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•

Raiders
defeat
-Chiefs

.WINTER IS HERE!
BUY A4 WHEEL DRIVE FROM C&amp; 0
SO YOU CAN GO IN THE SNOW!

1

727·2921

LEXUS

LOVE

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

7-2-5
Pick 4:

7-1'-9-4
Buckeye 5:
3-29-30-31-33

Sporta on Page 5

TOYOT~A~~7~2~7-~7=7=7=7~

LOVE

Cloudy tonight, rain
po. . lble after midnight.
Wedneeday, cloudy with a
chance of rain. lflghe In
the

•

- 1-.A'IA

VoL 47, NO. 154
01888. Ohio V.lley PVblr.hlng COntpllnv

.2 Sectlono, 12 Pagoo, 35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 10, 1996

Budget Commission predicts possible sh.o rtfal-1

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75
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VORTEX V8,AM/f . ~
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~REAR STEP BUMBER/ALtl~:'WHEELS.

· · AUTO., A/0, VORTEC V-6 ENGINE
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All Rebates to Dealer
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·Prosecutor drops
criminal indictment
But suspect pleads to lesser .
charge in County Court heflring

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Middleport opens bids for trash service
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Newa Staff
Scaled bids were opened for the posted contract of Middleporl's village
refuse service at Monday's regular meeting of Middl~porl Village Council.
Council President Beth Stivers opened the scaled bids, submitted to the
village by four area waste and refuse firms. The firms and rheir bids were
as follows, from lowest to highest:
·
• Dyer Garbage Service, Bidwell, bid a proposed m.onthly rate of $6.70
per customer for all residents of the village, with a $5.70 per month rate for
senior citizens.
.
• ·General Refuse, Millon, W.Va .. bid a proposed monthly rate of $6.69
per customer for all residents of the village, wjth a $6 per month rate for senior
citizens.
• Rumpke Commercial Services, Jaekso.n and Cincinnati, bid a proposed
monthly rale of $7.25 per customer for all residents .of the village, with a
$6.25 per month rate for senior citizens.
• Modem Sanitation, Porneroy. bid a proposed monriily rate of $7.50 per
customer for all residents ofthe village
Official announcement of low bid for regular village service by General
Refu8e and low bids for service to senior citi7.cns 'by Byer. was made hy May·
or Dewey Horton.

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LL CONVERSION

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NEW·

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;4 CAPTAI~ CHAIRS, SOFA\BED, P/WIINDOW, P/LOCKS, AM/FM CASS.
.'

UST PRICE

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$28.549'

FACTORY
REBATE .......................................... :...............................................:·........... :.. :2i!IQ ·.
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$26,149
C&amp;O SPECIAL DISCOUNT .............................................................. .'... :........ :.............-4150

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AS LOW AS
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ALL PRICES IJIICLUDE
REBATE TO DEALER

AND

727-2921

l[ly JIM FREEMAN
Sentl1111l New1 Staff
•· The Meigs Local Board of Edu·
cation, meeting in regular session
Monday evening, discussed renova·
lions to the Central Building, local·
ed behind rhe Meigs Junior High
School in Middleport.
The board approved spending
about $4,000 for a new front main
enrrance to me building. Thc new
entrance, by Capital Aluminum and
Glass Corp. of Bellevue, will include
a vestibule and be more energy effi·
cient than rhe existing entrance.
In addition, plans pall for working

Prlq" do not Include doc. !~ea. taxes or license fees.

MOTORS TOYOTA
.ST. ALBANS .·

&amp; LEXUS

RT. 80 MIICCOAKLE AVENUE-ACROSS FROM SHONEY'S
WEST VIRGINIA'S "1 GM'DEALER SEWNG CI;IEVROLET AND OLDSMOBILE AND TOYOTA AND LEXUS

OPIN 8 A,M, TO I RM, DAILY-IATUR!fAY 8 A.M. TO I RM.-IUNDAY 1 RM. ~ • Rll.

727-2921

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Horuin told council and those in attendance that council would only open
the bids and would not take any further refuse contract action during the meet -

ing. The bids will now be turned over to lhe village solicitor and the village
law dircclor for review.
·
Rumpkc is currently providing waste and refuse service in the villugc under
a one-year contract. That contract is set h) expire De~: . 31 . Rumpkc's hid for
the 1997 village refuse contract retlecled a .25 cent increase from last year's
low hids of $7 per monlh for all village residents and $6 per month l'or senior
citizens in the "'illagc,
In other matters. council:
.
• approved rcappoinrincnt of Dewey Hbrtnn . Manning Kines and Fred
Hoffman to four-year terms on the Middlcpon Planning Cmtnnission.
• appro~ed reappointment ofBoh McClure and Skip Johnson to I&lt;.&gt;Ur·ycar
terms on the Middleport Pi,rk and Recreation C(1mmis;-;inn.
·
• approved the Novcml&gt;cr mayor's report in the amount of $1 .721}.50. with
$805.00 of that amount collected in delinquent lines.
·
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• approved minutes of the Nov. 25 meeling.
·
.
• heard from coun&gt;il. presidcnt Beth Stivers, who commended the Mod·
dlcport Fire Dcpanment fort heir annual honor dinner recently Ill the lire sla·
tioo.
·
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on windows, plaster and paint during
the winler break, Superinlendenl Bill
Buckley explained. Some work can ·
prOceed during the school year
including electrical rewiring, he
added.
·
· Renovarlon of the Central Build·
ing, constructed in 1921 , is pan of the
board's plan to expand the exisring
middle school concept 10 include
sixlh graders by fall of I997.
The Cenrral Building will house
lhc districl's sixlh gradin. Contact
between sixth gradets and other
junior high students would be minimized through separate luRch hours

and differcnl'bell schedules.
Plans call to close BrAdbu')' Ele·
mcntary to students and using thai ,
building to house administrative and
maintenance personnel and equip·
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·ment.
In February. the board said Bradbury's fifth grade ~lasses will be
moved 10 Pomeroy Elemcnlary
'school while the kindergartners will
attend school al Salisbury Elemen"tary.
Board members discussc~ glass
and doorway repairs and decided to
focus rheir efforts on the Central
Building.

In personnel mailers, the board
hired David Barr and Mike Chancey
as head varsity boys' track coach and
assistant high school track coach.
respectively, for rhe 1996-97 school
year. .
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'The board also bored Path Johnson
as a full-time bus driver and approved
Debbie Cundiff as a substitute aide.
In other business. the board
approved annual membership in lhe
Ohio School Boards Association for
$2,404.
The board also approved mem·
bership in the Leading Creek Con·
f(:Mtlnued on Page 31
.

,ByTOPiHUNTER ,
Crow. then allowed th~ state tb disSentinel News Staff
miss the indictment.
Two felony charges brought
If he had l&gt;ccn convicted on lhe
against a Carpenter area man hy a felony charges, Zahran could. have
Meigs County grand jury were dis- faced a maximum prison· sentence ol;
missed Monday in . Meigs County 9-112 years and $20.000 in fines.
Common Picas Court as pan of a plea Attempted rape, as charged In the
indittmcnl. is a felony of the second

agreement.

Whalid "Willie" Zahran. 40, degree. while gross sexual imposition
appeared in Common Pleas Court is a felony of the fourth degree.
Monday bcfc&gt;re Judge Fred W. (row
Zahran was taken immediately to
III on a mol ion hy the st;.1tc nf Ohio the Meigs County Cnun of Judge
to dismiss the criminal indictment P~ltrick H O'Brien, where he entered
which had l&gt;cen previously returned a plea and was found guilty of ionpor·
.hy Lhc grand jury, dliJrging him with
one count of attempted rape and qnc.
~;o unt of gross sex ual im(lcisition.
The c harges stemmed l'rnrn
Zahran's cnnnc&lt;.:ti on with an im:idc'nt
whkh was ulh:gCd to hav e occ.:urrcd
on July 29, and invnl vcU a minor
ICmalc.
Zahra.n w:.1s st' hcdulc~ to go to tri al on Thursday on those c.: h;,1rgcs. ·
-With the di sm issal of the charges. the
trial is cam:clcd und jurors nccJ not
report. accordinl:! to Paul Gerard ,

tuning .
Um.lcr the plcu agreement, ~and
upon the rcL:omn"icndulion of th u
pro:-;cc utin ,g attorney. Z,ahran was
su ntcnccd to si:c. months in the ~:nun ·
ty j~lil. suspended tn tirnCserved ( 112
dnys). ~.tnd plm:cd on rmhation for
rive years with L:ounscli ng- ordered as
a p;lrt of that prh hatinn . He wns
rclc:.tscd li1llowing the county court
lu:ari ng.
.
In em unrelated ~.:asc. a Reedsvill e
man_is st;hcdulcJ to stand trial in car~

court administrator.
Meigs Assistant Prosccuwr
Cl,1ristophcr Tenoglia appeared in
he half of the.state. whole Za hran was
represented in L.:ou~:t hy puhli c
defender Steven L. Story.
The dismiss;.1\ al'tiqn came as the

ly February after the grand jury
returned indictments againsl him on
two ICiony offenses.
Michael Pooler, State Route 6H I,
Reedsville, wa-.: ·indicted Nov. 27 ·on
felony counts of gross sexual impo·

result of a plea a~ recmenl . under
which Zahran will enter a plea ol'
guilty in Meigs Cou nty Court to a
single C«lUnl (If importuning. t1r solir.:iting a minor to engage in sexual
y.c tivity or condui..:t. u misd~:mc•mor u f

the firso degree.
In c&lt;&gt;nsideratinn of that plea, rhc
pros~cuting attorney was askin~ ,
Crow to allow the di smissal or lhc
ldony charges.
' Upon questioning hy Crow as to
the rcmmn for dismissing the charges.

Tcnoglia related that the victim had
recanted her original sUJ.tc mc nt
regarding the inciden t and that. with·
out her testimony, regretfully. the
slate could nut pmvc the charges.

GAL~IPOLIS - The state of Ohio is olkring a financial ince ntive (o
BorgWarner Automotive Transmission Systems to construct a 50 000
square-fool addition to irs Gallipolis facilit y.
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Gov. Gcorgc'Voinovich announced Monday that the Ohio Joh Creation
Tax Auohority approved a tax credit of 70 percent l&lt;&gt;r a lfl·year term to

'

()hio is in direct competilion Wilh Michigan for the project. Jeanne
ol the slate de"f.lopmenl office said this morning it wmi hoped
the tax credit would help '~ing" the corporation toward deciding on Gallipolis as the site for the cxpansoon:
.
Company officials did not return phonccalls requesting comment. R.V.
"B uddy" Graham, exe~ulo~c di~ecl&lt;&gt;r of the .Gallia County Community
lmpruvemenr Corporation, declmcd comment when contacted thi s morn·
in!!. rcfcrnng questions w Borg Warner manngc·mcnt.
Borg Warner manufactures transmission components for the automQti ve industry.
The Job Creation Tax Credit is a refundahle lax credit agaonst lhe husi·
ness corporut~ franchise or i.n,comc tax . The cred it equals a pcrccntugc of
the new slate tn~omc .tax Wtthhcld on new full -time employees.
The &lt;:Jalhpohs announcement came as pan of a package of 17 other
tax credits approved by the tax credil authority for industrial projects
around the slate.

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felony of the fourth degree, carrying
a maximum pnssihlc penalty of eigh·
teen ll}ont_hs in prison and a line uf up
to $5,CKl0. Endan gering children is a
felony &lt;.lf the third dcgreo, carrying a
.maximum [lllSSihle penalty of five
years and a line of ur to $10.000.
P""ler is free on $15,000 proper·
ty hond from the Meigs County Jail.
He is scheduled to appear in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court on
Jan. 13 rnr a final 'pretrial hearing ..

