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OPBI

Steeler.s
nip Miami
24-17

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Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
4-6-2
Pick 4:

2-1-5-9
Buckeye 5:

11-15·19-25-26

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Allmiun \VhiJ!Is, V8Vortec
Power Locks, Tit, Ci1ise

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' YoL 47, NO. 145

2 Secttono, 12 P.goo, 35 cento

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesd~y, November 26, 1996

, 011186, Ohio Valley Publlllllng Company

.

A Gannett Co. Newopoper

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~· AR.C approves. funding
~ for TP sewer project,

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~Book

week ·observed---.

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"This funding is key 10 improving the economic development elimate in Appalachian Ohio. thus
affording residents and businesses the
resources needed for prosperity and
' growth," she added.
Hollister's announcement of the
·
• grants was followed Monday by a ·

·He also noted that of the 29
Appalachian counties. two have now
been removed from t~e "distressed"
list, which m'eans that a "few more
dollars may be available for 'distressed counties,"
Meigs is an economically distressed county.
.,
.

In observance of Children's Book Week, the Middleport Public Library is feeturing a display ·
of children's booke from around the world. They were collected by Pet Mills lor her grand~on
and came frbm England, F111nce, Graeca, Turkey Russia, Creta Switzerland, and Ireland. Wendy
Maxaon, above, a library employee, errangeathe display. "Oh, the Places You'll Go" .Is the theme
of. thle year' a observance. Children's story houra 1111 held at 11 11.m. Thur&amp;dly.
·
.

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i·a~as·flce··ae·parfnient

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Rumpke
plans trash
contract bid

: unc·overs nationwide
:Medicare overbilling
..

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Federal authorities say they have found
Medicare overcharges at 4,660 h&lt;&gt;spitals nationwide, and they c•pect the gov' crnmcnt to 'cnllcct $120 million in penalties .
The U.S. Justice Dcpanmcnt already has reached settlements with ncar·
ly 1.000 hospitals, resulting in payments of $22 million . according to U.S.
Attorney David Barasch, who oversees the investigation from Harrisburg.
The Philadelphia Inquirer on Sunday said the settlements have hccn con' dueled secretly under a "gentlemen's agreement" to avoid publicity for the
• hospitals.
·
·
.
Barasch adamantly denied that allegation , saying he has granted 60 interviews about Medicare fraud since the project began two years ago. He noted each single settlement inclativcly· small.
.
.
"In the last three years. I haven't issued a single press release on a civil
ea...C.'' h~ said . '' For the most part. these arc very small claims; claims of
' $20.000 to $25.000."
,
.
Last week. he said, he 'issued a news release that cited the overall ligures
and noted the task force has recovered $20 million during the fiscal year.
The Inquirer qu01ed Mary Catherine Frye. the lead proscuutor in the fraud
unit , as saying press release~ "would take away the incentive for 1hc hospitals to deal with us amicably.··
Health-care advocates and watchdog groups worry !hat the government
'
·
• is quietly scttlin'g the cases. the newspaper said.
·,
"It would seem to me that the public has more to gain from a full airing
; of the fraud in hand than they do from Justice Department otTicials not having the discomfon of having an antagonistic relationship with the hospit~Js:·
said Daniclle Bryan. executive director of the Project on Government Oversight. a Wa.shingwn-hased watchdog group.
The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania paid $976.034 in July. the ·
largcsl settlement yet involving excess billing to Medicare for outpatient scr-.
vices. according to documents the InqUirer ()btttmcd under the Freedom ol
: ·Information Act.
· Auditors using computer programs found that many hospitals . including
, Penn. billed scparutel~ lilT pre-admission tests. Frye likened .the practice to
• a rcs1aurant wilh a lixed-price menu charging extra for salad.
·•
The Justice Depanment ha.s declined to answer questions about ·whether
those improper clnirns stemmed fnnn sloppiness. misintcrprcl~lions ,,f vague
: rules or fraud . Prosecutors ,ilso have declined to discuss how widespread the
·: problems were and whether doctors. hilling clerks or managers were at fault.
:
Barasch said the dcpanmcnt rouunely declines to answer qucstmns after
: a sclllcment because the delcndants ·have noli&gt;rum for a deniaL

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.· ·.v.ason County teen struck by
stray bullet during rifle _practice

Middleport Village Council met
in a brief regular session Monday
evening, approving routine village
business and ~iscussing personnel
maucrs.
Ty Rumpkc of Rumpke Commercial Services addressed council
about refuse service in the village. ·
Rumpkc thanked the village for
the opportunity to serve as the contracted company for waste and

Report finds hospital settlements
· may have been done secretly

, ~;l"\.J"~~~~-.t...,. t4,.....:1

refuse services in the village. and

said thai the company intends to
suhmit a hid tn continue those services in 1997.
Rumpkc Commercial Services
was awarded a one-year conlract
for waste am.l refuse service in the
village of Middlcpnn in November
1995. Their contract c.pircs Jan. I.
1997. The bid deadli~c for the
1997 villago refuse service contract
is Dec. 9.
Council opened bids fnr
employee group health insurance
coverage for village employees.
with the snle hid submitted by
Downing -Chi Ids- Mulien-Musser
Insurance of Pomeroy. Council
asked that the bid be submitted to
the village's finance and cmplnycc
commiHccs for review .
In other nu\Ucrs. ~nundl:
• approved minutes nf the Nov.
IH meeting.
,
• approved payment' nf village
bills. '
·
• entered eXecutive scssinn for .
di scussion of personnel maucr,.;.
• heard from Council President
Beth Stivers. who anno,unccd that
the Middleport Fire Department's
annual honor dinner will be held
Dec. 5.

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va . .,... A Hospital after the incident which
Lctan teen was hospitali1.cd after cx:currcd around 9 a.m. A family
being slruck by an apparent stray hul- member said this morning that Kyle
lct. a hunter wa.s injured when he was expected to he released frnm the
apparently fell from a tree stand, and hospital later !Oday. . ·
According tc\ Humphreys, Kyle
a 53,-year-old Berkeley County man
was
walking do"\n thC hme of her reswas kiiJcd. all on the 11rst day of
idence
when she was struck by a .22
lirearm buck season Monday. . ,
The teen, Emma Kyle, 13, is in St. caliber rille bullet in the upper
Mary's Hospital after she was struck chest/lower neck area . The hullct
by a bullet that allegedly ricocheted allegedly ncncheted while her brothMonday morning. according to S£:l. cr. Patrick Kyle. 1~ . and a friend were
Dale Humphreys of the Point Pleas- target practicing off the. porch of the
ant Detachment· West Virginia State Kyle residence.
Humphreys said the ca.sc is still
Police .·
Kyle was transported to the Hunt- under invcsti£alinn.
Pc\int Pleasant Fire Department
ington facility from Pleasant Valley

and EMS nllictals were ctilled into
the W&lt;M&gt;ds niT Jerry's Run Road at
.approximately 12:30 p.m.• where a
hunter had apparently fallen from his
tree stlmd while hunting. ·
. JerrY' Wnrkmah, 52. of Ohin River Road , Huntington, apparently
slipPed oiT the tree stand and hung
upside down for a time he fore anuther hunter i(ound hi in and lowered him
to the grnont.l, ·according to u fire
department spokesman .
The Point Pleasant EMS wus
called to the scene, and when oflicials
found they could not reach the victim
by ambulance, called the fire depart(Continued on Page 3)

.Ex-trooper's
lawyer cites
possible conflict
MARIETIA (APJ - Washington
County Common Pleas Judge Susan
Boyer has taken under advisement a
request that county proseculors be
barred from panicipating in a former
state trooper's murder trial.
An altorncy for ex-trooper Jackie
McCrady argued on Monday that an
assistant prosecutor gave child custody advice to McCrady. and that
con:-;titutcd conflict of interest ,
McCrady. 31 , of Belpre. is
charged with killing his wilc,Jcnilcr,
30. He allegedly requested and
received advice on ohtaining custody
of his two young children lrom ass is,
tant prosecutor Kevin Rings sometime between Sept. 19, the date of
Mrs. McCrady's disappearance, and
Sept. 26. when McCrady filed for
divorce . Mrs. McCrady's body, with
·
(Continued on Page 3)

the rain Monday at the University. of Cincinnati.
· preclplta·
tlon that haa plagued the elate lor the 'peat dey Is expected to end
thia afternoon, temperature• are expected to drop tonight. (AP)

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!census finds stabilization in 20-year decline of two-parent families

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: By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID

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·The emphasis of the funding is to
facilitate economic and social devel·
opment in southeastern Ohio, said
Neff, who. noted that the Ohio
Dcpanmenl of Dcvclopmcnl's role is
to develop policies and promote specific projccl&lt; and proposals that originate with local groups .
The proposed Tuppers Plains
Wastewater Facility, which received
$275,000 this year, is vital to the
growth of that ' community, said
Closser. specifically mentioning
development of the industrial park.
As for the money received by the
Meigs Local School District , it will
be used to upgrade techn!)logy training in .bolh ·the vocational and acad·
cmic programs which serves about
750 students annually. according to
school officials.
That money, combined with
$75~000 in state funding and $50,000
in a local contribution, will equip two
'business-oflice labs. a math and science classroom, a Tech-Prep lab and
several vocational classrooms with
computer work stations, advanced
and industry standard software and
networking hardware.
·

; By CHARLENE HOEFUCH . \l isit from Daniel L. Neff, director of
: Sennne·News Staff
the Governor's Office of Appalachia,
t o eigs County projects are Ohio' Depanment of ncvelopment,
• amon
e 30 in Appalachian Ohio · and Thomas A.. Closser. executive
: which have been approved for fund- . director of the Buckeye Hills-Hock: ing by the~p'alachian Regional ing Valley Regional Development ·
~ Commission.
,
District.
•
The two cigs projects funded
.Neff explained tha.t there arc two'
; from the to al of $4 million in ARC programs in the package. the gonermonies are $125,000 for Mei~ com· al ARC grants which focus on eduputcr instructional equipment, and cation, training and economic infra$275,000 for Tuppers Plains waste- structure development, and the new
, water facilities improvements.
Appalachian Regional Initiative proThe Gallia County Industrial Park gram that highlights leadership.
received a grant of$250,000, and the telecommunications and exponing.
University of Rio Grande, a telecom- Both programs, he said, are designed
munications network consortium, a to create and . retain . jobs in the
grant of $50,000.
· . Appalachian Ohio area. ·
In making the announcement, Lt. , · He said that another $4 million has
Gov. Nancy P. Hollister said that the been approved for Appalachian Ohio
ARC projects represent "the cooper-. projccis in 1997. Neff explained that
ative efforts of local. state and fcder- the distribution of money is "project

•

. cent in 1990 and was 25.5 percent last year, a change uuributed tc&gt; the increasson for the stability is that baby boomer households are settling down .
'.' I wouldn 't expect tremendous change until another 10 years from now ing number of divorces and increased number or single-parent households.
when baby boom children will be mostly olf lo college and the oldest
The number of households with just. &lt;&gt;nc p1:rson grew from 17. I percent
(boomers) stan to think aboul early retirement," said De Vita. a senior of all households in 1970 to 24 .6 pcrce~t ,in 1990 and 25.0 percent in 1995.
Nearly half of the women living ulonc were 65 or older and 44 percenL
researcher for the independent population analysis group.
The' 1970s marked the biggest change in families and households, a time were widows. In contrast. nearly thrcc-rounhs of men li vin g: alone were ages ·
when lbe lirst of the post-World War II baby boomers were reaching adult- 25 to 64 and half had never married.
hood.
.
1l1e report also fpund :
''That decade was much more likely than now to be a decade of substantial
• Married couples without children declined fmm 30.3 pe rce nt of housetumult'of various kinds:·· Bryson ob.o;ervcd. Change continued into the 1,980s holds in 197010 29.8 per\:ent in 1990 and 2K.9 percent in 1995.
'but has lessened markedly since 1990, the report shows.
• Other families with ~hildrcn grew from 5.0 percent in 1970 to H.1 per·
Married couples with children have declined to just over one-fourth of cent' in 1990 a~d 9. I perccnl in 19';5, These include single parents with chilJll households these days, about ihe same share as single people living alone, dren. .
according to the repon: "Household and Family Characteristics : March
• Other families without children grew from 5.6 percent in .1970 to 6 I
1995:"
.
perccnl in 1990 and ·remaincd at lha(lev~llast year. This includcs·such famTheir share of households drc:'Ppe~ from 40.' pcr.:ent in 1.970 to 26.3 per. ilies as brothers or sisters livinf together.

: A1soclated Prell Writer
•
WASHINGTON - The worst may be over.
·
:
Arter two decades of.social revolution during which Bab~ Boomers stcc~cd
.' .America away ·from "Ozzic and Harriet " and towa~d smgle pare nts hke
"Murp~y Brown" or group homes like " Friends." thmgs seem to be stabalizing.
· • b' h
1 d by mama~c
. tn or
. Families - households whose members arc reate
adoption _ made up 70.0 percent of America's 98.9.million househ olds last
year. the Census Bureau reported today. While thai s down from 81 .2 per• cent. in 1970. most of that change occurred m the firsl 20 years. Ttlc ligure
, ·.
. ..
: was 70.8 percent in 1990.
:
"It seems that things have plateaued, l\Uid Census st,ausucta.n Ken Bryson.
: "II'. very hard tO predi~t 1he ruture. Bul I ~ert~anly. don t see tht~.gs that cause
! me to llclieve'lhings will be drnsuca~ly d~ffcrent m the future. .. ·
: · Carol}. De Vita of lhc. priyate Populauon Refenmce Bureau smd the rca-

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�Commentary

Tu11d8y, November 21, 1988

Pllgl2
TUIIclly, November21, 1111

•

OHIO Wcilther
Wedamday, Nov. l7

The Daily Sentinel ·. The true test of Th~nksgi-ving spirit
By S.. Ecllll

I

I never tealilcd how much I cared
about Thanksgiving until I had to find

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

114-112·21 Sl • Fu:: 1112-2117

£

A Gannett Co. N.Wapaper
ROBERT L. WIIGETT
Pubbher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

MARGARET LEHEW

Ga!WIIIIan•a•

Controller

._._. .,._.,.__
'------A/1. ==--."'. . ."--- .I-·";, •.-;--:,: IWIIF= =,.or

#It,_ .....

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Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
'

'

canned pumpkin in London. My
friends and I must have gone to every
food store in the city, but everywhere
we went the clerks gave us the same
blank look. Canned pumpkin? For
making pies? They had never heard
of such a thing. We had slightly bet·
ter luck with cranberry sauce, though
the stuff we found in a small specialty
sto"' was more like a jelly -- it didn't "'lain that pleasing tin-can shape.
But pumpkin pie or no, ·w~ were
determined to give a picture-perfect
Thanksgiving. Ruth, Barry and I
were all Americans'working in England, and we wanted to give our new
friends, New Zealanders, a taste of
American culture. We ~xplained that
,this was a day that we gave thanks for
·wluit we had, and we told them the
Thanksgiv:ng stories that we learned

example, that Americans ~ Jenerally fatter than Europeans, and that
British portions in restaurants were
paltry when compared to the heaping
plates of burgers and fries to which
we we"' accustomed.
Eckel
We also "'alized that Americans
sauce, treating it with the same def- wete louder and wore brighter colon.
erence one might give an exotic del- When we first arrived in the United
ie.acy from the Far East. And at the Kingdom, my friends and I were
end of the meal, they hugged their embarrassed by these facts, '!"'I we
sides, insisting that they couldn't cat tried to look as anemic and draary as
another bue.
everyone else. We made fun or our
But. Americans that we were, we accents; we assured everyone that we
ignored their groans and protests as hated Reagan, too. Once. Barry was .
we brought out two pies, apple and riding on the Underground while two
pecan. "Everyone has to have both · American coUege students wete loudkinds," Barry raid with relish. Ruth ly discussing the logistics of one stuand I agreed -- in America, everybne dent's move, their conversation
hilS' both kinds.
booming over the ether, sileni' passengers.
"Just one more stop.': an
Thanksgiv10g was not the only
time the three of us were struck by older gentlemen whispered to B~. '
lhe American love of eating -- and "and then those Yanks will be gone."
overeating. We had noticed, for Barry nodded mutely.

in l'ade school. But mostly we
focused on the gluttony. And hete our
friends proved perfect guests. They
we~ fascinated by the cranberry

Sara

'

By The Aat:aclalld Plua
Excel)lls of editorials of statewide and aalional inte~st from Obio news~:

,_

'

Tile (Cienlud) PWa o.aler, Nov. 21
_
.
.
Albert Belle was lhe most feared power hiuer in Cleveland lncbans hislory and probably the rum's best hiuer since Tris Speaker.
.

Belle was tbe best pla)'el' on lhe teams that relumed Clew. land to its right·
ful stare- tbe nation's best baseball town. And he was lhe cenual ~
lhe 199S Indians rctumed to tbe World Series after a 41-year absence.
But bcca1:sc he also vt'IS the most troubled and trouble-making player in
the club's history, the Indians today are far bencr off without him than lhey
were with him.
'
This is not a position we arrived at merely ~use Belle is now a member of the Chicago White Sox. As far back as Apr:l, we suggested the lndtans get rid of Belle.
Cleveland's problem is now Chicago's.

Sf•lnaftelcl N.,..SU, Nov. :ZO

.
•
It is certainly good news that the nabon's cnme rate has fallen to a tOyear low, The FBI reports that mu:ders, rapes, robberies and aggravated
assaults declined between 1994 and 199S in every region except the Wesl
But before politicians rush to "'lax- ot worse, claim ~it for the falli~g
numbcn- they should consider another national report that sugges~ the~'s
a new crop of criminals in the making. The reporl by FOidham Un:vers•!'Y
shows thatlhe nalion's social health is at its worst in nearly 25 years. Ch:ldten and youlh have been hurt.most.
.
Child maltreatment increases the likelihood of adult criminal behav:or
by 40 percent. Yet few politicians make the connection, choosins insteac! to
rail about the need to "get toueJ!" on crime after it occurs. The seeds of cnm' inal behavior are planted in a person's youth.
'
New families need help with pan:nting, particularly young, si'ngle parents who have no role models. They need home visits to teach them how to
nurture and care for their babies.

.,

(PGrt Clialol) News Benld, Nov. :ZO

We're looking forward with interest to next year's warm weather and the
pOssible impact of legislalion recent~¥ J!IIS~ by ~ Legisbuure. , .
Safe-boating legislation a:mcd 11 curta:hllg h1gh-speed Jet sk: JOCkeys
passed the House on Thursday. Senate Bill 295,' sponsored by 'tate S~n.
Karen Gillmor, R-Oid Fort, had earlier cleared the Senate, meaning it only
needs Gov. George Voinovich's signature to bccom~ law.
.
, Gillmor's legislation c...ates the offense of operaung a vesseltn an unsafe
manner and is the first Ohio law to specifically address safety issues raised
by personal watercraft.
. ..
Their increasing numbers and the careless acuvll:es of some operators
have made some kind of control important.
It is our hope that this legislation. while it may be difficult to enforce,
sends a message to owners and operators of personal watercraft. Safety,
indeed, must come first.

The COiuml:us Dlt:)lllk.. Nov. ll
·
Losing weight is an obsession with most of those who have too much of
it. So when Amgen Inc. of Thousand Oaks. Calif.. a bi~hnol?g_y company, began clinical trials of a substance called lept:n to determ:ne tf :t could
help control weight; 2,000 people a week called to s:gn up to test for tox:c
side effects.
.
Many hoped it would be a wonder dieting drug ~~~ stud:cs showed
it caused obese mice to lose up to 30 percent of the:r we:ght.
.
A huge disappointment came last week, though. when II was d:sclosed
·' that this substance may have a dangerous side effect: causing adult diabetes
in humans.
·
.
1n the land of plenty, we arc tempted all around us by. lusctous treats that
are certain diet-wreckers. What to do'? Hope for some m:racle drug that Will
let one eat forbidden fruit with impunity,
,
. .
Procter&amp;; Gamble knew what it was doing when 11 spent m:ll:ons of dollars developing olestra for no-fat potato chips .. That's what Amencans want.

Today in history
By The Aat:acilted PfHI
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 26, the 331 st day of 1996. There an: 35 days left

i

An

~xception

By Nat Hentaff
The November Bill of Rights diOner of the Tennessee affiliate of the
American Civ:l Liberties Union was
to be a panicularly inspiring event. A
Lifetime Achievement Award would
he presented· to 72-year-old Will
Campbell, a preacher, and the only
white man at the founding of the
S-outhern Christian Leadership Conference. And when Arkansas Gov.
Orval Faubus banned black kids
from the pubhc schools 10 L:ttle
Rock, Will Campbell nonetheless
walked son:c of those black youngsters :o school.
.,,
When Stokely Carmichael commanded whites to get out of the civtl rights movement and m:nister to
their own kind , Camphell took h:m
senously and became the chaplain to
a Ku Klux Klan outpost. Rev Camphell :s an equal-opportunity soulsa\lcr.
Ano:hcr persistent pracuuoncr of
the Bill of Rights, Jules Fciffcr. has
been skewcnng the poht:cally correct
he fore the term became current. Fe if·
fer was the keynote speaker at that
Tennessee ACLU dinner.
Before the program began, four
paladins of free speech stood in the
hallway outMde the banquet area diS· ·
tribuung lcaOets. One leaOc1 advocated Ralph Nader as prcs:dcnt and
included a number of forthright pop·
ulist quotations by Citizen Nader. A
sccondpamphlct reprinted an artide

...u ar

But over time, we bellll to feel
something tesemblina ...Uonal pride.
It started with music. The Billy
Bragg and Squeeze tapes we bad
brou1ht over from the States fell out
of favor as we started listenins to
Nanci Griffith. Hank Williams and·
the BoDeans. We even started to
appreciate American companies.
After a day spent naviaalinJ the
byzantine bureaucracy of one British
bank, we found the perky efficiency
of the workers in the American
Express off:ce positively rer...shins.
By the time ThanksgivinJ Day
rolled around, we we"' regular Yankee Doodle Dandies. We still hated
Reagan, but we found other things to
make us proud -- friendly service,
junior colleges, monster trucks. And
gluttony. But now I'm worried. For it
seems our national vice is in jeopardy. Have you heard the way people
talk about food these days? "You
drink WHOLE milk?" someone
asked me recently, with the same tone
that one might ask if I snorted
cocaine. Another day, I went to my
office candy machine and found that .
the treat I wanted was sold out.
"When that happens to me," said a
co-worker, "I feel saved."
Now, despite the fact that I cat the
occasional candy bar and prefer milk
that r can't see through, I -do believe
in healthy eating. But I think that con,
fusing good eating habits with moral·
ity is a mistake, for two reasons. One,
it lets us off the hook too easily -treating others with respect and generosity is a lot harder than buying a
box of SnackWells. And two, treating
food like a corrupting force, rather
than a cause for joy, will invariably
make us humorless and mean. When
separating the good from the had. I
think it is essential to our national
character that Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Ice.Cream remain firmly in
the former category.
·
.
So this Thanksgiving, take pride in
your heritage. Have both kinds.
Sara Eckel is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper EnterpriH
Association.

NatHentoff
says that Nader supporters had prcv:ously leafleted without inc:dent at
a S:erra Club meet10g and a Jesse
Jackson appearance at Vanderbilt
Umverslly.
But this time the:r free speech
rights were abruptly canceled -- not
by the hotel's secunty staff but by the
ACLU. Its executive director, Hedy
Weinherg. told them to remove themselves instantly because the ACLU
dinner was a private affalf. In
response, the quanet to.ld her that
they were in a public hallway, not
intruding 1010 the area her group had
rented. She was not moved. "I want
you out of here." she said.
Then a very .large gentleman, Joe
Sweat, a board member of the Tennessee ACLU, appeared, standing
very close to leane:ccr Richard
Moser. Swea:, looming. with arms
outstretched, told Moser. "I sa:d for
you :o leave!"
Moser. a history professor at the
M1ddlc Tennessee State Un:ven;ity,
told me he was astonished ' This Walii
the ACLU! " he said " I' m a member.
I paid my dues. And leallcting is :he
Flfsi Amendment. There was no
1

By Dian Vujovlch

.

•

William R. Brickles

•

I I

Conley E. Cole

Pomeroy man
ticketed for DUI

:.. Temperatures will drop
throughout a~ea tonight

Miriam Kauff Hickman

PUCO approves
rate decrease

Mason County

Mary J. 'Maidie' Mora

:O.J. adds 'I don't know'
to denials ir) testimony

Meigs EMS runs

Meigs announcements

Ex-trooper's

Hospital news

IISATfl\U~I:\1

•'
_,.
u

\

•

I

Because each new investment means
a new basis price and basis becomes
very imponant in calculating your tax
bill once you've decided to liquidate
all or some of your fund shares. ·
One additional point. If you're
already in a high tax bracket and are
thinking of selling your fund shares
right around now, when many funds
pay their dividends, Ernst &amp;. Young
suggests redeeming thole slutrCs
befoi'C ~y upcoming dividend payments arc made by the fund.llle rcl"
son: If your shares are worth more
than you originally paid for them, ybu
can take a capital gain on the redemption, pay the capital gains tax then
avoid paying the hi1her tax rate of
Oldinary income that's imposed on;
any orditwy dividends you receivco.
Finally, if you've been in and~.
of funds all throup. they-. reme~.!
ber, each time you sell even~ funil ·
share you've llltomatically creared II,
taxable event of some son for your, ,
self. Wilhout toad teCOid-keepiiiJ ,
habitl, even tbe moat rewanlina funCI
inveslrnenll can tum into ~
at tax time. Unleu, aC c:oune, you'"!! .
put all your money into tax•r..,.
accouti11 and liaurc on ~yliiJ tt*.
pipetlater.
'
••
r

•

and

""·

debate or response to us, except 'Get Rights -- the very aniclc reprinted in
out'! These ACLU people were not ,, the offending leaflet. 1bc quotations
used to being contradicted. They probably dido 't have much effect
were the authority!
~ hccausc 11 was Fciffcr's, sense that
"And the large man, who looked most of those in the audience '!'ere
like an off-duty cop. told me, 'I'm a Clinton fans .
big Clinton fan. And this leaflet
lllere has hccn no indication that
offends me ." ' This is a rising counter- the Tennessee ACLU has any regrets
constitutional right not to be offend- about ejecting the lcanctccrs. Hedy
ed, and has reached some ACLU ' Weinberg, for instance. tells me that
members.
the outs:dcrs had to be hooted out so
Neither Will Campbell nor Jules that the ACLU's non-partisan status
Fciffcr knew about the expulsion of '· would not be compromised.
the lcaflctccrs until a few days later. · But, a.1 Frank Ritter, a Na.,hville
lllen I asked Campbell his reaction. Tennessean columnist, pointed out,
"Ounng my talk." he told me. "with- they "could h~vc taken care of that
out my knovt'ing what had happened. concern simply by announcing to the
I tr:cd to chide the audience out of banquet guests that the ACLU took
self-righteousness. I'm a Baptist, and no rcsponsibthty .for the lcancts."
I pointed out that the Baptists began
As a result, R:tter also noted, the
as a very revolutionary movement. "ACLU ·-that has even defended the
but as they gathered power, they rights of such groups as the Ku Klux
became reactionary.
Klan and the Naz:s, to preach the"
"Now there is not a more mili- views publicly" -- actually told the
taristic. nationalist and unfree rcli- Nader people to move or he busted.
gious group than the Southern BapJules Fciffcr's reaction to that
lists. As I was saying tl)at, I doubted alleged Bill of Rights dinner is: "It
that the audience got my point."
seems to this parti~ipant that a faceCampbell wa.' appalled by the saving way out of an embarrassing
expulsion of the leanctcen;. "The situation is for the Tennessee ACLU
mission of the ACLU," he said to me, to file a First Amendment lawsuit in
"consi:;ts of one thing -- freedom of behalf of the Nader lcaflctccrs ., a
speech and expression. If we don't do suit against the Tennessee ACLU."
11. 11 won't be done."
Nat Hentoff ' II a nationally
Jules Peiffer's speech that night renowned authorily an the Firat
had consisted, 10 part, of a number of Amendment and the .-..t of the
quotes from my article giving Bill Bill of Rlghta.
Clinton failing grades on the "ill of

Because a fund's per-share price
To avoid facing a capital-gains
distribution and pay10g a tax on an usually drops by the same amount as
investmem you ' ve only held for a the fund's distribution, buying after a
short umc, lind out when a fund distribuuon means you have a lower
cost basis for your fund shares.
Here ·s an example of how that
Dian Vujov/ch
works from the Ernst &amp; Young Tax
Savers Guide for 1997: ABC fund
makes its capital-gains distributions declares and distributes a $1 dividend
before you dcc:de to invest :n it. on Dec. I. If you purchased I ,000
Then. don't buy shares of it unul after shares at $10 per share on Nov. 30,
the fund 's record date for distnbu- you will have to report $1 ,000 of
tions. (A "record date" :s the date on income for 1996 ($I capital gains
which a shareholder must actually div:dend x I ,000 shares $1 ,000).
own shares if they want to be enlitlcd But, if you waited and bought the
to receive dividends, income and cap- shares on Dec. 2, after the record
ital gains distributions from the fund.) date, you wi II pay $9 per shm and
for example, on Nov. 6the Kauf- · have no taXable income to rcpon. For
mann Fund declared a long-term the shares bought on Nov. 30, your
capital-gains dividend. Anyone ~ant­ basis would be $10 per share instead
ing to jnvest in that fund and not have of $9. (Basis is the initial per share
to pay taxes on the fund's capital- price -- including a sales charge if
gains distributions through Oct. 31, there is one - of your fund invest1996, would have to purchase their mcnt.llle basis is lhe bepning point
fund shares after the fund's record from which all capital gains and lossdate-- which in this case was Nov. 7. es from your investment ..., calcuSo, if . YOU happen to be buying lated.)
Speaking of basis, every time you
shares of the Kaufmann Fund anytime from Nov. 8 thrOugh Dec. 31 , buy additional shares 'If a fund you
you won'tbe penalized forlhe fund's al...ady own, malte sure to keep
long-term gains realized before Oct.. IriCk of the per-shin~ price yliu've
paid for the, new lhan:a. Why?
31.

