'CJ.\ Id._. Stcbhtn&gt;

Atlantic nh·ision

ll' L I

New Jersey·
.. ... IS 8
Philadelphia .
14 q
l'tttsburgh ....... .......... IJ 10
N Y R:mgers .
.. . II 1J
N.Y. Isla nder s
12 19

4
8
7
7
2

~

GI !UI.

40 90
]6 ~6
JJ SJ
29 84
26 ~2

76
70
RJ
S6

40 1m

90

%

Northeast Uhuiun
Toronto .

"

-·-

...... 191 1 2

7.1
60

'"

ii"

II+

Gt"nt ml Uh isiun

fum

ll:LI~GI

L\.:lnut
S! I nut&gt;
:"Jashl'alil'

. 11 ] f)

Cht~.:ilf!t)

- .IJ 19

17 D I
1'I II) X

:"oour th \1 f~t

,.! ..

f)i, i~ion

15 .1
14 15 .1
1.:! 15
12 17 .1
I~

CPI11r:rdu .
Edmomon
Vancl&gt;lllcr
Calg:try
Dalla ~
l'hocni~

Anaheim ,_
Lo ~ 1\ngt'les
S;w Jose .

.11
.11

lR

75

88

79

84

27

9()

"

93
95

' &lt;l''JJ

89

62
51
7J

'

l':~cific

~5

GA
96 82

.10 17 71
15 70 9.1
)2 71 107

IJi\•ision
19 5 6
19 5
IJ 12 7
10 20 !
.8 1.~ 7

'"
8&lt;

76
2.1 7.1
:B 61

Tuesday's scores
St Louis J. N.Y. Islanders .~ (lie)
Los A n~cks 1. Ptttsburgh 0
Phoenix 6. Detroit 2
Vancouver ~- Calgary J
Atl.1heim I. Co lnradn 0
... Tampa Ba~ at Buffalo. 7 p m .
Plul:tddphiil ar Boston, 7..10 p.m.
Dallas 111 Torn nto, 7·JO p.m.
Momrcal m Ounwa 7:JO p m
!'il . Luu ts ut New Jer~ey, 7:JO p.m.
Corol mn at NY Rangers. 7:JO p.m
W;1shingron m Florida. 7:30p.m
lk1rou at N;•slwille, 8 p.m
Phoe nix 111 Chic,lgo, 8·JO p. m.
S:m Jose m Edmo nton. 9 p.m
C~ l gnry at VJ ncouvt": t, 10 p.m.

312 GIFTS

.

Rl

WESTERN CO~FE RENCE

Tonight's games

EASTERN CONFERENCE
fum

Suulhroa§t Dili§iOn
15
I~ I' ;
II I I 6 li
9 .17 ·'
K'1 1 I
19

Cam lrnn
llond:1
WashHI!!I"n
Tampa Rn,\

FOR THE PERSON WHO HAS EVERYTHING
1 YEAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO
THE DAILY SENTINEL

91

71

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
five out of seven aLtempts in the midOVP Staff Writer
die quarters. The double-digit lead
. In Tuesday night 's varsity boys ' they maintftncd for much of the secbasketball game at South Galli a High ond half was built mainly.on 13-forSchool, the Southern Tornadoes used . 18 fool shooting in the founh quaner.
their efficiency from three-point
That effort was what it took to
range and at the foul line 19 record a withstand the challenge s the Rc!X-1&gt;
67-57 VICtory over the host Rebels .
mounted. Such challenges took the
The Tornadoes, who won their fonn of their chipping away at what
first game.of the season after losing had been a 14-point lead and bring it
their first five contests, lost the scr- to a nine-point sprea_d until time ran
vices of senior guard Mitchell out on the Rchcls.
Walker two seconds after Lip-off.
Shooters' gallery: Norris. who
When he was taken off the coun with shared scoring honors with Boot he
an injured left knee, classmate Bcnji with 15 points, combined high point
Manuel came off the bcnt h in his production and shooting eflicicocy
place.
from the field . as his 5-for-7 effort
The Rebels, who scored first and from the field - this include&gt; u 4led 5-2 after the first 90 seconds; saw for-6 showiQg from three-point oounSouth ern's three -point shooting try----:- shows.
transfor.m thai lead into a five-point
Boothe's 15-point effort was hui h
deficit following senior forward Troy m part on 4-for-8 field -goal shooting.
.,
Hoback's trey (6:05), Manuel's
Reser.ve notes: In the preceding
jumper (5:3 1) and j uni or guard reserve game, Soutllcm (5- 1'). proAdam Cumings ' three-poi nt er ( 3:35 ). pe lled· by 12-point efforts hy Jeremy
In the next iwo minutes. South Fisher . a nd Brandon Hill and
Gall ia battled back with layups by 6- Jonathan Evans' 10-point dfort. heat
foot-4 senior postman Robbie Rush . South Gallia 64-40.
A three-pointer from the right corner
The Rebel s ( 1-5) ·were led hy
hy se nior forward Rufu s Stanley Mit..:key Mass1e's nif')c . points and
(I :33) tied th~ game at 12. Then with seven -point effons hy Trevor Shafer
41 seconds left. a 19-foot jumper and Nathan Williams.
from the right wing junior forward
The future: The J'ornadoes will
· : BOMBS AWAY- An unidentifi!ld Meigs guard shoots the ball as Man Bess gave l~e Rchels a 14- 12 play Ripley on Tuesday. Dec. 29 in
Wellston's Randar Luis finds his defense a little late and 11 little too lead that stood at' the quarter 's end .
Ripley, W.Va. The Rchels will return
far away during Tuesday night's Ohio Division game at Meigs High
In the Secord ,qu arter. the lo at:ti on on Tuesday, Jan . 5 ror a
School, where the. visiting Golden Rockets won 73~2. (Sentinel Tornadoes ti ed the game at 14 with · game in Gallipolis against Ohio
photo by Dave Harris) ..
Jcrrod Mill s' layup (6: 18) before Valley Christian
·
going · ahead by three on Hohack's Quarter llltm
trey (5 :47).
Southern
12- 16-21- 18=67
After Rush scored his last poi nts South Gallia ............. 14-9-14-20=57
on a layup (5:30) to cut Sou thern's
Southern (1-5): Norris 1-4lead to one point, Mills ' first foul 1/3= 15.
Cum ings
2- 1-7/R= I4.
se nt Rebel forward Jeremy Davis to Hoback 0-2-8112= 14, Manuel 4- 1the tree throw line. Davis missed the
first shot but made the second. which
By DAVE HARRIS
Beha and Meadows scored the first tied the game at 17 with 5: 12 left.
Sentinel Correspondent ·
12 points of the third perio.d in a span
Southern went ahead bv one when
Wellston opened up a huge first oT'2:07. -Bcha made two three point- Hoback, earning a trip to-the charity
,oeri od lead ; and then held orr, a ers, and a two. While Me adow s st ripe beca.use of Ru sh's second fo ul ,
comeback added a pair of two pointers, and the made one\ free throw and mi ssed the
tremend ous
Meigs
auempt to defeat the Marauders 73- Marauders had suddenly cut the lead second. But the Rebels went ahead
62 in Tri-Valley Confere nce Ohio to 41-34 with 5:53 left.
20-18 when senior guard Eric "
Division basketball action Tuesday
The two team s traded buckets for Fraley 's hcyond-thc-arc comet landnight al Meig s Hi gh School. "
a couple of· minutes before' Kyle ed in the basket with 4:40 left.
MULTI TOOL POCKET
It was a wild contest which Smiddie najlcd a three pointer from
Thinecn seconds later, Southern
Wellston won at the foul line, tlie the right win to bring the Marauder went ahead 21-20 on the. strength of
SURVIVAL TOOL
Golden Rockets went to the line 27 faithful to their feet and Meigs to senior guard Adam Williams ' trey.
Limes and hit 18. Meigs on the other within 47-40 with 2:38 left.
' . But Rebel forward J.R. Boothe, earnhand went to the charity stripe onl y
Well ston tried to pull away, but ing a trip to the foul line because of
seven times and made four. Mei gs Angelo Rodriguez and Beha each Kyle Norris' first foul , made both
was whistled for 25 personal foul s, made three pointers to keep Meigs free throw s, and South Gallia led 22while the Golden Rockets were within striking distance. Beha's came 21.
.
called
for
16.
with
26
seconds
left
made
it
a
53-46
The seven-point run that put the
'·.'The Golden Rockets jumped out contest. Ardo Ar.mpalu's lay-up with Tornadoes on their. way to victory
to a 18-2 lead on a bucket by Radar 14 seconds left gave Well ston a 55 - stancd with Manuel's layup (3:37).
luts al the 1:5 3 mark of the first · 46 iead heading into the final period.' On the strength of Josh Davis' stickperiod. Steve Beha dmin cd a three
Well ston with the help of a Meigs back jumper (I :38) and Norri s.' threepointer to pull Meigs to within 18-5. bench technic al built up a 12 point poi nter from the left wing (:53),
But the Rockets went on a 7-0 run to lead at 60-48 with 5:34 left. But the Southern went ahead 28-22 before
take a 25-5 lead at the end of the Marauders wouldn't quit. Meigs settlin g for a fi ve-point lead at halfperiod.
went on a 9-0 run and pulled lo with- time.
Meigs started to chip away at the in 62-59 on a Grant Abbolt bucket
As the Rebels fell behind in act
Well ston lead in the second period . with 2:43 left. But Meigs was unable , two, they furth er hun themse lves by
Beha hit .two straight three pointers to get any closer as Wellston scored mi ssing 10 out of 12 field -goal
t&lt;i pull the maroon and go ld to with- the final seven points to post the 10 anempts in the second quarter. The
it&gt; 27-15 .. The Maraud ers cut the, point win.
Tornadoes' growi ng effi cien cy from
lead to I0 with 3:09 left in the half on
Rand nr Lut s, a 6-foot-3 senior the lleld was rcll ccted in tl1cir fi eld a:thrcc pointer by Zach Meadows. .potnt guard froin Eston ia. led all goal totals in the first three quart ers
B1lt Wellston scored -the last nine sco rers with 28 poin ts. Jon (5- 14, 6-14 &amp; 7,10).
p,oinls of !he half[() lake a 4 1-22 lead McDonald. a transfer fmm Jackson,
Such effi ciency was n' t limited to
i'!lo the locker room at halftime.
. added 16. The other Estonia transfer. field goals for South ern . The
.... The Marauders came out of· the fi -foot--11 j unt or Ardo Annpalu , who ~runwdoes. who didn ' t shot any free
16c ker room sizzling and behind added seve n po int s and seven throw s un til the s.ccond qUancr. made
rebounds.
Well ston .htt 26 of 38 from the
fl our, includ'mg 1hrcc of four fr om San Francisco
three point range for a sizz ling 68o/r.
...
(Continuctl from Page 4)
The Go lden Rockets went to the line Giants· sign
a· ·25- 10 lead mid way throu gh the 27 Limes and hit ' 18 for 67o/r.
&lt;.;penin g period. Eric Co!(!y a~d To~y Wellston had 23 rebounds led by Santangelo _
Heard each sco red 15 potnts lor Kyle Stcwqrt with eight, Annpalli
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - San
Tul sa (1 0-2).
added hi s se ven and Luts five. The
Frn
n c i ~co s igned switch·hiucr F.P.
:· ·
No. 17 Minnesota 78
R.ockels had six assists led tiy Scot
Santangelo
to a· onc·year contrac1.
·
-Montana St. 64
Sturgi ll and Brent Ew ing with two
Financial
terms
of the deal. ,were nut
: At Minn eapoli s, Quincy lewis eac h.
di
sclosed.
Santangelo,
31, expected
scprcd 27 points as Minn esota beat
M,cigs was pa.:ed by Bcha who
to
play
the
outl'ield,
first
base and
... Ntbtltana State.
had an ou!stanJing game with 23
third
base,
hit
.2
14
with
fo
ur
homers
·· Kevin Clark added 22 poii&gt;t s fur ' "Points, incl udin g seven three point ~ ·
the Golden Gophers (8- 1), who won ers. Dan iel Hannan added II. and and 23 RBis last season fur the
Montreal.
dCspit e a scaion-hi gh 13thrce-poin t(Sec MARAUDERS on Page 6)
by Montana State (4 -5).
·
• Mississippi 75
No. 23 Oklahoma 72
; At San Juan , Puerto Rico; Kctth
Carter scored 20 points and freshman
Jason Harrison hit fi ve of' six free

Wellston defeats
Marauders 73-62

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EVES ON THE BASKET- Southern's Jerrod Mills keeps his eye$
on the basket as he takes th~ shot from point-blank range in the
second quarter of Tuesday night's game at South .Ga,llia. High
School, where the Tornadoes emerged from the battle of the wtnless
with a 67-57 victory. (OVP photo by G. Spencer.Osborne)
0/0=11. Williams 0-1 -212=5. Da \' iS 718= 15. Stanle y 0-3 -4/4= 13. Davis
2-0-0/0=4. Mills 2-0-0/0=4 . Totals: .1- 1- 115= I0. Be» 3-0-3/4=9 , Rush ],
11/26·9/18· 18/25=67
11-U/0=6. Fraley U- 1- 112=4. Totals!
Ass ists: 8 (Cum in g~ 1)
13/47-5/17 -t6/Z3=57
Field goals: 20-44 (45 .5'1&lt;1)
Ass ists: 17 (Davis 7)
Fouls: 16
Blocked shots: I
Fouled out: Mills
Field goals: 18-54 (33.39r)
·•
Rebounds: ]] (Hoback 8.
Fouls: 22
·•
&amp; Mi ll s 7.cach) .
Fouled out: Boothe
•
,
Steals: 8 (Manuel 4)
Rebounds: 24 (Bess 9." Boothe ~ :
Turnovers: 16
Steal s: 13 (Nieto 6)
Turnovers: 13
-*South Gallia (0-6): Boothe 4-0-

Top 25 hoops ...

52 WEEKS

NAME

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

ZIP
' .

IL

down

th e

s tretch

assists a~ Oklahoma State heat

UN LV.
Oklahmna Stnte (7-3) led hy only
two p~ i llls wlt h '-L3 2 ldt hcf\ll't.:
going on a 16-2 run lo put the gaml'
qut of reach. Shawn Mannn and
Kaspars Kambala led UNLV 14-6)
-..,;th 1Hpoints ap iece .

.

Thursday, December 24 - Christmas Eve
Drive-Thru: 8 am to 12 noon
Lobby: 9 am to 12 noon

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Mississippi advanc ed lo the fin al of
the Puerto Ri co Holtday Classtc.
· Ole Mi ss (9-2) went ahead for
good with 15:59 left on Michael
W.h itc's three- point play. Mtchacl
Jo'1111son . scored 20 points for
Oklahoma (7 ' 2)
No. 24 Pittsburgh 78, Howard 42
· ·At
PiLtsbureh.
Vun teego
&lt;:;~mmin gs broke Out of a scoring
slump with 21 point s as the Panthers
defeated winless Howard.
: The Panthers (8 -4), playing for
th(: ri rst time since a onc-puint loss lo
to· No. 1 Connecticut on Dec. 12. led
on ly 27-24 at hall'tim e. But
C~mmi n gs sparked a 22-4 run ea rl y
in the second hall tlt;ll broke the
game Open.
No. 25 Oklahoma St. 81', t JNLV 69
At Las Vegas. Adrian Peterson
and Desmond Ma ~on each scored 21
points and Doug Gott lieh had 15

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�P•ge 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 23, 1998

~ Attendance increases, NBA lockout fail to save bankrupt confederation

ByTbeBend

t:_
A merican Basketball League dies in middle of thirll season
:-;IIY ROB GLOSTER
·PALO ALTO, Cahf. CAP) -A
, pile of freshly typed paychecks sat
'·',on the front desk. A' plastiC bag full
. of homemade chocolate chip cookies
and a wall covered with holiday
_cards gave.the office a festive atmos·. •phere.
.
But those trappings did liule to
1 :dispel the gloom in the offices-of the
,, ·American B'asketball League a few
; · .days before Christmas.
. , The nine-team ABL folded
. 'Tuesday. midway through its third
• •season, unable to compete with the
, .rival WNBA - which is backed by
the money and marketing muscle of
1. ~he NBA.
. As the league filed for bankruptcy
· proteclion, ABL franchtses canceled
their games and began drawmg up
.plans for paying players and employ. - ,ees, and refunding ticket holders'

money.
"I can definitely feel for people
finding out they just lost a job,
because that's obviously what happe ned,·• Nashvolle guard Michelle
Marciniak said. "We don ' t have
practice. We don 't have a game on
Christmas Day. I have a calendar
filled up 'til the spring. Now lhere'j
nothing."
The ABL had teams in Chicago;
Columbus. Ohio; Denver; Hanford.
Conn.,
Nashvolle,
Tenn.;
Philadelphoa, San Jose; Seanle ; and
Ponland. Ore.
· "At this point. the league IS oul of
money,' ' league co-founder and CEO
Gary Cavalli satd 'This IS a sad day
for our fans. employees, players and
coaches, and for women's basketball
in general."
Cavalli said the ABL was unable
to get the necessary TV exposure and

sponsorship to survive.
"I am shocked. I never saw it
coming." New Englanll guard
Jennifer Rizzotti said. " I am thankful
for all of the loyal fans throughout
Ibis ll)'ing season. It's a shame thiS
happened. I'm stillll)'ing to figure it
out."
The ABL was launched in 1996,
riding the enthusiasm of the gold
medal-winning U.S. women's team
at the Atlanta Olympics and the
boom in women's college basketball.
When the WNBA began play the following year, however, many began to
wonder if two wo(nen's league s
could survive.
This year, the ABL hoped to take
advantage of the NBA lockout ,
which has forced cancellation of at
least half the season.
"I' m a little surprised about the
timing of 11." said forward Katie

Smith of the Columbus Quest. which Starbird said. "She's got 20 tickets
won the league's two champi- that I think I have to reimburse her
onships. She plans 10 play with a for the next game."
national team this summer and then
'The league's board of directors
look into joining the WNBA.
decided late Monday night to susPlayers. some of whom chose the pend the rest o( the 1998-99 season
ABL because it offered higher that began in early November and
sa lanes than the WNBA, were file a Chapter II bankruptcy petitipn,
infonned of the shutdown when they leading to the league's liquidation.
called the league office.
Though
ABL
attendance
" We have closed our entire oper- increased 23 percent last season to
ation," a recorded message said. 4,333 per game and the league'slV
"The league is currently working on ads Ibis fall offered it a~ an altemaa plan to ensure that you'll be paid as live to hoops fans dismayed by the
much of y&lt;&gt;ur salary as posSible for NBA lockout, it could not compete
the month of December. This plan IS with the WNBA - which averaged
I0,869 fans a game last season.
subject to coun approval."
' Seanle's Kate Starbird. whose , 'The WNBA, which has 10 warros
signing two years ago was a major m cities that also have NBA franchiscoup for the fledgling league in its · es, plays from June 10 August. The
banle against the WNBA, had practi- ABL played in the fall and winter.
"This ts an unfonunate setback
cal concerns,
" I talked to my sister at work," for the women's spons movement, " .

WNBA president Val Ackerman said.
"We applaud the great effons and
passion of the ABL's players and all
the league and team personnel who
labored so bard to stan and sustain
the league."
At one time , the ABL was signing
most of the nation's top players.
Observers ranked the quality of play
as beuer than that of the WNBA.
which used a smaller ball. But the
ABL's competitive . advantage
appeared to drop recently.
'The WNBA signed most of this
y,car's top college seniors and was
able to lure Dawn Staley, one of the
ABL's main allractions. Many ABL
players will seek work in the .
,WNBA. now the only U.S. women's
pro basketball league.

· Joc ·to follow completion of bribery probe with drug s~mmit
By LARRY SIDDONS
NEW
YORK

work by the end of February.
the laviSh gifts or by fin anc10g schoi(AP)
"Wc have to be thorough, but at arshtps for relatives of IOC mem·
Investigations mto the biggc~l ethic~ 1he same time we have to do th1s bers.
scandal in Olympic hiS tory will be '" promptly." Muchell sa1d.
The Salt J,ake Organizmg
1 ·progress when the IOC meets 10 deal
A federal inquiry 1nto the Salt Committee. meanwhile, sai d an
l· -with another pressing problem Lake C11y hid has been broadened to in vesltg at!On by !Is ethics board
dop10g
mclude posSible cxton!On and tax would report its findings at a Feb. II
' · ' While the lnleiiiall!lna l Olympic and wtrc fraud. USA Today reported. meeting.
,
,
Commillee expects to wrap up by citing sen ior law enforcement offi··All we need to do 1s determ me
Jan. 23, !IS own probe of alleged cials
what happened, at whose hand. and
bnbcry in Salt lake Ci&gt;y 's winnmg
The newspaper reported that as why. " said Gordon Hall , a former
bid for the 2002 Wontcr Games. twQ part oj the m ~es ugat i on . the FBI is. Utah Supreme Court justice who
Other inqu1ries won 't fm1 sh umil foc using on whether organizers of heads the SLOC probe. " I don't
1 : ·after a worldwtdc drug summit set
the 2002 W111ter Games provided -· envi siOn that it will take a long lime
, · for Feb. 2-4.
·
IOC members with expensive gtfts 10 do that."
',
The latest investi gation started and other services.
While" the Salt Lake scandal. and
Tuesday, when .the U S. Olympi c
The Ju stice Department was allegations of more widespread corCommmce appointed a li"e-mcmbcr reported to be conducung a preltmi- rupuon in awarding Olympic cities,
panel headed by former Se nate nary mqUiry, wuh the help of the had riveted the !OC over the past two
,. majority leader George MucheU
FBI.to determine whether organizers weeks, a leadi ng member said the
~;: Mt!chcll . who helped frame the may have engaged in fraud.
doping summit set for Lausanne,
-.'Nonhero Ireland peace accords and
Should mvcstigators anempt to Switzerland, would not be delayed.
~~s expected to play a key role tn bnng a tax fraud case, ~ccording to
"That schedule wtll not change."
~ fresident Chntons tmrcac hment USA Today. they would be required IOC voce prestdenl Anna DeFran\z
: ·-defense, said the panel would hold its to show that Salt Lake organizers sat,d. "That affects the athletes, and
:;: lirst meetmg ne xt week and fimsh misused tax -exempt funds by buying the athletes are the most imponanl

thtng."
Mitchell said the goal of his
investigation was to' ensure that
fu ture Olympics in the United States
arc as clean as fans and spo nsors
expect them to be.
·•[ believe-the Olymptc movement
holds a special place 111 the' beans and
m10ds of Americans and people
around the world." he said: "We
intend _to investigate what happened
in the past and make rccommendaltons to assure that the selection of
U.S. candidate cities for future
OlympiCs is fair and above
reproach."
.
Mttchcll said he found 'thc accusa~
lions "disturbing, :• but not slunmng.
" I spent 30 years in politics and
tl&lt;e last three in Nonhem Ireland, and
not much shocks me anymore," he
said.
Mitchell said his panel would
cooperate with the other mvcstigalions and would turn over any evidence of criminal wrongdoing to

~~· Clemens removed the demand
•Tuesday and also made it clear he
:::would not play for the Houston
~l.stro~ under their current manage~ent because of remarks they made
!Jn Nashville, Tenn ., at baseball 's
::Winter meetings.
•.: Clemens, the only f)vc-llmc Cy
':Voung Award w_inner, said he had no
'desire to play for Astro s team presi~nt Ta\ Smi th and general manager
~erry Hun sicker, who called a news
~nference during the .wi nter mcct:l~gs to blast Clcmcrs'·proposal for a
~7 .4 miflion , one-year extemaon.

:-.;: ''I' m very upset about what Mr.
~ith and Mr ·HunSicker sa id and
:fi&lt;,w they directed things toward me
~ a perso n." Clemens said at the
· Wices of his agents.
•.: "I don 't know them personall y
·~d they gon't know me as a per.)on," Clemens satd of Smi th and
·4!unsicker. ''The disappointment I
lsel is that! haye no inletest 1n pl,,y~•g for two ind1v1duals like that who
~ould make a olatementltke that and
~n · t kn ew me...
·
:; Cl emens , who wnukl ha ..,c goucn
;r.43 .~ mill1 un fur the ne xt three years
••
•

1f Houston had accepted his proposal, confirmed for the first tim e he had
a wrillen agreement with the Blue
Jays allowi ng him 10 both demand
and veto a trade.
.
He is guaranteed $16.1 million 10
th e fina l two years of his contract
wnh Toronto and said he wouldn '1
ask for a renegotiation as part of a
trade. He said he was walkmg away
from an additional $44 million in
guaranteed money by . staying with
the Blue Jays - citing offers made
by other teams willing to trade for
him .
Clemens' dec tsion didn 'I have
much effect on Blue Jays general
manager Gord Ash's agenda. He 'll
likely res ume Cleme ns trade talks
after the holiday break '
" h does n't mean much of anything If' you ask me ," Ash sa1d in
Toronto " All tt does 1s remove a lot
uf &gt;he cluncr tal k we've had the last
coupl e of weeks and clarify thw
pos iti on ... ~
Ash sJid Clemens ' nghts under
the collcclJVe bargaining agreeme nt ,
v.h1 ch all ows ve teran players dcall
dunng multtycar contracls.to lil c formal tri.ldc dcmanJ s, wou ld QIVC the
pitcher leverage over any deal.
"Any club that is goi ng to g1vc up
ta lent of suh stam.:c ts go mg to ~a m
to know he II he there beyond the

year, " Ash said.
When Clemens sig ned with
Toronto, Beeston agreed that the
team would trade him if the pitcher
became convinced the Blue Jays
wouldn 't contend. Clemens became
disenchanted after lnterbrew SA, the
team's Belgian owner, set a budget
with a payroll of about $40 million,
and Toronto made lillie effon toresign Jose Canseco. who went to
Tampa Bay.
'
Ash said that if Clemens begins
the season with the Blue Jays, he did-'
n't anticipate any negative fan
response.
"Once he marches out there,
pitches a two-hit shutout and strikes
out 15, I can't see it, " Ash said .
Clemens notified the Blue Jays in
a Nov. 27 leuer that he was demanding a trade to a team closer to home
or to a contender, citing an agreement he made wnh then-team president Paul Beeston in December
1996 . The Blue Jays made hiS
demand public Dec. 2. ·
Houston , CleveTand and Tex as
v.e re the chief contenders for
Clemens, wi th the New York
Yankees on the outskins of talks, bul
Toronto cou ldn 't fmd a deal to its li k-

Clemens said.
Agents
Randy
and
Alan
Hendncks added that they wouldn't
compl etely rule out the possibility of
dealing with the Astros '" the future .
But Randy Hendricks said 'the
Astro s'
comments
portrayed
_Clemens as a greedy player.
Hendricks said he has continued
talks with Astros owner Drayton
Mclane
"What has followed in Houston
and around Amenca is an outpouring
of condemnation of Roger Cleme ns
and my self as a result of this press
conference." .He ndncks sat d. "I
want to reiterate that Drayton has
been dtligcnt, couneous and he has
been dogged in hi s pursuit of Roger
and at thi s moment st ill IS. "
, McLane told a Houston tclcvtsion
slalt on Tuesday ni ght that he hasn't
gtven up.
•
'
\
''It ce rt ainly is disappoinlm g to
hear they sa id that ," McLane said of
Clemens and his age nts. But he
added : " [can't hel p bul believe thai
thi s problem can be resolved All you
can do is say you' re sorry"
McLan e told KRIV-TV he
remains strongly behind Smith and
Hunsickc1 , saying they "huve done
lftg
oulsta ndi ng work 1 for the Astros. ''
" I still have the right to refuse a · Hendneks said one team offcrc(l
trade, but I'm JUSI not demanding it." Cleme ns more than $60 millton for

_,.,uzzleloader deer season begins Saturday
' :·· _·cbLUMJ3US - The Division nf
Hunters may not usc modern ,
;'Ntldhfe says there arc many good brcechloadtng shotgun s
iitnting opportuntltes remnllllng for
Unl1k c the record-breaking htgh
~nters planm.ng .t? parlict pate m the tcmpc1:atur~s, present during Ohio's
)!a1ew1de pnm 111 ve dee r seaso n statewtdc !~rearms deer season car lo~_!&gt;tch runs Saturday through Dec. cr lhl \ month. more seasonable con.zy.
.
duton s are expec ted lor the black: .. Hunters may us~ longbows and pu~dcr deer seaso n.
~ossbows, but ~1 ost will be ust ng . Weather plays an Important role
~uzz leloadmg nil es and l~lUt. zle- m the .success hun&gt;crs have dunn g
]lladmg shotgun s. The ftvc-day the pr!illli!VC deer season Barnn_g
~1!'-ckpowder season. as 11 ts hencr any severe ly ad\·CISC huntmg cond t~own , '!lso wdl all ow hunters to li ons, hunters t:an ~x pc ct to have a
!'l'ntdecr on Sunday. Dec. 27. on all vc oy enJ oyable f1ve-day season
1Jli.b1tc huntmg arc.1s apd on t:ertam hegtnntng: the day a ft er Chn stm as,"
~wale lands
sa id Boh Stoll, supervisor of the
:• . ·
,

wtldlifc agency's Waterloo Research
Station in Athens County.
Dunn g an eight-day primitive
deer season last year, hunters killed a
· record 15 ,289 deer. A shorlerseason
·and teduced bag lim !I this year will
res ult m fewer deet. being kill ed.
Hunters may lake as many as six.
deer during the various segments of
the falllw mter deer hunting season
dependmg upon where they hunt. A
deer of either sex and up to five
ant1crless deer may be taken with the
proper permits in Ohio's urban deer
zones. However, most hunters are
allowed to lake one deer thi s year if
they hunt ill Zone A or Zone B. The
·•Aarauder·~
lim it IS two deer., in Zone c. a 14I'
~. • • ·ccon tlnucd Irom Page 5)
county area of southeast Oh10 which
~ngelo Rodrig uez had nmc Za~h reserve game 45-35, behind J.P. includes both Meigs and Galha
;t.(eadows and Gran! Abbon both had Staats who scored 14 point s counties.
'lx, and Kyle Stmdd tc had five .
Team mate Johnathan Hiiggcrty
Legal hunting hours durin g the
; : Metgs hu 24 of 60 from th e lloor added 10. Chambers led the way for statewtdc pnmitive deer season are
· Jocludtng 10 or 26 from three pu mt Wellston wi th 14
.
one-half hour before sunn se to sun &lt;ange for 40"1. . Meigs went to the
The future: The Marauders (S- 4 set Deer must be checked by 8 p.;p . .
line just seven 11mes and hit fo ur lor overall &amp; l-2 111 th e Ohio DIVIS ion) of the day after harvest.,cxceptlhose
::tJ%. Mctgs had 22 rebounds led hy arc ult unl!l Tuesday, Dec . 29, when kill ed on Dec. 30 whtch must be
ffannan w11h seven. The Marauders they trave l 10 Gall iroi 1s. Well ston (3- checked by 8 p.m . that day._
had fiv e turn ove r~ and seven stea ls.
2 overall &amp; in the Ohto Di vts ion) ·. The.re were 14 hu,n tm~ .mctdcnts,
::''Our kids dtdn't qui&gt;." Marauder wi ll hos t Nelso nville-York on tnc ludtn g three latahues, th at
c.pac h Chn s Stout sa id aflcr the Tuesday
occ urred durin g the statew ide
jlilmc. '"The battled hack. we /us! Quarter~
ftrearms. deer seaso n. One th at
~eded a few n1urc brcak.s I'm very Wellston .......
25-16-14-!8=73 occ urred m Metgs County In volved a
pfoud or them. we cno either go up or Metgs , ... .. . .. .... .5- 17-24. 16=62 hunter shooung at sound or m ovc~~wn , we nee d t&lt;&gt; build on tht&lt; effort
Wellston : Jon McDonald 5- 1- men I_pnor to legal hunlmg tune on
&amp;Qd go 111 Galhro li s next wee k and 3= 16, Scot Sturgill 0-2-2=8. Ardo openm g day which IRJUrcd a huntmg
Play hard ."
·
Annpalu 2-0-3=7. Randar Luis IO-O- pa11ncr. Ft ve mctdems tnvo lved se ll .. : When ~~:-okcd ahout lht: olfk ta b. M-28. Brent EwirH! 3-0-0=6, Kyle mJliC_tccJ wou.nds th.al resulted from
I&gt;Jout comme nted. "I rea ll y don 't Stewart J -0- 2=~ -' Tota ls: 23·J· un sa le handltng ol a flfcann , the
£i,te.nt1o say anything . cvcry hncJy ,aw IS=73
dJv.t.sJOn reported. ·
.
"'hat happened: everyone ~:\\\' who
.1\feigs: Darucl I-f ann an 4-0-1= 11, . . In near ly every case of a hun.t1n g
@tplaycd who. lt '.'l h.ud I() l:'it:rhJr . ., h Kyle Smidd ic 1- 1-0=5 , Ange lo lllCH.it.: nt here . Jn OhiO, ~here IS a
l~alan,cd po:-.t gam~ whc 11 : ~lU h.tvl: Rr&gt;dr 1 ~ uc 1 J- 1-l):lJ Zach M~ndi· )ws w1ld It !c v1olauon (?r unsa t: handl1!1g
~~10 kid thcll they won't c,dll ou ls 2 - 1 -I~X. Grant Ahbon 3-0-0=6. of ahrcarm !hal" assoctmcd wnh
.in."
Steve Bcha 1-7-0=23. Totals: 14-10- the tnc td cnt. _S&lt;ll d Da~c - Wtl son,_
:: Reserve notes: Mctg~ won lht: 4:::: 62
:-.u pc1vtsnr ol the DtVJ Sion ol
Wtldl1fc's hunter educati on and out-

='!''

~·
:'I•

..
'

door skills section.
·
Hunter.s arc perm tiled to hunt
small ga me dunng the .statewrdc
pnmitivc deer season, but the y must
comply wilh the stale's hunter orange
requirement. All hunters durmg the
stalew tdc !'~rearm s and primitive deer
seasons must vistbly wear a hat1 cap,
Jacket or vest colored hunter orange.
Ohoo's sta&gt;ew ide archery deer season continues through Jan. 31.

the next four years, and another was
willing to add two years at more than
$30 mtllton. He didn't identify the
!earns .
For their pari, the Aslros wouldn't
rule themselves out Tuesday.
"The goal always has been and ·
sti11 is to secure the services of Roger
Clemens if Toronto is interested in
trading him ," Hunsicker said. "We
intend 10 continue to e.plore that.
Unfortunately, this has become a
very complicated si tuation ."

ROGER CLEMENS

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IRA Deadline of December 31, 1998

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BANK

G)
LENDIER
~-­

Dear Ann Landen: When my sister
and I were young, we were told our
• mother had died w(tj:n we were
babies. Two years ago, I was contacted by a woman claiming to be
our biological mother. She h'ad been
searching for us for 33 years.
My father died 10 years ago, s&lt;&gt; I
have no way of knowmg the truth,
but her story sounded legitimate. I
am slOw at developmg new relationshtps . However, my sister, who lives
on the opposite coast, welcomed the
"·

• jf&gt;

~-

,~.pr,'";., o/Ji!~'c,1

.;;tA .

' I\.4 ;, ' ' '
.'·. ;/ '(ii3

woman with open arms and began mother. She DUde me feel terribl~ .
calling her "Mom" immediately. I Do I need ~l)fe..ional help? I will
was stunned when I learned tlw the get it if yoo say so. -- Washington
woman had packed up and moved 10 Woes
Dear Wasbiactoa: · You have
be near my sister.
I invited my new mother to come done nothing wrong. However,
stay with me for a week so I coold some short-tenn counseling to gel
gel to know her bette(. I explained it you through this trauma might be a
might take me a while 10 adjust 10 good ideiL Meanwhile, be grateful
her. A week after our visit, which I that your sister and mother live on
lliought went well, I received an the other side of the country. lime
angry letter from her saying she was can be a good healer. Let it do its
disappointed in our visit because I work.
did not welcome her as warmly as
Dear Ann Landen: I saw
my sister did, which hun her feel- . myself in the letter from "Confused ··
ings. ..
.
in the Midwest." She said her busI tried to dtscuss it with her but band left a note on the table and
got nowhere. I saw my sister not walked out on her.
In J993, my husband and I celelong ago, and she lectured me about
my lousy relationship with oyr new brated 16 years together ana
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URG dean's lisl pooled
The foll owing area students were
named to the University of Rio
Grande\ fall 1998 dean's honor list:
Beth A. Bay. Chester; Kellte R.
Co llins, Syracuse; Rebecca M.
Evans. Reedsvi lle; Maria D. Frecker, Racine; Kathleen M. Goins. Middlepon: Dante lie E. Grueser,
Pomeroy; Trina G. Hannan.
Pomeroy; Brian J. Hoffman, Long
Bouom; Lauren R. Hunter, Rac ine;
Jen nifer R. Lawrence. Syracuse;
.. Jcancue L. McDonald, Langsville;
Andrea E. Moore. Syracuse; Vtcki
L. Mornson, Mtddleport ; Adam W.
Roush, Racine .
To be· named to the dean's honor
· li st, a student mu st earn a 3.75 grade
· . point average (on a 4.0 scale) during
the quaner.
Wildwood Garden Club
The Wildwood Garden Club's
Christmas dinner was held ' at the
Redwood Restaurant in Belpre:
Doris Grueser gave the blessing
before the dinner. For a shon program, members described material
they used in making their corsages.
Mrs. Grueser had the rea~ing , "The
Season of Givtng," followed by
. Evelyn Hollon reading "The Celebration ."
Club President Sarah Roush pre.. se nted members with Christmas
'favors. Gifts decorated with live
. plant ,materials were judged before
- the gift exchange with the prettiest
go mg to Janel Theiss. Afterwards,
members and guest Linda Hamm
toured Stahl's Nursery.

Julia Davis wrote two dozen

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;,:

The Commun lly Calendar is .Published as a free serv ice to .non-profit
groupS wishin g 10 announce meel in gs and specml events. The calendar is not designed lo promote sa les
or fund raisers of any'lype. Items are
orintcd as soace nermits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days .
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - "The Birth", a
live drama on the bmh of Christ.
Hill side Baptist Church, Route 143,
. · Pomeroy, Wedn esday. 7 p.m. Dr.
James R. Acree, pastor, invtles the
pubhc.
REEDSVILLE Chnstmas
prog ram .
Reedsvill e
United
Methodi st Church, 7 p.m., Wednesday.

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renewed our vows with a full-dress answered, and I asked for my hillchurch weddtng, recepllon and the band.
1rimmings. I was in seventh heaven
Here's the shocker: He informed
wtth my best fnen&lt;l and the love of me that he ·wanted a divorce. I was
my life.
swnned and speechles•. AU I could
He left the next day for a road do was hang up. He didn't even
trip. fHe was a truck driver.) For the rome home for his clothes or any of
ne•t two weeks, he called as usual his personal belongings. 'The man
every day. each time telling me how walked away from everything.
much he loved me. His last cal l was
Needless 10 say, my heart g~
on Oct. 4, 1993.
out 10 anyone whose marriage falls
Four days later, I received a call apan with no warning. but life does
from his employer asking if I'd go on. h took me almost a year 10
talked to my husband lately I said. recover, but finally, I came 10 realize
·'No." He then told me there was a he did me a favor. When I married, I
message for h1m on the busmess foolishly made the mistake of buildanswering mach10e, along with an mg my entire world around a man.
800 number. and he didn't know if it 'There's a lesson here. Ann. Please
was an old message or not. I took the print my letter for women who
number and called. A woman haven't learned it yet. -- lndepen-

S
b k
~f!JCI~~~*·-"·. crap oo ·
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Norm a \VII eox , II gal lon s

Stacey Pric e and Je nnifer
Lamhert were fi 1 ~ Himc donor s.
Helen Bodimcr. Jun e Ashloy.
Jane Bro wn, Tcd Hatf1cld , Pat
Noel. Pe ggy Han is and Marill a
Duddtng a:-.s i:-. tcd with the blood ;,whi lc through the RSVP prol!ram . The C h ~s lcr Un it ed
Mcthotlist Chu rch sc1 vcd lhc can ICC n.

dent and Content in Iowa
Deu Iowa: I know of no way a
wife can prOit:Ct hedolf against the
kind of. duplicity you d~scribed ­
Mt;.r 16 years of marriage and a
church ceremony to renew your
vows, the man wanu a di•orce and
doesn't even come home for his
• clothes or personal belonging~? This
son of behavior is bizarre, to put it
mildly. II sounds 10 me as if he had a
nervous breakdown.
,
I'm glad you have recovered and
•urvived the trauma, Let's hope
there are blue skies fron, here on' in .
Send qaatlons to Aaq, Landen,
Cnatorf Synditate; f717 W. Cea·
tury Bl•nl., Suite 700,
Aoceles.

4P

Callf.90045

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~.•;;v-~:-' -:l'i"~w-"'-r.
ijfilf,.~,

GOLD CHAINS AND BRACELETS- 1OK AND l4K

SAVE

50% TO 70% .

p.m. with a half hour of piano mu sic
TQURSDAY
before the service. Public welcome.
REEDSVILLE - Candlelight .
serv ice, 7 p.m. Christmas Eve,
POMEROY - Grace Episcopal
Reedsville
United . Methodis t Ch urch , Pomeroy, will hold its
Chri stm as Eve servi ce at 7 p.m.
Church.
POMEROY - Trinity Church,
Second and Lynn streets, Pomeroy,
will prese nt a Christmas Eve program with adult and bell choirs, 8
p.m. with music staning at7:30 p.m.
All welcome.

MIDDLEPORT - Chrjstmas
Eve candlelight services 7 p.m. at
the Heath United Methodist Church, . MONDAY
Mtddleporl, with Rev. Vernagaye
MIDDLEPORT - OhKan Coin
Sullivan and organiSI Joa nn Robin- Club meetin g Monday, 7:30p.m. at
so n.
the Riverbend Ans Council Building
in Middleport. Prospective mem POMEROY - . Christmas Eve bers, vistlors and guests we Icome.
services at Enterpnse United Refreshments.
·
Mclhodist' Church will be held al 7

Donors were : Palncia J. Barton, Paul Marr, Harold Norton .
Robert Taggart, WiHiam Radford ,
Iv an Powell,_Janel Pea vlcy, Mary
K. William so n, Wdlt.am Booth,
Marv1n Taylor, Deborah Gruc se r,
Rhond a Davi s, Mary Voss, Virgil
Windon , Donald May, Shnlcy
Mtll er, Lor en a Brown , Gera ld
Ro,ught , Joseph C Hall , Cnd '
King , Daytd Kmg , Debra Mora.
William Radford, Linda Fraley,
Stacey Price , Eun icc Jones. Tara
Grucser. Barb ara Smith, John W
Moo re , R ~1bcrt Smtth Daiuel
Lant z. Jcnntfcr He ck . 'S'u-anna
Hec k i!nd Alhcrt Park er. all or
Pomeroy.
Jnnmtc
Ftl..!cman ,
Hur ry
Holt er. Frcddtc S11nmons. Randy
Arnold , Kenn y W1ggtns , Charl es
Mug ragc, Larry Circle. Dawna
Atnold , Grace Holt c1, Aaron

Wolfe, Barbara Dugan, Rtchard
Dugan and Clarence Dugan, all of
Racine ; Dmah Stewart, Donna
Hawley. No~ma Wilcox, Donna
Davidson, Ellis Myers, Frank
Her ald . Jr , and Kim Barrett, all
of Middl eport; Karolyn Welsh ,
Tuppers Plains: Johnny Roush,
Sherry Roush and Deryl Well ,
Rccd svt li e; Carolyn Char les,
Vicki Morrow. Patri cia Ellt oll
a nd Patsy Co rnell , Syracuse:
Henry Bahr. Trennia Harri s. and
Paula Wood . Long Bol!u m
Willi am C. Cook and Jackie
Well , Shade; Marta ,Blackwood .
Gabnc ll c Bla ckw ood, Ralph
Bales . Debbie K. Brow n. 'Kind ell
Brown. and Pau l Larnbcn , Rut land ; Charlotte Erlewinc. Dex ter ,
Edd ie Bunuwrncr, New Have n.
W.Va .. Mary Bchn. Al bany: and

A Huge Selection
Diamonds!

ND
EARRINGS *'Rings
Regular or Lever Back

Lca nn c Cun ntngha m. Btd·wcll.

Reg.

SALE

1/10 Carat

$~29

1/4 Carat

$349

1/2 Carat

$749

$69
$199
$399
$1599

$2699

"'

'and every path may lead to peace.
Hint:' To stan poinsettias. cut.off
a sl ip about si• inches long, and
. plaie in wet sand in a can in Jply.
Make drainage holes in the can, turn
a glass over it and leave itther~ .;
Keep the sand moist. but not .,et.
It takes i. while to root. By fall , it
will be ready to plant and bloom :for
Christmas.
The January meeting will be held
on the 25th at the home of Beuy
Lowery. A gift exchange was held
by members.

Calendar~--'--

MIDDLEPORT - Christmas
Eve service, 7 p.m. al Middleport
First Baptist Church with Chnslmas
cantata and candlelight servtce.

~

·~~ ~·:)i&amp;::t' ·.a~ ~-.

The program for the evening wru. . faith in God. his son. ourselves and
A Christmas Story, presented by our fellow man .
Mrs. Atkins
'
,.
Christmas is joy. an emot ion as
What i; Christmas? Christmas is natural to the hean of man as to the
a light that has flamed throug~ the hean of God .
ages. Its glow warms the hean of
Christmas is a Benediction. tummen .
ing man's thoughts from material
Chnstmas is peace -- the promise things to those whtch are sptrttual. It
of heralding angels. and the promise is a blessing which implants goodwill and frien\lshtp among an peoof what could be.
,
Christmas is a spirit that fl ows pie .
from one heart to another. from one
What is Chnstmas 1 It is tendercountry to another. h is more pre- ness for the past, courage for the
cmus than rubtes or gold.
present. hope ·for the future. It IS a
Christmas is faith -- in goodness fervent wish that ever cup may overand kindness, in truth and love. It is flow with
rich and eternal ,

Meigs County Bloodmobile visit nets 77 units
Mei gs Count y residents donated 77 unit s of blood when the
Am erican Red Cross Bloodmobtl c vislled the Meigs Senior
Ce nt er last week.
Recogntzed as mulllple -g all on
donors were Iva n Powell. two
gall ons, John ny L. Roush , three
gallons. Charles Cook, four gal lons, Haro ld No rt o n, fi ve gall ons,
LorcHa Brown. stx gallon s; Mur,·rn Tay loo, Gera ld Rought and

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B r.t

Sorority holds party
books. both nove ls and non-fictton,
The annual Christmas pany of
as well as a play, The Anvil, about
John Brown . Although Davis was a Preceptor Bela Beta was held
reponer for the Associated Press and recently at the home of Charloue
a special worker in New York City, Elberfeld.
A traditional Chnstmas dinner of
she was born and died in West Virginia and most of her.-.work dealt turkey and trimmings was served by
the social committee.
with her native state.
A Christmas game of Christmas
Hoove r selected many intere sting
of the world was won by
customs
facts about the Shenandoah which
Norma
Custer.
"
flows 1&amp;0 miles through a valley
Those attending were Jane, Wal between the Blue Ridge and
Alleghemes, meeting tbe Potomac ton, Clarice Krautter. Ann Rupe.
Joan Corder, Velma Rue ,- Shirley
River at Harpers Ferry.
She touched upon the geologic Beegl~. Jane Brown, Norma Custer,
fonnation of the area and, told of the Mrs. Elberfeld, Carolyn Grueser,
McCollough,
Martha
early dtfticullies of exploration and Carol
senlemenl along with problems with McPhaol , Mary Morris. Roberta
O'Brien, Jean Powell, Margaret
Native Americans in the region .
Of special interest to her listen-_ Stewan, Eleanor Thomas and Reva
ers, the revtewer told of the wars ,·· Vaughan .
panieularly the Civil War, which
affected the people and the land.
Rutland Garden Club holds
Davis wrote about the many · Christmas dinner
famous people who have come from
The annual Christmas dinner and
the valley, including John Brown o,f meeting of the Rutland Garden Club
was held recently at _Crow's RestauHarpers Ferry fame.
Hoover stated that although the rant.
book stops in 1945, it is still true that
Following the meal, the regular
lbe apple industry flourishes in the meeting was opened by Pauline
valley. The tourist industry, aided by Atkins, who also gave devotions for
the co nstruction of- the Skyline the meeting.
The devotions were taken from
Drive in the 1930s, brings many visitors to enjoy the beautiful Shenan- Luke, "She ,brought fonh her . first
doah River Valley.
born son, wrapped him in swaddling
The roll call gave member an clothes and laid hom in a manger."
opportunity to tell of their personal
Devotions also included the story
connections to the area .
of the candy cane.
The ,delicious treat holdS great
The meeting concluded with
significance
in the Christmas tradi- ·
group singmg of Christmas carols
uon. Its shape calls to mind the·
accompanied by Mrs. Hoover.
· The next meeting will be the Shepherd's staff, of those who were
annual business meeting on Jan. 6 at the first humble witness .lo Christ's
the home of Betsy Parsons in Mid- binh. The peppermint itself represe nt s the kingly gift of spice, and the
dleport.
red color evokes the sacrifice of the
Chatter Club
Lord. The while represents his puriThe ·Decembe r meeting of the ty, and just as Jesus told us to break
Challer Club was held at the home bread in his name , the cane is meant
of Mary Myers, Long Bon om.
to be broken and shared.
Roll call wa s answered by mem Refreshments were served by the
hostess and a Chnstmas gift bers tclhng what hand -made favor
' exc hange held with the. exposing of they brought for the nursi ng home
secret pals. Members played btngo trays.
'
The travelin g prize, prov tded by
and a door prize was given away.
Names were drawn for 1999 Eva Robso n, was won by Marcia
Dennison . Dorothy Woodard will
secret pals and for meeting tim es.
furnish the prize for January.

·- ;-"---Community

' Nelsonvill e
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IMPORTANT NOTICE TO

,.,., ..;. "-fdts

~

•
Middleport Literary Club
·:reviews The Shenandoah
•
The Shenandoah River Valley
:: was the • focu s of Mrs. Martha
;: Hoover's program at a recent meet.0: ing of the Middleport Literary Club
·&gt; held at the home of Mrs. Jeancue
:;:Thomas in Middleport:
;. : Hoover stated that The Shenan::: doah by ~ulia Davis was published
·: • in 1945 and that it deals with the hos~ .. ~; torY: geography, and stories of the
:~-Shenando ah River, liS valley and tts

'

.. ~ "'Pomeroy
,:Gallipolis
"'Lebanon
•Dayton
•Wilmington
• Hi llsboro
•sard inia
•springfield
•Greenfield ·, •Circl cv ill~

Ann
Landers

&lt;&gt;f&lt;' ;,·,'if

JCiemens
withdraws trade demand, snubs·Astros
.
.
;:0y MICHAEL A. LUTZ
,: ' SPRING, Texas (AP) - Roger
~lemens IS no longer demanding that
....-i!le Toronto Blue Jays trad e him . And
Jf they do, he can refuse 11.

Women shouldn't build their entire life around a man -gain some independence now

;"*',;:&gt;!l«~"'-P:ir.\,&amp;~

prosecutors.
sors have voiced simi lar concerns.
SLOC senior vice president of
public communications Shelley
All corporate sponsors, partners
Thomas said organizers would coop- and suppl iers in the USOC's marketcrate w1th lhe USOC invescigation. ing programs had been contacted
as they have pledged 10 do with the about the case and the Mitchell
other inquiries.
panel 's mvesi Jgation , Hybl sai d
USOC president Bill Hyb l
refused to rul e out penalties agai nst ,
"Based on what we . know, we
organizers, but said the USOC had have told the sponsors that they ca n
no intention of taking over Sail count on full ovemghi so that it
Lake's Olympic preparation s.
won't happen in the future." Hybl
" These games will go on," he said.
said. "They will be one of the most
succ essful. i.f not the most successThe USOC preSident also said
ful, Winter Games ever ··
ihat American cittes bidding for
Olympic offt cials, meanwhile, future Olympics and Pan Amencan
tried to calm jillery sponsors, who Games must abtde by a 25~page set
· pay an tncreasmg percentage of the of ethics guidelines "that say what
mulllmtllion-dollar sports · budget you can and cannot do."
and are auracted by an injage of
quality and high ethical standards.
, No such USOC rules were in
US West, a major sponso r of the effect when Salt Lake won the
2002 Dlyinpics. wrote to SLOC pres- Winter Games in 1995, Hybl satd ,
idenl Frank Joklik to protest the although IOC rules limited gifts to
" unsavory allegallo11s." Other spon- members to $150 eac h.

The Daily Sent~~~

*Pendants
*Earrings

·All on Sale!

�•

-

Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • .Middleport, Ohio

W*fnnday, December 23,1998

....••

•

• ••

Traditional roast turkey with speciaf
family stuffing for the Christmas table :·
By The Associated p...,..
Alfred Ponale includes his recipe
for Roast Turkey Stuffed with
Mashed Potatoes. Sausage and
Chanterelles in " Alfredo Portale's
Gotham Bar and Grill Cookbook"
(Doubleday, S45).
The book is a ·collection of
recipes from lhe noted New York

.

restaurant of which he is ow ner·

.
CLASS DESIGNS SNOWFLAKES • The Meigs High School Junior Welding Class, and their·
instructor, Richard Fetty, designed and fabricated snowflakll! Christmas decorations for the Village of
Rutland, which have been on display in the community throughout the Christmas season. Fetty and his
students also fabricated and donated a large metal lighted Christmas tree.
·
·
"The old candy cane decorations were in disrepair,· Mayor JoAnn Eads said. ~We're very apprecia·
tiv_e of the hard work that went into the -decorations. • The Village Council voted Ialit month to appropnate the funds necessary to add needed decorations so that Rutland could enhance the holiday cel·
ebration for residents.
'
Pictured are, left, Daniel Young, John Boling, Brandon Collins, Levi Burns, Jared Bobb, Jared Smith,
Jessie Thomas, Gene Bing, Jimmy Yeauger, Kenny Hatfield, Cary Stewart, Ray Basim, Leiter Parker,
Jock Rose, Ed Smith, Andy Doczi, lee Greene, Ronnie Smith, Erik Matheny, Jason Miller and Mr. Fetty.

Christmas cookies the kids can help bake
By J UDE MAHONEY
Associated Press Writer
The smell of baki ng cookies and
the sound of children's laughter arc
evocati\·e reminders of Chr istmas .
Some of the newer cookbooks now
in bookstores can help bring ohal
fest ive spiri t into your home in time·
for the holidays.
'(wo were wri tten especiall y for
adults and kids to use together. coS!
less than $15 each and would be fun
to use during the holidays: " Family
Fun's Cookie's for Christmas: 50
Recipes for You and Your Kids''
(Hyperion, $9.95 ), edited by Deann a
Cook; and "The Hole in the Wall
Gang Cookbook: Kid Friendly
Redpes for Families lo Make
Together" (Simon &amp; Schuster, $14)
by Paul Newman and A.E. Hotchner.
" Cooki es
for
Christmas "
includes seasonol specials such as ·
Chocolate Crinkle s, Thumbprint
Cookies and Marshmallow Christ· ·
mas Trees (recipe follows), among
its selections.
"The Hole in the Wall Gang
Cookbook" offers a wider rang ~ of
recipes families can make together.
from Strike Up the Band Pizza and
Glenn Close 's Georgian-Style
"Creamed" Corn to Fast Eddie 's
Fast-Disappearing Apricot Popcorn
Balls (recipe follows). A plus is that
this book is dedicated to charity. All
proceeds go to fund camps for terminally ill children-throughout the
United States.
A"nother book, "Rose's Christ·
mas Cookies" (Morrow, $22) is by
eminent ·ba ke r Rose Levy Berarlbaum , author of "The Cake Bible."

It i~ a imed at adults but includes a

'eellon on " Cookie; LQ Make With
Kids. "
·
Beranbaum 's book. is by' far the
most compl ete,_offering 60 reci pes
for cookies that can be given as

gifts. used l\l dccoral!O trees. tables
an_d mantelpieces. dr just consumed
with gus to. It featu res full -page
color photographs of eac h rec ipe
and is printed on glossy, spill -res istant paper.
Rec ipes range· from easy Scoui; h
Shortbreads , to fan ciful . frag ile
Snow fl akes of powdered sugar and
egg whit es that take hours to make
but will deck your tree with neeting
holiday beauty.
Marshmallow Christmas Trees
or Wreaths
Preparation time: 20 minutes
10-ounce bag marshm allows
6 tablespoons buller
Green food coloring
6 cups cornflakes
1/2 cup red hots
Nonstick cookin g spray
In a saucepan over medium heat. ·
melt the marshmallows with the but-.
ter, slitTing constantly. Remove from
heat and add green food-co l(lring (a
drop or two at a time until des ired
color is reached ). cornflakes and red
hots, slirnn g well after each addi tion . Once the mixture has cooled

slightly, spray your hand s with
cooking spray and mold little
mounds of mixture into cone·shaped

" trees" ; dccoral e with extra red
hots. Pl ace the trees on a waxed
paper-lined tray to enol completely.
Makes 12 to 18 trees ..
· Fo r wreaths, fonn the mi xture

into open circ les and add shoestring
licorice bows.

(Recipe from " Famil y Fun's
Cookies for ChriSimas : 50 Rec ipes
for You and Your Kids.")

executive chef. The dish combines
his father-in-law's uncon• e~~t io n al
potato and chanterelle stuffing with
his mother's traditional sausage and
bread stuffing, managi ng to ·honor
both. trad itions witho ut betray ing
eithe r one, he says.

He urges the use of a fresh. freerange. organic or kosher turkey for
the best flavor. The stoc k can be prepared a day in advance, covered and
stored in 1he refri gerator.

Roast Turkey Stuffed with
Mashed Potatoes, Sausage and
C.hanterelles
Turkey StO&lt;:k:
Turkey neck and gihlcts (no
li ver)
I 0 cupS' turkey stock or chicken
stoc k
·
Chop the turkey ne ck into large
pi ece s and combine in a large

sc

He success fully compl eted 12
.weeks of training . des igned to challenge· new Marin e rec ruits both
physical ly and mentall y. Ba ys and
fe llow rec ruit:.. began their trai ning

at5 a.m., by runnong th ree '1!il esand
perform ing ca li stheni cs. In addi tion
to the phys ical conditioni ng program , B.iys 5ipent numerous hOurs in
c lassroo.ni and fi c]d ass ignmen ts

' which included learnin g fi rst aid,
uniform regul ations, combat water
surVival , mark sman ship , h and-tohand combat , and assorted weapons
train ing. They perfo rmed close order

into the roastin g pan and bri ng

. .

I 1/4 teaspoons ground junipet
berries (grind in a spice or coffee
·_
grinder)
Coarse salt and freshly ground
white pepper to taste
· '
Bring a large pot of lightly salted
water to a boil over hi gh heat. Add'
the potatoes and cook until tender,
20 to 25 minutes. Drain well and
return to the empty pol. Stir the

a

po tat o masher. Mix in the soUl·

boil, scrapin g up the browned bits
'on the bonom of the pan with, a
wooden spoo n. ·
Pour the stock int o ' a large

cream and 8 tablespoons of the but,
ter.
In a large saute pan , heat 2 table-

10

Chad Wheeler
Na vy Seaman Chad A. Wheeler.
son of Darrell and Glori a Wheeler qf
Tuppers Pl ains. recentl y completed
a s1x -rnu nth Jr.:ployment to th e

Mediterranean Sea ab oard the guid ed mi ss il e de stroyer USS Mi tsc hcr.
and professional condut: t.
homeponed in Norfolk . Va.
Bays and fell ow re&lt;ruit s ended
During the deployment , Wheel · the ~ ra i nin g [lhasc with the Crudbl e. er 's ship participated in vario us
a 54-huur team effo rt. probe 1m solv- major exercises to hone banle readi ing evolut io n wh ic h cu lmin ated wit II ne ss and increase their intcropcrabilan emoti on al ceremony in whi ch the it y with other naval forces.
rec rui ts were pre sen ted the Marine
While deploycd.,Whcclcr had the
Corps Emblem and were addresse-d opportuni ty to vi si t Crete, Corfu.
as "Mari nes" for the !ir.St time since France, Greece, Italy, Monaco and
boot camp began.
Spain. where crew membe rs particiRays join s 41,000 _men and pated in community relations prowomen who will ent er the Marine jects in the host countries.
Corps th is ye ar from all over the .
A 1997 graduat e of Eastern Hi gh
country.
School , he joi ned the navy in July.
1997 .

pound. until a meat th ermomet er
inserted. in the thickest part of the
thigh read s 175 F. About every 20

that silent, holy night
remain in your heatt
throughout the year.

'.

'

.I .

News policy
In an effort to provide our reader·
ship with current news. the Sunday
Tim es-Sen tin el will not accept weddings aflcr 60 days from tl~c dat e nf ,
lh c event.
Weddin gs submincd aft er the 60da y deadlin,e will appear durin g the
week in The Dail y Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Dllily Tribune . _
All club meetings and other new s
artic les in the soc\cty section must

be submilled within 60 doys uf
occurrence. AU birthday s must be
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occurrence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

CREMEENS
FUNERAL
HOME

.

8111 116fey

I·

•

By TAMARA HENRY

qualifications of teachers questioned

t

USA Toellly

. WASHINGTON - Parent• should have confidence that the people teacl&gt;ong thetr ch•!dren are qualified, says the head of a national accrediting group
t!tat •s worlcong lo booslthe standard.• of teacher colleges.
But Arthur Wise, president of the National Council for Accreditation of
Teacher Educat ion (NCATE J. says many adulls are allowed into classrooms
as, substitutes without having college degrees. Others come to le!l'hing
t!tioogh alternative, temporary or emergency rouleS. meaning they don 't meet
stAte licensing requircmen ls or have been allowed to bypass them.
·
. , A~d while some teachers are graduates of education programs, people
quesuon the1r prepatahon. To Wise, it means the nation is headed - or should
'!e headed - for a new educational era of "truth in advenising or truth in
labeling." ·
· "Right now stales are misleading parenls by describing everyone a.• a
"'acher."' Wise says.
·
. · "Those (graduates from schools) meeting state requirements wiII be known
as teachers; others will be something else. This should require states to be
more truthful. ..
·
American Federation of Teachers (AFT) says about 6.5 percent of
no:wiy h1red teachers each year come in with emergency credentials. In di s:
lfi~IS where students are predominantly minority. 14 percent of newly hired
teachers are under emergency credentials.
·
·' .. In Cal ifornia, about30.000 teachers. estimated to be one-tenth of the teach '~ll workforce. are working on emergency credentials.
But as the emergency credentialing phenomenon ha.• grown. oft~n propelled by surgmg enrollments, so too have the voices. like Wise 's, calling

:;n.e

By TAMARA HENRY
U~AToclay .
. A group that has been around four
decades thinks it has the tough and
consistent standanls for teacher colle~es tha,t the nation needs 1o improve
· t,he quality, of teacher education.
·. Not everyone agrees that the
Nptional Council for Accreditation of
Teacher Education (NCATE). established in 1954, is the answer. But
president Arthur Wise stresses that
NJ::ATE is the only professional
accreditation association for schools,
fOIIeges and ·departments of educati\Jn in the United States.
· NCATE does not claim that its
stimda,rds for teacher preparation are
superior to those of any stale but
boasts that its consistent, high quali ty' standards are free from the influ-

Rock shows
".might pose
.risk to aging
boomers ·
~y ELIZABETH NEUS
Gannett News Service
' WASHINGTON - Anyone
who's ever been to·a rock concert
~nows you can feel the music in
your chest, but one Fleetwood
Mac fan re~o•ering from heart
surgery ha.• l;ll&lt;en that concept to its
limit.
His doctor says the music at a
concert the 40-year-old man
attended two weeks after coronary
bypass surgery was so "intensely
loud" that the vibrations reignited

severe pain in the man' s healing

'

Racine, Ohio

Jsy C11m11n1
Ani11s C11m11n1
luH Hill .
Tammy HI((

~reparation,

'

incision - a "Fleetwood Mac
attack."
As more boomers reach the age
where they may need heart surgery.
said Dr. Stuart Ri&gt;senbush , more
Fardiac doctors may want to warn
them of this possible post-surgical
side effect.
"
:· "This syndrome was not report·
ed in the previous generation of
patients who underwent coronary .
bypass surgery. probably because
1hey did not attend events where
the sound volume approached the
levels found at rock concerts,"
Rosenbush ·wrote in a letter to
Wednesday'SJournal of the Amerlcan Medical Association.
' In an era where 50-somethings
are taking their gmndchildren to
~e the pushing-6Q Rolling Stones,
this may happen more and more
often, he said. He wrote the letter
J&gt;artially to alert other canliologists.
?nd partially becau~e he thought
medical journals needed more
'"I
. 'og hi ness. ..

ence of state politics or local p~es­
sures of supply and demand.
NCATE offers several panner_ships that lead 1o accreditation. They
involve either NCATE doing the
review by itself or in combination
with state officials. NCATE also
offers a more rigorous accreditation
review that looks not just at issues
such· as the content of a school's
courses, but at students' performance
throughout the teacher education program and on licensing exams.
About 500 institutions are accredited by NCATE nationwide. The
schools are in 44 states. but only 17
of the states require ail their public
colleges of education to be accredited by NCATE. Indiana and Kentucky
participate in the most ambitious
NCATE; re•iew.
r'

the practice into question:
' Education Secretary Richard Riley confronted the problem in a speech
thi&lt; fall. "Too many school di stricts are sacrificing quality for quantity to
meet the immediate demand of puuing a warm body in front of a cla.m oom..
Many of these emergency teachers are dedicated and wantlo do their best.
But I have heard about and read too many honror stories about pro• isional
teachers who are teaching by the seal of their pant&lt; with no preparation and
no guidance."
• AfT president Sandra Feldman. in a forceful challenge to the nation's
governors. ~ayors and boards of education, recently called for an end to emergency credential s an~ to the mi sassignment of teachers, or " higher (acade·
mic) standards will be a fi ction."
• The National Council of Teachers of English. at iis convention in late
November in Na,hville. conde mned the hiring of noncertified and nonl icensed
teachers.
" We. a.&lt; citizens, should insist that any cla.&lt;sroom with children needs to
have a fully certified teacher who ha.' gone through a program for which there
is quality control ," says Dennis Hinkle. College of Education dean at Towson University in Maryland. " I really believe if we a(e talking higher stan dards. damn it. let's hold everybody to those higher standard,."
But when some hear such complaint•. they fear teacher colleges are simply trying to proteCt their monopo.ly oo the production of teachers. Charles
Sykes. a researcher and author of "Dumbing Down Our Schools" (St. Martin's Press ), agree s there is a danger from hirin g teachers with emergency
credent ials.

·

But.. generally, the alternati ve routes _to teaching "are seen as a threat to
the status quo ... he says.

·• Anything that breOks that monopoly. whether it's chaner schools, school
choice or emergency credentialing. pose• a threat to that monopoly."
.•
Still. even P""p&lt;Ciive teachers at colleges of education have seen for them- :
selves the problem• of teachers who l ac ~ the proper training.
:
c'raig Ha.•tings. 27. a junior at Towson's College of Education who ha.• •
a bachelor's in history but is working on an elementary education degree. :
questions the wisdom of hiring "people comiQg off the street who haven't :
committed themselves to a four-year progrnm.'·

.

·:

Rebecca Gambrill, 39. a Towson senior. says schools can' I affonlto "JUSt •
let people have on-the-job training. If you raise the bar. you're just going to :
get beuer people."
.
;
Karen Driggers. 22. afo fth-year senior who switched majors from biolo- •
gy to elementary education, remembers during her student teaching that an :
adult who was working as a sut&gt;.titute at her a"-•igned school was a.' ked to '
become a long-term substitute. then was hired full time.
,
"That's unacceptable. There should be guidelines that say teachers should •
have qualifications to teach and, if not. that they· be going to school to get ·!
it." Driggers says.
•
Just knowing an academic &gt;object is not enou gh. insists Jerry H. Robbins.
dean of the College of Education at Eastern Michigan Uni versity in Ypsi· ~
lanti. currently the nation's largest produce r of educational personne l.
'
He says 40 percent of the students in EMU's ini tial teacher preparation •
program have at least a college degree. The students include those who have
worked a• physicians, lawyers. social workers and·accountants.
" You just can't take a course or two and go out and innict yourself on·
children." Robbins says. "We are not going to have anything to do with that." .

ing gun bans regar ess of scienc~.
By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
But Jim Brady he former presiAP Medical Writer
CHICAGO Laws barring dential press secretary who was
felons from buying guns should be wounded in an assassination attempt
expanded to ban prospective buyers on Ronald Reagan, supported the
who have committed misdemeanors, siudy's conclusions in an editorial
according to a study published today accomparlying the findin~s.
The editorial, co·written by
in the Journal of the American Med"Brady's wife. Sarah, and by Dr.
ical Association. ·
Researchers found that handgun Thomas Cole of lAMA's editorial
purchasers with a prior misdemeanor staff, said California has successfulconviction were nearly live times as ly stopped would-be gun buyers-if
likely as gun buyers without a crim- they have convictions for violent misinal record to be charged with. new demeimor crimes.
"The findings (of the study)
offenses involving firearms . or viosuggests · there are comstrongly
lence.
.
pelling
reasons
to do so," the editoA critic of the study said its methods were flawed and that its authors rial said,
The 'study was led by Dr. Garen
and under.writers are activists favor·

concerned that something was

:wrong. He didn't mak e the con:nection (with the concert). but to
:me, it was pretty clear.

a rolling ba&lt;is, with about 100 examined annually.
Wi se estimates that negative decisions are made about accredited institutions - meaning the quality ha.'
slipped ·- about 15 percent of the
time. But as many a.&lt; 25 percent of
the new schools NCATE examines
are denied accreditation.
Schools of education involved
with NCATE tout the advantages and
criticize state officials for not eagerly pushing colleges to adopt the standards.
"In South Carolina, as in most
states, we don't require schools to be
accredited by NCATE. not \.ike we
require medical schools, law schools
and CPA schools to be accredited by
simila&lt; organizations. That's what
society needs to do," says Thomas

Wintemute of the University of,California, Davis, and underwrillen in
J&gt;art by the California Wellness Foundation.
The researchers did ·a 15-year
study of 5,923 randomly chosen people in California who legally purchased handguns in 1977, based on
stale records. The researchers were
a)Jie to track 5, 177 for the full study
period, while the others could not be
verified a&lt; continued residents of California.
·
,Of the 2,735 subjects convicted
before their gun purchases of at least
one ·misdemeanor, 1.379 (50.4 percent) were subsequently charged with
new crimes. Only 239 purchasers out
of 2.442 who had no prior criminal
history were subsequently charged

'Pauper' petitions to court have
per cases about 10 times less likely
By TONY MAURO
to
get a high court hearing than casUSA Today
es
on the paid docket.
Even if you are too poor to pay the
Critics say the coun's track record
Supreme Court's $300 filing fee. you
can still petition the court. But your denies equal access to justice for the
chances of being heard are virtually indigent.
"I don't think I'd ever advise anynil- and gelling worse.
one
to file a pauper case again." says
More than 5,000 people file petiTom
Goldstein, a Washington, D.C.,
tions that form the biggest chunk of
the court's docket each year - the : ·lawyer. "You can't be sure you are
so-called ''pauper" docker. That's getting the court's full attention."
La.&lt;t year. doldstein filed a pauper .
short for hin forma pauperis," Latin
petition
for a drug defendant, chalfoi "in the manner of a pauper,"
lenging a Chicago federal appeals
whic~ allows petitioners to file for
court ruling-tlmt ran contrary to 19
free if they have no money.
The high court agreed to consid- other courts that ruled on the same
er only 14 of the 5,253 pauper peti- issue- just the kind of conflict that.
tions filed this past term, or under might appeal to the high court. It
three-tenths of a percent, making pau- denied review, widlout comment, in

Chia• ~.,

s,.,

. 7:00am - 10:00 am Only

: letter:

: ' The man's ~ urgery was unevent ~
; fuL He left the hospit~l fi•e days
•after the operation. and a week lat·
: er, the pain in his sternum ·cracked
;open so that doctors could get to
•his heart. was nearly gone.
: Fifteen days after he left the
:hospital, the man went to the Reel·
•wood Mac concert. He was prop:erly cautious with his healing
:wound. no twirling in the ai sles for
;this fan. "He was careful not to get
' 'too close to the other attendees so
:that they would not bump against
:his sternum," Rosenbu sh wrote.
: An hour 'into the concert. the
man's chest began to hurl so bad'ly that he left early. The next day
;it was so painful that upper body
:movements and deep breathing
'were difficult. He went to see his
·doctor.
"He wasn' t sure what it was:"
,Rose11bush said in an interview.
" He had .the discomfort and was

In South Carolina. only six of the
30 teacher education programs ~re .
nationally accredited. while four of
New York's 113 teacher education
institutions are NCATE-accredited.
But the New York Board of
Regents has voted to require all
teacher education schools to achieve
accreditation by December 2004.
Measured by inquiries and
requests for membership, interest in
NCATE has tripled the past few
years. Wise says.
"It's astounding that only now are
we waking up to see this problem
with teacher quality. States are seeing
NCATE as a mechanism to meet that
push for ,higher teachec quality,"
Wise says.
The 500 NCATE schools, accredited every five ~ears. are revisited on

Powell , dean of the College of Education at Winthrop University. Rock
Hill. S.C.
.
But many educators complain of
the cost of the NCATE process.
which ra~ges from $3,000 to $6.000
for the five-year accreditation visit.
with an annual fee of $1 ,430 to
$2,750. based on the number of
graduates.

repeats complaints t,hatteaching can- '
dictates are weak no matter who:
accredits the schools .
" What they want is a' monopoly. :
There's a clear ri sk'·in creating a :
monopoly. That's a tremendous conCF,ntration of power in private
hands," Podgursky says .
·;
Wise vehemently disagrees there's·
little difference in his program. He '.
says Arkansas, North Carolina and:
West Virginia adopted NCATE stan-·
dards in the 1980s. Ten years later, '
schoolchildren in those stales '
impro•ed on the standardized tests by·
the National Assessment of Educa-·
donal Progress at a higher-than-average rate.
He describes this as " probably the
most important single research find- ·
ing substantiating the influence that ·
we have."

. ,_

Eugene Hickok. Pennsyl•ania's
secretary of education, not only com·
plains of the expense, but says
NCATE's appro•al process is
extremely labor-intensi•e. Michael
Podgursky, chairman of the economics department at the University of
Missouri, al so is critical of NCATE,
noting that his research finds little
difference between graduates from
teachor colleges with and without
national certification. Podgursky

I
•

Study: consid r misdemeanors in gun sales

Rosenbush, a cardiologist at
; Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Med; ical Center in Chicago and himself
:a Stones/Jefferson Airplane/Beatles
·fan. outlined the unusual ca.•e in his

.'

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Accreditation group touts standards fo.r _classroom

potatoe s over medium heat until ~e

excess moisture is evaporated an'Jj
they seem so mewhat drier, about 3
minutes. Pass through a Jl91ato ric~r
into a large bowl, or mash with ,:a

Merry Christmas •••

i.~

drill and opcral cd as a small infantry
umt liurm g fie ld trai nin g.
J3ays and Othl.! r recr uits also
rccc!vcd in strut:ti on un the· Marine
Co.rp s' core values ~ honor.
~.:.o urag c and ..; nmm ilmL: nl. und what
the word s mean in guiding personal

Coarse salt and freshly ground
white pe,pper 10 taste
Pour the turkey drippings into a
. glass bowl. Skim off and discard the
yellow fat that ri ses to the sur face.
Set ohe drippings aside. ·
Pl ace the roastin g pan ove r 2
burners on top of the stove and turn
the heat to high. Pour 2 cups of stock

rosemary

..

'(

Rex Bays
Marine Pvt. Rex A . Bays. a 199 8
gradual e of Ri ve r Va lley H1gh
School of Cheshire. rece ntl y completed basic tra ining -' m Marine
Corps Recru it Depot. Parris Island .

into pieces

unsalted buller
.
I 1/4 cups thinly sliced shallOts
(6 1arge shall ots)
4 garlic cloves. minced
2 pounds fresh mushroom ~
preferabl y chanterelles, thinly slicCd
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
·
2 pounds sweet Italian sausage,
casings remov~
:
I cup chopped fresh flat -leaf
parsley
1/2 cup chopped fresh chives
2 teaspoons chopped fre sh thyme
I 112 teaspoons chopped fre s~

Fast Eddie 's Fast-Disappe~ring
soucepan with the giblets an.d stock.
Apricot Popcorn Balls
·
Slowly
bring to a boil over medium(Cook's Note: you will need a
hi gh heat. skimming off any foam
spoons of remaining butter ove;
candy therm ometer for Jhi s recipe )
3 t/2-ounce bag microwave pop- th at ri ses to the surface. Reduce the sau.cepan and add remaining stock medium-low heat. Add shallots and
heat to very low and simmer for 3 to and reserved drippings. Bring to a garlic and cook, stirring often, until
'orn
4
hours. Strain the stock into a large boil over high heat and cook until they're softened. about 3 minut~s.
2 cups chopped dried apricots
bowl.
You should have 2 quarts. ri chly ·fla vored and reduced to about Add to the potatoes.
I cup quick-cookin g (not instant)
Finely chop the turkey neck meal 4 cups , 15 to 20 minute s. Stir in the
Heat remaining 2 tablespoons of
oatmeal nakes
and the giblets, di scarding the chopped giblets and turkey meat. butter in the saute pan over mcdiUl)l·
I cup brown sugar
I stick (8 tablespoons) un salted bones. Cool the stock and chopped Whisk in the cornstarch mixture. high heat . Add mu shrooms and
turkey meat to room temperature . ground juniper berries and rosemary. cook, stirring occasionally, imtilth~
butter or margarine
Cover
separately and refrigerate.
Cook unt il the sauce is lightly thick- liquid they gi\'C off evaporates ail~
1/2 cup light corn syrup ·
Thrkry:
ened, about I minute. Remove from the mushrooms begin tO brown, I il
Butter a large roasting pan or
16- to . IS-pound wh ole fresh the heat and whisk in the butter, a to 15 minute s. Add to the potatoes..
bowl. Pop corn according to pack'
turkey,
rinsed with cold water and piece at a tim / Seos'on with salt and
Heat the oil in the saute pan ove~
age directions. You should have
-paned
dry
. pepper. P911finto a. warmed sauce- medium-high heat. Add sausage and
about 10 cups. Pour popcorn into
I recipe Mashed Potato, Sausage. boat. /
· cook, breaking it up with a spoon:
prepared pan . Stir in apricots and
Serve
the
turkey
with
the
stuffing
until lightly browned, about 10 min;,
and
Chanterelle
Stuffing
(recipe
foloatmeal.
and
sauce
.
utes. Add the sausage to the pota- ,
lows)
&lt;
In a 2-quart saucepan over. medi2
tablespoons
.
vegetable
oil
Mashell
Potato,
Sausage,
and
toes. Add parsley, chives, thyn\e ,:
um heat, combine brown sugar. but·
I teaspoon ground juniper b..,.tes Chanlerelle Stuffing
rosemary and juniper berries and ;
ter and corn syrup , stirring constant·
3 pounds Idaho or russel baking season with salt and pepper to taste. i
ly. Continue cooking and stirring (grind in a spice or coffee gl'ir0er) .
Coarse salt and freshly gr0und potatoes, peeled and cut into 2-inch The stuffing is best freshly prepared.,
.until the mixture reaches 290 F on a
chunks
white
pepper
Do not •stuffthe turkey until ready~o :
candy thermometer. Pour mixture
1
Preheat the oven to 325 F.
l cup sour cream
roast. Makes 12 to 16 servings.
o•er the popcorn ·and stir until the
12 tablespoon s (I 1/2 stick s)
Loosely stuff the turkey body and
popco rn is evenly coated. When the
,
mixture is cool enough to handle, neck cavities with the st'uffing .
Transfer
the
remainin
g
stuffing
to
a..----_:_:
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
:!
:
form it into balls. Cool completely
,
• '
and store in .an airtight container. shallow baking di sh, cover with alumioium foil, and refri gerote (sec
Makes 24 3-inch balls.
(Recipe from "The Hole in the Sidebar). Rub lhe ourkey all over
Wall Gang Cookbook: · Kid with the oil , ground juniper .h,errics ,
Friendly Recipes for Families lo salt and pepper.
Place ~ ~~ ·a rack set in a large.
Make Together.")
shall ow roasting pan. Pour 2 cups of
May the hope ·that was born
stock into the pan . Roast 5 1/2 to 6
hours, or abo ut 20 minul cs per

'

minutes,' baste the turkey with the
stock. If the stock evaporates, add
more to the pan, You want nice,
dark. reduced drippings: Do not let
them bum. Toward the end of the
roasting, tent the turkey with foil if
necessary to protec t the skin from
becoming too dark. Transfer the
turkey lo a large serving platter. Let
rest for 20 to 30 minutes, tented with
foil, while you prepare the sauce.
Turkey Sau&lt;e
4 teaspoons cornstar&lt;h dissolved
in 2 tablespoons water
1/8 teaspoon ground j uniper
be rries (grind in a spice or coffee
grinder)
·1 /2 teaspoon choppe4 fresh rosemary
4 tablespoons unsalted buller, cut

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..

Wednesday, Dt!cember 23, 1ggf

Shop EarlY &amp; Save

Beanie
No IJm/f

3 .99

Wh/1~ Quanltles t..ast

.2 Uter
Bo~

u month. .

The court's low itccept:mce rate is
justilied, defenders say, because most
pauper petitions raise insubstantial
issues or ask the court to lix sonie
factual error in a court ruling below.
something the Supreme Court never
does. Some petitions make little
sense.
But pauper cases have given rise
tosomeofthecourt'smostimportant
doctrines, including the handwrillen
petition of Clarence Gideon, which
Jed to the 1963'decision declaring a
del'endanl 's right to counsel in criminal cases. Many death penalty deci-

sions co'fne from the pauper docket as
well.
,
Thirty years ago. Chief Justice
Earl Warren placed a high priority on
pauper petitions. telling law clerks to
" be their counsel" by ferreting out
the legal issue involved and making
sure it got consideration. During·that
period. as many as 5 percent of the
pauper cases were granted review by
the court. - more than 15 times
today's rate.
What's caused the change?
Law clerks,_who summ~rize the
petitions for their justices, say on the
record they get the same considera·

lion as Petitions on the paid docket. .
"The court is pretty evenhanded ·
about it," says Stephen Smith, who ..
clerked for Justice Clarence Thomas ·,
in 1993.
But another former law clerk, .
who declines to be identilied, says, .
"Maybe that' s true in August, when _
the clerks are new and they're read- -'
ing everything carefully. But in ..
March or April, they llip through ,
them prelly fast. I wouldn't want my
case to be in that pile." The justices ..
themselves rarely look at pauper ..
petitions.

J•
~·

•

HAPPY HOLIDAYS
'

.

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c;hance of bein.g heard ·

•.- · ·. The Fanners Bank will observe the
following hours on Christmas Eve: .
Lobby 8:30-4 PM
Drive-Thru. 8 AM-4 PM
These hours will he observed at·all 3
locations.

DecoratiVe candles

All Natfvlty SetS

family practitioner. He said the study •
Counting only the worsi crimes- failed to fully examine the population
murder
and
non-negligent of gun buyers because many with ·
manslaughter. forcible rape. robbery clean criminal ·records had been
and aggravated assault - 421 people pared from state files of gun pur· .'
with previous convictions ( 15.4 per- chaser~.
.·.
cent) were subsequently charged
The authors said including such :
compared with 60 of people with no · buyers would nol have changed the ·
criminal history (2.5 percent). results substantially. They said the •
researchers said.
public has the misperception that
But Dr. Edgar Suter, chairman of laws requiring background checks of .
Doctors for Integrity in Policy prospective gun buyers " prohibit ·
Resear&lt;h. a nonprofit group that has gun purchase by all but the law-abidcountered medical research vilifying ing.
guns; said the study was politically
"In fact, many thousands of per·
skewed.
sons with a history of criminal activ"The individuals invol•ed with . ity legally purchase firearms' every
this want to make guns look as bad year." th.ey added. citing previous
a.• they can," Suter said Tuesday from research.
San Ram 0 n, Calif., where, he is a

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•

�•

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Wednesday, December 23, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 23, 1998

AN~EL&lt;£&gt;

•

'

Marlee Hoffman
. Daughter of
David and Kathie
Hoffman

Gracie Hoffman
Daughter of
David and Kathie
Hoffman

Lian Hoffm;tn
Daughter of
David and Katliie
Hoffman

Nathan Rothgeb
Son of
Todd and Beverly
Rothgeb

Justin Browning
Son of
Doug and Terri Browning
Grandparents
Theodore and Bec-k y Pullins

*

Mackenzee Redman
Daughter of
Ray and Mandy Redman

Nathai;:Redman
Son of
Ray and Mandy Redman

Abigail Faith
Causey
Daughter of
John and Tammi Causey

Arryn Stout
Daugbter of .
Michelle Price and
Alan Stout
Justin Nitz
Son of
Michelle Price imd .
•
Bobby Nitz

Nicole LeeAnn
Moodispaugh
Daughter of
Todd and Tracey
Moodispaugh
Grandparents
Roger and Sheila Westfall

Kali Morgan
Cunningham

Sierra Cleland
Daughter of
Chase and Shannon
Cleland

Daughter of
Shawn and Leanne
·cunningham
Grandparents
Ron and Judy Clark
Robert and Sharon .

Katie an_d Ross
Keller
Children of
Rodney and Jenny Keller

Austin Lute
· Son of
Kevin and Lisa Lute

Jesse Ritchie and
Jansen Wolfe
Grandchildren of ·
Judy and Ernie Bing

Grandpare.nts

Randy and Denise Williams

'

J

Megan Snodgrass
Daughter of
James and Rebecca
Snodgrass

Carolann
Stewart
Daughter .of
Greg and Laura Stewart

Great Grandparents
Doley and Mattie Beegle

Keshie Tillis

Daughter of
Michael and April
Tillis
Tim and Teresa
Gillian

,.
•

Katie Gilkey ·
Daughter of
Bill and Julie Gilkey

Emily Gayle Sinclair
Daughter of
Chad and Krist&amp; Sinclair
Grandparents
Charles and Margaret Sinclair
Jim and Ruth Ann Sellers

Jesse Dylan Ritchie
Son of
Bob and Bridget (J3ing)
- Ritchie

Steven and' Brandon
Mahr
Sons of
Ryan and Carol Mahr

Erin Chapman and
Jamie O'Brien
Daughters of
Jim and Sherry O'Brien

Kaitlyno Elizabeth
Daughter of
St,ev~ and Pam
Harten bach

Michelle Anne Weaver
,Daughter of
Patty Weaver and the
late Matt Weaver

Grandparents
Gene and Wanda Imboden
Bob and Viola Harten bach .

Jacob Matthew
Brewer·
Grandchild of ·
CharHe Brewer Sr. and
Diana Brewer
Lady and Ronald Davis ·

Megan Morris
Daughter of
Fred Houghton and
· .Sabrina Morris

Ga1J1riel Joesph Rime

Grandparents
Rick and Marcia Morris
Fred and

.Grandparents
Rex and Kathy Cumings

Son of
Amber and Monte
Riffle

Lauren Booth
Daughter pf
Casey and Julia Booth

Andrew~

I•

Zachary Carpenter
Son of'
James R. Carpenter and ·
Misty R. Hayman .

Robert Strohl and
Breanna Colburn
Parents
f
Tracy Collins,
Rick Colburn and
Robert Strohl

Alexandrea Nicole
Crow
Daughter of
Eric and Holly Crow

Savannah Bailey

Daughter of
Boyd Bailey and
Toni Sellers ·

Summer
Knight
Daughter of
·Vince Knight, Jr.
oiTn .• _
Vince, Mama Susan,
Aunt Heather,

Justin Jacks
Son of
Michael and Lisa Jacks

Wyatt Nicholas. and
Connor Braxton
Jarrell
Sons of
Mark and Aimee Jarrell

Brady, Ty and
Haley

Bryannah Dailey
· Daughter of
Bryan and Melissa Dailey

Lindsay Cooper
Daughter of
Greg and Sharon Cooper

Bridget Cooper
Daughter of
Greg and Sharon Cooper

Great-G reatparents
Charles and Jean Fitch

Grandchildren of
Todd and Diana
Bissell

Amber Davidson
Daughter of
Allen and Tracy
Davidson

..

Sven Wyatt Mozingo
Son of
Rusty and Angela D.
Mozingo

Emily Dillard
Granddaughter of
Jim and Donna Davis

Wells
Daughters of
Jason and Faith Wells

. · We love you
Mommy, Mama &amp;
Papa

Tanner and Taylor
Hysell
Children of
David and Penny Hysell

Gregory Priddy
Son of
Timothy Priddy Jr and
Darlene Hunter

Brody Waren Wood
Grandson of
. Bob and Sue Wood

Kelsie Joy Powell
Daughter of
Scott and Kristi Powell

Heaven LeeAnn
Westfall
Daughter of
Roger and Sheila Westfall
· Grandparents
Fairy Foster and Jimmie G.·

.,
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Kelsey Brooke
Johnson
Daughter of ·
'
Buck and Krista Johnson

Kyle McKeever
Son of
Dave and Bert Grindstaff
'

Christopher Dalton
I;
Thorla
Grandson of
Daye and Bert Grindstaff

�.

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Wednesday, December 23, 1998

Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

CHI

Travis and Tanner Tackett
Sons of
Ray and Janet Tackett ·

Anna Marie
Harten bach
Daughter of
Cind y · ~nd Bill Capehart
Steve and Pam
Hartenbach · ·

The

D~tily

Sentinel• Page 13

Wednes~ay, December 23, 1991

:&gt;I&lt;£&gt;TMA~

Tara LeAnn
Capehart
Daughter of
Bill Capehart, Jr and
Stepdaughter of
Cindy Capehart•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

Thomas Parker, II
Son of
Thomas and Amber
Parker

.J?illon Ryan Hill
Son of
'
Heath and Diane Hill

Kyle Michael Hill
Son of'
Heath and Diane Hill

Ariel Ellis
Daughter of
Bobby Ellis and
Candace Miller
I·

Bre Mitchell
Nicholas Combs
Son of
Sam and Melissa Combs
Gnindparenls
. Brian and Charlotte Armes

Colton, Ryan,
Jushua and Dillon
Grandsons of
Bob and Sue Wood

Tyler J. Shoemaker
Grandson of
.Fre'd and Gerri Hanel

'

Cassandra Roush
Daughter of
,.
Paul and Tina Roush .
Grandparents
Carrie Roush
Buzz and Iva Slater

· Zachary and
Morgan
Children of
Scott and Renee Barton

Zachery and Larissa
Children of
Greg and Lis!l
Cunningham

Troy Austin Smith
Grandchild of
Guy and AnnieCalay.:ay

Sabra Lee Bailey
Daughter of
Roy Lee and Crystal
Bailey '
Great Grandparent .
HolenT. Smith

Marc Hedrick
Son of
Jeff and Marcy Hedrick

Katie Gilkey
Granddaughter of
Elirl · ~nd Nancy Gilkey,
Anne Hatfield,
Bill Hatfield

Dimitrious Lamm
Son of
Terry and Rochelle
Lamm

Daughter of
Vaughan and
Marybeth Mitchell
Grandparents , .
Jim and Pooch Brewer
Linda and Merlin

•

•
.'

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Breana (Scooter)
Hemsley
Daughter of
Rollie Dee Hemsley

Celestia Hendrix
Daughter of
Petie and Christi
Hendrix

Son of
Keith and Sue Darst
Grandparents
Jeff and Kitty Darst
Pete and Brenda Barnhart 1
Great grandparents
Betty Gilkey, Katheryn Mel,zer,
Tom and Bess Darst

Hailey Morgan
Roush
Daughter of
Randy and Missy
Roush

Sandy Painter
Daughter of
Victor and Lisa Painter

Bethany
Megan R.
Daughters of
Jerry and Stacey Cleland

'

'

'"
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HI
.

.i' (~~-·
"
Carissa Chantel
Wolfe
Daughter of Keith and
Cindy Wolfe
Grandchild of
Hubert and Judy Wolfe

Christian C. Varian
Son of
Alex and Keawana
Varian
Grandparents
. James and Marcia Qualls

Christopher Allen
Taylor
Son of
.
C::hrisfy Taylor
Grandparents
Bob and Dottie Hawkins

Austin Johnson
Son of ..
Van and Marlene
Johnson

Brear'lna Elizabeth
Baiiey
Daughter of
Clinton and Carissa Hill
Bailey

Kylen King and
McKayla Powell
Children of
Janis Carnahan

Destinee D.
Blackwell
Daughter of
Arica Blackwell
Grnddaughter of Steve
and Shiui Blackwell

! l
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I

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'

\

Jaylen Michael
Richards
Son of
Janice Richard

.

Zach and Trey
Coates
Sons of
Joey and Misty Coates
Grandparents
Tom and Beth Schoonover
Jane Estep and
and Diane Coates

...

Amber-Laudermilt,
JoAnna and Jamie
Jeffers
Granddaughters of
Joan King

'\ '\
I

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IJ,j! ~
_j,

Cole Graham
Son of
Dave and Jane Graham
Grandparents
Charles and Evelyn Manuel

Reagan Cremeans
Daughters of
Jay and Verna Cremeans

Stephen, James and
Raymond Honactier
Sons of .
Fred and Karen Honacher

i.
Cltase Graham
·· Son of '
Dave and Jane Graham
Grandparents
Charles and Eve lyn Manuel

;

i
f

Shawn David and Bobbiie-R
· Anne Reeves
Grandchildren of
Joan King

Josh and Jerod
Cleland
Sons of
Jim and Stephanie
Cleland

Adra Sayre
McClintock
Daughter of
John and Tara McClintock

Quinn ~. M11nn
Son of
Toby and Jayne Mann
Grandparents
Bob and Charlene Hoeli ich

·;

;.
·;

'.

''.,.,
Wesley Ryan and .
: · Morgan Danyel .
Harrison
Children of
: John and Janel Harrison

Matthew Foster
Son of
Rhonda and
Ryan Foster
Grandparents
· S h a~n and Roger Spaun and
Bobby and (..inda Foster

Chelsea Holter
Daughter of
Stanley and Tanya Holier

Sydney Diddle
Daughter of
Sha\h and Amy Diddle

&gt;'\llt&lt;lrionna, Kirk and
Laura Pullins
Children of
Tom and Stacie Pullins

Andrew Theiss .
Grandson of
Carroll and Addie Norris

Lilly Elizabeth
Michigan
Daughter of
· Marc and Le sl ~y
Michigan
Gra n&lt;ldaughter of
Donna .Can ar1d Mari e Hauck

Tyler Michael Eblin
Son of
Michael and Robin Eblin
Grandson of
Frank and Lora Mae Imboden
llen ry and Hester Eblin

Tanisha McKinney
Daughter of
John and Sheila
McKi nney
Gra nddaug hter of
Pete and Diane H enclr icks

Cody and Dylan
Weaver
. Sons of
Dwaine and Gina
Weaver ·
Grandparents .
Jim and 'Ruth Weaver

K. J. Potts and
Kayla Bachtel
Grandchildren of
'
Ron and Diane Bachtel

.;
.••

'.•

Jansen Nicole Wolfe
Daughter of
Jimmy and Theresa
Wolfe
'

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•

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Robert and Cath y. Sca(berry

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Page 14 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 23, 1991.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 23, 1998

CHI &gt;I&lt;£&gt;TMA0 AN~EL&lt;£&gt;·

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

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Grandson of
Virgil and Geraldine
Holsinger
Ester Mays

Daughter o.f
Melissa Mullins
Grandparents
Jim and Mari.e Snyder

'

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Jake ·zuspan

Taylor, Callsidy and
Trae Tucl&lt;er
Children of
Heidi Tucker
Grandparents
Mam a Diane and Papa Heman

Danielle Nicole King
Daughter of
Tony and Stepham1ie
King

·· Son of
Todd and· Darla
. Zuspan

.

Travis and Kristen
Eblin
Children of
Ronnie andDenna
Eblin

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The Daily Sentinel• Page 15 ·

CHI ) 18TML\_&lt;£&gt; ANG-EL8

if

Merissa M. Snyder

'
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

••
••
••
•

~

'

Christopher Roy
Grandson of
Clarence and Inez Roy

Kaylin Rizer
Allshouse
Daughter of
J~mes and Milisa
Rizer Allshouse
'

Latham Chase
Bissell
Son of
Jeff and"Ruth Bissell
Grandparents:
Dwight and Carolyn Bissell
and Jim and
Nutter

Dustin S. Johnson
• Son of
Charles F. and Diana L.
Johnson

· Brandon Chase
Bostick Doyle

Leia Nickole
Gilmore

•

Son of
Angela Bostick

Doyl~

of
Shawn Gilmore and
Vikki Hayes
D~ughter

·

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•

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•

, Baylee Hupp

Granddaughter of
Darrell and Jan Norris
· J·im and Opal Hupp .

Jenna Houdashelt
Granddaughter of
Marcia Houdashelt

Nathanael Hoover
Son of
David and Dhronda
Hoover

·Dalton Wayne
McCloud
Son of
Bruce McCloud and
Shannon Morariety

Zachary Browning

Shayla Danielle
Kibble

Son of
Kenny and Tammy
l3rowning

Granddaughter of
Thomas arid Suzanne

Rebecca and Matthew
Roush
Children of
·Robert and Carrie ~oush

''"'-'.

Sierra Nichole Kimes

Jordan Smith
Son of
Wendi Smith

Daughter of
Robert E. Kimes
Granddaughler of
Thomas M. and Treva L.

~ibble

Kimes

!.

Nikki and Clara
' Children of
Scott and JoAnna
Polcyn

Victoria and Chelsea
Freeman
Daughters of
· Jim and Mary
Freeman .

..

Tiffany Renee
Colburn
of
Brad and Janelle
(Neutzling) Colburn
Daught~r

Justin and Evan
Sons of
Ryan and Lessic Jcffc"
Grandmother •

Brenda Jtdfcr~

Collen Young
Son of
John and Erin Young

Crew Warden
Son of
Brian and Dolly Warden

Katie, Cody, and
.Dalton

Taylor Joseph
McNickle

Children of
Terry and Melinda
Patterson
Grandparents
Henry and Kay Hill
Linda

' Son of
Terry and Tricia
McNickle

Trenton Tyler Wayne
Wolfe
Son of
Keith and Cindy
Wolfe

Wesley Jordan and
Whitney Morgan
Children of
Laren Wolfe Riffle

Grandson of
l:fubert and Judy Wolfe

Larry and Dolores Wolfe

J'enjamin aild Leah
Wilson
Great Grandchildren of
Carroll and Addie Norris

Hannah Cremeans
Daughter of
Danian and Bethany ·
•
Cremeans

Son of
Stanley and Tanya Holter

Daughter of
'Tim and Debbie Cundiff

Son of
·Jack and Tina Kelley
Grands0n of
Roger and Beverly Allen

.'

Gage Allen Hensley
•·
Son of
Daniele Hensley

Anna Little
Grandchild of
Tim and Debbie Cundiff

.

Caitlyn Holter
Daughter of
·stanley and Tanya Holter

Nathan and Erica
Tracy,
Dakotah Pollack
Children of
Steve and Angie Tracy

'"

Virgi1~ia Riftl~

Christopher Holter

Jason Kelley

"

Grandparenls
James and

Dee Cundiff

Bruno, Rocco and
Gino
Great Nephew's of
Guido

Son of
Todd and Kim Reitmire

Daughter of
· Tracy Pickett and
Brian Page.!
Grandparents
. Lewis and Judy PiGkell

Joey Roush

Clayton Erwin

Son qf
Joe and lenni Roush
. Grandparents
Isabelle and the late Bob Couch
Marsha·tI and Debbie Roush
.. Dallas and Donna Hill

Son of
Matt and Vinda Erwin

.

Wesley Todd
Reitmire

Ashlyn Michelle
Pickett

Brandon and
Browning, Jacob
Swain, Miranda
'
Smith
Grandchildren of
Carl and Janel Chichester

Erinne and Danielle
Daughters of
Larry and Theresa
Kennedy

Austin T. Hendricks
Son of
Travis Hendricks and
Amber Blackwell
.

Tiffany Elizabeth
Lee

Colton Lilly
Grandson of
Robert and Barbara .
· Smith

Grandchild of
Kenn y and Sandy Rife
'

Zachary Zeller
Great Grandson of
Norman and Allegra
· Will

Madison Grace
Maynard
Daughter of
Brad and Junie Maynard
•

Dale Ellis Jr.
Son of
. Dale. and Margie Ellis

David

Frank

Son of
John and Kila Frank

j

.

Emma Rose and
Lara Grace Perrin

Trenton, Colby and
Andrew

Children of
Don and Cathy Erwin
Gay Perrin

Sons
Tom and Dena
Roseberry .

"Drew" Terry A.
Newsome II
Son of
Terry and Tammy
Newsome

Amorette Salser
Daughter pf
Laur;t and

(Hcg

(\i._\\cil l

and Tony Salser

Tr~vor

Casto

St'll nf
( .

Craigory Long
St lll

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late 'Jommy Long

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P age

16 • T he

Da il y Sentinel

::Displaced steelworkers put
.~~pressure on administration

•
: • By ANICK JESDANUN
- Auoc:leted Press Writer
WASHINGTON Displaced
steel mill 'Worker Ken HoU-.er und
01he"' like him are behind 1he growing pressure on Pre,idenl Clinlon 10
. : rake ·,OOre aggre,. ive sleps lo block
s~ellimpons .
.
•,
They are also placin g the admin·
istration in a quandary a' il searches
for ways lo fi~hl 11\e recenl &gt;Urge in
imports, blamed for thousands of layoffs and other culbacks across the
, counlry. Congress has given !he

'. adminislrat ion until Jan. 5tocome up
wilh a plan.
Houser. who Josl his job at USX
Corp.'s Fairies. Works plan! near
Phi ladelphia lhe day· before Thanksgiving . undemands 1he administra·
· , lion 's de ~ ire to promote free Ifade
globally. Houser &gt;imply disagrees
wi th C linlon 's priorities.
," C linto n is stuck in the middle; ·

said Hou &lt;er. 44, who has worked in
steel mi lls .for a quarler ce nlury. " I
agree with the world economy a nd

. everylhing. but when il comes down
.·. to the American workers. he's got to

'·stand up for us. I don'1 feel lhey are
· doing i t. "

:
Allhough lhe . sleel indumy ha.&lt;
: already fi led fedeial lrade comRiai niS
\ · · against Japan , Russia and Brazi l.
accu s in~ !hem of O oodi n ~ 1he U.S.
· market with steel at c ut ~ ratc prices,
. rulings a re not ex pected ·unlil next
' • sU mmer.

•·

.
Fearing more jobscould be losl by
' : !hen, steel producers and th,e slee l
• worke rs union are "iceking more

r'

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; immediate action . inc ludi ng a broad
: in vestigat ion th&lt;tl could leatl to q uo~
· tas.
Sl~el is no! the only U.S. industry
:compl ai ning about impon s. Apple

Public Notice

.

growers warn !hal lhousands of jobs
are threatened by a surge of low-cost
foreign impons into lhe counlry.
And computer chip makers, machine
tool companies, textile manufacturers
and'automakers a ll could join in fi ling "dumping" complainls and seel~:
ing protective tariffs.
Adminisu·a lion officials are walking a lighlrope as they try 10 balance
the needs of tht.'r lradilional labor
constituencies and the ideals of free •
trade . If markeiS abroad close. there ·
would be fewer oullels for U.S.
ex pons. which drive about a third of
the nation's economic growth.
" We are running around the world
tell ing people to open lhe markeL•. "
said Dav id Phelps. executive d ireclor
for the American ln.o,titute for International Steel. which represents sleel
imponers and exporters. "Clearl y .
you have a proble m if you start. 10
close yours."
But lhe sleellobby is vocal. Steel
producers and stee l workers are
spending several mill ion dollars 10
lobby on Capilol Hill and press their
cause in steel..(lependenllown s across
the counlry.
And the adminislralion does nol
want
repeal of lhe 1980s, when
more than 300,000 sleelworkers los!
!heir jobs.
The current steel import crisis can
be traced bac k 10 the weake ned
econom ies of Russia and A sia, which
have lowered demand and ,pri ces for
"itee l.
·
Fdreign sleel · producers have
turned lo other markets - namely I he
Uniled Slates, where demand for steel
rcm&lt;.~i n s strung. Imports surged 55
percen l in the third quarter of 1998.
Domestic producers say they can
no longer compete. The decision tb

a

reduce produclion by 70 percent a1
Fairless Works . resulting in 300 layoffs and pay or hour reductions for
many of the remaining 550 employees. wa.'\ among dozens of recently

announced cutbacks.
'·The induslry is now operal ing al
a subslantially reduced CaJ&gt;aci ly,"
said Hank S amelle, chainnan and
chief•executive of Bethlehem Steel
COIJ&gt;. "Surely if you're being injured,
public officials have a responsibi li ty
to take action."
The fore ig n prod ucer:s deny they
are d umping· s1eel in U.S. markels.
They blame olher fac tors for lhe
slump ing prices, such a.• a General
M01ors Slrike thai reduced demand.
While Ihe d umping complainiS gel
reviewed by I he Comme rce Departme n! and the independenl U .S . Inl e~­
nalional Trade Commission, the Clinton administralion must decide how
to address the industry's problems in
the sha n 1erm.
The opl io ns include invoking a
cl ause in U.S. and imema1ional1rade
laws I hat a llows lhe United Stales lo
temporaril y protect the entire industry, without fi li ng dumping cases lar- '
geiing one producl and one country
at a li me. T he administration can do
so th rough qu otas or lariffs.
The admini slrati on al so can ,
auempt tOpre ssur~ foreign countri es
10 volunlary restrict shipmeniS 10 lhe
United Slates and encoumge markels
such a.' the European Union lo a&lt;.-.:ept
a gre ater share of impom.
David Aaron , lhe Comme rce
Depa rlment's undersecretary for
international trade, said lhe admini s·
!ration already has moved into action
by expediting the dumping cases and
threatening thai dulies might be
retroactive 10 mid-November.

I

' f

j Cases

concluded in County Court

The following ca.•es were re~o l ved
: lasl week in the Meigs Couiuy Cou rt
· of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien . .
:
Fined were: Ronal d C. Kirk. Bean
: Station, Tenn .• possession of firearm
: in fie ld afler legal hunt ing hours, $20
• plus cosls: Shawn R. Min sha ll .
: IY!ebane. N.C .. no val id hun ti n ~
• lice11,1e, $ 100 plus costs; · Randa ll
Brooke, Bean S1a1ion. possession of
firearm in fiel d afler legal hunting
hours, $20 plus cos1s: Gregory T.
Johnson. Pomeroy. failure lo tag
deer. $50 plus costs: possession of a
loaded sholgun in a molor-vehicle
while hunting deer, $ 130 plus costs;
John A. Gillespie. Rulland. possession of rine ammuniti on while hunting deer, $70 plus c9s1s: improper
lransportation of a firearm, $70 plus

Wednesday, December 23, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

cos ts. 10 days'jail suspended 10 lhree
days. 90-oay · OL s uspensjort, one
year probation , jail and $550 sus·
pended if residential lreatmenl pro- .
gram c~mJ&gt;I eted wilhin 90 days:
Dawn Thomas, Middlepon, disorderly conduct, $ 100 suspended lo $50
plus costs. one year probalion :
Day le Brooks, Chesler, driving
unde r Jlnancial respons ibilily action
suspension, $300 plus costs, s ix
monlhs jail suspended 10 30 days,
two years probation, forfeilure of the

motor-vehicle; expired tUgs, costs

only : Nancy G. Drennen, Gallipolis,
speed. $30 plus cosls ; Rodney W.
Sloan , Lowell . speed, $35 plus co sls;
seat belt, $25 plus cosls: Beverly L.
Sexlon, · Alhens, failure to control.
$30 plus, costs; Landis K. Wandling,
• costs;
Gallipolis, failure to display trailer
:
Ron ald L Fry. Syracuse, domes: regislration. costs only ; Sandra B.
' lie violence, $ 100 J&gt;lus costs, 60 days Pe lrey, AI hens, [aiJure to conlrol , $30
, . jail suspended to seven days. one year . plus costs: seal bell. $25 plus costs;
' probation. restraining orde r issued; Al an D, Moore, Syracuse, failure lo
: Daniel Murph y, Long Bou om, control , $30 plus costs; seat bell, $25
; assault, costs, one year probat ion, six plus cos ts;
,1
: , months jail suspended to time served;
: Mallhew A. Theiss, Pomeroy, DUI
Danny C. Buflingtorr. Pomeroy. dri - aft er underage consumption, $500
ving under the innuence. $850 plu s plus costs. th ree days,j ail and $300

suspended upon completion of res idenliallreatment program wilhin 90
days, 30 days OL suspension, probalion unlil 2 1: defeclive exhauSI, costs
only; seat bell, $25 plus cosls;
Thomas D. Adkins, Ponland, DUI.
$8 j Q pl~s cosiS, 10 days jail suspended to three days, 90-day OL suspension, one year probation, jail and
$550 suspended upon complelion of
res i&lt;\entiallrealment prograrri within
90 days: driving under FRA suspension. $150 plus cosls, 10 days jail suspended lo lhree days concyrrenl, one
year probation: ,left of cenler, costs
only; Jessica S. Fry, Chauncey,
expired tags, costs only; '
Joshua D. Harris, Pomeroy, underage consumption, $200. plus costs,
three days jail suspended, probalion
until 21: underage consumption ,
$200 plus costs, 30 day s jail suspended 10 five days; underage consumplion, $250 plus costs, 90-days
jail suspended 10 15 days, probation
unlil 21 ; resisling arrest, coSIS. 90
day s jail suspended 10 15 day s concurrenl, probalion unlil 2 1; OJ&gt;en
conlainer, $50 plus costs ..

. PUBLIC HOTIC£
Southern Ohio Coel
Oonlptny, P.O. Box 4to,
Athent, Ohio 41701 118e
aubmltted • renewel
eppllcallon lor coel mine
permit D-03114 to U.. Ohio
Depertment of .Neturol
lleeourcu, OIYitlon ol
Mlnoe end lloclemetlon.
The permit erN Ia .locetod
In Melge County, Selem
TOWftllhlp, Sect1on.a I , I , 11,
12, 15, 11, 17, 18. 10, 25, 28,

Public Notice
Soctlone I &amp; 36. Tho permit
contalne 1040.4 acrtt and
It locetocl on the llutlend
lind Wll.....,... 7 112 Minute
Quedrang lo
Mtpl ,
epproxlmtte ly 1.1 mllao
of 8alem Center, Ohio.
The appllcent 118o ...,..,.....
rood permlte to mino within
100 I"' of U.. rlght-ol-wey
ol Salem T-nohlp Roode
34 (oiiiCIIYI dele

. Public Notice

Public Notice

1 ~2$-83),

: Wednesday, December

•

•

23, 1998

Pomeroy • M iddleport, O h io

5-27-t7), • (efloctlve
527-87), 52 (ollac:IIY• d - ·
30-87), Columbll Townolilp
Roedl 6 (ollac:IIYe c1o1a a+
91) , 324 (ollectlvo clo1a •t·
87), 11 (eHICiiYI elite
97) • (olloctlve 2·2-te),
(12) II, 23, 30
· end Stele Route Sit
(1) 6 4TC
(ellectlve c1e11 3-27-t7), end
Salem Townthlp Rood &amp;25
(olloctlva date 10.1-eQ) et
Public Notice
lho location doecrlbed
above,
which will remain In
PUBUC NOTICE
Southern Ohio Coe l olloct until cotl mining and
Comp.ony, P.O. Box 490, recllmatlon operation• ...
Athena, Ohio 45701, hat completed uridar the CDIII
eubmllltd 1 renew a l min ing permit lttu 4d
oppllcetlon lor cool mine puroua nt to lhle permit.
permit D-0355 to tho Ohio Tho reiMWII eppllcaUon will . ,
Dtptrlmtnl of Ntture l allow eoulltern Ohio Ctial
Reeource ~, Dlvlalon of Comp.ony to continuo tho
Mlnee end Roclemetlon . mining operation on ~
The permit trot 11 locllod lor up to flve ynro pelt the
on tho property of Southern oxplretion dlte of June ~.
Oh io Cool Company In 1999.
Columbia Townehlp, Meigs · The eppllclllon It on ftle
County, Fraction• 17, 33, at the olllcee of the Molgt
Section• 19,25 ,26,31 ,34, Counly Recorder, Molgo
Townsh ip 9N, Range 15Wi County Court Hou .. ,
Stllm Townthlp, Molga Second Street, Pomeroy, .
County, Soctlont 17, 23, 24, Ohio 45769, and tho VInton
To!Vnahlp 9N, Range 15W; County Recorder, VInton
Solem Townthlp, Melge County Court Houto, M,jln
County, Fractlona 2, 8, 36; Stroll, McArthur, Ot&gt;lo
Section• 18, 24, 29, 34, ·35, 45651 lor public vlewl~g.
38, Townohlp 8N, Range Written comment• or '·
15W; Wllkeovltle. Townehlp, requeeta for an Informal
VInton County, Secllon 4E, conference may be sent :to
Townehlp IN, Ronge 15W: lho DIVISIOn ol Minot and
and on 1118 property of Carol Reclamltlon, 1855 Founll!ln
Phllllpt, Solem Townthlp, Square Court, Building H•3,
Molgo County, Section 35, Columbuo , Ohio 43224
Townohlp 8N, flange 15W within thirty doyo olthe 1111
end Suo White Smoke, date of publication of lhlt
Delillo, Stlem Townohlp, notice.
·
Molgo .County, Section 34, (12) 16,23, 30
Townehlp 8N, Rona• 15W: (1) 6 4TC

' , Custom Homes

''

Remodeling

&amp;J

,,

'

.

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 457~9 ,

Uve Spruce, White
Pine with root ball $6/ft.
Plant after Chrlatmasl
Dr choose a Cut Pine
or Spruce $2.50/ft.

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-4277

ADOliiCPU

NURSERY
Hemlock Grove Rd
Pomeroy, OH
Ph. 740-992·7285
(Sat., Sun. eves.)

111

Slug &amp; Stiot .
Matches

"

-OBERT BISSELL.
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Completa
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Campara
FREE
ESTIMATEES

..

2310

lil!'i

CREDIT PROBLEMS?

M

c

• MASONRY

.• BOBCAT SERviCES

N .

s

¥

30

, OILER.'$
:. DEER SHOP
Skin, Cut,
Wrapped
&amp; Freeze
740·742·2076

Santa's Gift
Wra~~ing Serllice
Judy L. Stewart
992-1194

E rnie a nd Bre nd a H aggy

G ra nddau g hte r o f
C h a rl es a nd L o is Wo lfe

Bay lee Rian Hupp

Tryston Huxley

Haley Danielle

D a ug hte r o f

S o n of
M att hew a nd A ng~ l a
H ux ley

D au g ht er o f

Bill a nd Tracy H upp

M ic h ae l a nd Carrie
Ke nne d y

/

Bretton Lee and
Dalton Jace
C hi ldre n of
Ronnie a nd Ki rslo n Cas lo
Gra ndpare nt s
R o nnie a nd S usie Casto

.'

•

I

'

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in lhe Greal Bend

-Complete Auto Seroice-

Recine, Ohio &amp;
50 West, Albany Rd., Athens, Ohio

·---·-·

"Emy

Ot•er

740.849-2115

tire Pit one Bnnk

*Fr~te

every Saturday
night
6:30p.m.
American Legion
Middleport
Post 128
Starburst $2000
Door Prize $600
145 people or.
more will play
$1000 cover aU.
Average $90 per
regular game :

Howell's Bookkeeping
· &amp; Tax Service
,
Bookkeeping and PayroU
l11dividual , Pc.rln e,hip a11d Co rporation
Tax Relunu
Fed eral and aU alales
Hours: Mon . thru FrL 9 to 4.:30
l~

Eve ni ngs and Sat aft ern oon by appt onl y.
Jeanie Howell, EA
Phone.740·992-7036

lmprovament and
Painting &amp; Cooling
Residential &amp;
Commercial

11/2411 mo. pd

5 Parts Warrant~

distribution of asse lo. Debtors in ba nl&lt;ruptcy may
keep "exemp l" property for hio or her p ersonal

Digital Thermostat

use . This may include a ca r, a house , clothes, and

Free Estimates

(740) 367-0412
12/IJWI

For Informa tion Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

William Safranek, Anonrey At Law
(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

"Wiaere Qnnlity Dorm• '1 Co$1 More"
'1
THE COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP
AND MORE ..

..._

(740) 992-4232

household goods.

BENNEn's :HEATING &amp; COOLING

Computer Graphics
Deslgl\•
All Landsoaplng &amp;
Lawn Setvlces
•Commercial
•Residential
Owner, Mickle Hollan
Cheater, Ohio
7 40-985-4422

"NoJo1ttoOIIIIor
toO....U"

financial obligations and arrange a fair

I

·HOWARD
GUN SHOOT
EXCAVATING CO. Racine Gun Club
•

Limestone Hauling
Hous&amp; &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic System &amp;
Utilities
Eatlmatu

Hollow Rd.
Every Sunday
12:30 pm
Limit 680 sleeve
.737 back bore

Nease

(614) 992-3838

Tues.-Fri. I 0 to 6
Sat. 10 to 4

.1

LAND SCAPI
DESIGNS

Cousin's Home

BANKRUPTCY can r elieve a.d ebtor of

'28 e month
Heat Pumps As Low As 139 a month

Air Conditioners .as Low As

. *f;ree

740·742·3411

•Wreaths
•Roping
•Swags
•Live &amp; Cut
•Grave Blankets · Trees
$5 to $25
•Poinsettias

'

TRPPRn

Minor Repalra • Cablneta • Slcilng ·
Roofs • Decka • Garagea
Insured
Fre• Eet/inst•a

·. 12/tll/lln

Announcements

BINGO

Sat. 9to

74o-992·2068

I moottll)d.

New conlfructlon .&amp; Rem,dellng

33334 Hysell Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

CONNOLLY'S
CHRISTMAS
TREES ,

Weekly .Sales and Drawings
· thru Christmas
Rt. 124, Minersville, Oh io

740-992-4559

2'h Miles South of
. Tuppers Plalni on
St. Rt. 7
(740) 667-3483 or
(740) 667-3073
Open Evenings and
Weekends

'

C:::ARPET
PLUS
Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

740-698-9114
or

740-698-7231
8/ 11 /11. tin

HILL'S .
SELF STORACE
29670 Baahan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771
740-949·2217

Sizes 5'x1 0'
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM· 8 PM
11 /HI/98 1 mo. pd.

YOUNG'S

~l'"airrlCJ;urtirf

CARPENTER SERVICE
•Roorn Addition•
·New Garages
·Eieclrlcal &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete·Work
(FREE ESTIMATES) '
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
'
Pomeroy, Ohio

Moonlite

112311

Se"'i11g Pomeroy, Aliddleport &amp; Ala son

992·0038
Charter Available

11 .' 13 1 mo. pd.

'G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
DEER
!St. Rt.. 7
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45763
740-985· 3813
PROCESSING ' 4 " thru 48 " Plastic Culvert In .Stock ·
~

Skinned • Cut
Wrapped
Maplewood Lake
Racine, Ohio
949·2734

.I

1

Full

Of Water Storage Tanks
Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks

Line

-

Sewer Pipe : 3" thru 8 ", Ga s Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:00·4: 30 Weekdays
9:00-12 :00 Saturday
4/21/V8 lin

11/20/1 fTIO,

'•
•

43370 St. At. 124
Minersville, Ohio

SUE'S GREENHOUSE

12117/98 1 mo. pd.

11/17/tl1 mo. pd

G randda ug hte r of

SR. 124
RACINE, OH 45771
(MINERSVILLE)

SHOCKS

You Kill 'em
We Chill 'e m

Erin Renay Glaze

, •c••d· Mli:POU · ':

SUISft
COIS,RUCTIOI

Residential &amp;Mobile Home
Air Conditionet·s &amp; Heat Pulnps

43370

New Roofs,
Repairs, Gutters,
Coatlnga, Siding,
Drywall, Painting;
Plumbing
Free Eetlmatee
Joseph Jacka

. . 1+800-272~1

Ronnie Jones

.BRAKES

S tarc he r

740-992•9909

f7.f0) 44A800 Oli .

52954 State Rt. 124
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

. SPECIALS ON ~
TIRES
.
·. . ~ , _.

D o ri s a nd S ta nle y

Call Now for Instant Approvalll ..

Former-"Velvet Hammer" ·

'

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

Speciau on oil
changea, lire•,
brake•, ahoclu.

Dave's Garage

GRAND OPENING
KARNS ~STROL
QUICK LUBE
992-9909
'.
WE HAVE GIFT CERTIFICATES

T im and L o ri N e utz ling

· QulokLube

No Embarrassment .:.
You're Treated with Respect!

*Free Estimates

So n o f

Karn'• Cutrol

.·WORRYING!!!

0
RESIDENTIAU/1111111/COMMERClAL
R
N
E
R
FREE ESTIMATES......... FULLY INSURED
y
T
E Brlar1 Morl'ilor•l Ra~lnoe, Ohio (740) 985-9948

. 7122/tln

Check us out at www.p·m·dulfit .com
Or phone (740) fPt·U77
ol/0/la, ••· .,...

G randso n s o f
Kare n and E u g ene r.:nl ott'll.

Grand Opening

No Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
Repo '• Divorced

A

985-4473

.Quality Affordable Web Pate DufGn
for Smell Bu1lne11 In Me!fs, Athen1, and
Gallla eo. Ohio end Malon eo. WY.
,"Let u1 put your bUIIneu on the Internet"

Coltin Thomas
Neutzling

Cut Your Own
· Ereeh Cyt
Any Scotch Dr Whltl Pine • $15.00
Wagon Rides on Waakends
At. 33 to Darwin, East on Rt. 681 , 4 miles lo Cherry
Ridge Rd ., w, miles to tree farm . Follow signs.
Daily 10 am til Dark
N v. 28 thru ec. 21

12/8198 1 mo.

PIB CONTRACTORS, INC.
• BACKHOE SERVICES

CHRISTMAS TREES
BRADFORD'S

- Call 740·843·5426

iii!~

• CONCRETE

614·992·7643

• Vinyl Siding • Garages
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions ·
Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

~

0

FREE ESTIMATES

LC1HG'S
COHSTROCTIOH

~~ ~~~~ft~~,li~t7-t
c

I

~:::::':4:0.:~9:49-::1:70=:1::::1:·~~- L------(~N_o_Su_n_d~ay~C_a_lls~)--~v1;ww~·

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing , Siding
Commercial &amp; Re,ldentlal
~
27 yrs. exp.
· Licensed &amp; Insured ill'!J
;... ~

Garages Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Degree certified Landscape Specialist
from OSU-ATI
Jeremy L. Roush

Rt. 124, Rutland ,.Ohto
742·3051
OPEN NOV. 27th, 11 TO 9 :00

11121 1mo

~~~~~~~e~~~~~~~~~~: !!C.

•Lawn Care
•Mulching
•Retaining Wall &amp;
Brick Patio Construction

•Maintenance
· •Planting
•Design
•Lawn Care

Phone 740-992~3987
Free Est/mstes
Owner: John Dean

*992-?696

wv

Road

ROUSH LANDSCAPING

BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

OC/25/96/0n

.'

A

$10&amp; Up

Chester, Ohio

RUTUND,OH.
AMERICAN
-, LEGIO.N
. BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUH SHOOT
SUN., 1100 PM

!50.00

*U.P.S.
*fills

304-576-2255 ·After 5 pm

..
(t

'It -

Wreaths - Swags
Roping &amp;
Grave Blankets

985-4422

Pomeroy Eaglas
Club Bingo On
· Thursdays
AT 6:30P.M.
Main St. ,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 CoveraH
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. # 00· 50

ADO U GIG HO 75.00
ADO L3 GIG HD 111.110
ADO19.00

CHRISTMAS TREES

SERVICE
'
Agricultural
Lime,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

Dynamic, innovative person needed for
Communlly Educator pooition. Responsible £or
developing, cootdlnatlng and implement~!\
comp,.,h;,nsive alcohol, drug, and mental health
conunanlty education plan £or GaUia, Jackson
and Meigo Counties.' Must possess a bach;,lor~s
degree in heahh edur:ation, social servicei,
nnrolng or related £ield or equivalel}t
~xperience. Competitive salary, excellent frin
benefit packal!e. · Submit resume with three
letters o£ reference tot Ronald A. Ad~
Executive Director, Gallia-Jackson-Meigo b
· of Akohol, Drug Addiction and Mental eahh
. Services, P.O. Box 514, Gallipolis 0 · &lt;&amp;5631
by January 6, 1999.

'

...,._
.

DUMP..TRUCK

GaMMUNITV EDUCATOR

r

AD017" 11onilorl40.00

TRUCKING

·Help Wanted ' •

EOE

• •

lel. HOLLON

BARR'S lANDSCAPE

®
=-•

Win 98 Color Prinl&lt;r! $899.00
'
Vperodt that old cotopattl ror about 1/2 tbt c051 ohcw!
Wf qm I Full lipc SJ[ Aqrugrjg,
740-992-1135 for a Prico Quoit!

'fl - &lt;/ ADO IS" IIonilor 40.110

""''"'ll
,,,,,

: :='~

I O~rlsttnw Sporlal ~CPU 32 nm 14" man S6K V.90 2.5

CHRISTMAS TREES
"'

"Best Prices of
....- --the Season"
..............
·s·.-,.c".;::
Vickers
Wood Heating

utb:p"

" Your

"Build Your Drlll!am"

''Ba·ngo' ·:

Jack and Nathan
Starcher

17

,3-

180 (olloctlve dele t-29-82),
3211 (oHecllve dllto S.21H17;
32, 33, Fractlona 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, Molge County Rotd 1
7, 12, 11, 33, 34, 36, (oHoctlve dota1~:zo.t3) and
Townthlp IN, lltllgt 15W; otete Route 124 (eHeetlve
Melgt County, S alem de to 1 0·24·14) t) the
T-nehlp, Sectlona 18 end loeellon detcrlbed above
32, Townthlp 7N, flange and which will remain In
15W;
VInton County, oHoct until coel mining ond
Wllk . . vll le
Townahlp, reclam~~tlon operation• Ire
Section 3E, T-nthlp IN, complotod under tho coal
Range 111W; Gallla County, m!nlng permit looued
C'-hlre T-nehlp, Section purouent to lhla pormtt.
35, Townthlp 5N, Rengo The renowtl ippllcaUon will
14W; on lha property of ellow Soutll8rn Ohio Cotl
$outhern Ohio Coe l Company lo continue
Oompeny, O.lberl end Opal mining operallone on D·
Mlllheney, Ron and Beulah
Shuler, loon Pierce, Cecil 0354 lor up to live y..ro
Stacey, Thoma• Perone , pelt the explrllton dale of
1999.
and Frank Puckett, with June10,
Tho
epp,llcellon
11 on llle
undergrou·nd working• In
. Melge County, Salem at tho oHicat ol tho Meigs
County Rscordor, Malge
T-nehlp, Soctlont 1, 6, 7, County'
Court Houae, ·
11 , 12, 13, 18, 17, 18, 19, 23, Second Street,
Pomeroy,
24, 28, 29, 30, 33, 34;
Ohio
45769,
VInton
County
Frtctlone 1, 13, 17, 18, 19,
23, 24, 31 , 32,' 33, 34, 35; Rtcorclor, Vinton County
Houoo, Meln Stroll,
Melge County, Columbia Court
McArthur,
Ohio 451151, and
Townahlp, Section• 7, 8, 13, Otl.lll County flacordor,
11, 18, Fractlona1 , 2,4, 6, 7,
County Court Houto,
13,17, 18, 18, 24, 25,30, 31 , Oallla
33, 38; Melga County, Loculi Street, Gelllpolla,
Ohio 45631 lor public
Rutland Townehlp, Sictlono viewing.
Wrmon com1118nll
31 &amp; 36; Oallla County, and/or requetlt
lor an
Morgan Townahlp, Sectlona
Informal
conference
mey bo with underground worklnga
5, 11, &amp; 17; Gellle County, tent to the Dlvlelon
ill In Melgt County, Columbia'
Chtthlrt
Townehlp,
Townahlp, Section• 7, 11 1 30. Announcements:
12, 13, 18, 17, 18, 19, 23, 24,
29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36;
Fraction•'· 2, 4, e, 1, 12, 13,
17, 18, 19, 23, 24, 25, 30, 31,
32 33, 34, 36 ; Salem
Townthlp, Stetlont 11, 12,
12/31/96
18, 17, 18, 23, 24, 29, 30, 34,
35, 36; Fractions 23 &amp; 35;
New Year's Eve:
VInton County, VInton
Bingo
· Township, Secttono 2, 3, 7,
8; Fraction 3; VInton
Ame..lcan Lemon' ,
County,
W llkeavllle
·~
.,..
Township; Socttono 4E, 5E,
Middle
_ port .
6E, 8, and 12. The permll
contains 291.3 acreo and It
6:30 to 9:15. ·
located on the Vatoe Millo
and Wllkeovlllo 7 1/2 minuto
Will have Second ·
U.S.G.S. Quadrangle Mapa,
Bingo 10:00 p.m.
approximately 1.1 mile a
aouthweat of Polnl Rock,
Ohio. The appllconl heo
to Midnight.
12·21
obtained a road permit 10
mlno through end/or within
Second gante ,
100
leal
or
tho
rlghl·ol·way
payout
Based on'
"I cut a piece off the bottom
or Melga County Roede 1
end patched your shirt:•
(effective dlte 5·27·87 and
size of crowd.
8·14·91), 1A (oHee~tlv~o~d~a~t•~-====~.:.;;.;.;.;;;:..?
· .I

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR A TOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

The Dal ly Sentinel• Page

del.

Mineo ond llecllmetlon;
1855 Fo unleln Squero
·court, Build i ng H-3 ,
Columbuo, Ohio 43224·
1317, within 30 cloyo ol U..
loll dele of publication of
IIIII notice •

11 0

.

'

mo.

MOBILE HOME
PARTS
"Huge lnvent11y"
~Rboi Coatings
•vinyl Skirting
•water Heaters
•ooor/Windowa
• Electric/Plumbing
Supplies
•Fiberglass &amp; Wood
·steps
Discount Prices

Bennett Supply
7 40-446·9416
1391 Safford
School Rd.
Gallipolis , Ott

(Lima Stone·
. Low Ratea)

1 ,.

.

WICK$
"

HAULtJfG
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fm Dirt
614-992·3470
H UBBARDS
. GREENHOUSE'
Now open for lhe
Chris tmas &amp;aron

Poinsettias In 6&lt;olots
Poinsettia Baskets
Holly Trees
Cui Christmas Trees
Grove Blonkets ·Wreaths
Open Dolly 9·5
Sunday 1· 5

HU&amp;IARDS
GREENHOUSE
Syracu&amp;l!l,Ohl~

992-57'76

Wt honor Golden Budttyt Cards

. ,,.

�I

'

•

.

W~nesday, December 23, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel• Page 19

OOP

NEA Croaaword Puzzle
PHILLIP
ALDER

37

ACROSS
1-

31Fura..,....

12o..lr

..... .

-··oyea

-

41 llllp8bbr.

42 F- b 11th

13 c.nl

640

005

Personals

ASK QUESTIONS,
GET ANSWERS
CALL AMERICA'S t1 PSY·
CHICS 1·900-740-6500 En

AbsOlute Top Dollar . All Us Silver Ancl Gold COtnS, Proofsels,
Daamond&amp; Antique Jewelry, Gokt

Aings , Pra - 1930 U S Currency.
Stertino Etc. AcquiSitions Jewelry
· M T S Cotn Shop, 151 Second

Avenue, GaHIPQIIS. 740...446-2842

3596,
www. ~

tomi,.,OSY·

chic125029thtm $3.99/Min 16+

110

To. P 0 Box Hl9 Jacllson. Ohio

Setv-U 619--345-8434
Staf1 Dating Ton1ghtl Have fun
playing llle Ohio Oanng Game. 1
800-AOMANCE, exiBnslon 90 15

30

Announcemenls

New To You Thiift 5hoppe
9 West StimSon, Athens
740-592·1842
Ouallt'f' cloth1ng and household
11ems S 1 00 bag sale evety
Thursday Monclay thru Saturday
900-5·30

40

Giveaway

3 Male Oogs , 1 Oa lm ation . 2
Years Old, 2 Puppies Part Cott~e 8
Months 010, To GOOd Hamel 740.
441-()192

Ant1ques, top prtCes paid, Riverine Ant1que1 , Pomeroy, Oh1o.
Fl un Moore owner, 740-9922526
Ant1ques &amp; clean used furni!ure,
w1ll buy one p1ece or complete
household O&amp;by Martin, 7-40992-0576
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucka, 1990 Models Or Newer..
Sm1th BUICk Pontiac, 1900 Eastern A:-18nue GallipOliS
J &amp; 0 Auto Parts Buymg
wrecked or salvaged veh1cles
304-773-5033.
P~rmane nt Pa r t T 1me Nanny, 4

ch11dren, light housekeeping, send
resume to CLA· 460 , 825 Third
A\'8 • GallipoliS, on 45631

314 Chow pupp1es ro Ql\1 1!1 away,
740-992-4123

EMPLOY MENT

3 Pupp ies To Goat! Hom e. Will
Take To Pound If Not G1\len
Awll'f'l 740·388--9 147

6 .Beauhlul Pupp1es. 1/2 Austra!lan Shepherd. 112 Mml Coll ie, 5
While Ones . 1 Black One 740441-()382
Free puppies. t /2 chow 1/2 eskimo spjtz, child lneMiy 304-895·
3285
Free ' Puppies Alter 3 00 74 0·
441 ·0417.
Full-Blooded Copper Nosed Fe '
male Beagle. 1 Year Old Free To
Good Homer 74Q-446-3615.

S ERVICE S

110

~941

Small beaut•lul Pupp1es lime for
Christmas, 2-black, 1-black/whlte
3 long haired kittens to Ql\le away
(740) 379-9447

60

Lost and Found

Found tn 5 Point's area. bull. 740992-0994
FolJnd · remale Walker Coon dog
w1th broken tall, 740..742·2319.
Found : Dressed Cement Goose
740--3225

70

Yard Sale
·Gallipolis

&amp; Vlclnlly

Babys1tter m out Racine home 2
or 3 rnornmgs a week dnvers II·
cense &amp; dependable transpottatiOn a must, 740·949-2940
Co Driver Needed, clean 11cense
COL ~ lass-A wages negotiable
start by 1st ot year. 740·9927363
COMMUNITY EDUCATOR
Dynemlc, Innovative Perso n
Needed For Commumty Educator
Position Responsible For Devel oping, Coord lnahng And Implementing Comprehensive Alcohol
Drug, And Mental Health Community Education Plan For Gall1a.
Jackson And Meigs Counties
Must Possess A Bachelors De·
gree In Health Education. Soc•al
Services , Nursing Or Related
Field Or EqUivalent E;ocperlence
Competitive Salary. Excellent
Fringe Benel1t Pac~age Submit
Resume With Three Letters 01
Reference To Ronald A •Adk 1ns.
E•ecutl¥8 Director, Gallla -Jackson -Meigs Boa rd 01 Alcohol
Drug AddiCtion And 'Mentat
Health Services, PO Box 514,
Gallipolis. Ohio 4S631 By January
6, 1999 EOE

...

AL.L. Yard Sa~a Must
Be Paid In Advance.
DEAQL!NE: 2:00 p m.
the day before the ed
,. to run, Sunday
«&lt;ldon - 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition
• 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp;VIcinity
All Yard Sates Must Be Paid In
Advence . Deadline: 1 OOpm the
day before the ld Ia t,o run
Sunday .&amp; Monday edition~
1:OOpm Frldoy.

80

.

Auction

and Flea Market
R1ck Pearson Auction Company,
lull time .auctioneer. complete
aucllon
serv ic e
Licensed
M66.0hio &amp; West Vlrgmia, 304·
773-5785 Or 304-773-5447
Wedemeyer s Auct1on Service
Gallipolis, Olllo 740-379 -2720

45640, Or Call 1·740·288-1463
To Schedule All lnlerY18W
Nurse A ide Tra ining Program·
Rockspnngs Rehabilitation Cenler
w1ll be offering tralnl"iJ classes in
the month of January. Applications are now 11t1ng accepted at
36759 ROCkspnngs Road, Pomer&amp;;. Ohio 45769 Class Size •s limlied Three relerence papers are
required With application Apply 1n
person between 1Oam and 3pm.
M-F Students that successfully
complete the TCE class w111 be
eligible or employment Absolutely
NO PHONE CALLS. EOE.

AESPIAATORV THERAPIST Full
Time Post tJOn Health Insurance
And Re tirement 8enefils Avail able Apply In Person Or Send
Resu me To Bowmans Homecare, 70 Pme St. Gallipolis, Oh.
45631 Ann Lewl8

The GBtlia County Board of MRf
DO IS currenlly accepting applications tor the 1o11ow1ng poslt1ort·
Early Intervention Instructor
12 Month ptJSitlon 8 hour day.
40 hour s week Work 1ng w1th
ch1ldren. ages birth to three. w1th
developmental delays or disab1l1t1es 1n the home setting
Req U'1 rements. Bachelor's Degree- Spec1at EcrucafiOn/Early
ChildhoOd background preferred
Must oe w1 tt mg to met Oh10 Depar tment ot MR / 00 Standards
Valid dnvers liCense
Applications can be obtained at
tne Gallia County Board of MA/00
located at 8323 North State Route
7, Cheshire, Oh. 45620
Deadl1ne lor applymg January 8,
1999
The Galila County Board of MR!
DO Is an Equal Opporrunlty Emplo'f'er
Wanted. Men To Work Te te
Co nstruction Must Have Burled
And Aneal Experience Call 740541-5832

130

rnsurance

Crop Insurance, Bur ley -Tomatoes. -Corn, Ken Bass In ·
surance. 1·800·291·6319

140

Gallipolis Career College
Winter Quarter Starts January
4,1999 Call Today/ 740-446·
4367, 1·800·2 14-0452, Reg 19().

180

Wan led To Do

Georges Portable Sawm111, don't
haul your togs to the mHI JUSt oalt
304 675·t957
Interior Pamtmg Plumbmg &amp; Ae ·
modeling . Any And All Odd Jobs,
740-245-5151
ProfesSional Treo Service. Stump
Removal. Free Esllmale sl Insurance, Bidwell, Ohio 740-3889648, 740· 367-7010
Repa1rman 20 Years Experience,
App li ances, Plumb1ng, Electrical,
Heeling , Anythmg l No Charge To
Look, 740-256-9212

FINANCIAL

----:-------1
21P

Business

Opportunity
I NOTICE!
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do business w11h people you know, and
NOT 10 send money through the
ma1t until you have lnvesligated
the ollenng

Christmas

21st Century MLM , No Meetings,
No Supplies. No Training Patenhal To Turn S130 Into B7K 116K
Des1gned To Work And Work
Ou •ck Call 740-446 0647 And
Leave Phone Number

.,

230

Professional
Services

•

Llvlngaton'a Balement Water·
Proofing, all basement repa ~rs
done, lree est ima tes. lifetime
guaran te e 12yrs on job experl
ence 304·895·3887.
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY fSSI7
No Fee Unless We Win'
1-888-582-3345

Your

REAL ESTATE

310

Homes for Sale

3 bedroom co untry kitChen llv·
mg/lam lly 2 baths. detached garage on 1 1/2 acres country sel·
lmg, Chester area. $46 000 740985·351 1

Classified

3 Bedrooms, Living Roo m. Ommg
Room K1tchen Bath , Part1al Fmls hed Fam1ly Room Call 740- 44 13253

Advertising
Staff

__

,,..,_

lNs 118 A! paper wfl no(
k~aa:apl

wtiet11s In YkYUOn of lhe

,_lie-

law. 0..
W1formtd thiiC all d • • •
8dYertiHd In lhil 1•wapaper

_....,,....

are avaHable on an equal

310

Homes lor Sale

FIXER UPPER
Older 2 Story Country Home 2 ·3
Bedrooms, 1 Bath, W1th 5 Acres,
Barns. Greenhouse. G1vmg Away
AI $30,000 740--286-oo81 .

Syr 2 3 bedroo ms loll tongue/
gro ove, pellet s1ove. HP/CA appliances garage spa acre Butavllle P1ke 740-367-0286

House On State Route 7 SOuth
Less Than 10 M inutes From
Qowntown Gallipolis, Pnvate 2 112
Acre Lot W1th Breiithtakmg R1ver
V19w Appro;oc . 2,000 Sq Ft 3 Bed·
rooms, 2 112 Baths, Family Room.
2 Fireplaces, Hardwood Flo(&gt;rs, 2
Car Garage, Lots '01 E;octrasl
$95 ,000 Ready For ' Im mediate
Occupancy 740-446-3248 , 740·
446·4514
Modern 3 bedroom house. 2 ·
baths. country kitchen, large 2 car
garage. on 112 acre lot : Tuppers
Pla~ns, Oh . sewer already hooked
up, $75,000, 740 -985-351 ' or
740 -lill7-3304

Lots

&amp; Acreage

7~1-1412

Jackson. Pike , Scioto . Athens.
Mt1gs And Gallla Counhes. In House Flnancmg Available And
01seounts G1ven On Cash Pur·
chases. Call Now For Maps And
Into In The Areas 'lbu Desire!
COUNTRY LOTS
5 To 20 Acre Tracts , Meadows.
Pond, Barns, Woods 0H SA 141 ,
&amp; SA 233 Near Gallia. Large
Hunttng Tracts Touching Wayne
Nahonal Forest. Rough 25 Acre
Tract · $19,000. 5 Acre Restden·
1181 $11 ,srx/. Land COntract Ava1l·
able With As L!Uie As 5% Down
W ith Approved Credit 1· 800·
213-8365

360

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy Land· 30 -500 Acres,
We Pay Cash. t-800-213·8365.

Anlhony Land Co
RENTAL S

410

2 br $350 + dep and 'f'OU pay
util 304-675-2535
2 or 3 bedroom hOuse In Pomerr:IJ. no pets. 740-992-5858
Ava1lable 1/1199 2 Bedrooms, Deposit. ApplicatiOn, Lease Required, No Pets. No Smok ing,
74D-441·1489 Aner8
Extra Nice 2 bedroom garage
apartment Centrally located, cen·
tral heat, air, $325 month OepoSIII {740) 446-2300
N•ce 2 or 3 bedroom house "' Pomeroy. no pets, 740-992·5858

Two
bedroom
house
on
801tx 162111ot Corner or Pomeroy
&amp; Rail Road Street Mason. Wv
$26 ,000 00 (304)882 3604

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes , a1r
cond itioned, 1260·$300, sewer,
water ancr trash mcluded, 740992·2167

320

2 bedroom trailer. furnished, In
Middleport , 740-378-6353 after
6pm

$1 000 00 Gill Certificate Or Lot
Rent Pa 1d For 6 Months Wh en
You Buy An'f' Home From Us Between 12/12/98 and 12131198 1·
800.251·5070.
$49il DOWN
3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS
FREE DELIVERY
&amp; SET· UP

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

ON~YAT

tress , 2 Sed&amp; , 2 Inner Spring
Mattresses Included. $295 . procIOrv;Qe, 740-886-6373
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Weshers , &amp;vera, refrigerators,
ranges ~'" Skaggs Appliances , 76
Vine Street, Call 740-448·7398,
1 ~888-818-()128

lMng Room Suite, 2 Piete, Never
Used $275 , Call 7-40-888· 6373
Proc!rcMt~ . Ollkl.

Nevv Box Spnngs &amp; Mattress, Not
Used , 10 Yea r Warranty Still In
Plastic, $195.00 ProctorvtiJe. 740886-6373. I
Used Furniture Store Below HOI!·
day Inn. Kanauga, Da'f' Beds,
Bunk Beds, Beds , Computer
Desk , Entertainment Center.
Dressers , Couches, Dinettes,
74D-446-4782

530

Antiques

Buy' or sell A•verlne An11ques,
1124 E. Main Street, on At 124,
Pomero'f'. Hours M T W 10 00
a.m. to 6 00 p m , Sunday 1 oo ro
6.00 p m. 740-992 -2526, Russ
Moore owner

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

"WARM uer ·
Furnace. Heat Pumps, &amp; Air Conditioning Free Est1matesl If You
Don't Call Us. We Both Losel
740·446·6306, 1 ·800-291 ~0098
1 Sofa Bed $275 .00, 1 Zenllh TV
27 ' Screen $275 00. 2 Advent
Speakers $50 00 740·448-8580
Leave Message If Before 5 00
Pm
1940 s Waterfall Bedroom Group,
Full Size Bed, Chest Vanity &amp;
Stool Call Alter 6' 00 304·675-

4617
1998 Harley DB'IIdson Barbie Doll

&amp; Mi sc . Holiday Barbie&amp;, 740-

Beanie Baby's, $10 ·a up. 740742·2511, 1·800-837 -6217, Au ·
!land Bonle Gas, ask for David
BOTTLED WILL POWERI
LOSE up-lo-30 Lbs.
THIRTY DAY MONEY BACK
GUARANTEE!
Natural Dr Recommended.

lor Rent

~

~~5~~::::~!:~1

$500 Down on any 14;oc70 In
stock, hm1ted number. tree deliv·
ery Caii1-8Q0..691·6777
$999 Down on any 98 mo del
Doubtewlde In stock Free Dellv·
ery Call1-800-691-6777
1973 Hill crest rwo bedroom mobile home. 740-992·5039
1979 Fairmont 14Ft)( 60Ft Can
Be Seen AI K&amp;K PI Pteasar;ll
Call740-446·4310.
1seo Fairmont 14)(70 3 Bed·

rooms . 1 112 BathS, All ElectriC ,
Ve ry Solld, Well Kepi, Many Updales Needs Mcvea 740-682·
3446

1992 Norris, 16Ft X 70FT, Vinyl
W1th Shingles 2 Bdrms . 2 Baths,
All Electnc App li ances. Porches ,
Carport 740-256·6336.
Oakwood Homes Barb oursville
WV. 5500 Down Low Rates ,' 304·
736 ·3409
Double W1de New $999-Down
$237-per mo Free deU\Iery &amp; se t·
up 1-809"691 -6777
DOWN PAYMENT BLUES?
OAKWOOD HOMES
NITRO,WV
WILL MATCH YOUR
DOWN PAYMENT
CALL FOR DETAILS
SPECIAL FINANCING
AVAILABLE
304-755-6885
L1m11ed Oller

1 end 2
(7401441· 1982
mshed and
1
, securit•d Chllel Craft Honey Oak Baby Bed
deposit req Uired, no pets .
And Matchmg Changing Table
And Dresse r $250 00 740-379992-22t8
2615.
1 Bedroom, lncludmg Utilities, : : . : . : : : . : - - - , . - - - - - $350fMo.. 2 Bedrooms. Including Church pews lor sate, 12 twelve
UtllltiBS. $450/Mo, Depo.sil Ae· loot. 4 ten loot, $200 each, 740·
qulred, 740-446-2477
949·2217.

-::---------1

2bdrm apts , total electric, ap·
pllances furnished, laundry room
facilities, close to school In town
Applications available at VIllage
Green Apts 149 or call 740·9923711 EOH

Electr1c Scooters. Whee lchairs,
New And Used. Stairway Elevators, Wheelchair And Scooter
Lifts, Bowman's Homecare, 740446-7283
Firewood lor Salel Call 740·256·
1922

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES , 52 Westwood Orlve
lrom $279 to $3 58 Walk to shop
&amp; mov 1es Call 740- 446 . 2568
Equal Housing Opportunity

Firewood Seasoned Spill, Dellveredt Jared, 740-446-6566, Or
Chad 740-446· 1271
Grubb's Plano - tuning &amp; repairs

Counlr'f' Side Apartment Large 2
Bedroom s. 2 Baths, W/ 0 HookUp, CIA, $435/Mo, Including Weter, Sewage, Garbage, Call Toll·
Free 888-840-0521

Problems? Need Tuned ? Call the
plano Or 740-446-4525
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Aebulll In Stock

Furnished 4 Rooms &amp; Bath Completely Redecorated, Clean, New
Carpet. No Pets Or Smoking, Ref·
erence &amp; DepoSit Required, Also,
Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath, Upstairs, 740-446-1519

Call Ron Evans, 1·800-537·9528
Johnson's Used Furniture Beds·
new and used. mattresses, K1tch·
en appliances, Dinettes, wash ·
ers, Dryers Freezers, etcl (740)
446-4039, (740)448-1004

Gracious living 1 arid 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle port From $249 -$373 Call 740·
992-5064. Equal Hous1ng Opportunities.

Large Oak Desk· $75 •00, Large
Ant1que Wal l Regulat or C lock$375 00, Oak Dry Sink W1lh P1!ch·
er· $50.00 740·256-6898
Nascar- new arrivals Dale Earnhart &amp; Earnhart Jr., Coca Cola
cars, while quantltlis last, Nascar
Barbie , targe select ion ol Gotd
Cars, 1ts 4 &amp; 1125 scale, Jeff Gor·
don Selection of limited edlllon
Items &amp; more WCW Ole Cast,
Goldberg regular &amp; gold cars
available We try to have the best
ol the best , hard to find Items.
save tim e &amp; mo ney, 740·742·
251 t. 1- B00-837·8217, Rutland
Bottle Gas. ask for David .

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment ,
740-446.0390

Good selectmn of used homes
w1th 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at
$3995 Qu iCk delivery. Call 740 ·
385·962 1
New 14x70 $500-0own $199 -per
mo Free air, skirt 1·800·69 16777
~ew

16xBO $500-0own $245-per
mo Free air. sklrl 1· 800· 691 ·
6777
New 1999 14x70 three bedroom,
mcludes 6 months FREE 101 rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer, s~lrllng ,
deluxe steps and setup Only
$200 74 pe r month with $1150
down Call 1-800·837·3238
New Bank Repo 2 S1ngle W1des. t
Double W1de, 304·736-7295
PRIVATE SETIING
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths, 800·383·
686~

SINGLE PARENT PROGRA,M
SPECIAL FINANCING
AVAILABLE
NEW A USED REPO 'S
CREDIT HOTLINE
304·755·7191
We Fmance land &amp; Home With
As L1ttiA As $500 Down 1-606·
928 3426

By owner- three bedro om. fenced
yard p~O I double lot m Galllpo
Its Feuy call 30 4-675· 1106 ai1er
6pm

340

3 Bedrooms 2 Baths With A/C
Sk1rt S2291Mo 1 BOO 383-6862

Nice 2 bedroom apartment In Po·
meroy all utilities paid, no pets.
740·992·5858
North 3rd Middleport, 2 br unlur
apt dep &amp; rei . 304-882-2566

Now Taking App11catlons- 35
West 2 Bedroom TownhOuse
Apartmen ts, lnclul::tes Water
Sewage, Trash, $295/Mo , 740 441 · 1616, 740-446·0957 740 · Prlm81tar $49 InstallatiOn One
446·6515
month free rree hOliday g111 just for
- ' - ' - - - - - - - -- I calling, 800·263·2640
One bedroom apartment for rent
qu iet ,dep &amp; rei required Restau rant pizza oven , Hobart,
electric, $650 . 740-992-4087 ask
$300 00, 304-675-,550
lor Wayne or 740 -992-4 514 ask
Pomeroy &amp; Middleport- nice tw o !or Christy
&amp; thrae bedrooms . equipped
k1tchens. references and deposit Satellite Syatema - 18' D1rectTV
dish . total pu rc hase price $99
required. 740·985·4373 alter·6pm
Ask about free programming, 1A10 Grande Apartment Close To 800·779-8194
College One Bdrm , All Utilities
Pa1d $290.00 Month 888·8 40· Solid Oak 12 Gun Cabinet. w/Pistot display, E~c condtllon. $250 00
0521
SKS A1le $150 00 (740) 367-7577
Tara Townhouse Apartments,
Very Spacious. 2 Bedrooms . 2: Starting Line -ups tootbalt , basFloors CA. 1 1f2 Batll, Fully Car- ~etball , baseball, hocke'f', &amp; Na,s·
paled Patio, No Pets. Lease Plus car the re Is just a few Emmett
Sm1th, M Jord an. K GrHiey, K
Secu r~ty Deposit Required , 740Earnhart, J Gordon, W Greztay.
446-34 81
M Johnson, 0 Rodman M McTwtn Rll•e rs Towe r now accepting Guire We save 'f'OU hme &amp; monappllca 11ons for 1br HUD subs1d· ey, call 740-742·2511, 1·800·837lzed apt for elderly and hand I· 82171 Rutland Bottle Gas, ask lor
Dav1d
capped EOH 304 675-6679

450

Business and

Th ompson 50 Caliber Stam!ess
Steel lnhne Black Diamond Moctel 740 446 3413

Furnished
Rooms

Buildings
Commerc1at Oll1ce or Retatt 07
M1fl St Mtddteporl 1 450 Sq Ft
$400 mo Corner Bu1tdmg 740992 -6250 AcqulsiiiQns (nex t
door)

;

C1rcle ¥otel Lowest Rates If)
Town Newly Remodeled HBO.
C1nemax Showtlme &amp; D1sney
Weekly Rates Or MO,!llhly Rates ,
Cons1 ruct1oh Workers Wel come
740 441 -5698 740-441 5167
'

Waterlme Specml 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 P.er t OO. I " 200 PSI
$37 00 Per tOO All Brass Com
press1on Fittings In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson Ofuo t-800·537-9528

-1

T RANSPORTATI ON

7-1

21

• Q 7 6.
a K8 f 3

• 10

• 10 7 5

•AQ916
IJiD982

cQ%

AKC Registered Cnlnese Sharpe!
pups, excellent bloodline. $300,
740-949-2126
AKC Registered Shlh-tzu pups,
$250 each, CFA R8gl&amp;tered Himalayan hittans, $150 each; lull
blooded Siamese kittens, S 100
each, AKC Pek•ngese pup, S250,
all shots and wormed. 740·687·

3090
AkC Registered Tri·Colored
Cocker Span 1e1, $100; Pupp'f'
M1xed, Looks Just Like Cocker
Spaniel. $25, 740-446-3281 .
AKC Registered. Shlh·tzu pups ,'
$250 each, CFA ReglitereCI Him·
gtavan kittens, $150 each: full
blooded Slameae kittens , $'100
each; AKC Regisrered Pekingese
pup. $250; all shOts anel wormed .

740-667-3090
AKC Rott Weller Puppies, Cham pionship Skmdllne, Parents Great
With Children . Ready For Weekend 01 :January 9th, $350, Depo sit Will Hold One Christmas ,
740-245-5823 Allar 5 ~M.
AKC Shelt1e pupa (miniature col·
he&amp; ). two malel , 4 months old ,
$200 each; tortotSe shell Persian.
lull blOOded, no papers, $100, can
be CFA registered, will charge
$2()0;740-992-5073
AKC St Bernard pupa, ready 12/
14, depostt w111 hold untll -12/24,
5350/ea, 740·698-8116 or 740·
898-3001
Australian Shepherd pups. 2
black males. sao. NSDR, current
health record, 740· 949·2128 or
740·843·5176.
CFA Per11an Kittens, 2 Male
Sealpoints Born 9!8198, Had All
Shots 740-245-9239
Chinese Pugs, 6 Weeks, Registered Peellgrees $350 Females ,
$400 Male Malee Great Chrlatmas Glftsl Evenings 7-40-4411176 Days· 740 -446-3977, Ask
For Clara

AC, $1250 , 740- :- '

1988 Bonneville LE ,

maroon, «tr, • '

BARNE~

Soul.h

•

• WHAT'S TH'

I CAN'T TALK AN'
SHELL PEAS AT
TH' SAt-' :: TIME

West

LATEST .,SSIP,
: . LOWEElY?

Opening lead:

ceo.

__:.;_::..._::..:...:.:..:::::.:.::.:._~

.

11 Crimson
13 Team o l l h 18 Short, closefitting j&lt;lcut
19 poculllr
20 Contribute
22 Colleld wbh
pitch
23 CloNd up
24 Opined up
25 Tollor'a toot
27 Porch u.m
32 Greeklalond
34 Clger

Pass

• 4

contlliner

35 Hlwk
39 Musk:lln

Cugat

43A-I

Oberon

45 C-t oouncl
47 Journey

il all, something new comes along.

EARNEST

someone having a

A

88 Honda Accord XL 5 sp.
124 ,000 miles In good cond
13.300.00 304-675·5143

The ballgame was in Au5lralia,
belween !he Sydney Slorm and the

ney.
showing some

ACCOUNT
.
OF YO\J~~. ,

••

12-16

points with

four spades and five hearts.
East's lwo no·tnliT!p was Unusu-

ll.·Z.~

al, promising at leas!

Trucks lor Sale

5-5

in lhe

minors. Despite the prevailing vulnerability, I think the action debalable
because Nort'h-Soulh rate to win the

THE BORN LOSER

o

91 Chevy S-1 5 sp. w/ topper :
84,000 miles In g,ood cond ,
$3,800.00 304-67s-5143
'
'

r

\~'a£

TElUI'I&amp;

~

1:':&gt; NO ~1'-l!:i\~ i!&gt;OI'Ill:':&gt;
I Tfl.l::. Yt:I'\1'-

J

.iJ

will only help declarer.

a trump lead--

for

another debalable

move. Taking Ea.•l's

10 w1th

lmg lhe

Looking For AKC Registered
Bo ston Terrier Stud, Black And
While 749·258·6251

1993 Chevy 4 WD Z500 $11
740.379-2451

the heart

10.

Should West rover?

At lhe table, We" made the natural-looking play of a low heart, let·

92 Honda 4- wheeler 2 wh
good cond. f04 ·675-4848 aftqi- -:
4.30pm
··,

97 Yamaha Wolverine ATV .. ~ ·:
wheeler, 4x4, 350 c c ex. co.itt '-1
$3,800 oo 304-57o·9907.
:, :

trump. ran the

620.

10.

Farm Equipment

!rumps, but he has only one: lhe heart
ruff thai establishes the sui I.

So

Ford new Hollanel December specials, model 5030 rental tractor
62 PTO HP, 4 wd , 2 pump hyd,
8x8 shuttle trans , 129 hrs
24,000 00
5030 same specs. 303 hrs
22,500 00 4630 55 pto hp, 2wd ,
same spe cs, 57 hrs $17,900 00
4630, 4wd, 16x4 dual power tran ,
24 000 00
256 rakes In erate 3,050 00
451 7" mowers 3,250 00
472 7" hayblnc 8,395 00
634 R balers 650 • 10 500.00
644 A. balers 1OOOit stnng t1e
auto wrap, wide pickup t3 ,900.00
654 R baler 15001t same specs.
15 900 00
565 square baler wagon hitch
9,70000
'
Keelers Service Center
ST AT, 87 PT Pleasant &amp; Alpley RD 304·895·3874.
We Have From 25 To 30 Used
Tra ctors In Sla ck Fmanc lng As
lew As 6 5% Fixed Rate On
Oualll'f'ing Tractors With John
Deere Credit Approval Car·
m1cllael's Farm &amp; Lawn MldWa'f'
Between Gallipo lis And Rio
Grande On Jackson Pike 740·
446·24 l 2 Or 1·800-594· 111t
Llveslock

2 Po ny Colts 8 Months . Liver
Chestnut Wl\h Bald Face &amp; Blue
Ev es, Bla ck Ba'f' Pmlo With Excellent Markings. 740·388-Q321

Auto Parts

&amp;

Accessories

As if thiS needed actdmg. It ju sl
shows how difficulllS !he subjecl of
covering an honor with an honor.

Campers

&amp;

Motor Homes

TO ME .. MOM DOESN'T WANT /""""\!!
'iOU TO HAVE A DOG, DOES SHE'?

LISTEN

DO i'OU I(EALL'( THINK

Home

BASEMENT

•• •

Chnslmas Pony Small Black
Beauty, 10 Year Old Gelding, Well
Broke $600. OBO 740·379·2701

I

I'

(
'

ASTRO·GRAPH

WATERPROO~ING '

C&amp;C General Home Maintenance - Pal ntlng, ,vln;-1 siding ,
carpentry doors, windows, baths,
mobile home repa1r and more For
free est1mate call Chet, 740-992·
6323
Professional . 20yrs experl;;;
with all maso nery. bric k, bract: &amp;
stone Also room add ltmns , Qa rages , etc Free eshmates 304773-9550.

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

2 'llerv gentle Ponys (740) 2455087

.

.•
.. ''

Appliance Parts AM Service·~ All
Name Brands Over 25 Years ex perience J\.11 Work Guaranteed
French City Maytag, 740 -446 ~
7795

Re,sldenllal or com mercial wir)ng.
new serv1ce or repairs Master Lice nsed e1ec1ric1an Ridenour
Electrical. WV.000306. 30 4 . 675 .
1786

I

RINYO

3 ..---11
.---1...-1

.---1

_Y,o_N'17""""'
4 11
11--,G__,U
_
_
_
_
I I I 1

"Medtocnty knows ijself." the

==,'

philosophy professor mused ,

r-"'7:'-:-:--=-"7':"'-::-::-.:::-. " but.~alent Instantly ~news- ,-

KUTYER

I

Ie

1--.,.,..~5-r-1-.-~-~,.,.6-~.---1

1.-.J.-...L._.J.-'...1.._.J__..J

Compl.,e 1ho ch,uckle

~uoted

by filling •n the m1ss1ng words
you develop from step No 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

IWEDNESDAY

, • •

UnconditiOna l llletlme guarantee
Locar references fur nished ES:tabllshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)
445-0870, 1-800 -28 7·0576 . Aog ·
ers Waterproofing

I

2
,.,._

'

1983 Motor Home, Good Coodlllon, 2 gast tanks, air &amp; Furnae8
740·367-7070 or 740·367-7093 ••

Improvements

1

all around you unt1l you reach the TOLLBOOTH .

1982 Terry Taru s 28' Air Awnl ~~·· •
2 Doors, Full Bed 1699 Bob M.;- "'
Cormick Road, Gallipolis, Oh io '
740-446-1511
"

810

I 1I I I

Obtuse- Elope- Utter- Should· TOLLBOOTH

•

'

t.IVUAS

From the Have You Noticed Department Change 1s

:·-·
• •
-.·
..
'

I

SANTA

15 GOING TO BRING
i'OU SOMETHING MOM DOESN'T
WANT '(OU TO HAVE:'!

CLAVS

=-=---=---=..:__._

SERVICES

WORD
IAMI

e

New gas lan~s &amp; bod" parts 0 1..-•
A Auto, Ripley, wv. 304 -37a-·
3933 or 1-800-273--9329
• •:

790

!he

contra'ctJails.

Summers not over! Kawasaki STS Jet &amp;kl, still under warranty,.j ~ :
three seater, 83 horsepowe~~:!·
bought new July ol 97, thra.-...r4":
match ing Kawasaki ski vests artfl_,;..-:
trailer all go with 11. Priced to seft ,..,. ·
$4200 740·949·2203 or 740·94q:.."
2045, will consider trade for
good pontoon boat
.. ~ •

760

FVIIY

Stuck in the dummy, declarer

.a•;

New 5010 6010, 7010 Series
Tractors In Stock 7 75% Fixed
Rate John Deere Cred1t Financing
Available New 4000 Series Compacts in Stock New John Deere
McCoa And Round Balers 0% 12 ·Mos. f.75% ·24 Mos 3 5!%.
36 Mos.. 4 5% ·48 Mos. 55% -60
Mos Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn,
Midway Between Gallipolis And
A 10 Grande On Jackson Pike .
740 -446-2412 Or 1-800·5941111

630

&amp; Motors

lor Sale

last

needs two hand enlrie&lt; to pick up !he

I

Rotlwe1ter mixed Christmas pup·
pies for sale. $25. 740-992-5747.

610

IVNPIV

PREVIOUS SOLUTION . "There are only two k1n&lt;ls of coaches- lhose who
have been ftred and those who wtll be l!red. ' - {Coach) Ken Loeffler

m

Yet now have West cove r I he heart

dr ' '

94 Honda dirt b1ke, pro acl(on 1
suspension- $2,000 OBO 3~... 1
675-2864.
". -:

LIVESTOCK

pleasing plus

·'

Registered poms , chlhuahuas,
poodles . schnauzers and mini
pinschers 304-675-5460

&amp;

ruffed a heart

to

hearts, and look !he club ace for a

'
'

Registered male Shih-tzu pup, le·
male Shellle , female Siamese kit·
ten , call 740-992-~607

FARM S UPPLIE S

nine.

drew West's

.' :

1985 Polaris· Trail Boss 4 Wheeler 250. $1,500.00 Call (304) &amp;7s~ '
5612 AFTER,S.OO
, -;

New Manco Go Kart , 9hp B&amp;S,
electnc start tights, will sell or
1rae1e, 740-742-2455, 740-7422580

LPBYKOBPV' YDZ

hand, repeated lhe trump finesse,

,ooo:

-.

10 win . Green led a spade

dummy's

Pair ol cockatiels , born in June,
wlth cage, $100, pair born second
week of October, no cage $75,
740-992·91,, .

Boats

J BY ' K

LAB Y

Back came the club jack. Winning in

1986 GMC Safari Mini Van, Au·
tomal!c, V·6, Runs Good, LoO\I
Good $1,250 080, 740·441- ·
0584

750

VNLASYI

ran the heart Jack lo East's queen.

Jack Russell terrier puppies, one
male, one female, $250 each, depos it w111 hold for Christmas, 740742-2050.

or Trade

NXLVY

pne of Australia's besl young players,

Full blooded Australian shepherd
puppies. 8 weeks old, ses. 740·
742·3304

For Sale

J N PV

ANJ . 8V ' K

1\is ace,

hand with the ace, Green advanced'

590

SYLWSLSNY

X N P

&gt;
'·SK

the declarer, Murray Green, who is

&amp; 4-WDs

Motorcycles

OBKKVK

YBLABY

Wilh his heart length, West opted

1988 Blazer 4 WD No Rust, Runs
Good $3,500 Or OBO; 1982 Ford
Van 351, Runs Good; 1982 Toyola Pi&lt;k·Up Diesel, 740-379-2313.

740

'A A B L

auctton. Therefore, this information

YOU &amp;XI'U:. i'IOT POU\, ('I'\

93 Chevy S-1 0, 2 wh . dr
lruck,2.8, V-8, 5 sp, ale, 78,0illl
mlles,new tires, very good cond .
$4,500. 304-675-3954 evenings.

by Luis Campos
CeleOrity Cipher CfYI1fOotlmll,. cru.Uid Irom quotaiiOAI by famous people PIIS1 and prvsenl
Eadllionef 'n the eipher stands lor at'ICICt1er Today's c1w Z eqv.1s y

•

North's opening bid was Flannery,

'~A,Ge

"

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Melbourne Reds. I've no idea who
won, bul here's a deal played in Syd-

~~VOLVING

90 Pontiac Grand AM , red,stan·

while

ha1rcut

auendmg a baseball game!

we VIANT YOU TO P\JT
A &amp;..ITT£.t JA,r.SPIN
ON T~AT

dard, sharp $2,200 00 304- 773·
5282

48 Mil. IChool
50 auv•
52 5allld veggle
53 Fool
54 Moo - -tung

photo in our local paper showed

86 Camaro Z-28, 350 V-8, auto,
ps, pb, Ull &amp; cruise. excellent con·
dili&lt;ln.$3,100, 740-378-0398.

1995 GMC Sonoma SLS Ext -Cab Pick-up 80,000 miles ,
$5,995 00 8&amp;D Aulo. (740) 4~';
6189
'

blue gran

Just when you think you have seen

1996 Mustang, 21,000 mll6s,
$8,99S 00 B&amp;D Aulo. (7401 448· 6!89

Vans

48 Kontucky

By Phillip Alder

J."~K &amp;

.....,

9 Hfoi-.Frl.
10 Wintry gWI

'

1994 GMC Jimmy, auto, road~d: •
excellent condition, 4 3, new tlms, •
.. door, $10,500
740-742.-~
7200 or740-742-2675

730

61mpreulonlat

Have you
·seen it all?

1993 Grand AM, GT Loadl1988:
Ch&amp;Yy capnce, runs great1
..
$900 00 1987 VolkswagOn Fox,
Runs Good $1,500 00 Call· (7401

720

7

5 Shott jllc-

%NT

2a
Pass

Pass

r=.':e
,_.,....

Othello

3 Compau pt.
4 Vllllln In

East

North

Pus

Pass
41

50 BESSIE SAYS
TO ME--

,, ' ' ••

682·1324

1 llenlglrie

2n_bb_.

Pass

1991 Dodge Monaco S 1.500 •
Firm, 740-448-9935 , Aller 2;30 ~

P.M

31 EmH rayo
33 Ughtu • 36 Having on

-live odor

13.200 304-675-5792 alter 5pm.

1991 Cadillac Seville 4 door sedan . loaded with accessories,
great gas mileage , car phona.
3Q4-1175-2722.
• -

30A--

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: East

~I

"'w urea &amp; brakes. good cogd.: ~

56 Suppcl. _ t t oounda

-)

• J • 2
• A 6 53

1986 Pontiac Parlsienne, high ' .

miles, 4 door, new eng•ne, looks ·- •
and runs great,
949-2045

.......

55 r:;.ll:u

23 $ource olllghl 57 Actor Ed 26 Ellu'a country 58 28 Garden tool
21 Chemical oufllx
DOWN

Eat

Soul.h

AKC Gotden Fletriever Pupa. Parents ~vallable , 740·319-2639,
7-40-867·5212

-

T- port

12 -

West

• Q7

............. In

.

18 Alhlng pole

I Kf

A Gro om Shop Pet Grooming .
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Rd .

Bunk Beds New Never Used Mat-

floor, 8' ramps, new tires, asking
$400I 74 0.992·5430

Apartments

for Sale

•. \- .

I A8 3 2

Beautiful River VIew 198 River
Street,
Depos 1t, Reier-

440

OAKWOOD HOMES
NITRO,WV
304·755-5885
Limited Offer

Pell

17 Uncwllned

•A9765
• K 3

tlng, square bates, call 7..0-9tQ."\

• J 10

4x8 utlltty trailer, e;occellent condl·
Uoo, stamless steel diamond plate

Two bedroom mobile home

560

5533.

Hay for sale· frr51 &amp; S8t:Ond cui- •

445Poodbdoc
48HIIr-

11Unnon"• tow 51 lncrnu

LZ -~-M

NonJo
1 K J 9 5

n95

256-1529

Middleport , no pets, 740- 992 5039

12.::;00::·::.:·~::.:.:::.=:5.:.:'869=-.---7
' '.;. '
::

Recondi tioned
Washer•, Dryers, Ranges, Relri·
grators , 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 740 T446-

2 Bedroom trailer. mason area,
Hud Approved ! Deposit required
(304) 675-1783

·~~~~~~7~4~0--4~4~1~-0~1~8~1~
:-

•

Rl2, Square Balol, 11 .oo-

sewer Jlll)et , windows.
t etc ClaUde Winters.
Rio Grande , OH CaU 7&lt;410-245 5121.

nn Tin

45 -

,.._
15W..oonlk:h

Appl iances :

Houses for Rent

420

Mobile Homes

HouiMihold

Goods

Did You Get Land For Chrl!irmas?
Irs Not Too Late . 1 Have Hunting
Ground Or Home S1tes In Ross,

14 Pootbucfa

4

510

BRUNER LAND

Restored V1ctorlan home slluated
on 12 acres Vlllage Middleport,
sec luded and private, appointment, eall740·992·5696

By owner. 725 Page Street Middlepor t, house S 3 lots. must see
to appreCiate, w1ll sell house wtlh
ou t lots lor $89 ,000. 740 -992
2704. 740·992-5696 .

By Ow ner Br 1ck Ran ch 3 Bed room s 2 Baths 4 Car Garage 4
1/2 Mil es Out Sandhttl Road ExIra Large Loll 740 44 1·061 B

350

House And Lot For Sate, 4 Bedrooms . 2 Baths , $1,000 Down
w A c Easy Terms Contact David Callt -800-448-6909

Furllllure repa 1r, refmlsh and restoration, also custom orders OhiO
Valley Re f1 n1 shlng Shop Larry
Ph1lhps 740-992 6576

Will Haul Any1h ing or Clean Up
any Hung I Will work !.or $4 00
(7 40)367-0 140

Merry

limitatiOn Of discrimlnatiofl
based on race. C&lt;liof. religion,
sex familial l1alus or r'llltJor*
ongin. Of any nteftion to
make any ...., prelefenco.
limitatiOn or d:lct'.mitldcN• •

I•

M ER C HAN D I SE

to ac:tvertise ·arrr j)ielel•a.

lor Sale

0~ · 12748

Gallia Me1gs Community Achon
Is Seekmg A Weatheri zation Laborer To Work Wi th Our
Weathenzat1on Program On A
Tempora ry Bas1s With The Pos slblil1y 01 Fullt1me In The Future
Excellent PhySical Cond1t10 n. Or
ganlzatlonal Skill s, And Ati lhly To
Dea l Wl!h Persons Of Var1ous
Socia -Economic Backgrounds
Must Be Able To Wor k Outs ide
In All Types 01 Weather. On Ladder s. And At T1me s tn High
Places Drivers Licen se, H1gh
School Graduate Or Equivalent,
And Tralnmg In Constr uctiOn
Trades Wealhenzat1on Or A Related Field Hetp!ul Send Resume
W1th Three (3) Relerences To
Ms W1tt, C S DIVISIOn Dtrector,
GMCA A, Box 272, Cheshire,
Ohio 45620 By 12/31/98 GMCAA
Is An Equal Opportunity Employer

AM real estate adYertillng In
ttis newspaper is IUb;ed to ·
the F - F., Houslog Act
Of 1968 wtliCtl maiees •!legal

Business
Train!ng

Computer Users Needed Work
Own Hrs $20K -$75K /Yr 1-800·
348· 7188 E;oct 1173 . wWw amplnc com

'

Person to work 5pm to 9am at
adult care home. ca ll 740·992·
5039. ask lor Kattt,o

Someone To S•t W1th Elderly
Lady In Eureka, 740-256-1291

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areas I Sh11ley
Spears 304-675-1429.

Puppies to good homes (740)

Local Trudllng Company SeekJnQ
Ouahfl&amp;d Truck Onvers Good
Pay And Benelrt&amp;. Send Resume

Help Wanted

Mobile home site ava1labte bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, ~all
740-38$-4367.
i

HOLIDAY WEEKEND CASH'
Simply Register CustomerS
For A Sav1ngs On Their Gas 81Jt.·
CALL NOW! I 614-834-521!1 Or
800-919-445'

Hay &amp; Grain

•

40 ~~

7-AIIIM

:...:.::.._:..:::....:..,.::.....:,..:~ ''
Hoy Ia&lt; sale- ono n'ile norll on

•

AIWWer to Pt at1 DIUI PuiZIII

~

diCCOfaliri

ANNOUNCEMENTS

s. pl1ell ..

...

'·

Thursday. Dec 24, 1998
There are strung lnd1 ~- ntions in the
yew- ahead that you u 1uld begin to
, ,perience nn overall improvement In
}OUr financial arrain;. You n11ghl
tven be able! to acquire 'omething
. you' ve alway~ wanted.
CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jnn. 191
When uttcmpting to tell othcr5 how
, ,you feel about them today, it w1il
• ~orne otT successfully. Those hsten·
ing closely will know tt's com mg
· from the bottom of your heart. Know
l ·where to look for romance and you 'II
find it The Astra-Graph Matchmnk·
~r m~tantly reveals which ~igns are
: romunucally perfect for you. M1ul
• ..$2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o tllis news, pnper, P.O. Box 1758, Murroy Hill
S1a11on. New York, NY IOIS6.
'

' • AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 191
Don 'I be unduly alarmed 1f somcon'=
loob hke he or she is only I."'ncemed
-about the monetary wonh or !iOffil!!·
' thing today This will be no renectron
•

on yuu.
PISCES (Feb. 20- Morth 201 It's
wtsc not to jump to conclusions nbQut

someone you meet for the first time
today. Thi s person could tum out to
be a !ipecial individual in your life as
the month!i move on
ARIES (March 21-1\pnl 191 No
matter whut the problem11 are today,
you ' ll figure oul a way to pull off
what you Want Dt:sirl! is a very powerful mol1\lating force for you nt tl'w;
tim!!! .
TAURUS iAprd 20 -Mny 201
Althou~h ytm won ' t be uttempung to
do so consdou~ly today, when you
enter a room, yourchan~mn will have
an excePtionally favorable affecl on
all chose present
GEMINI (May 21 -June 201 You
m1gflt be ahle to uccompli~h things
today that you ha\lcn' l been able to
pull off before Set your s1ghts n
notch or two h1gher. especn1lly 1n

tmg requires someone who &amp;X"iSesses a good imagination wtth an anlslic touch. you ' re the one who'll fit the
bill besr today Step forward and put
your gifts to producttve u~es.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nuv. 221 Provided you don ' t wamc when encoun·
tering a Jude oppPsition l!!arly m lhe
day, lhing~ will work out for your
ultimate advantage today. Procl!!ed

your per!ional affairs.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) The
first priority you'll set today ts to
make sure' everyone you're invo lved
w1th u treated with grllCe and dJgmty Tfley will be equally protective or
you.
LEO [July 23-Aug 221 E'"n

2 1) You rarely lll'e a last mtnutc person, bu1 you could suddenly decide
the family needs a specu1i llo u~hold
1t1:m today You'll he successful m
finding lfle rtght p1ece ut the nght
prtce

though you may only play n m~nor
role, !here's a posstbility that you
m1ght be able to work out an ummgement wnh an ocher. h could prove to
be rather rewarding for all.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 221 Events
With spec:tnl nlhaoces w1ll prove to be
of great s.uccess today. especmlly if
some of !hose involved are s.ligh11y
younger and eJttremely energetic.

LIBRA(Sept 23-0cl 2lllfn set·

for_~~rg 1~~;i~~~ry /~ 0~in~J-D~c.

DECEMBER 23 I

.,

�•
Page 20 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday

Wednesday, December 23, 1998 •
•

Allies rush . to defend· Hastert from Democratic crit.icism

•
•

.

By ALAN FRAil

Aaoclated Preu Writer
WASHINGmN - Rep. J. Dennis Hast&lt;rt. the Republicans' lattst
speak&lt;r-in-waiting. is . preparing to
&lt;merge rrom obscurity in jUSt tWO
weeks. But Democrats are suggesting
he may do little moR: than follow the
bidding or his friend. Hoose Assistant
Majority Leader Tom DeLay.
Hast&lt;n. a six-temn lllinoi&lt; Repub- ·
· lican, was in his rural hometown of
Yorl&lt;ville on Monday, preparing to
asc&lt;nd to the speaktr's post. The
House is elpecled to ela:t him to the
top job when the 106th Congress convenes on Jan. 6, a day after GOP Jaw, maktrs seem certain to fomnally
anoint ~im as their candidate and four
days after he turns 57.
Hasten allies weR: also fending off
suggestions that the quiet but genial
conservative would follow orders
from DeLay. R-Texas. Since 1995.
Hasten has been chief tkputy to
Delay, who isthe No. 3 House GOP
leader. but as speaker, hC will be
Delay's boss.
"Denny is no wallflower. and will
certainly be no pawn of Tom ·
DeLay." said l;fastert supporter Rep.
Mark Foley. R-Fia.
Though Hastert rarely seeks pub·
licity and is known for his ability to
strike backroom deals, DeLay rarely
shies away from controversy. He was
, one of the fir.;t congressional Republican leaders to call for •President
Clinton's resignation. and he has
helped lead GOP efforts to weaken
environmental and worker prot~tion
laws.
.
As such. Delay may be on his
way to becoming Democrats' new
favorite political target, replacing
the departing Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga. Many Democrats consider Hasten likable and bc;ar little of

a""""
f~
H
M. ·
~-~-ge
o M.
ormer
ou.&lt;e
monty
Le-•Bob
h
I
R
Ill
....r
IC e · - ·· a trnoder·
at• w'th ood ~ ·
· .•
• De
t ag
w~•mg re 1att&lt;lfl&gt;nip
w'th
I
mocral\.
" De
H
....
....
.
nny :1.\lert '"'-' a1ways ..,:en
ho·s own pe
. de nde ..
rson. v~ry m pe nt.
JeIIines
· sat·d.
··Nobod Y pu 11 s ".
v.;nny 's strings
but Denny... said IXLay ,poke&lt; man
To R d
·
ny u y.
So far. Ha.&lt;tert ·s prepamllons
·
,oor
Jan. 6 are gomg
· ' mo&lt;ll hi y. ao·ded by
th• 'act th 1 h
ad
• •·
a e wa.&lt; a1re Y a member of the_GOP leadership team and
was famth_ar_ llh many of. the plans.
1 add
H
de h
n
II Jon.
a&lt;te~ at s ave .
been workmg_cl_o&lt;iely wnh the staff_of
R
B b L
RL L

the animosity toward him that
• - •,oorGingrich and De' - y.
they •ve ,,...
.....
but they may 1101 wait long 10 try
tying him to DeLay.
"To the extent that Hastert 1·s tt.ed
into h_im. it will be interesting 10
how 11 plays out.'' said Rep. Davt·d
Bonior. D-Mich .• the No. 2 H~
..se
v~
Democrat.
" We'll give the new speaker the
benefit of the doobt, and we'll -"least
give him time to establt' s·h that he's
indepe
_ ndent of Delay.-· said Rep,
Manto Frost of Texas. who will be
the No.3 House Democrat.
Hasten spokesman Pete Jeffries
.
ern ph astzed Monday that Ha.,ten.
who came to Congress in 1987, was
s· e e

w.

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An AP News Analpla
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON (AP)- The ghost$ of this Otristma&lt;
past will haunt President Ointolt to the last hour of his last
day in the White House as he deals with the Republican
House that impeached him . .
Democrats will be reinforced in the new Congress, but
short of the strength to win what the president said he will
seek to do: broaden federal education programs. enact guar"!!lees of patients' rights in managed health care, and act on
the always-sensitive issues of Social Security and Medicare
. financing.
.
On 'Mldnesday, Ointon added a f"'Oposal for $1.12 billion in assistance for homeless Americans next year, a 15
percent increase.
There's more to come Jan. 19 in his State of the Union
message to a Congress in which Reptlblicans will have a
narrowed, six-vote House majority, and 10-seat control in
the Senate.
Whatever is done in the next two years can't be done
without them, which means compromise.
That was elusive before the bitterness of near party-line
impeachment- Ointon and Congress couldn't agree on a
budget this year and had to settle on a catchall money bill

C

·

FAA rushes replacement runway equipment to Hop!Qns
CLEVELAND (AP)- The Federal Aviation Administration is sending parts to Clev~land Hopkins International Airport to replace runway
lights and an antenna damaged by a cargo plane.
The work normally would take two weeks, but should be completed by
next Wednesday, FAA spokesman Donald Zochert said Wednesday.
Six runway approach light towers and a 15-foot antenna which helps
pilots land during bad weather were damaged early Tuesday when a cargo
plane hit them while landing.
The damage has closed a runway for bad-weather instrument landings I
until repairs can be made.
.
Zochert said aircraft may land on the runway as long :is the weather is
clear. A shift in th&lt; wind direction during a snowfall shut the runway for
a time Tuesday night. Planes were directed to a short~r runway: . __ •. ., ,

PURE SWEEf
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MIDDLETOWN (~P)- Authorities hope to make arrests soon in the
distribution of counterfeit money that has victimized businesses in the
area for several weeks.
·
About a dozen stores and businesses have unwittingly put counterfeit
currency in their tills since someone began circulating the bills, police
Maj. ~reg Schwarber said Wednesday.

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to keep the government funded.
They rugued to an impasse on patients'
right$, sidestepped a dispute on the way to
conduct the 2000census, and managed to settle on education aid, approving part of what
Ointon wanted with local control terms
Republicans demanded.
But the last session's sparse product Jed
Democrats to call it a do-nothing Congress,
while Republicans acc11sed them of snarling
the works.
Now it will be m&lt;R difficult to get thing.
done. When Congress convenes Jan. 6,
impeachment will be a first order of Senate
business, with trial or a censure sc:Uiementpossibly both- as the options.
·
Ointon said he would accep1 congressional rebuke aJ!d
censure for the Monica LewinSky affair and his deceptions ··
about i~ .blt.t he won't admit lying. let alone the perjury of
which he stands accused by House vote. A second impeachment article charges him with obstruction of ji.L';tice in an
attempt to cover up the illicit sex.
Even Republicans looking to censure as a way out given the prospect of trial without punishment for Jack of
the 67 Senate votes it would take to convict Clinton and

Fake·-mon,ey being-passed u.- Mid.letown

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Clinton faces tough road working .with Congress

•

69

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c
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.
.
$)19
.
R
. . oun ••••••••••• ~~~•••

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 165

.

Hometown Newspaper

force him from office- insist that a confession be part of any deal.
· But the suggestion of censure instead of
ouster prompted the Reflllblican who managed the House impeachment drive to say
there should be no deal in the 'Senate while
there are still "reams of evidence" against
Ointon that have not been disci&lt;Rd. That
could !ell!! two-thirds of the Senale to vote to
throw him ou~ Rep. Tom Delay of Texas,
the GOP whip, said Wednesday.
The new House speaker-designate, J.
Dennis Uastert of Illinois. was deputy whip
to Delay until Newt Gingrich resigned
because of Republican losses in the midterm
elections. Bob Uvingston of Louisiana. conf~ing his own
illicit affairs.before a sex magazine could publish reports of
them, withdrew as Gingrich's successor before Ointon w.S
impeached on Saturday.
'
There are threats of more such disclosures to come
about other Republican membeiS of Congress, which
would woJSen a politically hostile atmosphere. ·
.
Ointon joined other Democrats in calling for an end to
"the politics of personal destruction." But that em! is not in
view.

In the Ointon impeachment ca.e, some Democrats say .
the, Senate should settle quickly on censure. end it all and
get back to business.
·
'
"And if we don't do that. we're going to have such a
polarized, politicized Congress for the next two years, I
don 'I see where much of anything gets done in this country," Sen. Patrick Leahy of. Vemnont said on !'&lt; BC. Sen.
John Breaux of Louisiana said on ABC that pre~Sing the
case could lead to a months-long Senale trial, leaving no
opportunity to act on Social Security or other issues.
"'M:'re tearing each other apart," BreauJI. said. " ...
We're punishing the Congress more than we're punishing
the president."
,
.
Ointon's most ardent GOP roes say the way to end it all
quickly is for him to resign.
. .
Rejecting tha~ the president said it has never croo;sed his
~~

Aft~r

'

.

the House impeachm&lt;nt votes, he said he intends
to work for his programs and policies for two more y~
"until the last hour of the laslday of. my tenn."
.
After he .was re-elected, Ointon remarked on the pattern
of second-term woes that have beset modem presidents.
"I'm very mindful of. history's difficulties, and I'm going to
try to beat them," he said.
He hasn·~ and there are more awaiting him.

Holiday shoppers
not afraid to spend a.
buck to win jackpot ·

C

179
Breasts •••••••••••• ~. ·
BONELESS, SKINLESS, C~ICKE~

-Page4

~... ·
~

'

I 996 law amount to a "bill of attuin-

der.,'' unconstitutiomtllegislation that
10tl1cts pun1 shment without a coun ·
trial. BeiiSouth said it punishes the
Bells for the past anticompetitive s in .~
of their fomner parent, AT&amp;T, and for
any offense,s they may commit in the
future .
. The court concluded that the Jong-

Tomorrow:Ught snow
High: 30s; Low:20s

COCA COLA .
PRODUCTS

,.

correcl in turning down that request.

~

•
•
,
,

-WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTI.TIES
PRICES GOOD THRU DECEMBER 26 1998

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS .

the Motor City
Bowl48-29

'

Accepts Credit Cards

let them sell their own long-distance
service to local customers.
No Bell company has· won such
FCC approval because ihey haven •t
sutficiently opened their markets.
· the commission says.
The Bells provide a total of more
than 80 percent of the local phone
" service in the United States. .
The 1996 law's provisions go to
the heart of the government's efforts
to open the local phone market to
competition·.
" We're disappointed that we lost
this decision," said BeiiSouth's associate general counsel .William
Barfield. The company hasn't decid ed whether to appeal to the Supreme
The Jaw 's defenders. led by the
FCC and long-distance companies
AT&amp;T and· MCI WorldCom. hailed
the decision.
FCC Chairman Bill Kennard
called the decision "a victory for consu mers " that lets the commission "
con tinue to implement the will of
Congress and bring the full .benefits
of competitio~ in the local· phone
market to all Americans."
. BeiiSouth filed the case after the
FCC rejected it&gt; request to provide
long-distance service in South Carol ina, part of its local phone market.
The.court also ruled that the FCC was

enough ••-·GQpJ~•-rsht'p
.:•-- on He •-·t·ton so far, and hi5
&lt;4U&lt;
_...,.
,,... no"""""'
..__ ,_ """
~rr-,...,....y considered- but then aban- selection is e&lt;pected to be by accla~--•
uuoocu as un.,....,..,.," ...-.: a conferrnalion.
··-....- ;
ence call among lawmakers to disAllies say Hasren has personally
1
cuss panning.
tele""""'ed each of the 17 Republi1
P'~"
n the longer run, Hastert is · cans who will be House freshmen
elpected
to stick to a previously next year, since they wen: 1101 in town
p1 ned 1
an
egislative agenda calling for for Satunlay's impeachment vote
an &lt;arty emphasis on health care and and Livingston's surprise retirement.
Soc' 1 ~-- · ·
ta .,.,_unty and a schedule with
Rep.-elect Ernie Fletcher, R-Ky.•
more
work
days
than
this
past
year,
the
freshman cla.&lt;s liaison to GOP
·
:udes and lawmakrrs said.
leaders. said that although the newA r h' J
s oor ,. an. 5 selection by his comers· absence meant they had virfellow Republicans, supporter.&lt; say he tually no role in choosing Ha.&lt;tert.
has declared support from more than they realize there was little they could
180 of the 223 GOP lawmakers who do bo ·
" a Ultl.
will serv&lt; in the new House. well
" We realize there really was a

STORE HOURS

Communications Com.;,ission will

COurt .

and planning a reception for the hundred&lt; of constituent&lt; likely to atten•
"-

snow
High: 30s; Low:10s

•

&gt;

PEPSI &amp; MT. DEW
7 UP, DR. PEPPER,
MUG ROOT.BEER,
OUNGE SLICE
PRODUCTS
2 LITERS

Baby Bells
will continue
facing tough
standards
WASHINGmN (AP) - A Jaw
forcing the nation's biggest local
pho~e companies to meet special
requ~rements before they can offer
long-distance service to their cus·
tomers is constitutional, an appeals
coun ruled Tuesday in a victory for
government regulators.
The ruling by the U.S.
of
Appeals for the District of Colllm:Lirioi'
is significa~t because it means the
nation's five regional Bell telephone
companies will continue to face
tough standards as they try to get into
the $90 billion long-distance market.
BeliSouth, a regional Bell company. sought to overturn these
requiremt;nts. contain,ed in a 1996
law. arguing that they . unconstitutionally discriminate against and punish the Baby Bells because they
don't apply to other local phone companies.
The coun disagreed, in a 3-0 decision. The Jaw "does not violate any
of t_he constitutional provisions raised
by BeiiSouth.'' !he coun said.
The law requires the Baby Bells to
open their local phone markets to
long-distance companies and other
potential rivals before the Federal

"');'""' "'«' an&lt;ointed by Republicans
un Nov. I~ to he.:ome speoker. but he
-•hruptly announced his retirem&lt;nt
frum Cungrl!"' on Saturday arrer
:Kimilling tn e&gt;tramarita! affairs that .
were hein" invt.rigated by Hustler
"
ma~aLine:.
-Republicans have already planned
much of the o;chedul&lt; for Jan. 6_
beginnin•. with the constitutionally
"
required banging
of the gavel at noon.
Hasten still faces decisions about
some details. such as writing an
acceptance speech. deciding who
will deliver tbe opening day's prayer,

December 24, 1111111

•

,,

w.yA.

Dally 3: 0-6-0; Daily 4: 9-2-7-9
0 1998 Ohio Valley Publishing Cu.

•••

By DAVID JACOBS
AN&lt;x:lated Pren WrHer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~
Santa Oaus came eatly and landed in
Lancaster.
·
One winning ticket was sold
Wednesday night for the: Ohio· 1...0)·
tery's Super Lotto drawing, which
had a $45 million jackpo~ the sec'
ond-largest in its history.
The winning numbers were 13,
22. 23, 29, 36 and 43. Lottery ofti~~~~·~·the tiCket was sold at The
t.
in downtown Lancaster.
winning player opted for a
~IUIJliH"''" payment of $14.7 million
~r·
)
.
taxes rather than annual install·
j
ments. That figure is the amount lbe
f
lottery would have spent on an ann•~
I
ity paying the winner $45 million
.
over
26 years.
·
·
'
Payments for that period wou[d
have been $1.7 million annually
· before taxes, or S1.1 million after
federal and state taxes_
.
The jackpot buill.up because there.
were II drawings, covering 5 1/2
weeks, without a winner. That was
the longest winless period since a si•number, high-payout lotfery game
began in Ohio in April 1983.
:·
Lottery sales were strong across
the state Wednesday.
Naveen Reddy, who was staffing
the cash register at the A&amp;S Store iii
downtown Columbus, said the largest
single purchase there was $225. ·
"I think she. was buying for an
office. pool,"
. Reddy
' said.
.. ·
Ftrst-ltme player Andy Bowe~
wasn't holding out ~uch hope that he
was buying a winning ticket.
,
He didn't even know that the
Super Lotto drawing was Wednesday
night. "Somebody just gave me $10
and said, 'Here. get us some lottery
THE CHRIST CHILD as commemorated In numerous Nativity scenes and the Gospel of Luke tickets,"' he said.
Several Michigan · residents
Illustrate the meaning of Christmas. Here, members of the Racine First Baptist Church conduct
a live Nativity acene at the home of Ronnie and Cookie Salser near Racine to honor the com· crossed the border into the Toledo
area to buy tickets.
lng of Jesus Christ. The ecene featured Erma Norris"and Evan Struble ae Mary tlhd Joseph.

DHS wraps ~P '98Angel Tree project

....

Anniversary of Jon Benet's . ·
. Stl•11 poses q uest IOns
•
·murd er

The Meigs County Department of Human Services residents. ·
. ·
wrapped ujlits 1998AngeiTreeprojectWedncsdaywith
Agency staffers began delivering the gifts to homes
the last batch of presents being delivered personally by though?"' the county_ on ~c. 14 and have aver~ged
.
·
Santa Claus.
approxtmately 100 mtles datly on the county "sletgh",
·
DHS credits the 30 sponsors who purchased, an old van.
By SANDY SHORE
On Dec. 26, 1996, the Ramseys called police to report their
wrapped and delivered the gifts for bringing a brighter
The number of recipients of gifts this year was Allaoclallld Prw&amp;Wrft&amp;r
daughter missing after Mrs. Ramsey found a ransom nOt'(
Christmas to the 385 children and elderly Meigs County ;reduced by appr()ximately a third due to the fact that .
BOULDER. Colo.- John and Patsy Ramsey are a long ' demanding $118,000 for the child's safe return.
·
·
welfare reform has decreased way &amp;om Boulder.
.
. About eight hours later, ~sey found his da~!l"ter'.s body
the.case load of. those eligible to
The couple whose slain daughterwa found in the basement tn a basement room of the family home. Authonbes saJd Jonbenefit from the project, said of their home here nearly two years ago have moved to subur- Benet was strangled. had a fractured skull and may have been
project coordinator Mary Hob- bon A~anta Ramsey is nurturing a new computer software sexually assaulted.
stetter.
business. MIS. Ramsey otganizes family activities and tlleir 11Haunting images of the golden-haired little beauty q-n
The Meigs County DHS year-old soi\,Burke is enrolled at a private school.
.
captured the public's heart, drawing worldwide scrutiny·- and
implimented the Ohio Works
But the shadow of JonBenet'sdeath hundreds of ~les away aiticism- of the search for her killer and the city of Boulder.
First program in 1997 which still hang. over them.
Police were chastised for allowing Ramsey to~~ the
replaced the Aid to Dependent
"They do normal thing. ... but it isn't normal because all holise and find hiS daughter's body l!lld leumg famtly men~
Childre'n entitlement program, around arc these pictures (of JonBenetV said Unda McLean of w~der about the hom~. Disputes be~een pro5ecutor;; and.
she explained. OWF is sue- Parkersburg. W.Va., a family friend who has known MIS. Ram- pollee erupted. and DistnctAttorney Alex Hunter was crtltC1zed
ceeding in Meigs County and sey since high school. "Nobody watches the television. for failing to bring charges.
participants art being placed in Nobody talks very much about this."
Last fall, Detective Steve Thomas, a key investi_gat6r,
every available job, she added.
The Ramseys. who have been deemed under suspicion but resigned, accusing Hunter _of. bungl~ng ~e case~ trymg ~
"Although most of the jobs have maintained their innocence, arc expected to appear before protect the Ramseys. Special tnves~gator Lou Smtt also qut~
in the area pay only minimum a grand jury txamining evidence in the case when itreconvenes saying he beli~ the Ramseys are tnnocent. ,
,
wage, it is a beginning for the after a holiday break, Jnlbably in January.
The pd Jury of five men and t2 women. n~ludtng fivt
OWF participants to achieve
"They have wanted to go to the grand jury. And they want altemates. was convened after Gov. Roy Romer reJected severself-sufficitncy and learn good to say, ''M: didn't do i~ here's what happened,'" said Ms. ai pleas to appoint a special fXlRCUIOr·
work habits," she said.
McLean. who WTOte a book called "Jon Benet's Mothei: The
The pd jury took this month off.
"We all wish for prosperity in Tragedy and The Truth!:'
· With the investigative mistakes and the time that has passed .
our county so that programs
"And they have a tremendous amountoffaith. They believe since the slaying. "it's hard to see how there·~ ever gotng to be
like this one will no longer be that they will get in front of these p&lt;opl&lt; and they will see the a conviction," said Denver attorney Andrew Cohen, who has
needed, but the reality is that truth."
·
followed the investigation.
.
will
always
be
segment
As
the
annivtrsary
of
JonBenet's
dtath
approaches,
it
is
"When
two
veteian
investigatoiS
involved
in
the
case can
there
8
LOADIN' UP - Santa Claua Ia ahown here loading up the county
"&amp;leigh" Wednelday morning with the remainder of Angel Tree gift&amp; at of our population who will unclear wnether the truth will ever be known. Some legal ana- resign with completely different conclusions about what the
the Meigs County Department of Human Services . .PreHnts were need our help and we must all lysts believe the killer may neven be convicted because of cru- evidence means, how in the world is a jury going to convict
be there for them.':·
cia!, early mistakes in the investigation.
someone?" he asked.
delivered this year to 385 ci)Udren and elderly residents.
·

(

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