State offers inducement
'to Borg Warner to expand
existing Gallipolis facility

H~&gt;llman

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silion and endangering chil.drcn .
Accordi'n~ to the indictments. t,hc
charges arc related tn incidents
allegedly oCcurring on or between six
months prior tn the victim lca..,.ing the
Pooler home on Augusl 23.
Gross sexual imposition is a

expand the opcrulinn.
'The $25.1 million prnjccl would create 140 new jobs and retain 254,
according to a statement rcle.uscd by the governor's olfacc.
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Meigs Local Board eyes building renovations

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WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Supreme Court is using a case involv·
ing a repeat child-molester to decide
whelher state~ can confine "sexual·
ly violenl predators" after they serve
their full prison sentences.
Kansas 'wants 10 hold people -like
admitted pedophile Leroy Hendricks,
who served his prison tenn but was
found ' to have a mental abnonnality
lhat would make him likely to prey
• on children again.
Hendricks, who was convicted
five ttmes of child-molesting, has
. said his death is the only way to guar·
antcc he won't commit ncw-criiri'es~, """'
. The law serves the "compelling
interests of providing treatment lo~
sexual predators a!Jd protecting society from such individuals," the state's
lawyer~ said in court papers.
But Hendricks says the Kansas
law violates his righl to due process
because it allows lhc state to confine
him without proof of mental illness.
APPEALS RULING- Kansas Attorney Gen· · allowing sexual predators to be confined alter
He also contends it amounts tO
their prison terms are coinpleted. The U.S.
eral Carla Stovall, shown In this undated tile
unconsrirutional double punishmenl
Supremtt Court· is taking up the case today.
photo, Is appealing a ruling by the Kansas
(at the same crime.
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(AP)
Supremtt Court which struck down a '!late law
Allowing people to l&gt;c conlincd
Anyone committed to a menial ruled last March that the law viola!·
with no finding of mental illness ifornia, Minnesota. Washington and
"would invite t~e Slates to create an Wisconsin - have ' enacted laws health facility under rhe law is cnti· cd ·Hendricks' due· process rig~ts
because il allowed him to he comalternative system parallel to the similar to the Kansas Sexually Vio- tied to a new evaluation every year.
mined
wilh no proof that he is mon·
Kansas prosecutors invoked rhe
criminal justice system that would lent Predator Act. Those states and 34
lock people away on the basis of our others tiled fricnd-of·thc-coun briefs law in 1994 to stop Hendricks' rally ill .
Th'c Kansas court relied on a
release atier he served I0 years in
fears of crimes they might someday supponing Kansas' appeal.
1992
S~preme Court decisio n that
prison.
commit," Hendricks' lawyers said in
The Kansas law requires a judge
said
people
acquitted of crimes
·
A
jury
ruled
that
Hendricks,
62,
coon briefs.
or jury to decide beyond a reasonable
hccausc
nf
their·
insanity cannot be
After hearing arguments roday. Ihe doubt whether someone convicred of was a sex ually violent predator, and
kepi
in
mental
hospitals
after rc~ain ­
justices arc expected to issue a dcci· a sexually violent crime has a men· a judge drdered him commilled to a
ing
their
sanily
just
l&gt;ccausc
they
sion by July.
tal abnormality and is likely to com· state mental hospital.
But the Kansas Supreme Court might stilll&gt;c dangerous.
Five other slates- Arizona. Cal· mit n,ew predatory acls.

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added.
ipated liling a motion to quo ~t uuc on the property after no heirs df the pre':If you don't have that balance at the beginning of the year. you've got a vious owners appeared to protcslthc sate.
problem all year,'' he said.
·.
In other business, the board:
Frank sai~ commissioners may have to e.amine non-mandated county pro·
• Approved lhe lowest bid of $24.764 submiued by Home Creek Enter·
grams for possible funding cuts, adding that the board would likely face a prises of Pomeroy for upgrades to the Meigs County Dog Pound. Others sub·
lot of opposition in making curs.
mining bids were Banks Construction. Pomeroy, $30,980; Jacohs Con"The time has come that the growth of the county is not going to suppon struction. New Marshfield. $29.899; Associated Fabricators Inc .. Pomeroy.
all those things you like 10 do," he said, referring to non-mandated programs $25,796.
-programs not required by slate law.
• Identified three Meigs Counoy proJects that were approved for Issue II
In addition, Frank identified funds in need of more money including group . funding, including Bridgeman Street repairs in Syracuse, $104,788: county
health insurance, Public Employee Retirement System, Medicare and salaries road paving projects, $342,98 3: and a Children's Home Road bridge replacein several offices including the sheriffs depaninent, county home and plat ment project, $33,328.
maps.
• Paid weekly hills of $230.4\12.80. consisting of 68 entries.
Some of these, panicularly shortcomings in salary accounts, can be han·
• Met in cx.ccuti"'e session to discuss lahor negrltiutions .
died by transfers within d~panments, Frank said.
·
Also present were commission Vice frc~idcnt Janet Howard, CommisLentes said the $135~000 from the sale of eounly property to Consolidaled · sioner Robert Hancnbach; Clerk Gloria Klocs and Commissioner-elect Jeff
Health Systems Inc., cannot ,he cenified
until the money is received, He antic- Thornton.
.
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High court
considers
.confining
'predators'

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AS LOW AS

NEW S-1 0 EXT. CAB
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* Price Includes All Rebates to Dealer

SALE PRICE

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel Newa Staff
· : Members of the.Meigs County Budget Commission presented a gloomy
forecast of the county's financial condition during Monday's meeting of the
Meigs County Board of Commissioners.
Commissioners met with Treasurer Howard Frank and Prosecuting Attor·
ney John R. Lentes, members of the budget committee.
Frank estimated county receipts for 1996 at $3,032,805.56, using actual
' amounts for all months except for December. Estimated disbursements are
$3,178,913.35, meaning that disbursements will exceed receipts by about
· $146,000, he said.
He indicated the board could have problems meeting its financial oblig·
ations early next year without a $200,000 cash carryover from this year. be
said.
,
Money carried over is used to pay ~ills at the beginning of the year until
tax money stans coming in, Frank sajd. If you don't have ihat halance you
have to borrow money from a bank to meet your financial obligations. he

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Commentary

.,.. 2

TUIIday,Dectwnber10,1996

Tuallfay, o.c.mblr 10, 1•

0 HI 0

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By DeWAYNE WICKHAM

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
814-112-2158 • Fu: 112-2157

.2.

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlllher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

o.n. .. Manllger

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

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care have no euy way of determin·
mg 1f their physician is having problems that maght call into qucsti!rn
their competence.
That's about to change hCrc tn
Florida.
State offic1als say "very few" du.:·
tors in the Sunshine State qualify fur
the llstmg, but people have a nght tu
know about those who do. Rcat:liun
from the medical community is pre·
d1ctable. Mary Kathryn, an Orlando
doctor and head of the state's med1&lt;:al
board - which is made up of 12 doc·
tors and three lay persons - sa1d she
doesn't thmk much will be ach1eved
by llstmg all disciplinary actiOns.
She's wrong.
People who put thetr health care
- and lives - tn the hands of doc·
tors have a right to know if their

a.nn.a ..... Service

ORLANDO, Fla - Now here's a
good idea.
Begtnning next year, the swe of
Flonda will publish a quanerly bst·
ing of doctors who run afoul of state
regulators or the law.
Doctors who've paid at least three
malpractice cl&amp;lms during the past
five yesrs will be named 1n the consumer guide. So, too, will those who
· have been disciplined by their hospi·
tal, health maintenance orgamzat10n
or the state's Agency for Health
Care AdmmJStrallon, state officials
say.
In most states, th1s kind of infor·
malton ts hard to obtain. Doctors'
lobbies have seen to that More often
than not, people in need of medical

phys1cian has been on the losinB end
nf a-relatively hiah number of mal·
prncuce su1ts. They have a rip! 10
know that thm doctor had been dis·
ctphned by medical authorities for
some toll-related offense.
Sure there's a chance that a good
d&lt;&gt;&lt;;l&lt;&gt;r m•ght be blacklisted by such
rcveluttuns. It's poss1ble that an oth·
crwiso &lt;'Ompetent physician might be
nstraci1.cd and suffer a sharp decline
of mcome because of some rule Vlolat•ons, btg or small. But the good
that 1h1s policy does outwe•ghs the
bad.
Doctors who don't want to suffer
the embarrassment that such a lisung
m1ght produce need to get their act
together- not decry the state's dcc1·
s1on to expose those who do not. If
anythmg, states need to do more to

NASA's NEXT MOON MISSION ...

Letters to the editor

l

A happy Thanksgiving
To our friends, lhank you so much
for the help you have given us to
make our Thanksg1vmg dinner pos·
sible
To the friends that donated, those
who helped cook, those who deliv·
ered, filled the trays and came to VIS·
it us.
Thanks to you, Bob, for putting 11
m the paper for us.
We served 425 dinner in all . If 11

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were not for all of you, it would not
be poss1ble to do th1s. Hope to see
you all next year and make it the sixth
year.
We WISh you all the happiest of
holidays
Edna Hu...,eU and
Mary Pleke1111
Syraeuse Fire Department
and Friends

Support pound upgrades
· Dear Ed1tor,
·
We, the doctors and employees of
; the Meigs Veterinary Clinic, strong·
; ly suppon the Pound Upgrade Project. The Meigs County Dog Pound
: serves a very needed and •mponant
; service to the people and animals of
• Me1gs County.
'
The present fac1llty has served the
: county for years, but everyone in the
"coun1y knows improvemeniS are
needed. The question w1th the pound
has never been whether improve·
ments need to be made, but how to
fund them. PUP has made the commitment of lime and energy to try and '
··get funding, so hopefully improve·
ments can be made.