Embattled FDA director
announces he's leaving

WASHINGTON (AP) -It was 3 and givin@ consumers nutrition infora.m., and Food and Drug Commis- mation on food labels.
William R. Bnckles, 81, Middleport, died Tuesday, Nov. 26, 1996 at his SIOner David Kessler was on the
"Those thing s make a differToledo 33"
residence .
_
·
ence."
sa•d Kessler, whose agency
phone determining how many chilBorn Aug. 2, 1915 in Middleport, he was the son of the late John and Mary dren may have been sickened by a oversees the safety of products that
Holcomb Brickles. He was a retired painter from the Veterans Administra· gounnet apple juice - and how to account for roughly one-fo~rth of all
tion, Dayton.
·
gei the drinks out of Americans' consumer spending.
He served in World War ·n and the Korean Connict. He was a member refrigerators.
Clinton praised Kessler on MonIND.
of Feeney-Bennett Amencan Legion Post 128. Middleport, and a member
That hands-on passion defined day as having "a tireless commitment
of the Meigs County Senior Citizens Center.
Kessler's tenure at the regulatory 10 better :he Jives of our ci:izcns... His
He is surv1ved by his wife. Aretta Scott Brickles; two· sons and a daugh- agency - a job in which he alter- adminiStration asked Kessler on Friter-in-law, Danny and Cindy Bricklcs of Dayton, and Johnny Bnckles of Day; nately was admired as a protec1or of day and again Monday to stay, but he
ton· two daughters and sons-in-law, Mary Kay and Merle Sears of Dayton. vulnerable consumers or reviled as a refused.
and Kathy and Tom Popp of Sabina; three stepch:ldren, Louise Winstead of "gestapo-like" enforcer who cruSen . Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
Bowls Gap, Tenn., June Daniels of Elkins. W.Va., and Bradford Freeman of saded aga1nst the tobacco industry.
said Kessler was "one of the very
Atwater; several grandchildren and great-grandchildren; and nieces and
Kessler announced Monday that best commissioners in the history of
38'
nephews.
·
six years as FOA:s chief was enough, the FDA.
He was also preceded in death by two sisters.
.
saying he would resign once Presi"When a crisis has come, he's
Services will be 11 a.m. Friday in the Fisher Funeral Home, M:ddleport. dent Clinton found a successor, been there and he's rolled up his
Burial will follow in the Gravel Hill Cemetery. Cheshire. Friends may call someth:ng expec1ed no sooner than sleeves." said Or. Sidney Wolfe of
at the funeral home Fnday from 9-11 a m.
late January.
Public Citizen.
One possible successor is Dr.
Michael Friedman , an oncologist
Conley E. Cole, 78, Lucasville, died Nov. 25. 1996 in the Southern Ohio who spent 14 years at the National ,
Cancer Institute before becom:ng
Medical Center, Portsmouth.
·
A laborer, he was born Jan. 21, 1918 in Richmond,. Va .• son !lf the late one of Kessler' s top deputies this
One person was cited after a oneSunny · Pl. Cloud{ Cloudy
Ice
Conley T. and Cora Cox Cole. He was a member of the Seventh Day Adven- year.
" We've done what we sa1d we car accident near the interscctiqn of
tistS Church, Pomeroy.
would do." Kessler said :n an inter· Laurel Street and Mulherry Avenue
He is survived by a brother and sister-:n-law, Raymond and Faric Cole
v:cw Monday. He listed as his top Monday, according to Pomeroy
of Pomeroy ; and by a nephew and a niece . ach1cvcmcnts regulations designed to Police Chief Gerald Rought.
Semces wjtrbe I p.m . Wednesday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
prevent teen -agers from taking up
According to !Cports, John A.
with the Rev. Ray Lowinsky officiating. Burial will follow in the Gilmore smoking , slashing the time FDA
Casto.
42, Pomeroy. was traveling
Cemetery. Fnends may call ~~the funeral home from 7-9 tonight.
spends approving new mcd:cincs west on Mulberry Avenue around
6:49p.m when he lost control of h:s
1nse Wednesday at 7:30a.m.
By The Aaaoclatad Preaa
1990 Ford Tempo, going on· the roadWeather forecast:
The precipitation will stop but the
way and striking a retaining wall ncar
Word was received here last week of the death of Miriam lane Kauff HickTonight...Snow showers likely
I. 'temperatures will drop across Ohio
Sugar Run Mill.
tonight, the National Weather Service extreme northeast. Partly to mostly man, 71 , of Greeley, Neb .. on Sept. 30, 1996.
Damage was heavy and d:sahling
She was hom in Middleport, daughter of the late John Preston and Jen said. Some lake-effect snow could cloudy west and south. Mostly
to
Casto's
vehicle. The vehicle was
American Electric Power residencloudy with .scattered nurries north ny Elizabeth Grogan -Kauff. She attended school in Middleport, graduatin~
linger in the extreme northeast.
towed
from
the scene.
Overnight lows will range from 15 central to southeast. Lows 15 to 25. in 1943. After receiving a two-year degree from the Columbus Busmcss tial customers should sec a decrease
Caslo wu.' cited for driving under
Wcdncsday .. .Mostly cloudy wnh School, she married Max Douglas Hickman. The couple ran a dairy farm until in their monthy electric bill. follow to 25 degrees.
the
influence.
On Wednesday, winds out of the scattered snow showers cast and 1958. She worked at the county clerk's office and was later elected county ing action Monday by the Pubhc Utilnorthwest will produce some scat- nonheast. Pattly to mostly sunny treasurer. She was a member of the Greeley Unued Methodist Church. the ities Commission of O~io.
The action will reduce restdcntial
lcred snow showers in the northeast elsewhere. H:ghs 10 the lower and Veterans of Fore:gn Wars Auxiliary, and the Nebraska Dcmocrat:c Party.
She
is
survived
by
her
husband,
Max
Douglas
Htckman;
a
son;
four
daughelectric b1lls for AEP customers an
and cast with mostly cloudy sk:cs. m:d 30s.
(Continued from Page 1) •
ters:
10
grandchildren
and
seven
grcat-grandch:ldren.
_
Extended
rorecast:
average of $1.95 a month for each
The rest of the state will sec partly to
men
I.
Al so surviving are two brothers and sisters-in-law, Harold Eugene and 750 kWh of electricity used.
Thanksgiving Oay.. .A chance &lt;rl'
mostly sunny skies. Highs will be in
Fire department members entered
Alma
Kauff of M:ddleport. and John R. "lack" and Bcuy Sue Kauff of P~:nt
snow
...
Mainly
north.
Lows
15
LO
25.
The savings in the average hill.
the low to m:d-30s .
Pleasant, W.Va.: and a s1ster and brother-in-law, Martha and V:rgil "Otck" effccttve Dec. I. is due to a reduction the woods with a four-wheel drive,
The record-high temperature for Highs in the lower and mid 30s.
Collins.
of Venice. Fla .. and Syracuse.
Friday...Fair. Lows 10 the 20s.
in the utility's electric fuel component · but also c(&gt;Uid not reach the victim by
this date at the Columbus wcattlcr
·
rate to 1.0884 cents a kilowatt hour vehicle. They carried a "skid" into the
sta:ion was 70 degrees in 1896 while Highs mid 30s to lower 40s.
Saturday... Fair. Lows 1n the 20s
from the current 1.3477 cents a kilo- woods and rescued Workman, who
the record low was 7 in 1950. Sunset
was taken' to Cabeii-Huntington Hoswatt hour.
tonight Will he at 5:09p.m. and sun- Highs upper 30s to mid 40s.
-Mary Joyce "Maidie" Hayes Mora. 67, Pomeroy, died Monday. Nov. 25.
EFC rates arc estahlishcd every pilal. He rcport~dly suncrcd hand and ·
1996 at her residence.
·
six months and reviewed annually hy ankle injuries.
Meanwhile, a Berkeley County
Born Jan. 30, 1929 in M:ddletown, she was the daughter of the late Ver- the PUCO.
man died 10 the state's lirst deer huntnon N. and Mildred Leslie Hayes. She was a retired deputy with the Metgs
ing-related incident.
County Tuberculosis Clinic, and a homemaker.
David Putnam of Hedgesville was
She auendcd the Trinity Congregational Church. Pomeroy. and was a
•'
Units
of
the
Meigs
County
Emerclimhing
into a tree !'aan(l to shoot
member of the Tnnity Friendly Circle. She was also a member of the Chester
gency
Medical
Scrv:cc
n:corded
six
SANTA MONICA. Calif. CAP)- phone closer so people could hear Garden Club, Me:gs County Farm Bureau Board. Preceptor B,eta Beta Sorordeer when one' nl the t&gt;oards gave
calls
for
ass:stance
Monday.
Units
·: 'The theory helped OJ. Simpson win h1m. His few quips were generally Ity, and Couples Club.
way. uccording tn Divismn uf Natur·
, ,.
rcspondmg
included:
-, acquittal. And. yet, not once in his greeted with stares from the jury.
JI
Resources spCJkcsrn,an Hoy Murp
She was involved for many yean; wuh commun:ty youth ocuv:ucs throughPOMEROY
~ civil trial testimony did Simpson sugHe never got angr~. and endured out, Meigs County including 4-H, PTA, and Sunday Schoolteaching.
rhy.
9:02a.m.• Hiland Road. Kay Hill .
'"''gcsrthcrc was a pnlicc-ilriven pldt to Petrocelli's relentless questions by
He leU 20 lcct to the gn&gt;und and
She is survived by her husband. Donald C. Mora: her mother-m-la~. Maye_
HMC:
hmdcd
on his hack. Murphy said.
· ' 'frame him. .
answering in calm. even tones. He C. Mora of Pomeroy: t1ve children and sp!luscs. Sally and Gary G:bson ol
II
.
14
a.m
,
Maples
Apartments.
Another hunter found him at 10:30
:
Instead, when asked in the wrong- never got involved m the sharp Cincinnati. Rhea and Hal]'y Slawter of Madison, Wis .. Mary E. Mora of
a rn .. ahnut four hours after he wus
. t :ful death trial to explain all the phys- exchanges between Petrocelli and Pomeroy. Oavtd and Sarah Mora of Pomeroy. and :he Rev Mark L. Mora Sybil Barr. VMH.
RACINE
lasl seen. Murphy said. The cnnJncr
·- ical evidence. from blood in . his S:mpson's lawyer. Robert Baker, of Tulsa, Okla: two brothers, Paul Hayes ofL1ttle Hocking, and Charles T.
12 49 a.m .. State Route 3&gt;.H. Dcl- pronounced him d'cad at the scene .
' Bronco to blood at the crime scene, - who accused Petrocelli at one plllnt Hayes of Cincinnati: and five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
hert Milliron, HMC:
The mishap occurred in a rural
·simpson simply sa:d he didn't know of "showboating."
She was also preceded in death t&gt;y her s:ste: , Jeannette Hayes Butcbe~­
II
:
15
p.m
..
McKelvey
Street,
;Ilea
south of Martinshurg ncar U.S.
how it got there.
The court day ended early MonScrviccs will be I p.m . Fnday in the Ewing Funeral Home. Pomeroy, wuh
II. Murphy said.
Nu rac:st rogue detectives. Nu day when Judge Hiroshi Fujisak1 got the Rev. Roland Wildman officiating. Burial will be in Pine Grove Ceme- Jess:e Hams. HMC.
REEDSVILLE
nefarious lah guys. No mention of a note, called lawyers into hiS cham- tery. Fncnds may cull at the luneral home from 7-9tontght, and 2-4 und 712:37 a.m .. volunteer lire departconspiracy: No allegation of con(am- hers and told :hem he planned Ln dis- 9 p.m. Wednesday.
.
.
ment
and squad to Bridle Road,
i'nntion.
miss a juror tOday.
In lieu of tlowers. memorials arc to he dcs1g:natcd wward Bram Cancer
structure
lire, Dennis Ruck owner, no
"You have no explanation for this
The juror. a. while womun in her Research. American Cancer Soc1e1y. P.O. Box 70&gt;.. Pomeroy Ohio 45769.
Sentinel
injunes r(lportcd ;
jury'!" asked plaintiff lawyer Daniel ' 30s. will he dismissed for misconClasaifieds
3-49 p m., SR 7, Mildn:d Olgcn.
Petrocclli. in nne ol many questions · duct, sources conl1nncd late Monday.
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
about hlood evidence .
Her replacement will t&gt;c chosen t&gt;y lot
992-2156
Dance
announced
lO
9
p.m.
Refreshments
will
t&gt;e
"None." Simpson sa1tl
fwm th!.! pool of six. rcmaming alterA dance will be held at the VFW served.
And so. a~ Simpson returns tn thc ' nates. One alternate was dismissed
stumJ today for more plaintiiT qucs- 'carl1cr for drinking:. antlthcr l()r skcr· Tuppen; Plains Hall, Saturday, Rto II
(Continued from Page 1)
tiuns and perhaps some fncndlicr ing during testimony.
p.m .. with Guy Thoma and True Meigs Band bazaar
The Meigs High Band Boosters a bullet wound in the head, was found
qucstinns from his own lawyer. the ' Sources said some fr.:llow JUrors Country providing the music.
1
w:ll hold a Christman cralt and t&gt;akc 1n a rural area on Oct. I .
l'ramc-up s~cnano ;tpparcntly will he totn(llaincd ahoUl the wcmum. who
ba1.aar at the Carpcntcn;' Local BuildDefense atlorncy Dennis Sipc
· left. again. w his lawyers.
'works in rct;.ul jewelry !-~ales. During: Services starting
ing
on
East
Main
Street.
Pomeroy.
lilcd
a motion Nov. 7to dis~ualify the
Sunpsun\ tcslimony nn Munday , jury selection she sui&lt;.l she had no
Harvest Oulrcach Ministries curSaaurday
from
9:3011.10.
to
3
p.m.
and
prosecutor's onice from tbe Mc-crady
' was marked hy u scncs of "I don't opmions ahout the cnminall:tlsc and rently mnducting services at the old
Sunday
from
It
:30 a.m. to 4:30pm. case hcc.:ausc he suys 'there is an
knows .. , a cnmpnnton to his smng or .dkln't puy .much attention lo it
American Legion Bu1lding tn Midappearance nf Impropriety hct ween
. denials un Friduy.
.
Simpson was m.:quincd last year in dleport . Sunday 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
the defendant und the prnsecuwr's
S:mpson said he couldn'; explain tho June 12 . 1994. stahhing deaths of Pastor Mary Hughes McDaniel .
ol'ltcc
.
. in detail anything fmm the locmio.n his cx -wsfe and her friend . S1mpson
Veterans Memorial
Assistant
Prosecutm • James
of uny glovrs he owned to how he gnt d1d nnl testify durin~ 1hc criminal tn· Accepting applications
Monday admtssiQns - Bernice_
cuts on his left hand - go~ges tho al
The Metgs United MethodiSt Swartz. Pomeroy; Bonn:e Ransom. Schne1dcr said there IS no proof that
McCrudy sought to h:rc Rings.
· plaintiffs say hiS ex-wife Nicole
Rl!lntivc~ or the VICtim~ sued Coopcrnuvc Pansh will be laking
Racine.
' 'Since 1hcrc IS no cv1dcm.:c lo sup~
Brown Simpson and Ronald Gold - Silnpson for wrongful dcuth. foH:mg applicatmns li&gt;r Christmas baskets for ,
Monday discharges - none .
port
that any kind' ol relationship
man made with f10gcrnails during a him 1o take the stand tillS tune. Pru- low mcomc families Dec 3 and 4,
Holzer Medical Center
existed
hctwcen Mr. McCrady and
''
'· sc It"pmcrumnauon do from 9 am. In I 30 a.m. al the Con·
tecllnns
agamst
death struggle. ,
Discharges Nov. 25 - Mrs. DonSimpson ·s demeanor wu.• somber. not apply since he was cleared of dur Strccl. Pomeroy, hcadquar1crs.
ald Warth and son, Gerald Miller, our ollke. I ben u cl:cnt/atlnrney rei a·
!l't4~ 1it:n. ~IVt!'IIIIIUimll 111."1\t','r'll
He rarely raised his voice. The judge charges and can 't he reined.
Ruhy Bond. Mrs. Neil Wooldridge tiunshlp d1d not ex:st.'' he said.
'tl~l( IIU~IItllth U:-ili OAI.-ATHI~ll '
"AIIf:M~ liiiATI:\~••:11 ~~I\ a UU ••
If the court rules in favor of the
"During Monday's questioning. Open house set
had to tell hun to move the microand daughter. Ralph McKmntss,
(niUMM..
IOit':l' c;t:llflt'M.ATit.~ t\VAIIAHI.t:"
defense.
the
trial
could
he
moved
t&lt;l
Simpson again tssucd several denials\
An open house will be held hy the Philip Long.
an&lt;Hhcr county.
contending. for mstancc. thal hp nev- Eastern S:udcnt Council on Dec 4. 7
(Published with permission)
The Daily Sentinel er gol a "Dear John" phone message .--_;_--------------------------------,-------------------~
from glflfricnd Paula Barbieri on the
!USPS m -9001
day qf the killings .

I

to free speech·

of mine detailing Bill Clinton's dismaying record on civil hbert:cs.
Winston Grizzard, Tennessee
coord10ator for the Nader campaign.

forecast

MICH.

Year-end brings tax issues to mind

Unless all of the money you have
invested in .mutual funds is 10 tax,, in ~=ber ~6. 1789 was a day of'thanksgivitig_ set aside by ,President deferred accounts -· such as IRAs,
Wasllin&amp;ton to observe the adoption oft he Consmuuon of the Un:ted States. 401(k)s or annuities-- the end of each
On this date:
•
_
,
year is a time of reckoning: reckonIn 1832, public streetcar service began in New York Ctty. 1lle fare: 12- · ing how much, if anything. you'll
owe Uncle Sam.
112 cents. •·
In 1825, the first college social fraternity, Kappa Alpha, was formed at
Every year, right around this time.
Unioa College in Schenectady, N.Y.
·
.
fund inve~rs are faced-with two tax
In 1940, the half-million Jews of Wanaw, Poland. wei'C forced by the Nazts issues: On has to do with .ihe capi·
.
tal gains ta s that funds pass on to
10 Jive within a walled ghetto.
In 1942, the motion picture "Casablanca." stamng Humphrey Bo~an and their shareholders, and the othc:: with
Ingrid Berpnan, had its world premic"' at the Hollywood Theater 10 New the taX corisequences that fund shareholders create for themselves when
York
City.
.
ide aso1·
· · be ·
1111942, Plesident Roosevelt at deled naoonw 1 me ra11on10g, gan- buying and selling fund shares
.
....._I
.
throughout the year.
DUll Dcceuw: .
.
bl' ·m· the B "sh Co
1n 1949, India adopted a constitution as a :qJU :c w: :n
nu
mBecause a mutual fund is legally
oblilated to pass gains on to its share~wa)th.
.
rofli .
I 1950 China entered tbe Korean connie!, launch:na a counte ens: ve holders, buying shares of any mutufrom tbe United Nalions. the United SIMes and South Korea. al fund that makes its capital-gains
~ 1965, France launched its tint satellite, scndinJ a 92-pound capsule distributions in November and
December can mean paying taxes on
into odliL
, 111 1973, Presideat Nixon's personal secretary, Rose Mary w_oods, told_a an investment you haven't held for
rcdenl cout1 that she'd accidentally caused part of the 18 112 mtnute sap 10 lonJ. And, after another big year for
stocks and even some bond funds,
a by
W81 pte UlpC.
•
·
L
F'mnune
Ia 1975 a fcdenl jury :n SICCamento, Calif., found ,-nene romme, a this tax could add up. In fact, Shelfollowa' o( a.rtes ~·ll:'ilry of ll)'i,. to Ula~sinllll ~nt Foro. don Jacobs, editor of the No-Load
g 1990. .rap.nm l:l•n m ~~~~Electric lndpstrial Co.lped Fund Investor newsletter, says that in
.
. .
prior bull m~t year$, some funds'
111 acquildtCA Inc. for $6.6 bilh011.
1M 1_. .,o: 1'1 tid rill Ruaan appotn~ a comm:~ ~by f~- capital-gains distributions have been
11111' s-.-lobn Tower to in....Upae his N111onal Scetmy Counc:l staff :n huge.
c11e
the IrM COllin .,..._

·:S. .otdim

AccuWeat~

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • MlddleporJ, Ohio

"

Publb;hed tvery olicrnoon. Monday lhrouah
Friday. Ill Coon S1 • Pomeroy. Ohio. by the
Ohio Volle)' Publi,.hinl! Conlf'Bny/Gnnnr:u Co .
Pomeroy. Ohio 4~769. Ph 992·2 1~6 Secnnd
clau poAtngc paid nt Pomeroy. Oh1o •
Mtft'lbttl The A~'-OCUIIed

Ncwapnper A5:WXHldon.

Stocks

Pre""· and the Ohio .

Akzo ........................................&amp;&amp;

SUISCRIPTION RATI!S
tty CanWr or Motor Routt

an.w.et....... ...................... ......... S200
Month .............

. ..

...... $104.00

Sll«Ji.ECOPY PRICE
01\lly........ .. .................... ,,\ ....... )$Cent~

Umtted ............................ -..:.....18'"
Ohio V1Uey Bank....................3~

Ortt Ye11ey...........;.................36't.
Peoples .............................. ~ .. 27~.
Pr.n 111n1 ............................... 12~
Rockwell ...............................64 ~

No ~ub~~trlpeinn br mall ptrmiued In nren"
'*"home ciWI'itt AmOiclol •~ ovailnblc.

,

MAiLSUIIJCIIPTtONS
13 -

26 12 -

-M&lt;IpCoumy

............. , ......... ................ ... SlUO
............ .............................. Sll.82
............... ............ ...............$105.~

laltJO.IIIci&lt; Mofp CaontJ
13 \VeOtcl ..........

26 -

" ... """" ...............

,$29.25

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

.

AD-Shell ................................171

Shonty'l .............................. &amp; 38
Stir Bank ..............................83;
Wet\Ciy'• ................................ 21 ,1.
worttilngton .........,................zo•

-·-·-

Stock report• are the 10:30
a.m. quoiN provided by Advt1al
of Galllpolll•.

A

[h]~les
~ llclnk
PDIC

Llnda'lnd..... :..... ..................27\

..wn l:'iWTicreoch wtdc.

4utatlon of lltuullacripiJIUft. ·

·

K-mart ...................................10\

Sut!Wibml not dtMring 10 pny 1he carrier '!l"Y.
remll In .tvonre dire(! 10 The Daily Semmel
on a thret. ~~~ qr l'l mnnch b.1ftl~.Credlt will be

+•

A HOLIDAY LOAN SPECIAL

,.,

.

I
I

.,. wt ....

c!'J.

. .......... $8.10

'Mllllha lelltn'C~ the rithtto ll:lju~t rn~ dur·
'Ina the ,~ublcription period. Sub!lrriptl~n rntc
dalnat• muy ~ implcmtntcd tty chonpms the

9~99%·.· .

Aehlend 011 ...........................46..
AtaT .....................................37'.Benk One ................................ 47
Bob Evene ............................ 12._.
Borg~Warner ......................... 40'/o
Champion ............................. 2~.
Charming Shope .................... 5'/o
":'ding ..........................21 ~.
F
1Mogul ....................... 22'1.
O•nnett ......................~ ............78
GoodYear ..............................''., 11 .

Ohlo4~7~.

'OncYetw .......................

.A..·

Am Ele Powar .......... :........ ,...41'o

POSTMASTER: Send !Kklll!~li c~rre.:tion~ to
The 01111)' Sentinel. 111 Court St • l'omcroy.

()nc

Another Reason To ·Give Tha. .s.

M......

• Muon 773-5514 • New Haven 882-2135 • Point Pleasant 675-1121
• Or Call Mlui On The Peoples Bank Loan Hotline 675-ASAP .
~~~or..-

.. .......,..,,. .......... lor-oi,.ID:M-.. Lawoul&gt;joctlocndlt-'- RolooilodM•ol

...,.....ct......,, "" ...... -- -.....,a.--. ..,..

tlll!lott ... !U:Io&lt;tiO,.._ Al25"""'.,_clltlrltwlllalf0Cilhlllmllll ........... niL A.P.R.-11

... oii5.Mtwlllllhll25 . . . . . . . . . .

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,

il-lorlhl-cllllo .... c..mnt ........ llonk ....... nottllllbillorlhll •

.

5 2 -... ............................. ..............Si09.72

'

�TUIIdly, Nov.mber 28, 1896

En I ern's version of lhc "Young and
1hc Restless• settled down just

freshman Becky Davis added four
points, Ann Wiggins had four and
,enoup to polish off the Trimble Angi Wolfe two.
l,.ldy Tomcats Monday night, S1-42,
Trimble was led by Misty Lent
in lhe $t&amp;Son opener for both clubs. with ten, · Bobbi Lent added nine,
1be Tri-Valley Conference victory Toby Lawrence bad six, Joy Pettit
.wu lhe firSt for Eastern's young var- six, Sherry Davis six, and Sheryl
.lity club which consists of six sopho- Davis five.
11110Rs and two freshman. Eastern is
Eastern opened up a 13-4 lead,
now 1-0 both overall and in lhc then let it slip to 15-6 at the first
.ieque, while Trimble drops to Q. L
buzzer. Karr bad nine of Eastern's
' , Eastern placed six girls in the scor- early points, While Davis notched all
.ina column, paced by sophomore four of her markers.
Valerie Karr's . 20 points and I ;2
Eastern once went up by eleven in
~bo\lnds. Karr hit 9 of 15 frQm the
the second frame, ,but held on to a 28.1 f_ield, including a siring of four 19 halftime lead. Jessica Brannon
sttaight in the fourth quaner. Anoth- had a great second quarter 'with eight
.er sophomore, returning All; rvc. points, while Karr added one and
,AJJ-Dislrict nominee Jessica Brannon Wiggins two.
·lallied 17 points and collected ten
Eastern mis'sed several big open
rebounds in a 7· II night from the shots in the third round, but finally
,floor. Brannon again proved to be opened .up a 17-point lead late in the
one of lhc top rebounders while · fourth quaner. Trimble, however, did
spending most of the night at point not give up and applied an aggressive
,·guard.
press at the end to cut Eastern's lead
~
Stephanie Evans notched four to 51-42 at the buzzer.
points and had five assists, while
Eastern • Jach Scott Wolfe said,

"We made some young mistakes, but
as time goes on those will take car of
themselves. Like I told the girls after
the game, we played 'well when we
had to. We never gave any indication
of folding and we handled the pres·
sure well. We handled the pressure
like veterans. All ,the girls need now
is some self confidence. We have
some tough games coming up."
"It's been a great team effort. Our
girls have to understand that it's OK
to make a mistake if you correct it the
next time. 'They get down on themselves too easily. Also, I must credit our fresluneq. 'They've been thrown
into varsity lev'el competition without
any reserve experience and they've ·
done a fine job."
.
Eastern hit 23-52 for 44 percent
from the field , hit 5-13 atthe line, and
had 35 rebounds (Karr 12, Brannon ·
10, Wolfe 5). Eastern bad 4 steals, 21
turnovers, nine assists. and 'eleven
fouls. Trimble hit'17-64 for 27 percent, including 1-5 treys, and a 7-15
night at the line. Trimble had 27

'

WINNING TO· Pltt1burgh SIHters quarterback Mike Tomczek
to Ernie Mlll1
In Monday night's NFL geme In Ml.lml. The Steelers won, 24-17.
Pressure from Miami's Shane Burton (75) came too late. (A{')

(18) lookl up alter tolling • gem.wlnnlng pa11

Our special page(s)

"For Children
Only"
,.
(16 years of age or younger)
'

~.Southern girls trip South Galli~. 62-47
· • The Southern Tornado girls' bas- mostly from the blocks and fast
' : ketball team of Coach Jenni Roush break to post her twenty-poii•t night.
• ·claimed their season opener Saturday
'fhe Rebels had a surprising burst
. - ~ith a 62-47 win over the Soutb GaP of offense in the first period as
.Iii' Rebels. 'The game was a history Sou them edged to a 19-15 first perimilker as it marked the first-ever od lead. Turley ended the frame with
nine, but Proffitt led the way wiih ten.
meeting between the two schools.
Sabrina
Mooney and Bridget O'Dell
Southern is now 1-0 as it heads
'into 'rrl-Valley Conference Hocking kept the Tornadoes honest as they
Division play tonight at Federal netted five and six respectively for
Hocking. After a Friday loss to Well- the Rebels.
Rachel Waugh added six points
ston 50-45, SG drops to 0-2.
Senior standout Renee Turley and for the Rebels in the second frame
senior post Brianne Proffitt provided and her club shut down Proffitt to two
almost entirely all of Southern's second period points, however, Turoffense with 32 aqd 20 points respec- ley erupted for )2 points to lead
tively. Turley blitzed the Rebel zone · Southern to a 33-25 halftime lead.
·A 13-12 edge in· the thi.rd frame
defense with penetraiing drives and
two three pointers as well as hit 6-8 sprang Southern to a 46-371ead, then
the Tornadoes forced SG out of its 2at the foul line to complete a fine
game. Proffit{ hit nine field goals,

3 into a man and rolled to (16-10) a
62-47 finale.
Southern hit 25-67 for 37 percent
and hit 2-11 for 18 percent from the
lhree point line. Souther Gallia was
17-71 for 24 percent and 4-11 for 36
points respectively.
·
Southern had 47 rebounds, led by
Turley's 19, Proffitt bad 9, lenni
Friend ·six, and Cynthia Caldwell
five.SG had 41 rebounds overall
with no individual leader provided.
Southern had 12 steals (Turley 6,
Proffitt 2, Friend 2); II assists (Turley 5, Erica Arnott 2); 16tumovers,
13 ~ouls, ten blocked shots (Turley 7,
.Horst 2); and one charge picked up ·
by Kim Sayre.
The Rebels had seven steals, eight
assists, 17 turnovers, and 15 fouls.

"·

•

' TALLAHASSEE, Aa. (AP) . For lhe third time this decade, Floridll State takes part in '\lame between
. the nation's top tWo teams. But for
. the first time, they'll be No. 2.
: ' "We've been in it before," coach
; BobbY Bowden said. "With Miami
. several times, with Notre Dame and
. ' now Aorida."
. In their other 1-2 showdowns,
' Aorida State. was ranked first and
favored. But ihey lost at Notre Dame -

•
m

It's our 92nd

-ONLY-

$Iooo

South Gallla (47)
Laura Queen 2-1-0=7, Rachael
Waugh 6-0= 12, Vanessa Short i0=2, Sabrina Mooney 4-3-1 = 18,
Bridget O'Dell 3-0=6, Marissa Snod·
grass 0-0-0, Kari Clark 0.0·0, Jessi·
ca Clary 1-0=2. Totals 17-4·(1·

Per PicturePrepaid

6)=47.

Southern (6l)
Renee Turley I0-2-6=32;
Cynthia Caldwell·l-0=2, Kim Sayre
1-0=2. Brianne Proffitt 9-2=20, Jen·
ny Friend 1-2=4. Comiy Horstl-0=2.
T..tal .' •2.~~ 1-(1;0·1 ~ ~=t'.2 .

Birthday Party!
!

By The Au0c:lllted Pre••

· 1be changing of the guard among
college football coaches has turned
into a deluge.
Johnny Majors resigned at PittsbuiJh. So did Dan Henning at Boston
College and Jerry Pettibone at OreJOII State. Maryland's Mark Duffner
ud SMU's Tom Rossley were fired.
They join Bill Mallory, who was
fired from Indiana, on Oct. 31 ; Lou
. Holtz, who quit ar!•lotre Dame, and
Jim Colletto, who is out at Purdue.
Olbcr coaches leaving arc Gene
Stallincs (Alabama), John Bobo
(~laS State, Jim Sweeney (Fres110 State), Bill Curry (Kentucky), Jim
Has (New Me&lt;ico State), fohn Ral11@111 (Saft Jose State), Buddy Teevens
(Tulane) and AI Molde (Western
..).tichigan).
Wilh two weeks left in the regu.,~ season, 20 of Ill Division I-A
~hes have either resigned, retired
•: )r been fired.
-t~~ Some schools have already lined

f'klase enclose seH-addressjld,
stamped envelope to return your
.'
photo.
·r

i·'f._ -~

.HURRY, UEAJ)LINE .

· FRIDAY, DEc.'ll6, AT 3 P.M.
i

'-

•

~ ~· _,.:;

it""·; {,
'

'

.

,·

l

.

'

·Official
Entry
Form

SPECIAL ONE DAY

~replacements .

~r,ith the Washington Redskins, will
~ named the new coach at Indiana.
~ Ojlaile Joe Tiller, who resigned at
;::~oming last week, will be at Pur-

Celebration
of Generations

we~e suspended for aaml1!ina. lWo bet api1111
iOilOft Colleae in !he ~yracu~e
,...., llld Hennin&amp; uid they would
re111m to lhe team. 1be Eaales

finilhecl 5-7.

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..
--

December 4th, _1996
at our
Pomeroy and Tuppers Plains locations.

* Cake and Punch
* Register to Win:..

"'

- A First Edition Book of Meigs County History

.... "0

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- 0

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So come in... it's sure to.be an hi#orical occasion.

Fo

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II)

......

-A I75th Meigs County Aiiniversary Coverlet

Your

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... r::

.c

0

-~

]0

{due.

iaue."
On Nov. 6, 13 players

'CU

C)

l'

In 1-AA, Glenn McNeely was
fired at Idaho State.
Since tbe NCAA went to I-A and
I-AA schools in 1978.1he record for
most coaching cha,nges in a season is
27 in 1980, when there were 139
ldlools in I-A.
At Chesinut Hill, Mass., Henning
JWipled two days after another losins season. this one ·rocked by a gamblina scandal.
. "This bu been a difficult year,"
Mid HenninJ, 16-19-1 in his three
ICUOIII at BC. "There have been 1
number of distractions 11181 have hurt
the focus and clouded the ovCf11)1

t=:

C) - ·

t.:·

til Today, Cam Cameron, an assistant

·-§
·-§
.s....t=:

Join us for a

fn/JI!.' ..

II)

~~

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-...
·"'
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1. D~e: Friday, Det. 16 at 3 p.111.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Qhlo 46789

¥&lt;UUPU

- F.OJ.C.

A1 PitttburJh, the 61-ye~r-old
M.;on lellvf~ alter Slllllrday's pme

spi•st Rutten.

•

-~- ........ . -~
BRAD KEMPER

.k. . · · · · - -·-

''.

MIAMI (AP) - With time run·
ning ou~ Dan Marino seemed to
have ihe Pittsburgh Steelers right
where he wanted them ·- with their
backs against the goal line.
When Marino's fourth-down pass
sailed lorig, his comeback bid fell
short and Pittsburgh denied the Miami Dolphins with a dramatic 24-17
victory Monday night.
"It's very difficult,:· Marino said.
"because I felt we should have
won."

The Steelers (9-3), who rallied
from an 11-point first-half deficit,
incre!ISI'd their lead to tht'ee games
over· second-place Houston in the
AFC Central. The Dolphins (6-6) fell
a game behind San Diego in their bid
for a wild-card slot.
Because Miami lost, AFC West
leader Denver (Il- l ) became ihe first
team to clinch a postseason berth.

Miami scored only one touchdown against the Steelers' defense,
while Pittsburgh's Jerome Bettis ran
for I 1'9 yards and Mike Tomczak
passed for 252. With the game on the
line, Tomczak hit one more pass than
Marino - a 20-yard touchdown toss
to Ernie Mills that broke a 17-17 tie
with 2:10to go.
" When we scored." Tomczak
said, " I told (teammate) Will Wolford, 'Marino's got too much time.'
He said, 1 Who cares?".
Pittsburgh's lead hardly seemed
daunting to the Dolphins. even with
· no timeout s remainihg, becau se
Marino has rallied them to .v!ctory
from a lourth-quarter defJcll 32
times .
" I've seen it a million times
· when I wasn't with the Dolphins-·
Dan Mar-ino taking the team down
the field in the last two minutes,"

Senter. Cin. Tuqrin . .~ · 10. 1 7 .~ . Sr 1\nu.:r-J :t~nn 1 ·1·~
WaJ su.'tll1 h' H11h Herb. Almm Ell..-!: lkn White.
rn. )V&lt;.!stlakc. 6·2, PJ5. Sr.
.,
.
,\IH~rJo;C': Gi..·n l)n&amp;gi •I U. N C:mmn HllUWr: Dan H&lt;.'l'·
•, Ofl'ftl!l\'~ playrr pf lhf ~'tllr: ltrnuKe Hro.,.n.
t-.:,_. 11 . W: 11.t~wtlrlh : J:~m..-~ Wnl llh. 1\lo.mn l:rr..-~unc :
S«Hn.
.
,
lk1th (Jul'en. M.:Jina CtmwiL•a(: Rillllllll Walker.
' DdeMite plll~~rN nr lh,• rtllr: Jill" (OIIpt'r.
,\!.:ron l!ud!tcl: lln•u Weill}l.'l'. Warnm H.l.lwlnnll: Ucn
Cots. llidrprndrner: Nick (iusln•, Ch11~dun. ·.
. l'atll•twn. Alli:\lil'L· : Hrian M~· Nci l. Akmn Garlidd:
Coadleftht- ' 'l'llr: Ukk Kld~~o,·ll. h•,..on~a. ' l.itli1C1 H:uniltun . .Akrun l:ii'L.'~Itltk' : K~1·in Va'uf!hn
S1tc.nd Tum
.
Akruo Elkt: '
.
OFfENSE: E11d~-K.hary C:tml*"-'11 .. ~ yh ·:uua
Gran• c~rt.:r. S11lnn: A:lrtln l&gt;ardr.in~ki, G:ufjcld
SOO!hvil'w. b-:!. I Kfl. Sr.: lnJ}' t\mJe:~nn. ,\ll!:tiiL'~. !•· HI ~. ; f\bU 1\lil'f. Gn1t'tnn Mtd\•iew: Kent Htm.k~ty.
!li. ·212. Sr. l.ino.•n~en-~bmn I :tY"'-'· l~•.b . St. (hardtm: Ry:tn Drwnknr. UmndL·kw Ht~
CharW,, _tt-.l ; M. Sr.: IJnun M.,x. l&gt;n.·~n ln ·V:•I·
8kl·ks,·ilk: Mila· Ml'l.:m¥hlin. Sulnn:Garry Rcnlli"r_
I£Y.b--1. 1!1:'. Sr.l lnn R)•tk.'l'. l'tW"~tlurJ!:. f;:', .!'11~ . Sr.: tllanl11n: ('h:.d Prict, Grafltm Mid\'it'w: Rahma_n
8
Dr•'~WIL Waf!:ll.:tW\L'ta ..~·\1. 1.t~. Sr. QuartLY·
Mo~h\' Wam:n..,,:illl' Ht5.: lkn "Chip" Elkrn ~ .
. b:JL't~-Jt-.... Hi~ kL')'. Cob. Fmnl.:lin Hts .• ~- 10. IHU.
('1..:~·\: : ·J~st : Chri~ KtJI:v. ~bdi!tnn : Chti~ W•J!j! l n~.
Sr.: Sh~•un Ha~i,,.m. t&gt;:•)'IIUI Mc:tJt•wllak . ~-•). 170.
Sul(lll . Jt~m l'dll'J!rini. Willnughhy South: IJo:rTkk
~·· D:1o:k~-Kdt:m ~~~~~~Y: l ;"h", 1.""~· 1 6· 11• 1~5 : r\dam~ . S.t11on. Nid.-. l'ur~u.·sld . N. Ru.lj!o.'L'ilk : Erio.:
S&lt;tph.:·J.I. 1Jn1~Jd. N~'" I hii:Mk lplu.t. · · ' · 1 .~ · .~..
Mt1nlll!l'll'll.:f)'. C:h:ardt1n: b'an Lk-~·dlyn. Rroalhi.:W
Nu:k Nt'wl:mrJ. ~0"11,1 C:tlhnnhiilll.;~- ii. I?~· J:r • K~ \l~l
Ht~ . Un·~·b\'IIIC'; Uann y Cunan. Sn lnn: Chris Tau~
Hit:'-s. WCH Mlalllllrm•.: .. fi-. 1. _0.~ . ~r.. I..J. Lt.ll~ .
N. ltidll!"'·hk
Alli;um:. ~ - 9. 1MO. S•11•h : llilll ...·a~t: . R1dHnP11tlli h·

Scoreboard
.

.

'

1\lon«&lt;•f~ C. .t- B•k~tthall .
Major Scorlts
lly Tbt As!IOCillfd Pn'lts
I!:AST
Bo!tlun l'o llc~c K:!. N~ w H:un1•~ hi~ -Ill
Conlll.."\:'tiL'UI H9. NllnltcaSIL'nl ~ 7
Lil:lt.-rty 6-1. M01ioc ~ .1
Nial!nr:11.t. BudoJtcll 7~
Yalpnruiw otJ, CnnisiuJ ~~
SOUTH

ArkansMO St 96. Mi ~~ . Valk.-y St 90
Auhum IN. 1\rli .-Pinc Bluff ~6
AuMin 1\::w 1!16. Thnm:u. G11. ~:1
l1orid:1 61-i.' 8.:thune-Cnnkm.1n ~9
Furm:~n ~ -l

Stl;tum ~9
11nf~lra :'~ .· Fla. lntl!'tnntion.11 .~.&amp;
Jant~:' MadiSOIII16. Shipp.:nsl:lur,~: 67
Mnrshaii ·IOO. G:~rdn'-'I' · Wcltl:162
Murray St. II~ , lnd.· Pur. · l,dpl~ . 7~
N. Cnrt11ina St . .&amp;.&amp;. Penn St . .&amp; I
NW Loui~iana 116. Ark.·Mt,ntio."(lln 77
Nonh Cnrulin;r !46. Rkhroond 7~
Old Domini\m (\;4j , Tt.1kdo ~7
SW Miskouri St. I{ I. SW looi•inl\.1"7.&amp;
S..nd{.rd 70. Bl'lhnven 07

lew Tech HO. Nicholl~ St. 7.l

Wake ForeJC 116. Cit..dtl ~2 '
WiiHMn A Mwy 61. H.vnpton U. 6:\
Winthrop t'O. V;t. lntnnll1nt ~
Wu«ard 91t. Tu~·ulum M6

MIDWI!JT
Clrvt:llwl St. 71. Akr110 6.1

CRi,nton 70. Mll . · Knn~tu Cily 6tl
llllnoit 91. Dclawnfl" Sl. ~I
Mlchipn St. Kll!. Tcnne~~ St. ·U
N. lllinoil It') I. AunK~ 7-'
N. lnwa 611. "'i~ -Gn:cn Bay ~I

'

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SOUTHWJo:ST
l.:in1ar (17. 1\nt:l'l• ' Sl . ~~
Nt1l1h Tr:~~::.~ lOll. Mary Hardin-lb yk1r 7.l
Oral Rt1tlcr1s ~~ . N[ l.o'ln,•l!lmt :II~
Pmiril' Vie\\· 1(7. hith IJ:lflli~t ~ .&amp;
SW li.' ""·~ St . 7:-\, T..-.~ a.~ StlUih~·m B
Stcph,: n EAuslin I ~ H . Sd11'1.'incr fH
1\· , ~~ llui~ t1an IlK. C(ntt:nary H7
FAIIIWEST
Um~ Bcm:h St. 7\1. Wyuminp 7K
N.:w Ml·xiL'il St. 9.~ . Md.-1-; Sh\.,..c Kl
Pl·rr.:rllim• I{ I . UC Snnut Durtxlril 67.
TOURNAMENTS

M•ulln\il•llanal
Flnl RIMind
Californin 7~ . lo-A·a ~

K11nsas

!'l~ .

LSU ~ .~

M:t.un.:hu~u~ ~9. Ou,mlna&amp; .&amp;K
Yirtinia 9J, South Crv-r~lioo 70

UHIBITtCIN
Old:!ht'llt'-' St. 71!1, Con'(lt'o 70
Vatlikrbih 71. AlhleiL'IIn Action b9

Ohio HIP Sthool
Girls l•lkrtW
1¥ThoA_td.....,
. MendiV'I . . . . .
Albaay Aleundcr i~. Hemlock Milln 26
AnlhonJ W:.yw: -49, To!. Scott.&amp;~
Banrn·illf 69. tlivCf ~9
Btn\·er L«tti-H. lltdi~n CJCek 41
lklrw RJ. WellslOn' 27
Blan~-hcsttr 61. Climon Manko ~I

BridJCPOI'I .53. Toronlo 47
Centt"tVilk 63. Day. Pat1er10n 41
l 'ul. Undl:n .t.M. CDI. South 23
' Dny. Jdl'c\'Kin :'il. Dt1y. Belmont .~9

On)'. Mctl\IGWdalt ~.\. Ltmon M€BWoe 39

Miami receiver Fred Barnett said.
" Nothing is safe when he has the
ball at the end of the game," Steelers coach Bill Cowher said .
Starting from the Miami 23-yard
line, Marino threw completions of 6
and 10 yards, then hit Randal Hill for
45 to the Pittsburgh 16 with I :20 to
go.
" I thought we were going to tie it
up," Miami coach Jimmy Johnson
said.
Marino com'pleted an 8-yard pass
to the 8i threw an i11cOmpletion and
then hit Bernie Parmalee. who was
stopped for a 1-yard gain by Deon
Pigures.
That made it fourth -and·! at the
7 with 31 seconds left.
)ohnson discussed ·the situation
with his staff. Rather than run for the
first down , he opted for a pass from
a four-receiver formation . ·

By
Dave
Grate

of
. Rutland

Furniture
I

How to hammer a nail witho&lt;J!
hitting your thumb: let someone
else hold the nail.

•••

A man will laugh at a woman
pulling· on eye makeup, then
take ten minutes trying to make
j
three h!llrs look like six.

••••

Nobody knows how old mankind
Is -- but ~·s old enough to know
better.

**•

