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'UT.H

ana

••

OCTOBER IS
IIT.H
CHEVY TRU.C K ·MONTH lfTEI•..1-1.I
AT C &amp; 0 ' MOTORS!
CHECK OUT THE SAVINGS"
1998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
IPEI
lll..fll. N

.

Dolphins hand
Buffalo 30-13
defeat at home

•

Pick 3:
8-9-3
Pick 4:
3.0.5-2
BuckeyeS:
8-23-33-34-36

Sports on Page 5

Par!IY cloudy tonight,
Iowa nur 30. Wednaaday,
partly cloudy. Hlgh1 In the

408.

'

•

EXTENDED CAB 414

llbl. 41, NO. 151

Hoffman and Commissioner Janet
Howard
did say that they favor using
Sentinel New• Staff
"Nobody is going to \Je put out on a part of the facility for temporary
interim housing for residents who
1he street."
Meigs County Commissioner Fred find themselves without shelter due
Hoffman made that pledge in . to house fires, floods and lhe like,
resp&lt;inse to a large contingent of con- rather than as pe!1llanent housing, as
cerned citizens who appeared before it has been used in recent years.
Howard noted that the building
the board of commissioners on Mon·
might
be used in the future as office
day to address the uture of the Meigs
space for county agencies, but ~aid
County Home.
The citizens. including at least one that residents who live in the home ·
resident of !he facility. e~pressed their now would be offered improved
concern that the facility, which hous- accommodations in other facilities
es indigent residents, remain open. before any changes are made.
The concerns follow the defeat of a.
Howard · cited The Maples, an .
proposed half-mill county home levy apanment complex located near the
on Nov. 4.
home, as a possible allemative for
The commissioners have made no some of the residents, as well as pridecision to close the county home, or vate intennediate care facilities in !he
to keep it open. and according to community.
Hoffman, concerns that residents
Since the proposed ' levy was
will be put out without an alternative approved last summer, Commissionhome -. if the home is closed - arc er Jeff Thornton has opposed any
unfounded.
suggestions that the home be closed,

By BRIAN J, REED

LOW

AS
,

1998 ·CHEVY
S-10 .

Restyled Front Grille, Instrument Panel
Bumpers, and Increased Horse Power!!
I

,j

'

'

;j

AS

Hollister drops in
ori council, talks
·abolll.Jl&amp;W lx

LOW

AS

'

I

*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER .
•.

tJ

1998 CHEVY S-10
EXTENDED CAB

By JIM FREEMAN

Sentinel Newa Staff
Nancy Hollister, Ohio lieutenant governor and prospective Republican candidate for !he state's Sixth Congressionali&gt;iftri~~ paid a surprise visit to Mid·
dleport Village Council Monday evening.
Hollister, who is fron\ Marietta, was in Meigs County Monday, ·visiting
Harrisonville Elementary School earlier in the day and viewing a tire recycling demonstration. Later, she addressed members of the Middlepon·
Pomeroy Rotary Club.
Hollister briefly addressed the planned replacement of the Pomeroy-MllSon
Bridge . .
As .fonner l"ayor of Marietta, a city that lies along the Ohio River, Hollister said she encountered a similar project when the Williamstown, W.Va.,
bridge to Marietta was closed several years ago.
In that situation, it was detennined the best place for the replacement
bridge was at the site of the closed bridge .
,
"It's a tough process." she said. "I have watched your progress:"
f
She noted thdt three communities. Pomeroy, Mason and Middlcpon. arc
impacted by the bridge.
Middlepon Mayor Dewey "Mack" Honon said he attended an carlier·mceting during which' most people identified the existing bridge site as the best
place for a replacement bridge .
·
The bridge, according to Honon. serves as a flood route, a means for fire
dcpanments and emergency ~quads to support each other..and provides easy

.

.

Air Co~dltionlng,. Alum. Wheels, LS Package,
AM/FM Radlo]'W/L Tires; and More.!!
••
....

AS

•

Low·
AS
*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

Air, AM/FM Radio, Tachometer,
Locking Differential
0

LOW

$

AS ·

.....

•

All PRICES INCWDE
RI;BATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCWDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
LICENSE FEES.

*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

MOTORS TOYOTA

AND

•..fll.l-1

UT.H

ST. ALBANS
·2921

•

RT. eo MlcCORKLE AVENUE-ACROSS FROM Sl-iONEY'S

By BRIAN J. REED
Santlnel News Staff
Development of an area neat the
Middlepon corporation lirl)it as a
retail aomplex was discussed when
Pomeroy Village Council met in reg·
ular session Monday.
David Bumgardner, who owns
the propeny that was the fonner site
of the Twin City Machine Shop, met
with council to request the vacating
of two little-used sueets that border ·
• the property whic~. Bumgardner
says, will be developed for retail usc.
Council voted to vacate a section
of Cole Street and Willow Street to

allow Bumgardner to develop the
site. Bumgardner will be responsible
for replacing water and sewer lines.
at his expense, to accommodate the
~wo businesSes.

The roadways will be vacated
with the stipulation that the village
retain an casement, in the event that
access is needed to install sewer lines
in the area. The village plans to seck
funding to extend the village sewer
system in that area next year.
Bumga~dncr did not indicate the
nature of the businesses. but said that
the Environme~tal Protection Agency
has prohibited the construction of a

State issues recycling
e~!!!A!~A!'eigs County
Sentinel COiumbue Bureau

"4.9% fiiiAIICIIII
OIAPPIOVD IMAC
CIIDIT

IPEl
lll.·fll. ...
111.1-1
Amll:.ll:l
72"•2921
111.1-1
I'
.._..._......~-.+

&amp; LEXUS

WEST VIRGINI~S #1 GM D£Al...ER SEWNG CHEVROLET AND OLDSMOBILE AND TOYOTA AND LEXUS
OPIN I A.M. TO I JII.M. DAILY-IATUIIDAY I A.M. TO I JII.M. -sUNDAY t JII.M, TO 1 JII.M,

saying that the facility, which is funded in large part through the county
general fund, could be underwritten
by state and fedeml grants instead.
Under such funding, Tl)ornton
said Monday. the home could offer
improved and expanded services to
aging veter8ns and those needing
mental health services, among others.
Thornton and Bob Smiddie. of
Pomeroy. one of the concerned citizens meeting with the board, both cited the Washington County Home,
which is funded with a 1.5·milllevy.
That facility houses some 92 residents and employs 50 staff members.
Smiddie noted that the home
could provide expanded services to
needy residents while providing
employment at the same time.
Flo-€ouchie of Pomeroy, whose
brother is a resident at the county
.home, said that the home is a symbol
of the county's generosity.
(Continued qn Page 3)

ADDRESSES BOARD- An 11tlllllted 25 to
30 people met' with the Mllp County Com·
.mllllonll'l Mondlty to urge the board to kHp ·
the Mllg1 COunty Home open. Bob Smlddle,
right, .ncouflllld the board to IPDOint yet

another conim·lttH to evalllltl the home'•
operation. Also pictured, lUted left, 11 Flo
Couchle, whoM br.other 1a 1 rllldlnt It the
home.

Payroll changes loom
for Middleport workers
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Nlws Staff
Middleport Village employees
- .Will.'be-'paid. under·•. new.• two-wock
pay jleiibitfollllwinf action Monday
night by Middleport Village Council.
C011ncil unanimously directed
Clerk/Treasurer Bryan Swann to
implement an 80.hour pay ~riod,
consisting of two 40-hour weeks,
beginning Dec. I.
Employees will receive their first
paycheck un~cr the new system on
Dec. 16, with employees being paid
for a tWO·Weck period, instead or a
VIP VISIT- Ll Oov, Nancy Holllltlr, right, paid 1 IUrpriM vi•
15-day pay period.
It to
Vlllllft Council during 1t1 Mon• night ~Meting.
Under the old system, Swann said
She II ehown hlnlllllklng to Councilmen Eric Chembera.
he did not hdve time to properly
check the payroll reports for the vilaccess to Ohio Route 1.
lage's 22 employees.
"It was put where it is to tic the communitics ·together," he said.
He said the problems were high·
Hollister said the location of the new bridge "will be a community decilighted
by recent discrepancies on
sion and an engineering decision."
paymll
reports
in which employees
She was accompanied by Elizabeth Schaad. governor's economic devcl·
received sick leave pay and holiday
opment representative fbr the Ohio Department of Development.
pay
on the same day. being paid twice
Hollister will compete against former Congressman Frank Cremeans of
for
the same day without working.
Gallipolis, busincssmn·.,.ikc Azinger of Marietta and educator Tom Sharpe
The
rcpons were signed hy a village
of Belpre for the RepUblican nomination to challenge cuncnt Democratic
supervisor.
Congressman Ted Strickland, 0-Lucasville, in next year's congressional elecAnother situation Swann noted
tion.

•llport

was that recently a new person was
hired hy the police depanmcnt without notifying the clerk. who then had
to guess the:- new wmt.er'&lt; 'fliiY ~.
Under the new system, Swann !lllid he
would have had time to delve into the
matter.
Street Superintendent Brent Man·
Icy, who wa.' thCre with several other village employees. said he would
like coupcil members to reconsider
the change. noting that employees
voted againsuhe change earlier. .
"It's the way we've ,always hccn'
paid," he said.
Some workers. concerned they ·
would l!c shoned on their pay. were
reassured by council members thai _
they would get the pay coming to
t~ern .
.
"You won't be shoncd anytime - no way," sai4Council President Beth
Stivers. '~is right. Vou won't bC ·
shoned any t' c." .
Instead f being paid around the .
first of the month and middle of the
month, employees will' get a pay; ·
check every otJ!cr Friday, making for
(Continued on Plge 3)

Pomeroy retail complex idea outlined to council

998 CHEVYv·
4 WHEEL DRIVE
AS

AG.nnlttCo. MI¥11PIPIF

county home concerns

AS

•

'*"- 12 , _ , 35 '**

Commi.ssioners hear

'

"

2

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, luelday, November 18, 1997

C11117, Olllo Vllley Publllhlng Compeny

Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chrome Bumpers, Chrome
Appearance Package and More!

anne••
•. 1·1

Ohio Lottery

COLUMBUS -A state recycling grant totaling $42,4SO was awarded Monday to Meigs County for a variety of waste reduction programs. .
Meigs County will receive $42.450 from the state's Recycle, Ohio pr.ogram, a tiny sliver or the $6,719,904 in grant money awarded statewide
·
through the program this year.
"Local communities will be putting these 'grants to work at the neighborhood level, where it means the mos~" said Ohio Gov. George Voinovich
in a news release .
A total of $21.110 was earmarked for a littering awareness program,
$9,330 is exJtcted to be spent on a non·curbside recycling program,
$8,930 was awarded for a curbside recycling program and $3.080 will be
used for a waste reduction activity. A lO percent local match is included
in the recycling program's funding .
The Gallia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton Solid Waste Management District
also received a state recycling grant totaling $~4.900. Specific details about
that grant were not immeadiately available yesterday.
Since the state's first recycling and liner prevention grants were award·
ed in 1981. more than $181,000,000 has gone to Ohiocommunilies to sup- .
pon local programs.

..

restaurant there because ofthe lack of
sewer service.
He did say that one of the "stores"
would be an 11.000 square-foot
building, which would employ ao
estimated 30 ticoplc. ~at business
hopes to open in April. Asecond bu.•iness would employ an estimated 3S
employees, Bumgardner said.
Council did not act on a request
from Bumgardner to allow the construction of a paved parking lot and
outdoor dining area on the river side
of East Main Street across from
Wendy's, which he owns. A village
ordinance now prohibits construction

on the narrow area between the;;treet
and the ri vcr.
Council President John Musser
and Councilman George Wright both
expressed their opposition lo tho
construction, ciling esthetic concerns.
Musser said that he was concerned
about a large pile of rubble which has
been on the site since lhe restaurant
was constructed, and asked Bumgardner when the debris would be
removed. Bumgardner said that the
material wus being stockpiled for
construction of the parking lot and a .
possible boat facility on the river.
(COntinued on Page 3)

U.S. resumes surveillance
fljghts o~er Iraqi territory
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Uniled States resumed U-2 surveillance flig~ over Iraq today while the
Clinton administration and its allies
were weighing increased humanitarian aid to Iraq if .Saddam Hussein
allows U.S. weapons inspectors to
return.
A U.S. pilot flow 4 high-altitude
surveillance mission over Iraq today
without incident, said a Pentagon
official who spoke on COJidition of
anonymity. "It's flown and everything went well," the official said.
Another official said Iraq made no
attempt to interfere with the U-2.
The flight was the second U.N.sponsored U·2 mission by the United Stales on behalf of inlemational
weapons inspections since Saddam
threatened to expel U.S. inspectors.
but the first since he actually kicked

the inspectors out of the country last
week.
President Clinton called off a trip
to the Camp David presidential
retreat to consult with his national
·security advisers today on the standoff with Iraq.
"Iraq first has to let these inspectors back ilJ to do their job. But we're
not ruling iny options out, including
the military one," William Richardson, U.S. Ambassador to the United
Nations. said today on ABC's "Good
Momins America."
A U.S. proposal to increase aid to
Iraq in exchange for a return of the
inspectors wu described by an official accompanying Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright in Pakistan u "a
lillie carrot" for Saddam, providing
an incentive for him to end the

,.

(Contlnutd on Page 3)

COATS FOR KIDS - Ploplu Blnklng • Tnllt Co.'e 1MU11
Colli for Klda campaign 11 In fuiiiWing up until Dec. 31, IC_.
lnll to C1111P11gn chlllfWOfllln 01-. Llwlon, lhown ' - With
Pamldlt atoM -nager Scott Stwpfwt. The blnlt omo. 1n
POIMIOF, Middleport and Rutlttnd, the Plmldlltara Mel Vlulhln'l lOA In Middleport will accept new end Ulld chiiJ wr'a . .
tar coati, and dCIIIItlona can be dropped off In
blrNII at any of thl locltlone. In lddltlon,
Wll
accept caah dot!ltlone to purch••• new ch
'1 ca•
· Stuepfert Mid that anyone who dropa off 1 chlldl'ln'a COIIt at h
attn will !lilt I 10 pet'CIIIt diiCOUIIt on their el'ltiN purc"t I I 1 Caltel
will be dlitrlbuted thr01J9h the local elementary IChooll.

apeclll"'= 11
"ecz::.,

.l

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•

.

Commentary

Pa~
n.~.

November 11, 1117

By Jack Anderton
lnd
Molllr

11.,..4151• Faxiii2.Z157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINOm
Publllhlr
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

General vr-•aer

•

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recent report by Asia Watch, a in to help. America carries a lot of
human riahts monitoring group, weishl in lndonesia1 buying billio•s
. Last Jan~. as the campaign
found that Indonesian troQJ)I regu· of dollars of goods each year. May~
fund-raising scandal was just getting
l~rly mest lqe numbers of people if Washington exerted some pressure
geared up in Washington, Rep.
at one time. 111ose detained are rou- on the government, some thought,
Frank Wolf, R-Va., was thoilsands of
tinely subjected 10 tonure, "panicu- peace rpight finally return to the
miles away on the Indonesian island
larly with electric shocks, but alsp, island.
of Timor. But he still wasn't out of
with a variety of insll'llmeniS such~
When Wolf returned to Washingearshot from the foreign-money
rattan, metal pipes, and electric ton, he wrote a letter to Clinton
scandal that was engulfing Washingcable," the group wntes.
de~eribing what he had seen and
ton.
Most or the torture is done at heard in East Timor, and asked the
Wolf wanted to see first-hand if
police stations and military posiS. leader of the free world to do somethe reports he'd been reading were
But there have been increasing thing about it. He suggested that a
true: that the ea.itern half of thts
reports of "suspeciS" being forcibly U.,S. envoy to the region m1ght be
is~d, 300 miles nonh of Australia,
removed from their homes and taken able to negotiate a peaceful end to
has become one of the world's most
into the forest to be tortured.
I~donesia's occupation.
notorious torture chambers since it
Even more sickening, the report
In return, Wolf received the clas·
was invaded by lndonesta 22 years
adds that "tonure has apparently sic Washington kiss-off: a fonn letago.
become a source of income for indi- ter. Frustrated, Wolf drafted a secWhen Wolf arrived, he staned
vidual officers in East Timor who ond leuer to the president. "I believe
h
interviewing local ciuzens. w o
are sellmg photographs and even . things will not get beuer ... until
gave htm first-hand accounts of the
videotapes of interrogation sessions your administration forcefully
brutalny tnfltcted by the island's
to the highest bidder, with the price engages lndones1a to tmprove the lot
rising as more details ... are includ- of the East Timorese," he wrote. "I
military occupants.
One person Wolf encountered
ed."
beg 'you to do so."
wanted some answers. He had heard
"When we were there (we heard)
Wolf has since wriuen two more
stories of campaign cash being funstories of the military ... going leiters to Clinton. In the latest, dated
neled to President Cltnton from
around at night time, kicking down Oct. 15, he cites new reports of
Indonesian sources. He wondered if
doors and taking young peOJ)Ie away killings in East Ttmor and pleads
(froni) their with the president to take the issue
moms and seriously. "Mr. President," the leuer
dads," Wolf concludes, "I beseech you, I beg
adds. "They you, focus the power and the incliwould tell us nation of this country to do good on
they would this unfolding tragedy ... If America
npt go out doesn 'I help, who will'?"
after dark -"You really must act on this,"
no East Tim- Wolf scribbled in ink below the
orese will go typed text of the loner. "More will
out
after die." That was a month ago; there
dark .... We still hasn't been an answer from
interviewed Clinton.
one youog
"There arc talks going on m the
fellow that United Nations, but they have not
.had hts car · , produced any results," Wolf told us.
cut off (by a "(East Timor's) a very small island .
military
They arc of absolutely no threat to
officer)."
the Indonesian government. ... The
Many of ktlling goes on .... We keep sending
ihc
folks these letters hOJ)ing and praying that
Wolf met (the administration will) act on this
told
him issue."
they wished
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
the United ant writers ror United Featunt
States
Syndicate, Inc.
I__ _::,:::_::_:::::::::_:::~~~~~=_:~;~~~~~~~~~:J would step

'*'

111 Court SbHt, Pomeroy, OhiO

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Here's some dos and
don'ts of school prayer
By RICHARD CARELU
Anocletecl P1111 Wrltlr

WASHINGTON - School officials nationwide - espectally those in
Alabama - are caught in the mtddle of what they call religious warfare.
Whlit, for heaven'.s sake, can be done about school prayer'
Thirty-five years after the Supreme Court outlawed organtzed prayer sessions in public schools, the fallout remains controversial and confusing.
The Clinton administration two years ago sought to calm the waters by
issuing detailed guidelines on relig•ous activities tn publtc schools They
helped, but total success proved elusive.
·
In Alabama, a federal judge now has taken the unusual step of ordering
traming sessions for teachers and admimstrators in DeKal~ County schools.
A school administrator there alleged that students had been coerced into participating in religious activittes.
·
Oddly, religious practices m Alabama counrooms also have become a
politically ch1111ed issue. A state judge i~ Gadsden is fighung to conunue
having prayers at the start of coun sessions and to keep a carved d1splay of
the Ten Commandments behind his bench
Two notions - both found in the Constituuon's First Amendment often collide 1n school-prayer disputes. One says that government should not
promote or "establish" religion; the other that government should not unduly interfere with indtvtduals' religion.
A list of dos and don'ts for school offictals can be gleaned from three
decades of Supreme Coun rulings and federallegtslattOn thai has wtthstood
constitutional challenge. Here's some of the best advtce legal expens can
offer:
-Students are free to pray at any ume. either mdividually or in groups,
as long as their pray1ng is not disruptive.
-Prayers O!Janized, or m some way endorsed, by teachers or school
administrators are forbidden. For example, a principal cannot lead a morning p111yer over a school's publtc address sy.tem
-If a school accommodates student clubs, such as providing a classroom
for after-school use, a student club that seeks to meet to pray or otherwise
worship must be g1ven the same access.
, -Student&amp; must be allowed 10 say gr&amp;,ee before meals. Aaam, rules about
disruptive behavior apply. The absence of official school pohcy is a key
here.
-If students are allowed to wear T-shins beanng various messages,
those beanng rehgious messages cannot be banned.
·
-Teachers may read the Bible Ot:..ot_herscripture to students in the course
of instruclmg about religion, but cannot dctso to teach a panicular religion
in an effon 10 evangelize.

Barry's World

those contribu:
tions 111ight
have .some,thing to do
with the Unit·
ed State's soft
stance
on
Indonesia's
human rights
record.
Ten months Mollet •
later, we still
have no deftnite answer. Nevertheless, the administration's silence on
East Timor speaks far louder than
the president's came111-ready denunciation of China's human rights
record during Jiang Zemin's recent
• visit here.
"There's a retgn of terror on the
1slahd," Wolf told our associate
Aaron Karp. "The East Timor peopic live in great fear."
According to reliable estimates,
Indonesian · forces have killed as
many as 200,000 East Timorese
smce taking over the eastern half of
Ttmor in December 1975.
And the slaughter continues. A

r---yr-------------------,......,

Everything th
By lan Shoele1
Do you remember when nostalgia used to mean somethma? Ah,
those were the days.
~en I was a hoy in the 'jOs, war
movtes were as much of a pop cuiture staple as ~estems. I saw, first
. hand, second-Iter stars ltke Rory
Calhou~. Frank Lovejoy, Jeffrey
Hu~ter and Jeff Chandler wm more
maJOr WWII battles than Audte
Murphy put together.
Not only that, iL was a genre in
which Steve McQueen, John Wayne,
Robert Mitchum and Richard W1dmark thrived.
And Aldo ~ay! Remember Aldo
Ray? (If you don't, you're probably
just as well ofT.)
1just saw "Starship Troopers." It
was like every black and .white war
movie I saw when I was a kid in the •
'SOs. except that giant extraterresln·
al bugs stood in for Nalis and the
Japanese Imperial Anny I guess the
producers didn 'I want to offend anybody. (Do entomologists count')
And it was in color.
Not only that, when I was a kid,
movie soldiers represented a rclatively broad cross section of America (e•cepting black people, of ·
course, it being th~ '50s). We had
Tex. and Jersey, and the Ktd, and the
Professor, you know.
Well, the starshtp troopers were

e days is junk food

all vanauons
of the same
jlerson! Oh
sure,
they
were fully
mixed racially and gcnderwtse, but
they
were
otherwise
interchansc·
Shoelea
able. As far
as personality
goes, they could have been Ken and
Barbie dolls. Watching "Starshtp
Troopers" was like watching real
hfe action figures get torn to pieces
by arachnids from outer space. The
movie didn't even bother with cltches. It dtspensed with archetypal personalitics altogether.
Which isn't to say it was an
entirely unpleasant vtew1ng cxpericnce. I just wonder what's happenmg here.
When I was a kid, ·when a movie
soldier died, · it was indicated hy a
thtn tncklc of chocolate syrup from
the side of the soldier's mouth. In
"Starship Troopers," when a soldtcr
d1cd. there were stmulated body
parts all over the scrt&gt;Cn. In that
respect. I suppose-- even though the
movie was about eanhlings gomg
face to face, so to speak, wtth ants
from outer space -- the movie was

true to life.
But what docs that mean? "Boogic Nights" and "The Ice Stonn"
have both been praised for "capturing" the '70s. Btu frankly, they didn'l capture the same decade I lived
in. I had no connections to the porno
tndustry (except for a sound cngi- ,
ncer who told me that porn shoots
weren't •cry interesting, from a profcssional point of view).
I never wife-swapped in the
'70s, and wouldn't have had much
interest m 11, even if I had a wtfc.
I spent the '70s prclly much the way .
l spent the '80s and (so farlthe '90s
-- trying to make p bock in a way
that won't embarrass me or others.
More tmponanlly perhaps : My sex
life wa.• dull.
Whtit is reality'? Remember
"Happy Days'"! It's betng shown on
Ntckolodcon as a k1nd of look back
on the '70s. But "Happy Days" was
inspi,red by "American Grafliti,"
which was a foncj look back at 1962
"Mtami Vice" is being shown on
FX, tf you have cable. I've tried to
watch 11. It's unwatchablc.
lt's so much a product of tis time
that you just can't get involved with ·
11 any, more. It' all style, no guts.
I s'bspeclthat "The X-Files" will
meet the same fate. It's way 100 mid'90s to survive into the next century.
It's the same with "'Bonanza,"

which shows up from time to time,
or even the "hard-hilling" "Htll
Street Blues," "LA Law," or (I'm
belling) "NYPD Blue," "ER" and
"Oiicago Hope."
Yesterday's truth IS tomorrow's
quaint canoon.
And what about classics'/ Is
"Gone With the Wmd" a picture of
the Civil War or a portratl of 1939?
Is "Casablanca" about World War II
or about Bogart and Ingrid
Bergman'/
Lately, I've nouccd a rcl~nllcss
scncs of cameos on Jlctwork tel evision· cust members of "The Love
Boat" on "Boy Meets Wo~ld," Enk
E.•trada from "'CHiPs" and former
Monkcc David Jones on "Sabrina,
the Teenage Witch."
What docs this mean?
We've gone way beyond sucalled "post-modernism." Today,
everything is food for the cver-hungry media mouth. II feeds us. we
feed it, and everything has become
junk food --even food.
(To receive a complimentary lan
Shoalcs newslcucr, call 1-800-989DUC~ or wnte Duck's Breath, 408
Broa,d St., Nevada City, CA 95959.)
Ian Shoales Is a syndicated
writer fllr Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
·

By Jo11ph Spear
One of the original concerns
about Bill Clinton was that the war
resister and the military would never
get along.

Dear Editor, r
I am wntin1 thts in regard to the Me1gs County lnfinnary issue. My
·.mother, Belly Wtlls, has lived there almost 40. Why should she have to
· worry aboutlosiag her home? Yes, she 'could have a home wtth me butllive
two hours from Pomeroy, lhe doesn't kno\:1' anyone up here and her being
You don't hear much about that
· blind also malces it hard to ~stto new situations.
anymore, for good reason. Clinton
All of her friends are in Me•&amp;• County also. The Meigs County Infinnary assiduously courted the brass, deli vis her home! When your pwenl reaches senior ctltzen aae. they should not ered a stirring 50th anntversary Dhave to worry about losinJ their home. She has enough medical problems Day speech at Nonnandy, panicipat·
withQut added stress.
·
ed in military events and look bold
What's happening with thai county? You couldn't keep the Children's steps tQ Haiti and Bosnia.
Home, you didn't care enouJh about your needy children tn your communi- - Now the Pentagon appears to
ty so you sent them to another county. ·Now, your needy seniors or older respect Clinton and seems to trust
'adults, you don't care aboutt~m either so let's just dump them out and close him not to hurt the mstilution.
·.tbe doorl. Well, if you commiuionen would search your hearts and put your It is an achievement that not even
::parents in the place those people, the resideniS are. could you sttll say "No, hts hero, John Kennedy, managed 10
·lets close the door?" I bet if you have any hean at all, you couldn't. Those pull off.
re1iden1S ·wouldn't be there if they were able to be cared for by their loved
.
onea or even hid any family but there an; reasons where obviously th1s isn~ • ~t bl)~gs. the Kennedy compolllible and need that home. It would be like. scuing my mother in a large panson 10 rrund ts a largely forgouen
fteld in the dark and sayina, ''There Betty, here's your new place,"
story that is resurrected in Seymour
My mother has a wonderful happy home there and should be kept. Don't Hersh's new book. "The Dark Side
the commissioners care about the needy people in their community anyone? of Camelot.''
These residents don't need the mtcrruption in their lives now. Pleue reconThe episode began Wtlh the
aider the welfare or the reaidents, their happy home and how you would feel Kennedy announCement, on Feb. 9,
iin their aiwation beinJ unable to defend themselves. Pleue don't destroy all 1961, that he intended to enforce ~
of the aood thtnJs you have tn that community. Please keep those doors open ban on foreign policy statements by
and let them live the rest of thetr hvea happy and in surround ina• that they the military.
are used 10 beinsln.
In h1s third term as Chief of
Rollin W.ltltteahc•e, Naval Operations WIJ Admiral
r
ZuetMIIe Arleigh Burke, art irrepressible conservative and Wlr hero who had
earned the nickname "31 Knot
Burke" (or the breakneck speed wtth

his
which
destroyer
flotilla
engaged
Japanese
forces.
On Jan. 27,
1961, Burke
was scheduled
to deliver an
address on the
dangers
of
communism
SPEAR
and,
as
requested, he submttted his re"!arks
to the Pentagon for clearance. Anhur
Sylvester, the defense official who
later became infamous for defendtng
the government's right tQ lie, canned
the speech.
A couple of weeks later, newspapers around lhe world published a
Burke intervtew which bristled with
tough remarks about the Soviets.
The interview had been given to
prominent Greek newsman Eltas
Demetraeopoulos on Jan. 12 and had
been cleared by the Eisenhower Pentagon on Jan. 16, but the delayed
publication appeared 10 be a challenge 10 Kennedy.
At a subsequent news conference:
Kennedy e•plained the t•ming and
trted to laugh .the incident off as the
kind of brouhaha hts order was

designed to prevent.
"I would say that this makes me
happier than ever tltat such a directive has gone out," the president said
to a tittenng White House press
corps.
The truth was th'at the Kennedy
White HoJJsc viewed Burke's blunt
remarks as a right-wing assault and
remained unconvlnccd that the interview had been conducted before
Kennedy took office.
On the day after the press conference, according 10 a previously classified CIA document, press secretary
Pierre Salinger summoned the
spooks to the Whne House for a
briefing "on the background of the
case of Mr. llias Dimttrakopoulos."
The document continued: "It has
not as yet been established definitely whether the cited interview was a
personal one with Admiral Burke or
based on questions submillcd to him
in writina by Dlmitralcopoulos.
In addition, there IS some doubt
as to tbe exact date of the interview,
which is the crux of the entire investigation, tnasmuch as the establishina of an interview date prior to or
after January 20, 1961, is of prime
importance to President Kennedy."
From that point on, the atmos.phere between the White House and

the Pentagon seemed trreparably
poisoned.
!he brass viewed Kennedy's •
comments as a direct slap in the
face. :rJ!eir suspicions were echoed
on Capitol Hill, where the sympathetic solons who ran the senate
armed
services
committee
announced hearings on Kennedy's
"muzzling" of the mtlitary. ·
The distrust may even have contributed to the Bay of Ptgs disaste
The president kept the military
•irtually in the dark while the invasiqn was being planned and allowed
tbe CIA to run the show.
On the very night of the fiasco,
according to Burk.c biographer E.B.
Pot\Cr, the admiral argued with
JFK for. American naval intervention, prompting a ~ennedy snarl.
"Burke," Kennedy growled, ''I
don't want the United States
involved in lhts."
Arleigh Burke died tn ,JanJary
1996, at the age of 94. Bill Clinton
auendcd the services and pra1sed
him as a stalwan "who stood watch
over our freedom for more than four
decades."
JDHph Spear II a syndlcat~
writer for Newspaper Entennise·
A1110datlon.
·

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Commissioners hear

Acc:uWeather" forecut for

Victor L'Berger Brown

t.(!CH.

Victor L'Berger Brown, 8S, State Route 124, Minersville, died Monday,
Nov. 17, tm at his home.
ArranaemeniS will be announced by the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

Jean Summerfield Frederick
Jean L. Summerfield Frederick, 83, Olester, died Friday, Nov. 14, 1997
in the Mariner Health Care Center, Wtnter Haven, Fla.
·
She was born on Aug. 14, 1912 and was a lifelong resident ·of Chester.
She was a 1930 graduate of Chester High School, anended the Chesler
Methodist Ch_urch, was a longtime member of the Chester Garden Club,
belonged to Chester Council323, Daughters of Amenca Lodge, and Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern Star, and was a member of the fonner Pythian Sisters Temple of Long Bottom.
She is survived by a daushter and son-in-law, Shirley and Larry Roush
of Winter Haven, Fla.; a granddaughter and a great-grandson; and two sisters-in-law, Geneva Tuttle of Middleron, and Alta Ballard of Long Bouom
Servtces will be I p.m. Thursday in the Mtddlepon Chapel of the Fisher
. Funeral Home. The Rev. Sharon Hausman will officiate and bunal wtll be
tn the Chester Cemetery Fnends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m.
W~dnesday .

IND.

An.._

Letters to th.e editor Bill's deft courtship of the military
What's happening with Affllgs County?

Wc&lt;~tllcr

OHIO

VVednelday,~ov.19

The Dally Sentinel , Wolf howls for· u.s; action on East Timor
'LmDllsMI In 1948

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuescltly, Nov.mber 18, 1197

• IColumbus!4s• l

•

W.VA.

(Contlnu.d trom P8ge1)
"The county home is a historic
landmark in the county," Couchie
said. "It shows that the county cares
for' its people Some of tl\ese people
can't afford a nursmg home, and
they're unable to live at home."
"If you close the home," Couchte
said, "where's the compasston?"
· Couchie joined others in supponmg the placement of the levy proposal on the May ballot, and suggested the eonstderation of a proposed sales tax to fund the home.
Sabre Ash of Pomeroy satd she
feels the tssue should not be "poltl!·
cal "
''I'm sick of people using this as a
poliucaltssue," Ash sa•d. "rather than
a humanllartan tssue I feel that it
shouldn't have been on the ballot. It
shouldn't be placed on that level. It
should he decided by the commissioners"

The board took no act ton on Monday, but authomcd the contonumg
work and expanSIOn of an ad-hoc
commtllce formed by Thornton earlier this fall to constder alternauve
Olen D. HarrisQn, 84, Pomeroy, dted Sunday, Nov. 16, 1997 at hts resifunding and cost-culltng measures at
dence, following an e•tended illness.
the home.
Born May 17, 1913 in Rock Spnngs, he was the son o/ the late Charles
The commntec wtll have unlllthe
A. and Jessie Donaldson Hamson He was a retired construclton worker of end of December to make any rec34 years and belonged to the Iron Workers Local 301, Charleston, W.Va. He ommendations about the home's
was also a member of the Carleton Church, a past master of Harnsonville operauons. Howard pledged that the
Lodge 411, and a Scottish Rtle Mason.
board would take no acuon on closHe is survived by his wife, Evelyn Loutse Carl Harrison; two sons and mg the home betorc that ltme
daughters-in-law, Dale E. and Marlene Scholl Harrison, and Ph1lhp R and
The commassJoncrs also met with
Paulene Hudson Harrison, all of Pomeroy; two grandsons, a granddaughter, Alden Wmu, prestdent of the Mctgs
two gre,t-grandchildfen and a step great-granddaughter: and several n1eces County Humane Soctety, Rlla and
and nephews.
Franklin Lewis of the orgamwuon,
He was also preceded in death by a grandson, Rod Harrison.
and Athe~s County Human~ Officer
Servtces will be I p m. Thursday ni the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy Lana Plamsek, about the posstbihty
The Rev. Clyde Henderson will offi~iate and burial w1ll he in the Carleton
Cemetery Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday.
Masonic servtccs will be held in the funeral home at7:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Olen D. Harrison
Regional weather pattern
stable for next few days
By The Aeaocl1ttd Pren

Not much change is seen in Oh10's weather for the n~XI few days, the
National Weather Service said.
Skies will continue to be partly to mostly cloudy with a few flurries here
and there. Temperatures will climb to around 40 degrees during the day and
drop into the low 30s and high 20s at night.
A slight warm1ng trend is expected by Friday with a chance of rain, forecasters said.

Pomeroy retail complex ·
(Continued from Pege1)
Fire Chief Danny Zirkle met with
council to discuss needed repairs to
two of the village's fire trucks
Ztrkle said that a $30,000 repair to
the pump on one of the trucks, whtch
was approved late last summer, may
not be required after all. Ztrkle said
that a test of the equtpmcnl has
revealed that a pump may not be necessary, and that the problem may rest
wtlh the truck, instead of the pump.
A second pumper truck requtres
the replacement of a water seal and
related components at an estimated
$6,000. The pans for the replacement
have been ordered, and the repairs
were authorized by the council on
Nov. 3.
•
Pollee Chtef Jeffrey Mtllcr
1 received pennission to order an eslt·
mated $1 ,200 in new wint~r unifonns. The new uniforms will include
hats for the officers, similar to those
worn by the Stdtc Highway Patrol.
Miller also received authortly to
· purchase a camera sccunty system
for vtllage hall at a cost of$100, and
. 10 purchase replacement portable
rad1os at a cost of $804. •
Mayor Frank Vaughan announced
thai all hquor pennits within, the VII·
lage will expire in February, and
asked council to constdcr the
renewals
The mayor also said that he had
received two more bids to complete
the demolition of a house on
Sycamore Street - one from Larry
Landers, which did not mclude a
price, and one from Carlos Stevens,
at a cost of SI ,600.
Musser said that the Pomeroy
Merchants Association would be
plncing a lighted Christmas tree on
the parking lot again this yeat, and
noted that several stonn drams in the
downtown area had been plugged
smce March.
Councilman Btll Young satd that

-erosion on Spnng Avenue hill is in
need of repair, and said that a lack of
guardrail there posl:d a senous safety risk.
Scott Dtllon satd thai a utthty
company has left large tree limbs on
Mulberry Avenue. Vaughan satd that
he would contact the company to
request the removal of the debris.
Wnght noted that' a hole on Butternut Avenue needs to be repatred
before cold weather. He also satd that
the vtllage needs to rcnch an agreement with Pomeroy anorney ltm
O'Brien regarding the usc of the large
mini-park on Coun $treet.
,
Wright satd that a Chnstmas display is now m place m the park,
requmng !haiti be locked after hours.
The council tabled action on a
question of perm•tting members of
the police depanment auxiliary to
nde 1n poltce crutsers. Clerk Kathy
Hysell wtll check on liab1hty concerns before counctl makes a dect-

.,,on

Council also:
• Authonzed the adventsemcnt for
bids for a new dump truck for the
street depanment;
• Held a first reading on a resolutiOn authortzmg cooperative purchasmg of equtpmenl w1th the Ohio
Depanment of Transportation;
• Held all three readings on an
emergency resolution authorizing the
transfer of funds from the general
fund into the street depanment budget, $40,000;_ and tnto · the COPS
FAST II budget for $10,000, repre ..
scnung the VIllage's share;
·
• Approved the first reading of a
resolution charging off uncashe~
checks written by the village,
• Renewed a maintenance agreement with Dankc of Marietta for the
village's copier.
Also present was Council member
Gcrt Walton and Vtllage AdmtniStra·
tor John Anderson.
•

U.S. resumes surveillance
(Continued from Pege 1l "
standoff and help hts people at the
same time.
The British and French have been
..-------------·~
,:

consulted, said the official. who
briefed reponers on condllton, ~e not
be idenufied.
·
An Iraqt offictal qutckly branded
the proposal a "no-starter."

The Daily Sentinel
P11bliahcd ewcry ahemOOft, Mondar throu1h
Friday, Ill Caun S1 , Pomeroy, Ohio, ·by lht
Obio V.llcy PubUahin&amp; CompanyJ(]annen Co,
Pomeroy, Ohkl 4S769, Ph 092-2156 Second
dau po~tap pttd at Pomeroy, OhtO
Mn.bm The Auoc:latcd P'reu, and tht Ohio

Ntw.pAprr Auot111tion.
POSTMASTER! Send addrf:~~o comet ion• lo'
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St ~ Pomero~ .
Ohio 45769
S~IIICRimON

RATIS

ly C1rrler or Moter Rotltt

One Week ........ , ........................... ~~ ..Sl.CIO
One Mo111h....
One "r'tu.

• •.

.. ......... , ...... , lt4.7U
... ....... ... SIH4.UO

SINGLE COPY PIIICE
D•Hy .. .
..... .. .. . .3.5 Ctnlt
S•bKriben not deslrl., lo pay Ihe cwrler mty
nmil IR ldv1nct dii'Kt lo 'I'M D1ily ScntiMI
on llhrtt, sia or 12mo~lh blsiL Crcdll will be

11\'en c•"ltr each week.
No tllbtcriptKIII by mlil permlned in arus
wllcre Mmc c.trrler service 11 1\'lillble.
Pubh1hcr rt~erves lhe ript 10 adjllll r11a dur·
in11hr 1ublcripllon period Svbsc:rlptlon 111&amp;
elllnJfl m•y be impltmenl&amp;d ~ c••nllnJIIw:
du~rloft of I... IUblctipUon

....,.

l•llder.te~pc

IJ Weelr:1
Week1. .

.... , ....$27 JO
.....

. .•

... S$3 Hl

-u .:. . . . . . . . . . . .

51 Wteks

.. ... . ....

..... -

·Il-k•

u.

•...

"""

.

. .
SII,J6
Mflp Coo•IJ
""" " .. ... .. ....$29.,

5lW..u ........... ........ .... ... .

Am Ele Power .......................47\
Aklo ......................................

en

AmrTech ..............................74"-

Aihland 011 ......................... 47"1.
AT'T ..................................... 51'1.
B1nk One ................................53
Bob Even• ............................ 1&amp;'lo
Borg·Wamer .........................48'1.
Champion ............................. 17"1.
Charm Shpt ............................4\
City Holding,,, .....................40'4
Fedt,.l Mogul .....................44,.,.
O.nnett.................................55~

Goody•r ..............................82~
Kmart............................. ,.....\.12\
kroger ...................................35'1.
Linda End .............................35'•
Limited .................................. 24\
Oak Hill Flnl ..........................zo'k

ova .......................................37'\

3n

one Valley.............................
P•opl•• ,,. ................................ 42

Prem Flnl............................... 26~.

Rockwll ...............................48',i

RD/Shell ...............................53'S..re .............................:......47'Shoney'e ................................A:.
Star Bank ..............................40'.1.

M"ILS~JICRtmONS
2~

Stocks

S56.11H
..$1119 11

of hmng a paid humane officer 10
investigate animal cruelty and neglect
cases, now investigated by the county dog warden, Bill Dye
;
The humane society has pledgedi
$3,000 to help fund the position;
which would pay an .estimated!
$25,000, plus benefits.
1
Plamsek explained to the be~
the dulles of her posiuon tn Athens;
whtch ts funded by the city of Alhemr
and the Athens County Commission~
ers. Those duues tnclude the mvestt ~
gatton ol cruelly and neglect com•
plaints, responding to calls reponint~
InJured antmals and dotng publicll)'
work agatnsl antmal mistreatment. :
"I basically operate a '91·1' servic~
for antmals," Plamsek said.
j
Watll also dtscussed a propose4
increase in dog license fees, from $4
to $6, to help fund the operation ot
the county dog pound
!
No action was taken by the board!
The commtssioners also
~
~~ Approved the transfers of fund'
wtthin the followmg depanments:
Liller Control · and Recychng i
$12,000; Court of Common Pleas,
$3,030; recorder, $853 12, County
Coun, $1.040.71; Department of
Human Servtces, $7.500. County
Coun, $310.
• Authorized supplemental appropnations for the veterans scrv1ccs
office, $I ,700; and County Court,
$2,012.7 f.
~Approved the payment of btlls,
wtth
260
cntncs
totaling
$378,010 12.
Also present was Clerk Glona
Klocs.

----@bituaries-.

Payroll changes loom
(Continued from Pege1)
two paychecks a month, with two
months of the year'having three paycheeks.
Councilman John Neville said the
two -wcek pay period was inevita~le,
wuh the only quesuon bemg whep ll
would go into effect. He suggested
that council consider pullin~ off the
change until April, when workers
should be getting income tax returns.
Two councilmen said the present
was as good a time as any to tmplcmcnt the change.
"No time is a good time," said
Steve Houchins.
"It's a biller pill," said Eric Chambers, who added the employees
would bo ·bellcr off m the long run.
In other business, Mayor Dewey
"Mack" Horton said the vtllage needs
to begin paying ofT a $20,000 loan
from the state for a now-defunct taxi
service. The village has been carrying a $20,000 deficit tn its pubhc
transponaupn fund, making payments on the interest only, he
explained
Swann also addressed another
financial matter, saying that an audu
of the years 1991-92 showed that
about $35,000 needs to be transferred
from the general fund tnto the water
improvement fund. The audit has not
yet been released to the public by the
state auduor's office.
He recommended that council
borrow $20,000 to put into the general fund to pay employees and continue village services.
The village has more than
$400,000 tn bank accounts. buf it
cannot be transferred Into the general fund because 11 is commtlled to
other funds, Swann srud
Counctl approved borrowing the
money.
Councilman-elect Roben Pooler
then asked why the vtllage was hirmg people if 11 has financtal problems, refemng to the recent deciston
by counctlto hire a central purchasmg agent.
Swann, Honon and council members said the posttton was needed to
check unsupervtscd spendmg by vii·
lage employees.
"The vtllagc has been spending
mane)' hkc crazy," Swann said.
Councilwoman Rae Owtazdqwsky satd a purchasing agent gi vcs
the vtllage control over what gels purchased. A purchasing agent can call
around and get bellcr bargains, &gt;he
added.
Ncvtllc said it wa&gt; an instance of
having to spend money to save money.

Meigs

"People bought somcthmg and
dtdn't know if they had the money for
it," Honan satd. "We're irymg to
reverse that trend. If you don't have
the money for it, it won't be boughi."
Honan added later that the state
audtlors strongly recommended the
vtllage have a central purchasmg
clerk. "Not mandated, ~ut prelly
close," he said
"It is gomg to save us money,"
Swann said. "When I came here. we
were spending money faster than we
were ta,ktng n m." Swann was
appointed as clcrkitrcasurcr m June.
"We're workmg really hard ..
dotng the best we can, bu111's a hard
JOb," Honon satd
Just dcahng wllh the regulations
governing villages is a maJor task, he
explained.
.
"Nobody in God's world can
memorize all the laws m the Ohto
Revtsed Code," Horton sa1d, pomting
out 11 would take so long to read
them, that by the time you got done
reading, half of them would have
changed
"We have made tmptqvcmcnts,"
he said.
Stivers and Horton both commended Swann for hiS efforts.
"He's worked preny close to fullltme wtlhoul full -time pay," satd
Horton
Dunng open discussion, council
approved the purchase of two vent·
less healers for water pump houses
and approved fencmg the Park Street
pump station. Funding for the heaters
wtll come from the water fund.
Kiuy Darst, water clerk. present·
cd four optwns for counctl to conSider on chmmatmg the cxtsling .$65
depostl for water scrvtcc.
They include: implcmcnllng a
dcposn based on the average of the
' last 12 month's bills plus 30 percent,
a system whtch bases the dcpostl on
the water usage of the prevtous tenant; having the landowncrco-stgn for
water scrv1cc and be rcsponsthlc for
btlls not patd by the renter; make only
property owners be able to have
walcr m the1r

names~

do away with

dcpostls compl~tely.
Counctlman-clcct Roger Manley
Sr.. who is strongly &lt;!pposed to making property owners rcsponstblc for
the btlls of tbetr tenants, satd such
changes would run businesses out of
Mtddleport . Ma~ley owns rental
property in the village
Also present were Councilwoman
Sandy lannarelli, vtllage admmtstrator Bill Browning and ta~ admtnts·
trator Carol Cantrell.

announ~ements

CCL to mut
Middlepon Child Conservauon
League will meet at the Rock Sprmgs
United Methodist Church Thursday
at 7 p.m. The program wtll be about
Hosptee.
'

Athletic banquet
The Eastern High School Athletic Awards Banquet wtll be held Sunday, 2 p m tn the EHS gymnasium.
Cost per person is $7. For tickeiS call
(614) 667-36S3.

Wendy' I ................................ ZO'k Services slated
Worthlnglon..:::;:::.~::: ............. 11'1.
Thanksgivins servtces at the Long
Stock reporta ere the .10:30 Bollom United Methodist Clwrch,
e.m. quotaa provlct.d by Advell . Northeast Cluster, will be held Sunof Oelllpotla.
day, 7 p.m. Bring non-penshable food
items for Meigs County Cooperative

Pansh Food Pantry.
Dance set Thesday
A round and square dance will be
held at the Long Bottom Communi·
ty Butlding, Thesday. 7:30 to I 0 30
pm.
Ministry planned
The Power in the Blood Mtnistry
w11l perform the hvc 'drama.
Emmanuel, Rutland Ctvic Center. 6
p m. nightly, Saturday and Sunday
Crall show ·
The Country Cnttcrs 4-H Cklb
wtll sponsor a holiday craft show,
Dec . 5 and 6 at the Pomt Pleasant
Youth Center Limned spaces are
available For more mformauonl
crafters may call 304675-4689

Jean Summerfield Frederick
'Jean L. Summerfield Fredenck, 85; of Chester, dted on Frtday, November 14, 1997 at the Mariner Health Care Center in Wmter Haven, Flonda.
She was born on August 14, 1912, and was a hfclong resident of Chester,
Ohio. She was a 1930 graduate of Chester High School. She auendcd the
Chester MethodiSt Church and was a longumc member of the Chester Oarden Club.
She was also a member of the Chester D of A Lodge, and the Order of
Eastern Star, Pomeroy 186. and was a member of the fanner Pyth1an Ststcis
Temple of Long Bouom
Fam1ly members include a daughter and·son-in-law, Shtrley and 4rry
Roush of Winter Haven, Flonda, a granddaughter and grandson-in-law, Jean
Anne and Mtchael Burnell of l\llamontc Springs. Florida, and a great-grandson, Jonathan Burnell of Altamonte Sprmgs, Flonda: and two sistcrs-m-law,
Geneva Tuttle ofMtddlep,on. Ohto, and Aha Ballard of Long Bonom, Ohto.
Servtccs wt11.bc held at I p.m on Thursday, November 20. 1997 at the
Mtddlepoft Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home. The Rev. Sharon Hausman
w1ll be offictaung and bunal will follow in the Chester Cemetery. Friends
may call on Wednesday, November 19, 1997 from 6 to 9 p m. at the funeral home.

Olen D. Harrison
Olen D Hamson, 84, of 39701 Goldndgc Road, Pomeroy, dted Sunday,
November 16, 1997 at hiS residence, followtng an Cl!Cndcd tllncss.
Born on May 17, 1913 at Rock Sprtngs, he wa.~ the son of the late Charles
A. Harrison and Jcss1c Donaldson Harrtson . He was a retired construclton
worker of 34 years and belonged to the Iron Workers Local 301, Charleston,
West Vtrgtma. He was also a mcmbor of the Carleton Church, a past master
of Hamsonvtlle Lodge 411, and a Scolltsh Rite Mason.
He ts survived by his wtfc, Evelyn Louise Carl Harrison , two sons and
daughters-In-law, Dale E. and Marlene Scholl Harrison, and Plullip R. and
Pauleue Hudson Harrison, all of Pomeroy; a grandson, Scoll R. Harrison of
Pomeroy; a granddaughter and her husband. Jod1 .and Terry George of Rutland; a grandson, Trevor J. Harrison of Pomeroy: a great-granddaughter,
Emalcc Glass of Rutland, a great-grandson, Casey Harrtson of Pomeroy: a
step-great-granddaughter, Brtttany Lathcy, and several meces and nephews.
BeSides hts parents, he wa.&lt; preceded in death by a grandson, Rod Harrison

Funeral scrvtccs wtll he held on Thursday, November 20. 1997 at I p.m.
at the Ewmg Funeral Home. Pomeroy The Rev Clyde Henderson will offiCiate and hurial wtll be in the Carlelon Cemetery. Fnends may call at the
funeral home Wednesday, Novcmher 19, 1997 from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Masonic 'crviccs will he held m the funeral home at 7 30 p.m. Wednesday,
Novcmher 19. 1997

----Meigs EMS runs.---unil, of the Metgs County Emcr- . Rcedsvtllc. Randal Burke, O'Bicgency Mcdtcal Service recorded four ncs.' Memonal Hospttal;
calls for assistance Monday. Unus
7 24 p.m , Page Street. Mtddlercspondtng mcludcd:
pon , Ruth Ford, HMC
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12: 18 a.m , Mctgs Mtnc 31.1ohnny Rose. Holzer Mcdtcal Center, Rutland squad asststance,
7 57 a m , Powell Street, Middlepan, Alva Reed, HMC, M1ddlcpon
squad asSISted;
tO 21 am , State Route 7,

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday admtssions - Burdell
Black, Pomeroy
Monday dtscharges - none
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Nov. 16 - Cynthia
Wtllts. Ruby Saunders, Roben Sham,
Mrs. Robert Davts and son, Charlotte
Harper, Ntal Salser, Anna .Jones,
Mary Smith, Isabel Sheets, Susan
Hoffman
(Published with permission)

TIIANK YOU
Voters of the Eastern Local
Sehool District....
Your Votes and Support are
Greatly Appreelated.
ROGER WIU.FOBD
Pd. lor by canclldale'a -...-:

Beverly Willford, n..o., Boxl3 ~ PIHie, 011

�.

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\

Sports

r

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·The Daily Sentinel.
.

Dolphins roll over·Bills 30-13

·
Paat4
· Tu•fY· November 11,1817

.,

MATT WILLIAMS

JUSTIN ROUSH

JASON ROUSH

JEREMIAH BENTLEY

MIAMI (AP)- The Miami DolFew regard the Dolphins as title
phins honored their glorious past and contenders this year, especially with
offered a glimpse of their promising their depth depleted by i,njuries. But
future.
Johnson, who is in his second year
A halfiime ceremony Monday with Miami, would love for his
night paid tribute to Miami 's 17-0 young team to get ~me playoff
season in 1972. Then the 1997 Dol- e~perience before the big push for a
phins - far from perfect, but young Super Bowl title in '1998.
and improvinl!- completed a 30-13
The Dolphins split their season
victory over the Buffalo Bills.
series against Buffalo, and they hold
"About this time of year every the tiebreaker advantage over New
year, a couple of teams stan to get on York by v.irtue of sweeping that
a roll and come out of the pack and series. Miami faces another key lame
get good things happening before the Sunday at New England (6·5).
playoffs," coach Jimmy Johnson
"We know New England has as
said. "We're coming close to that." talented a group as there is in this
Miami (7·4) reclaimed a first- division," Johnson said. " We know
place tie with the New York leis in they'll be gunning for us Sunday."
the AFC East.
The Bills (5·6) find themselves in
"We needed this because we bad shape, with three teams ahead of
wanted to stay in first place, keep the . them in the standings.
ball rolling and get to the playoffs,"
"We're not good enough right
said Troy Drayton, whose 30-yard now." coach Marv Levy said. " It's
touchdown reception broke the game .apparent we. have to get better."
open wijh five minutes left.
Buffalo's punchless offense has

STEVE DURST

1997 Southeastern
All-District Teams
COLUMBUS (AP)- The 1997 AssOCI·
atcd Press Southeastern All-District high

~

I

I
' I

I

school fOQiballreams, as chosen by a media
panel from the district:
DIVISION I
First Team
Offense: Back-Chris Yates, Logan, 5toot-10,165 poonds, Senior.
Def'~: Lint-Ryan Btrry, Logan, 5-',
140, Jr.
,
No player or coach awards because onl)'
;one Division Iteam in district.
Special Mention
Jodi Hinton, Logan
DIVISION 11
first Te.m
Offense : Ends-Ph1l Beverly. Chillicothe.
: 6-0. 165. Jr.; Bl'3d B:Mu, Chillicothe. 5-10.
- ISO. Soph.linemen-Jeremlah Westbrook,
:. VIDcnt Warren.~. 255, Sr. QumerbDCk•Adam Poner, ChillicoThe. 6-0, 175. Jr.
: B..:b Rob .C allaUn, Vincent Warrtn. 6.. 0. 200, Sr.
• Otfcnse:
Linebackc:rs-Wts
• McGtumpby, Vincent Wurm. 6-0,180, Jr.;
: Laramie Fann, Marietta, 6-l, lOS, Sr.;
• Jonathan Bateman, At.ms, 6-1,205, Jr.
:
Offensive player or the year: Ada~n Poner.
• · Ctlillicothc:.
•
Defet~sive player of the year: Wes
• Mc:Giumphy, Vincent Warren.
Coach of the year: none selecTed.
Special Mention
•
Natllan White., Athens: Josh Smlth and
" Mike Gawelek. ChillicoThe: Nathan Swartz
: and Darryl Simmons, MaritiCa; Todd
• CMtin, Vlnctnl Warren.
~
DIVISION III
Firsl Team
Offense: Endr-H .E. Smith. CirclcvJ!Ic. 6: 0, 190. Sr.; Tony Re&lt;s&lt;, Gr«nfield McClain,
• S· ll . 160, Sr.: Nick Spears. Washington Coun
• House Mi311li Trace. ·5·10, 175. Jr.; Ryan
· Caudm, Mc..\rthur Vinton County, 6·3,
: 115, Jr. linemc:n-Erik Davis, Jackson, 6• 5, JO!, Sr.; Ryan G:urison. Washington Court
: . ""-. 6-0, '~!..Sr.; Rand~ Mi~. Wuvedy,
~ .5·11, 200. Sr.; Will Dhu~ . Greenfield
:. Mctlnin. 6-0. 242, Sr.: C:lSCy Boone, Hillsboro. 6-3. 250. Sr.; N::ale Salyers. Ci,rcleville.
• 5·10. 200. Sr. Quanerb:1cl&lt;- Trevor
~ Rosendahl. Washington Court House Miami
Trace. 6-3. 185, Sr. Backs-shant Woltord.
_ Jaddan.5-10, 190, Sr.; Scon Weaver, W:~.ver• ly,=- 1~160. Jr.: Nathan Mack. Thornville
: Shtrida 5·8, 165. Sr.: Todd Braden.
• M
Vln.., County,6-l, lOl. Sr.: D3J.
-. las 1-fotbrook. W::ashington Court House. S-9.
· 16$, Sr. All-Purpose-Richard Burns. Hills·
: boro, l-8, 190, Jr.
~
Defense: Linemen-Nathan Evans. Hills. - boro, 6--1. 200, Sr.; &amp;i.e Ellion. Circlevjlle
.. Logan Elm. 6-1 . 170. Jr.: Josh Bodimrr, Gal·
• Upolls Gallla Acodemy, 5·10. 180, Sr.:.Eli
: Cllltes:; Wlishingtlll! Co~n ~ouse ~iarrU Trace.
: $--10. _JS. Sr.; DaVId Pierce, Washingtoo Coon
House.S.II , I~5.Sr.: ChrkDanids,J•ckson.

• 6-l.~. Sr. Linebockers-Eric Eberhard. CirclevllleloganEim.5- 11.195, Jr.: ToddJack; son. Waverly. 6-1. 200. Sr ; Ch:td Culver.
~valh: ~hendan. 5· 11 , 235. Sr.: Lu~c Gar. land, Washmgton Coun House Mtomt Tr:ace.
... ~-10. li!'i, Jr.; J11011 Rousb, POIBero~ Melp,
: '-~ 2:0!'tSr. Backs-Shaun Ev:u~s. Htllsboro.
• S·9.160. Jr.; M~WU~PomeroyMrip,
: "'2. lMl, Sr. : Bnan 81g~. CtrdevJJie. 6-0.
I B.S. ~r.: Brad Ford. Washmgton Coun House
. ~t:unJ Trace. 6-0. 170. s;.: Kyk Brown. Washtngton Co~rt House. 6--. 185, Sr
Offenmre pl:~yer of lhe yeov: Shane Wolferd, Jackson.
_
Def~nsive p~ayer of the year. Chad Culver.
.. Thornville Shendan.
_
.
Coach of lhc: year: Ketlh Dowmng. CuI 'II
•
• c 1.~1 e.
Spea.,l Mention
Justin Johnson. Washington Coun Hou:"C
;Miami Tmcc: ; Shannon Robinson. Hill~ro :
)"""' Volkry :md Nathan Rudel. Wawly: kre my Newsome and Jeff Riley. Circkvillc: :
Shane Akers. Br:td Brooks and John Dis8cn.. nen. Circleville Lo1an Elm: Tom Cunis and
• Rodney Campbell. Jackson: J, D. Owley,
• lokAnhur Vln.., CO\HIIy; Justin Roush
· _.lese to•-.ey,P_,.Mrip; Josh
· ~tkNen,llert Cnlaand s.u. o ..~. Gol·
llpollo
Ac:odemy: Adam Finck :md Josh
f'

G-

~Dillon. New ln.ington.

DIVISION IV
Fint Team
..
Offense: Ends-James Taylor. Ironton . .ci• 10. I~~. Jr.: Chris Leo, "-on111t Folrlortd,
: 5-11.170. Sr.: Shannon Jord3n. Piketon. 6-0,
• 110, Sr,: Jared CIIN&lt;r. Wheetenburg, ~·8, 175..
.:Sr.: Ben Hartsock. Chillicothe Unio.to. 604,
.J~. Jr.:
Linemen-Todd
Phillips,
_:williamsport Westfall. 6-0, 20S. Sr.: Steve Sul•on. Wheelenb&lt;UJ, 6-2.310. Jr.: Aaron Markel.
: lruaton. 6-0. 260. Jr.; Ja500 83ft, Ironton Rock
• Hill. 6-2. 2JO. Sr.: Regie Ateunder, WdJ.
:U, l*J, Sr.: John Dougltty. Chitlico&lt;he
• Ulliolo. S·IO. 270. Jr. Quanerb:&gt;cks-llen
: -,_, l'lelooovlllt-York, ~. 16!, Jr.: Mlll1
- ·Aodmon, Piki&lt;on. l · ll , IIO.Jr. Backs-Josh
•)lloatpmery. Piketon. l·i, 160. Sr,: Akia
..,.,.,., Porumouth, ~. 17l,lr.; Tyler But·
:Jock, McDermott S&lt;ioto Northwest, 6- t, 220,
- ~r.: Ryon Janes. Chilli001be Unioto. 6-9. 170,
, : Jr.; Jtr1t Giooo, N-.rilk·York, 5-10,160,
· Jr.; Mott lf.lrteft, Wtllnoa, 5-10, 170, Sr.
•
AIJ.Pu
I Chinn, "-onitlt

Cameron. Ponsmoulh. 6-4. 120. Sr.; Rick Freeman. Ironton. 5 ~ I 0. 190. Sr.; Chris McKinley.
Ponsmoulh. 6-2. 250. Sr. Lincb01Ckers-Bcn
Hartsock. Chillicot~ Uni01o. 6-4. 2~0. Jr.: Bri·
an Scofl, Williamsport Westfall. 6-1. 190. Jr..
HeaTh 61nss. Pons mouth. 6-~. 250. Sr.: Chris
Glass, Nelson\'ille-York. 5-9, 150, Sr.; Chris
Barber. lrop1on Rock Hill. 6-J. 230. Sr.; Man
Parker. Piketon. 5-10. 200. Sr. Backs-Aaron
Murm)'..South Point 5·9, 155. k ; Jason Har·
mon. Ironton. 5-10. 165, So.: Juice Srhmidt.
Wheelersburg. 6-0. 180. Sr.: Curtis Parker.
PortsmouTh. 6- L 180. Sr.: Jertmiah Tripltll,
Cheshire Rh•er Valley, 5·8, 165, Sr.
Offensive pl.:~ycn of the yc;u-: J1&gt;~h Monl ·
gomery. Piketon :Akia Brown. Ponsmourh.
Defensive player of the year: Jason Rus·
sell. Neb;on,•lllf-York.
Co.:~ch of till! ye.:~r: Kc,·in Meade, Nrlson,·ille-Vork.
Sp«ial Mention
Todd Bun~h and Kyh: Th3d.:cr. Pili.ct,m:
Rick Collins. ChillicOThe Unioto: Boh Eg!!ets.
Tyler Hull. Tim Lc"'dlyn. M.:~uril:c Clark ;utd
Aaron MacDonald. PonsmoUih; Josh Cl.:~us·
ing:. Wheelersburg ; Charlie Hamilton. Minfonl:
Ricky Williams. Thoma.~ Kem and Brian
R:uerm::m. Wiiliamsport Westfall: Mich~l
Henry. Ironton : Eric Ferris, Prodonilk
fairland; Robbie Lozier and K~\ · in Okk.
South PoinT: Erh: A'·ery :1nd Ed Colegrm·c.
Ironton Rock Hill : Darin La•·son and Clay
Watkins, Nelsonville· York; Jimmy Gilnlarr
and Jay Stout. Cheshirt Rh·er Valley: Jon
Dalley and Dan Metts, Alb•ny Alexandtr.
DIVISION V
First Team
Offense: Ends-M:llt Knisley. Bainbridge
Paint Valley. 5·7, 155. Sr.: Scolt Bentley.
Portsmouth Wesr. 6-3. :!20.Sr.: Seth Keller.
Chillicothe Huntington. "6-0. 180, Sr. Line·
men-Willie Osburn. Belpre. 5-10. 209. Sr.;
Tony Hopkins. Portsmouth West 6-2, :!80, Sr.:
Jeff Bucey, Btlprt, 6-3, 309, Sr.; Curt H:.t·
1on. Frankfort Adena. 6-0, 260. Sr.i Ad:un
Cecil, Ches:~ptake, 6-3. 240. Sr.; Randall Kius,
Cool Grovt Dawson-Bryant. 6-0, 235. Sr.:
_'Ryan S1alter. Crooksville. 6-2. 240. Sr. Qu:u-·
terbaeks-Chris Lundy, Lucasville V:tlley. 6l. 18~ . Sr.: Josh Strolhen, Jl!lpre, 6-4, Ill,
Jr.; Justin Bdin, Bainbridge Paint Valley. 5II , 16l. Jr. Backs-Brandon Keeney Cool
Grove Dnwson·Brynnt. 6-1.210, Jr.; chris Ftz·
er, Chcs.:tpeal&lt;e,l-10, l7Q Sr.; Andy Orender,
Ook Hilt, S-10, 190, Sr.: Mark Runyon.
Chesapeake. 5-11. 180. Sr.: Chad Scun.
Lucnsviile Valley, 5-10.180. Sr. KickerCh3d !son. Bainbrid&amp;e Paint Valley, 6· 1, .225.
Jr.
Defense: Linemen- Travis Waulk. Coal
Grove Dawson-Bryant. 5-7. 178. Jr.: Ryan
H_onon. Lucasville Vallc!-y. 6-4, 200. Jr.; Eli
Gatrell, Olk Hill, 6-1, 260, Sr.; Jus1in Ever~·Frankfort Adena. 5-11. !'80, Jr.; Lincllocker&gt;-Ry30 Abem:uhy. Fr:tnklon Adetl3, 60, 170, Sr.; Som Miller. Lucasville Valley, 61230. Sr.; MiTch Campbell, Bainbridge Paint
Valley, 6·1. 215. Sr.; Cun Shocm:alter, Chilli·
co1h~ HunTington, 6-0, 210. Sr.; Bob Locke.
Lucas,illc Valley. ~-10. 200, Sr. BacksRichie Belville. Co:1l Grove Dawson-Bryan;,
5·8. 145. Sr.; Clint Miller. Crooksville, 6-1.
170. Sr.: Tytus Gilliland. Bainbridge Paint Val·
ley. 6-1. 175. Sr.: Da.n Hocter. fnmkfon Adcna. 6·1. 175, Jr.: Joe Ross. Cr0ok5Ville. 5-10.
1 8~. Sr.
Off~n!iJve player of the yciU'. Chris Lundy.
Luca.will~ Valley.
,
Dcft:nsivc pi oyer of the war· R' h'
.1v
•
IC IC
Belville. Coo.\ Grove Dawson-Bryant.
C oac~s of the year: Cmig Spring.
Crooksvtlle : Darren Crnh'ln.'e. Luc:lSville Vai Icy.
~pedal Mention
\
N11.:k Yoc, Justin Barnhart and Andrew
Patrick. B:Untmdp: Pairn Valley; Jcnid Adkin~

Franldin Fumoa: Gn:ep, S-8, t 6l, Jr.

GAINS YARDAGE • Miami Dolphins' Karim Abdui-Jabbar (33)
Iinde an opening as he 1llp1 awey from a tackll by 'Buffllo'l
Bryce Paup (95) a• taammatn John Bock (80) ·blocks In I!Kk·
ground during second half action In Miami Monday. the Dolphlne
won, 30-13. (AP)

Ring, Bdprr; Derrick French. Barry Bl:lllkcn-

MIKE~H

JASON WRITESEL

' ADAM CUMINGS

By wire and staff reporta'
COLUMBUS - Meigs County
placed 10 football players on the
1997 All·Districi football teams
released by the Associaled Press
today.
Meigs' Jason Roush and Matt
Williams were named First Team
Defense on the Division ID squad.
Justin Roush and)eremiah ·Ben,tley
were named Special Mention All·
District.
Southern's Jason Writesellanded
a First Team berth on the Division VI
All;
.
District offensive team. along with
Michael Ash
.
Making AII,Districl Special Mention were Adam Cummings and Matt
Dill of Southern, and Abe Rach and

Steve Durst, Eastern. .
Runnin@ ba.cks froni Piketon and
Portsmouth and a noscguard from
Nelsonville-York were among the big
winners on the 1997 Associated Press
Southeasi AII-District .high school
football teams announced Monday.
Piketon's Josh Montgomery, a 5·
foot·S, 160-pound senior, gained
1,250 yards on 112 carries and scored
25 touchdowns to share the Division
IV offensive player ofthe year award
with Portsmouth's Akia Brown.
Brown. a 6~0. IiS-pound junior.
gained 1,447 yards ,on 177 carries and
scored 18 touchdowns.
The Division IV defensive player
of the year 'in balloiing by a me~ia

panel from the district was Nelson ville-York's Jason Russell, a 5· II,
190-pound senior who counted 13
sacks and four fumble recoveries on
defense in addition to also playing
offensiVe guard.
The coach of the year was Nel. sonville-York's Kevin Meade who
Jook his team to a 10.0 record and a
No.5 ranking in his fifth year.
Other offensive players of the year
included: Richmond Dale Southeast·
em quanerbaclc-Tyler Barbee in Divi· sion VI. Luco.uille Valley quarterback Chris Lu-;;:iy in Division V, tail·
back SI¥tne. WQlford of Jackson in
Division Ill aoo Chillicothe,quartcrback Adam Porter in Division II.
In addition to Russell, the other

By The Atllloclated Prell
Jim Harrick's fresh stan at Rhode
Island began with a win. ·
Harrick, fired last year in disgrace
after eight s.easons at UCLA, won his
debut at Rhdde Island as the No. 20

Rams defeated N.C.· Wilmington 7869 in the first round of the Jlri:season
NIT.
Cuttino Mobley scored 20 of his
26 points in the second half as the
Rams {1-~) advanced to play No. 12
"

•

I, Bruce McKelvey Want To
Thank You, Lebanon Township, For Selecting Me To
Work For You.
,llkl for lly Cllldldale, 30041 a.I'I'Mt« " - Rd., Ponlatld, OH

defensive hoi10rccs were: Glouster
Trimble lineha~kcr Brady Trace
(Division VI), defensive back Richie
Belville of Coal Grove DawsonBryant (V), Thornville Sheridan line·
hacker Chad Culver (Ill), and Vincent
WQrrcn lincoockerWcs McGiumphy
in Division 11.
The rest of the coaches of the year
were: Hemlock Miller's Joe Winnenbcrg (VI). Craig Spring of
Crooksville and Darren Crabtree of
Lucasville Valley (V) and Circlevillc:s Keith Downing (Ill) . .
No coach of the year was select·
cd in Division II.
There were no Division I individual award winners bc&lt;:ausc there is
only one school of that size in the dis·
trict.

Trailing 23-13. the Btlls were
stopped at their own 24 on a desperate fourth-down play. Karim Ahdul·
Jabbar then scored on a 1-yard run for
Miamf to chnch the victory.
Marino finished 18-for-24 for 234
yards, ovcrcomtng two sacks by
Bruce Smith. Rookie tighl end Ed
Perry scored his first NFL touchdown
on a 3-yard reception to cap a 90-yard
drive , and Olindo Mare kicked field
goals of 37, 30 and 35 yards for
Miami.
Steve Christie made field goals of
36 and 24 yards for the Bills, and
Darick Holmes scored their only
1ouchdown on a 1-yard run
,
The Dolphins, who failed to score
a touchdown in a 9-6 loss at Buffalo
earlier in November. thts time raced
to a 13-0 lead after 22 mtnutes.
But it was the Bills' poor finish
that disjurbed Levy. Buffalo managed
just 22 yards on its fin-al fou r pos·
sc~sion s .

Prentice, Marshall
defense ·take awards

Miami, which tied for second in
ils division, was represented by an
individual award winner 10 times in
the 12 weeks the MAC made a selection. Western Michigan, which had
the same record, had ~nc player
· selected this season.
Back-to-bock shutouts in its last
two regular-season games, including
Saturday's 27-0 viclory over Ohio,
led to Marshalrs defensive recogni·
tion. In a showdown for the Ea.~l
Division title, the Thondcring Herd
limited Ohio to one first down and 63
yards of total offense.

season.

We .Give Mature
Drivers, Home
O""ners and
Mobile Home
.Owner~ Special
Savina•·
Our 818118tle8 show that mature
drivelS and home owners have
fewer and let18 costly loesas
than other age groups. So It's
only lair to charge you less for
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home and car with us and save·
more with our spacial
mui~D&lt;ollcv dl8coun18.

BoHle.
Gas

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OIL.CHANGE

The most disappointed folks
In the world are those who
get what's 'comlng lo them.

***

$1 5

Gossip to another: "I won't
go into all the details. In fact
I've already told you more
about It than I heard myself."

***

November 19,1 997 at 8:30p.m.
at tt:t~ Meigs County Senior Center.

H~ppy

This is an information meeting. There will be no
cost to you to include your item in the catalog.
Please bring a brief description and photo
of your prod!Jct (if available).
If you cannot attend the meeting, but wish to be
included in the catalog, please contact the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce prior to the
meeting date ·at

992-5005.

, .

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
912.f887

Ho.lldays .
from
· Rutland ·
Bottla ·G. as

Life Home Car Business

Rutland Bottle Gas

A.;....o,.,... lllflll'lllle•

n. :f. p..v.,•

~ 29

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.

FOOTBALL
OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) Baltimore Ravens running back Bam
Morris was charged with choking a
woman at a birthday party.
The assault charge,could be used
Io bolster Te~as prosecutors' anempts
to revoke Morris' probation for a
1996 drug ·conviction.
Morris was at a party given by the.
family of Ravens tackle Orlando
Brown at a Baltimore County banquet hall when the ·altercation took
place Sunday nishl.

CHECK OUT THESE SERVICE
SPECIALS AT YOUR WESTERN
AUTO SERVICE CENTER

They say one out of avery
four adults is unbalanced.
Think about your three
closest friends. If they seem
okay -you're in trouble ..

If you are, please attend a meeting that
will be held on ·

Seth l(eJJey and Jason Lyall, Willo14'
Wood Symmes Vallty; Joe DUpu y,
Pommouth Notre Dame. Jon Cranl and Jarad Hannon, Fl':lnkhn Furnace Green . Bobby
Howard, P-onsmoull1 Eas• : And)' Arkley,
Hemlock Miller; Adam Cummlng5 and
Mau Dill, Racine SouThE'rnj Abc Raeh and
Steve Durst, Retdsvillf l::aslcrn; Amos
Callahan. Merr.ervillc South Gallia.

offense to 121 yards. The Buckeyes
had just I0 yards rushing in 16 tries .
Bellaire jumped out to a 7-0 lead
after the first period and scored 19
second period points to head into the
locker room with a.26-0 advantage.
The Big Rei! increased the lead to
39-0 with 13 fourth period points,
before the Buckeyes scored on a 35
yard pass from Ben Robey to Parker
. Elliott withjus.t 44 seconds.left in the
game.
Robey completed just 12 of 33 in
the air for Ill yards with two interceptions. Bellaire held the Buckeyes
1,000 yard tailback Eric Glass to just
21 yards in 14 carries.

BASEBALL
OGLESBY, Ill. (AP) - Russ
Meyer, who pitched in three World
Series in the 1950s, died of conges·
· live heart failure at the age of 74.
Meyer, who died s"unday, was 94·
73 from 1946 to 1959 with the
Chicago Cubs, Philadelphia Phillies,
Brooklyn Dodgers, Cincinnati Reds,
Boston Red Sox and Kansas City
Athletics. He spent 12 years in the
New York Yankees' organization,
serving as bench coach in 1992. ·

Grate
of

How well you like hard work
often depends on whelher
you're doing it or paying tor it

KJrk Mannon, Willow Wood Symmes Val·
ley, .5·11, 170, Sr.
Offensive playerofll}e year: Tyler B::arbee.
Richmond Da1e SoutheilStem .
Derensive player of the year: Brady
Trace, Glowner Trimble.
Coach or the year: Joe Winnenberg,
Hemlock Miller.
Spedal Mention

Sports. briefs·

Dave

It's not a cheaper car people
want It's an expensive car
)hat costs less.

6- I, 240, Sr.
linc:bnckers-Andy
Messer, PortsmoUth East, 5-10, 190, Sr.; Mau ·
Caslle, Richmond D31e Southcutem, 6·2, 190,
Jr. ; Thny Rile)', He•lock Miller, 5-tt, 180,
Sr.; Brody Trace.Giouster'I'rtmblt, 6-:Z,liO.
Jr. Bacia- Daniel Jones, Hemlock Miller,
6-1, 190, Sr.; Brod C.rpenter, Willow Wood
Symmes Valley, 5·8, 160, Fr.; Steve Queen,
Mercerville South Gallla, 5·10, 153, Sr.;

Warren Local High School will and Wesl Virginia will play in the pre·
host its third antiual girl's basketball View. The first game which begins at
~&gt;review on Friday evening, Novem· 6 p.m. will put Belpre and Magnolia,
ber 21 at Warren Loclll High School. followed by River Valley anil FederThis year the Girl's Preview will be al Hocking at 7. The third game will
sponsored by the Scenic Hills Lions Meigs against Marietta at 8, and the
Club with all proceeds going to their evening's final contest will have
sight saving program. Last year Frontier against the host Warren
almost $1900 went to the program. Local Lady Warriors .
Ei~ht teams from Southeast Ohio

By

Are you interested in having your handmade
items(s)"lncluded in a catalog of products
made in Meigs County?

All-Purpose-Luke Daniel . Portsmouth Notre
Dame, S-8, ISS, Jr.; Pat McDavid, Franklin
Furnace Grwt, 5· 10, 165, Jr.
Defense: Linemeo-Jooh McClelland,
Glowter Trimbit. 6-1,110, Sr.: Wcs Wood,
Richmond Dale Southeostem, 6-3, 21 S, Jr.;
Jacob Emmnett. Portsmouth Notre Dame, 61, 17Q Sr.; Dmk Hammond, Pommouth Ettst,

Meigs girls to battle
Marietta in preview

Connecticut in the second round on Fresno State K\1. Florida A&amp;M 69.
Wednesday night at the Hartford
Mobley, who made all four of his
Civic Center. The Huskies defeated 3-pointers, scored 10 or Rhode
Boston University 68-54 on Monday. lslanp's 12 points over a two-minute
"We're similar teams, it should be · span, giving the Rams a 43-36 lead
fun. It will be interesting to sec how with .16:15 remain in~.
we react on the road·against a quali· . Luther Clay, who has mi,.cd prac·
ty team," H.al'rick said.
toccs because of a foot injury. played
Elsewhere in the Top 25, it was 29 minutes for the Rams .
No. 2 Kansas 88. Rice 61; No.8 Purdue 73, Valparaiso 56; No. 12 Con·
nccticut 68, Boston U. 54; and No. 13

Wu.

Continued on page s

By DAVE HARRIS,
Sentinel Correepondent
Bellaire quanerback Ty Masciarelli completed 21 of 34 passes for
337 yards and two touchdowns in
· leading the Big Red to a 39-6 win
over Nelsonville-York in the Division
IV Stale Football Playoffs Saturday
evening in Zanesville.
·
Bellaire now 12-0 will play Germantown Valley View, also 12-0 in
the State semi-finals on Saturday at
7:00p.m. at Lancaster's Fulton Field.
NelSonville-York ends their season at
Il-l.
The Big Red rolled up 550 yards
of offense on the Buckeyes, while
holding the potent Nelsonville· York

Harrick wins debut with Rhode Island

Chlllu.:01~ Za~ Trxc: Jimmy Harris. Chesapeake; Tun lrndsty, Crooksville : Chuck
Vogt, Stewart Federal Hocking,

Rich:

MATT DILL

Meigs County area tea.ms land 10
gridders on ~n~s.E.o . District squads

ship and Donnie Turner. Coal Grove D.:lwson 8~01.~1; Nick McPherson illld Kenny Mos.'i.

DIVISION VI
First Te1m
Offense: Ends-John D11nicki. Richmond
Dale Southe.asrem, 6-S , 2~0. Senior: JO&amp;h
Limo, Glowter Trimblr, 6-1, 17!, St.; G~g ·
Schract"tr: Richmond Dale SoutheilStem. 5-8.
150, Jr.; Jason WriteseJ. Raclnt Soulhtm So
11,170, Sr.
Linernei)-Mike
ooo. WillOw Wood Symm,. V•ll&lt;f, s.u, 220.
Sr.: Chns Gclllaghc:r. Franklin Furnace Green
5-11. 240, Sr : Joe FlMnery, Ponsmouth ~~:
6-0,280. Sr.: Brion Mllltr, Woterford, 6-J,
l35, Sr.; Adam Kdltr.He•loc:k MUite 6.()
160, Sr. Qulll1erb:&gt;ck-Tyler Borbe&lt;,
mond D31e Soutbeostem, 6-3. 180, Jr. BocksJ:vud Lloyd. Richmond Dale Southcutem. 6·
0. 200, Sr.: Heolh Howd)'lhell, Hemloc:k
Mllltr, 6-I. 185, Jr.; Mkllad Alb, Southera, 5~9, 170, Sr.; R.. ty Smith,

Nelsonville-York ·
eliminated from state
playoffs by Bellaire

I

TOLEDO (AP)- Miami of Ohio
running back Travis Prentice and
Marshail's entire defensive unit were
·honored as the offensive and defensive players of the week in the MidAmerican C'onference.
Prentice, a 6-foot-2, 223-pound
sophomore from Louisville, Ky ..
rushed for a career-high 239 yards
and four touchdowns on 22 canies in
a 42-0 victory over winless Northern
Illinois on Satwday. Pri:ntice has won
the award four times this season and
and ShOO Font. Ponsmouth West : Rick Bold twice in the past two weeks. He set a
rn.lll-:llld B. J. J:lenry, Luc:aviUc Valley : Brian Hate. Onk H1ll ; Stne Sprig and Barmt MAC record with 25 touchdowns this

'

scored more than one touchdown
only once in the past six games.
Quanerback Todd Collins. benched
for two games, ~turned to the line· ·
up against Miami and struggled,
completing 19 of 37 passes for 152
yards, with three sacks and an interception .
"We did too many things not well
to isolate on one individual." Levy .
said.
" I didn 'J hit some guys th'at I
should have," Collins said.
Buffalo rallied from a 13-0 half·
time deficit to trail 16-13 midway
through the fourth quarter. Then. Dan
Marino found Drayton 15 yards fo:om
the nearest defender, and the easy
score sealed the Bills' fate.
"It was a mi scommunicati'on at
the line of scrimmage ," safet y Kurt
Schulz said.
"You don't pet those kinds of
touchdowns very often," Drayton
said.

1997 AII-Southeastrn District...co~tinuedfrompage4

Fairland, 6-0, 213, Sr. Kicker-Josb HolT,
Portsmou th. 6-1. 200. Sr.
Defense:" linemen-Jason Russel~ Nelsonvill£-York, 5-ll, 190, Sr.; Jon C.sella.
Proctorville Fairland, f)..l, 180, Sr.; R.J.

THANKS

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

742·2211
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�.......

' • e •The 0.11y Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tueeday,No¥Mnber18,1997

_

reconci
latio~
.
.
~?.
.
.
~~.
~
.
~
?.
~
:,~
Ann
to~cth~rnc."

expll!ded when opened four days ,lat- faced Moodily injuror questioning.
er. FBI officials suggested at the time
One former law enforcement secSACRAMENTo, Calif. - The that the U~abomber may have sought re!&amp;JY said she was friends with the
Unabomber's last deadly JIICUge to re1ain the spodiaht from the Okla- wfves of two murdered California
bomb was mailed the &lt;lily after the iloma 11118ck, which killed 168 people Hishway Patrol officers.
Oklahoma City bombing - and the and inj'ured huodreds more.
She said she supported the death
twa cases have crossed paths qain in
The. Murrq bOmb was the last penalty in pan because of. cases like
Theodore Kaczynski's trial.
device anributid to the UAabomber, that of convicted rapist Lawrence
A prospective Kaczyriski juror althOugh subsequent written threat Singleton, who wail released after
who lost two cousins when a truck interrupted air and postal service on
serving a sentence for chopping the
bomb demolished the Alfred P. Mur- the West Coast.
arms off a rape victim in California.
rah Federal Building was excused
Kaczynski was arrested at his Singleton was arrested· in Aorida in
Monday aft~r she begged to be dis- Montana cabin in April 1996 and
February for killing a woman in his
missed from the Unabomber sus- accused of being re.sponsible for living room.
pect's presence.
three deaths, including two linked to
An elderly woman who said she
"There's just something about Sacramento, and 29 injuries in a
was
a fan of conservative U.S. Sen.
him. I don 'tlike to be in this room," bombing spree that lasted almost 18
Jesse
Helms, R-N.C., and thought
she said in a trembling voice. "I'm years.
pedophiles should be executed, said
just not a strong person ... I'm fright1\venty-three ofll¥1 first 37 jurors she was angered by the OJ. Simpson ·
ened. I can't sleep."
•
questioned remain eliJible to serve .
Kaczynski has watched most jury on the panel, but several will be chal- verdict.
"The judges should have a better
candidates carefully, but appeared to lenged in a belting Friday. Defense
knowledge
of the Constitution," she
ignore her comment, speaking lawyers said fi~e pro-death penalty
acknowledged on her questionnaire.
tns.tead to a defense lawyer.·
candidates should be excused for · A male high schoolteacher said he
•
Two of the I0 counts against the cause. Prosecutors challenged one
55-year-old former math professor wolllan who was ambiguous about was opposed to the.death penalty, but
conceded he could think of at least
relate to the death of timber lobbyist capital punishment.
two extreme examples - dictators
Gilben Murray, who was killed when ·
Lawyers and U.S. District Judge renowned for mass killings- where
a bomb exploded in his Sacramento Garland Surrell Jr. must ultimately
office. Charges for the Murray killing agree on 64 prospective jurors, from he w~uld yote for death.
"If we had (Adolf) Hitler on trial
could result in a death sentence. . · which a jury of 12 and six alternates
here
I wouldn't want to see him kept
The' Murray bomb was mailed will be selected.
around," he said. "If wc'tc talking
April 20, 1995, the day after the
Besides the Oklahoma City boml:&gt;- about (Joseph) Stalin- that's a perOklahoma City bombing, and ing, other high-profile crimes surson so deeply evil we'd all be in danger all the time."

•..if ,

I'

Gore . fun~-raising

s·o journ
.
also takes .aim at smoking
'

.
Sy M.R. KROPKO
Gore then limited his remarks to
Associated Preas Writer
Clinton-Gore accomplishments.
CLEVELAND- Vice President
"I'm confident beyond any doubt
AI Gore took advantage of his first that the agenda President Clinton and
chance to tour this city's shrine to I have put forward aod the ideas
rock 'n' roll before dining with con- founded in the Democratic Pany
tributors to the Democratic National upon which they are based are superior to the agenda of the other side on
Committee.
" I couldn 't possibly be more every measure," Gore said. .
impressed," Gore said about the
Monday afternoon, Gore led ~n
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and anti-tobacco forum before about 150
Museum, which opened in 1995. "It students, teachersandparentsatLin·.
really is a wonderful asset to your coin Middle School.
city."
· Joining the vice president for the
He said he was panicularly look- anti-smokmg session were Donna
ing forward · to Aeetwood Mac's Shalala, Health and Human Services
induction in Januai-y.
Secretary; Bruce Reed. presidential
Gore spoke Monday night to a domestic policy adviser; David
gathering of 43 people at a dinner at Kessler, former Food and Drug
the Rock Hall to raise money for the Administration commissioner; and C.
DNC. The event, priced at S10,000 Everett Koop. former surgeon generper couple, was expected to raise • al.
about $150,000. Some of those in
Mayor Michael R. White and
attendance were prior large DNC U.S. Reps. Louis Stokes and Dennis·
givers.
Kucinich also attended.
Among those attending was Lee
The 75-minute program was the
Fi~her, former Ohio attorney general , tltir&lt;l in a series of anti-smoking
aad a like!~ candidate for covernor, ·forums. The others were in Waterloo,
~nd Mary Boyle, former Cuyahoga Iowa, and Tampa, Aa.
·
E:ounty commissioner aod a declared
Gore tried to draw suppon for a
eandidate for the U.S. Senate.
White House drive to increase penal. ties against tobacco companies if
.00

youth smoking doesn't decline.
That provision could be pan of a
deal to settle 40 states' anti -tobacco
lawsuits. Tobacco companies would
also pay about $368.5 billion over 25
years and accept nationwide adver·
!ising restrictions. The American
Lung Association is opposed to the
settlement, convilrced it doesn 't go
far enough to curb the tobacco indus.try.
Representatives of the Tobacco
Institute, a pro-tobacco lobbying
group, did not immediately return
phone calls seeking comment.
One student asked Gore why the'
government doesn't ban tobacco
products completely.
"Most of us who have studied the
problem have come to the conclusion
that would be impossible to do
because so many people are now
addicted," said Gore, who quit growing tobacco on a family farm after his
sister Nancy died of lung cancer in
1984.
After the school forum, White,
Kucinich aod Stokes took Gore to
Panini's Bar and Grill, a popular
downtown eatery known·for its,sandwiches. Gore ordered tuna fish on
Italian bread.

Visitors st~y away from temple
as attack death toll hits over 70
By TAREK EL·TABLAWY .
Associated Press Wrtter

aod temple walls, but no one dis·
cussed the horror that happened 24
LUXOR, Egypt- Shaken by the hours earlier when a half-dozen
worst massacre in Egypt's five-year Islamic militants unleashed a hail of
uprising by Islamic militants but . automatic gunfire outside the temple,
determined to continue their holiday, killing 61 tourisis.
scores of foreigners visited. the HatThe victims were Japanese, Swiss.
shepsut Temple in Luxor today.
Germans, Britons, l'rcnch and a
Thousands more around the Colombian. Four Egyptians also died.
world, however, scrapped plans to
The victims' bodies, including the
visit the ancient temple: Finnish tour militants killed in police shootouts,
operators said they canceled all7.000 · were brought to a monuary in Cairo
Oips booked by local clients this win- on Monday, the Interior Ministry
tcr and the last of300 Finish tourists said. The bodiesofthe foreigners will
who were '" Egypt returned home.
be sent back home beginning today,
In Tokyo. Japan Travel Bureau a ministry spokesman said.
Inc ., the country's largest tour operPresident Hosni Mubarak Oew to
ator, said it has canceled all scheduled Luxor today to inspect the aftermath.
visits to Luxor and is considering EgyptAir's first night to land today
llaltmg other tours to Egypt.
in Luxor was full. even though many
Still, 11 was nearly business ils USII· . of the passengers were security peral at the site of Monday's death of71 sonnel.
people - including the six auackers
Japanese tourist Masako Goto,
- 1n and around the 3.400-ycar-old · from Hirosaki . was on the plane with
temple, one of Egypt's most famous a tour group.
Pharaomc monuments.
"Of course I' in a little bit·worricd.
Camera-wieldinipourists in shons I'm a little bit frightened , but we
and baseball caps led by their guides wanted to continue," she told The
stood in small groups.
Associated Press.
Typical snatches of the guides'
Her co-passenger, Nigel Smith.
monologues-'" English, German, 62, of Edinburgh, Scotland. agreed.
French and Japanese ~ dnfte~ " It disturbs me .. it disturbs me a lot
through the cool morning: "This tern- but somciimcs you've got to take
pie ... bUJit by one of Egypt's most risks," he said.
•
fliii\OUS queens ... Egypt's only
In Luxor, a town that survives on•
woman Pharaoh :.. married her half- tourism, revulsion against the attack·
bmther ... lived like a man and wore ers was intense. VillaJ!Crs spat on the
a false beard."
bodies of the six gunmen, which were
. Nearby stood ·scores of policemen brought to waiting ambulances after
w1th automatic nfles.
the shoolouts.
•
·
• The tourists stood within sight of
" Luxor lives on tourism. If 'that
tllc dried blood stains on the ground goes. there's nothing," said Magdi

Wassef, a 32-ycar-old waiter at a
Luxor hotel. "If we found the terrorists, we would tear them apart, bit by
bit."
In a ,statcment faxed to The Associated Press in Cairo today, an Islamic militant group called the Vanguards
of Conquest said the attack came
despite their repeated warnings(for
tourists to stay away from Egypt.
The group stopped shon of claim·
ing responsibility but warned that
"the operation in Luxor won't be the
last. ".
The attack was the deadliest in
Egypt's five-year Islamic insurgency,
which has claimed 1,150 lives, most
of them militants and police. Much of
the campaign has been limited to
southern Egypt.
The militants want to oust the
Mubarak' secular government and
impose strict Muslim rule. Before
Monday, .38 foreigners were among
those killed in the violence.
But never had Luxor, 315 miles
south of Cairo. been targeted, and the
slaughter was a ~low not just to
tourism in ,Luxor- !he city's lifeline
-but also to Egypt's campaign to
rev!•c an industry vital to its economy.
The city's temples and tombs including that of ihc boy-king
'Tutankamun - makes it one of
Elypt's top destinations.
Seven aircraft took off from
Gatwick today for Luxor to bring
..hack British touristS.
A Swiss woman who survived the
attack said the " very young" gunmen
were methodical.
·

"The · integrity of the criminal
inv~stigation ~nd fut~re llial, privacy nghts of th1rd pan1es, and cenain
personal informati011 concerning the
Ramseys outweighs the public desire
for access to this material," said May
whose opinion was posted on ~
Internet.
JonBenet, a 6-year-old beauty
queen, was found beaten and strangled in the basement of her Boulder,
Colo., home Dec. 26, 1996.
Charlevoix County Prosecutor
Mary · Beth Kur could delay the
release of the documents Qy appealing May's ruling. Michigan law gives
her 21 days to do so. She did not

.1

made

l ; mlas i l'~ seem real.

;.,..

!':,::~-~ ·.:,:~ ·~:·,;·;· 1 ·; ' ..~.: ::~;:·
~ ...." ·'h'

No wo1uk , I w'"

,huckc.t,

t

up I(!T adoption . At 22. I fin ally got

IllY lhird marriage ;md had a hahy
girl .

. Whcn,'"Y daughter wa' J, 1 was

c1mg no~cu with 1-lod gkin \ Ui scu~c
nnd unc.lcrwc m rudiat ion . I lost JO
rmunb . I abo lo~l my h~~hantl . He
left town and took 111y daughter wilh
him . I was tlc va\latcc.J. 'It took me
;dmusl a year tu lrm.:K him down and
get my c.:hild hack.
.
I married my lourth hu"'hand ,
wasted four murc year!'. tryin g to
make-the marriage work and fin&lt;~lly
went huck to t.:oll cge to get a hachelor;s Uc~rcc in hiology.
I pot a divon.:c and marri ed hu!-.hand No. ) . Soon urtCr, I WWi (Jiag-'
nosed with hrcast ~.;anccr. I also

outside Royal, Ark., where she lives
with Moore and his wife, Carol.
Ms. Anderson identified more
than a dozen firearms, including a
shotgun she bought in Aorida, that
she said were stolen. She refenred to .
!'"e ·weapon cradled in her arms as
"my baby."
She also recogni1.cd ammunition
found inside ammo boxes in Nichols'
garage, which wa,, separated into
· small plastic hags stamped "LC,"
indicating it was military surplus. She
said the "LC" came from a stamp she
has owned since childhood.
Moore has told authorities he didn't know Nichols and couldn't recognize the gunman. McVeigh was at
a gun show in Kent, Ohio, and Ms.
Andcr.nn was at a gun show in
Shrcvcpon, La., on the day of the
rohhcl')l.
Ms. Anderson said she and Moore
formed a gun-show business called
American Assault Co.

l

i' a wonderful fath er to my dau ghter,
who adore~ him . My dog love!-. him , ja
tuu.
, *1:
My rnothcr ~end ~ him than k ~you ~
note!-. for hcin g ~o good to me. He
aucn(.h !&lt;.t:hool n.:ciwl . . and parent~'

By LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP Medital Writer
ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP)
TranScan Inc. predicts using electricity to map out possible breast
cancer could cut 200,000 unnecessary biopsies every year, but government scientists say the company's
machine needs more study before
U.S. doctors try it.
Advi sers to the Food and Drug
·Administration called the T-scan
system a promising technology, but
unanimo.usly agreed Monday that
there 's not enotlgh proof about how
well it works - and in which
women.
;,1 read 25,0.00 mammograms a
year and .. . I'm not sure I'd know
who to usc thi s on," said Dr. Judy
Dcstouct of Advanced Radiology in
Baltimore.
Still. " It is a technology that
needs to he pur:-.ucd," said Dr. Patri cia Romilly-Harpcr or the Breast
Cancer Center in Indianapolis.
TranScan s:u~s the nonsurgical

Christmas Kick-Off
Edition·
Is Coming On Wednesday

·November 26th·

Ji
:U
J!

.

day event~ and ~cn&lt;.l ~ me llowcr\ for
no rca'oon .

The point of allthi . . j ... to tell your
rt.:.adcrs NEV ER gi ve up. No maltcr
where you arc or where you 've
hccn , there is ::.I way"' "'o mcpl m.:c lch
to go. And going forward j, th e hcst
option .-- Alive and 35 in N.C.
Dear N.C.: You &lt;J(C 1ndccU a
rcmarkahlc person and a true :-.urvivor. Your letter wi ll ..,urcly cn &lt;.;o urage Hlhcrs who arc fa&lt;.;cd wi th ..,enous oh~ tad c\ und having a tou gh
time to hitc th e hullct and carry on.
Thank you for ,all the people you

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Our special page(s)
"For Children Only"

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&lt;.J!!velopcd an ~mxicty di sorder for
whid1 l~.;ontinuc to Luke mcUication.
. My &lt;.: ar hrc:.aks down frequently,
and I have only recently caught up ·have helped tod ay.
paying the hills, hut life i' good. My
~..:urrc nt hushand is the most support- Send quc\tion s lo Ann Lander\, Crciv'c , kind and generous man in th~ ators Syndicate, 5777 W Ce ntury
world.
Blvd. , Suite 700, Lo' Angeles. Calif.
He is my friend , lover, &lt;.;ar
90045
mechanic, plumhcr, electrician ,
.

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(16 years of age or younger)
Will be pUblished

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new pit; would only last a ICw years
The Civil War News, one of the
and would · not compa~ tu the most widely read Civil War publicaemployment that will Ill created · lions, will be featuring comments by
with development of the battlefield Ashley on the Buffington Island
as a tourist attraction, As~t~cy said.
Battlefield in its next issue under its
Ashley lcviewed an article that preservation news.
appeared this month in' the Ohio
Twenty-one members and guests
Magazine on the battlefield.
enjoyed a Thanksgiving dinner in
The article quoted a person of the honor of President Abraham Lin·
Ponland community thai indicated coin's first declaration ofThanksgivthat this community had only been ing as a national holiday. The cominterested in the battlefield in the mander showed the work done in
last year.
cataloging the over I ,400 Union solThat ·same person was involved diers buried in Meigs County.
in the 1988 reenactment held there
In honor of Veterans Day, the
when the movement began to pre- camp recognized veterans of the
serve it, he said. Also, the article camp. They are Ron Eastman, Dale
failed to obtain comment from Gov, Colburn, Myron Jones and Thomas
emor George V. Voinpvieh's office Gorrell. The camp applauded their
on his position and failed to address sacrifices.
the inaction of the Ohio Preservation
Bill Brown, a member of the
Commission to request funding to camp, was noted to have received
purchase the area.
the "Dispatcher of the Year" in Gal-

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The Daily Sentinel

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lia County. He works for the Ohi o
State Highway Patrol.
The camp has confirmed that
David V. Medert of Chillicothe will
be the featured speaker at the camp's
annual Memorial Day activities at
the Civil War statue by the county
courthouse. Mr. Medert is the
brigadier general of the Sons of
Union Veterans Reserve , the uniformed arm of the SUV.
Officers elected for 1998 are
Keith Ashjey, commander; Myron
Jones. senior vice commander; Terrenee Cummings, junior vice commander; Tad Cuckler, secretary ;
James Mourning . treasurer, and
Roben Mills, first year trustee.
The next meeting of the camp
will be Jan. 12. The camp will be
performing the historic induction
ceremony for any member who has
not seen it.

I

Tuesday, December 23rd

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(CHILD'S NAME)
Parents' or
Grandparents Name

Per Picture·
Prepaid
Please enclose self-addressed,
stamped envelope to return your

. photo.

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test, already used in Israel, is valu- tricity is sent into the hand, where it
~ble i~ helping doctors pick which
travels lhrough the body into the
women need a biopSy when their breast. A hand-held probe is moved
mammograms alone don't ""give over the breast. where it measures
enougiT information to decide.
the electrical conductivity of breast
"Who's going to ~ the T-scan cells.
are the ones you're on the fence
Cancer ceils conduct much less
about. Those to me 1\.ppen every electricity than healthy cells - · so
day," said Dr. Michele Rossman of when the probe nashes its findings
Sinai Women 's Health Center in onto a computer screen. possible
Detroit, who helped study the tumors show up as bright white
device.
ii
spots .
Some 800,000 biopsies are done
In a study of 504 breasts. adding
every year, from whi ch, 180,000 T-scans to regular mammograms
women arc diagnosed with breast allowed researchers to accurately
cancer. The .rest are beni~n lumps. predict- 86 percent of the timeThe question is ·how to reduce the that the woman had cancer. Trannumber of biopSi~ s
mi ss ing Scan said. The company called -it
women who have cancer.
panicularly useful in :.-·omen under
Some doclllt'ti try
trasound age 50. whose naturally denser
machines that usc sound waves to breasts are more difficulr for mampicture lumps as an 'additjon .to the mograms to penetrate .
mammogram's X-rays.
The combination als o allowed
The T-scan would offer a unique re searchers to cut t:'ly 28 pen:cnt the
altcrnal ivc - using elec tricity to number of biopsies p~rformed on
map the breast.
·"
women whose hrcast lumps turned
A pajnlcss. one-volt shot of clcc- out to he hrnign. the L'nmpany said.

HURRY, DEADLINE FRIDAY,
DECEMBER 19, AT 3 P.M.

wilholt

Official
-Entry .

But that 86 percent rate was not
statistically better than mammograms alone - , and FDA scientists
warned that the te st wasn't alwal's
accurate. meaning that using 'it on .
the wrong women could deter a
stnall number who did ·have cancer
from getting a needed biopsy.
In addition. the FDA's ad1i sers
said the study did not reOect the way
doctors diagnose breast cancer. lealing . them uncertain about the
machine's effect when ph ys i&lt;;ians
use it even-. dav.
Doctors today use multiple. magnified . ,·jews of mammogrmns in
addition to physical exams before
deciding who needs a biopsy. while
the studl' onlv told doc tors· the
women's ·ages 3nd proYided just two
mammogram images for th~ del'i sion.
.
" There an: too many leaps of
faith for me 10 feel c·omfonahk with
it.'' said Dr. Da~· id Hackne" or th&lt;
Unil'eisity of Pennsylvania.·

Form

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Don't Be Left Out
/ --Can 992-2155
Dave Harr.is Ext. 104 or
Don Riffle Ext. 105

Allmcmhcr~

:.md guests

invit~d.

The Community Caleitdar is puh·
lishcd as a free servk:c to non -profit
groups wi shing to annoum:c meeting
ttnd special events . Th~ calendar is
not Ucsigncl1 to promote sale s or
fund rai sers of an y type . Items arc
printed as s Po~t: c permits and ~.:mmut
he gu:Jrantccd to run a spct.'il'it: num-

p.ni . at the Mc ig' Museum. Anyonl'
inl crc :-.h::d in bnul y hi story is invitctl
to ;l!l c nd .

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TIIESIJAV
I'OMEROY - Mci~ s County
( icncalogic.:al Soc ict y, Tue sday, •': 15

ADVERTISING DEADLINE IS MONDAY
NOVEMBER 24TH 12 NOON

'p.m.

I'OMliROY - Meigs So(l lmJ
Wate r (\msl'I'Vollion District1h mrt.l
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g:. WcdllL'sday. ~ p.m.
ol'fin~. Hilami -Ruatl . Pomeruy.
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THE PLAINS - Frc•e Small
lllls inl·ss 'li1 x Wt,rkslu•p. spllllS111'cd
hy lntunal R~.·v l·nuc Sl,'r\'it'l'. 'J•n.m.

. her or day s.

For More Details

"'

POMEROY - Guest &lt;inger
Chri&lt;Adkins. Newport Ncwst..Va .. at
the Hill&lt;i.uc llaptist C,hurd ~ State
Route 143. Pninemy. Wcdnes~ay. 7

fl ,IU . w~..·tlnc sd;! y._ Rl· ~isl cj~' l1 )'

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MIIJili.I ' I'ORT
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MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Weslcy;~n lliblcs Holiness Churdt .
Missionury s..:rvi~o.· c. WcUn..:sday.
7:30 p.m with Ann Jones from All
TrihL' Miss inn. Puhlk in,·ircd.
SYRACUSE - Third WcJncs·
day Homemakers Cluh m~cting
Wt·dncsday. 10 ~un. at the Syr;ll·usc
Municipal Building . Roll call will he
:1 Lnnki.: l' Xclmngc with , rcl'ip.: .
P\Uiuck at 1\U\U\.
REEDSVILLE

Rc•gubr

nwnthlv lltCl'linl.! nf 1hc East~nrAth ­
lctil' B~;tlStcrs . W..:dJh:;day. 7:.10 p.m.

urgi..·d hi aUL' nd .

THIIKSilAY
MtnDI.J:I'ORT . ~liddkj&gt;llrt
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insp~.·'-· ti~.m in th~.· S~.· k ~.· r ~ la st ~.· r s
Ik~t'!..'L' Frida~ . 7: .tO p.m .•ll thl· ~ 1iddk·p~.wt ~1aStllli~.· T~.· mpk . R~o.•ft\'sh -

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parents nl' athletes om:-

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n c·.-Jknl

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lll :td ~.· a b~,.· ; mtiful ,~;a, ~,.· ,~.· n 1"'-' IIL'I'.

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ROCK SPRINGS
Roc- k
Springs Beller Hc;~hh Cluh 111«ting
Thursday. I p.m.. ~u the Ro~~spring s .
Chun.:h. Dorotlw Jeffers. host ess.

REEDSVILLE
Ri vm ·ic11
Gard.:n Clut'l mc.:tinc Thur~J ~w .
7:.10 p.m. a1 the Rcccts\·illc Church
t,f Christ f,,r n Chri s tm ~ls \\\Wkslh' P·
ML' tnhl•rs ar~ to hring fing ~r fl,ods .

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ROCK SPRINGS - Tc1wn and
·Country Expt.J m~t:ting Thursday.
no pd.m. at the Rc&gt;ck Spring&lt; Fair·
gmun s.

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Boost~ r~ hl pc~o:l appl~~ h'r appk
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in the high

'

i l'&gt;

Community Calendar

•

,;tl

Government advis~rs reject breast cancer diagnostic device

The Daily Sentinel's

immcdiate'ly return a phone call this
morning.
Durin&amp; a Nov. 6 hearing, Ms. Kur
argued that "the integrity of the
investigation could be severely damaged'' if the documents were released
before an arrest is made. .
The documents were sought by
The Denver Post and Denver televi·
sion station KMGH.
After Ms. Kur decides whether to
appeal, the Post and KMGH will
have the right to appeal May's decision to delete some material in the
documents. Roy Hayes, an attorney
for the Pos~ said he· did not know
'Whether they would do so.

J

~ SUV hears Bufft·ngton·lsland update t
Keith. Ashley. Ulllllllander of
IJJ'lh&gt;ks-Grant Camp 7 Sons of
Union Vcter&lt;ms of the Civil War.
updated the camp memhership on
the current situation with the prcscr·
v;Jlion or the Buffington Island Battic field .
He stated the recent article in the
l&lt;wtll newspaper concerning a meeting hctwcen the Meigs County
Board of-Commissioners and the
sand and gravel coinpany was full of
nuslcading statements.
No· permits have been issued to
mine, Ashley said . The Ohio Preservation Office has not given its clearance to issue permits, nor has the
U.S: Army Corps of Engineers
issued a permit for a loading dock
nor held held any public hearings to
do so.
Funher, the 20 jobs the company
says would be created by opening

J

AMONG THE...

~~!~.~, ,!:~.~.~..~.?~..~~;!~~.~~s.. I

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J_udge orders release of edited Rams~y warrB(Jt
TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. (AP) A judge today ordered the release of
Ui:uments involving a police search
of the vacation home of J&lt;inBenet
Ramsey's family, but said some
nuuerial would be blacked out.
Disllict Judge Richard W. May
ruled that a searcl) w~ant and affi·
~avit from a March 6 search of the
Chlrlevoix house should be made
public.
.
: To be deleted: material whose
J!Ublication could set back the investiption of JonBenet's murder or
violate the privacy of the Ramsey
f1111ily and "third panies" whose
·~lll!les have not been disclosed.

landers

All II"· l:uuily
lht'!-.L' t·hiltlhoud

l'pn:ssL'C 1 :me 1 lola 11y unprcpal'ct1
whL·n . 111y l;•tltcr uwr11ctl ;.'moihcr
L!;;;;;;;;;;::~=~-----.:.......1 wotn;m.
L•.:l' ... fal:L' it . 'Wi h:ll it ~.: hild ':•: 'j)ttf·
llt•a.· Ann I.;IIUit•rs: Rl' IJ H.'Illlwr
L' llJ ~ an_
· di vurn·ll . they arc 1111 longer
th:tl Ytll t' t ' t l l' l''\ llt'rtt' lll.l' you ;tlways
OII L' h••PPY r~ uu i ly. ;111(1 theY should
1:11~ ahnur.' Wdl. hl·n· it ts. I am
11111 try 1t1 act lih· one . -- Uccn 'l11crc
wming :1hout till· lli\'orL·L·tl n mph:
amll&gt;onc Th;~t in FlurU.la
that w;mh·tlto l:l~l· tht• ir two yollll!! ·
llc:.tr Jt'lnrid;a: I ho w to the :-.urc,·hildn·n on a famil v \'ilt':ltion :1t1d
rior wis(llllll of those who have lmd
:lskt•tl what ~~till lh;1u ~d1t ahuul il .
l'X pc ri c nl'c a lon ~ th c:-.c Hnc :-..
Yt•ll :-.:1id 11 was a !!l'l' ;\1 itka . Sorry.
l&gt;i vorl:t:d couplc.:s should he c ivjlto
Ann. Ytlll art· \\Tilll!!. wn111 ~ . 'wwng . mic anuthm· hut nul so fn cmiJiy that
~1~ · p:ll'l'IU S tlivntn•tl whl'll I W;is
tlll.:y· g iv~..· their children !:1!:-.c hope.,.
:1 dtild . We l'l llll inlll'd tn !!' I lllll to
I w~1s ·clohhcrcd hy several rU"Ucrs
tlinna to~\'th . .·r as wl'll as take sum·
who :llsu llatl hccn there and done
llll'l. , .:ll':llion s ;1s if \ W wn~.· 01 n.'al
that. l)ass the. l:I'OW . I'll colt a gcncrfamilv .
uus portion .
I lhtlll ~ht thi s mt·an~ my pan..·nt "
Bear Ann Landers: I hope you
"L'l'l' workin g 011 pl'lling ho1 c k
will print my leiter ;md help me
III!!L' th~..T . 1\i'lcr all. thl'Y always got
delive r an important mcssngc.
al1\ll !! s11 wl'll wh~..· n we wen.' logelh1 lei'! sdtuol at 15 hccausc I ~o t ·
L' f .
pregnant. lly the time I wa., ~~. I had
Child r..: n nf di\'orn·d pilrl·nt s given hirth tu two sons and put them
alw~1y s harh1H' a SC( I'\.' 1 lk ., irc to sec

i

Witness rewrote insurance claim
on NichQis' alleged weapon .theft
DENVER .(AP) - A weapons the $63,000 insurance coverage for
dealer who said guns stolen from her the contents of Moore's home.
panner were found in Terry Nichols'
Even so, Moore ha,, said. ho got
home admitted she rewrote an insur- only 10 cents on the dollar for his
ance claim on the robbeiy to raise the purloined goods.
value of some missing items.
"We were both upset" after findKaren Anderson, testifying Mon- ing but the insurance .wouldn't co~­
day in Nichols' trial in the Oklahoma er the losses, Ms. Anderson said.
City bombing, said some of her guns
She was to continue testifying
were among the weapons Roger today.
Moore reponed stolen from his
She said Monday that armorArkansas farm on Nov. 5, 1994.
piercing ammunition and more than
Prosecutors contend Nichols a dozen firearms found in Nichols'
robbed Moore to finance the April home were stolen from her and
1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Mur- Moore five months he fore the bombrah Federal Building. Nichols' ing.
• :
lawyer, . Michael ngar, has quesOne of the people she listed ~~,, a
tioned whether the rObbery really possible suspect was McVeigh,
happened, contending tliat Moore whom she had met at a gun show in
and Ms. Anderson were friends with 1993.
convicted bomber Timothy McVeigh."We wetc asked (by· police) j)asiMs. Aoderson, undcrTigar's ques- cally for people tHAt might be aggrationing, admillfd she helped Moore vated a1 you or. people that might
draw up a-second list of items lost in · have visited your home," she said.
the robbery. raising (be value of some
She said McVeigh fit bOih categuns, when the forst list didn't match gories, having spent time at the ranch

,

.,~
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a

GORE VISIT - Vice President AI Gore
made a point as he held an anti-tobacco lorum
before about 150 students, teachers and parents Monday at Lincoln Middle School in Cleve-

ruasday,Novamber1a,1997

Divorced parents shouldn't give false hope-of t

By RICHARD COLE
Aseocw.ct ,,... wrn.r

land. Health and Human Services Secretsry
Donna Shalala and Clevaland Mayor Michael
White are at the right of the vice president (AP)

__

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l PICTURE -YOUR CHILD J

The Riv,erfront

Oklahoma City blast cros·ses
over into·Unabom.ber's trial

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Deadline: Friday, Dec. 19 at 3 p.m.
Mail or bring the entry form :

Tlte Dally SeJttinel

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~~~~·~~~·~~~~~~~~~
Pom~~~~~h~oS!s

�•
•

PIQii 8 • The Dally Stntlnel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuetdly. Novtmber 18, 1997

The Dally Sentinel • Pegt I

Pomeroy • Middleport,.Ohio

Americans cure themselves of 'affluenza'
ly ALEXANDRA ZAVIS
A~

Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Five yean
aao, Linda and Michael Lenich
finally hid the ttappinp of middleclass success: a three-bedroom
house in the suburbs and two cars to
get the~. They belonged to a health
club and spent many evenings at
swank restaurants.
They also owed $12,000, not
counting their mongage.
Today, they ~ debt-free, with
enough money saved to consider
retiring. And they're only in their
40s.
: The Lenicbes didn't win the lott~ry or discover a genuine get-richquick scheme. They simplified.
"We went from saving very little,
tb saving 50 pen:ent or more of our
income," said Michael Lenich, a
quality manager for a utility company.
· Befo~ the turnabout, their debt
included an $8,000 car loan, $4,000
on credit cards ·and $39,000 still
owed for their house in South HoiI,nd. Now they have a S150.000
nest egg.
The Lemches, who have no children, are pan of a small. if burgeoning movement intent on ~ cure for

"aftluenza"- a IRnd of the 1980s
and 1990s whose chief symptom,
they say, is excessive consumption.
They pqintto the downside.
Despite a strong national economy. personal bankruptcies ~ on the

rise.

·

Last year, for the first time, the
number of Americans filing for personal bankruptcies exceeded I million. According to Federal Reserve
figures, by early October, outstanding consumer debt had reached a
seasonally adjusted $1.23 trillion.
The Leniches and those of like
mind blame unprecedented levels of
wealth - and striving for more. In
addition to unmanageable debt, Ibis
"affluenza" harms families, communities and the natural world, they
say.
"We have gotten into this very
affluent, high-stress lifestyle, which
is harming the environment and
does not bring people more satisfaction," said Ellen Furnari, who heads
the Burlington, Vt.-based Center for
a New American Dream. which promotes simpler living.
The center is a private, non -profit foundation supported by the John
D. and Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation and the Global Wallace

Foundatitln, among others.
The center advocates cost and
time-saving alternatives such as
using public trinsponation and
watching less television. "It's easier
to take charge of your life without
being bombarded by advenising all
the time," Ms. Furnari said.
Rather than charging major purchases on credit cards, first save
enough cash to buy them . In addition to eliminating any interest payments, consider whether the purchase is really necessary.
The Leniches got the center's
message five yean ago. Then they
revolted.
They canceled magazine ~ub­
scriptions and thei~ heallh club
membership. They scaled back their
shopping. They quit working to
exhaustion just to keep up with the
loneses, a competition that only led
to more debt. Their monthly e•penses plunged, from $5,000 to $2,000.
The Leniches still enjoy a mid·
die-class existence. They still have ·
the house, the pair of cars.
But they walk 3 miles to the public library to read ·their favorite periodicals. Rather than blow money
eating out, they invite friends over
for dinner.

" It's nothing big," said 40-ycarold Linda Lenich, who works in a
quill-making shop. "ll's all the little
lhings that make lhe difference."
The Leniches spoke recently
about their lifestyle revolution
before addressing a focus group.
Some 40 people gathered in Chicago, allowing the Vennont center to
test its ideas bn Midwesterners. The
couple attend such meetings IS volunteers to explain the center's aims.
Since their lifestyle makeover,
the Leniches found they could afford
to travel to EurojJe- three timeson a combined income of $76,000.
At 43, Michael Lenich is contemplating retirement in a year or two.
His outlook is better, too. "We are
much more peaceful and at ease," he
said.
The Center for a New American
Dream was set up in response to the
1992 United Nations Eanh Summit.
The gathering in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil. concluded that the major
cause of environmental degradation ·
around the world was the unsustainable level of consumption and production, panicularly in industrialized countries.
There are social costs as well,
critics of free-wheeling consunip-

. tion say. Ttme spent gettina to work. friend, who learned abollt the Verthen worting extra hours, shopping mont center from out-of-state
and wlllcbinctelevision, is time not friends and from suppon groups that
spent II family meals, in conversa- the cenler spawned in Chicago.
tion with relatives and friends", and
Remke got rid of his truck. He
visiting neighbors.
donated more than 40 dress shins to
"People often think simplifying charity and sold 'Some 150 CDs to a ·
means giving up things, but in reali- secondhand sto~. By late October,
ty people find it is about getting his debt was whittled to $84.45.
what they want," Ms. Furnari said.
Today, Remke is back in an apanJ.R. Remke, 30, an accountant at ment in Chicago and living well on
the national headquaneri' of the his $43,000 salary. He rides a bicyYMCA, once found much of his . cle to work and buys clothes as he
entenailll)lent in shopping until he needs them.
was "dragged kicking and screamHe still browses music stores,
ing by a girlfriend" to change his but rather than succumb to impulse
attitude and stop the spending he he reads up on musicians before
couldn't alford.
buying their CDs.· He goes to conDespite a heallhy Income, only a cens but no longer snaps up the soufew years ago, Remke's $4,500 in venir T-shins.
c~dit card debt had driven him back
"I associated simplicity with
home to live with his parents in the deprivation," Remke said. "But I
far nonhwest Chicago suburb of am happier, more at ease and I have ·.
Palatine.
a lot more freedom."
Remke's plan was to save money
Self-discipline is the key to
and pay off the cards. Instead, freed breaking the over-spending habit.
of rent obligations, Remkc contin- But for those · who need an extra
ued filling his clothes closet, buying nudge, the Center for a New Americompact discs and going to rock can. Dream recommends freezing
conccns. He also acquired a new credit cards- literally. in ice. That
pickup truck. His credit card bill way, they'll need to be thawed
soared to $12,000.
hcfore they can be used.
At last, he began to heed his girl-

Take a close look at your kitchen; it could be·making you sick
The Naahvllle Tenneaaean
You're cramping. retching, running a low-grade fever.
You call the office: you tell a colleague you have the 24-hour flu. But
you don't. There's no such thing as
the 24-hour flu. says Charles Gerba,
a microbiologist wit~ the University
of Arizona. you possibly have a
fOod-borne illness, perhaps from the
midnight snack you fixed right there
in your own kitchen.
Gerba, the nationally renown
king of the kitchen police, has a
dirty sec~t to share: Chances are, he
says, your kitchen hosts more genns
than your bathroom.
.
For just that reason, Gerba, only
half-jokingly, contends that the
safest place in your home to make a
simple peanut butter and jelly sandwich {or any other kind) is atop the
toilet seat while the most hazardous
place is, TA-DUM your kitchen
counter.
aero~ you chase Gerba from
your home with a heavy metal ladle,
llsten to his rlliOIIale: "You automatically disinfect your bathroom.
But how many times do you disinfeet your kitchen? You wipe up
those countenop spills with a
sponge, thinking you've done the
right thing. Well, I'm here to te!T
you. The sponge is the best home a
bacteria can have."
Wipe up, say, raw egg with a
sponge, the microbiologist ••plains,

and you possibly set yourself up for
an assault from the Salmonella
germs that could have contaminated
the egg.
Welcome to a health problem
Gcrba and other health-care specialists say affects appro•imately
16,000 Americans every day who
becom.e ill from something they ate
at their own dining room table.
Approximately another 25 Amcricans will" die on any given day from
fOOd they prepared in their own
kitchens. ·
The figures, however, are only
estimates: "I don't know any 1-8001-Have-Diarrhea numbers our
there," Gerba says. "We only have
rough ideas of how many people get
sick from the transmission of disease-causing microorganisms by
water, food and surface.s in the
home, but we know the numbers are
growing."
Gerba often tests kitchen sponges
that clean your counters and scour
your dishes for germ contamination.
So does Sharon Ashberry, a
microbiologist at Nashville's Baptist
Hospital, who tested a sponge for
The Tennessean.
The ordinary green cellulose
sponge is from the home of Darlene
- Ridgely, who lives in a meticulous
Nashville high rise, and who has
used the sponge for KP duty for two
weeks.
Her sponge reveals only one

· fond-borne organism, enterobacter,
found in fecal material.
The organism could have come
from almost any meat brought into
her kitchen, or from a child who hasn't washed his hands after using the
bathroom, Ashberry says.
Ridgely is a childless divorcee
and a vegetarian, the microbiologist
is told.
·
Does she bring in lots of vegetables which need to be washed? Ashberry asks.
She does. Shonly before Ridgely's sponge is delivered to the ilaptist microbiology lab, she uses it to
clean up the counter where she has
several Idaho potatoes to be baked.
In that instance, Ashberry says,
the organism probably was in the
din that was on the potatoes. It's a
fairly common organism, almost
everywhere.
The enterobacter in the sponge
isn't enough to make Ridgely ill,
though, Ashberry says.
However, should a person with a
weakened immune system scrub off
an apple with the contaminated
sponge and then eat it. that person
could become quite ill.
Since the sponge analysis, Ridgely has decid,ed to buy sponges with
bacteria-killing componentS built in.
Another precaution she could usc
is another Gerba suggestion: She
could wash her sponge in hot, soapy
water, then place it still wet in a

small microwavable container and
microwave on high for 30 seconds.
Gerba urges cooks to be equally
careful with their dishclothes: to use
them only once. and then to launder '
them in bleach-treated "water and
detergent or in the dishwasher.
Heat kills Salmonella, E. coli,
Campylobacter and other bacteria
that makes people ill when they
appear in their food, Gerba says.
Another simple weapon to help

Aboui 4.8 million Americans have
congestive bean failure, in which
the hean fails to pump strongly
enough. It often occur.; a.~ a result of
heart attacks, high blood pressure
and aging.
The hean study, conducted on 18
patients, was intended solely to see
if the treatment was safe. Doctors
were surprised to see that even a
brief treatment seemed to have a significant - though temporary effect on people's symptoms.
"We're hopeful and very encouraged by the results so far," said Dr.
Douglas Mann of Baylor College.of
Medicine in Houston, who presented
the hean results at a meeting of the
American Hean Association in
Orlando.
The volunteers were given one
injection and then watched for two
weeks. They were able to walk 30
percent fanber without getting out
of tlreath, their hearts beat 15 percent harder, and other measu~s of
their quality of life improved SO percent.
Funhennorc. the patients felt hetter. Some said they even felt high,
probably the' ~suit of heing free of

the- nu-like symptoms caused by too
much TNF.
"This is a first attempt at controlling TNF in hcan failure. It's a proof
of concept," said Dr. Michael Bris·
tow of the University of Colorado
Health Sciences Center in Denver.
Research into the use of the same
treatment for people with rheumatoid anhritis is funher along. Dr.
Michael Weinblatt from Brigham
and Women's Hospital in Boston
presented results of an arthritis study
at a meeting of the American College of Rheumatology in Washington.
Over six months in 234 patients,
the doctors found that the treatment
reduced the number of painful joints
by 71 percen~ compared with 6 percent in those getting dummy injections. The number of swollen joints
declined by 51 percent, vs. 2 percent.
in the untreated group.
Studies of both lhe hean and
arthritis uses of the experimental
drug, called En brei, are being spansored by it maker, Immunex Corp.
of Seattle.1;be company said it plans
to seek Food and Drug Administration approval early next year to

I. Before preparing food, wash
ands at least 20 seconds with soap
nd ho~ forcefu I water.
2. Don't lick any batter that conains raw eggs off a spoon.
3. Handle raw meat, poultry,
eafood and eggs as if they were
ontaminated.
' 4. Don't let raw meat juices touch
ther foods, whether raw or cooked.
5. Micrqwave sponge after each
se on high for at least :lO seconds.
6. Wash dishcloth after each usc
ith dishes in dishwasher.
7. Clean countenops and other
urfaces, first with hot; soapy water,
hen with a mixture made by adding
ne teaspoon of bleach to one quan
fwater for an inc•pensivc disinfccant.
8. Lysol and other antibacterial

hegin selling the treatment.
The drug is a kind of chemical
decoy that attracts and deactivates
TNF hcfore it can do any damage.
In rheumatoid anhritis, TNF is
one link in a cycle of misguided
innamm~tion
that
eventually
destroys the joints.
In the hean, TNF levels ordinarily shoot up briefly during tj)lles of
stress or injury, such as hean attacks.
and the protein helps minimize damage. However, in a bean weakened
by congestive hean failure, the body
apparently produces TNF nonstop in
a mistaken attempt to fix the problem. Instead, the TNF enlarges the
heart and saps its pumping power
still funber.

really good spot,"' said Costner who
received a 5!'Cond draft of the movie
script just three days before Diana's
Aug. 31 death in a Paris car crash.
"I picked it up and the first 30

kitchen cleaners have been approved
by the Environmental Protection
Agency aS a safe way to kill bacteria
on kitchen surfaces.
.
9. Scrub wooden cutting board,
then do one of the following.
Microwave it on high for a minute,
wash it off with a mild bleach so.lulion or wash it in -a hot disbwasher.
Knife-scarred plastic cutting boards
harbor .germs. ' Wash them in the
dishwasher.
·
I0. Cutting boards arc a hot spot
for cross-contnmination: After chopping meat or poultry on cutting
board, clean it with one of the above
methods before using it again for
slicing fruits and vegetables.
II . Remember, bacteria grow
mostly in high protein foods such as
meat.

BURGUNDY &amp; BRASS
- Pearl I l111rd ·
I
949-ROSE (7673)

Happy Holidays From
The Meigs County Libraries

&amp; SHARING.
.All food proceeds will be donated to
The Meigs County Co-operative Parish &amp;
other local outreach programs.
We will be having a TurkeY* Giveaway
before Thanksgiving. Stop in and register by
checking out five books. ·
Fior further information call992-5813
THIS IS OUR WAY OF CARING

% CT. TW. DIAMOND RING
VALUED II $1,100
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

"TTIrkty donated by Ylugllan'a'IIGA, Middleport

.

GravelLimestoneSand- Dirt

(Free Discount .Piilrta list)
Same Day Repair Service

Buy, Sell &amp; Trade

614-992-3220
11/31871 mo pel

Looking for a Pet?

Richard's Lawn &amp; Garden
Gravely Dealttr
Spencer, W.Va.
1-800-lfT-4551

Happy Holidays

From

CHEVAliER'S
ORPET CLEANING
$19.95,...r...
ct-UJedo... yoar II
home ehopplftl center.
Find pal buyo on pell, ·
pelaccoaoriel, and

Min. 2 Room•

614-992..()()77
orr.; good
Nov. 20-Dec. 20

·
.
·

Racine
Tlllllo111

11

BACK HOE"

Help Wanted

'110 Court St.
1112-4111

Custom Homes

No job 7b SmaU
Landscaping
Septic Tanks
Water Unes

Remodeling

HEIRLOOM CONNEOION

Mil

DEER SHOP
S.R. 325,
Langsville OH

Chlptlf 7

Open Now &amp; WID Be
Open During The Bow
&amp; Regular

Deer Season
742·2076
10/21117 1 mo. pd •.

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek,
Attorney At Law ·•
614-592-5025
Athens, Ohio

. CI.ASSIFIEDSI
ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Personals

ANXIOUS?
TO MEET SOIIIEOHE?
nAEO Of lHAT OlD BAR
SCENE?lHEN CAU THE
DATELINE
too-2811-1111 EXT. 1740
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Sorv·U 819-e.5-8434.

(UmtSton•
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25 YEAR CELOTEX
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$25.98 sq.
Free Delivery
634 EAST MAIN ST
POMEROY
. (7 40)-992-5500
, ,;:::
. ~~·

· Managing Strains,
Sprains &amp; other
significant pains.
Free Public
Service Seminar
7 p.m. Tues., Nov. 18
Wellness &amp; Rehab
Center
. Speaf;er:

Dr. John Holley

Refreshments will be served.

:ze; 3TC

appeared to make James P. Hoffa the
clear front-runner for the presidency
of the 1.4-million-mcmber union.
Hoffa called for an end to political
infight!ng and for Carey's removal.
"He's been disqualified . By what
right would he be there?" Hoffa said.
"Hopefully we've seen the last of
Ron Carey."
Conboy's decision initially sent
Holfa.opponents scrambling. George
Cashman, president of a Teamsters
local in Boston, and Tom Leedham,
head of the union's warehouse division, were considered likely candidates to replace Carey for the runoff
election, currently scheduled for
March.
But with C~y·s decision to tight,
several union leaders said, any decision.to replace him on the ticket likely would he delayed.
Conboy also ordered the election.
overseer, Bennella Mansfield, to
investigate Carey's allegations that
the Hoffa campaign broke fund-raising rules. He suggested that she petition U.S. District Judge David Edelstein to delay lhe election and that she
tum to the FBI for extra resmin:es,
"We welcome any scrutiny. We
filed all of our repons; they haven't
found · anything," Hoffa said.
"They 've had my repons forthe past
year."

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FRUSTRATEOIII NM&lt;1 SOmtono
To Talk To? Call Now For ·
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Per Min. Uust Be 18 Vrs. Serii'-U

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OPEN NOV. 23- 11 to 9;00

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TRUCKING·

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&amp; Trenching .
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614-742·2138
.. ...
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Handcrafted

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Majbe Uncom1orrablo Is Asking
someone For A Date? Tnen Got

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SPORTS

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YOUR QUESTIONS! 1·900·329·
1169, Ext 5407, $3.8i Per Min .
Must Be 18 Yta, Sef\1-U 81 t-645- .

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Swings, Benches, Tables,
Misc. Items
Ph. 985-4198

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1

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Giveaway

1 Year Old Male German ~
Shepnerd Mix, 151 4--448·3993.
tyr old half Australia" Sl\ephard ,
very good With kids. 30C-57e-·
2477.

,QMno
•Pupp;os
i1 not gono ~ Thank•·
we wilt hive 10 OIW them to
~~~minal Shellon. {1514~ 448·

=================:::.:
:Jmtml

Complele Machine Shop Senrlce Fabrication
Steel Sales, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
•

•

'4

Radiator Repair &amp;·Replacement
Monday-Friday-8:00a.m.- 4:30p.m..
Salurday - 8:00 a.m. - 12 noon

Big Bend .fabrication,
Machine. &amp; Welding Shop
250 Condor Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
ADivision on·NichOls Metal, INc.
. Phone: 614: 992-2406
· Fax: 304-773-5881
-

------ .....

Edelstein would hear any appeal
ROBERT BISSELL
of the rcpon by Conboy, who was
acting under a 1989 consent decree · · CONSTRUCTION
the union signed with the Juslice
•New Homes
Department to avoid racketeering
•Garages
charges.
•Complete
Meanwhile, the court-appointed
Remodeling
Independent Review Board, which
. StQp &amp; Compare
- Easy Bank Financing has the power to oust Carey from the
union, and a federal grand jury in '
FREE
u:,,m.,loa '28"" 1 month
New York, which could bring charges 1
ESTIMATEES
agalnst anyone involved in the
985-4473
1Heat Pumps lnstalled'\3r a month
alleged scheme, are conifrruing to ~;:=:::;;;;;;::7/22/lfn=~
Fret ElfiiMtH
investigate.
--·· ·- '
t&gt;ase0 011 8llii&lt;OY«l credit)
Carey's re-election over Hoffa
FBD
"last year was set aside Aug. 22. At
that time, the election overseer found
no reason to disqualify Care)', who
Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WI/
St4-446-t141S
had run on an anti-corruption platforin . ·
,OH
1'1110-172-7
t3111 Sellord
Carey's 1996 campaign manager,
Jere Nash, and two consultants, Martin Davis and Michael Ansara, pleaded guilty Sept. 18 to conspiring to
raise illegal funds. Conboy was
named to complete the inquiry after
. DUMPTRUCK
fresh testimony raised a connict of
SERVICE .
interest for the former election offiAgrlcunural Lime,
cer, Barbara Zack Quindcl.
Conboy's decision relied on union
Umntone • Grav•l
documents as well as ~stimony from
Dirt • Sand
C~y's executive assistant, Monic
885 4422
Simpkins, and Nash.
20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie' Jones
CI!Mter, Ohio

MobUa lome Furaac•
aad Baal Pumps

.IN1f11Bt

8 Puppies mixed Shepparcl, 6 wk.
okt 1-Brown, 1-81adl 1 Brown, and
4 all Black. (61414oi1-1335

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Free Part 881gle Part Shepherd
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an, Chocolate
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adull. Also men &amp; women ' s
&amp;hoes. 304-87$.3307.

Lost and Found

60

Found· block &amp; white tlooglo ~pe
do&lt;! 'llrlill"' blue collar, Peach F'orlt
Run area, 614-982·7859.
Found: Sea~lo. S'lvel R&lt;lge.' EH5
vicinity, call 10 (), 614·985-3882.

Found: male Walket'l coon hound,
Higley Rd., Middleport •lclnlty, call
614-742-2475, 614-742-2889 or
814·742-1408.

lost- male cat, white wtyellaw
ears &amp; tail, blue eyea, Willow
CrNIUPamidl vicinity, 1!114 -992·

7032.

70

· Yard Sale
Galltpolls
&amp; Vlclnhy

IP•-

&amp;Yoni-Muot
lo Potd In AtMnco.

PEAQUNE: 2!00 ~t.ln.
tlltdoyboloRtlleod
fa to Nn. Sundq
odllon • 2:00p.m.
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34718 St. Rt. 7

Teamsters president pledges fight
against ruling barring him from race

Bored Ohio Housewives I' a 1•
900·285·9077, Ext. •ses 11.

.-.....

O'DELL--...
LUMBER

WASHINGTON {AP) - As his
opponent called for him to quit the
union, Teamsters President Ron
Carey pledged to tight a federal official's ruling barring him from a
rerun election.
"I have done nothing wrong and
1 will fight this decision until it is
overturned," Carey said Monday.
Kenneih Conboy, a special adjudicator in the federal cleanup of the
union, disqualified Ca~y on grounds
he participated in an illegal scheme
to divert union funds into his re-election campaign last year. ·
Carey "tolerated and engaged in
e.tensive rules violations" and authorized spending $735,000 in union
treasury funds "to help his nagging
campaign," Conboy said.
"I have determined that the appropriate exercise of discretion in this
case is to disqualify Mr. Carey from
participating as a candidate in the
rerun election," Conboy wrote. He
said it was impossible to "excuse the
impact of such significant electoral
misconduct..,
Conboy's decision, which implicated otHer labor figures and a Clinton-Gore campaign official, was a
devastating blow to Carey, who was
known as a champion of refonn at a
union long plagued by corruption.
The . decision Monday also

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

(No Sunday Calls)

.614-949-3060

7:30p.m.

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992.Q15
Pomeroy, Ohio

614-992-7643

1'tM:M11 . .. ,..

Large ·16" Deluxe $12.99
Large 16" Three Item $9.99
992-9200

lar council mntlng 12-3-97,

(FREE ESTIMATES)

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room.Additions· Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES .

Chapter 13

AT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS

Mlddtepon VIllage Hall.
Bldl nled 10 Ill tumid In to
1111. Keull an or ·bofOI'II 4
o'clock Dtaember 3, 111W.
a1c11 wtU Ill D)llllld In regu-

•NewGaragn

•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Alto Concrete Work

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

614-992-3470

miY bl picked up II

CARPENTER SERVKE
•Room Addlllont1

Free Estimates
Still Takln Orders for Chrlstmaa

Must be able to work with multiple supenilors.
Contact ofBce of the Mayor
VIllage Hall, 237 Race Street
Middleport, Oblo 45760
992·2705
'Resnmes need to be 1111'11ed Into Middleport VIllage
Hall by Nomnber 26, 1997

RUBBISH CONTRAClS
3 y•r cantriCI • copln

YOUNG'S

· Heirloom Quality Cu1tom Furniture
• Complete Klt.ehens
* Kltehen Cabinet Refaelng
• Antique •eproduetlona
Handcrafted Using Meigs Co. Hardwood
614-992-4106

1898 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Qhlo 45769

reconls, prqlUidon of flaandal reports, tiCCOtJDtS
payable and actount5 recdwble experience.

Public Notice

614-742-3010
614-742-3324
614-742-30711

Pomeroy, Ohio

OILER'S

POSmON AVAIWILE
Wlage of Mlddleport
CI!NTIIAI. PvltcHAsJNG AGENT AND Mutn-omCE
'fi'OIIIa!R.
Requim Computer tlkllls, l}'plng sldlls,

Roofing, Siding, .
Pole Barna,
Decks, Painting
Call Us For A Free Eslimato

Hourw:
7:00 a.m. thru 4:00p.m. Monday lhru Friday
7:00 am to Noon S.turda

"Bulltl Your Dream"

992-6305

New HomM, AcldHI-,

LUMP AND STOKER COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED
DELIVERY AVAILABLE

1~-5800

WVI023477

33111
lllddt.porl, Ohio-;

i

•

•ervlee~~.---===::=~.;.; mo.; .;pd; ; .t.
110

STATE ROUTE 124
Approxlm1te!y 1.4 mllea 111t of Route 32.
' WELLSTON, ?HIO
614-384-6212

"FACTORY
DIRECI'
PRIC:ES"
Quality Window Systems

SERVICE ·

1 111 1117 1

(11) 18, 20,

Florals &amp; Gifts

pages were totally her," be said. "It
was dignified, sexy, sman, funny and I couldn't finish . I stopped. It
broke my heart."

i

.

12. Begin precautions in the gr
eery store by not allowing plastic
wrapped, raw meat juice to lea
onto fruits and produce.
13. Wash and disinfect can open
crs, kitchen scissors and the lids o .:
cans.
14. "Bacteria arc everywhere
Therefore, thoroughly wash a fres
pumpkin before slicing into it I
scoop out the pulp for making thos
holiday desserts so you won't intro
duce any possible bacteria into th
pulp. (Wise cooks even wash water
melons before slicing into the
even though they don't cat the rind.
15. Usc disposable paper towel
to wipe up spills and meat juice
rather than run the risk of possibl
contamination of dishcloth an
sponge.

]resh Cut Arrangements
• Silk • Pilgrim Glass • Crafts
• Personalized Crocks
• Beaumont Pottery
• Leaning Tree Cards
• Love Lite Candles ·

DUMP TRUCK SERVICI

Hippy-,..

H0111 lllpron••llfs

'

•

25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

bookkeeping, dHIIng with public, knowlcdae of
office procedures, experi(gce with pUI"h•stng
materials, payroll ~lion end rqxwting,
quarterly report prqlU!Itioa, keeping penoond

15 steps to a safer kitchen

Diana planned to star with Costner in 'Bodyguard' sequel
NEW YORK (AP) - Princess
Diana was negotiating before her
death to star opposite Kevin Costner
in a sequel to the movie "The Bodyguard," the New ¥ork Post reponed
today.
Diana would have played a role
loosely based on her life, with Costner u the bodyguar~ she falls in
love with, Costner told Premiere
magazine. The Post obtained a copy
of the story, which it said was to
appear in the magazine's January
issue.
The actor told Premiere he had
bepn negotiating with the recently
divorced princess more than a year
ago, the Post said.
"Sf!e said, 'Look, my life is
maybe going to become my own II
some point. Oo ahead and do this 1
scrip! and when it's ready I' ll he in a

Soap and water alone doesn't cut
it, he says.
Now, if you arc stil~ imagining
the microbiologist nctually making a
sandwich on his toilet, quit.
Gerba really dO.sn 't. In fact, he
prefer.; dining in restaurants to eating in his own home or in the homes
of friends.
His reason: Rcstauranls must
pass health department inspections;
home kitchens don't have to.

.-------·---~-----'-----------------------,

Blocking tumor necrosis factor eases both
heart failure and arthritis new study reports
By DANIEL Q, HANEY
AP Medical Editor
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Blocking a useful protein that sometimes
turns disastrously bad appears to be
a promising new way of treating two
completely different diseases rheumatoid anhritis and congestive
hean failure.
The protein is tumor necrosis factor, or TNF, a chemical" messenger
that is ordinarily an important pan
of the body's defenses against infections and injuries. While a little of
.Ibis stuff is good during an emergency, large amounts produced
month after month are hannful.
For probably different reasons,
the body overproduces TNF during a
variety of chronic diseases, making
them worse.
On Sunday, doctors presented·
results of a large study showing the
benefits of a TNF blocker in people
with advanced rheumatoid anhritis.
And on Tuesday, another team
offered the first evidence that the
same medicine may work . against
congestive bean failure, too.
An estimated 2.5 million Americans have rheumatoid anhritis.

wage germ warfare in your kitchen,
be adds, is bleach .
After you wipe off a counter,
pour a few drops of bleach into some
clean water ·and use it to disinfect.
He also advocntes the bleach
solution for use in the following
kitchen hot zones: for wiping out the
sink and the taps in the faucet, for
wiping off the refrigerator door handie, and for cutting boards, both
wooden and plastic boards. .

TRUCKING

KlltGS'

BIIMBI Mlllll

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

S&amp;L

Mkldleport
&amp; VICinHy
All Yo,. ...._ lluat lo Pohl to
Ad¥-. Doodlloo: t :IIOpM tho

clay ~•fore the ad Ia te , ...
Monday Millen:
1:01'Jpm Frtllay.
.,

Sunilay •

eo

Auction
and 'Flea Marttet

ATTENTION VENDORS: Indoor
Spoco 15.00 Ouldoor $3.00 Open
Ewr1da1. S1oro hours D·S. c:lord'a Ft11 Market. Hend.era,n

_ _ _ _. . WV.304-e75-5404.

'

�P19t 10 •The Dally Sentinel

PorMroy • Mldchport, Ohio

Tue•di~N0Yernber18,1897

!T~u•;•;d;•~y,:No~v~em~~~-~1~8~,!18~8~7~--~----~~----~~~--~--_!~~~m~MW~o~y~·=M:I:dd:•~port;;·;o;h:~::::~:::::::::::::::::Th::e:o:a~lly~Se:n:t:ln:e:I•:P:a~g~e~11j
ALLEYOOP

'

_______N
__E_A_C
__ro_s_s_w_o_r_d__P_u_z_z_le______~:l
PHILLIP

ACROSS

ALDER

1 Loving geeture

.

4 Nol on

3tl

411

7 WNI did you

and~et .

80

Will Do House Cleaning (614)
&lt;4&lt;11-111~

Will Do House Cleaning, Trust·
wonhy and Dependable (304 )

675-8738
Will haul junk or trash away. 1351
pi&lt;l!up load. 304-675-503~

Wanted 10 Buy

90

AbooluiO Top Dollar : All U.S. 511·
.,.,. And Gold Coins, Proofattl,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rlng t, Pre-1 930 U.S. Currency,
Slel'lino. Etc. Acquilidons Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, GalliP91is, 814-446-2842.

FINANCIAL

ine Antiques, Pom.,roy, Ohio,
Ruu Moore owner, 614-992 ·

2528.
Antiques· no ilem 100 Iaroe or too

$2,000 Weekly Ptuem~ l Profits
4() Local t-1 1-TratfiC Sites
1-800-724-1730 Ext1099.

OWN · PAY PHONES

$$

Sitts

refinishing, cu stom ordefl, 614·

$150K Yearly Pot'l. Great

992-8576.

Avai l. Cal! Now I 1·800-800-3470
24 Hrs.

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Truckl r ~ego Models Of Newer,
Smith Buiclt Pantiac, 1900 East·
em Nen.le, Galipolis.

J &amp; D's "uto Para, Buying sal·
vage vehicles. Selling parts. 304·
773-5033.
Wanted To Buy: Holiday Barbie's
1988, 1990, 1993. 1 9~4 . 614·

245-6887.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

HilpWanled

AVON I AU Areas I Shirley
Spelw:s, 304-675·1429.

ACTION YOUTH CARE, INC . is
seeking Therapeutic Foster Par·
ents for lincoln. Muon, Cabell
and Kanawha County area . Free
train1ng, 24 hour support, competitive reimbursement and the
opportunity to make a difference
in a childs life. For more mforma·
uon write Action Youth Care, Inc.
Thtfapeutic Fol!lf Care Program
PO Box 74 Prkhard, WV 25555

!NOnCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends tha t you do bual·
neu with people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mail until you have investigated
lhe o!fe&lt;ing.

own houn. $20k to $50kJv r

~-

8()()-3.41.. 7186 )11508.

DAVID WHITE SERVICES
Fui·Tim9 HVAC Installation
-Oualificationseflrolessional Oemenor
•ER\ Ceruficaoon
•2 Years Expeneoce

614-446-4940
800-275-2991

230

Professional
services

895-3591 after 6:00pm. no
smallortoBIG. WV-021206

·

Livingston's basement water·
proofing, all basement repa irs
done, free estimates, lifetime
guarantee. 10yrs on job experl·
ence. 3()4.675-2145.

ptus depoah, call evenings 81-C·

698-«102.
Two bedroom house and one
bodroom ....,....,, in Ml~~
61&lt;1-m·2178. ..

First Time Buyefl E-Z Financing

2 Bedroom trailer S2751dapoalr,

2 Or 3 Bedroom.s. Around S200t

$275/mo. References required,
no poll. 3!«75-4&amp;71.

14x60 2bdr, 1

boll&gt;. 304-675-5056.

820 Fourth Avenue, 2 Bedroom

Trailer, Water Paid $300/Mo.,
814~1-o573.

Free air, free sk:ift, 14J:7Q 3 bed· Three bldroom mobile home, no
room, $1 ,055fdown, $1G81mo. petl, 8l4-11112·5851.
can

H!oo~91-&amp;777 .

Two bedroom trtillr In R1clne,

Free air, lr&amp;e skirt, 18x80 3 or 4 814482-4441.
bedroom $1,350/down, $299/mo.

c,a;_II_I_·000_~_9_1_·B_m_.-:--:---:-I T11JD bldroom Ual(er for rtnl In

.:.962:.::.,1·--,--,..-:---c::--:-l monlh. 114-11112·2034.
Mobile Home. 2 G818Qit. On Lot 440
Aplll1ments
Po!lible Land Contract Location:
for Rent

IUV CNIS FOR 11100111
·Belztd And Sold Locally Thlo
Month. Trucka, ·h4'a, Etc. Being
Liquidated In Yaur Aroo Now. All
llekoo &amp; Mocllla Available. Coli
ToiFrooii00-1122·2730 x 4420.

lWin RIYtrl TOWif', naw a:O..C
for lbr. HUD lllblld=
lzod opt lor oldtriY ond hondiCIPflld. EOH 304-el'krl7'1.
2br

1

Fumlllltcl
~doled, HBO,
Clnomu, Showtlmo a Disney.
Wllldr Aalal; Or Montiy Ra•.

COnstruction Workera Welcome

614-441-51118, 114-441·5117.
Sleeping raom1 with cooking.
Alaa trailer space on river, All
hook-upa. Call alttr 2:00 p.m.,
304-n3-Se51,MuonWV.

P.Q Box826,

Mwillla. OH 45750.

plano Dr.ll4~525 ·

Pleaaant Valley Hospital has im·
mediate Optfljngs for ICCU nura·

460 Space tor Rent

Have DHd. Crtpl WIIK Plait AI
Hope Mausoleum, in .Memorial
Gordena, t•.ooo, Or Mag., 814·

Mobile home loll for ront Shoclr
Cove Ia now acc•r.ting appUCI•
tiona. OM monlh rtl for quell·
fled applicants. Na outslde pall.

387-78&amp;4.

JET

Hartford, --31128.

•

AERATION lotCIIORS

••· Recent acute care i'X"""ri·
,..ence desirable. Evening/Night
Jhlhl. Send resume to Personnel
It Pleasant Valley Hospital,
2520 Valley Orlv•. Pt. Pleasant,

510

quilled, ~-863-55116.
A &amp;IFumllure

-

HoUMhokl
Goods

Muon,WV

$400 8 14-406-7271 .
Appllanc11:
Reconditioned
W.lhlrl, D.,..,., Aongoa, Rofrl·
gratora, DO Day Guarantee!
French Cl1r Mar1ag, IU·448·
77115.
.

WV. 25550. MIEOE.
NOW HIAINQ
Gov't Postal Jobs Full Benefits,
For Info Col 1·800·9•2·5438 Ext.
3142.

faa, D~p
TatQ,
Upright Freezer, Large Cr,ea1

Freozor, Aulomollt Whirlpool
W - I Drrtr White, 814·37i272D, AFTER I P.M.

Rofrlgorollr. Walhlr. Oryor. Color

........

Sear~ Pro·Form ~ross walker
plua "raonal trainer treadmill,

T.V.• VCI) $50 Each. 814·258·
1238.

like new, S500 OBO 304·175·

,

~-

WARM UP: High Efficiency Nalu·
ral Anc:t LP Gaa Furnacn, life·
timo Warran~ On Heal Exchang·
or. "If Yau Don1 Clll Ua W. Bolh
loaat• Free Estlmatesl Add-On
Hill PU11111 On~ Slighly Hlghar.
Can Uo Toda1. ne7 to Tna
TftniJ Sevenlh Ve&amp;r In The
-ling &amp; Cooling Buoirwsal814448-8301, 1·1100-291·0096.

dftt'

car 11111, Tueaday through

frtder,

RN'S$1a.oo -$29.00 HR.
Choall Your Own Hours Private
Duty And Supplemental ~lOlling,
lmmediala Work Available In
Gallia, Mei"a. AnC Ron Coun-

lllllnHpm, &amp;14-1192-3725.

Holida~ lnn, State Route 7, Galll·
poliO. OH.

WESTERN MEDICAL

Cali

SEFIYICES
Marie For Appointment, 61 4·

e•e ew.

~tnic Hills' Alzheimer And De·
mentia Special UnJt Is Looltin g
For LPN'a And STNA's For Part·
Time And Fill-ln. LPN's Ele-gible

For SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL .
Pltlll Contact Pam Jonas At
&amp;14-441·7150 To SOl Up An ln taVR For Eilw Po&amp;ition.

WANTED: Reliable lllperienced
green nouu worlttr. Call 30•·
812· 3128 Leave lnfOrRJation &amp;
phononurrl&gt;or.

180 WlnledTo Do
11111r11Gif"IG in "'' home In Aotlno,
retwencea IYailablt, 2 years old

lup,ll...-1311.
Furniture repair, refinish and ret·
IO,.lion, atlo CUIIDM OrderS. Ohio
Vellay Refinishing Shop, Larry
Ptilipo, &amp;14-992-857&amp;.

Georgea Portabl'l Sawmill, don'l
hlul,your loa• 10 1he mill jult can
~75-1857.

$73,000. 61H46-•173.
' Bedroom, full size basement.

New Remington 7400 243 cali·
ber, 4x11 power high country

u urrns d, anced u;ack yard, 2
car detached gaf3ge, Camp Con ley area. 304-fiJS-8865.'

ocopo $500. Now Marlin 33eCS
35 Roml~~n caliber 3x8 Weov·
tr ocope
. 304-6~181.

COUNTRY HOME

ON 1 ACRES,
SCOTTOWN, OIUO.
Miles From Proc toville, 3, 400
Sq. Ft. Living Area, 2 Story, 3
Bedrooms, 2 112 Baths, F.lnlshed
Be
F" 1
ll"· N
ament, 1' 8 P ace, ew, 4

car 1)8.rage, near Pomeror on Rt
33, mid IWentie&amp;, 614·387·7814.

Grea1 Neighborhood 5 Miles
South 01 Gallipolis, 3 Bedroom
Home, Oak Cabinets, 1 112 Balhs,
Carport, Barn, 1 Acre, Add itional
Land Av111ilable S?D,SOO, Phont:
fi14· U6 0035.

Home in country with 38 acres,
only 7 years old, with twa bed·
rooms, IMng room, khchen bath,
utalty room, stora~»&amp; txJitding, with
cellar, one car oarage. located
on Bailey Run Road, Bil houH on
leiL Reduced 185,000 firm, call
614·384·2097 or 614-04~2838.
NEW HOME under construction,
ntOril COmp!Oiod, 1,344 oq. It, 3
bedrooms. 2 batht, utility room,
I!Ont pgrdl, bad&lt; dod&lt;, Iorge M .

Pageyifle, near Albany, $93,000.

Ohio OreamHome Builders, 1·
-11041 , 614-69~1 .

1118.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

mo. 2 l!alhl. Htol
arM. FtN tttimlttt, r••nc... · Pump, G.E. Appllancet, Exctll.
&amp;1~51110.
Cond. , loon, WYa .• Sl3,500 &amp;14horM , am or pm shlh, 814-378-

$2250008CI010 COUNTY

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Wood !Stone Home+ ,11 A'rta ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
Bern~ Pond, M-~ $144,1100 ~om !12eO 10 .334. Wllk 10 shop
Exua Land Aniloble, 1-eoo-2!3· &amp; movloo. Call 814·•40· 2568.
83115.
Equal Houolng &lt;lllllorUrnity.

350 Lola &amp; Acreage
2.07 ICrtl 5ml OUI on S8ndhlll
Rood, ., 8,1100. 304-e75-38 1&amp;.
BuUding lol For Sate, Syrt:cuu,
Ohio, Nice Area, $18,DOO, 8U11112-7727.
HUHTlHE
SIIECIAI. OF !HE WEEK
In lleigo Coumy, lol It, 20 Acreo, Moodowt. Hilto, Woodo Road
Frontage 125,000 LOti Al10
Available 111 Jad(aon, Ross, Pike,
Athena, Scioto Countiea. land
Contrtctl. 3% Caah Discount
Anlhony Land Co., Lid. , 1· 800·
213-«115.

Downotaita Aport,..n~ 4 Rooms,
Waltr Paid. NO PETS, II Cedar
s ..... 614-3811-11110.
Efficiency On Eastern Avenue,
Wllhlt &amp; Dryer, Utilltill Paid,
&amp;1...-2515.

s.ooo.

Eitra r.ce, 2 bedi'Oom, Aft tltc·
uic, Furnished kitchen, WID
Hook·Up. CioN lo Spring Valley,
No Patol $375.00 Mor11h. o-111
, Reference required. (814) •48·
6157 .,., •:pm.
Furnished Efflciencr, AU Udlllies
Pllld, Shoro Belli, tiBSIIIo., 919
S.OOnd ,.,...,., Phono: 114-44631145.
Gracious living. T and 2 bl&lt;froom

-

apartmtm at Village Manor and
Riv.rlldl Apt.rlmenta In Middle~

port From t231·•304 . Coil &amp;14DA2·5084. Equol Houalf"IG Opper·

.

\Mndowt, dec!&lt; and an remodeled
lnskfe, 81042· 1345, 814-982·

ough, Pordond, Aaclno, Pomeroy · Homo, 2

1«10.

Aparfment for rtnl on VIand St
Call 304·175· 21 7-4 from G·S or
~~L':~'::
&amp;1...-2200 aiiM 5pm.
Newer Hou11 w /Pool + 50 Acr· Apartments For Rent On First
es ·Barna, Meadows, Pond, Ann.Ht, 814~1.

Three bedroom houae in Syracuse, basement, garage, new

HouiC!olnlng- . - t and lhor· · Ux70. 1~0altwood Mobile

llolhot,. of lhroo wll boiJrlil In m1

GOLF CI.UBS:

2511--89110.

187D l&lt;x70 Buddr. Ni .. Condl·
lion, On Rented Lol, 114· 44'1·

1327, 11~21115.

Pr-llonol TrH 5et'VIce, Stump I
Removal, Fret Estlmalaal In· 111118, 14X70 Cla111n !&gt; ~. 3
,.,..,.., Blctwol. Ohio. &amp;14-368· bodroomt, 2 llalho, W/Hoa1
Pump. $15,000. (II•) ..U.Ie
- · &amp;14-3117-7010.

UnlurniiMd

a AtoriQiraiOJ

Cllr1&gt;aga Paid,
Calll14·44&amp;·.

3117-7533.

.

Building ·
Suppllts

550

Winchester model 1"00 Ranger
12 !IIIUUO. venl-rib- 1M&gt; 1trew Black, bficlt, aewer piptt. wind·
in choktl, 1110 haa slug barrel, owa. linlell. etc. ClaudtWinlllfs,
Rio Grandt, OH Call 614· 245,
S3)0, &amp;t4-&amp;13-5210.
5121.

530 ·

Antiques

Pets for Sale
A Groom Shop ·Pti Grooming.
Featu,ing Hydro Bath . Don
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd .

Bur or sell. Rlverin• AntiqUes,
112" E. Main Snet, on At. ,~.
Pomoror. Houra: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. fo o:oop.m.. S&lt;lndlr 1:00 11
8:00p.m. 8~"·182·2528, Auea
--·

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

-

~._

814...e-023t

----:,.---'--~
AKC BoJCtr Puppies, 6 Weeks

!II,.,

Old '2!50, Coli Be,_.n 4 and 9
P.M.
441-1802

1

112 Corot Diamond
Ring, Paid tl,400
1700,&amp;14-3811-8151.
2 GraM Sltll · ·3 00, Memorlll
GonllrW. &amp;14-.25lllll
20 + " Call Trencher C•ll 114·
-..7842 A,., 4 P.M.

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

2300 dllch WiiCh lrtnchor. Call
114-78421fllr 4prrL
55 Gollon A9uorfum Wllh Waocl·
on S111nd, Compllto '250, 114·
3JI.2388.

:;;:..;;;;:,;;.--,.--:---:---:--1

AKC Gorman Shepliord PUPPI.
12wks old, · female, 1st shota 1
-mocl 304-175-8630.
AKC male miniature Doberman.
iara • tail done • au lh01S, •e
month~ old, rusl A black, very
good Wllh ·~-. $300. call 81 ..
742·201, - 5pm,
.

Alpha 1 Orchard Gran Mixed,
Phone: 614 ·4~8 ·1 104, 1114·4"1·

IM50.

Ooko Har For Sale. Round Blllo,

-t

-1111, bod,
· high 304·871·
-·..,
awtno· 1-rock•r.
4541.

Credit Problema? We Can Help.
Eaay Bank Financing For Used
Vth1c1ea, No Turn Oowna, Call
Vld&lt;le, 614-446-2697.
Need A Car, No Credit? Bad
Credit? Bankruptc~? We Can
Helpl Reestabiiah Credit, Uu11
Uake $150 Week, Take Ho~ 10
To 20% "Down 12 Monthl &amp;
12,000 Miles, Warranty Ava!labtl,
This Is Bank Financing, 114-448·

-

mtsliQI -

Wll houlll&gt;baoc:o. 304-875-20117.

TRAN SPORTATION

Avai la~e.

304·458·106i.

720 Trucks·for Salt
1978 GMC 1 Ton Dutr Good

710 Autos for Sale

Shape, New: Pa1ts, Tires, Bedlln·,
er, Filth Wheel· Bail, Plus Reel&amp;'
Hilell,

$4,650. 61 4-4&lt;48·3100.

.

199'1 GUC SLE PU, 350 loaded;

$6,500 : 1990 FoJd lariel XLT
lo;,ded, $5,200: 1991 Chi\'., S·IO:
Blazer • Door, $6.200: 1992 ford ·
Ranqtr PU: $3,000; 1990 Chtv.,"
lumme Van $2,900: 1991 S 10

PU $2.200: 1989 S.IO PU $1,500:
B&amp;D Auto Sales. Hwy. ,60 N.
61H46-8565.

.

1\.W..O, N.! ~~1m~ LHll£
Of"f" 11\€. TOP TCXlf\Y !

ellliW..!

~

t
~

'1'00 lt·ol

WII.\Lf.!

_YQU SEE WHAT THIS
MANS? I 'Ll, DIIAW
C~ATUIIES OF ~LL
THE TEACHERS! J 11A'&lt;

40,000 Milos, •1.200: 19&amp;0 4&lt;411-&lt;1199.
Dodgi Caravan, Aulomatic, 2.51.,

• C11.. Clean, Rtlloblt, $3,200, 19g4 Jeep Cherokee countrv,
614-&lt;4&lt;16-7215.
auto, 4x4, 4dr, new tire• &amp; tun- ·
1ery, all power, hitch. 304·875·
1985 Nlaaan 300: 1971 CheY1 5&lt;28.
wteektr, 480 Haimes bed, dual
winchas; cell 81"·949·2355 or 1e9e Dodge Ram 1500 4x4 Load·
&amp;14-1149-3117.
ed, 24,000 Mi..-; 614-379-9384.

NEW.R HAVE TO DO

ANOl"HER

89 Ford Bronco .11, 4x.. . Eddie
Bauer. loaded, e.:celenl condition, :
.4900, 6U·992·27&amp;2.

740"

Molorcycles

$2,400, 080 814-3117-0138.

1989 Cavalier Auto, ·79,000 Mitts,
$2,295; 19110·Grand Am 5 Speed,

NADA $3,775 Our Price : $1,995,
Cook MoiOrs. B1+4&lt;411.(1 103.

Four Jack Flulloll twrier puppiN,

Weal

North

East

Pass

16
Pass

Pass

column

I NT

28 Bound
28 Okloge
30 Uncooked
34Poetic

35

loo1

TOWI(d

lhe

center of

36 SlyiUI

38 Actress
Francis

·I

s

II PI I·

'J

'

•

I 0

1g95 300 EK Honda. Call Alter
4:30 P.M. 61 4-245·51 sa.

•

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQU"ARES

Good Condition, $2,500 No Lt.,,
614·446-4173.

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS

760

•
•

750 Boals &amp; Molars
for Sale

Indigo- Vista - VVIlole - Optics - GOSSIP
My friend feels worse lhan anyone when she gelS
larvnaitis. because she is such an avid GOSSIP.

NOVEMBEF11al

AulD Parts &amp;
Accessories

BUDGET PRICE TRANSMIS· :
SIONS, Used /Rebuilt, All Tjpeo, ·
,ggo PondiiC Grand Am 12,500; Accen Over 10,000 Tranamia·
111110 Pon1loc Grand Prl~ $2.500; &amp;Ions, &amp; Clu~hes' 614·24S..5C:In
1013 Ford Tlurus, $3,900; 11~2
au tanka, 1 ton truck
Ponnac Grand Prix S4,1100: 11113 N.ew
Fard Faauva 11,700; BID Auto w~ls &amp; rad1atoF1. 0 &amp; A Auto,
Rtpley, WV. ;J04·372-3933 or 1·
Sale&gt;, Hwy. 1&amp;0 N., 814-«11-6685. 800-273-9329.
1901 Thunderbird, 3.8 VB. reel,
sunroof, new Michelin radials,
SERVICES
prk:a rarluced. 304-675-55118.
$5.600. 6, 4-448-4222

810

Homt
lmprovemanls

BASEMENT
WATEAPAOOFIIO •
Unconditional llllllin. guarantee.
loc:al references furnlahed. Es·
!lbliahed 1975. Coli (814) •4&amp;·
0870 Or 1·800·267·0516. Rogers
Waieri)JQOfi~

-:--::---:---:-:--Appliance Par II And Serv ice· AU
Name Brands Over· 25 Yeara E~e·
!)l'rt.nce All Work Guaranteed,
French City Uaytag, 614· 448·

77115.

millt, leather Interior, gold
PICkage, Alloy ~hllll, Unltd '
windows, still under warrantr.
$13,500090.304-675-2342.

(&amp;14)~714

. star

25 Sinful
27 Door-

By Phillip Alder
·41 Game fish
42 Slorage
Bri~ge Today magazine began in
building
Jamaica, Queens, N.Y. Bu1 a few
43 Car
years ago lhe edi10rs, Pam and Matt
44 Duck
46 Very small
Granovetter, moved 10 Israel. How·
quan111y
ever, they continue .10 pul oul six . "'"rl--1-47 Once-a
issues per annum wilhoul any apparlime
48 Repair
ent difficully. The contenl is aimed a1
49 Shoul of
the tournament player, bu1 it isn't as
amusement
high-level as The Bridge World.
51 Cask
My favorite column is wriucn by
Pete Kichline under lhe title The
CELEBRITY CIPHER
Traveling Score. He gives a single
by Luis Campos
deal that contains one or two instrucCMbrity CIPher cryptogrartl5 are cre.lvd lrom qwtallons oy famou&amp; p&amp;Ople past and pro!SMl
E.ch letter Ill lha ciPher llandl ltlr MOther fodly! clue M ffQUltls R
.
tive poinJk, along with a traveling
'
score-sheet from a palr evenl, which
' IVX
Z B C f
JCXUJK
I V .G 0 E V N B J I
shows 1he results.at every table. This
is· one of his deals.
v HMGOOGHKX
GC
IYVI
Gl
DVO
· How should the play go in two
hearts?
.
VKPVTC
NX
CVDMGUGDXL
I B
South's 1wo-heart bid is most definilely non-forcing. With a strong
XSHXLGXODT. '
P . CBZXMCXI
r... hand, he starts by·doubling lhe oneI ~~ Tl\\1-11(.. l W..VE ~'( OllU no-trump overcall.
ZVJEVVZ.
Clf'rl 00:) I
The defenders are lrying to gel six
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The no-hitter I pitched actually cosl me money. I had ·
' tricks via three diamonds, the club
lo buy drinks for e~eryone :- eo Belinsky.
ace and two trumps. The declarer, in.
lighting to hold his lrump losers to
\
one: ainis to lead the st1ii twice from
the dummy so thai East's ace falls on
..
low cards.
lMAl DAILY
WOlD
East starts by laking three diaPUULII S©~c{l1AGAM I
- - - - - - - Edltod by ClAY a. POUAN _.;;__ _ _ __
mond tricks. If he continues with his
last diamond, it promotes lhe heart
Aeorronge let1ers of the
0 lour
' .
jack as a trick, but South will discard
Kromb1ed words be·
low
·to
form
four
simPle
words
his club; a classic loser-on-loser,
East musl switch to a club. Tlien,
when in with the heart ace, he leads
Aw L E E
the 13th diamond for the critical
trump promotion.
'
Additionally, if y0u are inlo movie
reviews, Pam Granovener wrote 180
of them in "Movie Guide for pridge
Players." For details of this book and
.
10 subscribe ($27 for six .issues), call
(800) 525-4718.

1988 Ranger 373V 18' 12 ·24V
1D&amp;a Dodge Shalby, lumbar Trolling Motor, 150 XP Evinrude
IHtt, loaded, uooo 080, e.... Du-rd. $11.800, 614,DQ2-2770.
1192-5529.
1990 Olds Cullan Supreme,
Loaded, Standard, l.ftather See.la,
CD, 69K, Excellent Condition

J

aide

19 Actor Sharif ·
21 Driller's deg .
23 Waver
24 Soccer

'

Nine WHk old Boxer pups, llrat
ahot1, dew claws removed, tails
dockod, Sl25, 614-742·2525.

Bo110n Ttrrlor for ulo. 814·DA2·

8 Puts to work

9 eall11 Poced
13 TwiBI IO one

lG t.i!S"

leu Than 1993 Ford E1plorer, loaded, 814·

1987 Dodge Dakota Motor Runs
Good, Nelda Trans, Sill As l1 ;
t987 Corsica Runs Real Good,
Real Nice Car; Hl88 Nova Nice
'Work Car; tG88 Sable V•y Nice
And CIHn Car In Good Condi·
lion; 198g Dynasry Very Good
Clean Car, Runt Good ; 1879
Chevy Pick-up, Runs Good ,

rr

f'flll),

1992 F~d F-1 50 5opd, lonil bod,
11711 Corvttta, L·B2 E"lll· Conlf. 11.000 mllea. $6.500. 30•·875·
$10,DOO . III4) 387-0328 Aller 542Hftt&lt;,Spm.
4:30
1993 limited Ford Explorer, Dk.
107lt Z·28 Camara Runs And Cranbe~ry. Loaded. 73,000 MI.
Looks Good, $1,500, Ptone: 614· Good Condllion. (814) «6·7310
256·1521.
U·Haui Co. Has Uaed Trucl(s For
1881 Ford Mustang, new llrea. Sale, caH 1·800-282-as75.
new brakes, 87 ,OOOiclual mil H.
730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
$SilO. 304-875-78, 2.
IIIII podgt [)rnaoly LE 3.0 new 1e&amp;e Chevrolet Attro Cargo van,
w1ter pump &amp; radiator. $2,500 good condition, 12250, 614·992·
615-4.
080. 304-773-5054.
1085 Mercury Grand Marquis, ~~ GMC Solari Cus1om. 54.950
Automatic:, 302, V-8, flemanulac· 61•·«&amp;.-•222
1u,.d Engine H11

THE BORN LOSER
rr

e250 each; fi~1 Mlnlat~u• Collie
Silo! dol. t 125 IICh; will hold unil

2013.

1:oopm. or ClwlsUNs \Mih depooil, 11 4-742·
20!0.

... 5:3IHI:GOprn.
Botll By Rodwlng. Chlppowa,
Rock)', Tony Lama.. Gu1r1ntHCI
LDMII Prices AI Sl1oo Cafo, Gof.
ipoli~
.

.

General Home Wain- •
tenence· Painting, vinyl aiding,
aulD, red, loaded, extras, 38,400 carpentry, dooft, windows, btif'ls,
milts. E11c. Cond1 S10,000 . 304· mobiil hOml repair and more: For
175-:1187.
tree ootimalt call Ch&amp;t, 614-992·
&amp;323.
.
11103 Dodgo- lnlrepld Loaded,
Tiroa, $7,500,
OENNY"S PLUMBING
56,000 Milta, 11 .. 256 ·
lnllllllation a Ropewl7\ltars
Experience
Faucets•
1893 Hrundoi Sharp, Till, QT
Woil Purnpa'Hotl ColdWaltr·
Package, 42 MPG , AC, CD, 5
linn call304-578-2681
Speed, EJCelionl Condition,
··FREE ESTIMATES··
34,000 Mlleo. $4.500, OBO 814·
37e-2845. ·
·
Roger's ,Plumbing Service, Ex · •
perienced, Free Esdmates, Cali
1H3 Ponlilfc Grand Am Auto, 2 Aflar s, 614-446·8568.
, .
Doon. NC. Power Lookl, Til~ CD
Ptaror. Now Tlrea. Amer. Racine 840 Electrical and
Whttll,
&amp;5,000ll4-«8·11&amp;48.
Mllll, I OWnor, l--.2:~~~~~-­
Prlct,

\3113.
-card ln.IIJIIriH.
,.
Qll
.,.. ,.,. - . . hard .. Cocktail, Male• and Femalas,

find action ftgur11. PrieN below
current n.f'Ut wWua. Jull In lime
for CM-• Coif lor laltsl price
quoits and dololla, 114-g441-301111

$15, Delivery available (614)

3117-7554

111112 Cnavr Lumina, 3.1 Multiporl
Y·l engine, air, till. cru111, amltm
alereo cauelte, aulomallc, 4
door, new tires, ·un clean In liiNI
AI&lt;C Reg. Sharpai chocolate Ia· · ou~ $31195. 614-002·6624.
malo. 614-1192-6112.
1892 Cttrylflr Ll8aron Convert·
AICC Registered Buset F'uppiea, able V·8, Auto, Air, Good Condl·
CFA Re8iltered, Seal Point lion, $5,250, Nog.; 11183 Z2• ConSlam••• Kiu1n1; New Boya 12 vertallie V-6, NADA loan, Aulo,
Spaod Huffr BICjCIO, 614·367- SB.375. Asl&lt;lrtQ $8,500, Nea.• 111113
71115.
Dodge Sj&gt;rill Aullmatic. Air, Good
Condition, $3,550 Nog., e 14·256·
AKC Rogiallred Dalmatian pupa. 17J8, 814-258-1252.
clllmplon llno, bred for llmpota·
menl, adults alao available, 1ea2 Pl~mouth Sundance White,
Chrla1ma1 bablei comlrag, rea· Sporty, ~ Doors, Also Air, 15,600
aonabll prlcaa. &amp;14-74~-3342.
Miles Asking $3,250, OBO 81•·
258-K!O, &amp;14-258-8.e7.
AKC Reaistered Pekln8tle,
1893 Camara (new a1yle), V-8
S1SO,It&lt;f.25e eooa

55 Gallon Flah Tank, Exctllanl
Condldon. 1250. Call Evonlf"IGI,
:81:.;•:..•:.;.0:.;.;100&amp;:.;.:;._,__ _= - l
Alumlrun Slorm Wl.-a DiHor·
om Fol Older ._, Spor• 111q1o Puppies. S20 Eocn, Rae·
Cord Colloclion, VCR Vldoos, _,Rood, &amp;14-441~17.
MUll 81111114 0428.
tOga! tank set up lptCIIIt. Filh
Aohley wood • - with b l -. Toni! a Pal Shop. 2413 Jackson
~. 114-M7-42112.
Avo. Polnl Plouanl, 304·&amp;75·

U:c111ne part
4 TrtCkl

3

From Jamaica to
Netanya ·

White Glbaon electric range,
1896 Honda 300 EX. Manr EX·
$150; Kitchen Aide portable Clilh- . Needa Some Body Work, Theta lrlll Excellent Condition 614·
Cora
And
Trucks
Are
All
In
Good
WIIahtr, gold, 150; call 814·992·
Shape And Are Cheap. 814·256· 44«3-39.45.
5187or6,4-992·7233.
,'
65&lt;4&lt;1.
1996 Wolverine 4K4 Excellent
Woodburner With Blower, Fuel
1987
Mon1e
Corio
Super
Spor~ T- Conditio~ · s3,aoo, 61&lt;-256·6899.
Oll Stove With Blower, 2 Ga1
Topt, 305, Corvette Railey 's Honda 1Q86 TAX 250R 2 SlrOkl,
Slaves, Fuel Oil Furnace, 814·

Mli:le Tom,. Armour Etc.
Built Clubi, Indian

3 ·4 Bedrooms, Optional Fimlly
Room, CA , 2 Baths, In-Ground

Yean Old S175,0 00, e 14·643·
•
~4. Or 514-643-2522. '
1111. Vent Experience Or ACLS 1:--'--.:.:.:-==-~-Ptlfllied 1M Not ReqUired.
Four bedroom house, one bath,
LOCAL INTERVIEWS:
li ving room. k1tchen, utit1ty .room,
Tues., Nov. 18th, 1 -8 P.U . Or dining room, unattached single

Wed., Nov. 19th, 8 A.M. · 11 A.M.

ChinlH M·H SA: Eagle AR-1&amp;:
814-:178-7814.

330 Farms fo'r Sale

640 . Hay &amp; Grain

Roc:-. Living
Room Ct.lro. SoLeaf
Frlgidalra

1

$4,000 1 ·5 Bdrm.. Locai ,GIW't. &amp;
Bank Repo's Call 1·800-522·
2730, X I 709.

MOMMY'S GOT A SUGAR
COOKIE FER TATER!!

Roln- wllh oil atllc:h·
mentl incJudlng carpel shampoo·
tr, ~ Qood condillon, $250,
11 4
7582 aile&lt; &amp;pm.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waaheral. dryers, refrlgeralort,
ranges. l&gt;kaaa• Applloncll, 78
Vlno SVHI, Col 814·4-18·7318,
UOO 4111134DO.

Moc&lt;lrew

33 Conteminated

5 Naval•addr.
6 Swoon
7 Healthy

Opening lead: • 10

STOP ·SOUAWLIN' ll

Bur, Sell, Trade
Uaad I Antiques I
Fumiwre.
· •
304-773-5341. '

3 Place flloyhill Counlry Bluo U..
i_ng Room Sulw. With Oak Trim,

The Pomeroy Thrift Shop· now
buying levi jeans only, mftn'a.
women'o lind chlldron"s, · al"'~lhlo
gl~l dreOitt, !qjl. dOll I and' IDd·

BUY HOMES AS LOW AS

&lt;BARNEY

s,...

Upright, Ron Evans Enterprlan.
Ja'*-, Olio, 1-800-537-9528.

~

South

8172, Or 614-384&lt;3042.

Oulltl for nle, hand pieced and

43 Up to thlt poln1
oay?
(2 wda.)
10 - 81. Laurent 45 Ptatlorm
12 poloon 41 Murmuring
14 Ug111-sound
1-r
50AIHII
15 Pork or steak 52 Swinging
16 Hard work
ttrida · .
53 lfad dinner
17 Flower
necldacl
54 Muoleoi
18 Not wide
compoallfon
55 Horrow'e rival
20 Unclothed
paroon•
·se Fanner's 1oo1
22 ~~~ ou1
, 57 Noun suffix
24 Having teet
58 Aloo
28 Surfeit
30 Move in the
DOWN
oppoolll
1 50119 ol praln
direction
2 Layer oflhe
31 Ztro

32 Ac1reH

63

_.._oha!*

Group of nine

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

Kenmore Walher &amp; Dry., $100 ,Square hales $1 .50 to $2.25 1
Upton Used Cars Rt. 82·3 Milet
Pair, Full 011
Pluo 275 Got· rrilo N. Rt 2. 304-875-$80.
South of leon, WV. Financing
ion Full Tonk. $150 F"' Plllr, 614-

310 Homts for Sale

· he 1

• uioa

j.lwren"" -

6 8

Mobllo- Homo Space For Ronl,
&amp;14-«6-3117.
.

«11·11 72, 814-256-8251.

• A 8
•AKQ7
6QJii2

• 6 4 3

Aapoired, New &amp; Reoolr in SlOe~
Col Ron EviWI~ 1·80().537-8528.

MEf1CHANOISf.

6 J 94

7 2

6 A 7 53

Mollilo homo till IVIIIIblt bol·
ween Athena 1nd Pomeray, call
&amp;14-315-4387.

•1

nt

• J

South
6!"086
• K Q 10 9

ahor 5pm.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon

~~1 .

Ea8t

6 7 5 3

&amp; LIVESlOCK

Grubb'a Pilno· tuning I repalra.
PYobltma? Nood Tunad? CaH tilt

Pickage. ca1 &amp;14-662-8613.

Please Respond To:

6 K

Wettt

For Solo Packard Boll 75MZ
P111tlum Multimedia Computer
With 1S Inch Co tor Monitor.
Wlndowa OS and Mic~osoft
Worka. E•c•llent Sy111m.
UIIS.OO Sunbtom Gu Grill Wllh
Side Burner. Needs Main Burner.
120.00(114)«6-1155

Kln;a Motel lowest Allt11 In

Q2

• J 52
10 8 4

EEK&amp;MEEK

•!ill.

OTR SMJ~i·Tractor !Trailer Driv· IJ-"!'o!"p,;,porl_un•i•ly•ba•s•is•
. -~
era. Excellent Pay &amp; Insurance 11

OR &amp;ICU Elt1&gt;01 ieuced Alro
wanllld ro. Ntwlr DIYolo~ng
Nursing Regis!Jy. Self Schedullr&gt;;l
And Corf118ilitve Compensadon.

..,.... ~--

FIJ11W00&lt;j, SPlit l aeaoontd, well
rounded lood
3114175-7937.

Rooms

tt-tB-97

6 A K
• 54

1-800-537-1521.

RIVE ASIDE WHOlESALE

REAL ESTATE

Nort

300' Thru 2,000 Goilona Ron

law. Our reads!'$ are hereby
Informed that au dwellings
advenlsed in th is newspaper
are available on an equal

E_.._

4i2Rcufr

IH8~~ta.....

~'lllnl EnterpriMa, Jlc:kson, OH

limitation 01' discrimination .~

Oak Hill, Ohio Based Trucking

.

Poodle puppl ... tiny toy ;· alao 1895 S&amp;~rn SC2, AUIOrMUC. Air,
miniature Schnauzer, champion Cruise, AMIFM Calltltt, Trunk
bloodllno, malo. AKC; 614-667· Release, $1~000 Calf Alief 5 P.M.
.;.!MCM...:_._ _;,_~-~---:--1 cseriOUI Inquiries Only I, 814·
Wolf HJbrldl, Ctlowt, Huakiel, 440•.015.
Mal~•' &amp; Poodles, Uust Sell I ~ 996 b&amp;ack Chevrolet Monti Car·
11.-29.
fo, POL, PW, olr, ~~ aulae, 3. I i·
1re V·CS, •xcellent condition,
113,800 firm, t1.4·e82·7502 after
FARr.1 SUPPLIES
&amp;pm.

a 2br, no Concrott l Plltdc Stotic Tanka,

make any sucl:l preference,

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor realesla,le
which is in violation of the

Autos for Salt

..,_31M-&amp;

OP\ for ,.,_ 304-e.,.

WldQI Al&gt;anmtn10 1br
- 304-67ft.2072.

_seo__Pet_a_fo_r_Sa_l•__ 1710

Chtck DUtt our Gu Unvented
Htattra (Natural or Propane,.
Starling at $1&amp;4 .95. We 1110
have Buck Stove lrand of Gas
ln1111nt Flrep':s~~~tnt Plus

1~

Crown City, 81-4·256-17«.

All real estate advertising In
this newspaper ts subjed: to
tno F-., Flllr Houslr&gt;;IAI:I
ol1968 which makes it illegal
to advertise "any preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, colof, reUgk&gt;n,
se,; familial status or national
~n. or any Intention to

4992.

Componr II Sotking

U6·9416 Bennett's Supplv. 13D1
Safford Scnoot Rd. Gallipolis,
Ohio.·

F..,

r

Met'cllancll•

con&lt;llllon. $75. 304·733·

Counur Home: 1275/Mo., Dopolit Town, Nowty

large
selection of used ho mea. 2 - · 814-11112-50311.
or 3 bedrooms. Starling 11 $2995. Two bedroom. Mulberry Avenue,
Quick delivert. Call 814·385· Pomeroy, ga1 heat, $150 per

eronc:es S,...ld Be Mailed Br I 11
26197 To GMCAA, Box 272.
Clwlllifo. OH 45620 EO£.
Nutting Assistant Or Homemaker
To Pnwlde In Home Services For
Tne Elderly !Disabled In Lawrence &amp; Gallia Co. Aren $6.00
An Hour, Please Call 1·888-453-

-·

3 Btclroom $450/mo. • $250 d•
paait + utilities, blttment, ga·
"""'· polio ' large ~- 304-875-

$299.95, Anchors $S.OO, Awn- Requi'od, 814-256-1651 .
Ings, Doors, Window•. Plumbing
Suppliea, Water Heatera, Fumac· Pomt&lt;or, 107 Pleasant Ridge, 3
es, fiberglan Stept, Gall 814· bedroom, 1 and hall bllthl, $312

iab to ClaytontEastwlnd

IIIII Awn. call614-949·9009.

1

$300/dopoalt. Availablo Dec 111.
-2920 01'304-882-3.274.

304-675-&lt;4078",_, metoogo. .

HARTS MASONARY · Block, Mo.. 1·800·251·5070.
brick &amp; stone work, 30 years ex·
~rienCe. reasonable rates. 304· For Sale Or A1sume loan-1994

Earn extra monev lor Christmas,

'

2bldroom, ntwl)' remodeled
M .u aeln New Haven, S300fmo.

FIRSTnME BUYERS.
IIUI11rdudld. 614-1182·2187.
E·Z FINANCING
2 or 3 Bedtooms around S200 per 2 Bedroom Mobile Homo, 814·
month. 1-tl)()-251·5070.
«6-9569.

~-

Agency Is Accepting Applica.
Fol Tho f'Oiilion 01 Emptov.
ment And Training Director. 4 •
Year Degree In Business. Social
Services Or Related Field, 5
Yean Experience Program Ad·
minJitration And Career DewkJp.
ment 1Job Training Desired .
Rasumes And 3 Profeuional Ref·

2 -•llrr 110U101 "" ren1 In Flu·
lind, conlllct Kim 304-773-8585.

Custom Built Doublewlde1 Ove;
250 Available Options, Vou Pick 3 Bedroom Ooublewldt, 1·112.
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1893 Oakwood 14i:70, au.
cond .. heat pump, Mingled root,
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ol056.

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rent&amp;d lot in country Mttlng, call

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tor Rem

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1D05 Monte Carta lou.d, 32.000 Res idtnrlll or commercial wiring,
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1711l.

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!!!~!!~~=~===~~~Hi~-~II~S=w=·ion, New York, }ly 10156~

your luck should remain intact today.
ASTRO·ORAPB
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. In venues where you don'l boast an
21) You are likely to be better at man- impressive lnlek record. work will be
aging lhe resoun:es of olhcn lhan you required. ·
,
BERNICE
will be al laking care of your own
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your
BEDEOSOL today.
pro_!JlC!'IS for personal gain could be
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) uncertain today, so proce«fwarily in
Try to keep importanl facets of your com.mercial mailers. It may not take
life in proper balance today. Do not much to tip lhe scales against you.
"beallworkandnoplay,norviccverCANCER (June 21-July 22) It
• • • • • • • • • · sa. Parity is essential for happiness. · could prove lo· be a good idea today
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) ·for you and your male to keep oul pf
In the year ahead. you may enter Today, you ·might pretend you 1he family checkbook. Either one of
into an commen:ial arrangemenl with received nmhing in return for your you is capable of bruising it badly.
someone who is older or more expe• service, while in acluality you did
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be realisrienced than you. This could be a receive an acknowledgment Do not lie today if you have to negotiale a
rewarding alliance in several untque play games.
business or career maUer. There inay
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) be a lendency on yoltr plirt 10 make
ways.
'
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Slishts could breed linsering resent- concessions you shouldn't
menl
today,
so
do
nol
play
favorites
VIRGO
(Aug.
23-Sept.
22)
Watch
Today you might be difficult to gel
alons with if your companions arcn '1 with your friends. Anyone angered for paradoxeuoday. What may seem
sirtlple could be full of complications,
in complete accord with your tdeas. mighl nol forgive readily.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) If while that which appears to be diffiStrive to be democratic, not diclalorial. Trying to patch up a broken you emphasiu your modesty today, cult could be slow but certain.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Give
romance? The Astro-Graph Match- you'll generale subslantial respect
maker can help you undersland what from associates. Avoid beins Ham- full expression to your ambitious
urges toc!&amp;Y· but also be realistic about ·
to do to make]lhe relationship work. boyan! or pretentious. ·
Mail $2.15 t.t-Malchmaker, c/o this I TAURUS (April 20-May 20) In your goals. Do not hang on 10 objecnewspaper, P.O. Box 1758, MuiTay arcas where you have been fortunale, tives that are not altainable.

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OCTOBER
IS ·~
• .:.ai.H
• ..fii.H
'UT.N
UT.H
AmiCAfld . .
CHEVY
TRUCK
MONTH
•• 1-1
•• 1-1
AT C &amp; -0 .M OTORS!')
CHECK OUT THE SAVINGS
998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
EXTENDED CAB·414

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Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
923
Pick 4:
7810
Buckeye 5:
4-11-20-24-30

Spqrts on Page 4

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By JIM FREEMAN
S8ntlnel News Starr

AS

1998 CHEVY

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S-1.0

• BOOK MARKERS. Southern Local kindergartners and Racine
Rrst.1nden presented book markers to Racine Branch Librarian
Norma Hawthorne. Here, Timmy Yates, Brooke Chadwell, Rashell
Boso and Sean Copplck, from left, make the presentation.

Restyled Front Grille, lnstru.ment Panel, ·
Bumpers, and Increased Horse Power! I

Ohio GOP wants
Bl~ckwell to stay out
of governor's race

AS
LOW

AS

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CINCINNATI (AP)- The head strongest candidates will end up
of the Ohio Republican Party wants fighting each other.
·
state Treasurer Kenneth Bl~kwell to
''I never want to so;~ our two pit
stay out of the governor's ¥ace and is bull elephan\s in a fight against each
willing to pay to see that it happens. other. That dissipates our resources,"
Party Chairman Bob Dennen told he said.
The Cincinnati Enquirer for a story
"From where they sit, the opporpublished today that the GOP will tunity for an open seal for governor
"commit the maximum" amount of- only ~omes around every so oftencampaign cash to Blackwell. if he and so it's not that surprising when
runs instead for secretary of state.
you have two· of your slats compel" I;II commit the maximum right ing for the same scat," he said.
·
Taft began his gubernatorial race
now;'' Bennett said Tuesday. "I've
told Ken that privately - whatever last week with an 11 -city tour. .
it takes."
His campaign manager, Bnan
Blackwell said he isn 'I interested. Hicks, confinned that. talks about
Instead. he is preparing a bus tour Blackwell as a running mate have
of Ohio to announce he will chal· occurred.
lcngc Secretary of S'tatc Bob Taft for
Neither Hicks nor Bcnn~l! could
next year's GOP nomination for gov- be reached for comment thos momcrnor.
ing. They did not immediately return
"I'm calling it my 'Freedom phone calls left at GOP and Tan
Tour,"' Blackwell said. "Freedom 'headquarters.
from government regulation. FreeThe GOP feud comes as Benncu
dom from the education bureaucracy. .is attempting to complete the GOP
Freedom.' '
slate for next year's statewide clccBenncu said he fears two of the tions.

*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

1998 CHEVY 5·1 0

EXTENDED CAB
Air Conditioning, Alum. Wheeis, LS Package,
AM/FM Radio~ W/L Tires, and Morell

AS
LOW

AS
•

Air, AM/FM Radio, Tachometer,
Locking Differential

AS

Low ·
AS
*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

IOIUIIIS

MOTO
ST. ALBANS

TOYOTA ........
•1• .
&amp; LEIUS
. am~'c::.C~
1
727-2921

•. ..

Southern Local ntle I reading program schools are celebrating American Education Week spotlighting the
importance of education to the wellbeing of children and society.
aook markers will be made and
donated to the new Racine Branch of
the Meigs County Public Library and
to D&amp;M Pizza. The book markers
will go out 'with each pizza ordered.
Bacr's Market, Waid Cross' Sons
Groce&gt;y and Powell's SuperValue ·
donated grocery bags which will be
decorated by the children and sent
back to the stores to be used.
· Placemats will be de~-orated and
used and Paula's Restaurant in ·
Racine. D&amp;M Pizza and Karen's
Greenhouse near Ponland.
In addition, posters will be mlldc
and posted throughout the communities and students will be writing
papers on what they like most about
school.
·
The Racine Library was the focus
of National Education Week activities
Tuesd;~y· with student council members from Southern Junior High
School in Racine presenting boOks
about Princess Diana and Mother
Theresa to the library.
Students at the junior high school
wrote essays to detennine what they
were thankful for during the Thanksgiving Holiday, and the 'library was
one of the top
choices. The
school uses the library on. an almost
daily basis.
•
Kindergarten teacher Suzanne

three

PRESENTING BOOKS • Southern Junior Sayre, Sec:retary Lindsey Smith, Treasurer Macy
High School StudentCoundl members present- Rees and Olita Heighton, library diredor or extened books on Mother Theresa and Princess Diana sion services. Stadonts at the junior bi.:h, kindet·
to the Racine Library Thesday. Shown.here are, garlen and first grade use the library •• located
from left: student council President Joe Cornell, adjacent the school ··on an almosl·dail~ basis.
Vice-president Tommy Theiss, Reporter Lori
Wolfe said h~r li,ludents go to the
library on Tuesday and Friday.
' Student council members said
they chose the books about Princess
Diana and Mother Theresa because of
tpcir significance in history and

because students .at the school arc
reading and writing essays about
famous women in history.
Southern kindergartners and
Racine lirst-gradcrs presented book

markers to Nonna Hawthorne and
joined in a l&gt;ricf ceremony with
Racine Mayor Scott Hill who proclaimed National Education Week in
the village.

'Great American Smoke Out' set for Thursday .

Meigs Countians are being urged of a pack of dgarcues today is $2 or
to join in the "Great American Smoke more. For the person who smokes a
Out" on Th.ursday by pulling oullhei~ pack a day, the daily cost is $2; wcckly $14; monthly. $61; yearly. $732 ;
cigarcues.
.
five years, $3.660; and over I O,ycars,
Norma .,..orrcs, R. N. o f th c Mcogs
County Health Department. through ···· S7.320.
the Ohio Unive_r~ity College of
For the two pack a day smoker, the
Osteopathte Medtcme, has secured cost for a year goes up to $1.464; for
staltstocs on who smokes, the cost ~f five years, $7,320; and for 10 years,
smoking, and the health and envo- s14 .64o.
ronmcntal problems ot causes.
As for the health problems which
To stress t)lc damage of smoking, smoking creates. statistics show that
Torres said that tobacco use kills smokers arc 10 times more likely to
more than 400,000 Americans each die of lung cancer, that it doubles the
year -- more than Aids, car accidents. chances of heart disease, that it is the
alcohol, homicides. illegal drugs . main cause of chronic bronchitis. a
WASHINGTON (AP) - Con- turned n~gativc. Bonds were lillie suicides and fires combined.
serious lung infection and cmphysc~
sumer inflation remained at a modest changed.
11\U.
that about one out of every three
In a separate report tuesday, the
' . 0.2 percent in October for a fourth
According to the information teens that smekc daily will die prestraight month - a pace that could Commerce Department said business
released
by the OU College of Osteo- maturely, thai second hand smoke
lead to the smallest yearly increase In inventories rose 0.7 percent in Scppathic
Medicine.
kids arc more like- hanns· non smokers nnd increases
11 years.
tcmbcr.
.
ly
to
smoke
if
they
live in a house- their chance of developing lung
The Labor Department said ThesAnalysts said the growth. partieI
day its Consumer Price Index ularly a 1.2 percent buildup at the hold where a parent or older btothcr infections. heart di sca.•e and cancer.
increased at a 1.~ percent annual rate retail level and the 1.1 percent whole- or sister smokes. nearly 90 pen;cnt of
In addition to personal health
during the firstlO months of 1997. If sale increa.'&gt;C. could result in reduced smokers started as teenagers. 20 percent
of
high
school
senior
girls
arc
damage,
smoking creates an envi.the pace continues for the rest of the goods orders and a slow ins economy
ri:gular
smokers,
16
percent
of
high
ronmenlal
hazard . lt takes more than
year, it would be the smallest annual that could further curb inflation.
increase since a 1. 1 percent advance
Still. business sales jumped 1.3 school senior boys arc smokers . lhrec hours to remove 95 percc~t of
in 1986.
percent and resulted in an inventory- almost 66 percent of high school the smoke [rom one cogarcue from
Consumer prices rose 3.3 percent to-sales ratio of 1.36 months supply seniors have tried smoking. an csti- · the room once smoking has .ended;
.,
at the September sales pace. That wa' mated 4.5 milliOJ1 kids smoke, the exposure to second hand smoke os
last year.
.. . .
1 35
h
Despite the posmve. pncc data. the smallest since a . -mont sup- · average teenage smoker begins at age t,csponsiblc [or an estimated 350,000
14 and becomes a daily smoker cases of hronchitis and 152.000 cas4
Wall Street lost ground after three ply in February.
before
18, and among smokers, 12to cs of poeumonia yearly in children
·days of strong gains. The Dow Jones
The Labor Departmcnt.reported
17.
70perccnt
regret slarting and66 under the age of (i•e , and exposure
industrial average closed down 47.40 last week that its Producer Price
percent
want
to
quit.
is responsible for 1.2 molhon car
at 7650.82 after an early 22-point. Index. inched up just 0.1 percent in ·
As for the cost. the average price infections each year.
gain. Broader stock ind~xes also
Continued ?" pa1e 3
"

~

Private prison sent back for more work
COLUMBUS (AP) - Escape
from a privately. operated ·p~ison
n:mained technically legal on Ohoo as
lawmakers held off a vote on a bill
placing new regulations on for-profit facilities.
Sen. Louis Blessing, R-Cincinnati,
said Tuesday that he planned to hold
one more commiuee hearing on the
bill in January to try to clear up confusion over sections of the bill - in
.• particular, whether it even applies to
· the one private prison operabng on
Ollio.
"I think they need to he regula!·
ed" Blessing added. "But 'some of
' would cause it to shut dO\"n ."
these
Supporters of the legislation say
officials with Nashville-based Cor·
rections Corp. of America, which

"There was just a lot of confuruns the Northeast Ohio Correction- police had the authority to arrest
sion,"
Ms. Hart said. " I understand
al Center in Youngstown. succeeded escapees since fleeing from a priva~e
prison currently is not a crime on they may start the whole process
in gutting the bill.
over."
Ohio.
"Tiley rewrote 90 percent of the
Ms. Hart added that limiting the
But
Corrections
Corp.
officials
bill over the weekend," said Senate
types
of inmates eligible for the
sponsor Robert · Hagan, D- said the bill would have unfairly lim·
prison would ' hurt the company's
ited its ability to operate.
·
Youngstown.
Hagan said ihe bill was "dissectIn particular, the company object- ability to make a profit - and create
ed and polluted" _by amendments that ed to auempts to limit the types of jobs for the economically depressed
area.
distorted backers' original intentions inmaies that could be housed there.
It was the promise of 350 new
to deal with problems at the private"The company does not ... have a
ly operated prison. ·
problem with oversight," said Susan prison jobs that won over the city,
As envisioned by Hagan and fel- Hart, spokcswomi!Jl for the country's . which has strugsled with the loss of .
more thiu&gt; 64,000 steel jobs since the
low Youngstown Democrat Rep. Ron largest for·profit prison operator.
Gerbcrry, the legislation - which
There also was uncertainty over late 1970s. Youngstown gave the foralready has passed in the House:; -, whether parts of the bill could be profit company land, offered multiwould set standards for pnvate prtson applied retroactively to the year tax discounts a~d agreed to prooperators that want to house out-of- Youngstown prison, which opened in tect the $40 million prison against
state inmates. It also would have May and now houses I, 700 io'imates losses and court damages.
cleared up uncenainty over whether frotn Washington and Nevada.

JOIN the Great American Smoke Out Thursday.
Tohacc~ use kills more than 400,000 Americans each year

•
•
•

•

After official count

No changes reported in
'97 election results
The outcome of the Nov. 4 general election remains unchanged fol lowing Tuesday's official count of ballotS conducted by the Meigs
County Board of Elections.
Elections official s were closely watching a township trustees race
in Bedford Township, where only .one vote separated the second
declared winner and a declared loser in that race.
The final rcsulls in that race, where two trustee.• were elected, were:
Robert F. Hawk, 229; David M. Brickles, 155, Virgil C. King, 151,
and Jack R.'Wells. 134.
·
That race was the only race which could have been changed in the
official count. No recount will be required in the race because of the
four-vote difTercncc between Bricklcs and King . A final difference of
two or less votes between the two candidates would have resulted in
an automatic recount by the board, Deputy Director Jane Frymyer said ,
on Friday.
Yesterday's official count added 89 provisional ballots, cast either
at the polls or at the board of elections office durina the absentee voting period. Those ballots allow voters who have moved, either within the county or from another Ohio county, to vote in the election.
The results of the three county-wide lery issues were as lfollows :
Meigs County Health Department, I mill i'cnewal, 4,471 for, 3,184
against; Meigs County Carlctop School. 1r8 mill new ~ontinuing levy,
3,403 for, 4,233 against; Meigs County Home, additional half-mill ,
3.577 [or, 3,961 against.

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Inflation remains tame

*PRICE INCWDES REBATE. TO DEAl ER

998 CHEVY BLAZER
4 EEL DRIVE

AND

·.

Southe-rn students observe;..:..
Nati·
o
nal
Education
Week
·
.

LOW

AU PRICES INCLUDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCWDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
UCENSE FEES.

2 Secllona, 11 P.-.~
~
A Gannett Co. New :..-: .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 19, 1997

AS

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IIIII. 41, NO. 112
Ctte7, Ohio 'hllley Pltbltlhlng ConlpMy

Partly cloudy tonight,
Iowa In upper 201 • •
Thureday, partly cloudy.
Hlgha In the upper 50s.

;.'f.

Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chrome Bumpers, Chrome
Appearance Package and Morel

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Atlanta Hawks,
Lakers remain
perfect ·In NBA

IPEI

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