We 1n the county and all ammal
owners should work together to suppon the Pound Upgrade Project m
any way possible, through donatiOns
or time.
W. David Krawsczyn, DVM
KeUey Grue.er, DVM
Meigs Veterin.,-y Qlnlc
Pomeroy
•
(Editor's n01e: The Pound Upgrade
Project mcludes Improvements to
the existing pound including two By Sara Eckel
For most of us, workmg ts some·
additional runs and a roof over the
thtng we approach with ambivaruns Donauons can be made by
lence. Sure we take pride 1n our sk1lls
sendmg them to Pound Upgrade Proand
our abi111y to prov1de. But we
ject, PO Box 415, Middlepon OH
also
play the lottery.
45760.)
But the ab11ity 10 work, to show
up. to log tn e1ght hours. to compr&lt;&gt;mJse and to swallow our pnde ·· on
top of whatever sk1lls we mtght have
·· ts somethmg we should not take fpr
granted, says Peggy Drtscoll, executive director of the Women's Bean
Project In Denver.
. By DONALD M. ROTHBERG
It's somethmg, that a' lot of people
AP Dlplometlc Writer
don't have ·- or a! least never learned
WASHINGTON -Five directors m less than 10 years IS a troubling Dnscoll explams thiS as she descnbes
'track record for a spy agency with a jaded past and a problematiC future. how the Women 's Bean ProJect
Anthony Lake IS the latest choice to try h1s hand at bringing some order to works The program, wh1ch began m
the government's spmwling Intelligence bureaucracy.
1989, employs 10 to 14 tmpovcnshcd
John Deutch will leave office after scrvmg as head of the CIA for 20 women at a ume, paymg them $5 to
•1months. Of hts Immediate predecessors, James Woolsey held the job a month
$5 50 an hour to produce and d1s·
short of two years and Roben Gates had it for I5 months.
tribute dried soups, vmcgars and g1ft
By any standard, that IS not enough lime to bnng about the change • lot baskeiS, wh1ch the company sells
'of people think is necessary 1f the CIA IS to •mprove the qualuy olns prod·
Although the proJect's directors
' uct and overcome tts legacy of scandal.
don 'I keep formal records. Dnscoll
.
,
"It would be far more dcstrable 1f somebody was there for a penod of estimates that 50 percent of the
t1me - cenamly a two-, three· , four-year penod," said former Republican women who JOin the year-long proSen. Warren Rudman. He was co-chamnan of a prestdcnltal commJsSJon that gram eventually fmd full·t1mc
: exafnined the mtelligence community and issued a rcpon earlier thJS year employment elsewhere But the sue·
' recommendmg several structural changes.
cess rate IS higher for those who com"All this tumover~s not good forthe agency." sa1d Rudman "But I don't plete II. ThiS year, seven of the 01ght
know how you solve that without creating problems that are probably worse
Jlhan the problem you're trying to eliminate."
L~ The former New Hampshire senator satd he and other commissiOn mem• :bers feh strongly that CIA directors should serve at the pleasure of the pres·
; ;ident rather than have fixed terms.
~· Deutch mcurrCd President Clinton's il!spleasure when he told a Senate
:1comm•ttee dunng the fall polit•cal campaign that the U.S. military strike
By lan Shoalea
~,agamstlraq earlier this year had left Saddam Husscm stronger than ever
Back during WWII, it seems. a
law clerk named Anthony S
British
.~ Sb much for Deutch's chances ol becoming secretary of defense, the JOb
: he wanted, or even of rcmammg as head of the CIA. ·
Pratt wh1led away h1s time dunng fire
•I Roy Godson, coordmator of the pnvatc Consortium for the Study of Intel· patrols drcammg up a board version
Zligence, sa1d length of t1me m the office ts less 1mportant than whether the of Murder, a popular parlor game m
: 'l.!,rector of central mtelligence "knmys anythmg when he gelS m or docs he E;ngland durrng the '30s Hts lntlc
.7bave to stan w1th a lcammg curve."
dream grew up to be called Clue, and
-~ Godson sa1d ne1therWoolsey or Deutch " knew the bustness much" when
that -- as Paul Harvey m1ght say · · Is
~hey took office
the rest of the story
• ~ As Clinton's nauonal secunty adviser, Lake is a maJor user of mtclligcnce
Suddenly the New York limes has
: ~atenal and "knows the pnornies" thi: pres1dent has when turn1ng to the taken an tnterestm Mr. Pratt and his
• /intelligence communuy, saod Godson
creatiOn, even though Mr Prall
:j1 "But he doesn't know the clandestme aspects of the busmcss and the pa.•sed away two years ago at age 90.
I'm nnt sure why, exactly Sure 1t's
details of the technical systems."
J Ccnatnly the human s1de of tntelllgcnce is what has caused the CIA proh· the holiday season. and Clue rcmatns
a swell g1ft (reasonably priced, tun
'lems in recent years and h1stoncally
, Just as the furor over d1scovery thai CIA countermtelllgcnce officer for the whole family, etc.) And certainly feature writers must have
• Aldnch Ame s was selling secrets to the Russmns was dymg out. another
somethmg to fill out the page on a
• age ncy offic1al was charged w1th working for Moscow
• Harold J. Nicholson, a 16-~ear CIA veteran, pleaded mnocenttwo weeks slow Sunday. But 1t 's sltll a mystery
ago 10 charges that over the past two years he sold Russia highly senSitive Tl&gt; me.
An even bigger mystery. howev-natiOnal security secrets, including the names and ass•snment plans for many
er.
IS why the wrrtcr of the art1clc
new CIA officers.
seemed to be bemused, m that whim: Woolsey, who never had Clinton's full confidence, lost h•s credJbdJty w1th
sical
style peculiar to feature writers
:Con1ress as well when he was seen as tssuing relatively mild punishments
everywhere,
by thcJactthat Mr. Prall
'tO offic1als seen as lax in the Ames case
d1ed
10
h1s
sleep
m a nursmg home,
l The CIA is not the only intelligence orgamza11on commg m for another
rather
than
bemg
bludgeoned
to death
/'ound of change at the top. By coincidence rather than destgn , the Senate
in the parlor by M1ss Scarlcu.
)nd House commmees thai monitor the agency also are getting new leadThere's a naw '" this kmd of
-ership.
thmkmg.
Mtss Scarlet! and her rcllow
~ Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., was forced to step down as chairman of the
suspects
arc
1magmary, you sec. ll1s
:.Senate Intelligence Committee because of the rule against servmg longer
very
rare
that
the creator of a game
)hso six years on the panel. Rep Larry Combest, R·Texas, gave up chatr·
or work or an meets hts or her fate at
·man sh1p of the House Intelligence Committee in order to take the leader·
the hands of hiS or her creations.
f.htp of o Hou•e Agnculture subcommmee of far more tmponancc to h1s rurShakespeare may have created
.ill dtSU JCI
Hamlet
and MacBeth, but he was not
The betting is that Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Aia , wjll succeed Specter, and
po1soned
by his stepfather, as far as
ilep Porter Goss, R-l'la.. wall become chairman of the House committee.
I know, nor stabbed 10 death by any
G.s spent I0 years in the CIA.
man, from hts mother's womb
untimely npped or not. Herman
~ITOR'S NOTE: DoUid M. RadoberJ· cowen lnlellic- for The
Melville
was not drowned by a wh1te
~Pna
whale. Contrary to popular belief,
•

Lake the latest to enter
.CIA's revolviog door

.

MlCH

proiCCI the interests of the pltieniJ of
health care providers.
They should require thal thole
who are HIV positive or haw ocher
d1seases transmitted by blood, like
hepat1tis, to make that knowledge
known to the people who come to
them for medical treatment. Needle
pncks are an occupational hazanl in
the medical profession. Surgeons
workmg With scalpels on rare occaSIOn draw their own blood. Patients
who go under the kmfc. or who get
stuck w1th a needle by thetr doctor,
should be told beforehand if the
phystcian has a lt,fe-threatening, con·
tag1ous diSease.
I know the argumeniS against providing pauents such 1nformauon.
Doing that could ruin the careers
of doctors who end up on a list such
as Flonda will soon produce.
Or, n's an invasion of their priva·
cy
But what about the patient's right
to make intelligent medical dccJ·
SJOns? Every ume I go to my dentist
and look up from the examming chair
at her face, covered from forehead to
chm w1th a cloth mask and clear
shteld. I reali1.c how protected she is
- and how vulnemblc I am.
I'd like to know 1f I need some
protection from my doctor. ~
Don't I have that nghl?
Don't you?
Flonda 's plan to publish a consumer gUJdc that lists the names and
mfractions of doctors wilh long mal·
practice or diSCiplinary records is a
good move that other states should
copy. To do so is to give patients
access to some of the same kind of
mformat10n that Better Bus1ness
Bureaus around the nat1on routi 1111ly

George W. Mtller, SS, Middleport, d1ed Monday, DeC. 9, 1996 at the Ade-

'' '

cy, one m1ght expect the staff of the
Women's Bean Project to embrace
the recent reforms m the welfare
laws, wh1ch have t;eplaced cash payments to indivi\luals with block
grants to the stateS,'and which require
the states to put all welfare recipients
to work. But Peggy Dnscoll IS wary
of the federal mandate. "I don't thmk
that the sy~tem we've had has
worked. so I'm m favor of changmg
it," she says. "But I'm really fnghl·
ened about the idea of loppmg peo·
pie off the rolls."
Along w1th the often-expressed
concerns about the availabtlity of JObs
and day-care slots, Dnscoll womes
that people aren 't aware of Just how
difficult 111s to make this transllton
F1rst, there arc the logJSUcs: "If you
gave anybody a budget and said,
'You 're makmg $13,000 a year and
you've got two kids m day care.
you ' vc go! rent of $250 and food

'

•

tan Shoales
or vchtclcs possessed by cvtl spirits.
The people whn created Doom
and Quake may be rolling m dough ,
not domg battle w1th zombtes '" dank
subterranean chambers, not literally.
Most people who play Solitatre do
not die of loneliness The prankster
who mvcnted 52 P1ck-Up d1d not
spontaneously fly 1nto pieces and
exp~rc . Poker can ktll you , thcoreli·
cally, hut only 1f you play for mon ey.
.
The guy who mvcnted Monopoly
d1d not dtc penniless on Park Place,
clutching wonhlcss hotel deeds '" hts
lifeless fingers The man who invent·
ed L1fe, 1t 's true, did eventually d1e,
buill wasn't Life that k1lled h1m , as
such. Triv1al Pursuit was a great time
killer back m the ' 80s, but the only
deaths from playing il were the result
of arguments over what Sky King's
plane wa.• named.
' Cenamly careers have often gone
down in names, but never as a result
of Careers. Nobody has even
explained the bas1c appeal ol
backgammon, much less realized 1ts
potential as a lethal weapon. Chess
may be a game of kmgs, but very few
kings have been literally ehec~!"atcd,
no, when a k1ng goes down, 11 s usu·
ally at the hands of 1 sinister usurper. an anJIY mob, Marxists, or the
tabloid media.
Prolonaed periods in a car can

Ice

SUnny Pt

Cloudy Cloudy

By The Associated Preaa

R1ver to the upper 30s near Toledo
A warm front IS allo)lling mild a1r .
The record h1gh temperature for
to come mto the Oh1o Valley. bring· th1s date at the Columbus weather
mg w1th 11 a chance for ram for Ohio, s1ation was 72 degrees in 1971 The
said the NatiOnal Weather Serv1ce.
record low was ·8 m I ~58 .
Sunset tomght w1ll be at 5·07.
The chances for ra1n look likely
for nonhero Ohio tonight as air from Sunnse Wednesday Will be at 7 43.
Weather forecast:
the south ndes up and over the warm
Ton1ght .Cloudy Rain likely
front, which will then he positioned
nonh after m1dmght w1th a chance of
· m central Ohio.
Lows tomght w1ll mnge from 35 ram elsewhere. Lows from 35 to 45.
Wednesday.. Cloudy wnh a
to 45. H1gh temperatures on Wednesday w1ll be m the lower 40s m chance of ram. H1ghs from 40 to 45
extreme nonhem Ohio but m the nonh to the mid 50s south
Extended forecast:
m1ddle 50s for southern parts of the
Thursday
.. Ram Lows m the 40s
Buckeye state
High temperatures for southern H1ghs m the 50s
Fnday A chance of ram Lows 35
Ohio may be 5 10 10 degrees above
normal Wednesday afternoon North· to 45 . H1ghs 45 toss:
Saturday.. A chance of ram or
em Ohio w1ll he 5 degrees above nor·
snow
Lows 30 to 35 H1ghs 40 to 45.
mal. Normal h1gh tempemtures range
from the m1ddle 40s along the Oh•o

Two-car crash in Chester
Township leaves 3 injured
Three people were InJUred Monday in a two-car acc1dent on County
Road 36 (Sumner) m Chester Town·
ship, the Gallla-Me1gs Post of the
State Highway Patrol reponed
,, Driver ~Ieven K. Goh, 35, 38250
Sumner Road, Pomeroy, was not
treated at the scene, but driver Ellen
K ,Eblin, 45, and her passenger, Colt
M. Eblin, 10, both of 42881 Tucker
Road. Coolville, were taken to Vet·
erans Memorial Hospital by the
Me1gsEMS.
Both were later treated and
released, a hospllal spokesperson
&lt;aid
Troopers satd Goh was northbound. 1 6 m1les north of State Rnutc
7, at 6 I0 p m. when hiS car went left
and collided head-on wllh Ellen

Eblin's southbound car.
Damage was severe to Eblin's car
and to the car dnven by Gob. owned
by Alamo Rent-a-Car, Fort Lauderdale. Fla. Goh was cited f6r left of
center, and Eblln ror no .safety belt
Troopers cJicd a Mtddlcport
woman for failure to control an a onevehicle accJdcnt on CR 20 (Rock·
--sprmg~) on Sunday, accordmg to
reports.
Jacmda D Mullen, 22, 509 S Sec·
ond St , was northbound one mile
north of SR 7. at3.30 p m. when she
rcponcdly lost control of her ptckup
truck m a curve
The ptckup went olfthc nght "de
of the road. struck a dnch and then
ovcnurncd on Its SJdc, troopers satd
Tl\e p1ckup was slightly damaged

Prison escapee arrfjlsted
in Kentucky, then freed
•

ST. CLAIRSVILLE (AP) - A
kidnapper who escaped from the
Belmont Correcttonal lnst•tullon
Nov. 15 was arrested and released for
shopllftmg, authorities sa1d
Donald Sattler, 30, escaped wh1le
on community serv1ce work detail at
the Grace Untted Presbytenan
Church m Manms Ferry. He was
serving nin~ to 25 years at the pnson
for aggravated burglary and kidnapping in the Columbus area.
He was arrested Nov. 18 for
shopllftmg at a Wai-Mart store in
Barboursville, Ky., Barboursville
police said. He was released.Nov .2~

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 21:1-!NO)
Publi1hed every afu~mooa, Mon~y throuah
Friday, Ill Coun Sc , Pomeroy. Ohio by the

Ohio VaUey Pubhah•nt Company/Gannet! Co ,
l'oi1'&lt;RJY. Ohio 45769. Ph 992·2156. Second
clan P9Staae paid at Pomeroy, Oh1o
Mnnben The APoclated
Newtpaper Anoc1m:ion.

~MI.

and the Ohio

Today in history
By The Aaaoclated Preaa

SUBSCRIPTION RATIS
Jy Carrier or MGtor . _ ,
OntWcek - $2.00
OntMOMh
$870
$10400
OntY...-.... ....

Today 1s Tuesday, Dec. I0, the 345th day nf 1996. There are 21 days left
m the year
Today's H1ghlight in History:
On Dec I0, 1906, Prcs1dcnt Theodore Roosevelt became the first Amer·
ican to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, for helping medtate an end to the
Russo-Japanese War
On th1s date:
In 1520, Manin Luther publicly burned the papal edict demanding that
he recant, or face excommunication
In 1817, M1ssiss1ppi was admitted as the 20th state.
In 1869, women were granted the nght to vote in the Wyommg Territory
In 1898, a treaty was Signed in Pans officially ending the Spanish·Amer•
Jean War.
In 1931, Jane Addams became a co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize,
the first Amencan woman so honored.
In 1948, the U.N. General Assembly adopted tiS Universal Declll'llion
on Human R1shts.
,.
In 1950, Ralph J. Bunche was presented the Nobel Peace Prize, tho lint
black American to receive the award.

SINGLE COP\' PRJCB
Dally

..

..........

.....

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Sublle$tn DOC deslrtna co pay the carria moy
remit q. ad•ance dlrecr co The Daily Sentinel
op a ttnee, 1b or 12 ~ buh. Credit will be

'"""'-......, .,.... ..mer....,,..,
~~-

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by maU pertr!itted II
Ia av1UIIble

Areal

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MAtLSIJIICIIPI'IONS

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Sattler gave police several lalsc
names, smd officer B1ll Swafford
Sgt Sherman Lawson smd Sattler.
who wa.&lt; using the name Jell' Dantcls,
gave officers a false operator's
license. Socml Secunty numhcr and
nddrcss. Officers dctamcd h1m so he
would appear m cnun the next day.
Lawson !laid
Lawson satd Dtslnct Judge Mack
Caperton rdleascd Sattler
"The JUdge gave h1m unul March
I to pay $122 50 m reslllullon , and
then placed htm on 12 months ' pro·
bation," Lawson said.
Lawson sa1d police later rctncvcd
a stolen car from the Wai·Mart park·
mg lot Upon recCJvmg tQformatiOn
, from the National Cnmc InformatiOn
Center computers, he reali,cd the
shophftcr's 1den111y. Lawson satd

Stocks
Am Ele Power .......................4!r'.

Akzo ......................................67~

POSTMASTER: Send addreu corm:tlona 10
The Daily Seftdnr:l, Ill Coun Sr.. Pomeroy.
Oblo45769

'

Militia defendants seek
delay in upcoming trial

Milder temperatures will
bring precipitation ~o area

lead "' death from horcdom, but destroyed by hts dummy, the filmTwenty Quesuons. Botllcelli. and maker 1s forced to live m his own
even Punch Buggy have never hccn mov1c, the httlc g1rl IS snatched by
md1ctcd.
her imagmary lncnd ...
(Wh•lc we're at u. let 's clear up
But in the real world, as I hope
some other Jmsconccpuons. Believe I've shown, people iuc never
or not. the Chmesc don't much care destroyed by their own crcatmns,
for Chmcsc checkers, lnd~nns seldom unless they're parents of course.
play lndJan poker, and Russians don 't
Well , there ts one exception. The
play Russ tan roulette. Mcx1cans gen- man who created the card game
erally walk away from a Mcx1can called Hean• lrled to sboot the moon,
stand-orr and a New York mmutc failed, and took hiS own life HJS sur·
takes longer than you thmk )
v1vors IIKJk up Cnhbagc, and lived to
So how often is a creator undone a npe old age.
by h1s own crcations71'm afraid that
Ian Shoales Is a syndicated
thts particular tw1s1 of fate 1s gener- writer for Newspaper Enterprise
ally round only m certam "Tw•light Aosoeladon.
Zone" episodes·· the vcntnloqmst 1s

.,

...

WVA.

ther." The 28-year-old smgle mother
says that along with helping her with
practical matters ·· such as findmg a
subsidized apanment and day care •
· the Women ·&gt; Bean Project has
helped her learn to compromise and
accept what she can't change. " You •
feel like you have a family ··some·
one to talk to when you can't talk to
your own fanuly," she says.
The challenge of the Women's
Bean Project has some imponant differences from those facing the state
governments. For one, it works &lt;m a
much smaller scale. For another. 11
has the luxury of bemg able to handpick employees with the greatest
potential lor growth •· as Holmes
says, "There arc a lot of people who
give up."
But us example IS still instructive
Thmugh the sales of Us products and
catcnn!! scmccs, the Bean Project 1s
80 percent sdf-suppnrtmg. More
Important. 11 helps women get bat:k
on thCJr feet by hcmg.cducatmnal and
supponivc, rather than pumt1ve and
Judgmental.
Sara Eckel -Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper enterprise
Assoeiation.

•

' '

~

•',.'

•

...

•I Columbus ls2• I

Colonel Mustard didn't do it
Franz Kall&lt;a was never transrormed
into a hectic. Stephen King leads a
pretty good life up there m Mamc,
untouched by demons, psychopaths,

He was born m Columbus on Dec. 12, 1940. and was a 21 -year service
veteran and a policeman for several years.
He ts survived by hts w1fe, Manlyn Seymour Miller; a daughter and sonin-law, Jodi and Guy Morrow of Alexandria, Ky.. two grandchildren, h1s par·
eniS, Joseph and Polly Bowland of Middlepon; and several brothers-m-law
and SISters· tn·law.
He was also preceded tn death by a son, Timothy 'Allen Miller.
Serv1ces w1ll be I p.m. Wednesday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middle·
pon. Burial will- be in the Riverview Cemetery and the Rev. James Keesee
will officiate. Fnends may call at the funeral home from 2·4 and 7-9 p m.
today.

...

IND.

Women _and work: New ideas to help ,
Sara Eckel

George W. Miller
na Resional Med1cal Center in Chtllicothe.

lbosc who argue otherwtse would
deny doctors' patient.&lt; the right to
make what could prove to be the most
Important Informed decisiOn of all.

costs ·- figure it out,' very few people could do 11," she says. Couple that
with emotional issues that women
who 'vc been unemployed often face,
hke low self-esteem. and preparing
someone for wnrk hecomes a b1g proJeCt. " We sec that sometimes a year
1sn '1enough ume for people to make
the changes tn their lives necessary to
get employment and keep 11 -- and
wc'n; working with people EVERY
DAY.'!
For th1s reason, the Women's
Bean PrtJJeCI tncs to do more than
Simply hand someone a broo'll.
Acknowlcdgmg that "there aren 't a
lot of JObs packmg beans out there,"
Dris.:oll says the staff tnes to oOer
other forms of on-the-joh trmnmg,
such as bookkeeptng and markcung.
They also require employees to
attend mdividual and group counsel·
tng sesSions, as well a• tmmmg scmmars on such top1cs as nutrition and
frugal shnppmg.
Evcttc )-lolmes, who works m the
Bean Project's catenng department,
says that her stubbornness had pre·
viously kept her from holdmg down
a stcadYJub "A~ far as my work and
all that. I did qu1IC well, but my atU·
tude kept me from gmng a lot fur-

Benefits for some to end Jan. 1

Nx:uWeather" forecast for dayhme condnions and high tetnper11ures

offer consumers

women who graduated from the Bean
Project found jobs.
W1th such a strong emphasiS on
the value of work and sclf-sufficJcn·

Local News in Brief:

VVeiltllel

WediMllllay, Dec. 11

The Daily Sentinel Patients should have the· right to know
'EstUfislid In 1948

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

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Aahland 011 ...........................45~
AT&amp;T .....................................39'1.
Blink One .............................. 4!5'h
Bob Enna ............................ 12'!.
Borg-Warner .........................

3n

Chllmplon ............................. 21 ';,

&amp;,.
2n
Glnnatt ................................. 74~

Chltnnlng Shopa ...................
Cltv Holding .............................23
Federill Mogu1••••••••••.•••.••••••.•

Qooctyeer •...•• ,••••.••••••.••••••••••• 49'·

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LAinda Ehd •••••...•••• "''''"'''''''''2H
Limited ..................................18\
Ohio V•lley Bltnk..................34'1.
OM Valley ............................ .37'/,

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Rockwellf ............................~ .•••14
RD-Shetl ..............................114"

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Iter Blink ................:.............11"
Wencty•e ................................20~
Worthlngton ........................ 11'-

-·-·-

Stock reporta •re the 10:30
e.m. qUOIII provldld by AtMat
ofO.HipoHe.
.

.. ................................. . StOII.n

•

WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) There was no motion filed for
Lawyers for four defendants accused Mountaineer Militia leader Floyd
"Ray" Looker, the official sa1d
10 an alleged plot to blow up the FBI
Looker, of Stonewood, has asked
center m Clarksburg have filed
motions seeking to delay trials sched· a federal judge to have his lawyer
removed because he was not allowed
uled to begin tn about three weeks.
A U.S. magistrate had encouraged to participate m defense strategy
defense lawyers to seek more lime tf Looker waniS to represent h1mself.
In all, seven men with md•ha 11es
needed to prepare their cases. Ev1.
dence includes 430 tape recordmgs, face charges 1ncludmg conspimcy to
make and sell explosiVes. to brmg
videotapes and other matenals.
exploSives
across state ltnes and to
A mot1on on behalf of Jack A.
Phill1ps of Fairmont was filed Mon· comm1t an offense agamst the Unit·
day m U.S. District Court in Clarks· ed States
Two Ohio men, Imam LewiS of
burg, h1s lawyer sa1d.
The others were filed m federal Cleveland and James M Johnson of
court '" Wheehng on behalf of suburban Maple Heights, have yet to
Clarksliurg fire Lt. James R. Rogers, be arra1gned They have appealed
Edward F. Moore of Lavalette and thetr detennon and cxtradJhon to tho
Terrell Coon of Waynesburg , Pa , a 6th Ctrcun Court of Appeqls m
Cincmnau.
coun official confirmed.

Passed over for defense
post, CIA chief to leave
WASHINGTON (A.P) - CIA
Dtrector John Deutch, dented h1s
w1sh to become Prcs1dcnt Clinton's
second-term delense secretary, 1s
leaving hJS post early.
Instead of wa111ng for h1s succes·
sor to be confirmed py the Senate,
Deutch plans to qUJt "m the next
week or lwo." an admm1stra11on
offic1al sa1d Monday.
He will tum over his dut1es to h1s
top deputy, George Tenet, until a per·
manent successor is 1n place, the offi- ·
c1al sa1d, speakmg on condition of
anonymtty
In announcing h1s second-1erm
national securny learn last Thursday.
Clinton sa1d he was nommating
Anthony Lake, hts national securny
adv1ser. (o head the CIA Lake IS not
likely to be conf1rmed by the Senate
before late January.
· Indeed. Sen Arlen Specter, chmrman of the Senate Intelligence Com·
mmcc. sa1d Monday he believed
Lake "could have a real problem "
w1nmng confinnataon because ol h1 s
role tn dcctsiOns on secretly anmng
Bosma s Musl1ms
Specter. R-Pa. who w1ll rotate olf
the mtelligcncc panel m January, smd

in an mterv1ew that committee members would have tough questtons lor
Lake on h1s role m the 1994 decJston
to tacitly assent to Iran tan arms sh1p·
mcnts to Bosnta.
Some other prommcntlawmakcrs
have predicted Clinton's new nahon·
al securi1y team, mcludmg Lake, w1ll
have a relatively easy ume getung
confirmed However, Sen. Pete
Domcn•c1, R-N M . who IS not on the
mtclllgcncc cnmmmcc, smd Sunday
that Lake could have "tough sa11ing"
at hiS conlirmat10n hcanng.
Specter' s commlllcc tssucd a
report last month saying that by
tummg a bhnd eye to the arms shipments, the admtmstratton had sane·
tioned achons that v1olated both the
U N arms embargo on Bosma and
the U.S. policy of Jsolaung Iran. Cnn·
gress held hearmgs on the subJeCt, but
Lake did not publicly tcs11fy
Deutch had made no secret of h1s
desire to succeed W1lham J. Perry as
defense secretary. he had hccn Perry's lop depu1y at the Pcntagnn
before acccptmg Clinton's request m
May 1995 that he rcpla&lt;:c R. James
Woolsey, who rcs1gncd at CIA

Under leg•slabon that was effectiVe on March 29, payment of bene·
filS under Soc1al Security Disability Insurance and Supplemental Secun·
ty Income (SSI) programs to persons whose disability IS based on drug
addtcnon or alcoholism will stop Jan I, 1997
Ed Peterson, Social Secunty manager at the Athens office, advises that
IQ order to he eligible for benefits under the new law, an individual must
have a disabling impairment other than drug addtcllon or alcoholism.
All beneficiaries who were receiving disability benefits when the law
became effecllve were notified 10 June 1996 about the change in the law
and mformed that they must appeal the dec1ston to lermmate their bene·
fits within 60 days Appeals that were filed by July 29 must be rev1cwed
by Soc1al Secumy by Jan. I If SoCJal Security finds that drug add1c11on
or alcoholiSm 1s the basiS for the mdJvJdual s d1sab•hty, benefit s w11l ter·
minate Jan I.
SSI beneficiaries who appealed within 10 days of the nouce may choose
to rece1ve benefits unlll the rev1 cw IS complete
For more informatiOn about the new law, mdtvJduals may call Soctal
Secunty's toll -free number. l-800·772- 121 3

National forest trails now closed
The Wayne Nai1onal Forest is remmd1ng 1he public that a seasonal trail
closure rema1ns m effect from Monday through Apnl 15
Under the closure order, all trail s on the forest wtll be closed to use
by horse nders. mountam btkcrs, and off-road vehicles However, h1kmg ·
w1ll be allowed on all trails Thts closure wtll be m effect each year
The closure order was Implemented in order to mimm11. e damage to
the trails and SOli resources , a1d m rcducmg mmn1cnancc costs, and pro·
Vtde f' sare lr311 expenenCC for the publtc
•
Increased mtcrest in the Wayne Nauonal Forest, particularl y trn1l oppor·
lumtJcs. created a higher demand for trail usc than wa s ongtnally aOIICI·
paled Usc by horses. mountam b1kes. and off-road vehtcl cs has
mcrcascd the amounl of resource damage OLcurnng on and arovnd Ihe
tratls The damage occurs mamly dunng the wtnlcr mnn1h s when soils
arc saturated With water.
The closure order affccls trmls nn the Wnync Nat10nal Forest m Athens,
Gallia, Hocktng , Jack.son. Lawrence. Monroe Morgan. Noble , Perry.
Sc10to, Vmton and Washmgwn counucs
For further anfonnat1on conccrmng spcctlic tratl s, rcs1t..lcnls may encourage to contact Wayne National Forest olltccs m Athens Manetta or Ironton

Business college to accept registration
Southeastern Business College 1s acccplmg rcg1stratann f01 winter quar
ter slarttng Jan 6, 1997
Cla.'!es arc scheduled m the mornmgs. ahernoons and cvc nmgs. Fman
cJUI atd IS available for those who qualily Fur more mlormatton , call 446
4367, or slop by the college nl 1176 Jackson P1kc. Galhpohs

Holiday open houses scheduled
Jerry and Phylhs Scott of New Haven W Va . w1ll on.:c agam hold hol Iday open houses at thCJr home at 214 F1flh St
The Scotts arc noted m the Bend Area for thctr Chnstma~ dccoraunns
and have 106 holiday trees decorated inside their home
The open houses w1ll he held Thursday, Dec. 12 from 4 30-8 30 p m..
and Saturday, Dec. 14 lrnm 4:30·8 30 p.m
' Groups larger than 20 members !hould call ahead at 304-882-2202

Governors told to present
united front to Congress

CLEVELAND (AP) - The pres•dent of the Counc1l of Stale Gov·
ernments had some advtcc at the end
of h1s term· The slates must lobby
Congress as a umtcd front 1f they
want to get power from the lcdcral
government
.
"We have to be dealing wllh lhts
on a h1part1san basis. on behalf of the
states." Utah Gov M1kc Lcavllt smd
"We have 10 be mlcrcslcd m the
states. nol our pan1san mtcrcsls.''
Lcavm spoke Monday at the
counc1l's annual mcctmg, wh1ch ends
today. About 850 people arc ancndmg the mceung ol the nonparusan
coum.:1l , hascd m Lcxmgton, Ky
New York Gov George Patak• wtll
replace Lcavm as prcstdcnt, whtlc
Sen Jcn Wells, R-Colo, succeeds
Ohio Senate PreSident Stanley
Aronoll, R·Cmcmnau. as chamnan
over 450 lbs. steady tn I 00 higher
Even though all h'ur men ~uc
u.s 1·3 300-450 lbs 41 on. Republicans.
LcavJII smd all parltcs
45.50, 450-500 lbs 45 00-46 50,
500.600 lhs 46 00-49 00. a few over must light equally lor slates' mtcrcsts
"We have 10 he tn the lace ol
600 lbs 49.00-51.00

Today's livestock report
COLUMBUS CAPJ - lnd•ana·
Ohto direct hog pnccs at selected
buymg pomts Friday us prov1dcd by
the U S Department of Agncuhurc
Market News:
Barrows and gilts .50 to 1.00 low·
er; demand ltght lo moderate for a
moderate run
U.S. 1·2, 230.260 lbs. country
points 53.50·55 00.
U.S 2·3, 210-230 lbs 42 0047 00. 230-260 lbs 47 00-53.00
Sows under 450 lbs 1.00 lower,

Announcements
Service announced
The Fa11h Full Gospel Church of
Long Bouom will have a hymn sing
7 p.m. Friday at the church The
Clarks and the the Peacemakers w1ll
be performmg
'
Dance sel
The Tuppers Plams VFW Hall Will
be scene of a square dance Saturday.
8 p m , wnh the Happy Hollow Boys
and Jay B. W1lson caller Refresh·
ments and door pnzcs.
Rome decorating
Judgmg m the Ractnc Area Cnmmumty Organ1zauon's home decorating contest w1ll he held Frrday.
6:30p 1n to 9 30 p m L1ghts arc lo he
oR-dunng thai pennd Prizes of $50.
$30, and $20 wtll he awarded. Judg·
mg to be done m the v1llagc and wnh·
m a two 111Jie rad1us of the village .:or·
porations s1gns W1nncrs will be
announced 1n The Da1ly Scnuncl.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday admissions - Bonme
Walther. Racine.
Monday d1scharges- none.
Holzer Medical Center
Diseharges Dee. 9 - Edgar Har·
rop, Roger Coleman, Mark Tomczak,
Edith Adkins. William Sheets, Bar·
bara Carpenter, Mildred Mtller, Mary
French
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Wtlllam
Milliron, son, M1ddlepo"; Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Perkins, son, Chilli·
cothe.
(Publilhed with permluloa)

Boars 38 00.41 00
Est1malcd rccetpls 36,000
Summary of Monday's Produc·
(Continued from Page 1)
en Livestock Association auctions
scrvancy DJslnc.l's leak •ra:mram:c
at Hillsboro and Creston:
program for Bradhury. Hamson ville
Hogs steady to 50 lower
and Salem Center schcxJis at a cost ul
Butcher hogs: 49 51~5X. IO
Cattle: I 00 In 3 IJO lower
$24 per bu1ldmg. and renewed the
Slaughter steers chotec M IKI- dtslrkt\ li.thJIJty insuranL:~ l. ' c•vcragc
73 25; selccl 30 00-66 00
wuh Harcum-Hyrc Insurance Agency
Slaughter hc1lers. chmcc M IK&gt;· In&lt;: of Columbus lor $X,339
71 10, select 35 IKI·M IKJ
The hoard .tgrccd In hold tis !997
Cows steady 10 lmle lower. all orgamzaunnalmccung on J.m I 1 at
cows 47 !XI and down
7 p.m. m the dtstrtct's central olltcc
Bulls steady tu hulc h1gher. all m Pomeroy, and uppomtcd hOimJ
Prcstdcnt Roger Ahhou as rucs1dcnt
hulls 42.75 and down
Veal calves· strong . chmcc IIO.IXl prcHemporc unlllthc mccung
The mcclmg was adjourned foJ.
and down.
Sheep and lamhs strong , choice loWin£ an CXClUliVC );CSSI()Il (O diS wools 80 00-95 00 , chotec cltps CUSS personnel maucrs
Present were 8ucklcy, Treasurer
85 00.89 00, feeder lambs 85 IKI and
Cindy Rhoncmus, Abbon, and hoard
down; aged sheep 45.1Xl and down
Feeder caltlc uneven. little lower members Scon Walion, John Hnod,
Randy Humphreys and Larry Rupe
to 2 00 h1 ghcr
Yearlings steers 60 00 and Jown;
hC1fcrs 52 00 and down.
Calves steers 61 CKl and down,
he tiers 48 00 and down.

Meigs Local

wa,hmgton. remmdtng lhcm lhal
the goal 1s to move power and mon·
ey out of Washmgtnn,'' he smd
Patak1 sa1d rctonns m arcus such
as wcllarc and pnv au~:auon nl sCr·
VICes arc happcntog at lhc state level He encouraged governors und legIslators to learn lrom each qthcr
instead ol wa1l1ng f'or a n.1110nal program
"You don' l have to do somcthmg
on a nalmnal level, and then , 11 1t
docsn 'I work, three or Iour years later change the nauonal polntcal citmate," he sa1d
The council's goal " to push
through Congress reforms that benefit the states . Gov. George Vomovtch
smd some of !hal work already IS pay.
ing oil Wllh fewer unfunded mandates - programs created hy Con·
gress wuh no federal money to
1mplcmcnl them
But he told the cuunctl II must
(.;Ontinuc lo momtor how power and
money ts d1stnhuted between the
stales and the lederal government

St~r~hlng '" 11 unlqu.

Chtlllmll gUt th/1 year?
L11/t no 'urther, pu""'" a
Btb Etan~ IJI" P1elt.

Meigs EMS runs
Units of the Mc1gs County Emergency Med1cal Scrv1ec recorded four
.:ails lor assiStance Monday Units
respondmg mc ludcd
MIDDLEPORT
11 35 am., Overbrook Nursing
Center. Cathcnne Varner, Pleasant
V.tlley Hospual.
POMEROY
12:34 p m , John Street, Roger
Kmg. Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal·.
RUTLAND
4:23 a.m., Carpenter Hill Roa!) ,
Mayford Whaley. Holzer Medical
Center. '
TUPPERS PLAINS
6:13p.m., motor vchtclc accident,
Sumner Road, Ellen and Colt Eblin,
VMH, Steven Goh, refused lr,e~l­
ment, Pomeroy squad asSISted

•

Cli1111 1 r1111ty 'uk tli1t lnelul11 Bo6
Eflnl lllllfl, Ctllnlel lflllllf ~nd Bl11ult
Mil Iff $9.$(} ,; 11f11t In 11/·IIUIIfl p11ft
Willi 111 lllfltl II 11i1011 lfllll Itt $1/,(J(J.

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•

Sports

The. Daily Senti,!«;l i

Eastern girls hand
Miller 44-34 defeat

In

.

Alexander girls
notch 62-57 win
over
Southern
'.

a 13-pointquarter. Eastern led 10.19
with 19 seconds before the half and
worked for die last shot, however,
the Lady Eagles shot too soon and
gave Miller the chance to resume the
lead as Angie Lucas went coast to
coast for a lay-up and 21-20 Miller
lead allhe buzzer.
Eastern picked up its defensive·
intensity in the third period. plus
became more patient in its offense.
The patience paid off as Branno and
Davis. charged to the front of the
pack with serveral big goals. Eastern
went into its diamond press, where
Brannon, Davis and.Karrcapitalized
with a combined 16.steals as Eastern
rolled to a 34-27 third period lead.
Eastern coach Scolt Wolfe said,
"Again the girls picked it up when
they had to. We've got to learn to
play hard for four quarters and to
gain some consistency. We're starting
to do more and more things correctly and I've seen a lot of positive.
We've improved every game. I guess
I've got to be patient, because we
haven't yet played as intensely as I
want them to. I commend the girls
for a great second half effort. A win
is a win and we are going to enjoy

By DENNIS GEORGATOS

y

",.,
"'

...

to lead 32-26 after three rounds, then ·~
By SC01T WOLFE
went on to claim the 49-39 win.
Sentinel, Correspondent
In that game.-Thrley led with 39 '"
.,
Despife a world-class effort from
talented Renee Thrley, the Southern points. Heather Hayes paced VC ,.,
·Tornadoes dropped a 62-57 heart- with 21.
breaker JOthe Alexander Spartans in·
Southern hit IS-38 from the lloor
a battle for the Tri· Valley Conference for 39 percent, hit 2-4 threes, .and ;~
Hocking•Division top spot Monday was 7-11 at the line. VC hit 22-51, . ,
night at Charles W. Hayman gym- _ 0.3 threes, and hit S- 12 at the line. .A
nasium jn Racine.
Southern had 28 rebounds (Turley
Southern is now 2-3 on the sea- 12. Sayre 4); 10 steals (Turley 8, .,
son, while Alexander is still unde- Anrou 2); five assists (Caldwell ,
feated .at ,6-0, 5-0 in the league.
two); .19 turnovers, 15 fouls and four
Just how good was Turley'/ The . blocks by Turley. VC had · 27 ''
senior guard was 9-11 from the field rebounds, six steals, eight assists. 12 "
(twos) for 82 percent and was 5-7 turnovers, and' l7 fouls.
••
VC
edged
Southern
in
the
reserve
.,
from three-point range for 71 percent
- supe,r-hero numbers by any mea- game 33-31 led by Casey Robinsori "
suring stick. She also hit 14-18 at the with 10. For Southern Kim lhle had
line for·78 percent, ending the night 12 and Stacy Lyons had seven.
The future: Southern will play at "
with 34 of Southcrn's· 57 points.
•J
Twenly·five of those points carne in Nelsonville-York Thursday.
the sccQnd half.
Ouartcr Jsl&amp;ala
9-ll-19-18=S7
Kim Sayre also had a good game Southern
with 14.points, whle Cynthia Cald. Alexander
18-15-11-18=62 ·;, ·
Southern: Renee Turley 9-5·
well, Conny Horst, Erica Amott, Srianne Proffitt, and Jenny Friend each 1/2=34, Cynlhia Caldwell 1-0-0=2.
had twg apiece.
Kim Sayrc'5-1-112=14, Jenny Fri~nd , "
· TAKES SHOT~ Ealbtrn'e Jesalca Brannon (22) takes the ehot
0-0-113=
I; Conny Horst 1-0-011=2, _
The "Duel at Diablo" between
ae an unidentified Miller plt!yer tries to defend on ll)e play during
it. "
.
'
Monday night's Hocking Dlvlslon contaat at Eastern .High SchoOl. · ,Turleyi'arid Afcxandcr sophomore Erica Arnott 1-0-0=2. Bria~ne Prof· ::
Eastern hii I0-13 at the line The hoat Eaglea won 44-34. (Photo.by Chris Stout)
Joni G~bh melted the nets as Grubb, liu o-o-212~2 . Totals 17-6-3111=57 :•
.
·
going down the stretch, as Karr and
Alexander: Kelly West' 3-0=6,
who jqincd Turley a.• a TVC coBrannon hit clutch free throws with
MVP list year, ended the night with Mary Blair 2-0-0=4, loni Gruhh 9- ·
the game on the line to preserve the line and had 20 rebounds (Come . Karr 2-0-619=10, Jessica Brannon 71; 10112=31, Angela Jewell 1-0· o
31 points.
Cook 9). MHS had 7 steals (Dutiel 0-5/10=19, Chasatic Hollon 2·0.
Eastern win.
Just like a viper ready to strike, 212=4, Bohhijo Davis 2-!J-()=4, Jcs- :
Eastern hit 15-57 from the floor, and Plant 2); 20 turnovers, one 218=6. Totals: 15·0·(14-29)=44
Alexander unleashed a venomous sica Robinson 3·0-1!2=7, Kristy i
Miller: Kristen Plant4-0-212= 10.
was 14-29 at the line, 0-1 threes, and assist (Lucas) and 20 fouls.
attack of striking often and early, a King 2-0-0=4, Jodi Wilson 1-()..()=2. I
Angie Lucas 1-0.112=3. Corrie Cook
There was no reserve game.
had 32 rebounds (Brannon 14, Karr
key lo ils continued success in 1996- Tolals 23·1·13/16=62
2·0-3/6=7. B'ritnei Mcrcklc 2-08). EHS had 16steals (Karr7, Bran- Quarter J21lb
97. Complimented by the rest of the
non 6, Davis 3); had 12 turnovers, Miller
9-12-6-7=34 2/3=6, Rhawng Dutiel 2-0-0=4,
Spurtan lineup, Grubb led Alexander Hull and Munn
nine assists (Hollon 4, Brannon 3); Eastern
8-12-14-1 0=44 Christy Halasz 2·0·0=4. Totals: 13·
to an I R-9 lirsl period lead. Southern .
and 17 fouls. Miller hit 13-44 from
Ea$tem: Becky Da~is J..0-1!2=7, 0-8/13=34
:
started to open up in the second receive MOC
the noor, 0-6 threes, was 8- 13 at the Stephanie Evans ·J-0-010=2,.Valerie
round, hut still fell to a 33-20 lead in · basketball honors
, . ·'
·:
the second quarter. It was an added
CEDARVILLE. ' ,Ohio ((\P) ;
.boost to get Briannc Proflitt hack in Mount Vernon Na1.arcnc sophomore · ~
the. lineup for SHS, but still she was Ehren Hull and Shawnee State
weak al\er fighting a severe case of sophomore Brandi Mu.nn were c.:hopncumonja.
scn as the men's and women's ha."'Southern cut the lead to 44·39 in kctball players of the week in the :
after scoring 15 points in each half scored 16 points, fouled out in the and held it the rest of the' way.
the third period a.• Turley put the Mid-Ohio Conference.
•
••
to come within one point of his
Southern Express in high gear, scorfinal minutes.
The league announced the sclccNo. 3 Kentucky 90
I
career high on IO.of-18 shooting.
ing 17 points enroute to a 44-39 tal- !inns on Monday.
"We tried .to play aggressive
1
WriKht St. 62
Dickerson, who was 3-of-5 on defense. It was a lot like a tournaHull, a 6-foot- 1.guurd, averaged
Ron Mercer and Derek Anderson ly after three frames. Southern stayed
three-pointers. said Te&gt;Uis '\decision
ment game, but it was frustrating each scored 19 points and Kentucky close for the durJtion, hut never quite 25.3 poinb a!'. Mnunl Vcrnnn
to play a man-to-man defer!Se·pt~e4 when the ball wouldn '(fall," Clack (6-1) won its sixth straight in its got over the hump ns Alcxnndcr Na1.arcne (9-0 overall, 2·0 MOC)
said:
·
rolled to its third strai'ght win.
into his hands as well.
continued its best start in schcxol his- 1
home opener.
Southern
hit
23-45
for
51
percent,
. "We just wanted to play good
Hours earlier, the then-unbeaten
wry with three more wins . He also
t
The Wildcats made · live threedefense," Texas' Brandy Perryman Longhorns were raised live spots in' pointers to·open the game and fin· hitting 6-12 ' threes, had 3-K at the, wa.&lt; chosen a.&lt; the most valuh)lle
said. ''He's going to get hi• points, the poll to No. 13, their highest rank- · ished 13-for-26 from · three-point · line. SHS collected 21 rchounds led player in the Cougurs' Fcxld for the
but the key wa.&lt; they got him open ing since February 1982, when they range. Anthony Epps scored all I5 of. by Turley and Horst with live ellch. Hungry 'Holiday Invitational.
were 12th. ·
_wilh the scr,ccns."
Last week, he had 32 points in an
his points on 3s for Kentucky, which while Sayre had thn:c. SHS had eight
steals (Turley '4, Prollitt 2), 13 K7-7K victory over Walsh, 23 points
Bibby had 14 points and five led 56-29 at halftime.
· In the only other games involving
ranked teams Monday, NQ. 3 Ken- assists along with his steals.
Rob Wckh had 22 points for the turnovers, and 14 fouls, three hlcx:ks. in a 104-64 win against A•bury in the
.. We got into the passing lanes,"
tucky swamped Wright State 90-62
Raiders (1-1 ), going 6-of-7 from Alexander was 24-59 with 1-4 threes first mund of the tournament and 21
and a 13-16nighlutlhc line with 39 · points in a 75-63 victory over Dcl1and No. 25 Boston College edged Bibby said . ... That:s what we want· three-point range.
cd
to
do.
They
have
good
shooters
rebounds. Alex had I0 steals. II ancc in .the championship game.
Vanderbilt 59-52.
No. 25 Boston College 59
For Texas, Kris Clack had 15 of and they're good off the dribble."
assists,
10 turnovers, a·nd I~ fouls.
: Munn, a 5·6 guurd. who srolii her
Vanderbilt 52
" I can't believe he's a freshman,' '
his 23 points in the second half. But
Reserve
notes:
Alex
won
the
high
school career between Jackson
The Eagles (4-1) managGd the
he couldn't get the Longhorns (4- 1) . Texas coach Tom Penders said. "He home victory despite only two reserve ga 01e 22-17 led by Mandy and Gallia Academy, had 20 points
back in it after Dickerson made a was really cffcc1ivc defensively."
starters scoring. Duane Woodward Van Est with 12. For Southern, ·Sta- as the Bears (4-1 , 1-0) defeated Find.Bramlcll scored 13 points and had 15 points and Danya Abrams cy ·Lyons had 7, Kim lhle six, and lily 79-49 in a meeting of nationally
threc-pointo!f and two free throws II
Davison had 12 and eight rebounds. addctll2, and the rest came from the Heather Dlliley four.
seconds apart late in the game. The
ranked te.ams. Shawnee State entered
•
.· .
Dickerson scored 13 points dur- Boston College rcsc.vcs.
foul shot&lt;. taken with 3:26 remain~
the game rankcil No. 4 in NAJA
:
ing after,Dickerson grabbed a dcfcn· ing a 24-7 run in the 11m half, which
Old news: In a 49-391oss tn Vin- Division II while Findlay was 12th. · :
· Austin Bates had 15 points for the
sivc rebound and was fouled, lifted ended with the Wildcats ahead 39- CommOdores (3-2), who went more ton County illst Thursday. Southern .
•I
I
the Wildcats to a 77-68 lead, match- , 38. But Tdas got the lead at 46-45 than 12 minutes in the second half look lin early 11-4 lead. hut slipped
on a three-point play by Dennis Jor- without a field goal. Pax Whitehead. to 22-20 al the hal f. VC came back
ing their biggest of the game.
••
Clack. who also had 10 rebounds dan with 16: 13 to pi~.
Vanderbilt's leading scorer at 17.0,
•
Arizona regained the lead nine linishcd with seven points on 1-forto help Texas outrcbound Arizona
••
46-37, and Reggie Freeman, who seconds later on a layup by Davison 10 shooting.
We

.

!

.

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - For a
team with no seniors, three juniors
and six freshmen, Arizona has come
together quickly.
A steady diet of ranked teams hasn't hurt.
The No.8 Wildcats (4-1) beat No.
13 'll!xas 83-78 Mon"!!y night, picking up their third win in four tries
against Top 25 teams.
,
, 11le victory was characteristic of
wh.r Arizona can do because of
guards Mike Bibby and Jason Terry.
In his fifth college game, Bibby set
a school record with eight steals, and
Terry, a sophomore, had four, helpinstbe Wildcats to a 27-18 edge in
turnovers.
"111ey cause a lot of people a lot
of problems," coach Lute Olson said.
"Texas has some tremendous athletes, but ~e didn't allow them
,nany open-court buckets." .
Michael Dickerson provided the
firepower with 30 points, most of
them on open jumpers created by
picks set by A.J. Bramlett and Bennell Davison.
"11le guards got me the ball in the
right place, and the big men were scttinJ. good screens," .Dickerson said

l

Drivers, Home
Owners And
Mobile Honae
.Owners Special
·Savings.

Alabama ,names Dubose football coach
.

.

By EDDIE PELLS

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) .,No fewer than two dozen former
Alabama players were on hand to sec
oae of their own, former defensive
l,iaeman Mike Dubose, accept the
Crimson Tide head coaching job.
The audience for Monday 's
.nnouncement by athletic director
Bob Bockrath drew a telling picture
of the Crimson Tide heritage and its
role in keeping Alabama's rich foot·
IJel( ,tradition alive.
"He understands that J\labama is
a'huJe family and the head coach is
the patriarch who sets the standards
11e waniS the team to go by," said
John Croyle. a former Crimson Tide
defensive end and Dubose's team·
-from 1972-73.
Dubose, 43, will move up from
his present spot·of defensive coordiutor after Alabama'sJan. I appear·
ance in the Outback Bowl. He'll

rcpiace Gene Stallings . . who
announced his 'retirement Nov. 23.
Bockrath said details nfDuhosc 's
conlract have not been worked oul .
but that he expected the deal to he at
least three years.
The Opp. Ala .. native will be the
fourth coach in the post-Bear Bryant
era. He said he's looking forward to
his tum in the spotlight after 12 years
a~ an assistant at Alabama. But he
knows his new job brings with it the
high expectations set hy Bryant
decades ago.
" I don 't think a day goes by that
I don 't think about coach Bryant ,"
Dubose said. "He taught us a lot
about football and he'taught us a lot
about life. I'm a beucr person today ·
because of him. I .wish he wa.• here ·
so I could say thank you.".
Some speculated Bockrath, in his
first year at Alabama, wouldn't make
hiring an insider a priority. When he

.

announced the criteria for the search.
an Alabama connection seemed
almost an afterthou~ht. ·
But faxes, mail and phone calls
Ooodcd Bockrath's office from the
time of Stallings' announcement and
the outgoing coach also had a role in
helping Bockrath make the selection.
Almost everyone with longtime
connection to Alabama was hoping
lo aVoid a repent of lhc divisiveness
that ensued in 1987, when Alahama
went outside its own program 10 hire
Bill Curry.
.
"I consciously tried to keep that
from being an issue," Bockrath said
of the push he felt to hire an insider.
'Tm sure in my sUbconscious it was;
always there. But that's not the only
reason he 's the new coach. I hired
him because he 's a good, young footbllll coach with a bright .future.''
He is also one who always set his
sights on pacing the same sideline

a

Bryant did while Dubose ,played for
hi rn from 1972-74, when Alabama
went 32-4.
"This is proof that dreams do
come true ,'' Dubose said. " I hope
every ~itizcn in the slate of Alabama
... that this will send this message to
them: Don't be afraid to dream. And
don 't he alraid to dream hili- Because
if you work hard and he patient,
dreams do cnmc true ~ "

He ' II be charged with' maintaining
the standard set by Bryant, who went
232-46-9 and won six national champicmships in 25 seasons at Alabama.
Dubose will take the place of.
Stallings. who has a 69- 16-1 record

Our statistics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
lewer and less costly losses than
other age groups. So it's only lair
to charge you less lor your
insurance. Insure your home and
car with us and save even more
with our special multi-policy
discounts.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Millllli .... :... ............

one' third of the girl student body.
He also noted that seven of the 12
girls were on National Honor Society another credit of the fjne quality
people in the program. Caldwell also
noted the impact of the loss in the
&lt;iectional tournament, noting that .il
was one of tile most ilentimentallosses of his long coaching career.
Turley, Keri Caldwell and
Thomas were both first team allSoutheast District and first team aiiTVC, while Brianne 'Proffiu was ·

honorahlc mention.
Kcri Caldwell was named the
Division IV District 13 P ayerofthc
Year and will play in the s ate all-star
game at Ohio Northern nivcrsity
on Sunday, Dec. IS.
· Special honors wen to Thomas
(TVC's MVP, all-gi rict 13 and
Most PoiniS Se~ved with 163); Keri
Caldwell, Coaches Award; aii-1VC
and all-District 13; Thrley and Prof·
fill (Middle Hitter Award); Duhl ·and
Kim Sayre (Most Improved).
'

Funitwe

••
•

lnllatlon Is bringing true
democracy. For the first time
history,
luxu·rles
and
necessities are selling at
same price.

•••

l•'

***things

If you · think

precarious where you
know a place where
dlstril)ute the desk calendara
weekly installments.

••'
•

:

you'll make the best SPlleclh I
you'll ever regret.

i

I

••'
*
*
·
*
An expert Is a person wh•" 1 •
•
makes his mistakes quietly.
***
Alarm clocl&lt;: a small mec:harlicail

I

device used to wake people
have no children.

••
••
·:·
•
•

I

1?,:3

•'•
••••

LD '
ER~

·

lnswrance Services ·

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

et.2..ee87
Auto-Oaon.l'll li&amp;IUI'Gnce ,
ure Hoine car BueJness

·-

·n.

i••

.

Rutland Funitwe

....:•

11.134,1
. ....... 742·2211
.

~

New Yor\... ........... 12
Or-.................... 8

.750

Iii

6 .M7
8 .lOO

Wu~Una:lon ...... ,.....,.7

.412

6~

Philadctphia ............. 7 ll J6B.
~Jersey .............. 4 II .11.7

n

8~

Bolton...................... 4 14 .222

10

10

.8l0
~ .833
6' .667
8 .$'79

· Toamamen11
F,...lln N.tlanlal a.nk Clulk

a...,.J · lz

M•ybnd 14, 0cuorae Wuhin11Un 61"
'hlrrl pia«
Clllifornia. 78, Mi11iuippi St 4~

Owione ................ 10 9 .:126 · 6h
lndi11.111 ..................... s . 9 -"''
1t
T....co .................... 7 12 J68 9~

Ohio H.S. girls' stores

8

.5 '~
6

,5S6

-·-

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
Ira
!t L fr:L Iii
&amp;~on ................. l7
\Jiah .......................16

2
2
Dolllll ............ .. ......... 7 II
M..nnota ................ ( 12
~~-"i\·;···· ·· :.,-··· ··· !1 I,S 1
SnnADtoruo,............ ~ IS
Vancouver ............... 3 18

.89S
.889
J89
.368

.:uo .
.167

...:...
~

9~

10
12'11

13h

.143

I~

Podn. 01- .
6 .727

Seanle .................... l6

L.A. Laken ............ 1~
Ponltnd ................ .l2
GokiatStllle ... .........7
L.A. appcn .... ....... 7
Salmwnento ..............7
PhoeRlx. ...........,.........

1 .682
8 .600

1

)

. 3~

8

J:\ .3!10
13 . 3~
14 .21:2

K
8
10

13

Monday'~IICOI'a
s-~ 118, Pldtadolphio 114

· a-tone 107, Vanoouver 91

Tonlpt's game~
Ookleft Stale at Toronto,? p.m.
Wahinaton ac New York. 7:30p.m.

Denver III ·AIIAntll, '7 : ~0 p.m. '
Mioml 11 CLEVELA~D. 7!30 p.m.

Houaron 11 MlnnCiotn, Rp,m.
Detmil ar Milwoukee. RJO p.m.
lncliona ot Utuh, 9 p.m..
Su Allonio at Pbocni~~o. 9 p.m.
Odllndo AI Portlm, IOp.m.

Dallal.ll LA. Clipper~ . 10::10 p.m.

ThCIIOfl 2S 1e;~rri1 In Tht Auociatl!d
PYm' ~·. &amp;.-o.lleca: b1a~i111111 fklll . with
firsl·p~ WOICS in rur.:nlllt!lel, m:onla
throuah Oet. 8. to~o points ~ un l.~
points for a firat -place v01e lhruurh oo.:
poi•l for a Hth-place l'uh:. und la• l
'M!idc's ranklna:

!!"--

"""I
1!11.-

1.....
1.626
1.~19

2
6
~

I.;W,i
I,J9J

1

6. IOWI Sc .......................4-0 1,26.1
7. Cinci..ad .........,........ 2-2 I.IS~

9
~

8. Arizona ...................... J-1 1,12.
9. Uhlh ...........................+-1 .1.121
10. Cltmson ........,..........6-l 1.0'12

II . NonhCarolinu .... .....!i-1
12. lndloM ..... ............ ....I&gt;-1
13. Tcas ....·...................o5-0
14. Duke ...................,.... S-2
IS. New"'"i!:o ............6-l

16. Fre~RoSt .................. ~"-'

fl:\5
790

:'i:n

11. MinntiOCa ................S.I . Sll
18. TexaaTech ............... J-0 497
19. Xavioer (Ohio) ..........~ 471
20. Arbnsas ..................;\-1
469
2t . SranlorrL. .... ,........... :I-1 307
22. t..o.ilville .................4-0 1"2
2.1. UCLA ...................... 1· 2 l2tl

24. ...- . . . ...................7.0

t69

11. BUIIIiJACollele ........ J-1

125

10
II
JJ
lb

17
20

Otlwn IHelvlnc t ..n: On-ton 91'.
Gecqe Washlnfton 6~. Tent~lc .a.". Vk·
linin 4~. Coil u Chlrirllon "''· Maryi..W
~I Pro... idmw 34. Cl«&lt;rtrtown ~2. Wlstoft.in' ~l · Co.-uwo.:l~•t 28. Tulaa 28. (ujj .
r..u i~t.'lowalot, UWLV lllllinoi• 12.
Syracuae 12. ,Soulh Carollaa 10. Wn1
VlrlinNt 9, N. Carollu Sl. •· Oral RIJN1a
I Vlrtlnio Te&lt;h 7, RhOde tolUHI6. St.
6, W..tHn.- 6. Ev•viUe ~.
M.-quene •· Oklahoma 4, hna St . 4,
Florida St 3, MuiiCMIHttt ~ - Old Do:- ·
lllliaiOI ~- lllinoil
2. Ndlralkl 2. Ari~
I.

NCAA Division I
men's SCOles
-Coi•

-·

aa actloa

.I9.V_k,2

Nloy71.~64

•

CiiQl&amp;TMA&amp; GREETING EDITIC)N

H:tllilnnre :11 Camlinn. I p.m.

Tuesday, December 24th

(.'indnnmi ut HcMnlun, I p.m .
Gn.'t!n Ony :11 1&gt;.:1mit. I 1•.m.
Ncw r:.np.l:mll nl [);1lla~. I p.m.
Nl.'wOrlcan!i :U N.Y. Giuna, l run .
St. Lnui ~ nt Alhtntu. I (1.111.
Sun' l:rllnd !Cn at Piluhttr)!h. I p.m.
l'alllfla Bay m Mintacrot:t. I p.m.
llllli:ln:tj'Mili s n1 Kansas City. 4 Jl.lll .
C&gt;:.ld:mli ill IA"fl~r. -' 1'·111

.

Monday, Ott. 16

Hockey

2
I
I
IC

'l':lll'(lit R:~y

2

:'

1.~

"-'1.
~4

,\2
:41
2'J
27
24

10
106
. 6-1
72
fl7
20 7.1

7K
ICK
M

1.1

72

·IC~

Nortlll'a~ 1)1\'l...
H:1rth'fll ............. IJ 7 6 .12 ' K.l
llullulu............ ... IJ IJ 2 2M K2
Mllltln.·;d , ........... l:!' 1• ol 2K 102
.:_ pllt5tlurjlh .......... l l l ~ .1 ' 2~ Ill
Hn.•ill'll ....... ... - .... 10 12 ~ 2~ - 77

-·-

Onawa ............... ..IC 12 fl

Sklncy ~IC . lima Sha"A' II&amp;.~ .'\0
Sl.'llllh IC~ ~K.. Mdlmwkl ~ .\
SoulhvWw ~ ()p.'tllluur .\4
Srrillfl Val. .fl. N&amp;.-w Mi..mi ~l
SprinJ. ~h tiS. 041)'. lkltoont .1~
Sftrint~rK..id -17. ()IIUwR Hill• ol~
St. MIM'y '11 ~!1. D:lrhoJ St. Jttbn ~~
' SICIIIIrnvUk- Catlt fl.&amp;, Tnm~~u ~2
~)'lvania ~view"· SWD11It111 JO .

n

MO
KJ

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR DAVE or BOU
992-2156

I~

tf1

-.NI
79

tl7

WF.STERN CONFERENCE
Cnlral DhoW.

:r.c..
WL I
Uallas ..... ............ lft 10 l
llt.1mit ................ I~ 1,1
S1. Luui~ ............ 1~ 14
Olk"JII.............. Ill~
l'tliJCnix .............. IO 1..
'furunln ... ,....... ,.. ll l7

Tol; Calbolil." M6. M•r•~tta ~:\
Tol. R&lt;...., ~t. Ao- W:f.nu &lt;I

4

).1

0

Jtl

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4
·0

27
76
2.&amp; 67 K2
24 IW ICIO

hdllc Dl•lCulutU,t , ........ :.. l7 K A )I
\1111'11.-ouv~ ,........ lol- 12 I 29
&amp;ln10111on .......... l"l~ I 2~
Los An~lt1 ....... ll.J J ~ . 21
A.....m............ IO I~ ~ 2.~
~nJtW ............. IO 14 4 14
Colaory, ....... \. 10 16 J 2J

Tri.vill.,. 02. MI... Volieyl7
Trlod 70, SplnJ. Oorholl&lt;l6 .
Trorwaod-MadiiOil ~~. Day. Meadow·

doto2t

Uok&gt;n
- · JO
U.llcdLo.:ol
l.o&lt;ol40,
~7. Sali-'lle S..Clwm
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w
....
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w..r..s64.
lle4) •
W-70, A,...vllle .I I
Ws IJak. 59. M-..._ :\2
_ , 116. Pon.....cll w.+I

'

fl&amp;. lit: Ia
J-1 7!t 67

'

. Tol. Whitmer'JO,. Tt)l, Slih . I ,

~3

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas
in our Christmas Greetings Editton
on December 24th

Allunlk lti•Won

Philaddrhia ....... IS 12
N.Y. R: III~I,.'U . ... 1,1 13
·N~· w J~ncy ........ 1-4 II
wa~l.tintUUII . ..... IJ 14
N.Y. b!amk'n ., ....K II

Kl

$:\

K~
7~

~

TI-lE DAILY SENTINEL

.

102 · 64

86 R6
101 · 9:\
76

R2

72
M.

RS
'U
91

7R

Monday'oiiCOI'a

• An:lleim 5. losl:on 2

N . Y . a..~~. Pholnilt2

T..- ), Cllkato I

Willow Wood Symmes Val. 6),

-.!~f'~~·:~lOp ...

-E26

W........ 6.1. 51Sir•w"'.........
r o))
World-. 41, Ohio Dn120
You. h1nlnwl "'· You. Willol :..•

Ftorirlo .. I'Niadolphio. 7;:00 p.n&gt;
New .lentJ • Tarot~lo, 7:30p.m.
EdmoMon a1 Detroit, 7:30p.m.

•
'

'

'

EASTERN CONFERENCE

:r.c..
!t L I Ell. lit:
Flnrid:t ............... l7 4 7 41 x.-1

'

With " '"'alhN of htdl,· and IDIN~Icohtr. Nhat•khllt'l h•miiC h,. llu• flrt• and Ht't'lll'!li
blanktoted
with 'illtaw. t:ltriMtlnas
.
.
•netmlltBMf'fli warmth and -tHHI ehcot•r as Wt'i t•ht•rJNh the
ltlt•N.'Ihtrt'l we•,·e shared thiN. poNt ,-t•ar. t'op 11s it ·mi-a1as .
sn,,·lnl( "thauk!i'" to ·''till. our maaa,- frl ..ndH. ttld antd ""'"•
" ·laos• kind Nllpporl. w•"ll ulwn,-s tl'('atSIII'('. laobtg
lmsln4'!11.'1 with ,.,.u is our l(r.•attosl. plt•nstlrt-!
..

W:~hin~tun 111 Ari·w nu. 4 11.111.
S~·;tflk: HI J;u,:k.mtiViilc. K11.111,

&lt;I

t."" •

•

s.t.rd.,.
l1bilollklphia ;u N.Y. Jcls, 12 :.10 p.m.
S:llll&gt;il.'}:ll :tl LlliCiiJII. 4 p.m.

s'.ntt.y. Ore. IS

•
••

Week 16slate

NHL standings

J;.p..,,

sa:
.... sc. I, E. Mldll... I. w..w.,...sc.

27~

Monday's ltiCore

Rit.'hntoMI EdiMm ~~. Wt.•I!JI\'illc ~J
RiY\'I'.W, FMtti&amp;."l' IM
til.-.:~ Hill .l-1, J:11.·bun .'\I
Rt•uhtnl fJI. "'" (1in1Hn J~
S..'hrintt M,·Kinlc)' ·0. Lishtm ,O..·aVL'f

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Onkl:rnd 2r.. K:m~ts Cily 1

Nl'w 811Mit1n 011.'11Wt)lkl 49. l:rnnklin
FumaL-e Grea.'ll 4.\
N\.-w Knnx.villc bl , UJ'P'-or Sdt•W Val.

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22
2~

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ll.·t:lin~hL'd divi!iiontill~:

.........9

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Buffalo nl Mi:tmi. 9 Jl.ll\.

9K6
I~
·'1117 . •
R7S · IK

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y·dirn:lll.'il playoll spot

Nt..'W R.ILtm-.tnJ.&amp;b. Wcllla'O Bruwn ·~2
Nt..'WII\n .f'nlb: 46. You. I~• JJ
()Qk Hi1170. S. W"h$1&amp;.'1'27
Or.!IIJI: Otr. 49, Audn:w11 .17
J\~lc• n . L)'nl:l•bti•JI so
rcuiiVilk $6. Tul. Chti~liun !'i~
Prin~·ct~'•n ~9. Lima ""'
P)'nu11unla(!. V:1!. 42. Baa~Jl,. 2~
,
lll.'\.'tl~vii~J~~tL-nl44. Hcntkd. Mill&amp;.,.

v,

7 0 .soo ~ 2-41
K 0 .429 276 ~ ~ ~

Midvicw 4~ . Elyria C:•h. 2~
Mi.-r.d RidJC 66. M :11h!.:w~ ~
Minrttn~ 69. Wuw...-ly ~~
M,,_."Mbc 49, Wllt\'rl~t~.l ol.l
N. Lima South Ran~ SK. Mcl&gt;onnkl

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12 ·

•
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Wflttm Di¥1.-,
y·Curulina .... ...... IO 4 0 .714 322 ISH
y-San Frmwi.'k:c\.10 4 0 .714 )4~ 22K
S1 . Looi~ ...... .......4 10 0 .2146 2~~ 369
Atlama ...... :...........'\ II tl .214 2M 40K
New0rlearis ....... 212 0 .1·1:' 11)9 J22

"Wl'Mtm
New Mhkllch1wn b2. lk.•rlin l"cnll!r
R&amp;."k.,....C 31

~

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2 0 . K~7 )57 240
:' 0 .MJ 269 2~

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.Midp;ll'k 6:\. S1. 1\u~ustin&amp;: 2.\

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~!.. ........ .... ....~ 9 0 .1,7 2K~ .11J
Tamp.1 Bay ..........~ 9 0 )~7 177 25,:\

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M~silnn Chr. 47, Wond C~•- W.Va. 22
M&amp;.'ig~ M . W!:II.!Utm ol6
ML1nlishur~ ~9. ChftW'd Tul:•w:•ftll:~ ,,.,
Midi.lk.1cwn P.mwido. -lfl. 11mnklin .l2

I

..

CtnlnJ Divlskln
..... ll J 0 .7M6 JK7 197
Minne.'IO!n.. ..........8 6 0 .~ 71 267 267
OticnJo ........ ........6 R 0 .4241 2.' 7 2."7

. tucotsvlllc V;tl. fi.l. Sd111u Nnnhww:NI

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li.• GrfttiB:~y

Jocksnn Mlltun6]. L•wcllv1llc .17
l..aOruc 66. SoulhinJt!"" l11411k,,- ~2
l..athc1n WL-siCm ~ - Pnn~n-.~~~tlll'l:ly

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N.Y. Gianuo..........b K 0 .429 217 2.&lt;117

!\7. fk.'fmnnl Nunhl.';llllcm

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.071 231 402

lltdtrn Dh'l-.n

Arizoru~ ................6

IA."'llllnia 44. E. P:lk.'!Uiuc 41
Lin~~~ Calh . 7". Culumhu11 Ornw 71

!\.1

t K..... [6)) ................7.0
2: Wake Foml (~J .........b-0
3. Kcnluck)' ...................:'i-1
ol. Villanova .......... :........5.0
5. Micllipn ....................s-o

. ~71

Philadclphiu ........ ,tl 6 0 .:'71 ]IJ
Washinglon......... .K flo 0 .:'71 .101

Hupcwcll Lllklnn 7~. Clytk :'ib
• bil.liun Cn.'-"- ~ .l , Hu~:k&amp;.-yc" l~~~;al41

eollege
poll .
'

.....,_

~:

..

&lt;:

j

'

-·-

19

~~

Thp25 men's

.

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Cui. DeS*s ~2. Col. Wnuenon 4:l
Col. Hardey 94, Col. Wolnut Ridac ~2
Cuvcmry ll6, Akron Our l..al.ly ur the
Elms.._l
Cl'fttwood R Winclaam )II
Day. Can-nll60. &amp;!~wood 42
.Dn)'. Duntxlt M . Olica,:u (Ill.) Dunb.'V
4J
i&gt;'Jy. Path.TSOn 67. Tipr Chy ~9
P- ClirtMa ~2 . Y~lluw Sprin~s K •
l:.ask.'ftl Bmwn J~. N1111h Adnn111 25
Evergl\oen !'iO, l'ul. Emmanuel Chr. 27
t'nirbom 46. Betlbi'oolc )9
Fairless SIC, M;~rlingloh 36
1~-ik.'r~ Hockint~- 41 . Trimhk: JU
Fn."flllml RuS!l 46. M:mn11..-c ~~
Gnm:unillc 6K. Rnt~1 st11wn 41

p.m.
DtnVflll( Churkllle, 7::\0 r .m.
Miami nr Phila*lptlhL K p.m.

to.

A· Detwcr ............ l2
Kai\JUJICily ........9
SIUI Die&amp;o ............ 7
Oakland .. ............. 7
Scanlr .................. 6

Cle. L.uth«an West 67, Avon 40
Clt. Srn.nhrtiJr4~ . F'sehl41·

Hill~tw.q

MlnnnOca at Chiro~t1o, H::.O p.m.

241
269 2M

219

28~

wm..mDM--.

47

Wednesday's pmtS

lndinna al LA. l.nM.'I'll, 10:30 p.m.

~.IN

Bulri!IIOI'C' ............410 0 .2R6 J:\4 .190

Gn."&amp;.'lkm J I. WiL~hingtun ('.H. 30

J....,..
CLEVELAND at WuahinJIOn. 7 :30

.71ol

.64:\

Cmlntl Dll'is6on
A·PiUsbuiJh ....... IO 4 0 .714 :\1.1 214
hcboo,ille ..... ....7 7 o .m 2K6 ~='
Houston ......... .....1 7 0 .!oOO ]()I 217
Cir~~.inllali ..........'..6 8 0 .429 J20 :4J2

AlexaDdet 62, Raciae Southem ~7
• AruuJUm ~l Dny. NonbridJC 48
Beaver l.ol:al .H . E. Liverpool .W
Bellaire 69, Zanetville S4
BellaiR: S1. John ~:l, COM.liz !tO
Belpre 104. NtlsonviUe-Yoc:k41
Bethel¥Tide 68. Ftlicilf. ~I
Boardmun 95, You. Wilson~~ '
Brookville 49. Cluylon Nar1htnont 44
Buchtel 811, Louirville 70
·~
Buckeye Local !'OI , Indian Creek 4J ! ,
~ 7~ . Tol. Woodwonl.42
Carhsle M. Dlly. Stebbins .f8
Ce111ervillt $0, Ketlerina Alter 41
Cin. Christian 49, Ridpvllle JO
Cia. l.oclcland ~It Cin. l.an.Jmarlc :\2
Cin. Prinerton ~9. Urna -44 "
Cin. Seven Hills ~l. But;~via 47
Cin. Sf. Unulm 60, Cin. Walnut Hillr~

.,

'

WLIEII.tEU

Y,.New f.a&amp;laod .. I_O 4 . 0
Buffolo ............. ... :9 .5 0
lndiwlapolis .........8 6 0
Miami ...1.......... ....6 8 0
NY Jt1s... ........... l 13 0

!I

r.,.

Eulem Oil'bion

to.

1

•'·'
.,

A~CANCONFERENCE

F1rWtst
Arizona lB. