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                  <text>Pllge 12 • The O.lly S1allnel

Po1Mroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Chargers hand
Lions &amp;·point
loss at home

Pick 3:
6-9-5
Pick 4:
. 9-4-3-D
BuckeyeS:
1-19-21-36-37

Sportl on Page 4

(

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Partly cloudy tonight, lowe
in the teena. Wedneeday,
moetly cloudy. Highs in
the uppar 301 .

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~41.N0.135

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 12, 1996

01-. Ohio Yalley Publtohlng Compony

Soctlon, 10 Pagoo 35 cento
A Gannell Co. 'Newspa~r

•

·finger of Sherman Buskirk of Mkfdlepo(t for a
cholesmol check at Tl)u!'Sday'a Home Cere
Fair held at tha Meigs County Public Library.

CHOLESTEROL SCAE~- .,_nn Cunnlnglwn, nuree with
Memorial Hoepltm Home Heellh care, dmn blood from the

v... .,.,

FOOD PYRAMID - Slater Fidelia Bell
receive• eome materlitl on nutrition from
Becky Baer, Melga County Extension Agent,

Qourt to .decide validity

Home Economlci, at Thur.ctay•a Home Care
Fair held at the library In Pomeroy.
. .

of ex-attorney's.charges

Hor:ne care fair draws largeJcrowd
Cholesterol and blood pressure programs, senior citizen services,
screenings were among the serviceS . medical applllmces and special ser·
provided at the Home Health Care vices including physical therapy and .
Fair sponsored by Veterans Memor- hospice programs.
Bowman's, Medical Shoppe,
ial Hospital Home Health Services at
the Meigs County Public Library Three River Option Care, Continuity .
of Care and Prescripljlin Option were
Thursday.
'In addition to the screenings among those businesses displaying
offered free of charge, information durable equipment and supplies. ·
The Meigs County Extension
was distributed on nutrition. health

Office featured the food pyramid in
their display along with dietary and
nutritional parnpblets. Health information on immunizations, breast cancer, WIC (women, infants and children) program, and clinics was distributed by the Meigs County Health
Department:
·
The Meigs County Council on .
Aging displayed a variety of materi-

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel NJIWI Steff
A judse's decision on the vali&lt;;lity
of allegations of criminal misconduct
asainsl Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Lentes and other officials by a former
Pomeroy attorney is expected later
this week.
.
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow ordere!l
Meigs County Court Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien to respond to the affidaviiS,
filed Nov. I by D. Michad Mullen
and his brother, Brian 0 . Mullen,
by Friday, according to a journal
entry filed lale Friday afternoon in
Meigs County Court.
The Mullen brothers allege that
Lentes, assistant prosecutor Chris
Tenoglia, former assistant prosecutor

al on programs offered through .that
agency as did Holzer Hospice of
Meigs County, the Veterans Memorial Hospital and Holzer Home He'alth
Physical Therapy. and VMH dietary_
services.
.
·
Refreshments were served and
door prizes were awarded as a pan &lt;)f ~,
the home care fair held an commu· ' ·
nity education program.

Study finds soybean protein may
relieve hot flashe$ of. menopause
SINATRA HONORED· Chrletlna Nlevee, .10, of Hoboken, N.J.,

dusta otr ihe aldewlllk plllque dedicated to Frank Slnatre
- • I l l ..tier at Slnatre'a blrttipl,lce In Hoboken. About ·soo

pecplad atteuded the dedication - Y Sunday. (API

Hoboken- honors
,

,

,

'ole Blue Eyes'··with
plaque, p'rayers

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Medical Editor
NEW ORLEANS - Eat tofu for
hot Oashes? The idea is ·not as weird
as it sounds.
·
AI the American Heart Association's annual scientific meeting Sun. day, researchers discussed-the growing evidence that soy~an proteincommonly found in tofu - .may
indeed relieve the miseries of the
change of life.
·
Dr. Gregory L Burke of Bowman
Gray School of Medicine in Winston. Salem, N.C., outlined the results of
an experiment into soy's effec.ts on
menopause.
.
The ltudy involved 43 women
between ages 45 and 55 who suffered
at least one bout of hot Oashes or
night sweating daily. For six weeks,
they worked 20 grams of powdered
soy protein inlo their diets, mixing il .

with their orange juice or sprinkling although some women arc reluctant
it on their cereal. For another six to lake it because of side effccos.
weeks. they did the same wit!) powLaboratoo:y. studies suggeso ohat
ered carbohydrate. No one knew soy estrogen acts on the same chemuntil the eiod of the experiment which ical targets in the body that human
they were eating.
estrogen affects: although it is I ,000
The women reponed significant- times less potent
ly lc,ss intense symptoms while using
Doctors have other reasons to
ohe soy protein. although they think that soy might be a oreatmcnt
occurred just as frequently.
for menopausal symptoms. One is the
Burke plans another study, lnvolv· . rarity of these problems in Asian
ing 240 women, in which larger dos- countries, where lhe soy bean is comes of soy will be tried. Another study, mon. Indeed, Burke said there " no
conducted recently at the University phrase in Japanese' for "hot nash.' '
of Manchester in England, suggests
Both hcan disease and breast canthis' can reduce the frequency of hot cer arc four times. more common in
nashes, as well.
the United States as in Japan. and the
' Expeqs believe the key ·ingredient risk or uterine cancer i~ 40 pcrtcnt
'
ofsoy protein is phytoestrogen- the higher.
Of course, there are many differplant form of the female hormone
estrogen .
ences between Japanese and U.S .
Human estrogen is widely used to women, including their gcncoic make
relieve the effects of menopause, up and their tendency to be obese .

By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER
who spoke only on condition of
AP MilitarY Writer
anonymity.
WASHINGTON- The Army is
A senior Army official; also speak·
ready to take action in 'another case ing on condition of anonymity. said
of alleged sexual misconduct. at a the investigation has been going on
training base, this time at Fort since September at Fort Leonard
Leonard Wood. Mo.. a Pentagon Wood. one of the Army's major
official says.
training sites.
Such a inove could take place as
The Army officer said he also
early as today against the first of sev· expected inquiries to be conducted at
eral male soldien under investigation other training bases, such as those at
.at IJle Missouri base, the official said Fort Jackson, S.C., and Fort Knox.
Motlday. .
'
• · Kv
' . . ',
· The·Anny last week filed criminal
Gen. John Shalikashvili, who is
charges against three military trainers chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
and administrative charges against- . said Monday tbe Army had to assume
two more-all married - ata.main- sucfi improper conduct was taking
tenance training base in Aberdeen, place elsewhere. He said officials
Md. The charges ranged from rape to were looking all across the Anny.
sending improper love leuers to particularly its training centers. to
female trainees. At least a dozen root out any sexual wrongdoing.
' women were irtvolved, average age
The Army. last week asked that
21.
any personnel who felt they had been
An additional 15 instructors were victims of sexual misconduct call a
plaoed on paid administrative duty. special toll-free telephone number at
Brad Rose. a·spokesman for Fon the Aberdeen Proving Ground near
Leonard Wood, confirmed an inves- Baltimore. About 2,000 telephone
tigation into se·.ual misconduct w.as calls had been made to number by
taking place, ard stressed that it was Monday afternoon .
"As soon as you arc off, another
not connected to the Aberdeen case.
He would provide no details.
rings." Ed Starnes, an Aberdeen
A Pentagon source said the spokesman, said Monday. He added
charges at the Missouri base would that some complaints go back to
involve sexual assault or misconduct, World War IL
but not rape. Three or four individuOf the calls received between
als were involved. said the source, Thursday and 4 p.m. Monday. 246

Doctors can operate on beating heart.with new laser surgery .

lv\l8vt::'\l\\~ Awt::'\ve\\ess
(2 0\M\M"'\\lfy pV'&lt;'8 V"t::'\""'
Q

Artists colonize old mining town

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•

•

Fox says change·s
are in the making

ce,teY

...

c...n,

'

fV!n Pleasant Valley
IlLII Hospital
Not-.

I

,

•

•

w~re dccmed serious

enough to be
referred to the Army's Criminal
Investigative Division for further ·
inquiry. The rest needed 'no followup, officials said.
Of the calls pertainins to sexual
complaints, 56 were Aberdeen-relat·
ed and 89 stemmed from complaints
about other Army facilities .
The rest of the calls had to do with
administrative requests, complaints
concerning nonsexual mauers and
crank calls. The Army rtfuseltto provide details about the complaints that
were being referred for investigation.
Capt. Craig Minnick, an Army
lawyer, said Monday more charges
were expecied involvin~ noncommissioned officers at Aberdeen.
"I don't know if we are going to
see more rapes, but I think it is going
to be more than love let!ers." he said.
At Aberdeen. one instructor threat- ·
ened to kill three trainees if they told
superiors he was having sex with
them, the Army said in documents
released over the weekend.
Ariny investigators at Aberdeen
have said they plan to interview as
many as 1,000 women who were
trained at the post since the beginning
of 1995, a process that could take
months.
(EDITOR'S NOTE ... The
Army's toll-free hot line Ia 1·
' 800.903-4241.)

SALUTE - Meigs County veterans organi·
' zatlons presented a rifle salute to the fallen in
America's wara during the county'• Veterans

Day observance In Pomeroy Monday. Veterans
fired a volley In salute. The ceremony was
capped with the playing of tap.s .

'Do .more'
Clinton pledges
action in solving
mystery of Gulf
· War Illnesses ~

.

·~

By JOHN HANCHETTE
Gannett NeVI• Service
WASHINGTON - President
Clinton told a solemn crowd . at
Arlington National Cemetery on
Monday that "we must do more" to
solve ''mysteries· still unanswered''
about the phantom sicknesses plagu· ..•
ing thousands who served in the 1991
war with Iraq.
Reminding
Veterans
Day
observers of his appointment of an
independent presidential . advisory
commission to get to the bonom of
the many disparate symptoms complained of by about 85,000 gulf war
veiS, Clinton made a health-provision
commitment that "extends to pursuing answers and providing relief for
gulf war veterans with unexplained
illnesses.''

... The pledge was ~idcly appl~uded
by the crowd, a turnaround from
recent years. Veterans Day observances here have come and gone
without much official mention of the
Persian Gulf illnesses.
But.on Monday you couldn't gel
'away from the subject. It was all over
town and lelcvision.
CLEVELAND (AP) · - The
Clinton, as commander in chief,
Christmas sales rush hasn't begun in and Ge.n. JohnShalikashvili, as chairearnest but an early-season snow man of the joint chiefs of staff.
storm~t has persisted since Satur: . addressed the controversial . issue.
day h given people some gift ideas. They both ·promised to do bel!cr in
May snow booiS?
•
finding out why so many Persian
Se sonal gear was ~popular item Gulf War veterans arc getting si~k .
at the enclosed Galleria shopping
Shalikashvili told NBC's "Today"
mall as winter-resilient Clevelanders show "it should be the main concern
dug out from up to 2-1 f2 feet of snow, of every military leader to ensure that
especially in snow-prone suburbs everyone who possibly could be coneast of the city.
necte4 at all to ohe gulf war il.lness get
"We have sold a lot of galoshes," · medical auention as quickly as possaid Evelyn Francko. "They seem to sible, whether that's at a military
be in big demand today."
facility or at a veterans' facility ... I
The culprit was "lake effect would like to ensure that all our
snow," billo)Ying dark clouds from efforts go towards getting people to
!he northwest that sweep over the· get the medical attention they
- ·Great Lakes, picking ufmoislurc that require."
gets dumped on the rolling hills
On an afternoon MSNBC probetween Cleveland; Erie, Pa.; and gram, former CIA -analyst Patrick .
Buffalo, N.Y.
Eddington reiterated his charges that
"The highways are open but they the huge · intelligence agency for
are son of slippery," said state high- years systematically covered up evi way supervisor Herman Thompson, dence of at least 59 . incidenrs in
whose 10 plow drivers began 12-hour which nerve gas and other chemical
shifiS al 7 p.m. Monday lo clear roads weapons were released near Ameriin Lake County, northeast of Cleve·
c,an troops.
.
land.
"The plain fact is," said EddingIn Willoughby, the four-day ton, "we've had a policy of denial
onslaught was a bonanza for the sev' and deception for five yean;. Officials
en tow truck drivers directed by dis- did know."
patcher Brent Hall.
Main reason for the. increased
Most of the stuck motorists auention : the presidential advisory
weren't able to get out of their dri- panel !hal Clinton spoke of has givveways, he said.
en new credibilicy 10 veterans' wide, Numerous schools in the region 'spread belief that Saddam Hussein's
east and northeast of Cleveland were chemical weaponry had something to
closed again today because of the do with the sickness.
Storm. More than 40,000 electric CUS·
Late last week, the Presidential
tomers were still without power.

Cleveland
digs way
out of snow

.

~

has filed several motions tor a new
trial, stating he has new evidence
provin~ someone else commilled the
crime. All motions for a riew trial
have been denied by the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court and the
Ohio Court of Appeals.
Mullen was sentenced to prison
following lhe trial, but was released
on Aug. II , 1.995. Since his release,
he has been continuing investigative ·
work on the incident, according to
statements made by Mullen in a July
1996 couo:r brief.
In Friday's .court entry. Crow set
forth allegations which, if true, may
result in O'Brien's disqualification
from the case and the appointment of
another judge to handle the mauer.
(Continued on Page 3)

Army moves in response to new
allegation of ·sexual ~misc.ondu~t

However. one clear difference is
especially the frequency of soy
foods rich in phytocstrogcn.
Burke said the typical Japanese
diet includes 50 milligrams af phytocstrogen a day. In his hot Oash
study. women took 34 milligrams a
day. In . the larger study 10 be conducted. this will increase to 68 milligrams.
If the~ studies prove h~ahh benefits of soy, one challenge will be to
fix them in a "more Wcstcm-tolcra·
blc way," he said, perhaps by using
them a.&lt; tasteless fillers in otherwise
familiar foods .
Nevertheless. he said, "it's prudent to rcco!llmcild tha! folks consume more soy in their diets."
The heart association's nutrition ·
committee, which draws up widely
followed eating guidelines, is not
ready to recommend lh.at Americans
stan eat in~ tofu bur~crs
di~t.

HOBOKEN, NJ. (AP) - As and it really made me feel sad for
Frank Sinalla n:covered in I.os Ange- him," said Joe Cardinulo, 45, of
les on Sunday after eight days in the Yonkers, N.Y. "I hope he's around
hQspital, SOO fans gathered at his for a Jon~ time to .come because we
CardioGenesis (:orp., a Sunny- cause of coronary ancry disease, the
The traditional trcaoments arc
birthplace here to honor the SO-year- need entertainers like him in this By POPULAR MECHANICS
A
Hearst
Magazlne
vale,
Calif.,
.
c
ompany.
has
conducted
No.
I
killer
worldwide.
More
than
world."
bypaS.
surgery, angioplasty' and-or
old slnger and pray for him.
For
·
Sinatra
has
not
visited
hjs
homeAP
Special
FeetUI'!II
Phase
I
TMLR
trials
and
has
received
1.5
million
Americans
suffer
heart
medication.
Neither solution is per"Frank Sinatra has been, continAn
experimental
new
laser
FDA.
approval
to
begin
a
Phase
II
attacks
each
year.
according
·to
the
town
of
about
34,000
since
a
trip
with
manent
According
to the AHA, a
ues 10 he and will always be .an
surgery·allows
s.
u
rgeons
to
operate
on
American
Hearl
Associati.
o
n
·and
study
on
!50
to
200
patients,
President
Reagan
in
the
1980s.
His
1
typical bypass lasts eight to 10 years.
inspiring success story," said Mayor
Arterial blockages arc a common one-third die as a result .
Anthony Russo. "Pray to our God to birthplace burned down long ago: the beating heart.
'
The heart operation is called transonly a brick wall and a brick and
help him in his time of need."
myocardial revascularization, Mike
Dignitaries in this city across the stucco arch remain.
Filion
wrote in an article in the curStill,
signs
on
outskirts
of
Hobo·
river from Manhattan placed a bronze
rent
issue
of Popular Mechanics, and
ken
welcome
visitors
to
"The
Birthplaque on the sidewalk in front _of
it
uses
a
cafbon-dioxide laser 10
Sinatra's birthplace. The plaque woth place of Baseball and Frank Sinatra."
vaporize
tiny
holes through the
a star in the middle and a microphone There is a Sinatra Drive and the town
reads, "Francis Albert' Sinatra- The ~ld a party for his 80th birthday last heart's outer walls, creating channels
that bring blood directly to oxygenyear.
Voi~. Born Here at 415 Monroe
starved
tissue.
.
"You
can'tlive
in
Hoboken
and
Stn:'lt· December 12, 1915."
Among
the success stories of the
. Sinatra was .released from a Los not have an appreciation of Frank
new
procedure
is former marathon
Ang~~s hospital Saturday afler treat· Sinatra," said 32-ycar-old John
runner,.
Ray
·Mitchell,
who after
men! for what w&amp;S.initially described Mooney. "He's a homc'town boy. he's
,
as a pinched nerve, but severaltdc- an All-American success story. He triple-bypass surgery and four ang'ioplasties.
could
not
walk
a
city
block.
grew
up
in
a
blue
collar.
immigrant
visiQil station reported he was Slrockcn with pneumonia and heart failure, town and he made it to the top of the Once virtually bedridden, he now
plays golf and works out 45-minutcs
•
"I watched the news every day world."
a day on a treadmill .
.).
Nemar Barakct. 65, a Saudi businessman, suffered from angina so
Learn the signs and symptoms that wUl help
severe that walking only a few steps
behind when the mine. last closed in origgcrcd crushing chest pain. Today,
By ~ENNIFEA MERIN
you identify a migraine. how they are triggered
after TMLR surgery. the attacks a~e
1953.
For 'f.P Speclel Feature•
Yet J9rome. the perfect ghost just a memory.
and available treatment programs.
JRROME. Ariz. - Route 89A, a
scenic national byway between town. is alive. It is once again thrivFlagstaff and &lt;Prescot!, cuts through ing and wearing its history of advcr- .
the red rock country around Sedona sity like a badge of honor.
It' isn't the first lime Jerome has
and then 'zig-zags up Cleopatra Hill,
.,/ '"fiACSJ..._y, .. OVCM'o4!Y
l1
the precipitous easuim slope of Min- come bru:k from 'the brink.
,
NEW YORK (AP) - Michaell
·Jerome rose from the ashes after
gus Mountain.
.
./ 7. p.M. (f•ee AJ.II'lissto-&gt;
For a pure adrenal in rush, the dri- devastating fires. survived landslides Fox says there could be some
ve on the two-lane road rivals a roller that swept buildings down the moun- changes ahead for his hit TV show.
./ Ple,._s,.,"t v...ney \4osrtt ...l
tainside, ' and overcame economic and ~e 's already starting the spin.
coaster.
Fox,
of
"Family'
Ties"
and
"Back
The view is equally breathtaking. · ruin after I he mine, its only industry,
\oJeU,ess A"~ Re~ ...'o
Verde Valley. Sedona and the mysti- pulled up stakes. Through sbeer·grit, .To The Future" fame, says he's been
cal red rock formations that tourists Jerome now is a charming artists' tinkering with "Spin Ciiy." even as it
. ,/ Glo\est $pe,.,\tc•z ·
by the thousands flock to each year, colony. tourist attraction a.nd home to racks up hefty ratings for ABC.
J"IU $~oJ ci, .1-\. t). C.tCIAYOlo~ist)
For starters, Fox has suggested
stretch into the distance below. 437 people.
The area was once home to the that writers occasionally cool off the
Above, at 7,743 feet, is Mingus·
Anasazi, and as early as Ihe 12th cen- libidinous relationship· between his
.I fOY lo\OYC l"fOYio..l\tlO"'
snow-cllj)ped peak.
Midway up,the hill, just around tury American Indians mined salt, deputy New York City mayor Mike
Ple,.,sc
&lt;10&lt;4) n~-z.n-1
the bend of a switchback. is Jerome, turquoise, azurite and copper. Span- Flaherty and reporter Ashley Schac·
•
an old mining town that clings to the ish conquistadors moved in and fer played by Carla Gugino.
"I want to do it in doses," FoK
mountainside. If it looks familiar, it's mined the mountain's huge copper
probably because. it is thci way we deposits during colonial times. But it says in Entertainment Weekly's Nov.
'
believe an aband&lt;!ried mining town wasn,'t until 1893, wben the United IS issue: "I love their sexuality, but
Groups
And
Individuals
Are
Encouraged
To
Attend
Verde Copper Co. began operations, I don't want it to be lascivious."
should look.
.
Fox, who doubles as an executive
Jerome scands alone in a harsh yet that Jerome became a town.
Refreshments Will Be Served
During the early boom years, producer for the show, also told the
beaulifvl ltllidacapt, iu copper mine
JoaJ clotled. Old siJIII and shutters Jerome supported an opera house, a magazine thai "Spin City" may take
CIMk Clll wCitlllalld buildings brushed hospital, a hqe hotel, several saloons a slight dramatic .lum.
"I'd like·to find a way to say this
and infamous brothels. Ai one time,
willa a thin veneer of dust.
is
imJionant
stuff without having to
Several VJCIOI'ian mansions have 15,000 people lived in Jerome and
walk downstage and say, 'Now I'm
aJiilbmel' oftheiroriJinal grandeu~. · were supported by the mine.
goina
10 do some actina."' Fox said.
In
1897,
1898
and
1899,
when
MaD)' '"dlcliiJI .-e ta~tlfy, and 1 few
WiOVIIIIoy DIM I
W'i 2.11101 1*1 I7WloiO
"II
doesn't
have to be. ~Now we're
- illdudinJ ~bote dial slid down the fires devoured wood-frame buildings
going
to
do
a
show
about
chlamy·
hill- n ,.......ackle monumcrt!J 10 and canvas IenlS lit by kerosene,
'dia!'tf
l..-..--·------'---:'--__:__ _ _ _-,------;,. ~-,.._.l.._j
!Itt llanbhiJill that residenu lert Jerome rebuilt
__......

Charles Kriighl, former prosecutor's
investigator Gary Wolfe, Meigs
County Sheriffs Deputy Danny
Leonard and three other individuals
committed several felony and misdemeanor criminal offenses during
the course of D. Michael Mullen's
arrest anc:t criminal investigation in
1994.
D. Michael Mullen· was found
guilty of four charges of corrupting
another with ·drugs, after providing
drugs to two girls. ages II and 13, at
his Pomeroy residence. He was also
charged with one count each of
aggravated menacing and contributing to the delinquency of a minor,
which were later dropped.
Since his conviction, Mullen has
acted as his own legal counseL He

•

AHEAVY UFT - Proving the ahot18• d111ance between two
p~• a atralght Ane,1hla heavy 11ft hellcoptel wu ueed Mondlv ~ cerry ll'ld place larga utllty polea for the OMEGA JVS alec·
~ tflnemiiiiOII line project. Other than ap11d, on• beneftl ot
uefnrl~ ttellco bit Ia that Ia not bound to pawd hlghwaya. Hera,
... lillie cfila' uti8 polee from a IIIIa
ROIId In Cheater
Townehlp. Earlier thla year, worklfl cut a right ot ~ for the
tnin•l•elon llnee which will cerry elecblclty fnlm • h,clr0111~

ott,.._,.

=z~ntat Beltwllle, W.Va.~ to •n _e llctrlclllllt!ltatlon naer Aut-

'
\II

VETERANS DAY OBSERVANCE - A windy, winter-like day
greeted the handful of residents who t11rned out to Qbserve Vet·
erans Day in front of the Meigs County Courthouse Monday morning. Retired Reserve Lt. Col. Gerald Koster of Columbus, formerly
of Syracuse, gave a briefaddress. This year, the ·front of the couF
thouse sported a huge flag hung from the third floor balcony.
. I.

.

.

Advisory Commiucc on Gulf War the gul r war syndrome.
Veterans leaked a draft of ·ios final
" We need to find out as quickly as
report -' due ao the end of Decem- we possibl y can. what in the world is
ber - ·that hli slers lhc Pentagon for causing it. '.'
"a supcrfit:ial investigation of possible chemical warfare agent expoWhen NBC's Katie Couric asked
sures.'' ·
Shalikashvili why it took more than
The special While House panel five years for the Pentagon to admit
recommends in its draft report a sep- that veterans were exposed to chcm·
arate probe of about 15 detections of ical weapons when an Iraqi munitions
nerve gas by American unios because dump was blown up by ·U.S. troops
the Pentagon ~as "severely under- at Kamisiyah, Shalikashvili respondmined puhlic confidence" in iL&gt;cred- ed , " partly because that information.
ibility.
in itself, while available someplace in
. The panel accused the Defense some records. was not available 10 the
Department of "slow and erratic leadership in the military and the
efforts to release information to the Defense Dc~anment."
public" and of "lacking vigor" in following up on myriad reports of
Clinton. at the national cemetery,
chemical exposures. ·
reiterated previous promises to
Shalikashvili said he is "extreme- improve the lives of sick veterans: "I
ly frustrated. particularly about all want to assure all of you that we will
this talk about credibility, or not cred- leave no stone linturned in our efforts
ibility." '
to_invcstijlale these cases and 10 pro"After all," he said, "we have vide our gulf war veterans woth the
absolutely no reason to cover up any - medical care they need."
thing, to keep something from the.
He noted that 26,000 gulf war
· public."
He said the Pentagon's review of troops already have been granted
illness claims "~as been a very frus - some fonn of disability rating and
trating effort, because we have not that many research projects are under
been able to determine the causes for way.

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Commentary

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

November1Z.1118

..... 2
TUIIdly,No~12,1118

OHIO

Weathc1

Wedn!ltlay, Nov. 13

The Daily Sentinel No one admi·t ted without a sponsor

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'£st1l!Jfislid in 1948
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·21156 • Fax: 1192·2157

.!lr.Newspaper

A Gannett Co.

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publl.tler

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

a..rat Manager

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Aa:uW~ forecut for

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Personalities wi.ll
ch·ange, but not
power balance
By DONAI,D M. ROTHBERG .
AeHclllted Pren Writer

Well, the election is behind us. It's
time to wake up and face the world
qain. You know what that means,
don't you? Forget your petty bond
issues, congressional races, and your
partisan opinion polls that tell you
exactly what you want to hear (with
aS pen:ent margin of error). Now it's
time, once again, to expel)ence meaningless opinion polls that are divon:ed
entirely from the political process!
Relieved? Don't be.
According to the Washinawn Post,
. a new survey jndicldes that audiences
"are staning to like seeing commercials when they go to the movies."
What a stanling piece of information.
Less stanling perhaps, this survey
was taken by Screenvision Cinema
, Network, "which supplies ads to
: · 7,600 U.S. Screens." .
Does this mean that this survey
·
needs to be taken with a great deal of
salt, with perhaps a small amount of
butter flavoring?

Maybe.
In my circle at leas~ when com·
men:ials show up on a movie screen,
they are greeted b. mild oaths, hiss·

/an Shoales
ing and fervent calls for revolution.
SOmetimes, we bum down the the·
ater, and marcl) down the street
shouting anti-capitalist slogans. Often
we're arrested. After we've cooled
our heels in the hoosegow, we step
into the light of day chagrined and
chastened, the police shaking their
hea4s at our youthful shena~iga_ns. I
sus~hat this survey 1didn I CIII:U·
late in my circle.
·
The sinister Dennis Fogarty, pres·
. ident of Screenvision, ctfeerfully
insists, "Over time ' people have
become subliminally conditioned to
the fact that advertisers will talk to
them anyplace they go."
"Gee," you might think, "that's a

creepy way to look at the world." It
is, but It doesn't mean it's not true .
We can't escape commercials in grocery stores, freeways, on the radio
and television (even public radio and
television are "underwritten" by corporations). Public transportation,
museums, street comers, your mail·
. box, the World Wide Web .. all are
sites for relentless self;promotion,
Some places, like Disney World and
New York City, only exist to promole
themselves.
But still .. there must be some
object of beauty out there that is total·
ly useless. 1bere must be a flower or
tree or pretty girl that doesn't have a
corporate sponsor.
If so, they won't last long. We're
just being softened up for 'the kill.
"The next step," according to the
Post, "is to increase the ad time."
The ever-chipper Mr. Fogarty
sa~s. "We're going to settle in where
we are for a little while, make sure

WELL. SINCE Tloi GOP
1.aJNG ON 10 BOTH THE

~AND SENATE, AND

SINCE CLINTON RAN · .
A5 A MODERATE c;w ·

WASHINGTdN ·-President Clinton was re-elected-' wasn't he?
Given all the speculation on who mightlill which Cabinet post, the capital tW the expectant air of a presidential transition.
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New faces pop up everywhere. Old ones take on new jobs.
.
But the rule that the more things change tile mQre they stay the same stlll
applies ..The gridlocking balance of power- an administration of one party, a Congress of the other - remains in place. . ' .
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For all the Cabinet changes, some of the most 1nteresbng new faces wdl
be on Capitol Hill and statehouses on opposite coasts.
A female governor of New·Hampshire and an Asian-American governor
of Washington are among them. New Hampshire voters rarely back Democ·
rats for gov~or and never a woman. In Jeanne Shaheen they got both. .
Gitry Locke became the fmt Asian-Amerk:an elected governor any state
outside of Hawaii.
·
· Cecil Underwood gained a unique distinction in West Virginia on Toesday. Forty yean ago, he became the youngest penon ever elected governor
of that state. Now voters have made him the oldest perso1&gt;everclected governor of 'West Virginia.
Congress always haS its share of fresh faces. Two years ago, Republicans to&lt;ik control and launched a revolution that foundered within a year
and gave 111any voters second thoughts.
AJI!fJtft/JII.
This year's elections produced a Congress less revolutionary in outlook, '"'"'F'Y ~ /(4{.
but with plenty of newcomers - 15 freshman senators and more than 70,
.
new House members.
Two women senators who campaigned as moderates are likely to attract
attention - Democrat Mary Landrieu of Louisiana and Republican Susan
Collins of Maine.
.
Both were victors in hard-fought races in which opponents tried to porThe otd way .:asn't so ·gond:
For otder wome~. especially. the
tray them as extremists. Landrieu had to oven:ome allegations by Republi·
Estranged
husbands
and
wives,
hiring
years
out of the workfon:e have
· can Woody Jenkins that she was too)iberal for Louisiana.
photographen
to
track
down
their
drastically
reduced their earning
Democrat Joseph Brennan was unable to ~onvince enough Maine voters
spouse
and
record
their
infidelities.
potential,
and
yet they receive little or
tltat Collins, a fonner aide to moderate Republican Sen. William Cohen,
would be an ally of conservative Hous€ Speaker Newt Gingrich. But cam- Accusations of mental illness.
paigning agains! Gingrich worked well for Democ~t Jack Reed. in Rhode Chargesofpsychological.torture. All
in the interest of finding "fault" in a
Island a state with a stronger DemocratiC Party traditiOn than Mame.
divorce.
Ti~ Hutchinson served two terms in the House before winning a Senate
But the new way isn't working out no compensation for the many valuseat, so his face is not new to Washington. But he'll get attention as the first
Republican ~nator elected from Clinton's home state of Arkansas since very well, either. That's the. conclu- able services .. child-rearing, housesion of two new books, "Divorced cleaning, meal preparation, etc ... that
Reconstruction.
.
From Justice," by Karen Winner they provided during the marriage.
· Among the new House members, Jim Ryun, a Kansas Republican, was (HarperCollins) and "Still Unequal," ·Instead, it is assumed that after
a celebrity 30 ye,ars ago when he set a world ~ord for the mde run. A by Lorraine Dusky (c;rown). And the receiving some short-term "rehabil· .
staunch conservative who supports home sehoohng, Ryun campwgned as big losers, both authors say, are itation" funds, she'll be able to pick
an advocate of a balanced budget and smaller government.
women.
up where she left off. A legislator
Democratic Rep.-elect Carolyn McCarthy gained unwanted notice .in 1993
The "no-fault" and "equitable speaking to the New York task fon:e
when her husband was killed and her son wounded by a gunman wbo opened distribution" laws enacted in the on women and the courts, quoted by
fire aboard a Long Island, N.Y, commuter train. .
.
'70s sound good on their face, but the · Dusky, sums it up best: ''(1be judges)
She was a registered Republican bot switched .parties and challenged idea that a maniage should be dis·. think any woman .. no matter her age
freshman GOP Rep. Daniel Frisa after he voted last March to hftthe ban solved like a business has had some or lack of training .. can lind a nice
'on assault-type weapons.
devastating effects on many Ameri- little job and a nice little apartment
The new Congress won't hit town for several weeks, officially convencan women.
,
and conduct her later years as she
ing in early January.
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The new regulations favor divid- might have done at age 25."
At the moment, the focus is on changes m the admm1stratmn.
ing up a couple's assets, rather than
Indeed, it is ironic that the women
Six and counting is the total to date of departures from the Clinton Cab- giving the person with the lower who have dedicated their lives to their
inet. It's a large number, but not all that out of line with the S'-" of a sec· income an alimony settlement. This families .• an act so smiled upon by ·
ond tenn. .
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might sound line, and indeed it pos- society-- suffenhe most if their mar· Within a few months of his 1972 landshde re-electmn, PreSident N1xon es no inherent problem for childless riage ends. "Whether or not they quit
changed the leaq~nhip of seven Cabinet departments; Fjye Cabinet secre: · career women. But for homemakers . their 'jobs happily," writes Dusky,
taries left or changed jobs soon after Prestdent Reagan s re-elecuon tn 1984. and women who have deferred their "they do it in a culture that altematl:ly
When Clinton finally fills the vacancies in his administration, one or more ' careers in favor of their husband's.. encourages them to be good homeof the faces around the table could be Republican -a possibility the pres- eitbcr by moving for his job, or makers and mothers when the marident refused to rule out during a news conference Friday.
,
reducing their hours . at work to riage is intact, then not only devalues
devote more time to the children .. those skills in the job market but drasEDITOR•s NOTE: Donald M. Rothberc has covered national affairs this can be disastrous.
tically penalizes them for the time
for The Aaoclated Press in Washington since 1966.

REPUBLICAN ISSUES.

Wi WIN!! \

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Sara ECkel

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that they have been
or the iahor·
fon:e."
Compounding this problem is the
fact that at the time of divorce,
women usually have fewer financial
resources than their husbands.
"Women, even professional, aflluent
women, typically don't. control the
family assets .. Consequently, they
often lind themselves in the peculiar
position of being cash-pOor at the end
of the maniages," writes Winner, a
fanner investigative writer for the
New York City Department of Con·
sumer Affairs, whose book is a prac'tical guide for women undergoing a
divorce.
Obviously, lack ofsufficient funds
puts anyone undergmng a d1vorce at
a supreme disadvantage. But it's not
just a matter of not being able to lind
a GOOD lawyer; many women find
they cannot get ANY lawyer when all
they can offer is the 'promise of getting back the family resources that are
now controlled by their husband. And
even if they do get a lal!(yer, the cxorbitant fees .. which can run as high
as $30,000 in most cities .. could
leave them penniless in the end. "The
basic problem is that the strategy
(lawyers) usc in eoinmen:iat cases.
• to wear the other side out-- is used
in matrimonial litigation. A company
with deep poekcts can wipe out a
small business because they can't

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"NoW THAT CQmfTIItroial Is t»ffnlte/y loudflr than
thtJ r.gulllr programming!"

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Born Feb. 2 1929 in Milton, W.Va., he was the son of the late Nelhe~h­
·worth and Harry Perry. He worked for more than 30 years in the plumbmg
business, and after he retited, was employed by Premier Ambulance.
He is survived by his wife, Joan F. Perry; six daughters, Grace Mason of
Munnsville, N.Y., Brend8 Glendenning of Logansport, Ind .. Debra_Lee
,J&lt;aloch of Madison, Jerri Piaza of Cleveland, Vikki Miller of Pomeroy. and
Marcie Perr)' of Unionville; three sons, Daniel R. Perry of the U.S. Army,
Port Sill, Okla., Randy' L. Brooks of Geneva •. and Michael .Brooks of Madison · 23 erandchildren and two great-grandchildren; three SISters, Mary Not·
tingham of Long B~uom, Sue Farmer of Georgia, and Linda. Acree of
Pometoy; and two brothers, Jack Perry and Jim Perry, both of Milton.
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He was also preceded in death by a son, Benny; and two daughters, 'Rebecca Joan and Debra Marie.
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Services will be II a.m. Friday in the Behm Funeral Home, 26 RIVer St.,
Madison, with the Rev. Ross DeFehce of Gfi!Ce BaptiSt 0.~, Geneva, officiating. Burial will be in Greenlawn Memory Gardens, Kingsville.
Friends may call from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Thursday at the Behm Funeral Home, I
26RiverSt.,Madtson .• •
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STERNWHEEL DONATION_-FarmersEiink a Savings
preHntad $250 to the Big Bend Stemwheel Fastlval Saturday. Peg.
gy Barton chairwoman ot the Sternwheel Commlttae lor Farm·
ere Bank. 'preaenta the donation to Big Bend Sternwheel Asaoelation PreaJdent Jlni Davia.
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John
Ph1hp
Pickens
Sr.
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Chance' of light snowfall
exists Wednesday night
By Tile Associated Prws
. A winter storm warning remains
in effect through tonight for lakeeffect snow in extreme northeast
Ohio, where up to 2 feet of snow
already has ~en deposited since the
weekend: .
Driving conditions continued to be
hazardous today in northern Cuyahoga County and Geauga, Lake and
Ashtabula counties because of the
snow and ice.
Lake-effect snow results from
northwesterly to ·westerly winds
.crossing the reiatively warm water qf
Lake Erie. 1be moisture from the
lake is squeezed out Qver the highlands of northeast Ohio and results in
the heavy snow. This northwesterly
flow bas also resulted in some clouds
and flumes across the rest Ohio.
Tonight, snow showers will continue across the northeast with the
remainder of the stale remaining
partly cloudy, ihe National Weather
Service said. By Wednesday, high
clouds will' be on the increase.

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• an'od·t.,.; litik~;o~ expense," ro~~~
U.S. attorney Whitney North Scymour Jr. told Winner.
,
Now add the final factor: Wol)leil :.
usually get the kids. Not, it should he . ,
noted, because judges discriminate •
against fathers, but because most ..
fathers do not seek custody. Having .·
to support a fa~ily ori the modest . .
~hild-support payments the courts
·award .. and which many fathers nev- , ;
·er actually pay .. has proved a near· . :
·ly impossible task for 'many :. '
divot:eees, which is ·why many are .. :
.ultimate.ly fon:ed to ~o on ·welfare. , ;
Indeed,n has been estimated that the . ·
average woman's standard of living
·aftc:r divorc~ declines 30 pen:ent, •,
wh1le a man s RISES I0 percent
.
We do not need to go back to the : (
bad-old days of fault d•vorce, but we .,
do need family-court JUdges to rec- ·
()gnize the reality of many womc.n's . •
lives. And we need to guar~nt~e th~t :;
women. who choose to hmlt the~r ,, ,
caree~s m ~~er to devote more um.e
to th01r famd1e~ do not merely rece1ve ;
the approbatiOn of conservative .
_.. t)Oiiticians and religious leail7rs. They
also deserve linanctal secunty. .
Send eomments to the author •n· ,
c~ ofth1s newspaper or send herema1l at saracumaol.com.
Sara Eckel is a syndica~d
writer f~r Newspaper Enterpnse
Associalton.

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High temperatures on Wednesday
will be in the 30s. Lows Wednesday
night will be in.the 20s.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 74 degrees in 1879 while
the record low was 16 in 191 I. Sun·
set tonight will be at S:l8 p.m. and
sunrise Wednesclay at 7: IS a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight.. .Snow showers continuing northeast. Partly cloudy else·
when:. Lows from the mid teens west
to the lower 20s northeast.
Wednesday,.. Snow showers still
likely extremenortbeast. Becoming
mostly cloudy else"'here. Achance of
light snow late tar south. Highs from
around 30 northeast to the upper 30s
south..
Extended foree115t:
Th~rs4ay ... A chance of snow.
Lows in the 20s and highs in the 30s.
Friday... Dry. Lows aroulid 20 and
highs near 40.
Saturday... Dry. Lows in the 20s
and highs in the 40s.

· ntral
Bea n. co unters put ce
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lny ·
d
er
Un
Scru
team
State
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WIT.BERFORCE (AP)- Central
State University's football team has
f~led the school's trophy case in
recent years.
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But the program is coming under
the microscope as school officials
took for ways to trim the university's
mulitmillion-dollar deficit.
' Athletics Director Ken Hudson
said Monday that options include
dropping the football program, cut·
ling out scholarships or continuing
!he program as is. Oisbanding the
football team . is "remote" and
"unlikely," he said.
"We're not planning on dropping
it But we're just reviewing all of our
option~." said Hudson. '.'You have to .
look at it and say, is it cost-effcctive?" .
Central State, the state's only
publicly-supported historically black
school, was $11.6 million in debt as

audit.
Since · 1982, Central State has
won three national NAJA Division I
championships and strun~ together
14 wmnmg seasons. But tn the past
four years, the sch~l's aOdetic bud·
gets have bee~ tWICe the amount ot
revenue athletics generated.
"We won a lot of games. But the
only thing we h~~e to show for it is
a lot ~f trophtes, swd Hudson.
. Thts year, Centra~ S~te lost about
$150,000 when an mvuation t() the
school's football team to. play iii the
Whitney Young Cla5sic atthe Meadowlands w~ withdrawn, and when
school officials cance_led plans for.the
team to play ~game '" South Africa.
Hudson satd Ctnbal State needs to
get into a conference because it gencrates fan interesl and cuts traveling
expenses. He also has told coaches to
recruit more in Ohio.

of July 1995, according to the latest

Land transfers·

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John Philip Ptckens Sr., 75, Portland, daed Monday, Nov. II, 1996 '" the
Jackson General Hospital, Ripley, W.Va.
Born Aprill8, 1921 in Portland, son of the late Prank and Myrtle Dobbins Pickens, he operated his own heating and coobng busmess.
He was a World War ll U.S. Army veteran, servmg on the German front
as a combat engineer. He was a member of the Baptist Te!"ple Church of
Akron, the American Legion Feeney-Bennett Post 128 of M1ddlepon: a lifetime member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 8387, and the D•sabled
American Veterans, Akron.
He is survived by his wife, S. Virginia Cornell Pickens, whom he married Sept. 27, 1939 in Pomeroy; a daughter, Rose~ary Croston of Akron; a
son, David Pickens Sr. of Negley; and 10 grandchildren, three great-grand- ·
daughters and two step-great-grandchildren. .
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. He was preceded in death by a son, John P1ckens Jr.; and by a granddaughter.
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Services·will be I p.m. Thursday in the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racme,
with the Rev. Roger Wilford officiating. jlurial will be in the Browmng Cemetery, Portland. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.

Oscar Qualls

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Oscar Qualls, Pomeroy, died Tuesday; Nov. 12, I 996 in Veterans Memorial Hospital.
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Arrangements will be announced by Ftsher Funeral Home, M1ddlepon.

local News in Brief:
·Milk tanker overturns near Chester
No injuries were reponed after a milk tanker truck overturned on Sumner Road in Chester Township Tuesday around 2:30a.m.
Kelly G. Hoover, 33, Waterford, was eastbound o.n Sum~er Road when
he drove off the right side of the road. The 1995 Whne straight truck went
into the ditch and overturned onto its side, accbrding to a Meigs County
Sheriffs Department report.

Driver escapes injury in deer crash

A 3S-year-old Pomeroy man escaped injury in a one-car acc.idcnt on
U.S.33inBedfordTownshipSundayaround 5: 10.a.m . . ·
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Paul R. ·Ste' ve.ns was westbound when he swerved to miSS a deer m the
.road and struck a guardrail, according to a Meigs County Sheriffs Depart·
ment report.
·His l99l Chevrole~ Cavalier sustained moderate damage.

D'""'PUtl"es·,·nv;estllna•e
two accid.ents. . .·
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No injUJi~s or citations were reported after a two-veh1cle acc1dent m
Letart Township Sunday around 4:50 p.m. .
.
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Jeremy L. Lyons, 18, Racine, was backing from a pnvate dnve m a
1988 Pontiac when he struck the front of an' unoccupied 1988 Ford Tau·
rus owned by Lois M. Wolfe, Racine, according to a Meigs County Sher·
itrs Department report.
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Lyons' vehicle sustained light damage whtle Wolfe's car sustamed moderate damage.
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In an unrelated incident; a Long Bottom woman's pickup truck sustaincd light dal!lagc. in an accident on Aatwoods Road in Chester Town.
ship around I: 10 p.m. Monday.
·
Gloria Starcher, 49, was eastbound when she crested a hill and ~ent
into a ditch to miss a vehicle parked in the road, accordmg to a shenffs
department report. Damage 10 her 1991 Chevrolet S-l 0 was reported as
light.

••,·nor ,·n,iury reported in crash

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A Pomeroy man was slightly injured in a two-vehicle accident Mon·
day on State Route 7 near Chester, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State H•gh·

wa'i.tf::::l ~~~~~th. 35 • 6 Liberty Lane, was not treated at ·tlle scene,

Meigs announcements

Chest0:. i:u~!:;

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Black politicians who prach their '' ~
brand of right-wing conservatism ' •
can't win election in a ml\iority-black •'
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political jurisdiction. And black .,,
lq
politicians who champion the mainstream causes of African Americana,
with rare exception, cannot win 'election to office in majority-white dis- . l
tricts.
So if Tuesday's election resulture
proof of anything, it is that God hu
• areat sense of humor.

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Meigs EMS runs

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Obituart..,. peld anilotmcemonts ...
l)y ·locotllunerll hom••· .
·Oblliilrtee.,.pubttohed•• ........... IDaccommodalethoHIIHtrlngmoro
lnformollon IMnll provt-ln the .eeompan~ng Deall1 "!ott-.

John Philip Pickens Sr.
John Philip Pickens Sr., 75, of 32539 Smith Ridge Road, Port~and, Ohio, '
died Monday, November II, 1996 in the Jackson General Hospnal1n Rtplcy, West Virginia.
·
Born April 18, t921 at Portland, he was th~ son of the lat~ Frank Pick· :
ens and Myrtle Dobbins· Pickens. He was marr•ed. to S. Vtrgm•a Cornell on :
September 27, 1939 in Pom~roy, Ohio. .
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He operated his .own heatmg and coohng busmess for several ye,ars.
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He was a World War II veteran, serving on the German front as a m~m­
ber of the Army Combat Corps of Engineers. l:le was a member of the Bap·
'list Temple Chun:h, Akron, Ohio, the American Legion Feene~-Bennett Post ,
J28, Middleport, a lifetime member of tJie Veterans of Fore•gn ,Wars Post.
8387, and the Disabled American Veterans, Akron .
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He is survived by his wife, S. Virginia Cornell Pickens; a daughter, Rosemary Croston of Akron; a son, David Pickens Sr. of Negley, Oh10; ten g~nd- .
children, Connie McManus, Scott Bryson, Leonard Croston Jr., Sherry Pickens, David Pickens Jr., Charlotte Gissiner, Kelly Turner, David Pickens, John ,
Pickens UJ and Danny Pickens; three great-granddaughters, Nicole Croston,
Kelsey Turner and Jodi McManus; and two step-great-grandchildren, Ang· •
ie Lutz and J.R. Lutz.
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He was pr~eded in death by a son, J~hn Pickens Jr.; and one grand·
daughter, Christina Pickens.
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Funeral services will be at Cremeens Funeral Home m Rae me, Oh10, on
Thursday, November 14, 1996 at I p.m . The Rev. Roger Wilford will offi- ,
ciate. Burial will follow in the Browning Cemetery at Pm:tland, and the grand- .
sons will Serve as pallbearers.
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Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Home from 7-9.p.m. Wednesday, ,November 13, 1996.
·

Family issues appeal fo• help
1l1e family of Peggy Vining and length in pants, and a 10 1/2 or II
Jeff Coley, whose home on Goose size shoes.
The family has a garage in which
Creek Road, off State Route 681,
Pomeroy, was destroyed by lire Sat· to store dona(ions until they can ·: .
urday night, is in need of clothing and locate a house. They also have a way
household appliances and furnish· to pick up contributions. Those with .•
. things io give io the family may call •
ings.
. The home and all of its contents 742-2682 or 992-4266.
.were destroyed in the fire.
M v· ·
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rs. mmg wears an extra arge
in tops, 16-18 in pants, and size 7
• shoes. Her son, Kevin, wears a modiurn in inen's tops, 34/30 in pants, and
1l1e following fines were rccci ved
size 10 shoes; and her daughter, Sara, during October in the Racine Mayor's ,
a size 10 to 12 in Shirts and pants, and Court of Mayor Jeffrey L Thornton . .
sizi: four in shoes. Coley wears an
Forfeiting bonds were: Joseph ·
extra large in shirts, 36/38 waist, 30 -Vining, Racine. reckless operalion ~
reduced to speed, $53 ; Ronnie John son,· Racine, driving under fmancial •
(Continued from Page 1)
responsibility actioo suspension,
"Upon initial review of the affi· $250; Robert G. Swaokhammcr, Fotl ·
davit and motion of Mr. Mullen, the Jackson, S.C., speed, $52; Joseph A.
petitioner states under oath that Auharty, Parkersburg, W.Va., squealMeigs County Court Judge Patrick H. ing tires, $50; Amy Lin, Findley, '·
O'Brien 'is a material witness in the speed, $52; Wesley D. Clark, Racine,
majority of the cases,' and therefore speed, $43; Carolyn S. Elswich. Lex- '
Judge O'Brien is biased and/or prej- ington, Va., speed, $55.
udieed, within the meaning of the
statute. Tlie affidavit is general in
natun: and docs not specifically set
forth facts as to which criminal

Racine mayor
issues fines

Court,tO deCI'de

charges the affidavit pertains. lt ·
alleges that the judge is a material
witness. but is not specific a• to
and. tohe
which alleged
. which defendant 'd
crime," Cww sm tn l entry.
"The mere suggestion that the "
elcctedjadgc of the county coun may
· 1Witness,
·
·
be amatena
unsuppo.rted , IS
.
insufficient to establish the
h ex•stence
d'
.
of bias, prejudice or ot cr ••qua1I·
. fying interest, " crow addcd .
Lcntes indicated that he feels the aile·
gations arc baseless and will be dis· .
missed by the court.
''I'm sure once
· thehpresiding
11
l judge·
on the cru;e rcvtews t c a cgat ons, 11
will be clear that these allidavits were
tiled in bad faith and without merit,"
he said.
·
f h
1
.~ b
"None o t e peop c accus"" y
the Mullcnscs in these affidavits did
anything wrong during the course of•
Mike's arrest, investigation, and conviction. All we did was enforce the
law and protect two young. girls
from a dangerous criminal," Lentes '
'd
sa• .

The following land transfers were
troocin::.~a~~ northbound at 6:32a.m. when he turned his car left to avoid
posted
recently
'
n
the
offic
.
e
.
ofMei~s
1
·
" te
M or1aJ
. a northbound truck driven by Joscph H. Spenccr, 30, Summersvt'II c, w"
.• a.,
.e nllli em
County Recorder Emmogene Hamil•
. Monday admissions -Elizabeth · ton·.
according to the report. ·
·
·
• .l.... nter, p ortJan d·
Spencer
then
turned
the
truck
left,
causing
Griffith's
car to strike the
C......
Deed, Mt'chael E. and Sandra K.
left
rear
of
the
truck,
troopers·
said.
·
Mon day d .tscharges- none.
McDant'el to Gary B. and 'Iiamm•'e
. Griffith's car was severely damaged, wulle
,. damage was sI'•g h.t tothe
-•- Medlc:al C •H......
en..,.
Gt'lbert, Rutland vt' llage parcel·,
' ""··ha r N
truck, owned by C &amp; W Wright Construction Co., Ch ester, Va.. accord·
u- raes ov. 11 - D'tn ah
Deed, Ronald A. and Karen s. .
.
.
ing to the report. _____.____________
•
Gryszlea, Homer Thac ke r. Rob.m Jq- Hibb8rd to Scott Eugene Golden, L.:::.;:;.::.;,;,:;;;;;.;:.
_,
gcn, Helen Vance.
·
·
1
(Published with permilision)
Allie Simon to
Royal Oak Resort Club Inc., SalisSentin
. el bury, 1.l 1 acres;
F"·AM
to meet
served.
Th~.
·
"'
Deed, Frank W. and Elizabeth M.
Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM
(USPS ltJ.~
Lowd· to William J. Ernst Sr. and will hold its regular meeting Thurs- Parent•teacher meetings
PubtlorhOd every •flemoon. Man~ ......,..
Kenda !{. Osboin, Orange.
·day, 7:30 p.m., at the lodge hall in
Meigs Local School District parFriday.
ttl
Coon
So
..
Po"""'l'.
•·..,. doe
Chester.
Electt'nn
of
officers
will
enl·teacher
conferences will be held
01o1o Yallo)' Publllhlna c._!Oo_o Co..
~
l'omenrJI, Ollio 4S769, Ph. 1192-21 s&amp;. Second
tal:e place. Refreshments will be Nov. 25, 6-9 p.m... and Nov. 26 after
,...,..,.....pold.,~y.Ohlo.
11
the dismissal of school for three
MOoolltr: ~ A~ialod I'm• ""' ll&gt;e Ohio
hours. Students will not attend school
New 1 1 Auoc:ialion.
·
Am Ele ,._r, .....................42}
U. f h M . C
E ·
Nov. 28, 29 or Dec. 2. Parents will
0 1
e
ntiS
etg~
ounty
merreceive
a tetter sent home with .stu·
POSTMASTBR: Send...,...,, comc1iono 10
gency Medical Service recorded six
The Dolly S.Mtnol. 111 Coun So.. l'omoooy.
dents on Friday describing the conOlolo4S769.
calls for ~sistance Tuesday. Units . ference scheduling proc
. edure.
responding included: ..•·
. SUIISCIIIPTION RATBS
MIDDLEPORT
· II)' Corritror- - ·
2 meeUng
o.e-t.................................................$2.00
3:22 p.m., Stonewood Apart· Issue
The District 18 executive com&lt;&gt;oeM-................................................$1.70
ments,AudreDoughty,HolzerMed·
ical Center.
mittee:will meet Nov. 22 at I 0 a.m.
o.ev................................................. SI04.00
·
at the Holiday Inn in Marietta to pri- .
llolty ...... ~~~..-~~~.~:.. !lC....
. 12:04 a~~~~~?YRoute 681 , orilize 'District 18 applications for
· round II of tlie state Issue 2 'lrogram
S..rit&gt;on""' dellrltoa ·,(,PlY ll&gt;e cllrior may
Leona
Eblin,
HMC.
.
and. to determine which appolcations
_,,. Ill•- dloe&lt;IIO 'l1le Dolly Seod•l
RACINE
.., • . -••• or lliiiOftlh bollo. Crodilwtllbe
will be submitted to the Ohio Public
..... . -...hoek.
6:34 p.m., SR 124, Elizabeth Works Commission for funding.
at the scene.
Rhodes, treated
No
~ moil pomoiltod to .,...
RUTLAND
- - . - - ' ' " " " -·
Gra111etomeet
.
II :06 am., Rocksprings RehabilThe Rock Springs Grange will
10
' 111 '" --die riJN , . _ - ....
itation Center, Rhodlt Bing, O'Bie101 dot
poriod. Subo&lt;rlpd"",
meet at 7:45p.m Thursday at the hall.
11111 be, • ..,, ...... b)' - - ' • lhe
ness Memorial Hospital.
. Members will vote on consolidation
o!lllt""*'"pdoo.
TUPPERS PLAINS
with Hemlock Grove Grange. All
MAtLBWICIIII"'''INN
6:39a.m., motor vehicle accident members are urged 10 attend.
1-Moi[IIC:..,
on SR 7, Michael Griffith, Mike _ _ _ _ _.:.,__ _ _ __
Swjp:r 111d Joe Spencer, refused
Project Head Start tiegan in 1~5.
Chester Volunteer Fire
treatment,
ltock reporte providing education, soctal servtc~s
Department assisted;
•.m~ provided
.and
medicine to dis.advantaged chtl·
Dl.
L
8:19 p.m., SR 7, Frances Martin,
dren
and their families.
HMC.
. ·

Hospital news

·

ing been lir~t sent .to Congress by :
large, black majorities, McKinney :
and Bishop had a record which a : ~
small, but necessary, number of white ; I
voters found acceptable. That's an ·;
advantage few black congressional
candidates will ever get.
· :
The truth is that with rare exceplion black politicians who champion
the mainstream beliefs of African
Americans only win election in
rnajority-blai:k districts. Franks and
J.C. Watts, R-Okla., were sent to
Congress to represent the interests of
their mostly,conservative white constituents. In that sense they are white
leaders - no( the new class of blaek
leaders that Newt Gin&amp;rich proelaimed them to be. ,

.

~~.

w.v-..

~

.

Harry R. Perry, 67, Madison, Ohio, died Monday, Nov. II, 1996 in Gene-

I Toledo I 30" I

Election results show God has sense of humor
sion Franks helped produce. But to That's something we already know.
By OeWAYNE WICKHAM
the surprise of many, they won.
Gannett News Service
The question is what constitutes an
Franks, a black conservative, was acceptable. black candicjate to white
WASHINGTON - God really
,a witness for til&lt;; plaintiffs in the court voters.
does hl!ve a sense of humor.
Proof of his heavenly wit can be case that resulted in a federal court
found in the outcome last week of redrawing Georgia's congressional
Simply put, the answer is one who
three congressional races, contests district lines. He was asked to testi- embraces their core beliefs. But can
that all seemed to go the wrong way. fy after introducing a bill on Capitol such a person still adequately serve
Two of them, .the elections in Hill to outlaw racially gerrymandered the interests of their black conGeorgia's 2nd and 4th Congression- congressional districts and delighted stituents?
al Districts pitted black· Democrats in the r~sults of the redistricting ease.
against white Republicans. Once
"The prospect of having black,
In Georgia's rural ind District,
largely black, both jurisdictions were brown, yellow and white congres• , Bishop's moderate record - his
given white majorities after the sional districts was simply too . vote fo·r welfare reform and in favor
Supreme Court ruled the old bound· appalling" for him "to sit back and of repealing the assault rifle ban aries resulted from racial gerryman ~ do nothing," Franks later said.
were a strong compliment to his
dcring. The other race, in ConnectiBefore the court ruling, Me Kin- aggressive efforts to protect the discut, matched a black Republican ney's district (the old t lth) was two- trict's pea~ut farmers from hurtful
~gains! a white Democrat.
'
thirds black and one-third white and congressionallegislatiqn.
Gary Franks, the Connecticut Bishop's 2nd District was 57 pen:ent
·
Republican, was a three-term incum- black and 41 pen:ent white. AfterThe state'' 4th District butts up
bent in a congressional district that is wllrd. whites enjoyed a comfortable against Atlanta and includes a sizable
more than 90 pen:enl white. A foot majority in both. But when the voles concentration of white liberals in the
soldier in Newt Gingrich's Republi· were counted in Tuesday's election, area of Emory University. McKinney
can Revolution, he was beaten by a the two black Democrats easily won fused a' coalition between them and
former state senaior in a race he was re-election, while Franks suffered a the district's black voters to win re·
expected to win handily.
surprising defeat - results that election. That's the same strategy
In Georgia, incumbents Cynthia demand serious analysis. .
used years earlier to elect black mayMcKinney and Sanford Bishop were
Some pundits were quick to say ors in Philadelphia and Chicqo~
both thought to be longshots to win the outcome of the two Georgia con- cities in which blacks were not the
re-election after' the black majorities gressional races proves beyond a rea- majority population.
that sent them to Congress were sonable doubt that whites will vote
1be likely ~tilical factor in both
wiped out tiY court order - a .deci - for the ri~ht ~ind of black candidates. Georgia races was inc~mbency. Hav-

Harry· R. Perry

MICH.

we've got everybody comfortable,
then slowly push it forward."
Yes, we are in a brave new world
now, ruled by spin dbctors, propa·
gandists wi)b a grudge, and market·
ing.
·
· Soon, the practice of product
placement (hCro of movie drinks
Coke conspicuously) will grow to
obscene proportions. The hero of a
movie will not only drink Coke, he'll
be a Coca-Cola executive. Instead of
fighting Arab terrorists, he'll fight the
evil forces of PepsiCo.
The next stage? Corporations
themselves will become heroes!
·Time/Life/Warner
(Arnold
Schwarzenegger) will join forces
with Walt Disney (Jean-Claude Van
Damme) and Don~ld Trump
(Sylvester Stallone) to do battle with
.. with whom?
That's a problem isn't it? Who
.. will be the bad guy in the advenisingsaturated world of tomorrow? It will
be the blank space, the moment of
silence, the empty gesture. You can
only light them by filling them.
Soon commen:ials will invade
our classrooms: "This history lesson
has been made possible by .Borders." ,
They will invade our workspaces:
"This hour of your labor was spon· ,
sorCd by Microsoft." Ads will invade
our dreams: "This nightmare is .
brought to you by NyQuil." ·
,
Here in San Francisco. an entre·
preneur is trying io sell space on the '
cardboard . signs homeless people :
hold up at intersections. Yes, "Will
work for food" will soon ,be replaced .
by "This space is available· for your :
.
d ..
a.
.
And the next thing you know, .
none of us will exist unless we have
an advertiser making its possible. 1be
only way around it will be to go in ,
business forourselves. Let's see: "Ian
Shoales Presents: The Commentary :
of Ian Shoales." Got a nice post· ;
modem ring to it. Maybe I'll work up,
an IPO, and see who bites.
· (To receive a complimentary Ian :
. Shoales newsletter, call 1-800-989- ·
· DUCK or write Duck's Breath, 408
Broad St. Nevada City, CA 95959.) '
Ian Shales is a syndicated writer ~
for Newspaper Enterprise Associ· '
ation.

Divorce: The rules don~t ~add up

conditions and hiah

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214 EAST MAIN
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.

'

/

/

•'

I

�'
Tulldly, November 12, 1118

-SpOrts

The Daily Sentinel
·~- .'.....

.

•

.

'

.i Eastern's

Pege4
Tuesday, November 12, 1918

'

Chargers rally
to beat Lions 27-21

,
..
•

BRYAN HOFFMAN

Hoffman
remains .
with Tigers
Bryan · Hoffman, the son of
George and Joan Hoffman of Middleport, is a junior al Campbellsville
Univcnity, and a three-year football
letterman for lhe Fighting Tigers.
Hoffman (Meigs '93) is a wide
.rcc:eiver for lhe Fighting Tigers,
who are C98Ched by Ron Finley.
Campbellsville l:lniversily is a mem.ber of lhe Mid-South NAJA Division
· U Conference,
1
He. is majoring in art education
ind physical education with a minor
in heallh and athletic coaching.
Campbellsville University, founded in 1906, is located is soulh central Kentucky. Tile university, affiliilled wilh lhe Kentucky Baptist
Convention, has an enrollment of
2,129.

Huzjak and Holmes
get MAC honors
10LEDO, Ohio (AP) - Toledo
quarterback Ryan Huzjak aitd Miami of Ohio defensive lineman Jason
Holmes have been selected as lhe
Mi4-American Conference's players
oflhe week.
Hu~ak, a senior from Northville,
Mich.. completed a career-high 23
passes in 36 attemptS for 246 yards
and two touchdowns in a 23-20 vic. tory over Central Michigan. He also
rushed for 38 yards and accounted
for 284 oflhe Rockeis' 360 yards of
' total offense.
Holmes, a senior from San Diego,
1 had II tackles including seven solos
~ and two tackles for a loss in a 24-8
: victory over Ohio University. He
l also had one sack for an eight-yard
~ 14m and recovered a fumble.

i

Fletcher, lhen losl 18 when he was
By BERNIE WILSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Herman sacked by Henry Thomas and fumMoon:. a receiver making a cameo bled. Humphries recovered the ball.
San Diego was oul of limeouts,
appearance on defense, took a swipe
bul
Detroit called one with 37 secat the .ball and missed. Cornerback
Ryan McNeil jumped, but il went onds left After an 11-yard screen
pass 10 Fletcher, center Counney
through his. hands.
Andre Coleman, standing near Hall was called for a false start.
lhe back line of the end zone, didn't Since lhe penalty came in the final
miss. 1bc 5-foot-9 receiver caught two }llinutes, I0 seconds wen: run
Stan Humphries' ilesperalion 46- ofl'lhe clock. leaving San Diego wilh
yard pass on lhe last play of lhe first two licks before lhe big play.
Humphries, who missed the pn:half, boosting the San Diego Chargvious'two
games with a dislocated
ers to a 27-21 victory over the
left
sholildet,
said he tried 10 lhrow
DelrQil Lions on Mpnday ni11h1.
"I lhink lhey just forgot about il high and ab9u1 five yards deep in
,
me," said Coleman, who proved lhal lhe end zone.
"II ended up going over the
you don 'I have to he big 10 make
whole pile and Andre caushtll in lhe
huge plays in lhe NFL.
Ju51 when it seemed like Barry back. ll's all luck," Humphries said.
The Chargers (6-4) eagerly
Sanders, another lillie· guy who
makes big plays, was going 10 lake accepted it.
"ll's about lime we gol a lillie bit
control of lhe game and help take
some pn:ssun: off coach Wayne of lhal. ll's been a long lime comFontes, Coleman redeemed himself ing," coach Bobby Ross said.
Ross figured two seconds was
by making the spectacular play.
Coleman lost his slarting job 10 enou11h lime.
"I said, 'WhaUhe hell, let's take
rookie Charlie Jones a week earlier.
Jones was knocked oul early Mon- a chance at it.' ''
The Lions, it turned out, had 12
day night with bruised ribs, and
men
on lhe field. Bulthe ·two closColeman proceeded 10 make .two ,
est
lo
lhe play gol burned. The 6-4
mistakes in the span of lhn:e plays.
He fumbled on a reverse and lost Moon: -lhe NFL's leading receivseven yards, lhen dropped a pert'ecl er coming into lhe weekend - was
pass from Humphries.
. in because of his size and jumping
''II was a lillie frustrating," Cole- ability. McNeil was trying lo bOx out
man said: "But !hal's all it takes Coleman.
"Right before I gol ready to
sometimes, is one big play, and all of
a sudden il changes lhe momentum. jump. I knew I had a chance to catch
II jusi so happens thai was lhe play i~" Coleman said. "II seemed like all
lhe other guys were in the air and the ·
and I'm glad I mllde it"
Thatlhe Chargers got off the play ball hadn't come down yet, so ljusl
jumped and it landed in my .hands."
was big in itself.
.
·
Coleman didn't realize until later
Jason Hanson missed a 53-yard
field goal with 1:211eft in lhe first . thai Moon: was in on the play. ·
"He didn't have iojump up there
half, keeping the Lions' lead a1 14wilh
me," said Coleman, who real10 alid giving lhe Chargers lhe ball
ly
didn'ljump
lhal high.
on their 43. Humphries lhrew ~s­
"He didn 'I jump," Moore said. "I
es of eight and 15 yards to Terrell

just n:memher a lot of guys standing
around and lhe ball landing in the
guy's arms. II just seemed like no
o~e limed il right"
McNeil said lhe Lions had a miscommunicalion''cven before lhe play
started.

·

"Coleman was small enough,
wise enough, 10 be in perfect position," McNeil said.
Tile Lions (4-6) lost their fourth
straight game, severely damaging
their playoff hopes.
Lions owner William Clay Ford
has implied thai il will lake a Lions
· playqff win 10 save Fontes' job. Lasl
year, Ford issued a playoffs-or-else
ultimatum when the Lions wen: 3-6,
and they won !heir last seven lo qualify. Detroit was lhen routed 58-37 by

In the ·wake of gambling probe,
pensions will continue through lhe
season's two remaining games,
against Temple and Miami. The
players wen: told of lhe jlecision by
lhe school's alhlelic director, Chel
Gladehuk. ·
''Tiley ·all want to be reinstated 10
the team and have their suspensions
vacated," William Keefe, the Boston
lawyer who represents some of the

players, ·told the Boston Herald.
"And they ·all want to play this season for Boston College."
Keefe told The Boston Globe lhal
he did not expect the players lo be
expelled from school.
' Whether any of lhe suspeniled
players ever will be reinstated to lhe
learn will be decided on a case-bycase basis, the school said.

•

Scoreboard
2. " - (1!) ..............19-S l.s.NI
l . Kalluekyll31 ..........)4.1 U42
4. Wilcc Rlnoot 16) . ..... 16-6 I.S~

Bilsketball

s. ~(1,1, ...................... 2)·8
6. ~................ ............. 11·'

·NBA standings
L .fa.

Ill

MiOIOL.. . .......... .....
Ortondo.,............. ....1
Plriladclphi• .-·-········-2
WAAhin11on ..............l

I .667
l .400
l ..QJ

II
l ''l
2'1:

Bolfoll,... ..................l
New Jmty ..............0

4 .200
l .000 !loo

l '"

I .All
I .1100

:'

~'TaAND::::::: ; ~ ~~
~:*.-:::::;:::::::::: : :::

II. lvwa Sl. .................. 24-9

I

il

1 .600
3

~

J'f:.

Toron~o .................... 2

l

.400

4
4',,

)

. 2~

»:

Utoll .... ....... .. .......... 2

Deawer ........ ............. 3
~ll .............. .. l
[)alllls ....................... l

s.n Antunio ............. l
VUCOUY(f ......

.. ... 0

L f.ao

0 1.00
1 .:100
4 .429
'3 .400
4 .200
s .167
6 .000

hdflc: DhlUan
L.A. IAUn..............4 1 .661
Seaftlt ......................4 2 .661
L.A. cu-n ...........) 2 .600

Ponl-'.:...........:.....4

s~o

..............2

Go.......... ..... .... ,.l
P'llotftilii ,., .................C

J
4
•

6

. ~71

Ill
)

)~
~·~
4'~
~

-

l 14
1.3!

20

Hae an: the Top 2.~ 1t1m1 in d~ Aqo.
Pn:n women'• collep bukelbAJI
prc-N110n poll, ~ith fiul-plr« vocr1 In

.200
.000

~;ialed

poi••

,

"""'

pore!Mhael,• 199~·96. ~. lotal
blatd on 2S poinlt lor a flnt place •ott

· throuah ooe poinl for a 2.~1h pla.."C •otc,
lllld '-•t
final rnnkjna: · ·

ye•'•

Clli~· 97. Phoalll79
Sntllt 110, ~1110 94

Iaa

Tonllbl't pmes

PtUbdeiJ!hia • New Yori. 7::t0 p.m.
111 WM""on. 7:~ p.m.
a..lone • ML.mt. 1:)0 p.m.
NO a1 Atlanu, 7;:l0 p.m.

Del"*

~

oaaw.

lll.lt!JA
10

IIM7

4

6. I1JW11 ............. ............ 21-.
7. Old Dominion .......... l9-J

MM6
K61
71J

7
6

8. W. K.cnutl:ky ........ .. l9-ll
9. Vudcfbilt ................ lJ.H
10.. YlraJnia....... ........... 26-7
11.1'c:uYTe..:h ............ 27·5 ,

677
6&lt;12
6l9
,.,

12. "-u ................. 2l· IO

Weclneoday'• pmes

Loot

l. Scanf'ord (.\~) ............ 29-.1 l.twO
1. Abboma(7) ............. :M.M 99~

.I.Ccoqia ....... ............. 28·~
4. Tcnnl!lxe ................ 32-4
~ - Co~U~t~.1ku1 . , ............ 34--4

MinatiOCa. 8 p.m.
111 HouttOft, 8 p.m.
Jlhonl
Milw:~~~ltl:, R::IDp.m.
, . . , . at
8: ~ p.m.
Ool*e S.. • Scalf)c. 10 p.m.
LA. Cllppm It V-.;uuYct. IOp.m.

9~1

9

323

17

2JJ

ll . - · ...................11·9

117

·

II

:oliO

10. Not,. Dome .., ....... 2l·8

22. Wiaca.jn .............. 21-1
2~. Nonh Cwlina ..... ll-1•
2-4. SltJ)hen F. AUIIin .. 27-&lt;1
:ZS. Av&amp;.m ...................1J.9

12

2J
I
I
1.1 .

- . Oklp. 1:30 p.m.
L.A. Lat..-t M S.• A•roalo, I :JO

•Ucoll.9p.IO.

2

414

.. ~.J
lK~

279
2.0

1110
1~9

)I

s.n

16

Iaa

ground game, with Leonard Russell
Philadelphia.
gaining 80 of San Diego's 127 rush·
"They pushed' us ·around, they
bent us,".Fonles said, "We go home. ing yards:
.Sanders gave the Lions a' 14-7
now a bauen:d football team. We're ·
lead with louchdown runs oftwci and
nol counting ourselves out yet."
II yards in a span of about three
The Lions slil!,haven 'I beaten a
minutes.
Both drives were aided by
learn with a winning record lhis year,
big
San
Diego
penalties. Sanders finand Still must face Kansas City,
ished wit!&gt; SI yards on 16 carries.
Green Bay and San Francisco.
Detroit quarterback . Scoll
Humphries was superb in his
Mitchell re-aggravated a rib cage
return, completing 24 of 32 passes
injury when he was sacked by corfor a season-high 311 yards and three
nerback Darrien Gordon on the sectouchdowns, wilh no interceptions.
ond play of the third quarter.
He threw a 32-yard touchdown
The Lions made il interesting by
pass in the first quaner 10 Tony Marlin, who had eight catches for 113 · scoring on a one-yard pass from Don ·
Majkowski, who replaced Mitchell.
yards, and a nine-yarder in the third
to,Breu Perriman with I :52 remainquarter to light end Alfred Pupunu.
ing. But San Diego's Junior·· Seau
who later broke his left ankle.
recovered lhe ensuing onsidc kick 10
The Charger~ rediscovered their
snuff oul Detroit's last hope.

" By PAUL NEWBERRY
· . ATLANTA(AP) _ B e lho gh
.
Yn u

:no

160

4 0 ,601) 2;\0 IIJO
tt 0 .400 214 226
fa 0 .oiOO 202 2~
7 0 .100 244 2K6

HI~

Centr.IIM•IIiun
Orun Blly ............ H 2 0 .1100
Mlnnesoca ............ s ~ o ..500
etm.-qo................. ~ 0 .400
lklroit .................. 4 15 0 ..tOO
TAmpa Bay .......... 1 ~ 0 .200

lMR
169
loW
20M

144
194

II~

St. l..ouh: ......... _... H 9 0

16

Phoonh................. ~ K 2

12 37

The suspended players are ~niors
Brian Maye and John Coleman,
juniors Sooll Dragos, Marcus •Be'nlbry, Paul Cary, Cliris Cosenza, Steve
Everson ·and Kyle 'Geiselman, and
sophomores Jcrmainc Monk, Jamall
Anderson, Dan Collins, Brandon
King and Rob Tardio,
Of those 13, only Dragos and ·
Monk staned against Pittsburgh, lhe
only game players implicated in the
'candal panicipaled in afrer the
.Syracuse game. Monk took the start·
ing spot from Mayc, whose scasor.
ended after he dislocated an elbow
(See PROBE.on Pa1e S)

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Minnesolil football coach Jim Wacker
. plans to work the final two games of
the season hefon: stepping down.
according to media n:pons.
Wacker told his staff on Monday
lhal he will resign, lhe Sai11t Paul
· Pion~tr Prus reported today. He
was 10 tell the team of his decision
!his mornins and later was 10 discuss
it ala news conference, according to
Midwes.l Spons Channel and lhe
Star Tribflne.
Wacker's resignation will be
effective at lhc end of the season,
· according 10 the reports.
Wacker told friends Monday lhal
he wanted lhe Gophe11110 be able lo
hire a new coach by Dec. I. the Pioneer Prtss reponed. He said il was
a tremendous disadvantage when he
was hired in late December 1991 and
couldn't assemble a staff until after
Jan. I, the newspaper said.

~

JM
~

11 .SO

17 49 . U
16 60 ~~~
16 44

44

I~

44

J9

'I

46

67

Tonlahl's pmes
Burfalu 011 PitisburJ,h. 7:JO p.m.
Wuhin.lun _ut NI:W J~oTJCy. 7:30p.m.
Hilflf(ll'"d ut San1..'*· IO:JO p.m.

,

Wednesday's gam..
fAJn1on1on Ill Oltll*ll; 7:30p.n1.
Floridll• Montn.'tll, 7:)0 p.m.
V&gt;~ncuuycr al N.Y. hlunders,

192
214
19l

7 : ~0

Transactions
lluoboD

N..-._..

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIE.~ N Chuck Cuuicr bench ~;oach 11nd Hal
McRIII! hilling inmucaur. SJaned 01-'
Brcm
to 01 mioor-Jeu,aulCulllraL1.

-,.Nn.l7

CIM'Oiinltu St Louis, I p.m.

O.k'l" • Koouao City. I p.m.
' CINCINNATI ;ae Duff.to:-t p.m.
Denver at New EnJiand. I r··m
.
JC~~.:bom'lllc M Pi11lbllraJI, p.m.
New OrbN Ill Atllnll. I p.m.
N.Y. JctJIIIMiillftii'IOiis, I p.m.
Seattle at Oetroi1, I p.m.
WuhinJion,. Pliilllklphia. I p.m.

Ou:-:!"•

ST. LUUIS CARDINALI): b.,.-!Jill.:d
tbcir IYY7 optiun on LHP Rid. Honey·
~uu .

Blllkelboll

•

Bahiman ot San F.-..,uco ... p.m.
Mlaml111 Holmotl. 4 p.m.
N.Y.. (iiln&amp;l.r Ari&amp;oiP. .. P·m·
Tlllftli. Bay al ~OklO, 4 p.m,
Mi'""""" • Oaloltllld, ~p. m.

-.,,No&gt;.

N.tloMI .....ttt.IA.-mden

CHICAGO

...._

B~U.S :

Pl""u P Diclwy

Simpkins un the injui'W 1i11. AaivDicd F
Ja1&lt;n1 Caffey rrom 1be inju~ list.

Foolb.U
N_F_...._
.

. HQ~STON OILERS: l'roolle!t&lt;d Rich
Snead. dim;tar or pro pmoMCI. to ditec·
tor of player penonncl.
'

II
, Offtn Bay ar DaU11, 9 p.m.

Hockey

Hoi:key

--"''-'

19

BUFFALO SABRES: SeM LW Bar·

NHL standings

rie Moon 10 R«bater of' tbc AHL

A--

A Complete Line OfHardware

FLORIDA. PANTHERS : Recalled

EASTI!RN CONFERENCE

:'1 ~~,.. ~ liA
Plol.................. 9 9 0 II SO SO

=.10 .........

I~

WAGNER HARDWARE

3l . :M

N.Y . . _ .......6 9 ~ 16 l9 l7
WMIIi-..........7 I , 0 14 .. '6
" -.., ..........6 7 2 .. so ·&lt;19
N.Y............. ,,! 1 l II )6 ..

SIXTH STREET
RACINE, OHIO 45771
PHONE: 949·2330

RW C_rDI&amp; Manlo rrom Cuollna of lhe

AHL.
,
HARTFORD WHALERS: Re••·
,,..,... D NoJaoo l'nll oo Sjlrinalleld or'"'
AHL.
PHOENIX COYOTES: Placed C
Miu l!ulwood. LW lim Mt:"-'c ud
RW SM. Doon oo dlo iajo,.S lio. Re·
e.llllll LW Juoa SimDII frvm 1.11
olliO&amp;IHL

v.-

Membtr of The Hardware Aaaoclatton

,,,,,; ~

-·.

IJ

,/

.

in bid to get more concessions from
players.
.
alternatives. Some owners have agreed lo give up ils option year in spenl40 minutes detailing a history
asked Selig to call ror another vole. 2001 and~notlo limillhe lux- of negotiations and explaining lhal
lhe major provisions all wen: inter"Tile meelina was a very direct ury tall ki five teams per season.
related and would not be changed. ·
Playen
voted
in
September
lo
one," said manaaemenl neaolialor
Randy Levine, who completed the give lhe union's executive board He also said players wen: willing to
projJosed agreement wilh Fehr on authority to ratify the contract, but play under lhe expired ilgn:cmcnl,
Oet 24, only 1o sec c:lubs reject il 18- conditioned that approval on no essentially giving owners a take-il·
or-leave-it choice. .
121ast week. Thllt was II voteS shon major changes being made.
.
.
J;lehr
said
he
told
owners
"we
had
'''They were under no illusions,"
of approval.
"Bud described lhe clubs' posi- neither lhe authority nor the will- Fehr said. "You play il ou~ so they
can say lhey tried, I guess."
tion and Don responded lo il," ingness to renegotiate il." ·
Selig brought along John HarLevine and Fehr have.set a deadU!vine said. "It was a civilized
line
nf
midnight
EST
Thursday.
If
.
rington
ohhe Red Sox, Paul Beeston
.meelins. not a hostile one."
of
lhe
Blue
Jays, Claude Brochu of
It's unclear ir Sclis will call for !here's no deal by then, free aaents
another vote. After n:jectin11 the could begin signing Friday under lhe lhe Expos and Fred Wilpon of the
deal last Wednesday, lc8IIIS voted 30- rules of lhe agreement lhal expired Mets, U,viile and two other lawyers.
0 1o give the IO-man executive . in December 1993- which remains Fehr was joined by his staiT, David ·
council authority 10 approve an in force under a federal court order. Cone of the Yankees, Tom·Giavine
Fehr, according lo two sources, oflhe Braves and BJ. SurhoiT oflhe
agreement, but only if lhe union

John Sql0111 was lhe best pitcher in
baseball !his year he couldn't bring
.
'

· Wacker, IS-38 in five seasons al
Minnesota, has a mandate 10 win five
games this season. When he signed
a. two-year conii'IICI cKicnsion jusl
before the final game of 1995, it
included 1he stipulation lhal he
would resign if he did not win al
least five.
Tile Golden Gophers are 3'6 and
on a six-game losing streak following a 45-28 loss Saturday lo Wisconsin. Their last two games Ibis season an: again•• Illinois and Iowa,
both at the Mctrodome.
· If Wacker does not return ncxl
season. he will be one of four foolball coaches in the Big Ten who will
not be back. Indiana lired Bill Mallory, Purdue coach Jim Colleuo
announc.cd his resignation, and also
on Monday, Illinois fired Lou Tepper.
Wacker did not return telephone
calls ~onday.
·

Gambling probe...-&lt;-co-nt-inue-d-fro-m-:P-age~4~&gt;

p.m.
.
Philaddpbiq M N.Y•. R&gt;~naeu. 7:JO
p.m.
.
Colorado at Oelroil, 7:;\0 p.m.
Culgary IU Oolltu., 11:)0 p.m
Tnmntu at ARIIhcim, IO.:JO p.m.'

Wftk lld.ale

·

Orioles.
Owners in favor of lhe proposed
deal an: telling Selig il would be beller than playing under lhe expired
rules. They think Selig carries
epough votes 10 gel a deal ratified if
he wanls to.
Some owners opposed lo lhe
agreement would rather allempl 10
impose a salary cap. But that strategy probably would be· mel wilh a
postseason strike, and il appears
unlikely lo get the required lhn:e·
quaners vole among owners.
If Selig wants to call another
meeting, he would be under a tight
time constraint. While Fehr didn't
completely close off extending lhe

deadline, he made an extension
appear unlikely.
"Players have 10 sign. Oubs
have to sign players," he said. "You
can't keep pushing Ibis back."
After the main part of the meeting, Fehr aM Selig had a smaller session lhal was joined by Beeston,
Levine, Cone and Gene Orza. the
union's.No. 2 official.
·At the end of lhe session'attended by lhe larger group, Fehr asked
Selig who on lhe owners' side had
lhe authority 1o make a deal. Selig
replied lhal he does.
Levine, who feels betrayed lhal
SeliB didn't suppon lhe· ag~mcnt,
intends lo resign as of midnight
Thursday.

pn:f~r to ~e~sign wi.lh lhe Braves.
. Series," S.mollz said. "~ul if I can
. Reahsucally, we hve ma world remove myself from bemg a ,team
that's not so much a baseball game player and jusllook al il personally,
as much as.it's a business," h~_said. this is definitelY_ the most.gra~fyi~g .
"I plan to s1t down wnh my Wile and, awl\fd I've re~e1ved 10 th1s poml.
my·~ agents and ha.mmer it o~1.1t
Ther~ also was .• ~ense of
won I be a qu1ck deciSion. My 1dea n:dempuon m Smollz vo1ce. 1\ven
of a perfect situation would he to though he had double-figure wins in
stay hen:. This is home for me. Bul six of the previous seven seasons, he
I won't clo~~·"
never won .more than IS, l~ading
Smollz, ":'ho. e1ved a $250,000 many lo bchevc lh~t he wasn •.lak.bonus for wmnmg the award on lop mg advantage of h1s full potenual.
of h~ $5.25 million salary, also
Acrually, though, Smoltz was .
received two second-place votes for .troubled for several ye~ by a son:
· 136 points. Brown had two firsts, 26 elbow lhal finally requ1red surgery.
seconds and 88 points.
Thts year, fully recovered, he
Andy Benes of the Cardinals was silenced all the critics and look his
third, Hideo Nomo of lhe Dodgers place alongside Maddux , and
was founh and theie was a lhrec-way Glavine. ·
.
.
tie for fifth wi!h Maddux, Trevor
"Everybody fell hke ~was m lhe
Hoffman of lhe Padres and Tndd shadow~ and needed lh1s lo be !he
Worrell of the Dodgers.
e(\Ual wrlh those teammates of mme
Atlanta's six-game World Series or be considered one of lhe besl
loss 10 the Yankees look some oflhe ~ilchers," Smo!lz said: :·1 never felt
pleasure away for Smoltz.
hke I needed II, but II s definnely
"Thai tarnishes this a liule bit. I gralifying to take the pressure oiT
truly wanted to. win the World that."
· · · · - ···
·· ·

'Wack,r says he will resign
Powers
h
ll
as Minnesota footba coac . .and Broxterman

H
44

S4

-

We've added another Showroom
Filled with Bedroom suits and
other fine furniture

Moolrclll J. Edmoll(oR 2. OT
Coluntdo 6, N.Y. l•lilftdl."111 2
VaM:ouver J, N.Y. RnnJ'."B 2
Dnlku l. An:dM..-im 2

· San l&gt;lcao 27. Odroit21

l I

Miami."

· Monday'• scores

Monday'uc:ort

New~ ......... l

10 play for his team this weekend
against Temple and next weekend at

Oul'llllo l, Fklrillo 2. OT

WCIIenDi•Won
Sanfrfllk:iK0 ...... 7 ~ · 0 .100 2~&lt;1 1~2
Carolina ........ ....... 6 4 0 .600 217 14M
S1. Loul• .............. 3 .1 0 JOO 201 2!«)
New Or............. 1 8 0 .100 1~1 1Jl
Att:.l:11.. ....... :....... l 'I 0 .100 11fl )0~

,

4~

... , 61

Chicago 10..........,6 222
Detroit 10.............6 222
Toronlo ........ :....... H K 0

7 J
Surd1Ke .............. 7 7 J
&amp;lmontnn ............ H- 10 0
Vum:uu11~o-r ...........?4 6 0
. Citi#:VY . ............ ..1 II I
Atmhtim .............. J II J

»: L) I0 .700
lll. ll: tA
2lK '20)
1~7

4~

46 .JK
4fl 41
4~ )4
16 52

u..~~ i\n~tcks .........7

1 o .'100 ~62 167
l 0 .700 206 1611
·• o .600 m 249
$ 0 .soo 206 , 239
6 0 .400 211 190

6 0 .400

41

41
70
S4
..7

·

straight losing seasons
-pUSh IllinOIS tO fl"re liepper

W L I lll. GE liA

Padlk: lN•Isktn
Colomdo 11.. ..... ..4 J 27 70

DlwWDn

J 0 .700 B9 I~
.4 0 .600 20b 16$
6 0 .400 IM 2~H

43

42
64

Two of the 13 players allegedly ·
bel against Boston College in a 4517 loss lo Syracuse on Oct. 26:
Coach Dan Henning has said
those two, who wef~. not idenHf1ed
by the school, wiii,I\Jlt be allowed 1~
relurn, and DC confirmed Monday
that any player who bel on a BC
game would not be reinstated.
Sophomore defensive back Kiernan Speight, who was not suspended bul felt he had been w'rongly
accused, returned to the BC campus
from his home in Washington, D.C.,
according to his . lawyer, John
McBride.
·
Speight chose not 10 play in the
Notre Dame game, bul McBride said
his client is "rendy, willing and able.

Interior Lineman, Bill Francis; and demic honors.
Tile seclional clwnpion volleyOutstandina Defensive Player,
ball
team will be honored Thunday
olf-season and to strive for more suc- J,.-omee Calaway.
cess in 1997.
Calaway and McDaniel earned in a separate awards ceremony. .
Note: Beca- via._ vi Idea·
11ic Coach's award wenl 10 bolh Tri-Valley Conference firs1-te~
tilkadoa
latOI'IIIIIIIon 011 plulcla
Daniel Otto and Nate Radford. Olh· honors recently, while four studenptaken
at
the
beoqold, the pb ~ 11 vi
er awards went to Most Improved, alhletes - Chris Buchanan, Bill~
the
special
award
wluen wll. be
Josh Hager, Outstanding Offensive Francis, Kelli Bailey and Jamie
Back, Adam McDaniel; Outstanding Drake - earned all-league all-aca- published ala later date.
lhroughoul lhe KUOD and chatlensed lhe team lo work hard in lhe

himself 10 say he's bel!er lhan team- . he played for the Allanta Braves;, he
mate On:g Maddux.
· .
would have won the Cy Young.
Maddux's unprecedented streak " Atlanta's prized pitching staff
' T.W0
of four straight Cy Young Awards became lhe firsllo win four consec·
., · I '
.
.
officially ·came to an end Monday utive Cy Young Awards and has won
wilh lhe expected announcement five of six: a streak ihat began with
lhal SmoiiZ was a landslide Nation- Tom Gla:vme's 1n 1991.
CHAMPAIGN, 111. (AP) _ Lou n:sipation today.
al League winner over Florida's
Maddux won for lhe Chicago
Thppertook pride in running a clean
Illinois athletic director Ron Kevin Brown.
Cubs in 1992 and lhen won in each
: program al Dlinois and in his play- Guenther praised Tepper's "class
Maddux, who was merely a lfe&amp;l of his first lhn:e seasons with the
ers' high graduation rale and ·civili- and dignity" in announcing lhe fir- pitcher this year instead of superhu- Braves. This year, Maddux rank~d
.
·
man, had to sellle for a tie for fifth second in the league to Brown wnh
ty. In lhe end, lhose qualities could'"II;'Unfonunately, we have nol been in lhe balloting by the Baseball Writ- a 2.72 ERA. bul a lack of run sup. n'l overshadow two straight poor as successful on the field as we . ers Association of America.
pon lefl him with a 15-11 record.
seasons for' the Fighting Dlini, and would expect and we feel a change
"MadiiWI is the :best pitcher in .
"I'm very honored 10 at least tern' Thpper was' tired. ,
.
in leadership is necessary 81 Ibis baseball "said SmoiiZ, who receive!! . porarily lifllhat throne he's had for .
"Our philosophy has been to lime," Guenther said.
26 of~ 28 ftrSI-place votes and was four years," SmoiiZ said. "!think the
educate by .promoting academic
tyrone Washington, a safety who second on the other two ballots. "I competition lhis siaffl\as shown and
achievement, positive social behav- played under Tepper from 1992-95, ' don't know if I'll ever not believe lhe.ability IO pitch with those guys,
· ior, racial harmony and hard-nosed said he n:specled the coach. ·
'that. 1 believe strongly in my abili- I know l'lllook back and be honored
wiMina footbaii,"Thpper said Mon"It's a shame it had to go down lies and whall'm capable of doing. to be playing wilh those guys for so
day. "I'm sorry lhat we have not had like Ibis," Washington said. "Things But with any kind of suppon and long."
more success on lhe field lhis sea- just didn't work out for him."
luck and breaks this year. he could
SmoiiZ doesn't know if he'll be
son."
Illinois losl its firsllhn:e aames have been righllhen:, too." ·
part of the hesl rotation in baseball
Tepper, 51, is 25-29-2 in five sea- by a combined score of 116-11, lowe
Even under lhe besl of circum- in 1997; A free agent, he w1ll be
1sons at Illinois.
ering already dismal auendance 81 stances !hough it would have been begin listening lo offers from other
, . He said he disagreed with lhe Memorial Stadium. Tile mini played tough f;,. Maddux or anyone else lo ieams on Friday, !hough he would
decision, but will remlin coach at . before an average of mon: lhan beat Smoltz this year.
···
·•
.Illinois (2-7, 1-S Bia Ten) in the llli- 16,000 empty seats in Champaign
The 29-year-old right-hander was
ni's tinaii\Vo games- Saturday at Ibis . year, including a crowd of 24-8 with a 2.94 ERA, winning 14
.Minnesota and Nov. 23 against Wis- 54,000 in lhe 69,()()().seal stadium for consecutive decisions from April 9·consin in Champaign. He becomes last week's 48-0 loss 10 No. 2 Ohio June 19. He led lhe majors in wins
rthe third lame-duck Big Ten coach, Stale.
and his lolal was the Braves' highl following Purdue's Jim Collello and
Money is a big concern in the alh- esl since 196S, when Tony Cloninger
Indiana's Bill Mallory.
_ lelic depanmenl, which must make wenl 24-11. Smollz also led the
Minnesota's Jim Wacker must money wilh marquee sports such as majors with 276 strikeoull and 253
;win his lat two aame• 1o meet a football and basketball to support all 213 innings.
..five-win provision in his conlniCI. of its programs, school president·
Nol even Brown, lhe only staner
·Midwesl Sports Channel reported James StukeJ.Iold Tile (Champaip) in baseball wilh an ERA below
.·lhat Wacker planned 1o announce his News-Gazelle last week.
2.00, came clase 10 Srnollz.
- • - • " ·· ·
- 7·He had q gn:ai year," Smoltz
saidoflheMarlinsrighl-hander. "If

DIYIIIon .

Dallas II ..............~ 0 22

lallcfn Dlwil6en

Phil....lpllia .........7
Wlllhinaton .......... 7
Dallu ...................6
Arizot\11 ........... ..... 4
N.Y. Giants... .......4

I.,.

I:14

t..

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

II

Otlltrs retrl•l•a •MHs Clrm•o•
Ill. S o n - 101 ....... w.......
ton 74, LSU 7 I, OftiOil ,3, NllliNIPili
41. O.P,.I )1. Mctlt!&gt;hJ• 29, ~CV. 2~.
- . Callll, Colontdo Sc. ll, Mkllla•n St. U. Mont••• II , lllittoiJ 10.
Northwt1ter11 I0, Southet1 Mill. I0.
Tuu A4M I. TuiiiM S, NelNub 4,
Toledo •· llldiua 2. M-,lad 2. SW
Mi_. 5c.1. w.,.-1, """'s.. 1
M.... I.OHJOST, I.-Hall I.
'

,

Wac~m

lknwr ................. '1
' l(.ans"'Cily .........7
IJieso ...... ...6
Statile .............. .... ~
Onkland ............ ..4

~

10

13. H. C.du Sr ...... ».10
14. Lmrisi~~n~~Ttdi .....Jl~l
1~. PnnSI. ........ :......... 27-7
16. Duke ....................16-7
17. Colomdo ...... .........:lt-'1
18. Atk~Nu ...... .......li·IJ

19. Trw ........ , .... ,t. .... ll·~

.l

m

AIJ.ola • - . 1 p.m.
PHiadl~ • TGrOIHO. 7 p.m.
w........ · - - ) ' . 7:;\0p.m.
""'""" • CLEVELAND. 7:;\0 p.m.
Doowt • Doni~. 7::10 p.m.

APTop25
mea's c.ollige poD

ll

Hnustt&gt;l1 ...............6
Cin..:innati ........... .4
Jracklonville . ....... 4
Btlltirnon: .. :.......... l

Providen"~

Cen~ral

Miami .................. 5 S 0 ,j(X) l~H 205
N.Y. kots ............. .l 9 0 .100172 264

II

.

~

..Atlanta's Smoltz captures NL Cy Young award by landslide ..

WESTERN CONFERENCE

o
.100 m m
o.D
112 208

Central Dlvlllon
Pin~bwllh ............7 J o .700

women's coUege poD

Monday's tJ&lt;Ores

~· ...s.,

13

APTop25

:~:

S:in Antonio at Utah, ppd.. w~arpcd

490

BMitmDIYliiM

»: L I lll. ff tA
Buflalo ....... .... ......7 J 0 .100 191' 17l

Iaa

New '""'""' .......1 J
llldiAQ11901i~..o, ..... ..5 ·s

San Fram:iuo I. Vanderbilt I. WEST
VIRGINIA. I. Wiu:onsin I. Wyomia11 .

6

.

18. Swlford ..... ............ 20-9

I~

Te.mple U Auburn Jl 0.0. Purdue .tl.
VirJIIil Tedl20. UNLV IM. Alabamilll.
California 12. o.:o.-,..'tuwn 12; St. John'•
II, WuhlnJt.&gt;n II, KMw St. 10, Okla·
homa SC. S. VirJioial. Or&lt;p7, Rhode
blond •• Uri..... v... nJ l . l.onJ &amp;-h
St. J. MIAt.ll (OHIO) l, Trnncatcc ),
Coli. of Charle11on I, Old Domini011 1.

.:r n

Denm- 104. Torolllu 9)

649
Ml
6l4

11

IU, lndl11011 16o4, Louinille 149. SoUth
Curulina 144, Tulane 141 , llltnol• ~.
Conntctlcul 81. Tulia 69, Pen• !it: ~K.

Mktwnf Olwi*ln

. . . . .00 .. , .. .............. 6

Arbnw .............. l0-1 .\
I•. ResnoSt... .... .....11·11
1~ . MuwhuW1ti ....... J!.1

lHhtn Neth·inl •otn:

·WESTERN'CONFERENCE
I.-

1~ .

NFL standings ·
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

19. Arizona .................. l6-7 4li:20. Cicm10a ............... ,B-II 4)~
21 . BosronColle,e .... l9-ll
~96
22. MirmtJOIII ........ :... J9-IJ 290
lllowa ............. :......... 2'-9 2~7
24. GecqeWashinglonll-l 2..16
2.,. MarquetiiL ............ll-8. • HW

2

,.. .... ..,............ ,..... )

7Q4

Northf'UI 01-.lllon
H01fonl ...............7 l 2 16
Buffalo .......... .......? 8 I IS
Monlmll. .............6 ij l I~
Botton ................... :'i 7 J n
OIIDWa .................4 6 S L\
Pittsburah ............4 10 I
'.1

Football

25

9~1

12. Syra..:u~e , ............... 29·9

16. Tu11 ..................21· 10
17. N&lt;w Me.lico .......... 11-l

3~

Cbarlo&lt;t• ................ )

lrll.llana .................... .l

11
10 .

10. Duke :................. ;.(1.1) l&gt;eO

CtnlniDhW..

1

l.ll~

9. Michiw ...... :: ........ 2o.11 1,0\Ji

AU.nUcot.W...

»:
New York ........... ·---~

1,)71

1. Vil'-1 ................. 16-1 1.191
a. Ncnh Catollno ....... ll·ll I,101

'
·EASTERN CONFERENCE

I.-

t4
1
9
"

: On the baseball labor front,

NEW YORK (AP) - Bud
• Selig's effort to exlract more con: cession• from burball players failed,
leavina lhe actina commissioner
until Thursday to accept lhe proposed labor agreement at face anothrr year under 1993 rules.
'"The ownen did not offer any
•
rationale, reason or discussion why
, lhose changes should be made.''
union head Donald Fehr said after
Monday's session.
If !here's no deal, interleague
play, revenlll! sharing and a luxury
tall would be wiped away.
Sclis, who returned to Milwaukee
,, after lhe session, said he would call
Fehr today after considering his

Boston College suspends 13 football players for 1996
·NEWTON, Mass. (AP)-Tile 13
members of Boston College's foot·
ball team who wen: suspended in a.
gambling investigation will not be
allowed 10 play again Ibis seas!)n,
school pfficials announced.
The players were suspended
shortly before Boston College lost to
Notre Dame last Sawrday.
DC announced Monday lhe sus-

nnity coacll Dick Rupe. hdley
R.C. Faulk IIIIMd lhe Moat
Improved Golfer, wbile Milt Kina
'NOll lhe eo.cb't Awll'd.
Next. vmity held foocblll coacb
C8ey Coffey millie PI tenlllions 10
members of his lolm, which tinilhed
It J-9. Coffey COIIIIIICnded the team
for !heir effon and improvement

~

The Dilly Sentinel• Page 5

fall athletes get honors at awards banquet

Alhleloa, fwly lllld COKhea of Other awll'llt weet to Dura WrilleS.Ierll Hip School honored man. MOlt lmpiowd; antic Mills
wilh ILIIDe meal and awlldlc:ere- MoltOutltlldina Checrlr 1or,8ct·
mony receady It Royal Oat Resort . 1y Sheets, MOlt Spirited; lllld Jllnic
- Five Poinls. ·
Dnke, Most Creative.
, a-ieadina awarda were preThe c'-leaden were honored
, sented by che erf:Nii'llllllviaer Carform ·!heir pat effon durin1 lhe
rina Bailey. Eamlna lhe !0110 senior football seuon.
Golf awards wen: presented by
; cheer'-ling award was Laura Arix.

fails
.\Selig
: By RONALD BLUM

LEANS FOR TOUCHDOWN- San Diego tight Blades and Into the end zone In the third quarend Alfred PuPI'nu (center) Jean• foi'WIIrd past ter of Monday nlght'a NFL game In San Diego,
DeVoH defender• AntDnlo London and Bennie · where the Chargers won 27-21. (AP)

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

'••
•·

'against Syracuse.
. in¥olved · the office of Middlesex
. At lhe lime the suspe'lfiions wen: County district allomey Thomas
announced, Everson was already Reilly has implicated more athletes
suspended for refusing 10 re-enter lhe than any known probe in college
Pittsbursh game.
sports.
The Ea1les (4-6) began their curRumors of the alleged samblinll
rent lhn:e·gallie losing ~treak in lhe begim swirling after lhe SyracYse
Syracuse game.
Jame and intensified .after lhe
Eaales, favored by II 1/2 points, lost
The decision lo keep the 13 play- 20-13 ai.Pitisburgh on Oct. 31. .
ers off lhe team for the test of the
Two days later, Henning and
season doesn't figure to· have a Gladchuk announced lhe invesliga·
major impact on the outcome of lhe lion II a late-ni11ht news conference.
remainina games since DC should
.And lui Wednesday, lhe)' particstill be a big favorite over Thmple ipaled wilh Reilly 11 a campus news
and a hu~.undeidog to Miami.
conference in whic:h the suspensions ·
BC plans to submit a summary of wen: disclosed. Reilly said he had
its investigation lo the NCAA once found no evidence lhal any DC
.il'l completed. Thai report will con- players had compromised the outlain lhe school's recommendations come of any same.
for reillllllinssutpended players, the
Reilly said the players ll8d bel
school uid.
from $25 10 $1,000 on lhe World
. It iupinst NCAA resulalions for Serie•. c:olleae f001baJI or pro foot.collep alhle&amp;esto bet on pro or col- ball. He lidded that hit office does
lep 1port1 evenll.
not plan 1o file criminal chllrlcs, a
• Lut year, Maryland quanerback common decision with misdemeanor
Scott Milanovich wu suapended by aamblina.
the NCAA for elaht pmea for pmAI lhe news c:onfe~nce, PlldbliiiJ on collep buketball. ~ chuk wu noncommillll on whelhet ·
~later reduced lhe auapen1ion · the schjlol would rescind lhe sehol~ ·rcu.-.
lllhip• or lake.further ICtion ~&amp;ainll
The BC lnvntlsllion that lhe llhleles.

••

get NCAC honors
CLEVELAND (AP) - Wittenberg tailback Aaron Powers and
Case Reserve outside linebacker
Eric Broxterman have been selected
as lhe players of the week in the
Nonh Coast Athletic Conference.
,Powers, a senior from New Brc:
men, carried 27 limes for 175 yards
'in a·21-13 victory over Wooster. He
scored on runs of 23 and 61 yards 10
break the school record wilh 40
touchdowns (38 rushing, 2 fllCeiv-.
ing).
· ·
.
Broxtcqnan, a senior from Homewood, Ind., had two inlcrccplions. !
amltwo fumble recoveries in a 7-0
victory over Chicago. He also had a
key tackle on u founh and goal from .
the four-yard line late in the game as
the Spanans posted their second ·
shutout of the season.

Brown
and DeMasslmo
get OAC honors
. .
CLEVELAND (AP) - Mariella
running back Dante Brown and
Hiram linebacker Jason DeMassimo
have been selected a5 lhe players of
the week in the Ohio Co~fen:nce .
Brown, a junior from Orange
Park, Fla., rushed for·413 yards ·on
a school-record SI carries and l~d
his own school record with six
touchdowns in a 58-28 victory over
Heidelberg.
II was the second lime Ibis season
lhal Brown has run for mon: than
400 yards in a game. He set lhe
NCAA Division·m record with 441
yards on 45 carries Oct S against
Baldwin-Wallace.
Brown's 2,180 yards is an OAC
season record and he needs 64 more
to sel the Division ID mark. He is
also on pace to break nalio!'ll marks
for average rushins yards per same
and all-purpose yardase in Saturday's same aaainsl Muskinauin,
DeMuaimo, a IICIIior from Mdonia, ll8d !5 tacklea and I 29-yard
return wilh an inletception in a 27- ,
7 loA lo John Carroll. He al10
recovered a rumble.

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�, Pqe 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy. Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, November 12, 1196

Pomeroy •

Middleport, Ohio·

·rhe justice system hits a whole new·low in Mississippi
Ann
Landers

• By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: "Can this be
':possible?" you. might ask. I am
·sending you the newspaper clipping
. so you will know I am not making it
·' up.
A Mississippi man is out on
parole for separate convictions of
r:apc and murder. During a search for
atolen tools, county sheriff's
deputies entered his apanment and
..:found the stolen tools along wilh a

rifle, two shotguns and five lwld·
guns. Some of the guns were loaded.
Bear in mind, this man is a convict·
ed felon and, by law, is not allowed
to own any guns. You'd think he
would be sent straight back tp prison
for life, right? Wrong.
It seems the man has some influential friends in high places who
wrote leuers on his behalf to the
parole board and the prosecuting
attorney. The corrections department
did not revoke his parole, and the
prosecuting attorney qonvinced the
. judge to drop the charges. Nine
counts of possessing stolen tools and
guns, and no parole violation? A
convicted murderer and rapist with
eight guns, and they tum him loose?
It's the uuth, Ann. Can you imagine

the lawsuit if he kills another person to be a friendly place with pleasan~ of my bank and asked quest.ions
while he's out on the street?
accommodating tellers. but no more. ~t the chanaes thai bothered me.
In the past year, I have noticed I was informed of new policies, such
The last I heard, the district atlor·
ney had decided to step in and take many new faces. The atmosphere is as:
I) Tellers cannot leave their winthe case to a grand jury. Please print no longer friendly. It looks mate like
this letter so Mississippi will know a cut-rate drugstore than a bank. The dows without the knowledge of the
the world is watching. It makes me walls are plastered with ads for com· management This includes going to
ashamed to be a citizen of this state. mercia! products and various money the vault, going for supplies, going
· programs. I now must wait in line to the bathroom .or going for a drink
.. Anonymous Of Course
,
Dear Anonymous: Thanks for the forever to be served. It didn 't used to ofwater.
2) Tellers cannot make mistakes
update. If the sheriff in that town or be like this. Instead of cheerful,
anyone else connected with this case energetic tellers, I see ·unhappy, without paying a price. They are
allowed a certain number of errors
would like to explain why this con- stressed-out employees.
I overheard a teller inform the in a specified time period. If they
victed murderer and rapist is walking around after all this, I ~ould be manager that she was going to the · exceed that number, it could result in
bathroom. Jokingly, I asked if she suspension or termination.
most interested in the explanation.
3) Employees who come to work
Dear Ann Landers: I am an out- was requesting permission. I was
late
six times within a year, even if
horrified
when
she
answered,
"Yes.
raged bank customer who needs to
they
are only late by 0 ne minute, are
let off some steam. I have dealt with Those are the rules now."
I've been to a few branch offices terminated.
this bank for over 15 years. It used

I hope this letter wi II 0(1111 101!\e
eyes and ears in the bankinl ...arid
Management needs to realize that
when the employees are happy, so
are the customers . .. The Biggest
City in Pennsylvania
Dear Pennsylvania: I checked
with two major banks in Chicago
and one branch. It is . not that way
here.. Have you considered changing
banks? I cannot believe all the major
banks in the city of Brotherly Love
are as cold and impersonal as you
have described.
· Send questioM to Ann Landers,
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Loll AQgeles,
Calif. 90045

We CM help you, and you can help the
envlronlflftnt.

"·

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all that food yo~ may feel the urge to
F...Sh Cranberry Relish
Starcher, director, and Linda substitution of I cup non fat milk nap. Go outside and refresh yo~r·
I
orange; I pkg. (12 ounces)
self.
If
the
weather
is
bad,
why
not
King, assistant director, Meigs instead of whole milk will save you
fresh
oi
thawed frozen cranberries; 2
County Health Department/Pre· 7.8 fat grams. When the recipe calls put a video exercise tape in the VCR
medium
tart apples, unpeeled, cored
ventive Health Services program.) for I cup oil, try substituting I cup and have everyone join in the fun.
and
coarsely
chopped; 18 packets of
November is Family Life Month. applesauce and save 100.7 grams of Be sure that you have a enough
artificial
sweetener;
1/8 teaspoon
It is a good time for each of us to fat. These may seem like simple room for everyone to move without
salt.
reflect on 011r own family and what ch(lllges, but they are a start and will hitting the person next to them.
Preparation: Grate rind from
If
that
doesn't
work
for
you,
try
makes it special. Each family struc· help to cut down on your calorie and
orange
and reserve. Peel orange, cut
ture is different. Perhaps a good def- fat intake. As the saying goes, every playing ~ game with .movement.
into
large
pieces. Place orange rind,
Soine examples would be Twister,
inition of family is " A family· is little bit helps.
made up of people who love and
At the end of this article you will Charades or maybe even Simon orange pieces, cranberries and
care for each other, wherever and find some trnditional recipes that are Says. You might -think these are apples in food processor; process '
whoever those people are".
modified to make them-lower in fat games for children, but why not join until finely chopped. Stir in artificial
· In this hectic month, talle time to and calories, but still good tasting . . in the fun? What ever you choose to sweet.ener and salt, Refrigerate until
relax . and enjoy the unique~ess of Why not try one or more of these do on Thanksgiving .have a great ready to serve. Makes 12 servings.
Nutrition information per serving:
day! .
your own family. Do as the Holiday recipes this Thanksgiving ..
Here are some recipe Ideas to '41 calories, 0 g protein, 10 g carboimplies. "Give Thanks". Not only
Do you have little ones in the
for material blessings, but for those family that need your time and lower your fat, cholesterol and.sugar hydra~s . 0 g fat, o mg cholesterol,
22 mg sodium.
that money can not buy such as good attention during this hectic time of Intake during the holidays:
health, your family, your friends.
the year? Well, why not involve
Sweet Potato Pie
Maple Glazed Sweet Potatoes
The traditional Thanksgiving them with the preparation? After all,
2 cups cooked, mashed sweet
I cup frozen apple juice concen·
meal is a huge banquet usually laden Thanksgiving is a time for families,
with calories and fat. Maybe that is so why not involve the whole farni- trate, thawed; 2 teaspoons com- potatoes; 2 eggs, or 4 egg whites,
why most of us feel so uncomfort· ly? Perhaps they could help ')lith the starch; 2 teaspoons artificial mea- beaten; 2 tablespoons honey; 2
able after a day of over indulgence. meal preparation or maybe you sure or 7 packets of artificial sweet· tablespoons black strap molasses; I
How can we make our families . would prefer that they stick to table ener; I teaspoon margarine; I tea: cup skim milk or yogun; I teaspoon
happy with lots of good food, but cut . decora~ons or making a table favor. spoon maple extract; I teaspoon cinnamon; 112 teaspoon ground
down on the calories and the fat? ·
For a table favor perhaps they vanilla;-2 pounds sw~t potatoes, cut cloves; 114·teaspo6n nutmeg; I cup
First of all, have available plenty of could make an a~ple turkey. Use a . into-rinch _slices, cooked and warm. flour; 118 teaspoon salt; 114 cup
fresh fruits and vegetables for appe- medium size red apple for the
Preparation: Heat apple juice margarine; 4 tablespoons of water.
Preparation: Thoroughly mix
tizers with low fat dips. A quick and turkey's body, place raisins or minia· concentrate; cornstarch and sweeteasy dip for vegetables is a fat free ture marshmallows on a toothpicks ener to boiling in small saucepan; ingredients, then pour into a 9 inch
dressing. Try some recipe modifica- for the tail feathers. A · reel olive boil, stirring constantly, until thick- pie -crust. Bake at 400 degree for
lions to· reduce the calories and fat. attached to another toothpick will ened. Remove from heat; stir in mar- about 45 to 60 minutes or until knife
Try only one substitution at a time, serve as the turkey's head. Pull out garine, maple extract, and vanilla. inserted in middle"comes out clean.
Pour glaze over potatoes in serving Yield 8 servings.
too many may change a favorite the pimento for the waddle.
recipe, only to have it rejected by
After the meal, before everyone bowl and toss gently. Makes ~ serv- · Nutrition information per serv·
AARON AND SHAWN WILSON
ing: Calories 222. protein 5 g., Caryour family.
· sits down to enjoy football on TV or ings.
Some simple ways to change or play a board game, exercise. -If the
Nutrition information per serv- bohydrate 37 g., Total fat6 g., Satu- ·
modify a recipe to make them lower weather permits, go. outside for a ing: 189 calories., 2 g pro., 44 g rated fat 2 g., ?olyunsaturated fat I
in fat, sugar, chl)lesterol and calo- walk and enjoy the outdoors. Some· carbo., I g fat, 0 mg. chol., 26 mg g., Monounsaturated fat 3 g., Cho. Sha,;n Marie ~ and Aaron
The flower girl was Casey Noll, ries, could be the method of prepara· 'limes with all that baking, the oven sodium. 21 calorie reduction from lesterol I mg., Sodium 176. 1
Anthony Wilson were united in mar- sister of the bride. Ushers were Skip tion. Changing from frying to bak- will warm the·house and after eating traditional recipe.
·
riage on Aug. 24 at the Norwood and Kevin Hobba, brothers of the ing can save about 180 calories.
When
making
foods
that
call
for
"
United Methodist Church, Marietta. bride, and Jated Ridenour. The guest
·. The Rev. Earl Perkins officiated registrar was Jaime Wilson, sister of milk as one of the ingredients try
at the double ring ceremony.
- the groom.
The bride is the daughter of Don·
The ceremony feature_d lighting
lid Deane Reed of Marietta and of the unity candle and a solo by the
1'herese Ann Noll of Waterford. She Tony Armor of Marietta, cousin of
Is the granddaughter of Richard and the bride. Piano musi.c was pro~ided
Lois Reed of Marietta, James by Michael Tobar of Marietta. The
Stukins of Waterford, and Arthela vows exchanged were written by the Julie Rime. daughter of Frank and
PritChard of Marietta.
bride and groom. ·
Frona RifOe of Long Bottom, has
· The bridegroom is the son of .
Following the ceremony, a recep· been named.to the Ohio University
Beryl and · Linda Wilson of tion was held at _the American Dean's List for summer quarter
\,_./
Reedsville. He is the grandson of Legion Post 64. Reception hostesses 1995-1996. .
.
Beryl and Virginia Wilson of were Darcy Reed of Hockingport,
To be named to the list,' RifOe
Williamstown, W. Ya. and Bernard cousin of the bride, and Diane Reed earned a grade point average of 3.3
and Hilda Stanley of Jensen Beach, of Lowell, aunt of the bride. Music or .better on a scale of 4.0 (straight
·A a.
was provided by Ryan Cochran.
A's) for the quarter and earned at
The bride's gown featured a
The bride is a graduate of Wash· least 16 crec;lit hours, 12 of which
princess bodice and a v-back, ington State Community College. were taken for letter grade. ,
accented with. a bow. Its basque She is currently employed as a secRime is a senior majoring in An
waist dropped to a full. chapel- retary at Washington State . ·she Education.
length train. Lace, pearls, and plans to pursue a bachelor's degree
~~equins embellished the neckline
in English. . .
and· bodice. Her headpiece was a
The groom 1s also a graduate of
In an effort to provide our reader·
pearl tiara witha blusher and finger- Wa~hington State Community Col.ship
with current news, illc Gallipo·
tip veil. The bnde earned a cascade lege and IS currently · pursum~ a
lis
Daily.Trib~ne
and The Daily Senbouquet of white carnations, bachelor's degree _in electrical engi.·'
tinel
will
not
accept
weddings
after
orchids, and red roses with baby's neering at Ohio University. He is a
!lreath.
.
.
stude~t inte~at th~ Ohio University 60 days from the date of the event.
All club meetings and other news
The maid of honor was Ntcole AVIomcs Engmeermg Center.
articles
in the society section must
Suzanne Bunting of Williamstown .
Following their honeymoon at
be
submitted
within 30 days of
She wore a baroque satin dress of Myrtle Beach, S.C., the couple
occurrence.
All
birthdays must be
black and white. The best man .was resides at 703 Elm Street in Belpre,
submitted Within 42 days of tlie
Bob Dunbarger of Lowell.

J_&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

(A monthly column by Jackie . this simple substitution. A reeipe

Reed-Wilson

Riffle named
to dean's list

''

'

"

"
,,. · ·

537 BRYAN PLACE
MtoOLEI'ORT
. 1112·2772
1:00 a.m.-3:30p.m.

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992·7119 .

After four years in business, Will
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BdmtJnds, owner and operator of Will
Power Tumbling, announces the
.~ng of his new 9,600
lqUIIC foot facility in Gallipolis. The
IICW building will be located on Air·
port Road. near Farmers Bank.
Will Power Tumbling offers full
{acilitiel ·and insuuction for power
IUIIIblinJ arid I)'ITill8Siicl. The build·
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11na. full gymnastic aparatus, and
olVIIIIJic leliJth rod tumbling floors.
Aft Olilcrvllllon - and IIJlORS shop

.,elllo planned.

(Jroundbreakinc il planned for
'lhdnelday, November 13, atl P·!"·
0 1 nOIIJGiD&amp;nowatthePoint
PI art facility and may be ~ehed­
. . . by c:eiUq J04.67S-6762.

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!-OCAL CRAFTERS featuring can, saw, slate
· paintings, oak shelves; quilt racks;
can 614-e49-26oo ·
goose outfits; fall decorations. ·
ask for Rick
WATKINS PRODUCTS featuring grape seed oil
Subsidiary OIIFC
(lower in saturated fat than olive oil)
·
TUPPERWARE - Some cash and carry.
:, fl .. 1M liNt lllytll 1M To
caR
Place orders/book parties/gifts/fund raisers
992·2156
Mon.thru sat. to-s. sunday 1-s
:~;;~~~~~~~----------------'L------2-m--ii~~N-o_rt_h_S_IWe--rBri
__·~~-on__
s_R_?____--J

: Stntiul Classifieds

pi_-• •••

,

.. ... .

'

porta

-

oqul-"

MoYtH... F-s,
A.- c...... tllld
Atltl-on Heat Pimps.
-oN THE SPOT FlNANCINQ
' •val.-le to QUALIFIED
BUYERS
"'.AAQE INYENTORY FOR
IIIMEDti,TE INSTAU.ATIONS.

{Um.StoneLowRatet)

:-=:::-::-:--1

WICKS
HAULING
Umestone,

Gravel, Sand,

.

.
1$6~ ,~ ton ptp&lt;up. 6 lug axte o~
complete rear end, leal spring

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

only, 814-742-2539.

.614-992·3470
.

Cla11ifieds
992-2156

Advertising Deadline: ·
Monday, Nov. 25th

-

Unforgettable
· Conversatlonsll
Call this exclusive
24 hr. hotnnall
Caii1·!KJ0..471J.8585
Ext.3313
$3.99 per min.
MUll be 18 yrt.
Serv·U· 8t9 84$ 8434

your dreams

'

CALL
1·900-526-5050
EXT. 4500
. , $2.99 per min.
Mu11 be 18 yrt.
Serv.tJ-(618) 645-8434

•

5p.m.
Sacred Heart Church

Call
Dave or Bob

Bazaar

coNsnucno•
Custom Building &amp; R8ITIOCiethtg

• New Homes ·

• Additions ,

1-900-990-9330
Ext. 1553

• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES .
(614) 992-5535
(614) 992·2753 .

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
· Serv·U
(619} 645·8434

Appalachian

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

Chimney Services
OU&amp;tleu W-ve.
Fnp-·F...._

Body work, C.r, truck
truck Jllllnting,
minor mechtlnlclf
I'IJIIIIr.
Tun..uJIII, on Clutnge,
Wax, Butting
Long St, Rutland, Oh.
742·2935, Alk tor Kip

Cle!lnlng

a

.

.

RalnCIIP8, 8cNenl • Full
Line Of Ac CIll!" ....
24 Hour

IIII!etyfnlpoctlona
Senior Cltan Dllcount
Fully lnaurtd
814-797-4491 ·

7/1CIItln \

Cralta -Also games dyrlng

BEAUTIFUL LADIES,

•un•m

·CAlL IOWUI .
1·90H7W515
111.4971

985-4422
.Chester, Ohio

"' wid!&amp; ••lfoaclcDI J.a. (Lorry

H J ) llrill a ..... INC viewwl
_._.,tlloe *'I hiloMif.

,,,

II ~ , ••

8CJ0.900.3040

GUYSI
WANT TO TAll TO

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand

Adultl $5.00 Children $2.50

An••• lug

. Servlct

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Creamed Baked Chicken or
Ham with all !he trimmings.

••

SMITH'S

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Thurs. Nov. 14th Church Basement
Serving from 4:30 -?

At 992-215

.---~~~~-"'""'a

DATELINE
The Girls of

FOOL
PROOF
LOVE!!!

1

Absolute Top Ootlar: All U.S. Sil1
ver And Gold Cqlna, Ptoottets'l'

WOMEN TO TALK
WJTH YOU liVElli

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

\

Meel Somoont Speclol From
Your OWn Aru. 1·1100·1541·5050

~

IVYDALE COUNTRY CUFI$ &amp; GIFTS

Sendnel

I

._tl

William Safranek

~ Construction~

-

I

Pick up dlliCMded
ppll

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of financiai
obilgations and arrange a fair distribution of assets.
Debtors in bankruptcy may keep "exempt" propeny
for their personal use. This may include a car, a house,
clothes, and household goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

Authorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
L~=61:4=;6;96-;=1:4:07:-_. ., Setvlces • Steel Sales a Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Alumlnum/Stalnl_ess • Tool Drawing • Ornamental
~'-~0 W./).:
Steps • Stairs, Raltings, Pallo Furniture, Fireplace
~y
~
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stuffll

Residential
Commercial
New Horne
Remodeling
Custom Design
"We treat your home like
our home"

84U434.

Full line of Clstem, Septic &amp; water storage tenks
....__ _ _~.;.....~-------"' 40

lalanrt

1

512-4000 Ill 5421. ~.1111 per

· Gas pipe 1• thru 2" .. fittings· Regulator:&amp; ~ Risers
Full assonment o1 P. V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water fittings

!Vtc.t.Pk tl!etak

Co.

a. ...

min. ...II be teyro. S.V-U IIII-

'U' U.L. approved Conduit
8" Graveless Leach pipe

nrt Rtpalr &amp; $pitt

PUBLIC WELCOMI:

10ik- Pl1·-rf.

01'1110 AND CAIIINQ
lnd

614·985-3813 or 614-667-6484
eoo-•78-8515 en 5042. 18.1191
Plastic Culvert- Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36"
minule. Mull bo 11 yro. $erv-U
4" S&amp;D - pert. - solid pipe
4" &amp; 8" Flex pipe IIH45+134 .
4" &amp;s• Sch 35 pipe
.
'/a" &amp; '/." C.P.V.C. pipe 30 AMouncemtntl
1'/," thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
'1." &amp; I" 200 p.s.h water pipe (100' rolls thru 1,000' rolla)
We proctll dHr, moM hickory

111412MO.

S5.0o' Up

..-.

Commerclal

FREE ESTIMATES

St. Rt' 7

Evtnlng and WHke11d J!l I.C:IIaraa

Used '-'s Attto

lntereste~

Restaurant Seminar

7/22/lfn

FALL
C:.I.EAN·UP
.

occurTence.

Will Power
tumbling set
to expand

985-4473

lmltltOrl Call Ut Todlf 1·100•
ete-11001 E11. 1110, 12. H Per
llln., MUll Bo 18 + ·U 1111145·1434 T· Tone Phone Re·

Porchlco 1·1100·414·1020
1:'____..:____,!':1:4:11:2:-40211:::•::.,.:"':==~ Roal
E1L 1111. 13.1111 11111. MUll Bo '18
G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY :;_:~~::::·,.. w..1 u!_

·a.,atlon ltpt!llr or Rtplac•••nt

Your Business Listed
In The Sentinel's
Holiday Gift Guide
Wednesday, Nov. ·2'7 th

News policy

•New Home•
•Garage•
·
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

Used Tires:

UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

I

Stick/MIG Aluminum Welding

742·3212

DelWin, Ohio

Doors Open
4:30p.m.
Bingo 6:30

'

ROBERT BISSELL
CONnRUCTION

Plrlelt'lala

AIIIRICA'I NO II DATING
IIIWICII Don't h Fooled By

Ml110r Remodellltl

Call for Demonstration &amp; Free Estimate
614-992-4119
1-80().291-5600
110 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

005

lteildenllal ODd

QUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

RADIATOR REPAIR SERVICE

Arm OUNCl r,IE fH S

PressureCieanllll
Roollnc

Olleied Exlualvtly
by

39170 Rt. 881
off Rt. 33 at Rt. 881

Racine

Every Sunday

·Highelt "R Value"
Blockl99.5%
ofUV Ray•

... _..

(No

'

~
-·

· Over 15 Ynn Exp.
lttterlor ..... Exterior
hlttdlll
hlntlltl Roots
WaUp11per Rlllllilll

"HEAT MIRROR• patlllllll syst-.

. 614-992·7643

GRAND OPENING
HIDDEN .
TREASURES
749 S. Third Ave.,
Middleport
Cenlmlca, Woodc...na,
Homemade Dolle a
Bukata.
Allo Chlklrwt'l
Playroom
Monday 10 im-6 pm
Tille.·Thur. 2 pm-7 pm ·
Friday 2 pm-6 pm

"" r--· ___....,...

THE LATEn II UIUCEIIEIT WINDOW
RCHIIOLHY

FREE ESTIMATES

1-800-273-3385

Fun, food, fitness: A celebration of·Thanksgiving ideas

..

BISSELL IUILDIIS, INC.

$3.99 per min.·
Muet 118 18 yq.
Serv·U (619) 8434
r

Oiamondo, Alnlqut J-lry, Gold
Ringo, Prt-11130 U.S. Currency,
Stirling, Etc. Acq\llllllona . - l r j

A!!!,·~t,·~~~~

Clean L111 Model Cart Or,
Truckt, 18eG Models Or Newer,

Smilh Buick Pontiac, 1900 Ellt·

orn ........,, Gollipo•~
J &amp; O'o Auro Par.ll. Buying ul-

vage

~tthiclet . S.llin;

773- 5003.

parts. 304·

Newauu1111 Or U.S. News 1035 To
1941111uea, 814· 448-3844 After
7P.M.
·

Non-Working Wathara, Dryers,

Stovaa, Re,rlgeratora, F'aeztrs,
Air Condi1ionen, Color T. V.'a,

VCR'o,

1231.

Also Junk Coro, 814-2541-

Top dollar- antiques, furnllurt,
·gtast, chi,., clocks, oold, tilvtt1
caina, •lehn. tllllea, okl tton&amp;
jars, okl tMut &amp; whitt cJahH. old

wood boJ~tl, milk boltlea, Meiga
County Advertisement, Osby
Marfn, 814-992-7441 .
Wanted To Bu~ Uatd Mobile
Homea. Call: 81-4 ·446·0175 Or

304475-511115.
Wlntld To Buy : We Buy Au10'1
A"' Contlllion, 814·388·8082, Or
114.-PART.

FMPLOYMENT
SE RVICE: S
'

110

Help Wanted

'ATIN: Point Pltaaant' Potllll
Poaltiona. Permanent fuM time fof,
clerkltortlra. full Benefits, For
e1am, appllcallon ond 111try lniO
coil: (830,1108·2350Ext387ll.
81rn-8pm.
Abtt

Avon

Rtpreaentathttl

n - . Eorn money lOr Chl\al·
mu bill II hom0/11-11, 1·100802-83!1 or 304-112-2t45, II)ol.
Rop.

.

••

..

�•

Pile •• The Dally Sentinel

Tueecllly, November 12, 1996

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

NBA

a..

7o.k·.....
,,...........

Babyainer ntaded 1t1rtlng
1at. 2 or 3 dlys 1 week, mutt
a non-smoker, refertnces
qt/- Col304-e75--.
Cornpur. Uaers Needed .
own hours. •20k to tSOk/yr
1100-34&amp;-11111 11508.

Alreal-te~ln
lhll new paper Ia a1JieCt to

the F-ral Fllr Hauling Act
ol1968 whlc:h ft ltlegoJ
lo odvertioe "'ny powiONnCO,

lllnilltlonor-tlon

-d

vtntionall

leml Home ~~!_!!_d":

COL Min 1
377-3101 .

'14-315-0121.
New 14xl0 Only make 2 pay·

mems &amp; move-ln. no peyment af·
W 4 years. "" Mt· up I dlllWtf}.

baled on 1101. color, not1g1on,

304-1$5-5885,

ae• larilll .... or national
Ol1gln, or ony ~ l!8t otlonlo
-any oud1 111'1....,.,.,
1 1 - o r -.•

NEW 1117 14 WIDE 2 BED·

--for

T h l o - witt not

ny A

Ntlld 10 atll immediately. Nice
, . two bath 1~b: 70. c.ll Uike ••

~

~­
real estate

1o In Ylolotlon Dill!' law.

Our readers are hereby

~

lltttt Ill -.,g.

ldverHied 1n lhll n8'1

raper

are e'ldable .on an equal

OIJPC)I1IoNiy baoolo.

ROOMI .15,225 Free Delivery

So•Up 1-1100-251·5010.
New 1ae1 t4 Widea, 2 bedroom,
$15.225, frll dtlivttry and lei· up.

1-1100-251·5010.

NII!W tDD7 1C~~:70 3brm, Includes
I Uontha FREE t.o1 rent. Only
1185.57 per month with $GIGS
~.

C!'II1-II00-837-3Z18.

New homes starting at $1.8&amp; per
month with only $095 Down. Call
FIJSS at t -8 t4-38S-&lt;1898. ·
New ho!MI Starling II ,, 70 J*
month whn onlr 1770 down. Cali

Ru11 II 1·800-837•3231.

NEW REPO'S ONLY 2 LEFT
Never Lived In, Free Dalivery
And Sot-Up, Col 1-1100-251-5070.

Itt Rullonof:o4 boduoDillltoula,

143-1614.

,_,lly~CIA,,_oar·

OTR dl'lvor, Clau A COL wllloz.
Mat, 1'/r Erperlence. 304-875-

ing, $20.000 OBO, 81~14.
HouMAftdLoiForS.Ie:

5570.
People 10 work during dHf HI•

2 Btdtooms, One Bath, 1800
Down, W.A.C. Easy Terms. 1·800·

Chlllty'a F...., LMng

port, doors, ,..,lldlng, oulllulld-

warranty, rret delivery

I.O~up.304-755-7191.

82 acres of prime deer hunting,
with 011 well, located oil BHch
Grove, Rutland, 614·992·5049.

'

2 Bedroom &amp; Urility Room, H11
Sto~ I Refrigerator. Located In

Konaugo, $225/Mo., Pfuo Deposit,

Po•t•l Jabs 3 Poalllona Available, No Experience Neceaury,

Full

1018 ElL 9102.

Security Deposit, $275/Mo., 6 14·
245-54311.

2 Bedroom Brick In Rio Gtande,

Poplar Heighla·3-4 . B.R .• L.A.,

0.1\., .F.R., 2·bath~ 2·flrop!oc:eo,

2bdrm. apia., total electric , ap pllancea furnished, laundry roam
facilitin, close to scl-ool in town.
Applications available at Village

Rt 2 N, 8mllea, Pt PIMunt. WV.
T"*'Sat H , SUn 11-5.

Green Ap11. 149 or call 614·992·

GOOD

3 ~11 . EOH.

:-'::--:---::-::---::---::--:::-1
3 Bedrooms, 5 Court Street, GaiNpolis, Kitchen With Stove, Refrlg erator, No Pets, Deposit, Referencel. $360JMO., 61•·.t45-.t926.

USED

Ulld Fumiblre 13o Bulavilt Pilot,

ne,t Uodel Color. T.V. $125 Goad

Goods

lipolis, 3 Bedroo.m1, L.R., D.R.,
I:USIUo., OneV..r le•M. Ref.
erences Requltwd, $~5 Deposit,
tcey·AYI.II•ble, Tope'a Furniture,
10.5.814 4410332.
Furfilhed 2 Bedroom Apar"*'',
Actou From Park, AC, No Pet1,

Remington 12 gauge, modt/ 11 ~7•
Wilh lour bllrrell, 814-7&lt;42-3082.
Reminyton Gamemnter 30~0e

Spri"g leld Modal 760 Pump.

1350. ~~75--3857.

530

Releranceo, Depooit, '350JMo.,
81.....,8235. et4-4ott.OS77.

a..ement Garage, No Pe11,

2 Bedroom Furnished Houae NO
Inside Peta, County Water Furniohod $450/Mo., Oepoolt &amp; Rll·
Required, Off ~te Route
850, 81 4·446·4 1 11 Evenings.

114-245-0380.

.

Antiques

Buy or aall. Riverine Antiques,
11 Z4 E. Main Street, on Rt. 124,
Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. 10:00

::~C ~.~~f4~99~~:6 ::::
Moore owner.

·

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Furnished EHiCiency All Ut!iltltl . t8k4 lwimminG pool wllh large
Paid, Share Balh 1145/Mo., 819 . sand filter and pump, filler and
Second Avenue. Gallipolis e 1.-. pump used one season, asking
448-394S.
$500, 814-992·5388.
Gallipoll• ferry 1 bedroom apl,
all utilities paid except electric.
$250/mo. 30 4•675-t 371 or 30 ...,
675-3812._
Graeioua1Mng. 1 and 2 bedroom
aJ)artmenll at Village Uanor and
Riverside Apartments in Middle·
port. From $232-1355 . Call 8t4·
992-5064. Equal Houting Opportunities.
MlAdltpo'r• N 3rd Ave. 2bedroom,

.,
. ,.
furnished apt. Depo&amp;il &amp; r8fer-

275 Gallon Fuel Oil Tank SOD;

Ltnnox Fuel Oit furnace SBO ;
Westinghouse Clothes Dryer,
$75 ; 20 Gal. Barrel 01 Fuel 011
StO; Chriatmaa Tree $10, 8U446-1451 .

~~~~~;~~A,:•:··~8~1~4-

Professional
. Services

peritnce, reaaonable fltH. 304·

310

mora lnlo,..tlon call 6 14·143·

5343ancf -~·

450

liT n¥1 IUYERI E,z Fl· Trajtoo tor Rant. Boaulilul River
MANCINO 2 Or ~ Bedroomo View. Konaugo. 614-44HI1S1 ·
Clrolo Motai. Now Ownarohlp,
UOO P.r Month, FrH Doflvary i
Newly Rtmodatod, Elflclancy
$oM,Ip, 1-100-251-!;010.
Two toedo00o11 ...., In Middlopon,

HEM ES TM!:

Ill Time buyort, E·Z finonclng 2
or 3 bedroom, around $200/mo

H9JnH for Sale

Bt-1010.

frN dtltvery lnd SII· UP. 1· 800:

10411ootln s-~ Pomeroy, call 2 Btdrooma, Ntw Carpet, Air
Cond., Vary Nl&lt;t, Phone: 114·
11..-2... oret..-3!128.
-14011310 I P.M.

3 Bad oom. 2 Bett, N:., Jenn Air.
2.1 Al:tH. Cua10m Kitchen, AppfiaiiOH. Secluded. 4 Minute• IV

HD~Mt. e14 ••• • •

Furnished
Room•

ex.:::.llent condition, 81•·to2-6000

-r.

- . . . H80, Cinomu, ....
Monlhly Rolal, .... _

2101,114-187-11112.

440

Apanments
for Rent

Roamo tor ,.,. • -

580

A Gtoom Shop -Pet Grooming.
Ftaturino Hydro Bath. Don
ShHII. 373 Georges Creal Rd.

114 UIIIID:

1 and 2 bedroom apartmtnll, furnilhed •nd unfurnished, IICUrily S lnplng rooms with coolllng.
depo1i1 requ ired, no pets, 8141 - Alao ttaller IPICI on rivet. All

11112·2211.

hlok-upo. Con ofttr 2:00 p.m.,

304-17:1-51111,

-wv.

480 Spece for Rent

AKC Miniature Dobermah Pup,Mea. 2 Malta, 2 Femaltl, $250,

114-256-1992.

AKC Registered. Mal• Cocker
Spaniels, Both Adults, 1 Black &amp;
White, 1 Buff &amp; White, Wilh
Champion Bloodline, 614· 379·
2728
.
CFA R....,iltered
D..rll
·......., v:"-o,
~
~ ·~" N,.,
~0. WIPholh Breltding~Rights &amp;
r.YQI'tt.
ne: 8t4-2!:m·8t07

a!RISTY'S PETS
m N. s-nct Avenue

~= 1~

Monday·Saturday t2am-Bpin
Grooming, kennet, pets, supplle•.
AKC registered dogs, puppiet,
r'ptilea, spiders, li1n, mice,
oquariuml $9.99, 25 lb~ caoliner,

S2.t9. Will honor school dil·

counts . i O% discount witt\ $25

order.

Thank~. Ch~t~

$2500 090, 614-742-2323.
1985 Ctlrysler 5th Avenue, Great
Shape! $2,200, t9&amp;4 Plymouth
Voyag•r Needs Motor, ssso ,
814~.

1985 Olds 9S Regency PW, POL,
PS, 90K Mi~' 814-245-50117.
1986 Ford Thunderbird , Fair

Shape, Good Running Condition,
$1,200 Before s:oo can &amp;1C-.t461052. After e:oo Call 61C -4.t6 -

1421.

1987 8ulcll LeSabre, good cond.
304-675-12e4.
1987 Cl'levy Conversion Van,

1988 Ford Tempo, 1913 Plymouth
Ouster, BH-446-7282 Attar 5

P.M.
1987 Dodge K Car Runs Good,

8714
Patt Plus, Sltver Bridge Plata.
(1~ Off E\18t')' Thing. EYit')' o.yl)
6N-441-Q770.

580

frUitS &amp;

Vegetables
RICHARDS BROTHERS FRUIT
FARM --APPLES I APPLES! AP·
PLESI large Crop Wlln Many
Varieties To Choose From. We
Art Featuring Red DelicioUs As
Our SPECIAl Far November.
Came Check Our Prices And
Cc:m.,are, Located 24 Mi. Norrh Ot
GaitipoMa On Route 35. Exil Right
On County Road 46. Phone 81&lt;4286 •458-1.

S le
or I
or Trade

590

F

Ruger M-77 . 7mm, Red field
scope. 304-675-1010.

FARM SUPPLIES

&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Fann Equipment
'78 John Deere 2840, 82 hp.,

24 How-

........

sa ,...,
YOII&lt;
lndlen
sa.....,..probe

B-ol- 5727 !lhlol you
DOWN
2111'*&gt;11,-

tan--

z.ro
32Aomonl2
33-

1 P1rt ofRFD

ZSiylooltype

TV''•4

3

JoMne-

UtiCioM~)

lllro'o .......

10=
·--·
........home(Z-.)

7 Ruddy

t F - b b.

Motorcycles

19871lodge

arm; 5 Spied. aobd

Condiion, 1750, 814-379-2853.

~~~~II-B.~e~1~4-~2S6~-1~063~.=

..:,:
1890 Grand Prilt
red, auto.
2dr. tully loaded factory options.
all power, low mile&amp;. 304-675·

Solid Moplt Drop Laol Tobia •

~ilhl•d Gun Cob
Wllh Drawer Hofcll12 $85, 114-

-S.
Solid 0111 Dining Tolola 4 Chllno,
Paid $1,100, Moloe Oflor; 112 Cor.
at Pear Shapa Dl•mond Paid
$1,100 All&lt;lng $1100: ~ Roll I Ft

,Choln Longlh Fonco Appro1. 110
Ft. 1150 114·245·5001 Lo•o

Mollllo HolM' Sltoo "" ronl Coli
1-1100-117'-3231.
·STORAGE T.NKS 3,000 Gollon
Upright, Ron Ewano Entlfprl-;
T.- . . . For Rant, Add-, --·Ohio,
, .110().537-t!a. .
11'1 ........

'

0 I

.

'

'

~

·'
•

Sparlster, very sharp,

·;.

I

1-J!J,O (N-.1 61 VE ME.

Far· Sal a: t98GI Gl1500 Gold •

~

...

~

AAD !&gt;.. 00{\I!&gt;T

"'·~[;())( '!

1993 Cougor 45,000 Mllto, 1
Owner, Garage Kept, All Power,

$9,50Q, 080 1.14·441·8021, Or
31)4,875-53411 E\IOnlngl.
1193 Ford Mu110ng LX, nollly d
lactorr, opliona, 4 C'flindtr, very
good n onow, 30,000 mllai, vary
QDod condition, 11500 080, 81&lt;4·
. . .,11 .
1PSJ3 Uncoln Continenlaf, loaded

wllh goodin, non-"'""""', llwiYI
gl,raged, eacellent condition, 451&lt;
- . $13,200, 614-5e2-27V1.

•

I

t

GET A'S ! NOTH lNG
El.SE IS GOOD ENOUC'.H'

~4~.~.~.~d~t,.--n.~,.;"',-,~lo-n"'~-r~G~U~ca~r :

M-e.

Chevy 2 dr. Sedan, goad
, S2,400 ; eg Grand Prir, 2
nice,
, 2 large
' 614·

16' dual axle trailer with 4: side
racks. factory made. 11.200. 814·

.,

r

ternalional; 42" rolary mower

woodi for small traelor(12·30hp):

Ford
• V-8, aula, load·
loolcl &amp; run1 good, $1,500;
Dodge Oiplomal, 318, auta,

I ~~~~~r_u_n.,-o~9°-0-::d-,_'_75-0~,-·_14-·
I~

Loan1 : Aula Deller Will Ar·
1948 Masi ey Harris pony traclor ou:.:~-.:F_I,nanclng Even If You
wlplow &amp; cultivaror, ·&amp;~~:c cond ,
Turned Down Betore.
callec:tOtl item. $2,000. 304-382No Credit,
3256.
Buy-

Gt4·742· 2455or614-742·2580.

Farmall Cub, wilh hydraulic front
cultlvalor, looks &amp; runs good , CARS FOR $1001 Trucko, boa !I,
4·wheatera, motor homes, furni $1,250,614-247-4292.
ture, llectro"'c•, compultrt •tc.
Hydraulic Oil t12.50 ·5gal pail. lor FBI, IRS, DEA. Avollablt your
Sid•rs Equipment, Henderson, area now. Call 1·800.513·4343
ElL S«&lt;ll8
wv.304-e75-7421. .

Lhie$tock

Credit Problems? E·Z Bank Fi·

nan .. ng . Fo' u, .d VahiCIOI No
Tum Oowna. Call Rutn 81&lt;4·-448-

Fiftoan brad Hol1teln heilerl. _, 2897.
riooo, et4-IIQ2-2123.
:':':~--::-:------

1Race rudy for lltHt use· turbo

350 nntmlllion, $37S, 814·802·

5388. .

I
.
Il--r.l7;_1r.:.,·lr-,lr.8..:;.1r-f e

coh&gt;leoe the chuckle quoted

S
.
-

A UNSCRAMBLE FOR
'V ANSWER

Ac:com~

Tow Maarer Car Dolly
odate Moat Sized Cars 2" Cou -~
plot Size 814-448-1977.

!TUESDAY

,,
'

,I

I

r

''

'

'

..:.::... I

NOVEMBER12I

'

,,.

,I

---BA=.SE;::UE::::NT::;--~1
WATERPROOFING

f

Unconditional lift~rtme guarantH.-:
local ra1erence1 furnished . Es.,
hlblished 1975. Cali (614) 448-i
Ql70 Of 1·800·287·0578. Rogets!
-pr&lt;&gt;Ofing.
'

•'

:--::---:::-"7""=--~
Appliance Partl And Service: AHj
Name Brands 0VIf 25 Years Er- .1
parience All Work Guaranteed,,

Frenoh Cily Maytag, 814·448· 1
7795. .

I

C&amp;C · General Home Maln·j
tenence· Painting, vinyl siding,
c:arP_enlry, dOors, windows. baths,
mobile t'_lome repair and IT'IOft, Fof lree eanmata call Chet, eU-9921323.

ASTRO-ORAPH

CoiNna Construction- building and -:.
remodeling, OYef 10 ,_,1 e~ep~n.
anca. Fret eatlmataa 11.t-t92- 1

I

'

'

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

ai/Oid alllaVAQ111011 today, and Wltlch out

try to - y o u In

an sxpoNive _ , . _

Ran's TV Service, specializing In "'
Zenith alao Hrviclng moat other
branda . House calls, 1·100·111 7• ·

001!.., wv 304-578·2398.

signs o1 lhe zocllac. Mall $2 tor each and
SASE to Aitro-Graph, clo this neWopa·
per, P.O. ·119x 17!&gt;8, Murray HIH Station,
New York, NY 10158. Make ouoe you
llate duired zodiaC signs.
SAGITTARIUS (NOv. 21-Dec. 21) Try to
for~ whO mlgltl

llf)trltnc:t.

710 AutotforSIIe

f

'

Column- Mound · Basis • Gadfly· FAMOUS
One colleague to another. 'Your idea will be accepted
more readily if you say it was thought of by someone
FAMOUS'

'

Call Tom 304·075·4188. 20 yeori

$1 ,700, 614-

!

SCRAM ms ANSWERS

sleeps 8, many acceuories.t

1910.

Good Condillo.n,

1:

A PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

HlnQ, firntt, repair,
CeUfngs lerturtd, plaalar ,epelr

THIINSPOHJA TION

I

...... - -

bv filling in the miuing word1
!..-"'·-"'·--'·-"'"·'-...,·__, you develop
from step No. 3 below.

----==--·
·
DRYWAll.

S-10 V-8 Auto,

'

I
I I 1· I
TIFHES

1015 Dutchman Royal wflwin sli

810

51-Acrooo,

8--

.------:~~~-.,

SERVICES

165 'Ma$1ty-Fergu son, gsa lricy·
cle lront end, dual remo te, live
nydr., !Iva PTO, power Steering, 2
row mounted ptc:ker avat. for lrat·
tor ; SC-Case 1946, new tires on
rear, anorher lor par11 ; GEHL ,
grinder ml~~:er : s· rotarv mowef in-

I·•.

4t~ol
I'

1 I I I' J!-

our clean bed, earner tub, stereo

367·0323.

.....
R--

44 Actor

~,~S~N=A~E~I~!.!

FEEL

50R.RY i'oR you-!

1073 Fleetwing t7 Ft. 1976 Bla·
zon Wllh Awning 2-4 Ft. 197~
Millard. With Awning 27 Fl. 1699.
Mc:Cormi~ Road, Gahipolla, Ohi
814·«8-1511 .

$15,000. 304-815-2484.

~~·:..the

flow
42CtMKIII'of

est from a suit he8ded by. at least one Juri-+-GeddM
.honor. Against suit contracts, though, ·lo:r+-lt-+-1-'--+10
Clllmlcel
. many pairs now lead the third-highest
aulflx
lrom a three· or four-card suit and low- · ..,.+-1-+-lf-'-+52 Picnic peel
13 NeighbOr of
est from a five -carder. These leads, ·
Fr.
known as thirds and fifths, usually """'""'-'--'-.....1"--'-count out the suit quicker. And one
isn't misled when the lead is low from
honor-third, which often happens in
CElEBRITY CIPHER
the middle of the play. However, this
by Luis C1mpoa
style isn't recommended against a no~c.,..., CI J~ ~ ••• . . CMaled trum quolllion8 ~ r.mou. ~ . pall and prnen~
tnlmp contract, because you frequent·
·~ - .. - ·T""¥•-,O-P
.
ly cannot afford to •waste" lhe third·
highest card.
.
UYPTHIYA
SY~
NSYUZ
'H RYOYU
Defending against an aggressively
bid three no-trump, ·West led his
p
·L R. Z H T .H. NZPUZYA
WYRZB
HN
· fourth-highest spade, the two. East
knew the rules , playing third-hand ·
' I, C 'p N Y C P T T
PTHWYRF.'
OPFHRX
high with his jack. After winning with
the king, declarer cashed the club ace
KPUPF.
SPUUF
PRRVLRKYU)
and played a club to dummy's 10.
Suddenly - for.South - the sun burst .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "A soldier is the chap who makes II possible for i
through the clouds. Not only did East
civilized folk to despise war.• - Allan Massie.
win with the king, but also the spades
were blocked.
For East-West this was exasperat·
WOlD
ing, If only West had led his third-highlAM I
----'-~ l4l1o4 lor C\AY I. POUAII.....;;,__ _....._
est &lt;or second-highest or highest)
spade, the suit wouldn't have become
1-ro1110 lotion ol the
blocked and the contract would have
four ocramblad -d• boo
been defeated.
tow to form four word1.
"Sorry, partner," added East. "If I ·
had play~d· the three or seven at trick
GLEBOI
one, letting South win the first tr(ck
with his eigh~ the contract would have
gone down."
"It's not so simple," pointed out
South. "If you start like that. I might
uL sy0
well play a heart to dummy's queen
and call for the club queen . As the
cards lie, I keep you &lt;East) off the lead
Adolescence i's a very
and gel home."
·
emolional
time. You are too
This didn't make East or West feel
5
old to say something cute·and
better.
too young to say something

New 811 tank I , I ton 1rU"k ~

118,500, 81;4 ·U8-45U leave

1995 Neon Sport Caop . Low
f.tiles , Elcellent Condiltan, S.cri. For $9,400 Under Loan Val·
ua, 614-387·5044.

MAN , DO

~

245-5877

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

40

.
13
.

YOU TO

10,000 Transmitsiona, Clutches~
Flywheels, Overhual 1&lt;111. IU11

790

1894 Ford Mulling convtrtible,
I cyl, IU!O, fully loocted, Ford car
cover Included, HINng lor payoff,
814-8115-3818 Of 8141·501..0751 .

rtEI'IN. ·. E~ERYil.oDY

flii'E,TS

or truck, aaking 1375, 614 -9925388..
.
·~
Budget Price Trensmiuions. :
Used 1Rebuil1, All Typea, Over .•

or, looded, 112,500; 1990 MUI·

!ling Air, Aulo, Spoiler 11 K Mlln

39=-

I

BIG NATE

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

whHII &amp; redlltOro. 0 &amp; R Auto'C
Ripley, WV. 304·372·3933 or 1~
1100·273-8329.
"'

1N3 Salurn GL2 Sunroof, IM,th·

1 counloy

31 Not quite
31 Allev38 Lacko!

0

'

760

34=..-from

.All pass

'::~::.' S&lt;a\\4\\lA-4~~s·

.

j

i2,000 Miles. $S,OOO,
1895 Honda XR80R Mini Condi-:
5641 ·
lion, LOoks &amp; Runs Like New, 1
~
1992 DtK!Gt Shadow Automatic, S1,250, 080 614·4-48-8651..
.
I .
Air, Rear Spoiler 65,000 Miles,
$3,700 OBO 014-256-634~. 614· 1895 :Yama~. Warrior 4 Wheelt.! 1 ~
Gbod COnd•tion, t3, 100, 81'4-441Y' ,
256·6467.

9408.

,io. ~Df ~1(1:! Cl N'-1

111-l~CF

Wing Tr ike Wlneberrw AMIFM
Casaene, CB, Intercom Heel-Toe r
Shifter. Reverse loaded , Must •
Sell! SI.SOO, Days: 8to4__.&lt;4G·4S54,:
Ewninga: 814-256-6894.
•

40~1~3~or~30~4-6~7?5-~1~188~
- ~~~f:l1994
Honda 4·whealer. 4W / d ..~
1990 Mercury Grand
31M-675-6335.
.
.

114·992-7421.

, And Gauflnteedl ,,00 And Up,
. Wll o.uv.. 814-188-8441 .
Chalfl 50 Ytlrl Old Excellant
Condlllon, 180; 357 Moonum

~ 17&lt;4

a.100. so..a82-2374.

e.atwork
Z2 Fnlll*'

!.

: .

740 '

y

Eost
Pus .

It is traditional to lead fourth·high-'

1992 Toyota Pick -Up .t Whe8l
Drive, 5 Speed, AC, Bedtiner•
Sunroof. Batman American Rae~
ing Wheel&amp; Erctllent Condilion,.
75,000 Miles 110.900. 6t-4· 448•

12.800: 614-258·6434 .

3NT

l

Revolve (1
...r-l--1-++-+-'1 ' 28 -.nglog)
30 Very omall :

By Phillip Alder

~.

Shape,

Pass

1•

It makes you want
to expectorate

351

1987 Dodge Lan·cer, mull sell ,
lois of new parts, runs great,
great condition, $1000 080, 614·
992·4133.

Pass

FER?

'1992 G20 Full Size Chevy Con;
version Van, Tiara Package,
Full Injection, Campletel)' Loaded
67,000 Miles $12 ~ 500 Days: 614
446-4554 , Eventngs: 614 -256,

311~

Wool North

I
nlly
11
ngout
12 Ch. . . ,.
18 COiby'l

24MIIIINII
21RI-nymph

Opening lead: • 2

1891 Plymouth Voyager V-6, Auromatic, 47,000 M1les. $5,850 , .
814·256·1142.
~

1983 Ford PU V· 8, 4x.t. , Ne
Paint, Chrome Wheels, Goo

1057 hfl. with 148 JD endloader
bucket and torka , S13 ,500, call

630

South

·r

Hioh Mlleaoe. $675: ·Car Dolly
$575614·446-0761 . .

Coupon

Cackaliels. Please Call 814·388·

I

1091 Dodge Caravan LE . whit
wtwoodgrain, loaded, new fires!
"very nice cond. $8,000. 614-441 J

0135 ..... 5:D0pm.

Rtlrigtratotl, Stovea, Waahtfl
And Or~en , All 'Reconditioned

lj - - ....

~-

54 Ohio citY

31

WHAT'S HE
WANT TO

KNOW IF HE'S
HAD ALL HIS .
SHOTS

tg83 Ltonte Carlo dirt track car,
355 engine, Ford 9• rear end,

Chrl~ gl~

.M-.

., ~:'-

KNOW THAT

AN' WANTS TO

81~1 .

AKC Gold•n Retrltver Pups, 12
Weeki Old, 2nd Sholl, 1100,
114 818 , ,

11 -•2.

••I NT

PAW II BEANIE BAGLEY'S HERE
TO TAKE IINTA POOCHY
BACK TO TH' CITY

Pats for Sale

NOf'dic Track Walk -Fit, like brlnd
n•.
!wo yaafl old, $300. Nice
814·949·2171.

or .,.,.,_ Btlld Waod

Sllrllng 01 l1201mo. 'QoHIII Holll.

·-ark

~= 5ald

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

":BARNEY

Rio Grondo, OH Call 114·245'
5121 .

u-

=!•

815-35111 8:00pm, no job 10
.,.. or 10 BIG. WV-'121201

owt, llnrtla, tiC. Claude Winters,

Regiatered Cocker Spaniel, 10/
mol old, female $175. 304-67·5 ·
113:)
·

larae utility Rm. 2-car oataga,
wrap araund deck, almost 2 tcr-

~·

pl!lfO. wind·

Aluminum Window• tto· Each,
31• Ext. Door .Prehuno ISO; 8'
Eleclric Heater 120, 814·245·

~

HARTS MASONARY ' Block,
~ &amp; ttcne work, 30 YNft ek·

-~~

55 Gall on Fi sh Aquarium With
Stand And All Other Accesso ries. $250, 090 614-367·1625.

Ko'l

230

BIO&lt;k, briCk,

Puppy Palace Kennels, Boarding,
SIUd Service Puppies, GroOfT!ing,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds.
Pllymentt Welcome, 814· 388·
0429.

4 -88 2~2_~·
ceLH30
I I
5610.
.
2 Bedrooms Unfurnished House anN.ew
aven, 1 pi~Uraom urn shed
In Galllpolia, Gaa Heat. Washer 1
apt. Deposfr &amp; reterencea. 304·
Artificitl El81:1ric Firepl•c• 2 Miu304-e75-711118.
Dryer Hook-Up, No Pets. Refer·
304-4175-11157.
882-2568.
milop Rabbh1, 1 Female, Silver
ences Required, .ft1~ ·446 - 4· 491 .
Marlin, 814-258-8147.
lnterloo ond Elltrior ffnllhll car· RIVER FRONT PROPERTY,
New up1talr1 etliclency with prlWITH
HOliSE,
721
FIRST
AVE·
pentr~. llrtpltce relinilhing, ad·
3 Bedroom Gil Furnace, CA, 4 vale entrance, completely fur - Bao11 B~ Rtdwing, Chippewa,
ditions. por~hea, decks, llave HUE, GALLIPOLIS, $11,500, MUll From Holzer Hatptial, No nished, quiet surroundings, three Rocky, Tony lama . Guaranteed
11
......
7t12.
,.,.,.,..._ 304-675-1013. .
Pets, Reftfence 1 Deposit Re- miles from the. Ravenawood lowell Prices AI Shoe Cafe, Galquired, S320fMo., 30+576·2438.
Ritchie Bridge in Ohio. tr you are ~pols.
Two
bedtoom
home,
s
acrtl,
111
Odd Jobl &amp; Strip Tobacco, 81-t·
looldMQ, Irs a mu11 see. Irs $390
on
SR
1
2o4,
Racine,
two
Clr
oa·
-1682, 814-44HI253.
rage with apenmtnt, well, electric 3 Bedroom House. In Gallipoll1, per month, utMitiea are included. A Campground Mambtnhip For
No Peta, S2351Mo., S150 [)epolit. 1300 deposit is reqUired. For Sale The landing Canal Culton
Profnlional TrH Service, Stu.mp heal. other bulldinfJ•· Call Horne References, 814.....e·3817.
more information or an appoint- Ohiotn~1-1557.
Nolional
Bank,
Ra&lt;one,
Cillo,
614Remaval, Free Eatimatlll In·
ment, call 61-4·843-534;1 and
949-22!0.
surance, Bidw~WI, Ohio. 814·388·
Cardioglide,StOO: Solid Cherry
3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, Ci mp Con· leave me111ge.
111411,614-387-7010.
loy
1111111. $350'ri'&lt;o. 304., 75-3812.
Gun CoblnO! $200;
Poiy 1100
320 Mobile Homes
Nice 2 Bedroom Furnished Koyboord Wllh Amp., 150; 614·
wm Do HouMCieantng, Reison- ·
for Sale
13 BR, Houae. Nice Yard, I G1r- Apartment, Gallipolis. Laundry -3040. ,
._ Ra!OI, EJ&lt;tltont Reltrtncool
den. Water fumiahed. No Ptls. No Room, Air, No Pets, S3501Mo ..
114-3118-113112.
· Caner... I Pl111ic Septic Tanke,
'73 Kirkwood, 14X70. 2·3 be~­ Alcohol, No Druga~o Smoking. Plua Deposit, 514-446-2800.
rooma, total electric, one acre Deposit wilh Reier 1cea. $375.
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron
Will do odd jobs, laying black &amp; land, app«tx. 5 mil&amp;&amp; out SR 1&lt;43. mon..6t4-245-SD84
Nice two bedroom apartment in Evans EnterpriNI, Jackson, OH
1
hinging drywool. 304-e7S.2164.
1-1100-537-11528.
AJmeroy, no~. 814-992-5858.
$12,500, 814-11112·3195.
Burkhan Lane, 2 B,edrooms, With
t2d) 2 fio I oorno. 1 Botlt, EJICOI. Garaoe, $3-tO, Deposit Refarenc- One bedroom apartment In Pt. Electric Craftmatic bed, adjult·
FINANCiAL
lent Condition, $3,500, 304-736· "· 513-57+253;. •
able held and feel, colt 12700
Pleaaanr.&amp;14·992-5858.
7295.
-.lolling $400, 814·1K12·53N.
Chn.ty'a F~11ty Living
One bedroom furnished apart·
210
Business
121,000
In Rutland: a 4 Hedroom house,
mem in Ltiddleport. call 61•·446FALL SPI!CIAL
·epponunlty
14170 uooile Ho"!• 18'118·
recendy rlt'IOYII.d~ CIA, new car3091 , 61-4-992·2178 or 614·992· 82"' High EUiciaricy Furnace,
Room, Addition tBa•ement 1
10,000 BTU -·715: 80,000 BTU •
pet, doors, new sidino. outbuild53Q4 or 614-992·5231.
!NOTICE!
Acre, Fru it Treea , Fenced In
U85: 100,000 BTU ·$195. Tho
inO. $400 ~.us depplil, petl &amp; ·
OHtO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Vard, Outbutldinga, Consider
Ch~drenare welcome, available
Small Cottage, newly carpeted &amp; Above Pricea Are For Furnace
November 1. .
painted,· 1 large roam, kitchen, Only. Fret Estimate To Install
rtcommendi that you do bull· Land Contract Wilh Moderat•
nell with people v.au know. and Dawn Payment, 81,..379-228&lt;4 In
tn Pon~e~OJ : 12x12furnlshed
bath. ldeal for working or single Furnace, Duct WairK, Etc. s Year
NOT lO s~d money through the Afternoons.
·
roam, access to appliabces,
person. $200/mo' • utilitlea, relet~ .Waf'flnty All Par11. Ufelime War.
mall until you have inve1tlgated
kitctlen, bllh, laundry &amp; iiuutiliences &amp; de'posil required. Call ranty On Heat E•chenaer 814llteofloflntl.
14x70 On 3 Acrn 01 Land,~
•
weekly or monttii rates,
afltf 6:00pm. 304-875-2495.
441·1308, 1-1100·291 ·000&amp;
State Route 7, ·5 Miles OUI 218,
modem&amp; roach~. call 61+ ..
Pealtfthlp Available Steel Build- · Will Consider land Contract With
992·451 .U am-11pm.
· Small One Bedorom, E•cellent FirewoOd: Mixed H8rdwood ~ull
lng Solei"'" Booming Big Profit Do ._
Cord '(3 Stacka 18" Averag8,1 c•
81 4-3011-9946
Potential From Salt.l And 10r
wn' ..,rr.mt.
·
'~~'i·:~·:EWasher,
Dryer, Stove,
e Room HouN, o4 Btdrooml, 1 11
Included.
No Hi11t 8' Long) 814·388-atl79. I
Canatruc:tlon Call For Available t978 2bedroom, mobile home, 2 Bolito, 1 Car Clot19f, S511!11Mo.,
Pall, 1300 D~oit,
.....-.. 303-~135Ext6800.
carpet, new 52gal watet
Firewood For Sale: Oak S35, Pick·
Up Load, 814-258-1802.
•••••••
wa!ll)lper, great Aut Deposit, 304.e75-7873.
Hlir Stytill, Bo Your Own Booi, I
30,..175-5108.
Small 2 Bedroom house, 129
Hw1 Scallonl Far Rent, Can Car·
George St. New Haven. S260Jmo
Tower, now acceptirtg Four Uled FirtlfCM vwnfte letl•r
a1 King, FIMII Sly~ng Salon, 61.t· t983 Schultz 141170 With 7'r21 ' + depo1it. 30-t-773-9171 leave lepplico11ior1s for 1br. HUD subsid- ATX 285~ 15 tiraa, 'ama off '04
448-8922, 8:14-387..()612.
Factory Expansion, 3 Bedrooms, meUBg&amp;. ·
i
apt. tor elderly and handi· Ford Ranger 414, 180 1oo 1111. 1!49411-2503.
2 Baths, New Carpet, CA, Heal
cawect. EOH 304-675-6819.
Hellf1 Club For Sa~ : lndudtl AU Pump And lots Of Extraat Two ~droom house, llove and
Freezer, Washer, Dryer, VCR,
Equiipment. Seri ous lnqu iriaa t 1s,IJOO, 614·245-5986.
refriger~tcr, no insida pets, 8U- Two bedroom lpartment in Mid·
Only, 11 ..446-eil~ 8 A.M. To 12
9112-3090.
dieport, $155/rno. plus 1100 de- Police Scan,..,, Microw.ve, 814•
.
P.M. For An Appolntmonl
1984 14x70 Sk~ine, 2 Bedrooms,
posit, water and trash paid, you 2!18-1238.
2 Batha. 1 Acre, S2e,OOO. Also 7 420 Mobile Homes ·
pay electric and gal , avllllble
Large Profll Polentlal From Steel A""• Available. M-4-789.
November 6. Call 61-4·1JG2·7808 Golf Carta For Slle. 304-875·
for Rent
5162.
Bldg Busine11 Natn. Co. Award·
9am-5pm.
ing Oeelenhip In Open Markel.
JET
Sllll Or Construction. 303· 759·
Unfurnished 3 bedroom apt, If, dr, :
AERATION MOTORS
3200 Eit 59!;0.
1 1/2 baths. S300tmo plua utili·
lies. Deposit &amp; references. Call Repa1red, Now &amp; - i l l In s""".
CaN Ron Evans, 1·800·537-9528.
Loc:1l Vandint route for stle, B8
-8:00pm. 304-675-2415.
your own tmss, ~a Cuh wMkly.
Cll-1100-371-83&amp;3 .
very nlc:e ground ftOOt' apartment KX • P2824 Panason iC 24 Pin Oot
In quiet •urrounding• loc•t•d Metria: Printer, Uke ,..,.,, 614·446·'
· Local Vlrtdlng Route For Sole, Bo
lhrae ll'iln !nom the RewoniWOOCI 7400.
Your Own Bon. Bio Cooh w..k·
Rlodia llridgo It OIJo. Cclrr9otolr
~. Clll- 1-800-371-8363.
fumi- ......... drfw, dloh- lilt Chaira, Electric Wh..lchtirs
WOihar ond largo kltchon wllh oil
Stair Lifts, Van Lilla, Scoorera:
Wa por 12.00 loo every envelopo
oppfiln&lt;tl. Nl&lt;a balh with lor9t New Ailed, Bowman's Homecare.
you IIUft 11 hOme. Send a aelf ..IJ..
show'tr, te;ge Ntftr bedroom 114-441·7213.
dr••••d alamped envelope 10
with a warktng ftr.,..ce. living
R.W.J. ~ntlrpriNt, P.O. Bo1 4011,
are• h•• 1o11 af room. At a..eo Manlco Go ctrt, Php, electric
Hills, MO 20748 (Pay ·
3 bedroom trailer in Racine, S250
moiled -.y Friday)
por ,.,., Included. A 111M, Dingo Du.... 814-742-2455
"'"" cfopolit, .• 14·992-6542.
depotlt af 1400 Ia required, For or 614-742·2580

Georo•• Por•ble Sawmill, don't
hlul rour logo to tho ll'ill )ull coli

47
41

23 lelnllld'e

• J 8
6A7432

446-4782.
AKC RegloMred Chinooo Shorpal
-::-::---::--:--:-::-"'-"""'~ · pup1, lott of wrinkltl, lirtt 1hot1
S20 · Sponlng
onctwormod.., .....21211'

~. 1 ••• •--• A
G
..,.p ex OHIIiUIIQ
venu•. at-

17 E-,u.lng

~ :=r·!n

• A 9 5

Waahara, dr~er1 , refrlgeratora,
ranges. Skagga Appliancea, 71
Vine Street. CaJI . ft1~-4.a-7301,
1-eoo-499-3490.

3 Room 1 Bedroom Apartmenl,
With Slave I Refrigerator Fur -"'-shed'
. ..;•_
- 8_14_.4_46
_ ·_2__
5a3 . ---·1 Rac:ondlliontd Washer• And
2badroam apanmanrs In PI Dryer With Guarantee! Great
Pl•unt. perfect lol construcdon Prices! lto4· 245-594e.
worker. 304-e75-2t74 or e14-~- Sanyo OHice RefrigenltOf' 1.2 Cu.
2290. evenings.
F1. $40; Wainul Flnllh, 8U·.t48BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 3&amp;44Ahot 7 P.M.

posit a referenc;tl, 30 4•8 82-

... :
•a-

APPLIANCES

Layaway noW b' Cht'ilbT'et.
Po11y'a New and Uaed Furnilure
2101 Jetteuon Ave., Pt Pltat•
ant.

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

,• .._.

21Mot1!1!C

South
e K 10 8

Counvy Furniture. 30U7S-6120.

z::... .
X

ecaon

Easl
eJ754 3
• 1 6 3
t· K Q 3
• K5 ,

e A Q9 2
• J 8 4
• 10 6 5
• J' 8

Guaran1eel

Carpet I Vinyl In $10&lt;1&lt; 16.00 Yd
Mollotan Cor!*!, 114-&lt;146-7444.

4&lt;6-3437.

Private Porklng, Utllloloo Fuo- ·
niohlil, E1c:ept Polrsonal Ele&lt;uic,

lor PINIOn! VOlley Hoopllal. Contact tho f'ofoonnat 0.

•· 110 wantfd To Do

2 Bedrooms, $3951Mo., All Udli tiea Paid, $ 100 Depotit, 300
Fourlh A~enue, Gf llipolis, .,, __

,114-441-2802.

Wool

French City May tag , eu-.ue7795.

RENTALS

814-448-7o4011.

'

Gra1ors, 90 Dar

Pateela on Reyburn Rd . Wa1er,
paved road, reaaanable rastrictlons. 30C-875-5253. (no singlewide inquire•.pleue)
'

410 Houses for Rent

POSTAL JOBS
Start $12.08 /Hr. For Exam And
Application Info. Call 210-71111301 E1~ OH581, 8 A.M, ·9 P.M.
Sun .fri.

21n

Furnished Apt. 1 Bedroom 807
Second Ave. Gal/lpolit, S285,
UIIHiiHPd.S1+3&amp;44.aftlr7pn. ~
Furnilhed Efficiency Apartment,
Ctntrll Hear, All' Condlllonlng ,

Per Dltm Nurelng Ataialanta

For lnlonnotlon, Coll1·8tll-714·

NAPA. 1270/mo. Call 304·175·

Appli ances:
Reconditioned
Washer~. Oryera, Range, Refrl·

25ee. ·

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

oon, No 'tii)Ofionca noo•uory. I '4"'48.:. :.1111:..;011.:.·:..""".:..:.:..For:;.·.:.Dav;;;.;ld;;___ _
Applr 01 Cr-rd'l, Htndtroon
'IN. 304-17S-6404.

~tme~l at 304·8.75--4340. A'AI

2 Bedroom, unfu rnithed apt ovtr

Couches, Beds, Mattresses, 81'·

Schult t2x85, fair cond., 2br, w/
large ulility room, refrigeralor,
ltave &amp; 2 wir,dow ac, S2,800
Condo tor aale, 2 bedroom, 2 finn. 304-&lt;175-3000.
batlta, around laval~ wflh ac~ Trailer 7r10 New Ftoor Lights 1
cfla to pool lftd club haute, f'ajnt, $375, 614-3~2853 .
Pori Charlotte, Florida, 114·

Needed: riverboat pilols &amp; deck
hinds, call 304-527-3234 or 412·

614·992-&amp;502,

Beech St Mlddttpon, 2 bedroom,
NEW! Bank Repo 'a, only 3 lerto lurnlohed apt, utilltlel pold. Da·
arill undet'

-Mf.

I~ pluo ~~

Office Chairs, ~tom~~ttc Washer
S5D; Electr.lc Range 175; Otak
S50 Microwave $80, Good Cabi·

1-1100·251 -50!0.

A· Frame 3 ~~. Bedroom 1 , 2 Full
Batha, Laundty Room, large 2
car Garaga, 149,000 Gallipolis
ANa. a1.c-251-M21.

2 bedroom apartment, Racine,

Household
Goods

ESTATES, 52 Waarwoad Drive
from $2&lt;4• to $31&amp;. Walk to ahop
a movlea. Ctll 114·441-2511.
Equol-1ing~nlty.

New Rapo1, only 2 left, never
lived In, free delivery and set-up.

long Term Care Nursing Faclliry
SHklng Enthusiaatic Ohio Slate
Te1ted Hurtt Aides. Excellent
Benefit Pack'age Including: Yael·
lion, Chritlmll Club, ..o,K Plan,
lniUranee, And More. Sign On
Bonua Jual In Time For Christm••· Contact Pinecrest C•re
Centar - 614-446 - 7112 • Usa
LM, Adon.

510

•

-

15 : : - _ _ .

MUST SELL 1981 10X70 wllh
lireplace. Need 10 stU flit. Cell
Roaino 01 614-385-2&lt;34.

•I

40Hunled
41 CewWUNo
I

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11-12-M
N
• 6
• K Q 10 2
tAII742
• Q 10 6

Puzzle

A,_.., .. ruutr ,.._...

ACROSS
14 -•llllaMI
1 Full of OIIII,.Mwilool•l J7
lUe.'

PHJiLIP
ALDER

r.1FRCHANDI S c

CrOIIWOrd

..

.

.

'1bur
'1lrthday
'

TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20) Taka ..,.
not to creall unnec:et~~ry problems for
yourulf today. Think before you IICI. You
cthollld be your biggeiHldvocate, not

•.

your- enemy.

(lilllV 11-.lw. 20) AloHa your
financea realtlllcelly today ond ut your
budget accordingly . You ahould not be
axtrovagonl or from Olttall. Make
do wllh whll you hi...
CANCf!R (J- 21"""" 21) Keep lmP,or·

CRIIINI

•.
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•

Worten IU&lt;e)

CAPAICOIIN (liM. ZNall. It) II wiM be
biller to do 01'11 thing ~ do Mpropeofy
today lnPitd ol aaomptlng _
.. lhinga . tant objeCllveo In clear locut today, oo
etu you may dflll off on' li longenl and
at anoe. Try to pofel1llze your 1111&lt;1.
AQUARnJS (.len. 20-1'8!1· It) You will IOIIllllftlng tt.l COUld haVe- ~
not have fltUCI1 auc cIll II you IIY to per· ... not be lllalnld.
ouade olhei'W lo do oomethlng for you LI!O (July 21-Aug 21) It w\11 1110¥8 wile
today to try to temper your grandioaa
whlclt you can eulfy ..,. 01 your·
wilt a hMilhy opr'dtlng ol oeallly.
For
t!/illl_.,
rNiinllin a balancecl pero
PIICfl (l'ell. 10-lllaroll II) lnvotvo·
opedlve.
lhll . _ lllong - - ol rllk
ohould be ~ today, .b eco- your YIIIGO (At~~vU lapl. 21) A pn1p011l
..., olloling might ..... piiCIIdli 101 ()vel: p II tiiCIIO ~ IO!IIIy Ill' - I I ~
do not .._ lao oould . _ llllngl
your
win.
allltChad.
E.-.1111
peel(. onfuly.
A111D (*raii21-Aprll11) H you UIM (lljll. 11-011. U) You and your
rtlllllnoe. ~ might dawn lrwiHd
o1 puohtng tlte pedal to 111e metal. To mala mlgltt argue •boul your Oollecllw
achieve your goata tDday, you muat .be reoourcea today. Strive to r•ach an
IQIMIM!K aa _, aa p: llllrlll.
llfiiiCioul,

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P8ge 10. Tbe O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Oh.l o

Tuesday, November 12,1188

'

Eastern Local honor rolls posted for first nine weeks:
Eastern Local School District
students have been recopized for
academic distinction for the first
nine weeks' gading period, accord·
ina to district superintendent Deryl
Well.
Those high school students.
achieving a grade of B or better in
all subjects were listed on the over·
· all honor roll and those achicvina a
gnide of B ·or abOve and a grade no
lower than a C in art, handwriting
music and physical education were
listed on the academic honor roll.
In the elementary schools, students were recognized on an aii·A
honor roll, and ' lll\ academic honor
roll, the Iatter being for those who
achieved a grade of B or above in all
.subjects.
EASTERN mGH SCHOOL

Twelfth Grade: All A's: Patsy
Acikcr, Meredith Crow. Overall:
David Biker, Ansel• Bissell, Anaela
Chancy, Eric Dillard, William Fran·
cis, Maria Frecker, Christi Gross·
nickle, Tracie Heines, Martha
Holter, Misty Lyons, Amanda Mil·
hoan, Peter Nowllc, Mindy Sampson, Michelle Westfall, and Tracy
White.
Eleventh Grade: All A's: Kelli
Bailey, Brandon Buckley, Michelle
Caldwell, Rachael Seth. Overall:
Stefani
Bearhs,
Christopher
Buchanan, Bethany Coolce, Jamie
Drake, Joanna Gumpf, Shaun Long,
Angela Riling, Judith West, Nicoie
White, Corey Yonker. Academic:
April Foreman, Jeff Kimes.
Tenth Grade: All A's: Stephanie
Evans, Mike Sobieski ~ Overaii:

Beau Bailey, Jessica Brannon, Jessi·
ca Burclwd, Jessica Marcum, Sari
Pubnan, Heath Proftitt, Jacquelynn
Parker, Nikki Roberu, Jennifer
Starcber, Aaron Will.
Ninth Grade: · All A's: Maureen
Heines, Jessica Pore. Overall:
Joshua Broderick, Matt Caldwell,
Chastic Hollon, Rachael Lees,
Cassie Rose, Leah Sanders, Steven
Weelcs.
Eighth Grade: All A's: Brandon
Browning, Joshua Clark, Wes Crow.
Overall: Julie Bailey, . Kristen
Chevalier, Cinda Clifford, John
Coolce,Ttffany Hollon, Joshua Kehl,
Roben Taylor.
Seventh Grade: All A's:' Tamara
Bissell, Bradley Brannon, Lindsey
Cross, Ben Holter, Garren Karr,
Christopher Lyons,· Kimberly

Marcinko. Overall: Alex Carpenter,
Darlene Connolly, Tina DeLaCNz,
Jonathan Duffy, Ben Holter, Misty
Clark, Tiffany Kidder, Sara Mans·
field, Sracie Watson, Jonathan Will.

bary, Derek Baum, Cody Dill. Acad·
ernie Achievement: Abbie Cheva·
tier, Carrie Elberfeld, Andrea
Gruescr, Sara Pore .and Cbelsey
Young.

CHI1'STER ELEMENTARY
Sixth Grade: All A's: Carrie
Crow, Sonya Frederick . .Academic'
'Achievement: Joshua Basham,
Travis Baley, Brent Buckley, Derek
Clark, Cacy Faulk, Erin Taylor, Jennifer Thoma, Brandon Werry, and
Chelsey Wood.
· Fifth Grade: All A's: Brittany
Hauber, Alyssa Holler, Jonathan
Owen. Academic Achievement:
Rachel Elliott, Stacy Smith, Patricia
Stuckey, Becky Taylor, Adam Will,
Adam Wolfe, and William Woods.
· Founh Grade: All A's: Ken Ams-

RIVERVIEW ELEMENTARY
Sixth Grade: All A's: None. Aca·
· demic Achievement: Krystal Baker,
Miranda Buckley, Jennifer Chad·
well, Roger Chadwell, Tara Fisher,
Beth Gregory, Cyrus Knous, Abbi
Thompson, Ryan Wachter.
Fifth Grade: All A's: None. Acad·
ernie Achievement: Emily Brocl&lt;,
Sandra Powell.
Fourth Grade: All A's: Morgan
Weber. Academic Achievement:
Jaime Reel, Casey Smith, Krjsta
White.

TIJPPERS PLAINS
ELEMENTARY
•
Sixth Grade: All A's: Tyler SiJR..
mons. Academic Achievement: AsJt.
ley Boyles, Nichol Honalcer, Erica
LA:mons. Jeremy Shanlcs, Thomas
Simmons, Lisa Smith, Jaime Whit·
lock, Carrie Wiains.
Fifth Grade: All A's: Jessicp
Boyles, Hailee Oinc, Ryan Kidder.
Academic Achievement: Chrissie
Gregory, Steven Hollis, Kassandra
Lodwick, Kevin Marcinko, Katie
Robertson, Nicholas Weeks. ·
Fourth Grade: All A's: Darren
ScarbA_ough. Academic Achieve.·
ment!"'lrittany Barnett, Christopher
Carroll, Adam Dillard, Jessica Kehl,
Bryan Minear, Dusty Murphy, Cas·
sandra Nutter, Sarah Yost.

Ohio Lottery

Meigs
honors
fall athletes

Pick 3:

059
Pick 4:

8958

Cloudy tonight, chance of
anow, low In mid 20s.
Thur~day, mostly cloudy,
snow ahowefl, high In

BuckeyeS:
9-16-25-30-35

Sportl on Page 4

•

•

a1
'

•

•

VoL 47, NO. 1311

2 Sectlono, 12 Pegeo 35 cents
A Gannen Co. -apoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohlo,Wednesdayj November 13, 1996

OliN; Ollto V.lley Publlahlng COIIIpllnf

I

Meigs County home page
up and running on Internet

'The Baby-sitters Club' stories draw from
experience, ·issues and suggestions
Marlin was a full-fledged baby sit·
ter, and she continued to baby-sit
through college.
·
When an editOr at Scholastic
Inc., where Manin once· worlced,
suggested she write four - just
four- books about the adventures
of a group of friends who started a
baby-sitting cooperative, Marlin
called on her personal baby-sitting
experie.nces and even J:reated a
character, the shy Mary Anne,
based on herself.
·
However,. "Most of the situa··
lions that happen in the books were
not things that happened when I
was baby-silting," admits Manin,
who is on a two-year book tour that
will take her to every state. "I
would have had one spectacular
baby-silting career if tbcy did."
The books took off, and a series
was born. So was a board 'game, an
HBO 1V series, a movie, trading ·
cards and a fan club with 60,000
members. ."The Baby-sitter's
Club" boolcs are printed in 19 Ian.
guages and distributed world-wide.
Over the years, the books have
become less about baby-silting and
more about the baby sitters.
"All of the boolcs involve baby·
sitting," Martin says, but in many
.cases, it serves as a backdrop. The
books are about the kids who are
members of the club, their friend·
ships with each other, their· fami·
lies, problems they have in
school."
·
Now 41 , Manin has a home in
upstate New York- she .won't say
where - and one in· New York
City. She is not married and docs
not have children. Politely asked if
she is a millionaire by now which surely she must be (nearly
ISO million books in the series
have sold) - she just as politely
responds, "I don't talk about my
finances' to anyone except my
accountant."
Although she continues to plug
away on the series, Martin ~ who
has wriuen 13 other children's novels and two picture books- hopes
to concentrate more on her other
writing for children. Her second
picture book, "Leo the Magnifi·
cat." illustrated by Caldecott win·
ncr Emily Arnold McCully, will· be
out in mid-September.
·
"It's fun to be concentrating on
other characters," says Martin.
"It's nice. to branch out and do
something different."
To parents who wish their
daughters Would also branch out
and read something different than
the ever-expanding "Baby-sitters
11

BABY-81TTERS CLUB • Ann M. Martin author of 100 bqoka In
"The Bllby-elttera Club"·aerlea writes from experiences. She waa
a bllby-eltler for 11111ny r•ra, atartlng at age 10 when she was a
, mother's helper In Princeton, N.J.
that's still a lot of books - about
By BETSY RUBINER
40 a year, says-Manin.
The 0.. Molnea Regi-'er
"I staned off writing every·
Tile first thing you may want to
thing,"
Manin ~ays during a tele·
know about Ann M. Marlin on the
lOth anniversary of her wildly suc- phone interview from her home in
cessful children's book series "The upstate New York. "Then gradually
Bahy-sitters Club" is: Did she real· the scl;ledule was stepped up to one
every ·other month and then one
ly write ali those books?
· Weii, here's the scoop - and each month."
Although she now writes j~st · a
frankly, it's not much of one: She
few of tbc books herself each year,
didn't.
Manin - who was once a publish·
How could she?
At last count there were 100 ing house editor - gives the five
boolcs in "Tile Baby-sitters &lt;;lub" writers who work on the series a
·series, which chronicles the adven· "very detailed outline" and edits
tures of a group of 13-year-old girls their manuscripts "so it has my per·
in fictional Stoneybrook, Conn., sonal touch at the end."
and is loosely targeted to children
The next thing you may be curl·
ous
about is whether Ann M. Mar·
age 8 to 12.
Not to mention the three spin-off tin was ever a baby siuer.
She was - for many years,
series: 27 "Baby-sitters Club Mysteries"; 76 "Baby-sitters Little Sis· staning at age 10 when she was a
ter" books .(for children ages 7 td mother's helper in Princeton. N.J.,
10); and two in the newest spin:off, where she grew up with a mother
"The Kids in Ms. Colman's Class" who taught preschool , a father who
drew cartoons for The New Yorker
(for children ages 6 to 8).
Tile books are quick reads, but and · a younger sister. By age 12.

Club" series, Martin offers a mixed
appraisal of children's book series.
It's .not great for a child to he
hooked on a series if she has the
potential to be a fantastic reader,
says Martin. But if she isn't a fantaslic reader and gets hooked, at
least she's reading something. And,
adds Martiq, ."most kids don't get
stuck in anything for long."
While series books have thrived,
she notes that "luckily, other forms
of literature for kids have also
taken · off. The children's book
indusuy has been booming. !think
kids have a great variety of books
to chose from - series, fiction,
non-fiction."
She also encourages her young
readers to read other books by
including the names of other novels
- perhaps a Newbery winner or a
favorite from her childhood, like
the Mary Poppins or Dr. Dooliule
boolcs - in her books. She reports
that some readers have wrilten try·
ing to find those books.
Letters from readers also help
Martin come up with .ideas for. The
Baby-sitters Club books. "Some·
times kids write to me with sugges·
lions." While she may not adopt the
plot lines- which, she says, "tend
toward disasters: There's a car accident and then there's an avalanche"
- she docs sometimes explore
tbcmes raised by bcr young corre·
spondents.
For example, Manin recently
re&lt;;eived "lots of letters from 'kids
asking for a book about. problems
associated with drunk driving and
from kids who experienced the
death of a peer or classmate."
The result, released in January,
'was "Mary Anne and the Memory
,Garden"- No. 93 in "The Babysitters Club" series - which
addresses both issues with a story
about how the baby sitters grapple
with ihe death of a classmate whose
family 's car is hit by a drunk driver.
"The ideas come really from all
over the place," says Martin.
"Some are based on things that
actually happened. Some are based
on issues that I read about. I listen
to the news. I read the paper."
Don't look, of course, for a
.crack house on Stacy's block or a
drive-by shooting near Claudia's
house in Stoneybrook (a tow~ not
unlike Princeton, Manin acknowl·
edges).
"I write about things if they
seem · to fit into the .world that's
been· created. · ... the world . of a
baby-sitters club in Stoneybrook,"
she says.

-~---.,...-· Poet;s
'Distress'

/

When trouble comes
and things go wrong,
and days are cheerless
and nights are long,
We lind it so easy
to _give in 10 despair
by magnifying
the burdens we bear,
We add to our worries
'by refusing to try,
. not knowing he sent II
- • not 10 distress us ....
but to strengthen our faith

.
PASTOR MIKE FOREMAN AND FAMILY

SOUTHERN CHEERLEADING HONOREES • Southern High
School senior cheerleaders honored at the SHS fall awards bllnquet
Sunday were, left, Amy Northup, Kristen Hensler, Vanessa Shuler
and Angle Carleton.

-Community calendar-

·Church in Middlepon.
·
·
: He joins 'his father, Pastor Lawrence Foreman in the ministry, at the
;,burch. ·
, Tile new assistant pastor previously served as children's church pastor for
'lilt years at the New Live Church in Charleston, W. Va. under Apostle Jim
.ug,c. He was ordained after attending New Life Training Center for two
'yean. He holds a bachelor of science degree in electrical engineering from
•West' Virginia Institute of Technology. He is employed at Columbia Gas
Tra~~~~~~ission. lllc.
Foreman, his wife, Karen, and tbcir four children, Seth, Bryant,
.Nathaniel and Elisabeth, reside in Ripley, W.Va.

•

Speakers, Rev. and Mrs. Sam Davis,
Jr., Mexico. Public invited.

The Community Caiendar is
publlsh~d as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not .designed to pro·
mote sale$ or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as spaee
permits and cannot be gnaranleed
to run a speo:ific: number of days.
TIJESDAY
POMEROY •• Regular meeting,
Meigs County Commissioners, 3:30
p.m Tuesday at Courthouse in
Pomeroy. Meeting time changed due
to holiday Monday.

THURSDAY
POMEROY ·· Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Soror·
ity, 6:30 p.m. thursday, Episcopal
Parish House. Pomeroy.
RACINE -· JEWEL (Jesus
Enhancing Wise Educational Learn·
ing) Home School Suppon Group,
former TEACH, Thursday, 7 p.m. at
the Racine Nazarene Church. Dixie.
Wolfe. presentation on teaching pre,.
school.
' .
FRIDAY
POMEROY
Meigs County
Arthritis Support Group, Friday,
10:30 a.m. to non, conference room,
Meigs County Senioc Citi1.cns Ccn·
tcr. Dr. Sam l.cvcrt, Holzer neurologist, speaker.

SYRACUSE ·· Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce , luncheon,
Tuesday noon, Carleton School,
Syracuse. Anita Kennedy to give
program on American Indian ani. facts. RSVP through chamber, 9925005.
PAGEVILLE •• Scipio Township
Trustees, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday,
Page ville.

SATIJRDAY
POMEROY -- Creative 'writing
workshop. Meigs County Public
Library, Pomeroy, Saturday. 9;30
am. to 12 '30 p.m. Jcrcdith Merrin,
associate professor.of English, Ohio
Stale University to conduct.

POMEROY ·' Meigs County
Genealogical Society, Tuesday, 5:15
·p.m. Meigs ~useum .
. POMEROY , ,. Meigs County
Board of Commissioners regular
meeting Tuesday, 3:30 p.m. in the
Meigs County Courthouse.

r-----------,

POMEROY -· Meigs High
School winter sports banquet Tucs·
day, 6:30 p.m . in the high school
cafeteria. Parents to bring two cov- ·
cred dishes, dessert and vegetable . .
Meat, rolls and drink provided.
WEDNESDAY .
MIDDLEPORT ·· Wesleyan
Bible Holiness Church, 7:30 p.m.
missionary service Wednesday.

corner------

and redeem us
and to Bless Us!
By Teresa iiUI MUier
LA:tart Falls

'Do I?' ·
Hour by hOur
and day by day;
. I talk 10 God
and say when I pray:
"God, show me the way
so I know what to do.
I am willing and ready

if I just knew what to take
and what to say."
But it seems no matter
hew much I pray,
the answer I cannot
seem to hear.
And life grows more confused
and unclear.
I ask myself,
Do I hear his voice
and just refuse his choice.
By Teresa Hill Miller
Letart Falls

'

'

By

Dave
Grate
of
Rutland

'•!
J·

Doing nothing is verr,
tiresome, bec9,1.1se you can I l
stop to_rest. ·
,
•

•

.

•

t

l

Always be careful not to kick
up more dust than you can
settle.

•• •

Saving Is eas.y. Just earn
money faster than you can
spend It. .

•••

Middle age: when
memory is shorter,
experience longer,.
' energy lower, and
forehead higher.

your
yo,u r
your
your

•••

************************

Experience may not be
worth what It costs, but
w~ have to pay
that's
for :.;;·..._""=",.., !T'~

:
TIIANKS! ,
:Foreman chosen as assistant
: I would like to express my sincere
pastor for Rejoicing Life Church ·*
appreciation for the complimentary
Mike Foreman has been named assistant pastor at the Rejoicing Life
•

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff
Efforu to promote Meigs County
as an economic de.velopment site
have been taken to a global scale,
with the new Meigs County Eco. nomic Development home pase on
the Worhl Wide Web.
,,
Mejgs County Economic Devel·
opment Director Julia Houdashelt
announced the startup of the home
page during Tuesday's Meigs Coun· .
. ·IY Chamber of Commerce monthly
luncheon Tuesday afternoon in Syra·
cuse.

* votes

and support given me in the
: November 5, 1996 general ele.ction.

**
:* EMMOGENE
IIAMRTON
•
**
* .
Your Fulhlme Meigs County Recorder

·

.·

Pol. Mi. Pilei lor by~ H81111110n. Coitlge Rd., SynociM, OH

***********************************

Rutlald Fur1lture
Rt. 124, hd ( 0.. 742-2211

NATIVE AMERICAN DEMONSTRATION • Local raaldent Anita
Kanntcly preeented a clemonatrltlon on Native Amarlcan Indian
artlfactJ during Tueldly'a monthly Melgll County Chamber of
Commerce lunclleon at Carleton School In Syl'llcuH. Kennedy
dlapllyed HVtl'llllndlan artifacts and dlac:ueaed •rly American
Indian culture. (Tom HunterJSenttnel photo)

Commissioners
OK pound plans ·
The Meigs County Pound
Upgrade Project (PUP) came a little ·
closer to being Tuesday afternoon at
the postpo~ meeting of the Meigs
County Board of Commissioners.
Commissioners approved plans
for upgt'ldes to the Meiss County
.Dog Pound and agreed to advertise
for bids on the project. Commission·
ers met Tuesday instead of Monday
due to the Vete01ns Day holiday.
Commission Vice' presiden! Janet
- '.. Hgward said plans call for adding ·
'tWo runs to the pound, upgrading the
fencing and pulling the whole struc·
ture under roof.
The goal of PUP supporters is to
getthc pound under roof before win·
ter to help keep the runs free of snow
and ice, which in addition to making

conditions miserable for the dogs also
make It difficult to 'Clean the runs.
Coinll\issioners and PUP suppon·
ers had wanted to wall in the srruclure in an effon to prevent vandalism,
but did no~ have enough money.
How&amp;rd described the planned
structure ·.S a pole bam to cover the
pound.
"We're shooting to get it under
[OOf at this time," she said.
In other business, commissioners
paid weeldy bills of$422,156.38 con·
sisting of 207 entries. .
Also present were commission
President Fred Hoffman, Commis- ·
sioner Robert Harten~h. Clerk Gloria Klocs and Commissioner-elect
Jeff Thornton whose term com·
mcnces Jan. 2, 1997.

Drivers beware: It's
mating time for deer
TOLEDO (AP)-. Titis is the time
of year wbcn deer start looking for
love in all the wrong places, such as
highways and' busy roads.
It's also a dangerous time for
motorists, who are being warned by
wildlife officials to drive extra carefully . during deer mating season,
which lasts from November through
January.
Tim Armstrong of Toledo suffered
several broken bones and was hospitalized for two days after his car hit
a deer on U.S. 20 last December. The
deer died.
"It just came out of nowhere,"
Armstrong said Monday. "I had no
time to stop. It was really scary."
Last year, there were 24,811 deer·
car accidents in Ohio. Summit Coun·
ty led the list with 716. More than
half of all deer-vehicle accidents
occur during the last three months of
the year.'
For 1995. the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol said 332 of
the I ,245 crashes it investigated in
both counties were deer crashes. Out
of 1,000 accidents so far this year,

son.
\:egional Development District.
Houdashelt stated that Athens and
·Internet users can .access the
Hocking Coun)y's are also working
eigs County Economoc Develop·
on similar projects, joining Meigs ment home page at http://www.
County in efforts to make develop· meigs.new/county/
1
ment information available to manuSpecial guest speaker for the lun·
facturers and industry worldwide.
cheon was Anita Kennedy, who P.re·
The Athens and Hocking County sentcd a demonstration '?n Nauve
development home pages will be American· Indian artifacts. Kennedy .
included with Meigs County's disc.usscd traditions and the c':'lture of
through a project developed by Ohio Nauve Amcncan tnbes, saymg that
Region II , in conjunction with the many of the beltefs and practo~es .of
State Office of Appalachia and the early American Indians have been
Ohio Depanment of Development, passed on to modern cultures.
Continued on Page 3
and also with the Hocking Valley

Northern Ohio residents continue
to dig ·o ut from early winter blast
•

.

CLEVELAND (AP) - By the oompacted and there was little melt·
time winter officially llfrives Dec. 21, ing underneath where the ground was
peop)e in tl:te snowbelt area of Ohio warmer, weather service spokesman ·
,
will have already had their fair share. Kevin Barjenbruch.
Other hard-hit cities: Perry, 28
Tile snow that had pelted northeast
Ohio for four days began to taper off inches; Highland Heights, 30 inches;
a bit today and was expected to . Shaker Heights, 27 inches and
dwindle to flurries by afternoon .
Ashtabu)a 27 inches.
Accumulations ranging from 2
Gov. George Voinovich on Tuesinches to .4 incbes were still possible day declared a state of emergency in
in tbe eastern suburbs, .while 3 inch· Ashtabula, Oeauga and Lak.e counes to 6 incbes could accumulate in the ties. The Ohio Emergency MBI!.aae·.
hllt'de$t·hit are115 east of CUyahoga ment Agency can use the OhioCounty, the National Weather Service · National Guard, the·state's Depan·
said.
ment of Transportation and other
Snowfall on the ground already agencies as needed.
topped a foot in western suburbs to
"We've gone through three truckabout 4 feet in Munson Township in . loads of snow shovels. Snow blow·
Geauga County.'
ers, generators, 3nd kerosene healers
Snow accumulation passed 19 go out as fast as they come in," said
inches Tuesday at Oeveland Hopkins Bob Lancz, owner of Dunn's Home
International Airport, l)laking this Center, about 7 miles east of Cleve·
the third snowiest November on land.'
record in the tity. The snowiest
Temporary she hers were opened
November was in 1950, whon 22.3 acr.oss the area.
inches were recorded.
Amelia Grey, 86, of Chagrin Falls,
Only a trace of precipitation was about 10 miles cast of the city, spent
reported at the airpon overnight, but most of Tuesday watching television
some heavier· snowfall was reponed at the Mayfield Heights Community
east of Cleveland.
Center, because her home was with·
Parts of Chardon had 44 inches on out electric power and heat.
the ground early today, including
"h .was a bit frightful," she said.
more than 6 inches of new snow. "The worst of it is, you just can't preSome areas measured 54 inches on pare for so many bad things to
Tuesday, but some of the snow had occur.,.

344 have involved deer, a patrol
spokesperson said.
Deer intent on finding mates
become fearless and do crazy things .
such as 'boldly dashing across roads.
"They get goofy," said Ed Lan·
gcnau, big game specialist for Michi· .By JIM FREEMAN
tied to annual compensation of
$7,000, according to the Ohio
gan's Natural Resources Department. Sentinel News Staff
· Just ask a student who found a
An audit on. Letart Township Revised Code.
,
120-pound doc Monday in a bath· released to the media Tuesday says
Estimated Letart Township
room at Ravenna High School in elected officials must repay the town· · resources fer 1994 as certified by the
northeast Ohio.
ship a total of $4.400, but legal coun· county budget commission totaled
The school 's principal, Rich cil forthe township described the cir· $237,073.17.
Markwardt, said the animal must cum stance surrounding the finding as
Township Clerk Joyce White was
have gotten inside the building Sat· "an honest mistake".
overcompensated by $2,000 during
urday night during a police fund-rais·
The audit rclca.&lt;ed by Auditor of 1994, auditors reponed. She was paid
cr.
. . .
State Jim Petro, which covers the $9,000 that year.
The d~ ~as found lymg ·~sodc a . period between Jan. I, 199.4, and
Likewise, in townships meeting
stall. Floor ttles made ''·too shppery · Dec. 31, 1995, states the township the above budget criteria, trustees ale
for her to stand.
clerk and trustees were overpaid by entitled to annual compensation of
Humane office~ Tom McCarthy $4,400during I994andmustpaythe · $26 perday ·for not more. than 200
tranq.uthzed the am mal and removed money back to the township's gcner· days.
her from the bathroom.
al fund.
Auditors · found trustees Don R.
In townships having a budget of Hill, William D. Graham and Christo- .
"It's usually a deer hit by a car on more than $100,000, but not more phcrWolkwcrcpaid ataratcof$30
the side ofthe road that's injured that than $250,000, the clerk shall be cnti· a day for . 200 days during 1994.
..
.
we have to euthanize or tranquilize.
But a ~igh schoolbathroom? ·That's ff It meets all .standards
unique," McCarthy said.

'

'

'

FROZEN FOUNTAIN • Cincinnati city worker Ron Bell climbs
down from the frozen Tyler Davidson Fountain on Tuesday on
Fountain Square In downtown Cincinnati. Worker~ were shutting
down the fountain tor the winter. (AP)

Letart audit findings an ··honest mistake•

'

Rutland Council OKs routine matters
. Rutland Village Council held a
brief regular meeting Tuesday night,
to discuss routine village business
and recent passage of tbc village's
two mill replacement levy.
In routine financial review by
council, the following village fund
balances were reported for the end of
October by Eskew: General Fund,
$7,242.37; Civic Center, $3,052.61;
Police, $3,832.97; Law Enforcement,
$487.33; Street, $3,431.60; Highway,
$4,224.35; Water, $4,246.05; Sewer,
$5,643.58; Sewer Debt, $20,003.97;
Utility Deposit. $9,472.09; Replace·
ment Fund, $19,588.37.
The treaturer's repon was ·
approved and accepted by council.
· Council members and Mayor
JoAnn Eads expressed their IJ!Preci·
Ilion to village residents f"'' passinJ

The county development Internet
site contains demographic informa·
tion, maps, and photos ·of the Great
Bend and Tuppers Plains Industrial
Sites. The county has been working·
with local Internet service provider
MeigsNet to create the county website, Houdashelt said.
A web-site for the Meigs County
Tourism Board has been available to
Internet users worldwide for just
over two q1onths, and received over
900 visits by net surfers in hs first
month on the Internet, according to
county tourism director Karin John·

the . village's two mill, five year
replacement levy during the Nov. 5
general election. Voters approved the
measure by a 166· 74 margin. •
In other matters, council:
• apProved a $2.000 loan payment
on the new village'police cruiser.
• approved minutes from the Oct
15 meeting.
· approved the October mayor's
repon.in the amount of $4,13.6, with
the villqe retaining $2,816afterpay·
ment of the state share of$1,320.
• heard a report from Dave Davis
of the 'Village maintenance depart·
m~nt concemina repairs.to a pressure
regulator on the villaae water system.
l'la4nr were council members
Dick Fetty, Danny Davis, Judy Den·
ney, and Vera Marlin, Mayor JoAnn
Eads, and Eskew.

.

While the trustees were due $5,200 'explained. "When they did their ini·
each, they were paid $6,000 •. an tial budget, they anticipated i,t being
overpayment of $800 each.
over $250,000."
·
Auditors issued a finding for · · However, the amended budget in
recovery of $2,000 from White and January showed the township:s
her bonding company, the Personal resources were below the $250,000 .
,
Service Insurance Company. In addi· · mark.
lion, findings for recovery of $800
"At the same time; money was:
each were issued against Hill and . coming in to cover the purchase of a:
Graham and the Western Surety ·vehicle ... money which should have
Insurance Company, and Wolfe and been added to the budget, which
his bonding company, the Personal would have put tbcm back: ovc.r
Service Insurance Company.
$250,000," Lentes said, adding that
However, Meigs Prosecuting tbc budget was not amended because :
Allorricy John R. Lentes, who reprc· of a paperwork problem.
sents all townships in the county. said
F~om March to the end of the year,:
they
should ha•c been paid at the;
the findings were the result of an hon·
higher rate, be said.
est mistake.
"Township trustee salaries arc
"I am working right now with the
based on their budget," Lcntes
Continued on page 3

•

Underwood says he will support' pulp mill project ~

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - · come and where it will continue to
· Gov.-cicci Cecil Underwood said tbc come," he said.
Underwood plans to establish an
state has undergone significant
change in the nearly four decades institute where universities and comsin&lt;:c he was governor and his expe· panies would seck new industries and
.
rience since tbcn has best prepared products for West Virginia.
"The
objective
is
to
look
for
new
him for the job.
·
"It's so much bigger and the econ- technologies that are emerging,
omy's changed a lot, and the sccuri· because each new technology has the
ty needs are vastly different than tbcy potential of ·a new product or ser·
vice," he said. "Entrepreneurs will
· were then," Underwood said.
Sinct he left office in 1960, take those new technologies and
Underwood co-founded Software start a new business.
"We have the science and tech·
Valley, a high-tech company incubanology
commission created by the
tor along Interstate 79 in Moraanlast
legislature,
and I assume that can
town. H~ said the principles on
which the incubator was founded will ·. be the vehicle to carry the research
·IClivily, while having close tics with
be a focus of his adminstntlon.
college and university facilities
''The most useful experience
had is my work with Software Valley, across the state, as well as private
because that's wbere the change 11M indu~try rf&lt;rarch," he said.

rvc

..

•

Meanwhile, Underwood said wei·
fare and bcalth care arc the two
biggest problems the state faces. ·
How they will be dealt with wi II be
innuenccd by what Congress and the
Clinton administration docs, he said.
'Those are two extremely difficult
problems to deal wjth," he said.
Health care access is a serious
problem because the state is rural,
Underwood said. The state already is
working to comply with new federal
welfare laws.
Also, Underwood said he supports
a proposed $1 billion pulp mill in
Mason County if it meets federal and
stale fl'gulatory standards. The Apple
Grove project by PITSOns &amp; Whitte·
more Inc. of Rye Brook, N.Y., has
been delayed by permit problems.
The company last monih asked the

state to grant it a new water pollution ·
pcmlit after a judge invalidated its
previous permit. No decision has ,
been made.
"I've not been privy to the da:ta :
thin seems to make the dccisiohs that :
have already been · made," Under- .
wood .said. "I certainly will take a
look at it. I don't know what the sit·
uation really is."
He also said he has not spoken ;
with Democrat Charlotte Pritt
Pritt called Underwood's home in
· Huntington last Thursday and talked
· with his wife Hovah, but he was not •
home, he said.
"I'm going to try to call her," ht'
said. "She called to congratulate us
and offered her help in any way sbe :
could. So, I'll express my apprecia-··
:
lion for that."

'

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