~~~;._ . ~: .&amp;. '

-~ ~

'""

.
. """' ',.., ..,_
ONE-ON-ONE- North Carolina's Shannon Williams (3) nwets
Richmond's Carlos Ct.teto (tO) at the top of the lane, forcing a
Richmond turnover during second half action of Monday night'•
game. The Tar Heels won, 86·75 at Dean Smith Center In Chapel
Hill. (AP)
_

YOu knOw you're growing
when you get winded playing
chess.

• ••

Heard about the new microwave1l
hearth? It lets you spend ao •
.evening in .front oflhe fire in four
minutes.
f:

*••

and 12 rebounds, while Williams Jd't UMass to become head coach uf
the New Jersey Nets.
added 19 points.
"When I woke up this morning, I
Rick Edwards led the Spiders
wasrcady
to play," Flint s~id . "I just
with 13 points, while Jarod Stevenson added 12 points and II rebounds. wanted ttl get this one out uf the
way."
No. 17 Massachusetts 59,
Weeks, e•pccted to pick up part ol'
Ch11minade 48
7 SHOWROOMS
11 WAREHOUSE~
the
slack left hy the loss of All-AmerAlso at the Maui Invitational,
ica
center
Marcus
Camhy,
keyed
a
Tyrone Weeks· scored 19 points, ·
Cannclo Travieso had 16 and James 13-0 run in the lirst half that put the
Rl. 124, Rutland. Qh. f42-221J
Flint won hi s head coaching dchut ' Minutemen ( 1-0) safely ahead.
Darnell Clavon led· the 'Silverwith the Minutemen.
'
swords
with 19 points.
Flint replaced John Calipari, wh&lt;l
~--------------------__:--------;-~.,

Rutland Furniture

It's Our

·Anniuer~ary

somc ·things .,.

LSU didn 't get its first points until
6:35 had elapsed in the first ha.lf'
when Oenc Nahors scored on a fol low shot .
"Like coach said , we wanted to
set the tone early," said Ryan Robertson. who's lilling in for Vaughn. "We
got our traps and pressure @oing and
that got us rointed in the right direction . We wanted to show we could do
il. ..

No. 3 Wake Fore¥ 86,
The Citadel 52
At Charleston. S.C .. Tim Duncan
had 21 points. 12 rchounds and did
just ahout whatever he wanted a• the
Demon Deacons (2·0) rolled. ·
Duncan, a conscnsus 1prcs~ason
AII,American . had live dunks in the
lirst half as Wake opened a40-19
lead.
. Jamie Jenkins had 16 roinls to
lead The Citadel .
'
- Duncan rccurdcd his-60th career
douhlc-doublc and was too much for
Citadel center Karill Misyuchenko to
handle.
.
'"He makes you look !illy sometimes." said Misyuchcnko. a junior. •
"I wasn't e•pccting that."
No.· 14 North·Carolina 86,
Richmond 75 ·
At Chaj)eJHill, N.C .. Shammond
Williams made a pair of 3-pointers in
a key key !.ccond-half run and
Antawrt Jami!on added 12 points in
the final 7':22 as the Tar Heels ( 1-1)
avoided their first home-opening loss
since 1929.
North Carolina trailed the Spiders
(0-1) 61-55 with 10 minutes left.
However. Williams made his two
treys ·during a I 5-2 run and his two
free throws with 8:48 left gave the
Tar Heels the lead for good.
Jamison fini•hed with 28 points

•

r

"I wasn 't surprised that they
threw it," Pittsburgh linebacker Chad
Brown said. "Th~y didn't have
enough time to do anything else.''
"We felt like we could get what
we wanted, ·• Johnson said. " We had
a shot to hit it in the end zone or pick
up the first down."
·,
Marino threw into the end zone
for Miller, who had dropped a key
third-down pass earlier and, has just
nine receptions all season.
'
"Maybe they thought we woul~­
n't account for him," Pittsburgh
safety Carnell Lake said.
·
Miller was well covered, and tile
_pass was too high . The Steelers took
· over with 25 seconds left and ran out
t~e clock.
'
···
"It shouldn 't have come down. to
us scoring with two minutes left,"
Marino said.
~

No.2
Kansas
rolls over
LSUB2-53

By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer
•
It didn't matter if the game was
son .~ -~. 150. Jr. Kick~:r-N~c:k Avandcl. Pnrm11 Hu .
Ten Southeastern Ohio League Holy
played in Hawaii, Halifax or Hong
Name. 6·0. 1!~0. Sr.
football players were named to the
DEfENSE: Lnemen-S1cVl' Kobu ~. Ge ~va. 5Kong. LSU coach Dale Brown knew
10. 250. Jr ; M1kc Rood . Steubenville. 5-K. 200. Sr.:
1996AII-Ohio Divisiion II and Divi- .F..r;k
his team had no ~hancc against No.
William~ . Delaware H o ~1 . 6-6. 155. Sr.: Bob
sion I football teams today by the Jolle!i. Wad~worth. 6· !'i . 2M. Sr Uncbad•crs- Phil 2 Kansas.
Hick s, Cin . l'atl. 6- 3. 215. Sr.: D:rn Wonman.
Associated Press.
The Jayhawks scored the game's
Ma5on. 6- 3. 22!1 . Sr.; ~o r·rienon. Eostorim. 6-2. lli.
Warren Local 's Shawn Taylor, Sr.:
Tom W~~rdrkc . Defianc:t. 6·2. 23 ~ . Jr Backsfirst 18 points Monday night and
who led the Warriors to 24 wins Shaurl Rice. Culs, Wallcl'!lon. 5-10. 178. Sr.: Antonio rolled to an 82-53 victory over the
BroodR:~~. Cin. Aiken, ~2. 175. Sr.: Olris Chnmbrn.
against six losses during the past Bedford.
6-2. 180. Sr.: Miguel Hunt. Akron SpringTigers in the first round of the Maui
three years, received First-Team All- field. :'i ·8. 16S. Sr. Punt~r-Kyle Oeswcin. Dayron Invitational in Lahaina, Hawaii. · ·
Cll1Toll. 6-2. i9S, Sr.
'
.
Ohio honors.
.
" It was a mature; bigger. stronger
SpreW Mendan
·
Two players from River Valley,
Scott Hwdtman. 'Cols. Franklin Ht~. : SM\Vn
teain that who.;pcd us," Brown said.
Jeremiah Triplett and Brad Kemper, Wnller. Mar)" ville: Mik~ Be5t. Dubllp Sd01o: Nick "It was not a surpri&lt;e. We knew it
Mitchell. Cols. Waucrson; Keith Sn yder. Marysville:
were named to. the 1996 Special Oris
Muha. Cols. St. Outrlc5: Jason 13nkrr. Oclaw~ ' would bC a learning experience. This
,.cntion Squad. along with two from H:~yrs : Nath~n Wade. Col1. St. Charles: _Jason is just a good team. We cannot beat
Dublin Sciolo: Scan FIUTOW. Cols. Sooth:
Warren L.ocal, Dan Greenwalt and Lanier.
them tomorrow or next week. But we
Malt Spit1n. Cols. W:merson: Gary Henson. Cob .
Jeremy Thomas, and two from Marion· Fr:tnl.:lin : Ju stin Gwinn. Col! . 81'01)1-:haven: might beat them when we mature."
Athens, Joe Sparhawk and Matt Mike Adkins. Marysville: Aobcr1 Fo5tcr. Cob. W:ll·
Jerod Haase scored 6 points, Paul
nut Ridge: AdriBn Hnmway. Cols. Nonhland; TronGOodwin.
• ny K..!aton. Cols. M3rion-Franklin:
.
..
Pierce 5 and Scot Pollard .4 in the
lu Divisiop I circles, Logan,s..
Jell WriJht. E. Uv~o.-rpon1 : Corey M1ller. Richopening
18-0 spurt as the Jayhawks
mond Edisun lol,·nl: Doug Anderson. Rayland Bud.·
:. Ryan Butcher and Beau Miller were eye
(2 -0) opened an early 25-5 lead.
Local: Chudo. Youn!CR. Cttrrnlhon: John Cybulnamed Special Mention All-Ohio ski . Steubenville: Jim Jnck son. E. Liverpool: Chuck
Kansas controlled both ends of the
!along with Marietta\ Floyd Van Milligtm. Cambridge: Anthony Cul.c i, E . l .iv~:rpool ; Ooor in the first half, especially the
Mike Onnnclly. S1eu~nv111e : Kylt: C:uretJn, Rich · Fossen .
mond Edi son Local: Ja~on Kcnw or1hy. Co11nbridj!.e; · defensive end. The
Jayhawk s'
•
Divi&amp;ion Ill honorees win be Mike Will. R11ylond Bu ckcye Lo.: al: Rob Ligp:U. swanning man-to-man defense limS1cubenvillc: Nic k Brown. E. Uvt!rpool : Mall Salsannounced lalcr lhis week.
ited LSU to 9-of-35 sh09ting from
~rry, E. Livcrpt\01 : Bn!)by Vahalik. Richmond Edi ·
•- - l OR Local: Willie C. Grnnt. New Philuddphia: Mike
the field in the first 20 minutes.
·. COLUMBUS - 'OJc 1996 Assodated Pre~s
Abdalla. Richmond Edison l.ncnl: Sum~ Herrin!-.
allowing
Kansas to open a 45,22 lead
u·1vi~iun '11 AII-Uhio hi!lh s~hool footballtl'am. h.'ISI."d - Stet&amp;en~illc : Eric Manin. E Liwrpool : .
.
·
•
·1
·
h
Emda
Nitl"a.
Dayton
St~bms:
Ja~
kJt•
F:uk
at
the
break.
on the n:.:onuncndatlm1s ol a state n1l.&gt;dt;~ p.1nc {wJt
·
R
M
. And
~hi.Ktl.l~t.'ight, wcip.ht ;.nd JrOKk! ):
Oil~tnn _ P~llctstJa: y:'ln . nti)'O~. •1~ 00. no~..
'f
Elsewhere in the Top 25, it was:
,.. DIVISION 0
·
Wcmhctnll'r. Lrovcl&lt;~nd : ~~~k Sw1~r. Stdnc y. 8obFI1'5t Tram
by_Highfill. Mn:ion: Mllf\IIR Jolk'i. Dayton Patterson: . No. 3 Wake Forest 86. The Citadel
Ol~~ENSF. : f:.rnb- Donte Robinson. Uaytun
~tkc Rohin.Hln. l..l.•banon: Ste ~~ _ D~y . O~ford
52 , No. 14 North Carolina 86, RichM~3dnwdalc. ~·fuot.·l{, l!li~ JIOURdl , Scnl\K; JaSt.ln
~alawanda ; l:oc ".1'-::an~. G~v1lle . Jnson NL"Itle:
mood 75: No. 17 Massachusetts 59.
Cunninglmm. Uninntown Lake. 6-1. lt!O. Sr. Line· m~ham ..N'-"'' C~~thslcTl'\um.~.·h. ~n Pu~(er. Sidney.
men-Shnwn Kelly. Madis11n. 6-J. 2MJ. Sr.: Tnny
ttrhke W•l~t)n , Dayton Mcl\dowdal~ . Adnnn Duncan.
Chaminadc 48: and No. 13 Boston
Macl·hi:uok. Akron Sprinf.li~lll . 6·2. 2JO. Sr.: M&gt;~l·
l&gt;i.l)1t.1 ~ l'aucrsun, . •
. . .
·
culm RuhinJOun. Fo~tnria . fl ..t 2~; . Sr.: Rob Winlk.-r.
l;n'· Slmk r.. I •rrin ((llumhlnn . En..:_.1111Tcy. College 82.. New Hampshire 40.
· The Jayhawks were playing their
G · •'II• ( -~ '11~ Sr · Jnc Ohun. Cnls.
Buw~ng Gn-cn: l&gt;irk 8 ill11ctt. Wnp.1k0~1~: kn~ ~!1·
"~,"l\l ~.· ~-l \-,o·sr Q.. wrterhatk-Shawn m;m, Tlflin Culumtu an: Kacnc Ru~mn . . l•lhn second game without All -American
n Nlll.l
ta-v( . · · ·. · · ·
('. uIurn h'~&lt;~n:_ J'1m •Sh!w .....
- t.e 1u·• P:1••·
~lor. \'lnctnt Warftn, l\-l,17(1, Sr. U!u.:h.....Orc~
..... lodd I •,,ll'
• . ~'e :
point guard Jacque Vaughn: sidelined
Holland Srnngficld; J;~11n Younfl. lilfin.Ctllunlhmn.
. . t&gt;ohl' •· • , , . 1 110 Sr . nnxton C·U1•r
Sunr~ln.
111.~11 II. I . - . . ..
•
• \: . J -' .. . 'I'0 t c
q M :C bb'n {Jcliance·
i ~ l.i~Cf'ltlul. fl- 1 . 1-IO.Sr.: JnnEI~as~. W:tp':tLnnct:t
uuy,.u stm . · ·~l· nn : m ~. ,. '" u 1 ·
•. · w1th a wnst inJury. Vaughn, weanng
": 10 1~ Sr . R1.1 James Akron Sprin~ti.:l'-'. ~-It .
M:trk N:IU~. lluwl1ng Gn~~n : I 1m Uauu.~t. Tnl. C_ent
a short-sleeve short and a brace on
·
' · • · ·. ' "
··1
0 IMO s K' ·k
C:nh.: Je~my 111\'"-...,.· Wapakooc1a: r-!:UL' Murocn. fol.
IY~. Sr: lcrram.:c Bruwn : So ·~n. fl · ·
· r ll •
t'l·nl , Cuth : ('.l Plym:~IL'. Whildwuse Anthony
the ;ight wrist he injured during a
'-Y- Bn:ndcn Ruuh . l)uhhn Sc10tn. !'1 ·9. II,JO. :lr.
W
.
DE~:ENSE:, L~lll'llk'n:-h.t.uk St~l\
ay;;~IX'I' Scwa!\1. Chillkuthe : 011nn~ &lt;:Jne~~· ~ll. pickup game thi s fall. watched from •
ln.nd. Akron Buchtel. ~'~ ·- · _I;. Sr_, Andy ~.rk I ~ . Vincent Warrt&gt;n: Chad l1ll)'lnn. WCH M1am1 I rocc . the bench as his teammates blew
Rrad Ktmpcr. Ch~t!dlin Rhu Vallt-y; Jell llcnoeu .
Liverpool. 6-1 . 220. Sr : Ma~rL: Su.nderm:m: Cm; St.
·
lkmard- Ro~~r B:~~.:nn. 1'1 · 1. _-&amp;9. Sr.,: O.wr r'-~ntarz.
W('H M1: 1mi Tra~~·: C.J. Danb. Chtl li cuth~.: ; Bran· LSU away.
liom Church. Vifk•.:nl W~n : An Adams. Chi llit:uthc:
Uniontown l.,..kc. fl.~ . ~.lO. Sr. l.u":bac~·"-J,_.,
··we were forcing them to miss
\OI)per. (tlb. lndo:po:mk.•nl'o.' . f.. I. 210.. Sr,: Lan;c
Mik~ kl'!.'\\'~ . WCH Miami Tmw; Matt Goodwin.
shots in the first 10 to 12 minute s.' '
RieJic. On-enville. 6-1. 1 1~. S~, : Mntt S~·~t~ . WCH
.\thfll~: Jrl'flll\' Thomas. Vlncml Warrtn; Jot'
Mi:lmi Tr.~n~. ~-I I . 2 I~· ~r. : Nt ,·k Gil~ In:: ~ha!dnn,Sp&lt;~rha"·k, ,\lhrn.~: Jrrrmi•h Triplett, Chl"shin
Kansas coach Roy Williams said.
6-0. ICJJ. Sr. O:u.:b-R•~·ha!\1 N.:wOtlllk.' . l ·tl~ tnnu . fl.: llh·t-r \ 'ulln•
'
"After that, it was a matter of fin I . I MO. Sr.: S.imha Hud:.n. C't 1 L~. W;llh.'r~' 111 · ": 1. I~::!.
l.t~t ll:.~ks . Alli :mL·e: Chip U.·dunby. Un1111llt1Wn
Sr.: Robcnl · u st~r. Akron Dudud. ~·"· INI. Sr .. K\·n
Lik··: N 1 ~ k lhmd 1• N. Canmn Hml\'cr: Joe IAlwth\:r. ishing out the game and working on

:'

••

-

Ten SEO~L players are
named to Division II All-Ohio
football squad by AP writers

TfllftCik'( Tl'l:h 9.:!. Curnbl.'rhutd. Tenn. ~.:!

Mall or bring the entry form:

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

JEREMIAH TRIPLETT

'

.

:Majors, Henning,
•Pettibone
:resign

··.- -.: ..."·' ;·

Taylor First-Team All-Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Box score:

in 1993 and to Miami in 1991 -the helps," Bowden said.
tick."
.
last time the Seminoles have lost at
The Seminoles (10-0) have made
He said his offense, which is
home.
averaging 40 points and 400 yards a it undefeated this far tharik~ largely to
· "The key to both' of us is trying to game. needs to get untracked early · a def~nse that .has given up only 10
make our kids stay relaxed," Bowden Saturday against a Aorida team that points and 200 yards a game and shut
said.
-puts up almost 50 points a game.
out North Carolina ·J3-0.
Florida hasn't woo in Tallahassee
''!just can'tbelieve how fast they
"!tis going to be' very important
in I 0 years, although they hung on for score," Bowden said. "I don't want for us to go out and get untracked·eara 31·31 tie two years ago after blow- to get in a scoring contest with them. ly and not put so much pressure on
ing a four-touchdown lead in the final
"It's like a bomb ticking when our defense," quarterback Thad Bus13 minutes.
·
you play them. It's a 60-minute by said Monday.
• "~laying it here at our house

Will .be published

Monday, December 23rd

Southern won. the reserve game
29-14 led by Stacy Lyons with I I.
O'Dell had 6 for the Rebels.
,
Score by quarte,s:
South Gallia 15 10 12 10=47
Southern
19 14 13 16=62

Tension rises as Florida teams prepare h:r c's•~- h

Steelers score dramatic
24-17 win over Dolphins

PICTURE YOUR CHILD ·
AMONG THE .•.

rebounds (Misty Lent7, Bobbi Lent
6); had four steals, 15 turnovers, six
assists, and II fouls. lbere was no
reserve game.
Trimble plays in the NelsonvilleYork Holiday Tournament Friday
and Saturday, while Eastern goes to
Alexander Monday.
Score by quarten:
Eastern 15 13' 9 14=51
Trimble 6 13 8 15=42
Eastern, (51)
Becky Davis
2-0-(0-0):4
Stephanie Evans 2-0(0-4):4Valerie
Karr 9-0(2-5)=20Mary Styer Jessica Brannon 7·0-(3-4)=17Ann Wiggins 2..Q-(Q.0):4Jackie Parker0-0=0 .
Chasatie Hollon 0-0-0Julie Hayman
(injured)Angi Wolfe 1-0-(0-0)=2
Totals 23-0-(5-13)=51 ' .
Trimble (4Z)
.
,
Cluissy Richards 0-0-(0-2)=0, Joy
Pettit 3-0-(Q. I )=6, Sheryl Davis 1-0(3.(;)=5, Sherry Davis 2-0-(2-2)=6,
Misty Lent 3-1-(1-2)=10, · Toby
Lawrence 3-0-(0-1 )=6, Bobbi Lent
4-0-(1-1)=9 Totals 16-1-(7-15):4Z.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

PomerQy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, November 26,1998

Eastern girls outlast Trimble 51-42

•

•

1:10 _ _ ,

•

, .O. bl39
·.II ~~

Aon, Qtl ~

16"J607-JI6l

\
'

' _,

...

,.
•'

�'
Pt~ge

•

Tuesd8y, November 26, 19tl

6 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • P1ge 7

PGrcror. Middleport, ohio

Tapas
Spanish-inspired bundles ·My favorite holiday
of taste can be bundled for home
.
.

1997 ESCORT SPORT

1996 MUSTANG GT

Autometlc:, ..... IHIOhl lfltry, dahwt,
apalll', AMI1'III cua, aluminum whaela,
loaclecl

IISRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS

CCIIIWftlbla, auto, AC, crulae; full power,
kayleu entry, lalllhar IVtlry option
IVallllbll.
MSRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS

'14,81Cf"

'29,390""

'

$12·995°
'

0

.

.

1997 ESCORT WAGON

1996 PROBE GT
Auto, VI, cruiM, till. alf conct, a.tnl
entry, poWer wlndowl-lockl. ,.., dabOlt,
108Citcl
IISRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS

$23,995°

0

By HEIDI KNAPP RINELLA
Plan 1 dinner party and you're likely to he ce~~fronted with
more obstacles than an Olympic hurdler:
One guest doesn't eat red meat
•·
Another won't cat any meat Another h~tes seafood, while
another eats it exclusively.
What's a beleaguered '90s ho.stto do? ·
Try tapas, perhaps.
We have the Spanish to tliank for tapas --'1- more specifically the Spanish of the Andalusia region. The little dishes of
Spain found their genesis in Andalusia, where they remain an
imponant part of the culture. Natives and tourists, if they
know how to do things right, wander from one tapas bar to
another, tasting the specialty of each place in the little dishes
set out to accompany the cool sherry and cdld heer.
1be word "tapa" originally referred to "cover," for a
piece of bread placed over a drink to keep the flies at bay.
Sausage and cheese were placed on the bread, and the tidbit
was included in the price of the drink.
Through the years, the tapas became more elaborate,
although they still featured many of the regipn 's best prodll\&gt;ts
unadorned, in addition to many childhood c.&amp;mfort foods.
Traditionally, they're served before Jpnch or dinner,
although they can be a meal in themselves.
. Olives are the cash co.w of Andalusia, 111111 they show up in
profusion in authentic tapas either in their.Jiriginal form or as
olive oil, or both. So docs pork, especiall¥-_tfle.precious lberi·
co ham that's a specialty of the region add the ler;s-precious
Serrano ham.
·
American restaurants have in recent years co-opted the
1apaS tradition, simply hecause it's such a good idea.
Many restaurants thai don't Serve tapar; still have adopted
the · same concept by offering "small plates" as well as large
ones, or ·suggest that customers try s~veral appetizers in lieu
ofan entree if they're so inclined.
·'.'!
Tapas is the latest innovation at Rof1-Friedman 's Rooftop
restaurant on Bonita Beach, Fla., and Friedman says the have
"been remarkably successful," with peop,le coming in speoif· .
ically for tapas.
'
·· On Fridays (and only on Fridays), CljStomers are present·
· ed with a list of about 35 seafood tapas,.f mix of hot and cold
dishes. At lunch, they get to choose three and also are served
a cup of conch chowder. At dinner, they get six tapas, ,plus
salad, potato or vegetable and bread. ·
On one visit, the tapas list included hot dishes such as New
TASl'V TAPAS • From the Spltnlah, tapa 11 the lltlat Innovation at, Ron
· Zealand queen scallops, swordfish fritters with papaya sauce, Friedman's Rooftop restaurant on Bonita 8each, F...thl tlpu llat lncluclld hot
grilled cobia with mango coulis, broiled African snook fillet, dishes such 11 New Zellllnd qu_, ICII. ., awordflah fritters with pepay1
sauteed squid with roasted garlic cream'osauce and petite fillet IIUCI, grilled cobll with mango coulla, broiled African 1nook fillet, llutlld
of John Dory. The cold items included cuttle fish in ink sauce, squid with roaltld garlic Crlllll IIUCI and petite fillet ol John Dory. The cold
octopus in a red sauce, smoked trout, eel and mullet, among lllma Included cuttll fish In Ink IIUCI, octopua In a rtd IIUCI, amokad trout,
others.
. ..
,.
, · .
eel and mullet, among othere.
"People.get to pick from this list ol appetizer-sized portions, and they ~------------~---------.,
. put together their own combination plate," Friedman says. "It gives them
Tapas: Here are some mad&amp;-for-grazing recipes
a chance to try interesting fish they niay never have ·had."
. 2 bay leaves
Fort Myera New•Prell
Rooftop executive chef John Porter, Friedman says "works with tapas
one-half teaspoon Tabasco
Ify.
o
u'd
like
to
drum
up
a
lit·
in different preparations; which can 'he as simple as broiled in butter or
sauce
tie
enthusiasm
!'f
your
own,
Ron
more complicated, with sauces, steaming or grille~ with wine-soaked ·
2 teaspoons lemon juice
Friedman's Rooftop restaurant on
wood chips." .
·combine
all ingredients,
Bonita
Beach,
Fla.,
has
supplied
Before adding it to the tapas list,·):he'll work,with an item for usually
us with recipes for two of the tapa except shrimp, in a large pot.
a week or more- in some cases, a nilmher of weeks- where people here
specialties.
Two other recipes are Bring to a boil. Add the shrimp
get the opportunity to taste it and sa:r;this works or doesn't work," Fried·
for
more
traditional
tapas. ·
and cook for 2 minutos.
man says.
,·
Leave the shrimp in the cookPorter says his inspiration for tiJI; tapas comes from many areas, but
DRUNKEN
SHRIMP
ing
liquid to cool, an&lt;! m~nate
always comes back to one thing:"lt's basically trying to marry different
2
pounds
raw
shrimp,
shelled
.
overnight
in the refriger.ator.
spi~~s and herbs to the fish that I'm using."
Drain and serve cold, moisten·
and deveined
·
POrter says he thinks the tapas appeal to customers, because while they
·
ing
the shrimp with some of the
2
bottles
(12
ouncesr
or
cans
may be somewhat reluctant to try ·a .whole plate of something new, they're
ofheer
cooking
liquid; serve on individ·
willing to try a little dish of it
l.
·
·
ual
plates,
spooning a bit of the
I
large
onion,
thinly
sliced
"There have been some trends in the restaurant industry · which are
marinade
on
top. Serves 8 as a
I
garlic
clove,
peeled
emerging including the fact that pe&lt;iple like to graze," Friedman says.
tapa.
·
2 teaspoons salt
8
black
peppercorns
Contlnllld on page 8
:·People love to try new things. las give them the ~pportunity."

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A solo by Meigs Sheriff James
Soulsby with a parody to aged song,
l'Memories" wiM set the "Musical
Memories" theme .for the Thanksgiving weekend musical of the Big
Bend ~instrel Association in Mid(lleport Friday and Saturday

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~venings.

·The show under the direction of
Bob Hoeflich will play at8:10 p.m.
on both evenings in the Meigs
Junior Higli School.
A dance line composed of Amy
Smith, Erin Struble, Sarah Ball, Sara
Craig, Melissa Ramsburg, Danielle
Peckham, Pamela Neece, Billee
Pooler, Sarah Larkins, Becky Johnson, Michelle McCoy and Melissa
brewer
.
will move out to a fast-paced
'There's No Business Like Show
Business" followed by one of severill appearances by Sam Cowlln who
will present a lively version of
:cabaret".
' Forty-Second Street will be the
background accompaniment for a
fast moving tap number by Rae
Gwiazowsky and Tom Dooley.
~ayn~ Hoeflieh Mann, Lancaster, a
~eteran of the local.shows, will pre·
sent her rendition of "You're Nobody

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Fourth and finally, it turns our
heads toward God. Just the word
''Thanksgiving" promptS the spirit of
humility. Genuine gratitude to God
for his mercy, his abundance, his
protection. his smile of favor. At this
holiday, as at no other, we count our '
blessings and run out of time hefore
we exhaust the list And hest of all,
life simplifies itself. At Thanksgiving, we come back to the soil and the
sun and the rain which combine their
efforts to produce the miracles of
life, resulting in food for our stom·
achs and shelter · for our
bodies ...direct gifts from God. From
the annals of our rich heritage, there.
has been preserved this announcement which was made over 370 ·
years ago. !t says:
j

"To All Ye Pilgrims, in aS much
as the great Father has given us this
year an abundant harvest .of Indian .
com, wheat, beans, squashes, and
garden vegetables, and made the '
forests to abound v.:ith game and the
sea with fish and clams, and in as ·
much as He has protected us from
the ravages of the savages, has·
spared us from pestilence and disease, has granted us freedom to wor-.
ship God according to the dictates of
our own conscience; now, .1, your.
magistrate do proclaim that all yd.
Pilgrims, with your wives and chit·
dren, do gather at ye meeting house,
on ye hill, between the hours of nine
and 12 in the daytime, on Thursday,
November ye 29th of the year of our
L!lrd one thou&lt;and six hund.red and
twenty-three, the third year since ye .
Pilgrims landed on yc Pilgrim Rock,
thereto listen to ye pastor, and render ·
thanksgiving to ye Almighty Goo
·for all His blessing,"
• William Bradford, Governor of
Plymouth Colony, 1623

Chester council (D of
A elects new officefs:
Officers were elected when ing by reading the I 21st Psalm. The
Chester Council 323, Daughters of Lord's Prayer and pledge were given ·
America, met recently at the hal[
in
unison, and Thanksgiving
Elected.were Mary Jo Barringer, . thoughts were given in response to
president; Goldie Frederick, vice roll call. Reports were given by Inzy'
president; Opal Hollon, treasurer; Newell, . secretary, and Thelma
Laura Mae Nice, secretary; Ethel White, treasurer.
Orr; sentinel; Erma Cleland, flower
committee.
R,eadings included "If I Had My
The Christmas supper was set for Child to Raise Over Again" by
Dec. II at 6 p.m. at Tilnity Church. Goldie Frederick, and "Little Pick
There will be a $3 gift exchange.
Me Ups" by Mary Jo Bariinger.
It was reported that Erma Cleland Games were conducted by Opal
bed knee surgery at Holzer Hospital. Hollon, Ethel Orr, and Cora Beegle.
Door prizes were won by Laura Mae
·Dorothy Myeis was hostess for Nit;,e and Ethel Orr. Others attending ·
the meeting assisted by Shirley Bee- were Marcia Keller, Pauline Ridegle and Erma Cleland. Delores · nour, Mary K. Holter, and A guest,
Wolfe, president, opened the meet- . Sandra White.

Big· Bend Minstrel Asociation Musical set for Ope\ning Friday night

IN

1997 AEROSTAR'XLT 4x4

By PAM BEAUMIER
Pomeroy
Its been going on for over fony
yeii'S...IS far back as I can remember. Hands down, it's my favorite
holiday of all. Here is why.
First of all, it seems to blend
together all we Americans hold pre·
cious and dear .. without the sham
and plastic mask of commercialism.
Shopping ·centers jump from Hal·
loween to Christmas. It's spooks 10
Santa.... pumpkins ·
.:ll to
presents.... orange and black tO': red
and green.
Its doubtful that any of us has
ever seen (or will ever see) a Pilgrim
hype. Just can't be done. Except for
grocery stores, merchants are mute
when 1banksgiving rolls around.
Second, it highlights home and
family.
Thanksgiving is synonymous
with stuff that .can be found only at
home -- the warmth of a fireplace,
early morning fussing .around in.the
kitchen, kids ·and grand kids, long .
distance phone calls, family·
reunions, singing around the piano,
holding hands and praying hefore
that special meal, the Cowboys vs.
somebody on the tube, a touch foot.ball game in the street or backyard,
friends dropping by pumpkin pie,
homemade rolls, and six million .
·calories. (talk about self control)
Third, it drips with national nos·
talgia.
For me, even more so than the
Fourth of July. That holiday reminds
us of a war we won. Giving us independence. This one takes us ·back to
. a simple slice of life over 370 years
ago when our forefathers and foremothers realized their depeadence
.on each other to survive. With
Thanksgiving comes a surge of
renewed patriotism, a quiet inner
piece that whispers, "I am proud to
be an American."

' . '11,085'"'

"Fil Somebody Loves You". Amy
Perrin's vocal will be Ray Charles'
"Georgia ori My Mind" . .Perrin will
rqurn to the Big Bend spotlight later
in the show to do "You'll Never
~ow".

~dull cloggers representing the
Mfllnight Cloggers will present
"l;tbwn at th~ Twist and Shout"
while later in the show, the organization's younger clogging group will
dance to "Hurricane''. Adults in the
group are Margie Wolfe, B.euy
Smith, Melanie Dudding, Shirley
Simmons, .Linda Roseberry, Betty
Latlley, Myrtle St. Clair and Sheryl
Th~as. Making up the youth·
group are Sheri Cummins, Chelsea
· Montgomery, Delana Eichinger,
Eric Haning, Jennifer Allen, Tyler
SiRII!,lons and Thomas Simmons. A
regular with the show, Dixie Sayre,
willl1;e singing "'Til There Was You"
in this year's musical.
My~n Duffield who specializes
in playing unusual instrumental
musical numbers will he presented
in the 1996 varieties in two 10
minute, segments assisted by his
wife, June. Mr. and Mrs. Duffield
are formerly of Middleport and
: moved from the community follow-

ing their graduations from high Rag" while Sheriff Soulsby will do a
school over 40 years ago. They replay on his popular rendition of
recently retired here and this will be "The Green, Green Grass ,ofHome·:.
Myron's first stage appearance local· · Veteran Bis Bend perfonner, Kathy ·
ly with the wide range or unusual Hood, will also do a comedy-vocal
instrUments that he features in his on "There'll Be Some Changes
act which he and his wife take to Made". Meigs County's Agriculturmany locations across the Midwest. al Agent who has become active in
A medley of songs from "yester· the county's music circles will sing
year" will be presented on the guitar "Young at Hean" in this year's show
by veteran performer, Denver Rice, . and a newcomer to the cast, Tom
and Rice will join the Gentlemen . -Hunter, will make his debut on
Four, a barbershop quanet doing a "Let's Do It". •
couple of appearances. The quartet ·
Another' veteran of the shows,
will do "My Gal Sal" and "Wait 'Til La\lfll Hawthorne Guthrie will pre:
the Sun Shines, Nellie". Making up sent the Mama Cass numher,
the quanet in addition to Rice are "Dream a Little Dream of Me"
Gerald Powell, Hugh Graham, and returning to the Big Bend spotlight
John Anderson. Lou Swan of Mil· later in the show with "I Dream of
ton, W. Va., will replace Powell for You": Sam Cowan's second vocal
the Saturday night show. Sharon music number will be "The Desen
Hawley, a veteran of Big ·send Song". Cowan is a musiC major at
shows and a piano and vocal instruc- the University of Rio Grande.
tor, will be featun:d vocally on Michelle McCoy and Donnie May,
"Can't Help I.Jovin' That Man" and . representing the Big Bend Cloggers,
will team with Amy Perrin and will he the featured dancers in a fast
Dixie Sayre to form the Mello-lones, moving modernistic number to
a women's trio which will present "Boogie Woog!e Fiddlin' Blues".
"Satin Doll" and "I Can Dream Returning to Meigs County from
· Can't I?"
Orlando, Fla., where he is employed
The pony chorus line will dane~ a by· Disney World, will be Bruce
c!'medy type routine to "12th.Street Wolfe, . a veteran cast member,

whose vocal selection will he "You
Aie the Wind Beneath My Wings".
The Committee, a group from the
association which has traditionally.
done "Cigareets, and Whiskey and
Wild, Wild Women", this year will
tum to a comedy version of "When
You're Smiling". Making up the
woup are Jackie Buck. Robert Buck:
June ~toes, Manning Kloes, Cindy
Fields, Cathy Hood, Hal Kneen,
Susie Soulsby, Jim Soulsby, Charlene Hoeflich and Bob Hoeflich.
Sam Cowan's saxophone solo,
"Winter Wonderland" will introduce
the final~ by the ~n,tire cast.

Heart Association and the Riverbend
Arts Council which· will share jointly in the proceeds. Sandy Iannarelli
has served as chairperson on hehalf
.of the hean association 'l'ith Mary
Wise as chairperson for the arts
council.

Mrs. Jennifer Sheets · is show
accompanist and will be joined for
the performances by Kenneth McElhinny, a drummer who played with
the orchestra in some of the first
shows which hegan in 1953 and
Denver Rice, on guitar.

We
Matu...
Drivers, Ho•·
Owners And
Mobile Ho•e ,.
' Owners Special
Savings.

Our statistics show that mature ,
drivers and home owners have
few!&gt;r and less costiy losses than
other age groups. So H's only fair
to charge you less lor your
Insure your home and
Making up the staging and light- car with us and save even more
ing crew will be Mary Boggs• wHh our special mufti-policy
Grimm, Julie Dillon, Scott Dillon, P. discounts.
J. Harris and Maxine Griffith.
The show is co-sponsored by the
Meigs Division of the American

·Reader wants to ~now both sides of the ·antibiotic story
Or they were prescribed when tling event early in my internship.
By PETER H. GOTT, M.D.
that mally kinds of bacteria were
, DEAR DR. GOTI: Will you becoming resistant to antibiotics. they should not have been ·- for An elderly man was rushed to hospi,
please comment on the use of antibi- During the process of natural muta- common virus infections, for tal in terminal shock. His doctor had
otjcs? Recently Illy doctor gave me tion, th"* micro-organisms devel- instance. The end result of this mis• given him a ~hot of penicillin for a
antibiotics "just. in' case" I had an oped enzyme systems which neu- use was that some bacteria failed to cold. and tlie man unnecessarily died
infection. My reaction to those was tralized the effects of the antibiotics. receive a lethal dose. ·They were from an allergic r~action to the
more traumatic than what I was suf- Such mutations have now· become slowed but not killed. And, like all antibiotic. Then and there, I decided
fering hefore I took them. I discon- . almost a public health catastrophe. well-behaved micro-organisms, they that I would never use these drugs
•tinued them on my own and imme- , For example, drug-resistant tuhercu- changed their biochemistry to frivolously; but, unfortunately, my
losis and gonorrhea are prese~tly accommodate the new environment: conviction is not shared by mat\y
diately felt whole again.
DEAR READER; Once antibi· major health concerns, not to men· · 'They developed the means to resist physicians who continue to pre· ·
· scribe antibiotics (or trivial reasons,
otics came'into widespread use ttiree tion the many other kinds of bacteria antibiotics.
Today, we are experiencing tile often at the insistence of their
decides ago, doctors and the puolic that can gobble up antibiotics witheffects of this and have once again patients, who don '1 understand the
breathed a collective sigh of relief. out blinking.
·
finally, after centuries of frustration,
Because --in the beginni~g of the been reminded of the versat;lity of riskS and the implicatiOIIS. Reactions
humans had the wherewithal to beat antibiotic era ·- all bacteria were Nature's creations, . an observation to these medicines cover a wide
iheir ancient archenemy: the bacteri- killed by adequate doses of the med- that shouldn't surprise us, since hac- range, from minor rash and fever to ·
um.
.
icines (and, therefore, couldn't teria were the earliest life form and life-threatening anaphylactic shock.
. 1be celebration "!as short-lived. . mutate), many authorities believe have survived for millions of years ,
Consequently, I agree with your.
True, antibiotics proved to be a. that the pretent problem of resis· due to their phenomenal ability to
position. I believe that your doctor
powerful weapon. Many lives have lance probably stems from the inap- adapt by mutation.
l&gt;een saved by these miraculous propriate use of antibiotics: The
Of course, there is another down- inappropriately prescribed a drug
drugs. But about 10 years ago, doc· drugs were ·given in too ·low a dose side to antibiotics: alle1Jic reactions that you're probably better off not
and side effects. I remember a star· using •• unless there is a ~ocumentiors discovered the disquieting fact for too short a time.
·
•

j

••
{I

.

..

••

•
,.

GOTT, M.D. ·

are .
far from harmless and shout~ be prescrihed only for serious bacterial
infections .. not, as a general nile, .
"just in case." Infectious disease
experts plead with doctors to he
more parsimonious in administering
antibiotics. The extent to which
physicians will eventually heed
·these pleadings may .he governed, at
least in pari, by patients whO are
educated about the pitfalls·and haz·
ards of the indiscriminate prc:scrib-. t
ing of antibiotics. The bacterial battle is far from o~er; some authorities
believe it may he just beginning.

ROGAN

~

RNER~

Insurance Services
, 214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992. . .7
Aulo-Oiellere lmai'OIIce
Life Home Car Bualneat1

1'!':•

•
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PETER

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P9 I • The Dlilly Slnllnel
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
TueldiY, November 28, ~-·
..:~- ~--~~~------~~----~~==~~~------~~~~~

TUIIday, November 28, 1818

..

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·Chemical imbalance causes hus~and's aggressive behavior::
Ann
Landers
I'Jfl,
'nnlc:a

u,.

.U,cle.

s,..._ •

...ns~

c~

8y ANN ·LANDERS

ne. Ann Landers: For almost 16

.yem; I lived will\ an active volcano
·•• my husband. He has many wonderful qualities, but during his outbursts, his language was insulting
and he berated me in front of friends
and ·family. Our children would
: cower during those rages, and they
. .asked me lime and. again, "Why did
you marry Dad?"
.
• My husband realized he wasn't

1Ra1in1 me riJht, and we saw four
counselors durin1 those yean.
Counseling didn't help. We found
the solution to his behavioral problems in a doctor's office. 'That. wonderful physician prescribed meda.
lion for depression, which runs in
my husband's family.
What a change the medicine has
made! 1be paranoia is gone. My
husband no longer thiaks I'm out 10
get him. He responds approprialcly
to unsettling silllllions and doesn '1
blow up. Wllll a telief it is to bolh of
us to know die leiSOft he was so hard
to get along with wu 1101 a mean
streak bul a chemical imbalance thll
could be fixed with medication.
Many people who have hellish
relationships and bun or kill their

loved ones could be helped by the
proper lii'edicali')ll. Please encourage
tbaC people 10 see a medical doctor.
1be ript drug could make a huge
dill'erence in their lives and the lives
of the people around them. --Richland Center, Wis. ·
· De8f Richland: Thank you for
what could be a valuable contribution to the lives of many readers.
Chemical treatment of wild mood
swings and mental illness has
proven very successful in many
cases. It should be made clear, however, that psychologists and counselors cannot prescribe medication.
Only a psychialrist or a medical doctor can do this .
Dear Ann Landers: I recently
attended a birthday party given by

Spider si!k: Scientists
By JOHN YAUKEY
The IUIK8 JOUI'MI
For centuries, science and its
. ancestral . institutions sought to
bend riature to the human will.
In the Middle Ages. alchemists
lried to tum base metals to gold.
Steel was made by adding carbon
to iron. More recently, boiling pressurized .chemicals yielded bulletstopping Kevlar.
So what new material cao scien' lists· conjure from their molecular
bag of tricks to outperform even
this?
1be answer is crawling along
Cornell University biophysicist
Lynn Jelinski's hand.
Meet the golden orb-weaver spider, whose · dragline silk, for its
weight, is five times stronger than
steel. It surpasses KevJar for combined strength and lle•ibility and
nylon for stretch. A single strand
. wrapped 8l'Ound the globe would
weigh IS ounces.
Is i! any wonder Jelinski is
intrigued?
·
·
"I'm always looking to biolot~Y
for inspiration," said Jelinski,
director of Comclrs Center for
Advanced.Technology in Biotechnology.
By studying the natural world
instead of trying to conquer it,
Jelinski and other like-minded scienlists are finding a wealth of
. research and development already
• conducted during a million years of
natural selection.
"I like to think that nature has
done the cKperimcnls. and we have
to 'figure out what 'they mean."
Jelinski said. She works in the
cm~rging field of biomimetics, '
where scientists try to create mate·rials

ba.~d on nature's successes.

Pict~re

a biofiber ba•ed on spider silk, spun into super-strong
bridtze cables and other construetion materials, bulletproof fabrics.
artificial tendons, non-allergenic
stitches. implants and even artili: cial skin.

l

,

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)

•,.

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SPIDER SILK • Cornell University biophysicist Lynn Jelinski gets friendly with the golden orbapicler, whOle dntgllne silk, for ita weight, is live times stronger than steel. She and other
sclentlata are looking to the eplder (or such posslbllltis as spider silk, spun into super-strong bridge
cabin and other construction lllllerlala, bulletproof fabrics, artificial tendons, non·allergenlc stitchas, lmp18nta and evan . .lllclal akin.
·
.•

~
·.: _

they appeartci reinforce the fiber in
different directions, giving it great
nc.ibilily.
' '
'
· .But for now.. th1s JS speculat1on.
1clcnllsts arc st1ll years ~way from
fully understanding .what il took
380 mllhon years ol cvoluuon to
des1~n. let alone rcproducmg 11. .
Smce II would take 5.000 sp1dcrs all thetr hves to produce
enough SJik lor a sf arl. the only
way to usc the material is to mass
produce it outside the •.rider hy
trans.planll.ng the s1lk-ma~tn~ genes
!Din a more pruducllvc hie lonn .
Ultimately. Jelinski would iike
tn ~e the s1lk produced gcneucally
m hbruus plants. then c.tracted.
Althn_ugh that's at kast a decade
away. 11 s not as far-letched as 11.
sounds. Sc1cnusts already can
mscrt ammal genes mto plants.
Recently they reported manul'acturmg part of the o•yg~n;beunng
hlond protem .hemoglobm m plants
hy mse.rtmg ammal genes..
.
. Jchnskt dreams ol usmg
b1illcchnolngy .•o mfusc tobacco
plants with .spider silk gc?es and
lra~sformmg the tobacco Industry
from a killer into a .lil'e-~nhancer.
Maktng sptder stlk thts way theorctically could he don~ with little
nr no adverse cnvtro~mcn.tal
~(feels. Kcvl~~· by contrast, 1~ made
'" vats of bmhng su.lfurtc actd. .
. "One of the factors pushmg 1h1s
ts the dcme to move away from
petroleum products, so we don '1
have IOJO pulling stuiT out of the
gmun~. s.hc sa1d.
.
. Jchqsk1
strongly bcl1eves
biotechnology can Improve the '
quality of life by _creating new en IIimnm~nlally fnendly matenals.
gmwrng .food. more productrvely
and treaung dtscases where many
start. at the genetic or molecular
level.
. While Jelinski is enjoying notortcty lnr her ~ork wuh the orbweavers. they rc hardly her sole
focus. Other research projects arc
startmg to Jell.

apparently cat it. Jelinski Is stingy . her grin. "Right now I'm still in the
with the details ,' revealing only that reading and library stage, seeing
it could lead to a bcncr understand - where things go. We'll sec what
ing of biodegradability and new happen s. "
environmentally benign materials.
Another valuable lesson gleaned
"I have a few ideas I'm looking from studying spiders : hang loose
into," she said with a sly twist in and stay ne•ible.
,...------------------------.

People have used spider silk at
least since ancient Greece
By JOHN YAUKEY
The Ithaca Journal
Long he fore scientists cvcr 'Ocgan studying spider silk a~ the inspi~
.ration for a super-strong. hyperllexihlc new material. people were
using il. anti even trying In muss·pmdm:L: it.
The ancient Greeks applied cohwch L.' omprcsscs lo stop hlccding;
unknown lo them. the natural antihiotics in it staved off infcctinn .
Eighteenth century Frenchman Bon de Saint-Hilaire believed that.a
factory nf lly-lcd spiders would make him a silk magnate. His dreams
were da"ihcd when he learned lhut ar~~~.:hnids have u huih-in mechanism for contr,&gt;lling nvcn.: n&gt;wding.

It's called cannibalism.
During the ~ivil War. American surgeon BUrt Wilder wrote several

papers nn spiders and reached the conclusion that producing silk fnr
industrial purposes was impructical.
But industry .was not ·finished. ·
At about the same time. astronmncrs discovered that the fine libers
made excellent croSs hairs in' telescopes and were mut:h chcupcr than
the plati~um wires they were using . .
During World War II. many uses for spider silk arnsc as demand
skyrocketed for oplical instruments of' every kind: surveying lransils,
levels. r;mgc Iinder~. telescopic gun si~ht s. bomb sights and a host of
medical instruments.
Demand w;:as so high lhut several cuHagc industries sprang up to

supply the government includin~ u during handful that took silk from
deadly black WldQws. because they don't stop spinning in winter as
many species do.
·
. In the l%0s, the Army. amnn@ i&gt;thcrs. hegan tn investigate the
chemical properties of s~ider silk ..seeking to develop synthetic 'superstrong lihers.
·
This laid the gmundwork for '"'carch now under way at Cornell
and several other univcrsiti~~ .
At Cornell . scientists arc looking ICJ understand how spider silk gels
its strength and dcvl s~. ways to ma" ·pwduce it 'oy transplanting the
genes for it into plants or mkrohcs ).hat will grow it in large volumes.
ScientiSts envision a new generation of industrial fibers for construction materials, light-weight. bulletproof fabrics, and artilicial
implants, tendons and even skin - all made from spider silk .

___:____,....,...-Community

TIM Com tualty Calendar is
ptt'" hd Sf a he Mrrin to - ·
. . . lf'OUpl w11111111 to
.., II 1 ad ap1eilll n'mtl. The
ell 11 t r II IICIC d 1111.-1 lo pro_ . .,.. or fHd nt1tm olany

•-e

.,.,.. . . . . . 11ft

prlafed • .,..,,

c•• .-ranteed

pel_.. Mil
be
.. .,.. a lpidlk ......... ol dayL

•

SWORDFISH ESCABECHE
2 pounds swordfish
Salt and black pepper
Flour to dust
one-half cup olive oil
.,,
4 bay leaves
I lemon , sliced
6 parsley spri~s
6 garlic cloves. peeled
2 la'l!c carrots, peeled and thinly
sliced
2 large onions
I teaspoon sweet paprika
three-fourths cup white vinegar ,.
three-fourths cup white wine ~'
Season the fish well with salt and
pepper. then dust lightly with llour. \
Heat the oil and when it is hot,
· add th.~ lish. Fr:y for 4 minutes on
each side until lightly golden.
Remove the fish and place 'in an
earthenware dish. Arrnnge the hay
leaves, lemon and parsley nn top.
Peel the onions, cut in half and
slice into line half-circles. Add the
whole .garlil· cloves, carrot ' and
onion to the remaining oliv'e oil and
fry on low heat for 10 minutes, until

~00~~~.

•

Add the paprika. vinegar and
· wine and allow to simmer for 5 min· ·

Scientists' also arc studying · rat
teeth able to gnaw through mct:ll:
crack-resistant walnut shells:
quick-healing rhino horns: and the
powerful mussels that glue themselves to docks and boats.
"We're still in the infancy
stages." said Randy Lewis. a pro· fcssor of molecular biology at the
University of Wyoming. "In most
' cao;cs. we're still trying to figure
. out what gives these materials their
. remarkable qualities." .
'· Spider silk ha• Jelinski pleasantly perplc.cd at tHis point. but she's
making headway. Using magnetic
resonance technology. similar to
' medical MRis. she has been ana- ·
lyzing the molecular structure of
the orb-weaver's sill.
A complex-folded protein. spi. der silk is made primarily of twn
amino acids. called glycine and alanine. Working with grJduate student Carl Michal and colleague
Alexandra Simmons. fmm DuPont
· Canada Inc .. Jelinski has lt&gt;und that
, the alanines arc arranged in two
1 ways:
, - In ci&lt;tremcly tiny .crystals
. that foni) molecular shc'Cis. like
rectangular plates.
. -And in more loosely arrang«l
crystalline conliguratiuns running
·in squiggly parallel lines. Picture
·' crimped hair pins.
So how docs this tmnslate into .
super !llrength and strc"h7
klinski think.• the hairpin.-likc
alanine lingers couple together the
cryital plates. When the material is
~ stretched. the kinked fingers take
up the strain.
One entails studying the chcm:
Bccausr: the.struclurcs in the silk
. are fucing in different directions. istry of.beeswax and the birds that

.,
''

Continued from page 7,
Nutritional analysis per serving :
Calories. 137: protein, 23 grams; fat,
0 grams; carbOhydrates, 5 grams:
cholesterol, 170 milligrams; sodium,
1,330 milligrams; percentage of
calories from fat, 0 percent. . ·
- Recipe from Rooftop Restaurant.
·

I(

'

TUESDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Ministerial Association community
Thanksgiving service, Tuesday,
Sacred Heart Church, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Rev. Peter· Tremblay of
Laurel Cli IT Free Methodist Church
to ~peak .

Jiven. a friend (ne- the spouee) :
does the collecting well in ad\'~Ke of the pany. To panhandle pes~s •
who have come with o &amp;ift is IOially ,
uncool -- or, more 10 the point, •
tacky .
Dear Readers: A major seven·
year study, according to the Amcri- '
can Hearl Association Journal,
found thai non-smokers married to '
smokers have about a 20 percent
higher rate of death from heart dis- ~­
ease. (Now will you quit?)

"Ill ..... ,...,
Mill can help ,YOCI, and you CMJ help , .
environment.

..

calendar----~

RACINE -- RACO. Tuesday.
6:30 p.m., Star Mill Park. Potluck
Thanksgiving \~inner and business
meeting.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -- Dress rehearsal
for .the Big Bend· Minstrel Assocation's Friday and Saturday night pro:

ductions. 8:10 p.m. to be held
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Meigs Junior
High School auditorium.
FRIDAY
PORTLAND -- Lebanon Township Trustees •. Friday; 7 p.m. at the
township building.

1-80():273-3386

'

•

'

I'Spllr.

I union. linely chopped

• ;. 1 &lt;~ ..

""~

Co.
'ell
We specialize in:
Reeldenllal
Commercial
New Home
Remodeling
Custom Design
'We treat your home like
our home'
Call61'4·949·2600
ask for Rick

otnsurscl

I

614-.-3470

Card of Th8nks
· Tl!t flmlly of Helan L.

'·

-ryofiFC

KIT 'N' CARLYLE®

Combe would like to
lh111k lhoH who unt
llow•r•, cards, tood,
phon• cella or
a•l•tad In •ny Wly.
Wt would aepec1111y
like to thank· Peator
Roy Hunter, Slater
J•n Kelly, Slater• ot
the , Full ooepal
Ughthouaa, Birchfield
FUI)Irll Home, EMS,.
Ohio State P1trol

9am·5pm •

Sundlly 1 pm • 5 pm
:Jru Coff~ df Cookju
lrui."'l ChistnUJS Sason

0
()

Appalachian
Chlmne~S•vlces
Ouattesa

' Ft~6Fumlce

CIMnlng
Aalncapa, Screen• &amp; Full
Line of Acceetarlel.
24

.

''TiiANK YOU"
We wish to Impart
to each of you our
heartfelt
appreciation that
Ia much 1tronger
than any words
can expntea. The
food, flowers,
phone calls, vleltB,
cards and prayers
let us know we
were surrounded
by people who
cared about ua in
ourtlmeof
uctneas. All of you
are responsible tor
leesenlng the pain
of our lou.
The Family of
Patricia
Houclallhelt

:J
I 1111111111111111
- 111111 I 1111111111111111111111111111111111111
''.
-- - - - ·----·--·· -L:

--------

-------------::
-

::

-----

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
2:00PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

---------------::
::
----

'

30

Pom~roy

2 Family Size .
1-ltem Pizzas·

$12.00
X-Large 18" Three
·Item Pizza $11.50
Umlte Free
Delivery Area.

992-6111

---,---News policy----~'

HOME DECORATING

In an .elTon to provide. our readership with current news, the Gallipolis '
Da1ly Tnbune and The Datly Scnllnel wrll not accept weddings aficr60 days:
from· the dale of the event.
·
All dub meetings and c~her nc ws articles in the society scctioo mllllt be • '
submilled within 30 day~ of •lccurrcncc.
·
:·

OPEN

"

i

RUTLAND,OH
Homegrown- eu.ruuy
Sheared Scotch &amp;: White
Pine 4' &amp; Up wltb 1 great
selection .,r IIU'I'!r lr!es.
. Call742•2143 or
742-2978
On Sale Nov 2flfll

BING'S
AUTO
REPAIR

'i

GIFt BASKETS FEATURING WATKINS AND
TUPPERWARE PRODUCTS.
UVETREES, WREATHS, CROSSES AND
POINSETTIAS BEGINNING NOVEMBER 23
' aMil.. Notlh of Siver Bridge on SA 7
11).6 u.F: I~ Sundly ·
· Phone 446 4530

MIKE BING
mo.pd. ~

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB GUN .-·
SHOOT FRIDAY,
NOV. 29,
6P.M.

Ohio

SLUG MATCH
FORKED RUN .
SPORTSMAN

DATELINE
The Girls of
your dreams

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

1-9()0-990-9330
Ext. 1553
.2.1111 per min.

vooe ...hleleo. SelllllQ parco . ....
-- ~

773·5033.

...

Top dollar- anl!quet, lurnlturi.
glass, china, clocks, gold, til~.

coins. walc:hes, estatea, . okls~Dnp
jars, old blue &amp; while dlshea, atd
wood bollet, milk bolllea, M~l
County Advertisement, Oab)'
Martin, 01ot·G92-7441 .
~

Wanlod To Buy Uoed Mobil'

l;lom••· &lt;;all: 61ot·448· 017~ '0r

304-CJ75-6Qf56,

I

~

,

WantU To Buy : Little Trkta
Kitchen Set, Workshop, Play.-

MIDDLEPORT
' et2-2772
a.tn.-3:30 p.m.

houle, Ponlbla Any Othlf Urrtt

Tyko Toyo, Plene Cal
5887.

ltl:epltiCIIIIII Wll••ws
Gill Ill

614·24!)'
j

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Diers&amp;
Wllllh•s

l:!~~·~~~IM!I~I•~•!•--~.JI 110

Help Wanted .

Potlllono. Pormantnt lvR time lor
clerklaorte,., Full Benefits. Foi
exam, application and salary ln!O
call:

(S30)9D8· 23SDE1l.3670.
lln&gt;Spm.
'

Easy Pay Auto
INSURANCE

AVON

We will work w~hln your budget.
Ph. 773-9173
FAX ,773-5881
108 Pomeroy Street
Mason, WV

Plastic Culvert·· Dual wall and Regular 8" lhiU 36'
4' S&amp;D • perl. • solid pipe
4" &amp; 6" Flex pipe
4' &amp; 6' Sch 35 pipe
'/a' &amp; '/.' C.P.V.C. pipe
I '/a' lhiU 4' Sch 40 pipe
'!.' &amp; t• 200 p.s.l. water pipe (100' rolls lhru 1,000' rolla)
'1.' U.L. approved Conduit
8~ Gravelass Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1' thru 2' - fittings - Regulators - RISem
Full assortment ol P.V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water llftlllQS
Full line ol Cistern, Septic &amp; Water slo~ge tanks

TREE SERVICE

Any C:&gt;r
Any Dr rv er
DU I &amp; SR·:'?

All Arias

l SOir le~

Avon Represen1arive1
needed . Earn money lor ch,ist'mas bins a1 nomt~at work. t-800ggz.e356 or 304·882-2645, Ind-.

Able

· D1scount~&gt; ·-

Alp,

Avon Chr111ma1 $8 -$15 IHr. NOMinimum Order. No Door -To •
Door, /Inventory. 1·800·738-Q181

Computc·r OLJotes
(6H) 9CJ2-6677

tntVIillftP,

P o m eroy

•

.I

Babraiuar needed starting Jan
111. 2 or 3 days a week, must ~
a non-smoke~. references ri;.
qui(Od. Con 304-67S.B1146.
'
Earn 1ooo:s weekly stuffing a~
velopes at home. Be your boss.
Start now. No experienu.. FrH
supplies into, no obligation;,
Sand S.A.S.E. to Nugget Un~
364·6, 101s1 u,ivlftiiY Btvd. Ot"

Pl~k up dlacarded

lflllllencea, battarfla,
11111nylllllale6
motor blocb.
llt4-192-4025 B11rH1

~FL326!7

t.

ANNOUN C EMENT S

005

MHI SomHnl SP,Kial From

Your Own Arta. 1·100~150·5050
Ext 7'331, t2lW Min. Must Be 18
Serv u 811-e45-8434.'

Real OUt~tlone, Atal Aniwara,

Real PsychiCI 1·100-484·\020
Ext 8178, t3.81 Min. Mult Be 18
SltW U 81G-&amp;45-1434.

Ollr Hun..,.ll
ttoUOW• sow 5nack Now .ca"ylllQ
DHr Slu_gl And AM 'lbur MUIJ:It

LM*ltl SUtiPIIK

Elder Ch01C&amp; Hama Hellth, .;
Vencor agency rapidly growing
meet the home c:are needs a1
senior adults is hiring Homtmak1
era and Personal Cafl Aides
lhe Mtlgt Couoly and Atheoo
County areas . Personal Care
Aides mu1t be cartlrled Homt
Heallh Aides or ceuilied NursinG
A81i111n11. Our Still II depend~,:
abla, flexible and ha1 a sincerii
dtaire to work with senior adUlts: .
We olftr 1 competitiye pa~ 1at~ri
mileage nttmburtament and be .
llit pac:kage. To apply con1a
Sandy Cisler, RN, Diracaor of Clint

laf

PaniGnlls

30 Amouncaments

leal Services. Elder Choice Ho~

Hoallh, "3 Loncuter Str•.•.~

Marieltl , OH 45750 or call &amp;loti

373·30811 or HI00-793-0380. ·
.•
General qflice, lighl 1yping, must
be 55 or older aM mee1 loco,..

H.
,...---I
lint~
Contact WV

()pan Daly

C:oll~l~14:.;311-::.;04::::14::.·

Top, Trim,
· Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

I

~·· 304-675·1429,

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

DUMP TRUCK

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt• sand

~

J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying s-1-

ALL OHIO

Authorized AGA Distributor ·
• Welding Supplies·• Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
SetviCes • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication ' Repair Welding
~Aluminum/Stainless • Tool Dre¥ing • Ornamental
Steps • Stairs, Railings, Patio Furniture, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots ol other stullll

TRUCKING
SERViCE

em~GalllpoNa.

'"AITN: Point Plt118nt• Poatll

Tuppers Plaine, Ohio
814-985:3813 or 614-667:6484

t49,057'

Trucka, 1890 Modolt Or NIWtl',
Smith Buick Poollac, IDOO Eall·

WilHam Safranek
· Attorney At Law ·
592-5025
.Athens,

6,

Cltan Late Model ·cars

5371RYAN PLACE

obilpllons and IIITIIIIge a fair distribution of assets.
Debton. ip bukrupccy may keep "exempt" propeny
for their penonal ute. This may include a car, a house,
ciOihcl, and houlehold goods.
foiilnformation Rcaardinl Bankruptcy contact:

Wanted to Buy

RlllQI, Pre·1f30 U.S. Cu"en ,
Slorling, EJc:: Ac:qul~dooo Jowollj
• M.T.S. Cain Shop. 151 SecG~
A&gt;oouo, Galllpollo, 814...,...21142. ,

&amp;
INSULATION·.

BANKRUPJ'CY can relieve a debtor of financial

compte"

Abaolule Top Dollar: All U.S.~•
ver And Gold Coinl, Proolat~,
Otemond&amp;, Antique Jewelry, G

Racine, Ohio ,
oRoplng •Wreaths
•Swagi
oGrave Blankets
•Artificial Poinsettia

,,,.,....

lime auctioneer.

90

SUE'S
GREENHOUSE

•s.oou,
. 949:2114

St. Rt. 7

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

lull

!

auction strvlct. Ucenatcl
186,0hia &amp; West VIrginia, 30l713-S7SS Or 304-773-5447.

SUtlimln. Mlllt be 18+
Touct.-tonePhone
PAOCALLCO.

ANGELS
LIGHTED BASKETS, WREATHS, SWAGS,
YARD ORNAMENTS, QUILT RACKS, PAINTED
CANS AND SAWS, DOG HOUSES, SHELVES.

G&amp;W PLASTICS AIID SUPPLY

R. L. HOLLOII

SUNDAt
DEC. 1,
11 A.M.

Qlolls Ollar .
31845 SA 325, l.anglwllla, Oh.

';.

f

CIRISIIW
IllES

Public Sale
r
and Auction
Rick Peareon Auction Compart.

Ext.1951

.

t

· 80

1 (900) 378 83181

WIIEI't

Ann~ts

CWI

HOUSE

SAT. NOV. 30, 9 AM·9 PM

.

4

atiVYDALE

:

Friday.

COUITRY?.

Open
Evenings and
Weekends
11mllllpd

CliRISTMAS in the COUNTRY

(614)

l.... &amp;W h ...... .

St. Rt. 7 &amp;33

•••

'

-

JUKEBOX
PIZZA

'

Fully lnaured
614-797-4491
8110'9011-3040

Card of Thanks

The . fsfl!lly of Wither Evant would like to
. thank -ryona for their flowers, food, cards
llld WOlds or comfort during our recant 1011.
We want to think the Hospice nui'ML Spacial
thanks to Dr. Witherell, Dr. M8nsflakl and the
wonderful nuraee at V...,.ns Memorial
HOipltal llld lltlfl. Rev. Lamar O'Brysnt for
hie consoling words, pallbe-., Ewing
~~ Home tor Its efficient service. May
God bins all who helped In any way.
·
Kdlryn Evant
David a Dabble Evans
-

Hour An~ng

Service
s.toty lnapectiono
Sonlor CHI:ran Dllcount

Clrd of Thanks

'

~.

CHRISTMAs TREES

l

All Yard Saltl Mutt Be Paid
Advance. Otadlint: 1:OOpm t
day belore lhe ad it 10 run, Su&amp;. day a Monday edition · 1 :oop)n

II RUSH
LIMIAUGH .

South ot
Tuppere
Plains on St.

BaskeiS '$7.95-$17.95

Christmas
Cactua ... $1.75or21$3
Cld TreeS ......... $8-$18
Small Holly Trees $2.5().
Wreaths.... $4.95-$9.95 •
Grave
BlankeJs .......... $19.95
Cemetary
Monument
·
Sprays ............. $18.95
• OPEN DAILY

Son, Lae Combs and
flmHy
Dllughtar, Dorothy
Gore 1nd flmlly
'

Poinsettia

I

Pomeroy,

Rt. 7
(614) 667·3413

(6 colol'8) $3-$5

•.m.

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

2Yt Mllea

CONNOLLY'S

Yard 5alll Mull Bo Paid o

1\dvanc:a. DEADLINE : 2:00 p. .
the day belort the ad Ia lo rU('I .
Sunday t&lt;llian • 2:00 J&gt;m. Fri~.
Mon•y edition - 10:00
S1;turclay.

(619) 645-8434.

1·800-291:5600
Pomeroy, Ohio

Now open for Christmas
Season
6 112' Poinsettias

Vases.............:... $9.95

Hcorta.

.
\
A program on creatmg angels was presented hy Janet Bulin at a recent
meeting ol' lh!' Meigs Cnunty, Churches of Christ held recently at the Rut-·
· land Church.
.
·
.
'
Bolin displayed different kinds of angels -- Sl,llnc made nl' macaroni,lacc
and shoulder pads. pthcrs with lace wings and trumpet vine hc&gt;dics, and then:
told how to make them.
•
It was noted that ofliccrs will he installcd at the Dec.' S meeting to he held
at thC Zton Church. The new officers arc Put Arnold. president: Ann Lam-:
hen, v1cc president: Kathryn Johnson, secretary; Marie Snyder. treasurer;:
Eleanor Hm&gt;ver, card lady. and Ida Murphy, news reported. .
c
The meeting opened with si.nging "fie Is So Precious In Me" and prayer:
~y Sabra Ash. Dcvolmns by Lmda B.ules mcluded "Beauty nl' the Lcavos" •
"Growth", and "Fro the Beauty of the Earth."
' ·;
Officers reports were given and plans were mude fc.- a.'group meeting in :
January. Followmg prayer hy Paula Pickens, refreshments were served by;
the host church.
'·

All birthd_ay• must be submillcd withi.n 42 day~ of the occurren.;e.
All matcnal suhmlltcd.for publication is subject to editina.
, '
'

,$ Constructio~

.

Phone.1!,141112-2735

Meigs Churches of
Christ construct angels ·

.

~~0--~

Umistone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top ~II, Fll,l Dirt

lnstltllatlon • SaMce

~LL

GOOD FOR THIS
HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE

j

Yard Sale

=:::::;=::::===:::;::
Gallipolis
1
&amp; VIcinity
i

$2.99/mln, 18+
Setv U .

a Free Estimate

614-992-4119
110 Court St

70

Ext. 6218

QUALITY
· WINDOW
SYSTEMS
Celt for Damonstretlon

l

1-900·526-5050

..

WICKS
HAULING

ofllfllgarlllors

.

' '

(Umt StOf1a.
LawRaln)

ofu~

11..

2 pnuni:ls ripe tomatoes, s'ktnnf\1
and seeded, or 28 ounces canned
tomatucs. with juice
two-thirds cup . gcMJd sherry or
Mnntilla wine
First. prepare the sauce: Fry ·
union very slowly in the 2 table- ,
spcHms olive nil, lclling .it soften and "
darken. Add the tomatoes and sim- .
.mer. stirrin~ occasicmally with a
spoon.' ~ntil ~the ~ucc. is reduced.
. . ~oak the ~read m !he lemon
JUice, then squec1c outug_htly. Cnmtun.~ ~~·~.a~l H.l the u\lhcr mgr~~~~nts '
(thiS Js easy m a I •KI .processor). '
Rnllmln halls tho Sll~ ol_lurgc mar- .•
hies. then roll them m hcatcn. c¥g:
Sh:tke m a plasuc b:tg c•mtajnmg
llnur. or roll on a llnurcd plate. until
lightly coated.
.
. .Heal the ml and fry the mealhalls
2 g;arlic clove~. minced
tn nn~ nr two pans, shakmg the pans
6 one-half-inch inch thick hone- cx:cnsmnally. SCI they roll over and
less pork loin chops
,
cc~&gt;k evenly. When they ale cooked, :.
6 thin slices Serrano ham or prh~ sur the sherry mto the sa~&lt;:. JlC&gt;U~
sc\utto (ahnut 2 ounces)
over the meatballs and b~tng to a
2 large eggs. lightly he:ttcn with 2 boll. Spear wtth 1o01hp1cks an&lt;J ·
teaspoons milk ·.·
.
serve. Serves 6-K a.~ a tapa.
' 1 cup (abou() plain dried hf.lad - N~tnlumal anal~sts per scrvi~g: "
crumbs
~·
Caloncs, 705. prmcm. 34 grams: lut.
olive nil (fur fryin~)
47 grams: carhohyd~atcs, 31 gr~ms;
Mi K parsley and garlic in a small cholesterol. 221 mtlhgrams: scK11um,
howl.
I. 139 m1lhgnims: rcrr.entagc .of .
Place pork hctwecn 2 sheets of calc'.'les !~~'"' 1'~1, 60 percent.
.
.
waxed paper. Using a mallet. pound
. "'"'~. Rec1pes from a Spantsh
pork In nne-fourth-inch thic~\ICSS. VIllage.
Cut each p&lt;&gt;rk cutlet into 5-by-3-

'

'

· BUDFORD'S

Acly Scotch or White Pine- $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weakends
Rt. 33 to Darwin, East on AI. 681, 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd., 1 1/2 miles to trea farm, Follow signs.
Dally 10 am til Dark
Nov. 29th thru Dec. 24th

~

.

Don Smith
oHtatPumpt

.

2' tahlc~p,uu.~~ ~&gt;l.i,~c ~&gt;i,l 1~l

I

REFRIGERATION
HEAnNG&amp;

'

•

Blocks 99.$%
Offered Exluelvely
by

Cut Your Own
Fresh CUVUve

985 4473

MEIGS

l

Are You SICk And llred
01 Being Single 7 Days
AWesk? Romance Is
Just A Healibeat Away!,

otUV Rays

~ CHRISTMAS TREES •

-Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop 6 Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES

COOLING

utcs. Take off the hc;ll, add one-third
cup water, and let cool.
Pour the cooled vinegar and vegetable mi.rurc over the lish and
marinate. refrigerated for at least 24
hours.
Reheat the lish just he fore scrving. Cut in bite-sized portions and
serve on a planer along with other
1apas Jtems. Serves Has a lapU.
Nutritional analysis per serving:
Calories. 338: protein. 25 grams; fat :',~
19 grams: carbohydrates. 16 gmms:
cholcslcrnl. 44 milligrams: sodium \
403 milligran\s: percent a~&lt; nf cain: .
ric,; from fat. 51 percent
'
_ Recipe lrom Rnnrtnp Rest:tU·I
rant.
"
ANI)ALUSIAN PORK ROLLS'"
2 t:thle&lt;p&lt;K&gt;ns minced fresh p:~r?.:
Icy

, 1

7/IIWn

'

2 slices of stale hrcad
nne-fourth cup lemon juice
I pound grounil pork or veal (i&gt;r ••
half and hall),
nne-li&gt;urih po~nd smoked ham, "
ground .
;,
nne-third cup· finely chopped
green olives
Finely grated zest of onc' half
lemon
nne-half teaspoon coarse salt
Pinch of cayenne
•
2 cgi:!S. hcatcn. for coating,
Flour for coating
nne-half tn two-thirds cup olive ~

.

~NewHoinea

1'llnHipt, Oft Change,
WU, Bulllng
Lang St., Rutland, Oh.
742-2135, Alii for Kip '

.:

DATE LINE

IHI
Ill RIPLACEMEII1' WINDOW
IECHliOLOIY
•HEAT MIRROR" patellted syst8111.

co•mumo11

• truck Plfnllng,
minor maclllnlcal

'

$10 &amp; Up
BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

fOil
IMFIEDIATE INITALLATIONI.

Rt.124 Rutland, Ohio 742·3051
OPEN NOV. 23-10 TO 9:00

101111 IISSILL

Body - " . C.r, truck .

(Tiny meatballs in red sherry ,

•

IUYERI

... _..

GAUGE

PELOT EN SALSA ROJA

~~~~.

"LAAIIO!--

MWeqylprMnt.

Hlgheet "R Value"

.
GIUESEI'S

'

inch rectangle. Top each with I ham
slice. Sprinkle with parsley mixture.
Starting at short end, roll up each
cutlet: secure with wnthpick.~. Dip '
into egg mixture. then coat wilh ,...
breadcrumbs.
··
Pour oil into deep mcdium '!ikillcc ~:
to depth of I inch and heat to 375
degrees. Add pork rolls and fry until' ,
golden and cooked thmugh. Drain
on paper towels. Cut mils cms~wisc ·'
into three-fourths-inch wide strips. .:
Nutritional analysis per serving: :; ·
Calorie~; , 571; protein, 27 grams; fat, ,.
46 grams; carbohydrates, 13 grams:
cholesterol. I87 milligrams: sodium.' ,
333 milligrams; percentage of cain- ;
rics from fat, 73 percent
From Bon Appetit magazine

sauce)

tvtl-10 OUAUFIED

· made from the sidewalls o1 scrap tires, ·
manufaclunld In 4 feet lengths with IDs ol13, 14
or 15' and an average OD ol 22'.
(lalger sizes also available.)
Never polluting, EPA approved, lmpei'VIous to
attacks from salt or other mlner&amp;ls, lasts lorevert
$5.00 per linear foot, F.O.B. Pomeroy, Ohio
Contact:.
Natton~ n.. Recycling Center

Send questio111 to Ann Landen, ·'
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. C~n·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, Lao Angeles, '
Calif. 90045

Wreaths - Swags &amp;
Grave Blankets

'9N t:HE SPOT I'IIWICtHQ

'PIIIIDniiATUon

Cf.JLVERT DRAINS

CHRISTMAS TREES

Air c. llhtllll . .
A.... Htat ......

.,......,_,.,.
........

Cover your moaquKo lnlasted.dralns
wfflt ,_.,.,lld:lndNtii'IICffolW

to mimic nature ·Tapas..... . .;. .__..__ _ __

--~

•.i:-&gt; . . :&lt;

• ..

my friend "Sue" for her husband. I just a few dollars will' do." My
hove known them for many years. fiance, embarrassed. aave her $20.
The pony had over 200 people, lats She wrote down our nllllMit and said
of aood fOQd, drinks and a live band. we'd be thanked.
We spent a lot of money on his
Everybody brought I' present for the
birthday gift I thought it was
,birthday boy.
After the dancing and eating, but eJUremely rude for Sue to ask for
before opening presents, Sue had additional donations. When she
someone go around with a little box mailed out the invitations. she
to collect money donations from the should have written, "No presents,
· guests. She said it was for her hus- please --a cash donation is pre·
band's dream gift, which would cost ferred."
$2,000.
Am I wrong• Is this the ,-.ew etiWhen this person came lo my quette? -- Party Guest on the East
fiance and me, I wls shocked to see Coast
how many people had put money
Dear Party Guest It's too bad
into the bo•. I said politely, " I'm your gutless fiance caved in to that
sorry, we cannot make a donation. totally boorish, ham-handed soliciWe brought a nice gift." She would- tation.
• 't leave us alone. She said, ."Oh.
Usually when a group gift is

QUide

871Hl857.

and mutt llvt·ln wv;
Job Service. 304 ~
'

HOME COMPUTER USER~
NEEDED. $45,000 Income pot
lontlal. 1-8DO·SI3· 4343 Ell. Bl
~8 Calf

Owner':
•Ron"lt Jon......,

For DeUllls.

1

HoPNWorlttrl Urgently NHd-stJ
Earn Weakly Pa~c:hac:kt From:
The Comfort Of VDur Own Homa.
frft llllliiL Sond Long, So~-Acl­
dreaaed, St•mptd Envelope TO;

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC•
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Addltlona • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

Mutt be 1Byre.

FREE ESTIMATES

8lfii.U
(8111) 845 8434

814-992·7643

s.P.o.e., Dtpt. o.o:r. P.o. aox 11.
-~ 01i04SUI.

40

Giveaway
Nelldtd 5 ladlta Ta Stll Avon,
10 Mootn Old Bneto,l14·448· Colll14 •• "M

11111.

GE Waatt.r,

ctoi1n't worl!;,

you

--~

•

•

�'

• ..... 10 • The Dally Senllnel'

The Dally Se 1llnel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Mlddftport, Ohio

NBA CroiiWOrcl Puzzle ·

BIUDOI:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

,.,

ACAOII

PJDUJ'P

....

41Dii Ill?

...................
1 CIT S

I

..,_

ALDER

... , . . _

u

l

lU-

I -In Clnulsallll • 1P a1 _ ,

tz ,. ...,
1111 41 Js 1 r llsM
tUI l p r ' t d - a g g , . 7

14-tiiNe 14
11 ...... - . MTI
liltl
11 ............... 17 -LfiiiUe
17 DsciiMI un11

-

~~--

20--- 22 Chllel'a...,.
" ~ 1flll

8 A

Get A HH.d Sl8rt On 'Chrlatmaa.
' Apply Today, Sltft Tomorrow.
11240 -·325 W.tldy. Coli LIM Toll

Very nice U85 r&lt;x70 with 2
bl.fhl. Large Island kitchtn witt\
polio door. Call 814-3115-9821 as.\

-

•

Allllll..:l2-7378.
Com~,.,. Users N..dtd. Wotk
own houra. $20k to ISOk/ yr 1·

lor .......

All lOll- -lillllQ In
lhll nu :11• • Mltect to

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

llt-Far-.u"""

100 311!1 7118 J:1508.

1193 u x70 2br, 2bath, lots of
extras, on 8110 acre, Crabcreek
Rd. 135,000. 304-875-3726 aher
5:30pm.

o1 111111-- Klltgol
to ad'41rlll '"any pi .... WICI,
••, d'f1ordlltllii*llllkH•
bam on~. at*lr, ..tg~on,

CrUIH Ship Jabal E•rn $300 I

11900 Wloly. Yoaiollound Pooltlon.
Hiring Both Men /Women. FrH
Rabm And Board. Will Train. C.H
1 Olya 407-875·2022 Ext. Ol52t

-01'-llili-.'·

People 10 - k during d- - -

No experience nace11ary.
, =r~=·d'a, Henderao.n
IOn.

:

POSTAL .10118
Start •1z.oe /Hr. For Exam And
APt&gt;tlcatlon lnla. Call 21D-76g.
·1301 En OH511 , 9 A.t.t .. g P.ll.
So.ti-Ffl.
.

-·ln-ollltlaw.
0 . . - aro h4M8I7I

Sal Of Cobra GoH Clube For Salo,

Darwin , Ohio. Two ualler hook-

Dartirrw Only..

ups, frn gaa, reasonable Mbttt

~IGNS AND LETTERS ; Largo

Partible Chanoaa.b4e

Sla:b · Wood Cut To Preferred
Ltn8tt" $35 Truck Lolid , Dellv·

-

. 614-258-1802.
Specl1i: New Septic Tanlt Aera-

310 Homes for sale

Jackson, Otio, 1·S00.537-9528.

Super Nintendo 8 Gamea • Controtters $150, Saga CD 2 Cantrollers 10 Games. S200, 814448-3200 After 4:30.

304-273-9773 .. 304-273-3052.

Surplus Army Camouttage Clorh·

lng, (lt'sulated eoveralls, brown
duck bibs $35). Sam ·somervUI8'1 by Sandyville Post _
Oifice,
·Frldly-Sunday Noon-5:00pm .
COlter days eall 304-273-5855.

RENTALS

Ventless gas heaters, keroltn&amp;
heaters &amp; wood stoves In stock.
~ Equipment 304-875:7421.

410 Houses fOr Rent
2 Bedroom Furnished House No
lnaida Pata, County Water Furnlohtd ..501Mo., Deposit I Ref.,..,... Rtq~red. Off S11oo Route
850, 814· 448-4111 Evenings,
814-2-45-0380.

c.rftld·Daycare PraYkler Wllhin
Gllltipolla City limil1, Has OpenRooift,

Exporlenctd, 814-

12xBO trailer, been ramoo·a•,.e••· 2 bedroom, 1 bath. For
Georgea Ponabl8 SIIWmiN, don't
. CeM 3)-4-875-5043.
hlul your IOQI to the mill jual call
304-4175-1957.
11it83 Schultz 14J:70 Wllh 7'x21'
EJCpando, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Bathl,
CA, Heat Pump, Lots Of Extraal
E"""lent Condloion, $14,900, Neg.

1340/Mo., Water Paid, Garage,
Oepo1lt References. 61o4·o446-

2A19.

814-2-'5-5988.

2566.

Burkhart Lane, 2 Bedrooms, With
Garage, $340, Oepoait Referenc-

Nice IWo bedroom apartment ;n
flDmerOW'. no pe11, 81-4·992·5858.

Chrloly'o Family Lfvillfl

1n Rulland: 4 bedrooms. CIA.
carpet, outbuilding, S400imo. plus
$-400 deposit, HUD accep~:ed , one
year lease, wcam now.
Call 814·992·4514 8am·11pm.

114-388-113112.

House tor sale or ren1: '2br, Park

Will lake care oi elderly lady in
1hl evenings in 1heir home or
purl. Poin1 Pteuan1 area only,

llilnlllii'-Fndty. 304-4175-5413.
FI'JAN CIAL

3 bidrCJ!Im, 2
$221/ma, f11te

Mall: 2 Room And Bath,

3 Bedroom Gas Furnact, CA', 4
Miles From Holzer Hoaptial, NO
Pets, Reference &amp; Oepoail Required, $320/Mo., 304-576-2438.

es, 513-574-2539.

, Will Do Houaeclaaning, Reaeon....~... Exeetlenr Aelet.ncesf

lafa~ene

Drive. 1325tmo. :Ki4-875-6753.

1n Middleport- 3 bedrooms, two
credit. 1-800- baths, overtooklno .river, remo deled, S425tmo. plus utilities and
depoait, will land conlrac:t, 8U1187-14X80 w/Giamour bath . 992-7136.
1179/mci, fnn dtUvery I Hl·up, 7:::-"":'::-:--::--:-:---onlv •• Oa~ WctOCI Homes, Nitro
'IN. 304- 'ISS-~
.

N. 3rd . Ave Middleporl, OH . 2
Bedroom, furnished apt Deposit
&amp; references requ ired. 30-4·882·

One bedroom apartment in Pt.
Pleasant 814-982·5858.

One Bedroom Effi!=iency Apartment First Avenue S2501Uo., Deposit, Referer;_as, 61 -4~-4-41.0400.
One bedroom furnished apart·
ment in Middleporl, call 614· 446·
3091 , 614·882-2178 or 81HK12-

5304 oi 814-992-5231 .

One bedroom, furnished, exua'
nice wilh private entrance In Mid·
dleport. Cf!ll 61 .. ·354-4084 and
leave rneaaage.

4 ora- w•~ Litde Tyke work1hop, other Llnle 'fi'Ke toy1,' .Ill by

bed, changing table, llroller,

....... lOWing. 304-875-4548.

Boots BJ" Redwing, Chippewa,
Rockr. Tony Lama. Guaranteed
loweat Pr~es AI Sh:Mt Cafe, Gai"poli&amp;

Computer prmter, Cilizen GSX200, color printer, SSO; Sura litestyles b'ead.mill, very goad condl·
lion, $100;·81-4-887-3240 attar
Spm.
Concrlle I Plallic Septic Tanks,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
Evan• Enterprises, Jackson, OH

004-937-2018; .

TRANSPORTATION

condi·

'92 Ford Taurus, o4 doOI. white, air,
tilt, cruise, 73,000&lt;. milts; '8•
Toyota, 4WO, 89,000 mil"' runs

1979 Jeep CJ-5, good cond. 304·
895-3021 aflor Spm.

560

Earn Christmas. Hoar • Tupperware demonatration. Extra girts.
Call 1-IIOO-e84- 1782 S.C. 2779.

2 Male, 7wks, lull blooded, Oo·
berman's, wormed, 1St shots.

E*trlc typewritlf, 2 LitUe Tyke
swings, 2 wood burner stoves,

9~

High Erflclency Furnace.

Pets fo~.sa1e

$100. 304-675-4508.
6 Male, Sheltles (Miniature Col·

lita) e wkt, full blooded, no .PBpert, vel checked, 111 sholt,

$100eoL 304-875-2207.
A Groom Shop

~Pet

Grooming.

1984 CheVy Chevene 89,000
Miles, New Paint Looks &amp; Runs
Great! $750, 614-446-374e.
t985
Cadli[J'c
Fl.twood
BrouQhani EXcellent Cohdltlon.
Power Windows , Power Door
locks, AM/FM Cassette, Tilt,
Cruise, Air, Power Seats $1,800
814-441 -1975 Oaylime, 81-4-2450464 EYOr1ingo.

1985 Oldo 98 Regency PW, POL,
PS, 90K Acrual Miles, $2,800,
614·2-45-5887.
.

Flnta1 Strling Salon Is Sealting
'Partnership Many Opportunities

Good Loc:111ion, Tired Of Worlting
Fcw Someorw Elae? 8a '~bur Own
·-I61+311Hl812Fcw ,Details.

220 Money to Loan

~ao,meheeet ~.. 0 0°kLi11x01a~l~ rboamtoh..
11

1

11 7

2

1

•deled, block,
' .. •lepl,
•
'
central
ale,AEOUCE013Q4..a75-6.197.

tiaa.
aho&lt; .

2 Bedroom Mobile Home, No
Pets. S2251Mo., Includes Water,
S100 Deposit. References, 614446-3617. ·

Llmlttd Ofltrl 11117 doubltwldt, · :-::-:--:-:-:-:-:-:-:---::-3br, 2bath, 11788 down, $27&amp;/ 2· Bedroom Mobile Home, Tota l
month. Frttt dell..ry a 1etup. Eie&lt;•~. No Peos, 6 1&lt;-388-9:l26.

Only It Oakwood Homes, Nitro 2 Bedroom Mobile Home Close
WV.304-755-5885.
To Gallipolis, S2751Mo., Includes
SOUTHERN OHIO
UotMit Homtt fcl, Sale: Big Ytlr Water, S200 Deposit References,
. . , _99 IINDVSTRY
End St1t- on Prograaa • Saw 814-446-8605.
1•500 On ~ny PMw 1888 Single :For o•lalll, Conlut: Th• lit2-:B:-,-d-ro_o_m_H_a.-le-r,-lu-rn-,-,h-e-d,
.,~Economic Dft'•lopment Sacdon And 11 •000 On Any New washer &amp; dryer. al e, $250 /mo ..
ClfpcnliOn In $Ouf\ Point. Chit ,
1007 Sin81• Section In Sloc:k. deposut &amp; references. 304 . 675 _
AM For: Lou Am Weldin Or
.Save Thoutands On Remaining 4874 .
Secuonal Homea In Stock. Fi·
Atrblr~s::i-:: ~ '383&amp;0r nancl!'lg Available, Frenel'l Cil~ 2 Bedroom trailer, ~ou pav utiliHom"es • Gallipolia, OH 614-4-46· ties, $tOO deposil, no pers. 304-

L~~::'ErFL~

*

1

230 Professional

11340·

675-2535.

Services
UUST .SELL 1081 1o4x70 with fire- 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Acre &amp; 112
:-:-:-::;~::-::;-:::::-:;:;--:;;:::;:-·1 piece. Need to lOll fall. Call RE- $325/t.to., Deposio Required, 51 3-

HARTS IIASDNAAY • .lock,
-·--t&lt;,30yttrtex~ ,.. ...,.bit ratH. SO.·
•5-31511 altetl1)()pm. no

lrftlllotiiBIG. W\f-.021:!08

lob to

1 Bedroom Allnc:h, 3 Bllh1, Full
.......,.!, Garage, Gao Hut,
Ft 1' 11. PooL Large Lot. Aoure
.... City SCttoolo. teo.soo 614..,7438(£•*1111!'
3 81 f OD.,_, 1 Batl, Kl~h«&lt; Ap~ Atu'lcdv• Interior, Full

.

ea-~ 1

~~~~:Sa~~~~

~

I

es. oeposii
.Required,
614 --44661-4-256-6251
.
6172,

450

Fumlshed
Rooms

New
1•x70 ttwee bedroom.
Include&amp; e monthl FREE lot ,.nc.
Or1ly $185.57 per rno(lh witli $995

Circle Molel 1 New Ownenhlp,
Newly Remod81ed, Etflc:lency
~. HBO, Cintmatt, Sltowtimo,
Wttklr. Monlltly ·Attn. 814-"*
2501, 614-3117-Git12.

lor rent • weak or monlh.
Starbng at $120/mo_GlU61 Hotel.
814-4-48-9580.

AKC Atll Garman Shoophard pupplea, 8 W'lfl(t old, 2-mate&amp;, 1·temale, rirtt 1hat1 &amp; wormed. 30-t-

or 304-675-5053.
Firewood lor sale. $35 toad. split,

··~ -

-304-8115-3292.

Hold Till Chriltmas 814-448·

0229.
For Salt: Elecuic Stove And
Standard Size Relrigtrator, 175

3703.

5291 .

Freezer 22 c:ubic upright. sell defrost, $225 ; studfed snow tires on
rima, P20$1751U, $25 each; TV
25• ftoqr cabihel,. S100; TV tower
top, 1 -lion I hinged bottom, afl

AKC R8glsterad Engliat} Springff
Spaniel Puppies, Black/White,
Champion Bloodlines, 3 Males

.

....

,.

Good Sola &amp; Chain. Uvinu Fmom
Chairs, Swivel Rocker, Good
Electric: Cook Srcwes • Pc. Bedroom Suire&amp;, 200 Ga1ton Fuel Oil
Tank, FueJ Oil Stoves, Dfttaar&amp;,

AKC Registered Uinl Dachshund
Puppitl, 1 II Sholl And Wormed,
e1•-388-9194.
~ustrallan

CFA Registered Persinan l&lt;inena,
$200. With Breeding Rights I

460 Space lor Rent

18M Compular I prifll• $500. Mi·
crosoft WOf'ks and other, tofrware.

ho~

SilH for ttnt, call 1·

Wanltd to rent ~=·
car ln. Coil304-87
.

490

to stDI't

For Lease

R•llll/commt~ace, prime
loc:lldon. WIH r
to suit ten-

304-875-5040.

JET

,

~RATION~$
.
Repolred, __ &amp; RlbuN1 In StOCk.
C.U Ron Evano. 1-800-537-g528,

HouHhold

4411-5. .

~tt. Phont :

614-258-8107

AKC Coc~er Pups, While, Burr
Spotl, Shots, Worff!ed, Tails

~:;:;d;lf.t:::~~:C.361~~~:::

8100.

.

Cock• Spaniel pupplea, 2 biK'kl

Lift Chtlro, Eltctrlc WhMfcl1alr~

PAtllfiAR .
-Saililloo Sylltl!ll, No OCIUII&gt;n*W
to lt!JJI lor mora lriformotlon cal :
1-81J0.754-1831 Ol1lor now. gtF

one rr.. rnonlh or ..CM:h•nu
and f!AIIZI

Peta Plus, Sliver Bridge Plaza .
11~ 011 Ewerr Thing. Ewerr Dayl)
814-4"'1.0770.
Poodle puppl••- tncupa, whl1e;
1oy1, bl1ck ; 1110 mini1ture
Sc:hn•uzera, AKC, sl'lott and
-mod, chtmplon - n t ; 614687-3&gt;104.
Prlct -oed 55'· live __, nice
Purebred Sibtri1n Hu1ky pup~
pie1, white, bl1cks, grays., pretty
m•ska; 1110 Pur•br•d Cocker

Spaniol blonde molt puppy, tall
dono; an 10 - · old, VOocf w!llt
Ctllldrtn, and wormed, $80/ea.,
814-1112·5144.

t5t4.

_.....,~.~~,.,_ ,

teoo

A•~,•rOM Balli.
W.A.C. e., Teon-. 1-«10-

1• ....

....... ~···---·

llc:hufl 12185. flllr cond.. 21or. r•
klgtrator,
- ' 2 window ... , "'"'""·
t2.IOO
firm·
304-4175-3000.

.......,.···- ...

ller:Uonal Ho ... 60JZ4 3 SR
hlh, 2 LR't, On Rented Lol,

....... -

.. _

, 1 ' 1/f "''"· , -

llill\,

l!iali

..... 2

...,.,

' ur~w~ntroom...,..

.......:~--olloiiA

7:aa,nt .. llltlt

,..,.1111-

-

1988 Nissan 'Puiaar , new lirts,
brakes , e~r:hliusl, auto, ac,
$2,000. 000. 30+675-5332
1968 Nissan Pulsar, t-topt, $100;
ltaf fib•rotatis to~tpar for shari
bed Ranger, 1125;81-4-2-47-2961 .
1986 Olds Delia 88; 1979 Dodge
Van; 198• Ford Rang&amp;f, AU A·l
Shape, 61o4·446·9S38, 8U·387·
0544.
1988 Ranger 4x4 V-8, Manuel
Hubs, S Speed, With Extras! 814-

•46 2588

(

'!

Woot

Nonh

•·•
2•

38

Pass

..

IF

11

4
hlghlsldl

21 ACIIwe
Laltchlllll

........

23 .........
24 w. eo.t aal•

21 Todhplltl
IIOidsr
bNotflllae

Eaol

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

=~~·
not

~·

308ullurbMIIa'a

,·=pride

33--31 Aullior

VoMsglll

41 Hlippllll
43Mae •

45=~

'
By Phillip Ald~r

45 Dec. holiday

$U(,GfSS ,UNf

I~

lltY FAMILY.
BUT IT IIEVfll
.
QUITe
OVti(TOO~

ME.

sharp, $8,000, 614-1112-8551 a1!4r

8pm.

,.

. THE BORN LOSER
(:).;WI'S, Tl\l~ "'
~f&gt;\ENT~

600f.. CN l..OI-I0
o::J'IIJUC:rn

!

L£T'~

PUT OU~

...

~OC~D~

TO TNJ(. I'DJUI

I~

\)1~

. Tl\1~!

304-1182-2511.

TAAT~ WH~T

:;rnqro TIE
I,.JI'«-E. TJ.II~

Muat Sell 1&amp;81 Dodge -Dakota
4x4 Sport 3 inch body lh, Oudlne
AlurT!inum Wheela on Gooj:JY•ar
Wanglers, Roll Bar wlt11 lights
SUnroof, Sun Shield, Cruise Con·
trol, Air, Till. to many.-~~~· to
RunS Great S8150 ; m~iP,-ea th
appreciate 814·441 -1975

-me. FI~T

~

M.

Motorcycles

740

1988 Honda TRX300 2 WD Now
Tires, N~e$~500, 614-387-G458.
1989· 4-Wheeler, 350 Yahama
moloA ulilily lype, good cond,

In M'arch i993, I reviewed a soft·
ware.packagealled Bridge Master. It
bas been rewritten for Windows (ver.slon·S.I or higher) and exira deals
added. The A-Series. that I reviewed
contains 180 single-dummy problems .
You play the declarer's and dummy's
canis while the computer manages the
defenders' hands . The Infuriating
thing is that you cannot get a break.
Suppose you have a two-way ftnesse
for the spade queen. You take it one
way - wrong; the finesse loses and
' )'ou go down. Replaying the deal, you
· take the finesse the other way wrong; that finesse loses too! You
shouldn't be taking the finesse either
way. -Instead, you should be endplaylng an oppoltenl to lead a spade for
you.
The deals range from easy to
fiendish. In this one, how would you
play in three no-trump after a spade
lead by West?
You have six top tricks : three
spades, two hearts and one diamond.If East has the diamond king, you can
take that finesse &lt;three times if necessary) to get home. But if West has the
king, he will switch to hearts, removing one otdummy's key entries.
The correct play is a club at trick
two. II the defenders duck tl)e trick,
you turn to diamonds, guaranteeing
nine tricks . However, if a defender .
wins the firet club, you can ,establlsh ,
and run jlummy'e •uit, getting 'home
with an overtrick.
To order, send US ~.95 (or $29.95 if
you own the earlier DOS version) lo
Bridge Base Inc., 15 Lillian Street, -o
Toronto, Ontario MtS 2!17, Canada; or '
call (416) 322-8316 for further details.

45

lhlo

one ot
Slm.,.-

488Gb
50 HelliiH .

51

Ct...t""

52 Agllila

!I&amp;Tiie-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campo•

~Cipher~-~ from q.IOI II w by l.mout~. Pllt .nd P"Mfll
Each ietWf In the cillt* .-ndlo for.,.,._, Toa.y'a cU.,· F . . . . L

•0

v

V M L

A X J. L

c· PM. F

0 p

M

CPMFOYL,
0 Y L

oa

N X X B.

y X

DKY

VKAG,

OEUPEY

VKAG

NOKBPJJP

DPYYPC.'

y X

YGOEN

UPCSO.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "When you win, nothing huns." - Joe Namath.
"A racetrack is a place wtlere Windows clean people.· -' Danny Thomas.

....

'::~:~~~' · S&lt;c:\\.clllA-~~~s· ••••
- - - - - Ultt4 loy ClAY I. POUM __;;...__ _
_
0 lour

ocramblocl -.11 below to form four words.

KWE ,CRI

I I I 15

..
·'

'
•

I

r--=::-::-:~..., ..

I
I
I 1 I I' I I e
NA P CI

I~

'One of the biygesi drawbaqlsofprogress, the old gent
_
.
')) told his rain soaked grandson,
.---:-:--~~---~..,·is that you can't warm your
W A B M 0 N feet on a---------.'

, I' I I I' : :

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessorl.e11 .

'•
'"

LEEDVI

1~ Honda Four Trax 4~~:-4 green,
exceUent crondilion. many e~etra1.
$4,400. 304-675-1756 or 304 -6753840.

''
'
.,

lecmanoe · letters of the

II y
l

q
1

Camplolo _lho ch""kle qua!ed .
~-~,.___.__...._.._,_.._.,
, ....o..-~.
bv filling tn the mt111ng words
- ·
you develop from otop No. 3 below. .

,r

8

Budget Price Trinamiuiont,
Used /Rebuilt, All Types, Over
10,000 TransmiUions, Clutch••
Ftrwheels, Qyerhual Kits, 814:

•:.

i

245-5877

Ford Ttucll Frames And Body
Parts, 90's Vintage Cab Parts, 2
New Coral Springs, Baclt Glas1
Eoc. Also, 1995 CObno Hood, R. S.
F. D. R. , 01her Misc. La1e Model
Parts, Slight Damage, Take All,
As Ia 50% OH list, £11•·388:9181
leave Messaoe.

II I'

I' I' I' I'

UNSCRAMBLE FORI

ANSWER

I' I' I

. '1

'

II

SCUM LITS ANSWI~

Indigo • Offen • IMvng • Parody • IN a FOG
waa a very boastful fellow until
another friend told htm that, 'He who bloW&amp; his own horn .
IS usuallv IN a FOG.'
.
A ~e roomrn_ate

1-----=--- - -- ."

New ,gas tanks , 1 ton lruclt
wheels &amp; radiators. D &amp; R Auto ~
Ripley, WV. 30-4 -:,.72-~933 or 1;:

1

1

·
·
1989 Mercury Topaz GS, 100k . 800~273-9329.
milt&amp;, automatic, ale, amlfm C:lll·
sene, very wall maintained, eteefSERVICES
lent Interior, $1050, 814-lltl).23t1
19&amp;2 Oo.dge Sh1dow Automatic, ·
Air, Rear Spoiler 05,000 Mllea.

810

$3,700 080 814-258-6340, 614258-8467. .
1092 Gao More Good Condioion.
5 Speed, AMtFii CaoHtlt,
$~100. 61+258-0725.
HUM) Geo Storm, 1081!1 Cougar,
Both Runs Good, S'ome Paint

Hollie
· Improvements

.51-!E WAVES AT 'fOU, AND
'1'01! WAVE BACK ..

BASEMENT
WATERf'ROOFING
UnCGnditional litatime 8Utrlnhta .

SUT IT'S HER
6RANDMOTI-IER .. ·

Local reference• lurnished. Es- ~

tablisha&lt;l 1975 . Call (114) u8- 4
0870 Or 1·800 ·287·0576. Rogers ;
Waterproofing.

Work Needed, $1,550 Each 080
614·256-1252, 814·258-1 738.
1993 Camaro, ·reef, au10, V-8, fUlly
loaded, lint•d windows. many
e~etrill, 31.200 mile&amp;; showroom

cond. S12.300 OBD. 304 -8753087.

. .
1&amp;93 Chtvy C'avaller 4 Doors,
~lr, Automtlc, AMIFM St•rto,
Anti-Look Brakitt, New Banery,
Excellent Condition, f3.H5, 814·

379-2887.

1m For&lt;IEocort LX, 4 -·automltlc, 4111 miles, IICl, amftm
CIIHtle, $3870, (PIIIIflQtr lide
nftda point), 614-94g·2311 dlyl
or814-114g.2844 Ml1lngo.

1gg5 Mopoo Corio LS, Shtiwaod
Grotn, Rear Spoiler, Loaded, AMI

FM ClsMne, Cloth SHit, 34,000

llilea '15,800,
614-245-5824.

81~ · 441 ·0753 ,

Appliance

Part&amp;

And

~lc•:

All

Name Brands Over 25 V..rs Ex- '
perlence All Work Guaranteed, :
Fr•nch City Maytag, 814·4141· i

7795.
I_
cC'C&amp;Cc-~G~e-n-en
__I __
H_om
-o---ll-a-1~- :
tenence- Palnling, vinyl siding,
carpenlry, doors. windows, bltht.
mobil• hom&amp; repeif and mote. For
tree eatimata can Chtt, 411•·882-

8323.
CotUna Conttruclion- bultdlng ~
remodeling, OYtt 10 ye~~rs UJ*i.
tnce. FrH es11ma1e1, I ••·002-

11110.

HanQ,

DRYWALL
finish, repoir.

Cetlrnga ttxturtd, ptUitf repair.

Call Tom 304-475·41M. 20 yoorl .
-itl~e.

Ron'a TV Sarvlct, apatlallllng In
Zenltli alu Mrl!f&lt;l"' moot olltr
lt&lt;aioda . Houoo etlll, 1·-1117·
41 Chevr. 2 dr. Std1n, goed OCJ'1!, wv :J04.671-2al.
lhapo, U ,!IOO ; 18 Grand Pilr, 2
do., io•to, nice, u ,gso. 2 la'lle
Electrlcallnd
show caHo, good shape, 614Rlfr"'trltlon
-11Mior61..._1138.
,.

~STRO·ORAPH

·-

stu11ers lor ill algOl of the zodiaC. Mall S2

..

GEMINI (lily 21-Junt 20) II you ha..
illocatad your monlhly budge! properly,'
you attould tleve a .,.!I ourplua 111il will
-enable you to buy e lwwry ~em you've
- f o r along time.
CANCEII(June It ..July~) II you don'
come out of your thelllodliy, you m91t
foe I reatlesa. However. lfMnding lime
wllh active frlenda could pul you in a
hippy mood.
LEO (July 2S·Aug. 22) Condition&amp; In
general w1n be l~bli ,IOdiy, and you
mlghl get oeveral excltlllg opportu~• ·

for tach and SASE 10 Astro-Graph, c/o
IIIII newspoper, P.O. Sox 1758, Murray
Hll Slallon, NIW YOlk, NY 10158. ,_.
•
-you dMifeclzodiae ligna.
BERNICE
. CAPRICORN (1180. :12-Jin, 11) People
wtoo - - you lor the find tocliy will
BEDEOSOL . bt
lm\.ussad. Thera iluttona P*ibillty that • ·,_ acqualnlanCi mlgltl-e c:lOH lrtind.
AOUf'IIIUI (Jan. 10•''"· 11)
Assiglonilnla you COITIPISII todiy wll nor
· only ~ you a atranQ ..,... of - ~. lf1ey wiiiiiiO lhil . . .!rom an unt"ffldad - ·
YIIIQO (Aug. ll-lepl. 22) H will brto
c:lal .... iltWiillon- ' '
PIICII (M. liD 11..-oll liD) You will til your edvant•g• 10 mingle with lrilncla
much moow j)OIIUiar will! your callssogolil lodiy, eapecially Wyou 1r1 unan•chad
W«&lt;riiiddly, Nov. 'IJ, 1111111
.,., you,tNrtle. Todly lliia lscl pmifllly. Mlmbtrl of the oppoalle ...
illliia wil find you spp II ling.
'
()pptnrnltloe 10 81111 addMiorilf ... wlfl biCOIIil .-.tiO )'OU .
be fMIIIIy evallellle In File )'Hr eheltd . A11111 (lllraiii1-Aprl 11) Do nolldK IJIIIA (Sept. ·114c1. U) Tocliy )'OU will
Its bil M, ,OU will , _ to worlc OWl til h!' lor othera 10 mekt lht lociAl orrango· bt In tuni wltlt lrllnds incl ~
Flllllll toda~· They will look 10 you to Who r.eve clout and tnfl...nce . You will
·~--...,...
lllllm'AIIUI (Nov, u-Dell. 11) T1110 ' 001111 up wtttla pa.. or ewntlhil ~ ...... oppoo1tjnitill
le¥018.
ICORPIO (Oat. 14 No•. 22) You might
JFicrple WhO ltlve your lnterMt ar - ... il'flll'.
,lillll ,.. wor1c on your bthlll bthlnd "' TAUIIUI (April II Map 101 Your lldll - g o o d -lnlm e -~~~­
. . , . ....,••tiOweuar, nellher pereon aa a noadlaiOI l!llglll be NqUinrd IOdir to today. Chicl&lt; your !NIIrolt llncln 1 ago
• b e - al . . btill'a lflolla, Mn- .wid an 111 Clllon bet ssn 111110 ptOIFia SINioe hqulnlly. and lllll&lt;t an a11ort 1o
0"1!11 llltdfOIIona lor lhl year aheld . you like ICMI'Y· You wtM kOOIII ho\1110 rwiUm ill calla."'
·- k • wonderful Ch!iatmaa &amp;locking · oool ClOWn hOlhillll.
...

to-·

Regfotortd AKC Bt1111 Pup1,' I

-Old, 1100, 814 41111174.

Musical

lnltrumenta

:814 .... 3147.

'IWo---lnllt1011, UIOO or rtnl lor UZ5mto.

•AU.~.......
~7111.

•

tOArclll--

Bigger and ~er

POPPIES

67 Chevy Scottadalt 112 ton 4x4.
new tires a,
rims, too many extra&amp; to list. Vf!!l'1

760

IIIVIII , . . Y fiOIIO'IIITY,
..,.-.,
m

11111,

• 8lllsr nul
7 lllocldng

110 Wltldllow•

Opening lead: a 9

350, auto, cruiae, tilt,

1988 Mercury Grand Uarquis •
Door, E~ecellenl Condidon, Garage.
Kept, 84,000 Miles, Ahti Theft
Sys!lm. 614:446-3775.

Alii ..... DaorloL

Cl! Ill I I $4001'MO.. Dllpoait,
llsli
lt4&lt;141-.

NEW

$23, ~. ~675-5332.

$2,500.'304-875-2074.

whitt malta. $50ea. 304- 773-

5078.
Slalr Llltt, Van lll1s1 Scoolars,
Ntw/UHCI, Bowmen't Ham 1 Clrt.

.c
....
·-lly

---

11!:':13 . . .

clays or 814-949-2844 Mr'Ongo.

Grubb'a Piana - tuning &amp; rapaira.
Problorno? Nttd Tuned? Call tho
piano Or. 81 ...40-4525

Good.

year old otidl"', ,21,000 090,

Wormed S225, 614·448·8851,

Sleepinq rooms wi th cooking.
Also tra1itr space on river_ All
hoo~-ups . Call 8ftar 2:00 p.m.,
304-773-5851, Ma.r:waWV.

510

Four bellllroom hou••, OM out·
tou1o11n1. 1+.,.. olland, e.r.!r, 112

Registered Glden Retriever
Pups, 5 Wlteks Ut Shots &amp;

81o4..f48-2Se.

r.1ERCHANDISE

'

.

5182.

htt! po1119o

'

Leh. 304-875-7071 .
~KC

Golf Carll Fi;lr s·ala. 304-675·

able. Four thou11nd (4,000)
squ1re feel of wa'thou" space
a¥ailable. Sarioua inquire&amp; call

khchen applla as. brMzeMW, 1
..r 11raee. fuN bt-~ nice
....
. . . .. tooopllaf
end - ·
In,._.,,
, 414· Dg2-3t1g
or

AKC ragialered Dalmatian puppkls, raady' for Christmas, sholl,

Each Or $100 For Both. 614-446- vel checlted . S200ea. 30'-4·773·

(304)875-6774, • -

3-4 - - hoYM,

875-4288.

AKC Registered Chocolate lab
Pups, Ready In 2 Weeks, But

ant OW. 5.0!10 oquaro IHt avail- 614-448-7283.

M71.

5!46.

ChHI Of 0-1. 614·379·2720
Alter 8 P.ll.

Mobile

Apartrnants
for Rent

Fire wood for sale. 304-875·1937

-6308, 1-$)0-291-(1098.

Sheptlerd Puppies,
Farm Raised Working Dogs,
Several Colart Available, 814 -

470 Wanted to Rent

440

wMhint markings. $200. 61 4·886·

$50; 814-992-7173.

800-837-3238.

N~t 1 112 Story House, With
lulldinQ, 32.1 Acres, loc•tlon
State A-o ut• 7 Soulh e1•· 25e-

•u•

""'"Itt

Mobile Home and Lot for Rent

Nice 2 Bedrooma, S2251Mo., 8
Mi1e!l. Dowh 218, Nice , Referenc-

s•oo

area has Iota of room. At
per
wKh uUiilleo lndudoil. A
depo1it ot $400 It required. For
more information call 814-843·
5343 and 1eove meaaage.

Rao~s

,_

.,.

shower, large matter bedroom

with a working fireplace. li¥ing

Green Terrace S2651M o.. No
Pe t s. 3 Reference s, 614·446'0737.

Cor Ga- - .. Croll 1-800-837-3238.
,.. .. Ntw Vinyl Siding &amp; Hoot
pymp, City Schooll, 614·441 ·

llrtlirof-

appllancu Nice batli with largo

New 14X80 Only makt 2 pay·
menta I mowe-in, no payment arler 4 J'Birl, rree set-up &amp; dtliv-

NEW 1117 U WIDE 2 lED· 8"·4411-1279

31 o ttomn tor sa1e

"'Itt

574-2539.

ROOMS t 15.225 Fre• OtliYtry
Sat·UP No Pay'mtntt Until febru·
15187. 1-1()0.251·5070.

noor apartment

in quiet auuoundln8! localed
three mil" tram lhe Rau&amp;illlllload
Rito:lie 1!"'111&amp; In Ohio. Camptotaly
lurnlohed
wolhor, dryer, clislowalhor and large kltcheil wilt all

GINA ot814-3115-2434.

.,.,. 304-'ISS-5885.

REAL ESTATE

Vtry ,;ee ground

Warranty All Parts. liletlme Warranly On Heal Exchanger 8U·

BRAND-

Asking $7,800 . (Below book val-

1981 Buick Ctnwry V8 "I A&gt;wer,
$600 080; •oo L:ncoln Welder,
$300, 614-379-2506.

80.000 BTU -$785; 80,000 BTU • Fe•tu,lng Hydro Bath. Don
Twin Rivers Tower. now accepting $885; 100,000 STU -$995. The Sheers. 373 Glcir;es Creek Rd.
apptlcaliono tot 1br. HUO oublid- Above Price&amp; Are For Furnai:e 814-440-0231 .
1088 Cougar, excellent condition,
ized apt. tor elderly and handl· Only. Free Eallmate To Install
Furnace, Duct Work, Etc. S Year AK.C Boxers, lawn, black mask call 614-992-3244,
capped. EOH 304-4175-8879.
bedroom apt, k, d&lt;,
plus utili ·
Call

37Long~

~ -2

Paaa

STRVTTlN'
IN NOW

'1991 Dodge Caravan LE, load&amp;d,
very nice condilion, hi_gh milea.

Chevy ·314 Ton 4 WO 1186 WI~
TAN AT HOME
g'ood, bo.dy rough ; b.otli ta8oo · Only 11,300 Actual Miles, 350, litJy DIRECT and SAVEl
080; 61'4-985-3362.
8, Auto, Air, Bedhner, Garage ,
Com1'!"141fcia11Home units from
lmmacul~te Condiitonl $9,600, .
1070 Cadillac Convertible, ·W f 81-4 -446.&amp;452.
$199.
·Owners Manuel , Project Car,
low monthly payments
Very Res1orable, Orlveable, Top
DEER HUNTER SPECIAL
FREE colOr aualog.
1978 FOfd Econoline wn
•Works ' Best, Needs Cover. Have
CaHTOOAY 1-lll0-842-1305.
R ·Glass And Boot. Full 500 Cu. lnterkir customized, coUch makeC
Wood For Sate: $35 A Load, Will ln. Turbo. No Storage, Must Sell . double bed, removabh! table, Co·
Oeilver, 814 -388-8010, 614·388- Or Trade. 1500 OBO, 8,.·388- Ieman bu ilt-In un it InclUdes 2
8150.
911!11 Aorlime.
burner srove and heater, sink af'l4
ice box, windows have priyac~
1978 CamerO, runs good , body curllltns. many other e~r:tras, acru ~
rouglt. $400. 304-1195-3579.
al mlleag~t 88,750, $2500, call
550
Building

1-«10-537-9528.

OL' BULLET'S
OF SIX

'91 Chevy SUburban 4,., 350 au,
tomati,, air, 1tereo, hlgn mUtt,
wry nice, 19800, 614·992-41 11 .

lion, low milH, SOOOO 080. considet trade, 814·885--&lt;t227, ask ror
Amber.
1- .

Rio Grande , OH Call 614-245·
51~1.
.

·-lhlo-

Paso

730 vans &amp; 4-WDs

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS

Block, brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc . Claude Win ters.

34 • I LIU .......
Faollisll....,.,
Joi• 'IWiitod

47=lilof ,.·

Allalloo Hay Roi!·Sti&gt;rago .and dtlivtfY av•llable 1 Morgan Farm

'87 Mazd• RX7. •~tent

iKQJ

Paas

HERE HE ·
COMES

Orivo, 811,000 Milos, $3,000 OBP.

1896 Chevy e~elended cab, 4w~.
350 auto, loaded, askir1(1

Supplies

AIN'T THAT

614-256-1233.

Hay .It Grain

640

South

BARNEY

199• Full Size Dodge Truck,' 2
WI1MI Drive, 318, Auto, Loaded,
34,000 Mileo, $12,500 080; 1981
Ford Ranger Standard 2 Wh..-1

7

One bedroom. upstairs, SZSOimo. ambulatory chair. 304·882-3339
plus ulllities; 1·2 bedroom, up- aho&lt; 59mstairs. S3251mo. ~u1 utilliee; r~
FALL SPECtAL
.-!ed, bollt In llldrllooport, 614-

992-11311.

Rico, 81«187-3287.

3SW-

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

1992 5· 10 Wlth Tahoe Package,
Save Big! Tradea Accepled,
~ MoiDrl. '61-4·446-0103.

'83 Buick Eltctra, body loir, run1,
$550 000, 81 4-9112·1271.

WollfTannl11g Beds

:~~~~~~ln,ludtd S185tMo..

Bred cowa, moady Hertford An·
gu1 cro11e1. Contac:t Harley
Rice, 614·687. 33e0 or John

1 HOool
2 Noll-pi olll ....

prCCIIdlngl

8oadl

•

.DOWN

:5t

iAKf
• J 4s2
t A Q J 10

PackaQe,

Waterbid f'ull Wave With Heater, S i ~~; Drawer, Bookcase, Mirrored Headboard, 1100 614 ·387-

4336.

2 Bedrooms, Upstair&amp;, Duple~~: 15
112 Vine, Near Finl Avanutt.

7 Vear Old Mlta. Well Broke,

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nue , Gall ipo li s, Ohio 814 ·&lt;146-

deposit ~75-2749 .

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1989 Chevy 5-10, 4Cyl, 51pd ,

71 o Autos for sale

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Ave. S3501mo. Ptus references &amp;

ir'VI Far AU Agoa, Mr Shih, Ret-

Hydraulic 011 •12.50·!1gal poll .
Siders Equip,..nt. Hendarton,
wv. 304-875-7421.

Bay, $850. 614-4&lt;1&amp;·113ZF.

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8 EO f 3 2

11187 Ford Rtngor, V-e, 5 apeed,
1or0g bid. 78,000 mlln. 304-875-

good .:and. S2.500. 30•· 675·

STORAGE TANKS '3,000 Gallon
Uprighl, Ron Evans Enterpriaes,

Eilt

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1984 5 -to Good Shape, Runs
Good, Ml'5. 614-387-112117.

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celllble, goocl hunting and flal'llnt , $18,500 . Serloua Inquiries
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Cabin- generator powered, two

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Gallipolis Or1 Route 35. E•ll Righi
On County Road 46 . Phone 814·

Lener

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and Leners. Plattlc Lt1tert ISS.
~ Sox Frtt), AM Signs 1·
533-3453 1nylimo. · · ,

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District lfH•-2o4S..S463

lnlonn8d lhlt II d\ullli:'QS
lldverllled In this na ..,..,...
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New Rebuilt Motor, Auto, Asking
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Are FlllUting Rtd O.IICIOUI As
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$3500, 614-gg2-2363 oi 304-757- Variellea To Ctloota Ftom. We
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The "1996-97 Eastern Lady Grande. Evans, earned first team,
Eagles will be both young and all-Southeast District AP, Ohio
· exciting. However, the. number ~f High School Basketball Coaches
victories that come the1r way will Association District 13 honors;
depend upon just how fast the was a Tri-Valley Conference firstyoung stars of the future step up to team nominee; averaged 12.5
the higher level ofvarsity play.
points per game .and in two
Youth, enthusiasp~, ~illingness consecutive years had more than
to learn and a good work ethic arc I 50 rebounds e~ch year, Eva.ns
the Lady Eagle strong points. , was also the teams top three pomt
Lack of varsity experience, depth shooter.
.
.
. ,
and lack of some fundamental
Another key 1n Eastern s
skills arc a concern.
·
success was Nic~le Nels~n, who
Graduated from last year's team averaged over e1ght po_mts per
were four outstanding seniors. game and was a steady ball
Paving the way in departure was handler over the past four years,
Wilmington College player .while Beth Bay was a strong
Jessica Karr, who was Associated contender off the bench .. In all,
Press Southeast District "Player of Eastern lost nearly 40 pomts per
the Year"· Division IV; First team, game from . its senior class ~a~t
aii-SoutheastDistrict AP, Ohio year, plus anothCII' double-d1g11
High School Basketball Coaches. ave~age in an underclassman who
Association District 13 Co-Most dec1ded not to play.
Valuable Player; and Tri-Valley
Eastern has only nine players
Conference First team nominee. in its varsity program, but each
She was also a I,200 point career looks to contribute to the success
scorer and won the Most Assists, of the team in 1996-97. Overall, rebouQding (17h and steals. Other
Most Steals and Leading Free seven sophomores and lwo than that, Eastern ' has no varsity
Throw Percentage Awards.
freshman m~ _ up the team. Last
....~: 1 experience.
Next in Eastern's one-two year, I he reserve cIub was .,...
.•ec
Head coach Scott Wolfe
punch was Rebecca Evans, a in the league at 15-0, postin; a 16talented athlete who now stars in 4 overall mark. The varsity expects this to be a IC8f11ing year
softball at the University of Rio cl.ai.~cd th~ TVC Hocking Hand trai~ding"gWrou,nd for the futured.
DIVIsion co-title at 14-4 and 16-5 . c sa! •
e re young an
overall. In the prior y_car, Eastern mexpenenced, but we hope to usc
~astern's slate'
was the Division IV sectional and ·the ,youth to our .advantage. We
district champion.
don I want anyone to feel sorry for
Qat&amp;
OJIJimwpt
The lone returning letterman to us. we:ll be exciting to watch and
Nov. 25 .............................Trimble the Eastern lineup is sophomore ~bably make some sophom~e
Dec. 2..... :............. ~ ....at Alexander Jessica Brannon. She averaged m1stakes along the way, but we II
Dec. 5..................................Belprc about 10 points a gaine as a win some ball gam~s too. These
Dec. 9 .................................. Miller freshman, led the team in two- girls know how to wm." .
Dec. 12 .............. Watcrford-6tm. point goals (84-163, or
"We're surprisingly weajt
Dec. 16 ........................at Sou rn
fundamtntally, but we can fix that
Dec. 19 ............................ Wellston
Dec. 23 ............................at Meigs Eastern's
Ian. 2...................Federal Hocking
nMter
Ian. 6 .....................Vintqn County
Ian. 8 ...................at Warrcn Local
Ian. 9 ................. Nelsonville-York Nq. . . ., . . . . . H r "'l:IIE
•
•
Ian. 13 ...........................at Trimble 10-Becky DIYil-0 ..........5-8. Fr.
Ian. 16 .......................... Aiexander 11-Stephanie Bvans-O ....S-5 So.
Ian. 22.. .......... :.at Wahama-6 p.m. 12-Valerie Karr-C ..........6-0 So.
Ian. 23 .............................at Miller 14-luli Hayman-0 ..........5-8 So.
Ian. 27 .............................Southern IS-Wendy Smith-F.........S-6 Fr.
Ian. 30.............at Federal Hocking 22-leuica Brannon-F .....5-9 So.
Feb. 3............. :..................... Meigs 23-Kim Mayle-0 ............5-6 lr.
Feb..6 ..,.... .at Waterford-6:15p.m. 24-Ann Wigilll-0 .........5-6 So.
Nole: ..... odwawlle...., 31-Jackie Pll'ker-0 .........S-3 ~ So.
all date1 are re•ern•Yar•lt:r 34-Chasatie Hollon-G ....5-5 Fr.
. d. .blelleaden tut wUI ~t~~rt 41-Marv Stver-0 ............S-6 So.
42-Anai Wolfe..P ..........5-10 So.
wtdl5:55 .... 1• lfUD flltJ

1996-97 Eastern girls

5LS'*'&gt;·

varsity

basket~all _ team·

eveni"ually. We'll get better as the
year goes along ._Our biggest
obstacle will be making the step
from the competition of reserve
ball to the level of varsity play.
There arc no $1ouehcs in the TriValley Conference. It's going to
be another strong year for girls'
basketball in the league."
An early setback to the already
young team came when starting
point guard lull Hayman broke
Iter. elbow in a scrimmage .
Hayman will at least be out until
Christmas, if not longer.
·
Normally a post, but one of the
best ball hanillers on the team,

Brannon will probably fill in at
point guard with . freshman
Chasatie Hollon subbing in.
Talented shooter Stephanie Evans
wftl play right elbow, while
frelihman Becky Davis will play
the other wing. Sophmorc Val
Karr. will jump center and pia~
right post, while sophomore Ang1
Wolfe will start the other post.
First-year player Ann Wiggins, a
sophomore, is coming along at
·post, while Iackie Parker is doing
well at off guard.
Wolfe picked Southern,
Alexander and -Federal Hocking to
among the area's top teams.

Here'• To A.
'

Good..t.~uck

'96-'97 Seuon!

·

Eastern's
varsity roster

Eastern's
reserve ro,ter

1

'

:

•

•

tll-1111 ·

Your Independent Agents
Serving Meigs County Since 1868

DOWIIII CHILDS MULUI
MUSSER
IISUIAIKE
'

111 Second St

Pomeroy

r

,

smallest school in it. We arc only
looking at one game at a time and
will
let speculators be
speculators."

1996-97 Eastern boys basketball team

(jooa Luc/('Io yt([ Meigs County Scnoofs
![or Yl. (jreat

Season!

CHEERING
SECTION

'

......
..........
BER

~

•Meigs
·Marauders
•Southern.
Tornadoes
•Eastern
Eagles

• Souther•
• Eastern

IIISTIIS IUIIIOS·

1

and work. ethic," Deem said. season is concerned il is no ~,.,t"
''They are workinj very hard at that th~ TVC is a very tough
'this point, bUt have a lot to learn league and we are the second'
in a little time. As far a~ the

~

No.-playcr .&amp;.11111:. . Ill. XL No.-•m A' a. /
w. Ira
12113-Eric Dillard ....5-10 Sr. 1&amp;11-Jeremy Casto-0 .. 5-9 So.
14115-Rick Hollon ....5·8 Sr. 14115-Adam Sanders-0 ..5-9 So.
20121-losh Casto . . . ...6-1 Sr. 20121-lason Mora-0 .. ..5-9 So.
22123-Andy Vance ....6-2 Jr. 22/23-lohn Driggs-F ... 5-10 Jr.
24125-Daniel Otto . ... .6-2 Sr. 24125-Beau Bailey-G .. 5-10 So.
30131-lcrcmy Kehl . . ..6-0 Jr. 30/31-Joe Dillon-F .....6-0 So.
32/33-Corcy Yonker ...6-2 Jr. 32133-Jocy Weeks-F ....6-0 lr.
34/35-Lamar Lyons ...6-6 Jr. 34/35-Josh Hagcr-F ..... 5-8 So.
40/41-Steve Durst-F ...6-1 Jr. 40/41-Jeremy Coleman-C 5-9 So.
42/43-Roben Harris ...6-3 Sr. 42/43-Eric Smith-C .....6-2 Fr.
44/45-Adam McDaniel .6-0 Sr. 44/45-Nick Spurlock-F , .5-9 Jr.

Good Luck

Eastern Eagles
Southern Tornadoes
Meigs Marauders
Wahama White Falcons

.......... 141

,

Collch Tony Deem's Eastern .
Otto aiM! Casto played starting
Eagles enter the 1996-97 season roles for the Ea1les during part of
coming off the firflt winning the 1995-96 season. Big things
season of Deem's young regime. will have to come from the junior
Eastern hopes to build on this class if the Eagles hope to
success in 1996-97, but will have impro"e on last season'·s 11-9
. mark.
a young team overall.
Deem S!lid,"This season will
Durst will have to step up
be a great challenge after losi!lg .early, and so will forward Corey
some great seniors. All district, Yonker. Guard Jeremy Kehl will
all-league player Eric Hill, who have io step in and take a more
averaged 19 points per game and active part in the Eagle lineup.
Micah .Otto'~ 16 points per game Senior .point gullfd RiclfHollan;' .. ·~ Wiltttie'-gt- rifissed. Also lost will also bi called upon to step
to graduation is 6-3 Michael his game up a notch. Other
Barnett and Brian Bowen."
members .of the Eagles squad are
Together the losses left Juniors Robert Harris, Lamar
Eastern with a 35-point scoring Lyons and senior Adam
deficit- a big blow to ·its lineup, McDaniel. Meigs ·transfer Andy
Eastern docs have some valuable Vance rounds out the lineup.
returnees in point guard Eric
"We arc not nearly as big as
Dillard, who underwent a we were last year, but our overall
strenuous off-season training quickness is a little better," Deem
program; Damel Otto, a.talented said. "Offensively, we have the
forward; post· Josh Casto and ability to score more as a team
Steve Durst.
and will not hav~ to rely so
Deel!l added," One thing that heavily on one or tw peop,le. The
is favorable is the return of senior floor seems to be a little more
·point guard Eric Dillard. Joining balanced this year. Probably our
Eric will be two other lettermen greatess weakness right now is
from last season, forward Daniel our defense and n;bounding."
Otto and guard Josh Casto.'_'
''This club h, a great attitude

Enjey the
exeltement ef High .
Seheol Basketball

8REAT .SEASON ·

Good Luck
Have A Great

..

Ea$t~rn·· bQys.look to ~youth to craft winhing finish

Youth defines , -·
Ea~te~n ·g irls'
program in 1996-97 ·

'

., ,1

The Dally lentil ... 1 - a........ Eclllor,.. Page 'l'llrw

, _ 1he Deily latdll.a, 1 • Baalilllll EclltiM

992·2381

CHRYSLER ·

A You'll Uke Our Quality Way
· . Of Doing Business I
0

·.
•

0

r ••• Qrpl.... Plpuulflt . . . . True~~.,......
NORlUS N~RT_.UP DODGE, INC.
252 Uppw .River Road

446-0842

Gallipolis, Ohio ·

�Page Four· The Dally Sentlnei, .1896JI~II Edition

U$A Today touts.
top 25 ·prep stars

Lady Marauders
to get h~lp from
youth for·1-996-97
and a lot of different ball handlers
By DAVE HARRIS
we just have to get the right milt.
Sentinel Correspondent
"Our weakness is the lack of
Ron Logan welcomes back
three starters and silt letter playing time together," Logan
winners, as the Meigs Marauder said. "In scrimmages this season
girls opened their 1996-97 the girls have played well, and
· basketball season on Nov. 22 have played hard . So far the
against River Valley.
difficult thing for us to do have
The Lady Marauders finished been to forget the turnovers. So
the season last year with a 6-15 far if we make a turnover, we
record, but have a good nucleus have made two or three more
of young players coming from the right after that. We need to forget
reserve team that finished with a about it and get on with the
14-5 record. Meigs must replace game."
.
three seniors lost to graduation in
Logan feels that Belpre once
·Anne Brown, 'Cynthia Cotterill again will be the team to beat in
and Kristen Dassylva.
the Ohio Division. "Belpre looks
1996-97 LADY MARAUDERs-The 1996-97 Meigs Marauders opened up their season on Fri·
Among the retuning starters right now to be in mid-season
day, November 22nd against River Valley. Team members Include In the front row from left
are seniors Cheryl Jewell and fonn, I don'! know that anybody
to right: Carissa Ash,·wendy Shrlmplln, Cheryl Jewell, Ashley Roach, Brandl Meadows, Tri·
Ashley Roach and sophomore will beat them." In the Hocking
cia Davis, and Becky Smith. Second fOW: Head Coach Ron Logan, Melissa Werry, Tonya Miller,
Becky Smith. Smith started the Division I feel that it very
Tracy Coffey, Taryn Doidge, Bridget Vaughan and Danlelle Peckham.
last half of the year at point ~alanced, and any team can beat
guard.
·
any other team on any given
crowns and two district titles. His
Also returning are lettermen ·night."
1986 team came within minutes
Carrisa Ash, Taryn Doidge and
Brandi Meadows. All three saw
The Marauders will also play a of advancing to the state
quality playing time last year.
· pair of games with R"iver Valley tournament before losing to the
state
champion
Logan feel's that one of the and Point Pleasant and a game eventual
strong paints of this year's team is with Wahama. Meigs will play Wellsville' after leading for most
a good miltture of veterans and Eastern in a pair of games with of the contest.
"
youth. "We have six sophomores one counting as a non-conference
•
MEIGS
lUUUDERS
and with the milt of veterans we game and the other a conference
have, we need to find the right game.
• EASTERN EAGLES
combination. We have good si~.
This is Logan's 13th year as
• SOUTHERN TORNADOES
the Lady Marauders' coach. He
has a 178-89 record (.667).
• WAHAIU WHITE FALCONS
Marauders' slate
Overall it is Logan's 21 si year as
coach for the Marauders
Dm
OJ!goicpt including eight in the boys'
Nov. 22 .... River Valley-6:30p.m. program, five as the. head coach.
Nov. 25 ..............at Vinton County Assisting Logan this season will
Dec. 2 ............at Nelsonville-York be his son Darin.
175. 2ND AVE.
MIDDLIPOII, OH
Dec. 5 .............at Federal Hocking
Meigs has won three TVC
Dec. 9 ............................. Wellston titles under Logan, five district .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....
993·7021
Dec. 12 ........................:....... Miller
Dec. 18.at Point Pleasant-.5:30 pm
Dec. 19 ........................at Southern
Dec. 23 ..............................Eastern
Jan. 2 .................................. Belpre
Jan. 6 .......... :.....................Trimble
Jan. 9 ........................ at Alexander
Jan. 13 .......... ;........Vinton County
Jan. 16 ...............Nelsonville· York
Jan. 23.. ..... ~ .................at Wellston
Jan. 25 ....... at River Valley-6 p.m.
Jan. 29 .................... Point Pleasant
Jin. 30 ............................at Belpre
Feb. 3 ............................ at Eastern
Feb. 6 ...................... ;....... Wihama
Note: Unless otherwlae
noted, all dates are reserve·
vanity strain that beaJn with
5:55 p.m. reserve pmea.

Good Luck to Our
Area Teams

Support
Your
Local
Teams

.

INGELS CARPET OUTLET

Support You~ Local· High School
Basketball Teamsl

Meigs varsity roster
No.-pluer

Hclcht Ica&amp;:

3.5-Taryn Doidce ............5-9
22-CheryUewell ............S-7
40-Brandi Meadows ....... S-8
IS-Ashley Roach ...........5· 7
12-Carissa Ash ... ;...........S-7
30-Danielle Pecklwn .....S-8
41-Wendy Shrimplin ......5·6
45-Tracy Coffey ............5·1 0
24-Tricia Davis .............. .5·8
31·Tonya Mil_ler ..............5·9
21-Becky Smtth ..............5-.5
tO-Bridget Vaqhan ........5-8
25-Melissa Werry ...........5·9

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.

So.
So.
. So.
So.
So.

So.

•.Meigs Marauders
• Eastern Eagles
• Southern Tornadoes
• Wahaina White
Falcons
.ltfitt The 1••• H•v• Dinner

By USA Today
Pre-season top 25 high school
basketball players:
Ron Artest, LaSalle Academy
(Manhattan, N.Y.)- F, 6-7, 16.8.
great·defender, competitor (undecided on college).
William Avery, Oak Hill Academy (Mouth of Wilson, Va.)- G,
6-21 26.8, has I ,827 career points
(Duke).
·. ·
Shane Battier, Detroit Country
Day (Binningham, Mich.)- C, 68, .20.-r. averaged 5.3 blocks
. (Duke).
Elton Brand, Peekskill, N.Y.F, 6-8, 26.1, averaged 1'6.8
rebounds, seven blocks (Duke).
Kenny Brunner, Dominguez
(Compton, Calif.) - G, 5-9, 16,
also averaged 9.3 assists (Fresno
State).
· Chris Burgess, Woodbridge
(Irvine, Calif.)- F-C, 6-10, 26.3, ·
outstanding outside shooter
(Duke).
Eric Chcnowith, Villa Park,
Calif.- c. ~7-l, 19.8, averaged
13.3 rebounds; five blocks
(Kansas).
Schea Cotton, St. John Bosco
(Bellflower, Calif.)- F, 6-5, 24.5,
will miss at least first month of seaso·n because of shoulder surgery
(Long Beach State).
Edwin Daniels, Cohen (New
Orleans)- G, 6-1, 16.1, averaged
6.2 steals (Nevada-Las Vegas).
Baron Davis, Crossroad&amp; (Santa Monica, Calif.) - G, 6-2, 17,
also ;~veraged nine assists, five
steals (undecided).
Ricky Davis, North (Davenport,lowa)- G, 6-6, 20.1, school
career records: 1,070 points, 534
re"?unds and 87 blocks (Iowa).

Khalid El-Amin, North (Min- By The Louisville
men 's basketball team received
neapolis)- G, 5-10, 24.5, leader Courier-Journal
their season tickets in the mail
on back-to-b'ack state champiLOUISVILLE, Ky. - When recently, a pocket-sized, black
onship teams (undecided).
fans of the University of louisville ·booklet entitled "Rules of the
Melvin Ely, Thornton Qiarvey,
Game" accompanied the duckets.
111.)-C, 6-10, 12.6, nation's preSeven regulations are described
mier shot blocker (5.4 . average)
in the booklet, but while the titles
(Fresno State).
.. such as traveling, sideline interDion Glover, Cedar Grove
ference and intentional foul ·• are
(Ellenwood, Ga.) - F, 6-5, 26.3,
basketball related, the descriptions
shot 64 percent from field (unde·
pertain not to the game played b~
cided).
Marcus Griffin, Manual (Peoria,
Ill.)- C, 6-9, 17, shot 69 percent
from field (Illinois).
Tony Harris, East (Memphis)G, 6-0, 27.7, MVP in Class 3Astate
tourney (Tennessee).
Brendan HaywoOd. Dudley
(Grecnsboro,N.C.)-C,6-II , IO,
set state record with 182 blocks
(North Carolina).
Ryan Humphrey, B.T. Washington (Tulsa)- F, 6-7, 19.8, also
averaged II. 7 rebounds, 5.5 blocks
(undecided).
Mark Karcher, St. Frances (Bal·
timore)- G, 6-5, 25.5, has school
career-record 2,268 points (undecided).
Tracy McGrady, Mount Zion
Christian (Durham, N.C~ )- F, 69, 23.1, dazzling gem discovered in
summer camps (undecided).
· Terence Morris,Thomas Johnson (Frederick, Md.) - F, 6-!1,
22.4, also averaged 13.8 points, 5.2
blocks (Maryland).
.
Lamar Odom, Redemp!ion .
Christian (Troy, N.Y.)- F, 6-10,
17, can play all five positions
(undecided).
Chris Owens, ·Duncanville,
Texas- C, ~7, 16.2, great speed
for 220-pounder (undecided).
Anthony Perry, St. Anthony

FAMILY
RESTAUUNT
HI-Mit

121 . . . . .

the athletes on tl* court but to the
o~te boosters play off of it.
The pamphlet was produced by
U of L's compliance department in
the wake of the recent NCAA
investigation into ·the basketball
program. On Nov. 20, the NCAA
placed Louisville on two year's
probation for I 0 violations, six of
which were at least in part atirib(See BOOKLET on paae 6)

GOOD
'v-tQCK TO
fiLL·AREA
TEAMS
• MEIGS
•SOUTHERN
•EASTERN
• WAHAMA·

GOOD LUCK!'
• Meigs
• Southern

• EasJern
•Wahama

With Uti
~ CROW'S

Louisville basketbail fans
get copies of rules ·bo~klet

UWUiiiS.C:OITS

Fisher Funeral Home
IIUCI fiSIIII • Ow••r/Oper•tor
' MIDDLEPOII
992·5141

Corner of General
Hartinger Parkway
and Pe•rl St.
Middleport
·992-3471 .

�Southern .expects
.veteran trio to lead
=·t:ady Tornadoes

Meigs boys to start
1·996-97 season · ·
with· South Point

.

Two other wins, a victory over
By DAVE HARRIS
I Oth-ranked Wellston and the
Sentinel Correspondent
The Meigs Marauders will double-overtime win over
open the 1996-97 season on Nov. Nelsonidlle at home were also
29 with four returning ·lettennen highlights of last season's
when they will host .the South campaign.
Returnees from last year's 12Point Pointers at Larry R.
9
squad
include seniors Aaron
Morrison Gymnasium.
Hockman,
Chris Lambert, Brad
Jeff Skinner opens his fourth
·
Whitlatch
and Josh Witherell.
season as the Meigs hoop boss,
and moving up to
Joining
them
coming off last year's campaign
the
varsity
squad
from last year's
that saw Meigs finish with a 12-9
record and a 9-S record in the Tri- 17-3 reser.ve squad are Brad
Valley Conference's Ohio Davenport, Robert Qualls, Collin
Roush, Matt Williams, Daniel
Division. ·
The Marauders have steadily Hannan and Jason Mullen.
1111-17 MeJQS MARAUDERS.The 1111-17 will kick off the new ......II e..-on on FrlLeading the newcomers are
improved under Skinner's tenure,
dQ, November 28 8t home egelnt the South Point Polntllra. T•m mlnlbere from left to right
from an 0-21 season three yevs transfer Angelo Rodriguez, a SIn the front row .,..: 8nld o.v.nport, Mlltt WUIIIIml, DMiel tt.nnen, Collin Roulh' end Angeago to a last year's fourth-best foot-10 sophomore guard, and
lo Rodriguez. 81COUd row: Robert Oullll, J11011 Mullin, JMon Wll .... ~ HoclciMI'I, Nalcuconference marlt in the 11-school Nakuma Tyree, a 6-foot-3 senior
mll ~. Bl'lld Whltlltch end Chrtl Lambert.
.
·
.
forward.
Tri-Valley Conference.
Last season, Meigs recorded
"Our work ethic and our strong seniors, 'put into the program. going to be the favorites in the pair of non-conference games
two huge comebacks at sense of 'team' will be this group's Brent Hanson and Donald Yost conference," Skinner said.
against River Valley, host South
Nelsonville- York and against strong points," Skinner said. "For . were probably the best two
The Marauders face a good Point and Fon Frye, and travel to
Vinton County, where MHS came us to be successful, we must show individual. defenders I've coached non-conference schedule to go Portsmouth and Rock Hill for
from behind and outscored the a lot of determination in· at Meigs. Their presence will along with an always competitive matchups.
Vikings S2-18 in the second half establishing our own identity definitely be missed," Skinner TVC schedule. M~igs will play a
to win. Meiga handed Point early. Our weaknesses will be our said.
Pleuant a 20-jloint losa - the lack of experience and size, and
Skinner said that pre-season
(Continued from page S)
Big Blacks' worst defeat of the the loss of our seniors from last workouts have gone very well for
season. The Big Blacks later year's squad."
this year's club. "We have had a utable to activities by what the boosters of the rules and with
came just one game away from
Those players lost ~o typical pre-season' thus far. We've NCAA called "representatives of compliance information to give. to
making a trip to the West .Virginia . graduation from last year's squad been very pleased with our the university's athletks interests." recruits, we'd take it one step furstale tournament.
(Travis Abbott, Cass Cle,land, progress. There is always lots of
The booklet is just one of the ther," said U of L athletic director
Nick ,Han.iilg, Brent Hanson, room for improvement, but there university's efforts to prevent Bill Olsen. "We thought it would
Mark Mills, Paul Pullins and have many bright spots as well."
another visit by the NCAA. U of L be in our best interest to send a
Meigs alate
Donald Yost) made up more than
Skinner su1Jested that Belpre also has set up a system to moni- message personally .from us to our
98% of the team's scoring and once again will be the team to tor telephone numbers dialed from seaso1t ticket holders, boosters,
beat in
Dal&amp;
Quqqt rebounding.
the
Tri- Valley athletic offices and to .monitor and others."
"Much of our success from last. Conference's Ohio Division, with what cars athletes are !!riving. But
Nov. 29.................. :....South Point
The booklet gives a detailed
Dec. 3 ...................at River Valley year came 'from the effort that · Federal Hocking expected to be the pamphlet is directed at fans and description of just· who is an athDec. 6 .................... Vinton County everyone, particularly ·those leading the rest of pack in the boosters.
letic representative and who is a
Dec. IO ..............:...........at Eastern
Hocking · Division. "Until
"We thought because Confer- pi'Ospective athlek!, and what a repDec. 13 ..............Nel1011ville-York
someone beats those two teains ence USA and the NC,Y. provides
Dec. 17 ...............Federal Hocking Meigs varsity roster on a consistent basis, they are us with information to inform our resentative can, and more impor(LOUISVILLE elldl • pill' 7)'
Dec. 20..............:.........at Wellston
M•t XL
Dec. 21 ......................at Rock Hill No. 1hw
Jan. 3 ........................ River Valley 11-Brad Davenport ......S-10 Jr.
Jan. 7 ...... ,........................at Miller 15-Angelo Rodriguez ...S-10 So.
Jan. 14.............................Southern 20-Robert Qualls ..........S-10 Sr.
lan. ·17 ..... ;......................at Belpre . 21-Brid Whitlatch .........6-1 Sr.
Jan. 18 ............................Fort Frye 22-Collin Roush .............6-0 Jr.
Jan. 21 ..........................at Trimble 30-Matt Williams ...........6-2 Jr.
Jan. 24 .. ,............ ~ ..........Alexander 31-Chris Larnbert ..... ;.....6-0 Sr.
Jan. 28 ...............at Vinton C01111ty 40-Daniel Hanning.........6-2 So.
Jan. 31 ...........at Nelsonville-York 41-Jason Mullen.............6-0 Sr.
Feb. 4 .............................. Wellllton 42-Aaron Hockman .......6-4 Sr.
Feb. 7 ......................at Portsmouth SO-Josh Witherell ...........6-3 Sr.
Feb. 14 ................................Belpre 00-Nakuma Ty~ ..........6-3 Sr.

Booklet •••

GOOD LUCK FOR AGREAT '96- '97
SPORTS SEASON!
• Meigs Marauders
• Southern Tornadoes
· ·Eastern Eagles
• Wahami White Falcons
H••• Of.The liN l1y l•f•

WI8HE8 Yllll ANIJ Y00fl8
·
A VEfiY HAPPY lillLIIJAY 8EA81lN

Hoping to vie for the Hocking'
Division crown in 199()-97, the
Southern Tornadoes bring a mix
of three veferan 'players and a
young lineup to the hardwood of
Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium
this year. Souther" has three
returning letterwlnners in TriValley Conference Co-Player of
·the Year Renee! Turley, Cynthia
Caldwell and Bnanne Proffitt.
A good mix of freshmen (two),
sophomores (two) and juniors
{four) ropnd out the lineup.
Turley, a veteran of three
Southern seasons and numerous
AAU championships, will be one
of the area's top headliners in
1996-97.
She averaged 19.S points per
game last season, was a top assist
leader and a great inside-outside
threat. Also returning are talented
· shooter Cynthia Caldwell and
11nother stroltg rebounder in
Brianne Proffill.
Gone from last year's team
was first~team all-TVC selection

and second-team all-Southeast
District selection Jonna Manuel.
Manuel was also the winner of
the District 13 three-point shootout and a large portion of the
· Southern offense. Other graduates
were Bea Lisle and Becky Moore,
both of. whOm were District 13
Senior All-Stars.
Last year Southern finished
11-10 overall and beat some very
good teams, winning nine of 13
going down the stretch. Leading
Southern again in 1996-97 will be
veteran mentor lenni Roush in
her fifth season.
Roush said, "Last year, we
played very hard, but not always
as smart as we could have. We weaknesses. Roush added, "We're over. Shooting-wise, when we are
ended the season way too early."
on, we are on; but when we're off
very quick at most spots."
Roush noted that quickness
Roush said, "We have more it's a nightmare."
will be one of her club's assets . heighth than we've ever had
Roush has always emphasized
and that her team plays hard with before at S-9, S-10 and S-1, but hustling for full court for four
a never give up auitutde. A lack still we are small. We still must quarters. This year is now
of varsity experience and lack of get more aggressive on the different. Defense could be one of
depth will be one of the team's boards. Offensively, we've got the Southern's strengths.
"We're scrappy, always on the
altitude to shoot before we tum it

1996-97 Southern girls basketball team·

Southern's slate

Varsity team
Dill
'
OJagoacat
Nov. 23 ..................... South Gallia
No.-aJucr
Hcilh' Ira Nov. 2S ...........at Federal Hocking

10-Stacy Lyons ..... :........ S-6
11-Cynthia Caldwell ......S-S
12-Conny Horst .............. S-9
13-Jenny Friend ............. S-6
14-Kim lhle ....................S-2
20-Renee Turley .............S-9
23-Kim Sayre .................S-S
24-Erica Amoll ......... ,....S-4
32-Brianne Proffiu .........S-7
3S-A.s111i Davis .....,........ S-7.

Fr..
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Fr.
Sr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
So.

ReNtVeteam
"ddN Ira

No.·glmr

14-Kim lhle ....................S-2 Fr.
11-Stacy L'yons ..............S-6 Fr.
S-Peggy Lawrence .........S-6 Fr.
10-Laraine Lawson ........ S-4 Fr.
£2-Stacy Ervin ...............S-4 Fr.
13-Heather Dailey .......... S:6 Fr.
IS-Sanh Brauer .............S- 8 Fr.
· 20-Palty Lawrence ......... S-7 So.
'

.

Dec. 2 ...........................at Trimble
Dec. S .................... Vinton County
Dec. 9 ........................... Alexander
Dec. 12 ..........at Nelsonville-York
Dec. 16 ............................ ,.Eastern
Dec. 19 ................................ Meigs
Dec. 27-28 ..........at Trimble Tour.
Jan. 2 ....... ~ ....... ,..............at Miller
Jan. 4 ............. River Valley-1 p.m.
Jan. 6 .............................. at Belpre
Jun. 8...........................ut Wellston
Jan. 13 ................ Federal Hocking
Jan. 16 ..............................Trimble
Jan. 23 ......................at Alexander
. Jan. 27 ...........................at Eastern
Jan. 30 .......................,.........Miller
Feb. S........................ Ravenswood
Note: Unle11 otherwise
. noted, all dates ue reaerve·
nnity doublelieaden that wUI
start with 5:55 p.m. reaerve
eontata.

,High ', School
Basketball

Teams
481 SOUTH THIRD

PHONE 112-2111

4tiODLEPOR1' • 0"

LOU iSVi lie •.•,_;&lt;:.;;.Co,;,;,;n,;;,;tin;;;.ue;;;.d.:.;,fr.:.;,om;;..:p~ag::.;;e;;;.6&gt;;..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....;·•
tantly, can do for and with an athlete .
For example, "Player Control
Foul" says "It is impennissible to
employ or arrange for employemnt for a student-athlete during the
school year." But, the booklet says,
"Do
pay
student-athletes
employed during the summer only
for work actually perfonned and at
the same mte for similar seryices in
the community," and "Do notify
the depanment of athletics of
employment possibilities for student-athletes." Bu\ "Do not provide student-athlete with employment during the academic year

ESTERN··AUTO

t

1996-1997

,

•

,.

#

tant not to say a thousand times
over 'You can't do this, you can't
do that,' " Crane said. "Instead, we
·said 'Stay away from this, but diM •
are ways you can help us within the
rules. • We turned what could be
perceived as a negative into something more positive, rather than .
wagging a finger in people's face."
The university !tired Crane .last
April from North Carolina State,
where she had been working for
three years in the compliance
department.
It is an on.going, exhaustive
task.

•

Batt Wlahea For A
Great Seaaonl.
• MEIGS IUUUDEIS
• SOUTIIII 'TOIIIDOES
•UmRNEIIUS
I

'

• Wllllll Wllft fALCONS

Swlsher·Lohse Ph.
a
r•acy
'
•••.,.,, Olllo

1121~1
•,,•' •. '

...

without first consulting the athletic department."
Finally, there are possible
penalites listed if the rule is broken.
The NCAA found that fonner
Cardinal center Samaki Walker
was given impermissible preferential treatment -- a violation -- when
his 199S summer employer (and
therefore a U of L representative),
Anthony Huff, gave him a Ford
Explorer to drive.
Beatrice Crane, the lJ of L ·
compliance coordinator, created
the booklet, I 0,000 of which were
printed.
"I thoug~t it was really impor-

BASKETBALL

'

Support Your .
Favorite

floor after everything and very
aggressive," Roush said. "If we're
· going to win we've got to pick up
the pace and play aggressive ball.
I expect the younger kids to
contribute more as the season
goes along."
Southern opened at home
against South Gallia on Nov. 30.

ltt•

"'

. ..

~

••

~

�Ayers expected· to\win with ·stronger osu.squad ..

Southern boys'
team ·plans to ·kick
ghost ~~ 1995-96
Last year the Southern
Tornadoes were faced with a
major overhaul and finished the
. scuon with a 9-13 overall mark,
the first lOsing record at Southern
since 1974. The Tornadoes face a
similar situation this seasun.
However, they bring a little more
var,ity experience to the lineup
·than they did one year ago.
, . Eight lettermen dot the lineup,
~ by seniors Adam Roush, Ryan
Norris, Greg McKinney, Jamie
Evans, Billy Sheppard, Josh
Roush, Tyson Buckley and Jesse
Maynard.
Ml\)'nard and Evans have been
varsity mainstays for two years.
Buckley also saw some time at
the varsity level as a sophomore.
Evans was a first-team all-league
selection. Maynard was an allSoutheast District selection.

By RUST¥ MILLER

From ·tast year's team,
Southern lost the services of John
Harmon, Spike Rizer, and Jay
McKelvey.
The .Tornadoes will again be
coached by veteran coach Howie
Caldwell.
Southern should possess the
same style of play that area fans
have seen over the past couple of
decades. Southern tradition comes
in many forms and one of those is
always a Jack of size. Like most
Southern teams, the 1996-97 teiJll
lacks height, but possesses a good
attitude and uses its quickness
well. Caldwell cited that his
young club may be even smaller
than usual.
Six, foot tall is about us high as
the Tornadoes tower setting the
stage for another yedr without a
legi.timate post rna'!· Caldwell

. Southern's varsity roster
· No.-playcr
·
.
Hei1ht Wci1ht
4-5-Adam Roush• .... :... ......................... .................S-9
145
10/11-Ryan Norris .................................................S-9
145
12/13-Greg McKinney• ....................................... 5-l i
155
14/15-Jamie Evans• ....................:.............. \.........5-10
160
2012 I -Jesse Maynard• ........................................... S-8
165
· 22123 •~ete s·ISSOn ................................................... S-7
140
• ~1-Jo~ Karg .....................................................6-0
160
33-Mtchacl Ash .... ... ..... ...... .............................. 5-1
150
34135-Billy Sheppard* .................................... :::-:-:5-10
ISS
40/41-Joe Kirby ..................................................... 6-0
180
. ~43-Josh Roush* ............................................... 5-11
150
45-Tyson Buckley* ............................. ..............6-0
175 .
*-letterman

rm

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr. ·
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.

Southern's reserve team
No.-lducr
.
.
. · Hej1ht Wej1bt
4/5-Chris Randolph ................................................ S-5
120
10/11-Mitchell W•lker ........................................... S-8
130
12/13-Adam Cumings ............................................S-8
I50
14/15-Kyle Norris ................................................. :s-6
125
20/2 I -Russell Reiber ............................................. 5-IJ·
135
22/23-Josh Davis ..................... - ............................ 5·9
145
24125-Benji Manue1.. ...... :...................................... 5-9
150
30/31-Scott Brinager ...................... ., .................... 5-IO
145
32/33-Aian Moore ...............................................5•11
. 160
34/35-Jason Allen ............................ ,..... ................ 5-8
14&lt;J
40/41-Troy Hoback .............................................. 5-ll
165
~43-Adam Williams ......................... .................. 5·9
140
44/45-Jerrod Mills ...............................................5-11
160

l:w:
Fr.
So.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr:
Fr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So.

GOOD LUCK!!
To All Area
Basketball
Teams

. IING . HARDWfRE .
••t•tlf

.

. H2•5020

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) There's a giant hole at the comer of
Oientangy River Road and Lane
Avenue where the foundation is
being poured for Ohio State's new
arena, set to open in two years.
, On the eve of another basketball
season, the naggil)g questions are
about the foundation of the team.
Can it be built as quickly as its new
home? And is Randy Ayers the guy
to· handle the reconstruction?
Ayers' enters his eighth year as
the Buckeyes' head coach with a
dual persona. He is the architect of
those 27-4 and 26-6 Big Ten cham· pionships in 1991 and 1992, and
the guy whose out-of-control program has gone It-43 in the Big Ten
the last three years.
' "I know I've got to win," Ayers
said. "At this level, you've got to
win. It's apparent. But you don'.r
want to put any extra pressure on

1996-97 Southern boys basketball. team.
said, "We have absolutely no size,
buf we are extremely quick.
Rebounding is going to be a big
key as to whether we have any
success at all."
Southern has one huge plus in
its lineup, the return of 10 seniors.
Caldwell noted, "This is as ·an
experienced a club as we have
had in a number of years. Jesse,
Jamie ahd Tyson have experience
on the varsity for three years."
Southern teams have Jon$ been
praised for their tenacious
defense. Said Caldwell, "We have
strictly emphasized our defense
this year. We believe that our
defense should be able to take
people out of their offense. That
is one reason we have
emphasized the defense so
much."
Maynard's speed helps spark
the SHS press, while his tenacity
is a spark on the off-guard
position. Evans tills in at an ·off.
guard or forward, while Ryan

Norris, who came on with some
potent offensive spark at midseason, hopes to provide some
fireworks out front .Jthis year.
Adam Roush is another capable
guard, who joins the lineup with
Greg McKinney and Tyson
Buckley anchoring the post.
Caldwell concluded, "The
bcauty ·of coaching is starting
each New Ycar and taking 12
·individuals and molding them
into a team who does not care
about points. who doesn't care
about who plays, who rebounds,
ani:! who simply gets the job done.
The bottom line is to play as hard
as possible. If that happens, wins
will take care of themselves."
Caldwell noted that the league .
will again be fairly well balanced
with Federal Hocking and
Alexander taking t~e lead for the
· top spot. Otherwise the league has
very much balance.
Southern will open at home on
Dec. 6 ag11inst Federal Hocking.·.

Southern's schedule
Dm

Oggonept
Dec. 6 ................. Federal Hocking
Dec. 7 .Logan Elm at OU-4: 15 pm
Dec. 10 ..................... ...... Wellston
Dec. 13 ........................... .. Trimble
Dec. 17 .............. at Vinton Co11nty
Dec. 21 ............ Ross Southeastern
Dec. 27 ....... at Chesapeake-6 p.m.
Jan. 3 ........................ at Alexander
Jan. 7 ................. Nelsonville-YOrk
Jan. IO ........................... at Eastern
Jan. 14 ............................. at Meigs
Jan. 21 ................................ Belpre
Jan. 25 ............. at Gallia Academy
Jan. 28 ............ at Federal Hocking
Feb. 4............................ Aiexander
Feb. 7 ................................ Eastern
Feb. 14 ............................ at Miller
Feb. I 5 ............... Newark Catholic
Note: Unless otherwise
noted, all weekday dates arc
reserve-varsity doubleheaders
that start with 6 p.m. reserve ·
contests.. Weekend dates start
with 6:30 p.m. reserve contests.
ln. all instanc:es, varsity cames
will start approximately 90
minutes later.

By GREG BOECK
USA Today

HIGH SCHOOL
BASKEtBALL
.,

.

-

.

Good Luck To
All Area Teams!

LET'S MAKE THIS SEASON
THE BEST EVER!

last year. 6-6 Jason Singleton and
6-2 Don Jantonio, are back. Also
back is Otis. Winston, who started
two years ago then sat out last year
to try to make the U.S. Olympic
team as a high jumper.
Most have bulked up and
stretched out over the summer.
StringeF put on 19 pounds, and the
previously slight Tate and
Stonerook put on muscle to combat
the brawny centers around the conference. ·
Freshmen Sean Tucker (6-7
from Mansfield). Jeremy May (65 from Columbus) and Trent Jack·
son (6-4 from Rochester, N.Y.) all
figure to contribute.
Ayers said maturity may be the
byproduct of a summe~time exhibition tour of South Africa. Ayers
grows animated when he talks
about what it was like to meet President Nelson Mandela and drive

.

within' several feet of white rhinos,
at the Kruger National Park.
. Ayers also s.aid his young players gained perspective from spending a couple weeks working out
with [om1er OSU players Jimmy
Jackson of the Dallas Mavericks.
Chris Jent of the New York Knicks
and others in advance of the trip to
South Africa.
But not all is sunny and positive
around the program,
-Sales of personal seat licenses at the budding Value City Arena have been sluggish, probably
due to the Buckeyes' dismal record
the past two years.
,. )
-Ed Jenkins, a former Columbus prep star who transferred in
from a junior college, has been a
disappointment physically and academically. He's not practicing until
he gets his head and bum knee in
shape. Ayers concedes the 6-9,

270-pound hulk may not. play all
season.
-All those returnees are coming back from a team that was
downright ugly at times last year.
The Buckeyes shot 29 percent 'in
back-to-back beatings to Minneso·
ta and Illinois and all season they
produced more turnovers than a
chain of bakeries.
The usually reticent Ayers
appears to be more at ease and
more emotional than he' has in
years. It's as if he's holding four of
a kind and knows no one else at the .
table has a better·hand.
"What our fans can look for:!'"'
ward to is a sophomore class that
wi II provide a lot of exciting
nights," he said. "We have to add
to the mix with the other people,
but it'll be fun."
And fun is something that hasn't been evident around the program for the last few years.

Can Rider shake bumpy past with Trail Blazers?

.

I

your players ...
Despite rumors to the contrary.
he said he has been given no magic number- no quota of victories,
no required postseason berth- to
keep the job through the remaining
three years of his contract.
"They expect us to make some
progress,·: he·said he has been told
by Ohio State President Gordon
Gee and Athletics Director Andy
Geiger.
· In a year when only one Big Ten
. team (No.8 Michigan) is ranked in
the top 20 dunng the preseason.
thts would seem to be the perfect
lime for the Buckeyes to make
progress.
. They have four starters returnmg - 6-foot· 7 Shaun Stonerook.
6-9 Jermaine Tate, 5-11 Damon
Stringer and 6-3 Neshaun Coleman
-from la~t years team that went
10-17 overall and 3-15 in the Big
Ten. Two others who played a lot

•

Donna Rider is keeping a journal of her son, Isaiah (J.R.) Rider
Jr.'s bumpy journey through the
NBA.
In three turbulent years in Minnesota and four eventful months in
Portland, her third youngest of
four children has drawn as much
attention for his aberrant behavior
as for his bulls-eye ju"lper.
He has run afoul with coaches
and referees on the basketball
court, and with the law in criminal
court.
"I'm going to write a book
. about him one day," Donna says.
· "No one really knows him. I feel
it's abou~ time that people knew the ,
real J.R."
Who's the real J.R.? That's an
unfolding chapter in Portland,
where ·mom says Rider has finally
found a . support system, and he
says he!s "trying to do the right
thing."
On the court, where his pure
offensive talent is rarely questioned, lie is working hard to fit in,
even defensively, with the newlook Trail Blazers. Rider is one of
three new starters on the youngest,
least experienced and arguably
·most combustible team in the
NBA.
Joining t~ 6-5 guard Rider in
Portland this season are point guard
Kenny Anderson, a former All-Star
whose attitude came under fire in
New Jersey, and forward Rasheed
Wallace, known as a hothead as a
rookie at Washington last season.
. Cynics suggest the Trail Blazers
are a disaster waiting to happen, but
they've left the aate 7-5. Yes, the
newcomers ire all potential
headaches. But they're also potential All-Stars.
Rider is avef11lna 13.9 points,
5.9
rebound•
assists.
Anderson
ia a and
1tape3.0leader
il\

::-=-.~~=:=-=

NMiii-IWd .... .,._,..,..

"In this league, everybody talks revisited him. In preseason, he
about taking chances," says Port· was arrested on charges of possesland president Bob Whitsitt. "Well, sion of marijuana. He faces a trial
everything is a chance. The guys early next year.
here all want to be here, and that's
' "It was an opportunity to make
a real good starting point."
him understand the kind of behavSays vet-. an forward Cliff ior we expect," says Whitsitt.
Robinson, a member of Portland's
He also was suspended for the
1990 and I 992 NBA finalists: opener for missing a preseason
"Everybody is doing what they can game and sat out the first half of ap
to put those personal. agendas exhibition game for missing a
shootaround.
aside."
"Mistakes, yes," says Whitsitt,
Exhibit A is ~ider, 25. "This is
definitely a new start," he says. "I ''but they weren't for lack of carhave something to prove, !he fact ing or not wanting to be part of it.
that! am a'winner. I'm trying to be Quite honestly, if it wasn't J.R.,
on time, trying to fit in, tryinJ to nobody would think twice about
.
play hard. It's a growing process." it."
Mother
and
son
say
the
troubles
·
He is teaming the hard way. He
is quick to smile and has an engag- have been blown out of proportion.
ing personality, but in Minnesota he Like the nickname critics have givquickly wore out his welcome. In en the Trail Blazers; "Jail Blazers."
"That's tough," says Rider.
three years there, he piled up more
than $200,000 in fines and lost "But people in the Portland orgasalary for missed flights ·and prac- nization know I'm not this monster
tices. He feuded with his coach I'm perceived to be. They've put
once and, after getting tossed out of faith in me, and that's important to
a game by a referee, had to be me."
shooed off the court by his mothSays Robinson, "He just haper.
pens
to be in a couple hard situaHe also spenttwo days ih jail for
failing to follow· through with tions, "but that doesn't make him
court-mandated community ser- a bad person."
Less publicized: Rider lent convice for an assault charge.
siderable
financial assistance to a
That's hardly fodder for a book.
young
girl
in Minnesota who lost
Or, it would seem, a trade.
But Whitsitt decided to take the her mother. He annually takes chil·
chance last summer. "With so drcn in his hometown of Alameda,
many guys in this league, it's their Calif., on a prcsc~ool shopping
second stop before they start to spree. At Thanksgiving, he helps
understand what it's all about," with a: food drive for the homeless
in Oakland.
Whitsitt says.
"I know all the bashing bothers
"We thought, if we could get a
him,"
Donna says. "He runs into
player still as young as J.R. who's .
already done the things on the court these stumbling blocks, but he will
he haS and more importantly a guy overcome. He's ·young. I tell him
who is lookina for a fresh start in he's. a public figure, and when
a new environment, it could be a you're a public figure, they set you
aood opportunity for both sides." up to tear you down, so you have
Rider had barely arrived at his to be more discreet. Once he real- .
izes_
that,
be_
fine."
new _
lddress
before
._.
__
_ _old
....;problems
____
_he'll
__
__

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High ·School Basketball

GOOD LUCK
Meigs, Mason, &amp; Gallia County Teams
A salute to the area teams as basketball
season arrives. We know the many hours
of hard work and dedication you have put
into your 'sport.
You have the support from all of us at ...
Rlldne,

Ohlo41177
Phone
(814)

Mt-2210

.Support Your Teams

""·......_lloi
, _..;...__...:..;..-....------~-

I

�..-_,.Ten· Tile Dlllr ll 6111,1-·&amp;•'1¥1•••....,..

, tl

Bridgewater

Courllr-Newa

~ is a team-by-team look at
the Big East men's teams for the
1996-97 season.
I. PROVIDENCE (20.9 overall,
12-6 Big East) - . The starting
nucleus includes three solid seniors
in forwards Austin Croshere, Derrick Brown~ Ruben Garces alld
dazzling sophomore point guard
. God S~ammgod. Providence fig,
ures to.' be a bruising rebounding
team, and with a season under his
. bell, Shammgod should run the .
·~ offense flawlessly.
.
Key contributor: Croshere. The
6-fciot-9 forward was an enigma

last year, dominating in some
games and diSappearing in others.
Flanked by Brown and Garces,
there's no reason he can 'I carry
Providence the way John Wallace
carried,Syracuse last year.
Note: In late summer, Providence picked up seven-foot freshman center Ndongo N'Diaye. Originally signed with Maine, he is supposed to be a shot-blocker with
great promise.
. 2.SYRACUSE(I8-II; J.l-7)~
This is a high pick for a team that
·will count heavily on four freshmen, but those freshmen (point
guard Jason Hart, forwards LaSean
Howard and Derrick Thomas and
swingman Ramel Lloyd) are very

talented. Add in returning veterans He is rumored to be headed for
Otis Hill, Todd Burgan and Jason Fresno State.
Cipolla, and the Orange have an
3. GEORGETOWN (17-10, 10interesting blend of experienced S)- A.fter two years of go-go ball
veterans and talented youngsters. under sensational guard Allen lver. All three vets emerged in last son, things will get back to a more
year's NCAA Tournament run.
reasonable pace, with sophomore
Key contributor: Hart. The guard Victor Page leading the way.
freshman point guard is 'Slated to He could be the Big East's best
start and Syracuse fans think he'll pure scorer, and he'll be surroundbe better than Seton Hall's mega- ed with capable talent in junior forhyped freshman star, Sh~n Hoi- , 1Nards J~hidj )Yhitc;i•'ld Boub.acar
·lowav: r
•
'
Aw and Junior gulllll Jerry Nichols.
Note: Two weeks ago, Syracuse White, Aw and Nichols have all
freshman Winfred Wallon _ per- been waiting to show their stuff.
haps the best recruit in the Big East There's also a talented group of
after Villanova's Tim Thomas freshmen, led by point guard Ed
was declared academically ineligi- Sheffey.
ble' by the NCAA and left school. . Key contributor: Page. He's a

shooting guard Levell Sanders and
swingman Jalil Roberts give Seton
Hall three good perimeter players,
but the frontcourt of6-IO Bayonne
·Taty, 6-7 Donnell Williams and 61o Jacky Kaba is Atlantic 10-caliber. particularly on offense. There
also isn't much depth.
Key contributor: Williams. The
junior forward had a great freshman debut and then struggled last
season with various health problems:lfhe can score 12to 15 points
•11 gjUIIe, just giv'l Seton Hall some
sort of inside offensive option, the
Pirates will be better.
Note: Roberts was a blue-chip .

pure talent, · but he's always ·
·rumored to be in academic trouble.
If he becomes ineligible, Georgetown is very run-of-the-mill.
Note: A few ye~ ago, some
fans were saying Georgetown
coach John Thompson ,was slipping
and living off his repull!tion. That
talk should disappear this se_35on
when the Hoyas make the N&lt;:;AA
Tournament despite losing Allen
. ,I~er~o~ . .Jer~me ~i!J.iams.~..and
(jthella Harrmglon to the NBA
draft.
4. SETON HALL (14-14, 6-12)
- There just isn 'I enough frontcourt talent to hope for bett&lt;;,r.
Point 11uard Shaheen Holloway,
(See BIG EAST on page 11)

recruit out of Jersey City St. Anthony who originally signed with W isconsin. He averqed 5.5 points and
2.2 rebounds as a freshman in

Stringer believes in Ru.t gers women~s potential·
By JIM CARTY
Brldgewlter
Courier-News
PISCATAWAY, N.J. - It look
only one exhibition game to start
lhe debate on how good the Rutgers
women's basketball team can be
this year.
"Rutgers has the ingredients to
be a top 2S team this year," Hall of
Farner Nancy Lieberman-Ciine
said after her Athletes ·in Action
squad beat the Scarlet Knights.
"But certainly they need to take
care of business. I don't know what
!f'ibeir motivation was against Athletes in Action, but they have to
play every game like that, like it's
against a contender.
"If Rutgers will have that men. tality ... thciy'll be successful.
·lbey're going to heat a lot of .
teams, I can tell you that."
1be Scarlet Knights. are coming
off a 13-15 season (8-10 Big East),
their best players are sophomores,
their depth is mostly freshmen and
the schedule includes No. 5 Connecticut, No. 8 North Carolina
State, No. 9 Old Dominion, No. 14
. Notre Dame, No. 16 Penn State and
No. 17Duke.
Doesn't exactly sound like an
easy path to. the Top 25, does it?
Three thing$ give Rutgers a
chance:
-lbe young talent is indeed
., very llilented.
-As tough as the Top 25 opponents will be, there are also 16
aames qlinst Bia East opponents
who are not ranked and are not considered much beuer than Rutgers.
- Coach Vivian Slri11Jer. who
knows what to do with young talent, knows how to win winnable
1ames and ' - never miued the
NCAA Tournament for three
lll'liJht years.
''We're youn1 enouJh. you
miJht say foolish tnou1h. to
.., believe we can do it all," the
coach slid. "That's 1ood. I'm not
1oin1 to try and c:hanp their
minds.
.
"I'm realistic: in recopizin1
that were 11iU very younJ. lucille
freshmen. • 10011 • they have a
clue about whal's
011 - aad
it

the season -then they're going to
be good for a very long time:"
In two exhibition games, Rutgers has shown some clear
strengths, particularly its frontcourt. ·
Sophomores Jen Clemente and
Susa11o Blauser have been rocks at
center and forward, averaging doubfe figures in points and dominating the boards. The :reserve forwards compliment eadh other, with
sophomore Kylie Martin bringing
finesse scoring and freshman
Andrea Honeycutt playing a power game.
Ballhandling, a weakness last
year, has also been solid in the
exhibition season. Senior point
guard Kristen Somogyi looks
quicker and better conditioned and
is clearly running the offense
~!!:fore she thinks of her own shots.
Sophomore guard Tomora Young
has helped out at the point. but will

mostly play shooting guard. Freshman Rachelle Guyton will also see
minutes.
Perhaps most promising from
Stringer's standpoint was the
improving defense. She said good
man-to-man defense would be a
big key to this season's success or
failure.
·
.The opening-day lineup Sunday
against Penn State will probably
include Somogyi and Young in the
backcourt, Clemente at center and
Blauser at'big forward.
Freshmen Usha Gilmore and
LaTana Lillard are fighting for the
small forward's job, but have been
emtic in the pre-season.
Freshman inconsistency is one
thing that bothered the Scarlet
Knights in the pre-season, threepoint shooting is another. Rutgers
was only 3-for-20 from three-point
range in two exhibitions. Big centers could .also hurt the Knights.

Clemente is only 6-foot-2 and
she' II have to guard players as tall
as 6-8.
The weak spots aren't m.any,
though, and are fixable. Stringer
insists there are three-point shooters wailing to emerge. The freshmen will gain experience. The
defense is improving.
A big key will be winning
winnable games while the team
develops.
"Last year, we had a few games
we should have won, but when it
came right down to it, not everybody showed up to play on that
day, •· Clemente said. "To win, you
need the ·whole team there. We
need to win those games this year."

&amp;

1993-94, but decided to trans.er
when his playing time dropped as
a sophomore and he averaged only
3.75.points
and 2.6
rebounds.
MIAMI
(Il-l
5, 5-13).

Maybe it's because there are 10
freshmen and sophomores on the
roster and they don 'I know lillY better, but the Knights'· confidence is
high, especially after Liel&gt;ermanCiine's comments.
"Just to hear a pro like that
come out and say we cari·be one of
the top teams, that makes us work
even harder," Young said.
Stringer doesn 'I mind the hype.
She likes her team and she likes big
goals.
"We'd like to win the Big
East," she said. "Connecticut is a
great, great school, but why would
you say you want to be .~?You
don 'I do Jhat. You set your sights
high and you shoot at it."

Good· Luck
To Area
High School
Basketball
Teams

•MEIGS
• EASTERN

• SOUTHERN
•WIHIMA

.,.. Shoe Place

• WUIIII Wlm fALCOIS

GOOD LUCK
.INGELS FURNITURE
JEWELRY AND RADIO SHACK
101 N. 2ND ITRIIT, liiDDLIPORT, OHIO
(814) 182-2135
.. .

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-

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to 1956. Bob Wenzel'~ four su'aighl
sub-:SOO campaigns (going inio this
season) are the second-worst streak
for a Scarlet Knights coach.
7. PITTSBURGH (J.I-18. 3-15)
- Coach Ralph Willard just finished his second nationally ranked
recruiting class in three years. but
Pittsburgh still is a year away from
a bi-eakoul season. Aside from
senior forward Chad Varga. there
isn 'I a proven. Big East player on
the roster. Center Gerald Jourdon is
steady (8.7 ppg. 6 rpg last year), but
doesn't dominate. Sophs Mark
Blount and And~ Howard will
fight it out for .the third frontcoun
spot. As pedestrian as the frontcoun
is;lhebackcourtisacoach'snighth
mare - two ~nprovenhesop omores. No one d1sputes 1 potential of Kellii Taylor. and Vontecgo
Cummings. but the Big East is a
tough place for young guards to
live up to expectations.
·
Key contributor: Cummmgs
.
II
be
evpected
run
th
show
·
s
WI
1
10
from the point. He missed nine
.h
. . d ·
games wtt an InJUre wns1 1as-1
year and shot only 33 percent from
•'"- field. If he It' ves up to his poten""'
tial and brings the young Panthers
together, Pittsburgh could be better
than e•pected.
Note: Since joining the Big
East. l·n 1982, Pl'ttsburgh has only
had four losing seasons. Three of
those losing seasons, however,
have come in the past three years.

the first need. Now. if either Tarik
Turner. Chudney Gray or Collin
Charles can run the point, St.
John's is going 10 be a very dangerous team. Fraschilla's got an
All-Amenca candidate in Zendon
Hamilton. a potential All-America
candidate in Felipe Lopez and a
proven Bii East forward in Charles
Minlend. Those are formidable
ingredients - if the point guard
position gels filled.
Key contributor: Clearly Turncr. a blue-chip recru~who ~n:t
produced yet, is on 1 spot. e s
been handed the starting point
guard's job and just needs to run
the offense and not make mistakes.
~ hman, d'd
Note: Gray,a.res
1 not
h' NCAA · ·
SAT ore
get lsf h' h mhlmm,um h ~ k
out o 1g sc oo , so e oo
advantag_t! of a loophole and did not
' 11. 1nste ad •
enroll at sI. John•s th'1s •a
he
d
.-.;
h
I
guar sta,.... orne, bone· d up
h'
on 1s s""':f skill s and took I he tes1
· Thi s·time he passed. so he'll
agam.
enroll at St. John's in December
and have four years of eI'1g1'b'l'
1lly
remaining.
3. BOSTON COLLEGE ( 18-8,
B' Eas s·
12-6)
Because
the
lg B I IX
D' · · ·
IVISion IS very strong. os1on
College might also be the third•best
team in the Big East. Why pick a
h'rd he · has 1e
• be 1
team 1 1 w n 11
ague s s
player
guard (S(Danya· Abrams),
p ) nd a1ogreat
coolRIC enhn bua B st no
1 ~&gt; ston
starters? . t's tougl •
•Co1lege IS current Y a two-p ayer
team, while Villanova (Lawson,
·Williams, Thomas) and St. John's
(Lo-. z, Hamilton, Minlend) have
,.,..
potent one-two-three ~nches.
, Key contributor: Duane Woodard
h .
uard H
w · starts at s ooung I
· e
can play the point, freeing Penn to
score more, and also averaged 8.8
point$. Penn will miss the first six
· games this season. because of academic struggles, making Woodw'ard even more important.
Note: Boston College's fall
recruiting class self-destructed
wl!en the admissions department
rejected two of four players, and a
third player then refused' to sign
with the Eagles. This off-the-court
'incident prompted Coach .Jim
O'Brien to hint at quilling and may
hurt B.C.'s morale.

1

!ot.

•

Note: West Virginia's only
freshman recruit. 6-8 forward Marcus Goree, is barred from playing
pending an NCAA ruling. He hasn'l met NCAA academic requirements for high school credits and
may be f\li'Ced to sit out this season.
5. CONNECTICOT ( 14-13. 99)- The Big East simply isn't an
easy league to rebuild in and
UConn is definitely rebuilding.
Any time a team is frying to pass
off a player like senior Kirk King
(9.9 ppg, 6 rpg) as an emerging star,
ifs a sign oftrouble. There's a great
freshman class and two tremendouslv talented sophomores in
guard Ricky Moore and swingmaA
Rashame1 Jones, bu1 the Husk'1es
are ateam for the future, not today.
Key contributor: Moore. Now

r-a.

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chusetts on Dec. 27 at the Hartford
Convention Centec. With Huskies
Ray Allen, Doron Sheffer and ·
Travis Knight all gone to pro basketball along with Minutemen
coach John Calipari and star center
Marcus Camby, it won't be the
matchup it should have!' been.
6. NOTRE DAME (5-21, 0.18)
- N9tre Dame doesn 'I have a single Big East-caliber guard on its
roster, and with the exception of
talented forward Pat Oarrity, its
frontcourt players are slow-fooled
bruisers. Last year the Irish were
last in the Big East in scoring,
steals and blocked shots. Worse yet,
the talent leve.l will go down this
year after a mi:diocre recruiting
class and the transfer of starting
point guard Doug .Gottlieb.
Key contributor: Soph9more
swingman Gary Bell was a thirdteam prep AU-America and could
give Notre. Dame a hu,e lift. He
was hun all of last year, though,
and is already bothered by naging
injuries this fall.

that Allen lvei'Son 's taken his actio
· ker
Ihe pros, one· won •t fimd a qutc
uard
·
11
1
he
ho
g
1n co ege. s I
sop more
·
up to steadymg
a young 1earn
throug'h the Big East's rough spots?
Note: After years of talk about
a showdown of New Eng1and powerS, Connecticut will meet Massa-

Since the most talent on this team
is in the freshman and sophomore
classes, it's likely Miami will struggle early al)d finish strong. There's
· sophomore ".ora budding star an
ward Tim James, and t!te freshmen
- guards Lucas Barnes 111d Ver.. ard M · ·
non Jennings and •orw s ano
Bland and John Helmsley - were
..
nationally ranked as a recru1tmg
.class. 1be veterans are a different
matter. Point guard Kevin Norris is
. ti ard AI F
streaky, semor orw
ex raser has never dominated, senior
81&amp; Ealt six
center Will Davis is injury prone.
v
tn'b to Nom's 1be I. VILLANOVA(25-4, 16-2).1t's
...ey con u r:
·
.
junior point is· a team leader and strange to pick a team for first and
has,10 find a way to brin1 to,ether be~n the expllll!ation wit!' a disthe youngsters and lhe veterans. He clallner. but don 1 count Vlllan?va
.. also needs to improve his own as a lock. Sure, ~here's. amazmg
assists-to-turnover ratio (Ill to 75 . frontcoun talent m semor Jason
last year).
Lawson, super freshman Tim
Note: Miami coach Leonard Thomas and strongman Chw;k
Hamilton has a reputation for not Kon:'egay,. or course Ajvnt
tnisting his freshmen. Last season, Will~s IS a doub!e-figure scorer
for instance, he never started atpotntguardandeltherJoh~C~leJames, even though the 6-7 forward ~land or Howard B1'?wn w1ll g1ve
was clearly his best talent. If he is Nova a decent shoottng guard. But
equally skluish about this year's Lawson has to prove he ~an carry
, freihmen, it will definitely hurt the the team, a proven shooung guard
Hurricanes' won-loss record.
need.~ to emerge and the Wildcats
6. RUTGERS,(11-15, 4-14) _ h.av~ to ·show theY_'re better than
Every team ahead'of Rutgers has at s1mll~y talented B.~&amp; East brethren
St. John's and ProVtdence. No one
least a .few players who w~h has more talent than lhC Wildcats,
ranked 1n t~ top I&lt;X_l as h1g . it'sjustarilatterofhowtheyputit
4.WESTVIRGINIA(I7-9,10.
school recruits; the Kni;tts have · ,__ he[
8) -This is a solid if not spectacnone. 1be peritneeer· Jhc)uld be a 1-·-1 ·
.
.
ular .team. Damian Owens gives
strenJih. Sophomore pards Geoff
.Key contributor: For a semor West Virginia a go-to scorer at
Billet and Billy GiJW and junior pomt guard, Brown looks shot small forward. Power forwll'd Gorcolle,e u•fer J!)lllnie Blake are bef~ pus a
H~ also strunles , don Malotie, 6-11, is a legitimate
-clflll11c shooten.la the frontcourt, to hts left. Hts assiiiHo-tumover Bil East ban,er. There's also
junior forwlrds 'Jerry MiUs ·and ratio (5.4-2.4) is eacel~nt, though, suenath at center Y(here last year's
Eric:, Clark and klphomore Rob ~ he played more mtnutn than starter, 6-11 Sandro Varejao, · is
HocJason are all talented, but ~yoneexceptdeparteds~Kerry beinapushedby6-10juniorcolthey're all 6-8 or smaller. Bia Kiu~ last year. ~f the sen~or can lege transfer Brian Lewin. Guard is
power forwards and centen will sumve the defensive, attenuon and a queation mark. Coach Oale
have a looclllfllon, Nova will be cadett wun 't happy wi,b $eldon
aaain decimate Rut,en up front.
Key coatrlbutor: Junior 7~f001 toup to stop.
.
. Jefferson's decision~~~~ at the
center JIIIW Holcomb. There's no
Note: Vill~va ts '? 1~ lhis point last year and may shift the
other player oftlbc roster who can ~ lhat ~~ II cons~n· red- senior to shooUnll'*d· The~
lnlll:h up trilllllla power forwards shUUIIJ semor nrinpnan rl.efl'y . 1em Is tM1 neither junior tall II
and
His role ltl'l1 to ICCII8.
a ..._.... tole player on the traMfen Adriaa Pledaer and Gre1
Wiklt:all'
Todd
buttoiJict . . . deWbia2.S'f.JOHN'S(23-3,15-3)- Mylelilam.paiat.-...
•r:!:C'a • P..,d White The Reel s.am. pazte waa millinc
conlrillutor: The point
..........._ ........: ----' for --~"'- - ......_ last year - a ,_,..., _ __. whoever he is. It's a t.l sip
_ . . . . , • ., n•v ,..............
.......,,
.-...
.._ 500 1111 • • ....... loliq COICh llltl a li&amp; Ball ptiinl ,....t. when an Olhel wise talented tqm
for~ • • ,_.from 1949 Brilllinl in Fran Fraschi!~ fl~led -~:~~~!~ ~.~ttta~· ..
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Sports on Page 7

Cloudy tonight, Iowa In
the 20.. Thankeglvlng
Day, partly cloudy. Hlgha
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•
Vol. 47, NO. 146
,
018118, Ohio ValMy Publlthlng Company

3 SectloM, 24 ~. 3S ""nta
A Gannett Co. New opopor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, WecloNday, November 27, 1996

Racine-based firm settles campground la.w suit
.

.

.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - Companies in .Ohio aiid Florida im~li­
cated in a campground membership scam have agreed to pay $200,000 to
settle a lawsuit; Attorney General Darrell V. McGraw Jr. said Thesday.
Family Resorts Inc" of Racine, Ohio, and Adventure Outdoor Resorts, of
Lakeland,Aa., agreed to refund $200,000 to people who ·bought "membership upgrades" at Pipestem Village Resort, a private campground near stateowned Pipestem State Park.
.
The companies also agreed to cancel $269,000 in debt that campground
members financed through the companies.
The selllement affects about 350 consumers.
The "upgrades" cost $3,045 each, but the highest cash refund will be
$1,070. said Assistant Attorney General Jil,l Miles, who is in charge of the
office's consumer protection division.
.
·
"We feel we did extremely well for as ~omplicated as this _got," Miles

,I
•

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. .. ...... .

Consumers temper
economic·confidence
with tinge of caution

~

Ball State gets nod to·take ·MAC m·en's ·crown
By RUSTY MILLER

Six-10 center Robert Martin, 6-5
AP Sporte Writer
Marcus Mason and 5-10 point
It's no huge secret why Ball guard Randy Zachary are a perfect
· State is the pick to win the Mid- complement to Wells' all-around
American Conference Iitle this sea- game.
son.
If Wells is the MAC's binest
"It's because ofBonzi, Perind," star, then Devin Davis of MIAMI
Cardinal coach ~y McCallum is its anti-hero. Vilified on the road
said.
,
because of his dreadlocks, goldThe 6-foot-5 junior can pop out- capped teeth and menacing elbows,
side and shoot the three, be can the 6-7 senior is a whirlwind. He
drift inside and muscle up a shot in led the MAC in rebounds and
llaffic. or he can rebound with just intimidation last year while averabout anybody in the league.
aging 17.8 points. Damon Frierson
That's quite a package to have . returns at guard after scoring 10.5
on your side, and tbe most obvious points a game as a freshman. For'o;{l:ason why Ball State was the pre- · mer Miami star and ex-Central
season choice to. pick up its first Michigan coach Charlie Coles, an
Iitle since 1992,93.
assJstantlast year, moved up when
Still, it's not as though BALL Herb _Sendek moved on to North
STATE is without talent. McCal- Carolina ~tate.
lum returns three other starters
In bQxing parlance, Earl
from last year's team that went 16- Boykins ,of EASTERN MICHl:
12 ·and tied for fouf\11 in the MAC. · GAN would be called the best in

the MAC "pound for pound." ·die, literally and figuraJively. To 15-12 season.
Despite his 5-7 and 140-po"''d lake the ~at off Sears, the guards
The core of Stan Joplin's firsl
frame, Boykins is fearless and · will have to shoot better from 10LEDO team will be~ 11 center
pmctically peerless on the court. three-pointrange; they were last in Casey Shaw and 6-7 Brett l'edak.
Millon Barnes, an assisiant at Min- the MAC .in three-pointers and Joplin, a 'Michigan State assistant
nesota the last five years,tocik over accuracy behind the arc last year. who was a Rocket star in tlie '70s,
as head coach when Ben Bralm left
Antonio Daniels, Jay Larmnaga stepped in when Larry Gipson
for Cal. Eastern (25-6, 14-4) won · and MAC freshman of the year stepped down.
the MAC regular-seasilll and tour- · Anthony Stacey each averaged at
The good news is that. CENnarnent litles and then blitzed Duke l~asl IS.S points a game last year TRAL.MICHIGAN will likely be
in tbe NCAA t!)Urnament a year at BOWLING GREEN, which also the most improved team ih tbe
ago. Two more starters from that has starter Dayon Ninkovic back in league. The bad news is, that doesteam are also around, 6-4 Derrick the fold. A problem area? Despite n't mean much .. The Chippewas
Dial and 6-7 James Head.
tbe credentials of the big three as were 6-20 last year and 3-15 in the
Four starters are back at OHIO, scorers, the f'alcons were near the MAC. Four starters and the infubut the graduated 7-2 Jason Terry bottom in most offensive cate- sion of three junior-college transisn't one of them. The Bobcats gorjes last year.
fers should help coach Leonard
boast 6-5 Curlis Simmons and 6-7
After what Saddi Washington of Drake's program turn the comer.
Paul Morris at the wings . and 5-8 WESTERN MICHIGAN has been
KENT and AKRON will fightto ·
Geno Ford and 5-10 ~rey Reed at . through, playing MAC brutes is a stay out of the ~asemeri' much as
the guards, but are lacking a game- · breeu. Two blown-out knees and · they fight for recruits and fans. All
breaker in the middle. Ed Sears\ a Washin(!ton has sjlent'more time in five starters are back at Akron, but
6-9, 270-pound lo:!lld who redshirt- the weight roinn and j\yhirlpool than the Zips ran the table with 18.
ed l!15t year, will likely fill the mid- on the court the past.three years. strai$ht MAC losses last yJ:ar.
Buthebouncedbacl&lt;toscore 12.3 Kent'sncwcoachisformerEastem
points a game last /year and is the . Michigan assistant Gary Waters.
leader of a Bronco team that 'has He won't mistake ·the Flashes for
fourstartcrsbi.ck!fmasurprising lheEagles.howevcr.

• Stat e ·0ff"ICia
• 1expeet·s attendanee
Oh 10
'
• ·
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at menS games to Increase Wit t1me

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -·
Attendance at the team's two exhibition games has been less than
spec!&amp;"ular, but more people are
expected to attend men's basketball
games at Ohio State.once the regular season geta under way, a university otfocial said. ·
An intimate gathering of 4,208
watched the Buckeyes .beat High
P.~e America 94-64 on Nov. 6, and
another 6; 127 showed up Nov. 16
to see another blowout -an 84-42
victory against a Russian club
team.
St. John Arena has 13,276 scab.
"I know it was .• discouraging
atmosphere and I fell badly for the
players more than anything,"
Richelle Simonson,ticket director,
said Thursday.
Simonson cxpecb the crowds ,.,
return when the ,ames start counting in the·win-loss column.
"I think you'll see attendance
. escalate," she said. "!think we're
looking to atJeast stay where were
last year, if not ao up."
Ohio State's average attendance
for 14 home games last year was
11,713.
.
.
t; Until 1994-9', the Buckeyes
had drawn mooe than 13,000 per
aame for seven years in a row,
twicc.averapa a full house. There
llaln 't been a four-digit averap
•ino:cthe 1976-nteamdrew7,S34
perpme.
.
. Si1110111011,~~eknowlcdpd that it
will be a •hlllcRJe dnwina f1111 to
lhe five hotne ,..._ ~
llelween Dee. 1-11, before die 118ft
ol' Bia Ten.'lbe B~~ekcyea will play
llcia to Southwcslem lAuiliena.
Ke111 Slllle, l.oaJ Ill ~. Ocorp
Malon IIIII Allll1 u Stale.
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The Southern Local Board of
Education Monday night approved a
district-wide technology pl.,., as part
oflhe process in applying for School
Net and School Net Plus· funding in
bringing more technology into the
classrooms.
The technology plan 1"85 submitted by a district technology committee.
Meigs liJld Easte111 local school
districts have already submitted technology plans.
. · S~perintendent James Lawrence
explained that SQuthern was waiting
to see the outcome of last August's
school building issue. lf approved.
the new elementary sChool and renovations to the existing high schopl
would have included' most of the
hardware needed for computers in the
district.
In addition, the bQard rehired high
ichool football coal:h Dave Barr.
The hiring will give some consistency to the school's. football pro-

'

Members also were not giyen time to consider the offer or allowed to
review the membCrship documents with an attorney, the lawsuit alleged.
"They told us our contract wasn't any goOd. They told us if we didn '1
sign we'd lose everything," said Charles Kind er of Charleston.
. Kinder chose to retain his lifetime membership in the 'campground, which
he bought in the late 1970s for $5.400.
A partial settlement was reached in August 1995, under which Pipestem's
1,400 members were allowed to cancel their memberships and be rcliev~d
of maintenance fees. More than 500 people canceled their memberships,
McGraw said.
•
'
About roo campground members never responded to the notices sent by
McGraw's office and cann9t participate in lhe settlement, Miles said.
The most recent settlement resolves all remaining issues. McGraw said.

,......._--..·Holiday harmony-,---. Gounty
support

.
•

'

Commissioners.
reaffirm support
.
.....
for battlefield'
· preservation"'' .

Consumer

NEW YORK - Conswn~rs are
ronfidPnce
the mpst contldert in seven years
\!bout me tconomy's· current _health:
from a monthly surveJ 61' ' .' ..'
but are increasingly . wary thai 16e
· 5~000 U.S. households. · .
good times will end by late spring, a
, • -~~? " .......
' ' ._ '
,""=,;1!·~ ,. "'.
~-,. _. .
survey reported Tuesday.
·· The Conference Board's measure _
IIIIIs"' 100
120 ;-,.,.,.....,..,.,..,.
of sentiment on curTent business
conditions rose to 131 in November,
110
its highest level since· l989. It was a
tOO
6.4·point gain from October and an
90
encouraging sign for merchants hop·
ing for brisk holiday sales.
80
However, consumers' outlook fer
70
the next six month wasn't as rosy,
60
with t!J.e-Board's gauge of the future
50
dipping more than 4 points. to 91.4
percent in November.
40
"Whatlhls is telling us is that we
30
have strong conditions now in the
20
economy. but expectations for the
10
future have drifted ' down ," said Dan
Seto, an economist at Nikko Securi0.~~~~~~~~
ties International Co. "Consumers
arc concerned about what 's ahead ."
· Consumer confidence' is.watched
closely for indications of consumer
spending, which accounts for about calculated from a base of 100, is
Jwo-thirds ofth~ nation's cconomy.ll derived from responses to quesliolls
also is one of lhe earliest economic · sent to 5,000 households nationindicators for the month of Novem- wide, polling lhem on matters ,rang-·
ber.
jng from job availability to homeThe Conference Board'-s niain l)uying ,plans.
, '
barometer. its Consumer Confidence
The Conference Board's report
Index, was I07.3 lhis month, the comes as financial markets scour new
same as the revised October figure . dala for signs of economic weakness
The index jumped 5· points in Augusl and low in nation, two factors that
and '6.9 points in July, hilling a six- could cause the Federal Reserve to
year high before weakening slightly hold off qn raising interesl ra1cs at its
in September and October.
Dec. 17 J!Oiicy meeting,
The November figures . were in
The latest report shows consumers
line with economists' estimates.
arc quite confident about the present
The consumer confidence index, economic picture.

Southern Board gives nod
to district technology plan

i

• Southern Tornadoes'

-10n

d::riSSJ the lllllwo pmn IIIII aOnc
ror lhe confensa opelier .,ailill
Illinois on JM. 4,
"We're aoinJ&amp;o have to ltruJJlC 11:nJui1: ~lilller), "llhe ald.
B.c slit r.e11 IIHclsttlncc will
Improve wtsen ,ifle conference

,,, . ,,

'High School Basketball,

By RACHEL BECK
AP Buelnesa Writer

'

said. . .
•
. '
.
Adventure Outdoor Resorts sp6kesrrian Richard Rippe in Blue Springs, ·
~o., did not return a telephone message Tuesday. There was no directory
listing for Family Resorts.
.
Adventure Outdoor Resorts filed for Chapter II bankruptcy protection in
Florida:
}'he practice of selling upgrades to people who are already members of
resorts is known as "unloading," which is usually a scam, McGraw said.
McGraw tiled the lawsuit after receiving complaints from campground
members.
·
Members were told their children and graqdchildren would be saddled with
increasing debt for campgrGund maintenance fees unless they purchased the
upgrade, according to the 1994 lawsuit filed in Kanawha County Circuit
Court.

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff

The atory of the Firat Thsnkaglvlng Ia one of hannony between the pllgrlma and the lndlena. The pilgrim• eliered frulte end vegeteblee with th• Indian• Who provided them with com
end wild meet The occasion marked the beginning of a frlendahlp. Among thoee tlklng roles
In it Thankaglvlng play at the Middleport Elementary School were theae children, from lefl, Kel118rawer.and Aahley Crlalip, co•tumld" pllgrlma; end Billy Fink and Clorl11a Davie, as lndl-

nL

··

·

Ex-Meigs resident 'takes_center
stage with annual Macy's parade
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newe Staff
'
"Bullwinklc" mania has struck
New York lhis week, drawing a former Pomeroy resident to the center of
attention a&lt; filial preparalions wind
down for Thursday's 70th annual
Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade in
New York City. 1
1llc popular cartoon moose "Bulll!'in~lc," created by the late Jay
Ward, has been nam&amp;l'"lhe official
ambassador of this year's Macy's

gram. It has heen several years since
the school ha~ had the same lOK&gt;Ihall
coach Jor two consecutive years.
In other personnel mailers, Margo
Florian and Shannon Korn were
approved as subslilulc teachers. •
John Manuel was accc)lled as a
volunteer girls high school basketball
coach, and Isabel Couch was
approved as a junior high volu~tccr, By JIM FREEMAN
The board also approved Ralph Stein. S.ntl1111l
Sbltl
metz to transport a hearing-impaired
Two arid-a-half years Into a1five'
student to Athens.
year permanent improvements levy,
·In other business, Lawrence invit- members of the Mei111 Local Board
ed board mernhers and others to ofEducation Thesday night reviewed
attend a town nieeting Tuesday, Dec. what it has purchased so far, and
3 at 7 p.m. at Jackson High School plarined for the future.
The district sold voters the levy in
about the condition of Ohio's school
funding.
.
May 1994, sayina it would be used
Present were Lawrence, Treasur- for books, buses and buildings. A ·
er Dennie Hill, Soard President Susie report prepared and presented by
drueser and board members David Tn:ILiurerCindy Rhonemus indicates ·
Kucima, C.T. Chapman, Bob Collins the money has been uaed for those
purposes.
and Marty Morarity.
The next meedng whl be Monday,
The levy will raise about
Dec. 16 at 7 p.m.
·$2,782,640 ~fore it expires.

The-Wards have been in New York
Thanksgiving Day Parade. Since
for
several days, participaling in proWard's passing, the cartoon moose's
motional
events for the Macy's
commercial interest has cmitinued to
be rcprt:scnted by Jay Ward Produc- parade and signing copies of "The
Rocky and Bullwlnkle Book."
tions.
'
"They (Macy's) arc wonderful to
Mrs. Jay Ward, aformc.r Pomeroy
work
with and it is a very· happy
resident. and her daughter Tiffany
i&gt;ccasion
," said Mrs . Ward, after
Ward have collaborated on a new coffee table book featuring stories about arriving with Bull winkle and Tiffany
production of The Rocky and Bull- Ward at the legendary Herald Square
winkle Show and art work of Bull- Macy's store Sunday afternoon. The
winkle and his sidekick, Rocky the · Ward's made a promotional slop at
(Continued on Page 3)
·
Flying Squirrel.
'

Meigs Board gets update on spending .
r.w.

The district pun:based $345,869 in

l!ew textbooks containing curriculum'
designed to help students pass the
Ohio ninth-grade proficiency test.
Purchased were language arts, science and social studies fof grades K12 and health for grades K-6.
Plans also call for purchasing foreign language texts, additional health
books and other texts including music
and industrial arts .
.
"We will be up t,o date ,on books
·by the end of the levy," said Superintendent Bill Buckley.
The district had purchased math
books earlier.
Aloo. $~,317 has been spent on

..

12 new buses with the board Tuesday
night agreeing to advertise for five
addilional buses .
·
(Continued on Plge 3) .

No Sentinel
on Thursday
The Daily Sentinel will not be
published Thursday so that its
employees may observe lh~
Thanksgiving holiday.•
R,_egular publication and busi·ness hours resum~ Friday.

Meigs County Commissioners
· reaffirmed lhcir suppur1 for the ongo. ing effort to preserve the Buffington
Island Civil War Battlclield site during their regular meeting Monday
afternoon at the Meigs County Cour-' ,
thousc. ·
•
Richards. and Sons Inc.,_Racine, :
has applied for a U.S. Army Corps of •
Engineers permit to construct an :
Ohio River barge loading facility just ;
upstream of Portland. The facility :
would · be located along !he right .,.
descending ban~ of the Ohio River al :
milepoint 215.5 at Portland at a site :
associated with the Civil War Battle •
of Buffington· Island.
•
, Margaret Parker, president of the.. :
·Meigs County Pioneer and Historical :
Society, discussed the group's battle- field . preservation efforts with the :
commissioners, and updated thorn on :
the latest information rclaling to a •
request for a public hearing on the :
matter with the Corps of Engineers. :
Commissioners Ptcd Hoffman, :
Janet Howard and Robert Hartcnbach • ·
each assured Parker lhat the bailie- :
licld ha' the full support of the board. '
"We're in total sUpJ!Ort of full :
preservation, if we can do it," said Commissioner Janet Howard .
•
Hoffmarrsaid that the board wants :
to bring baulefield supporters and .. Richards and ' Sons Inc., together to Z
meet and discuss whether a compro- :
mise or solution could he reached in :
the dispute prior to a public hearing. •
Parker said that the corps extend-. :
:cd a public rcspon~ deadline to Nov. :
30 to allow the those in opposition to :
the barge facility 'to prepare their :
objections to the issuance of the per- •
. mil.
·
· ·
A public hearing with the co~s· :
Huntington office about the facility is :
being sought, while supporters •
encourage other local officials and :
· residents to join the preservation effort.
Parker noted that the haulefield
preservation effort has received hundreds of lcllers of support, including ·
endorsements from State Sen. Jan ·
Michael Long, U.S. Rep. F_rank Cre- ·
means, State Rep. John Carey and '
U.S Secretary of the Interior Bruce :
Babbitt.
•
In other mauers, ·a proposal from
the. Meigs County Department of
Human Services, requesting policy
'changes in the department's employee handbook regarding reasons for :.
usage of sick leave in the case of a :
death of a family member. was tabled '
· by commissioners until they hav,e an :
opportunity to meet with DHS Direc- :
tor Mike Swisher.
•
Swisher addressed the board in' a :
(Continued on Page 3)
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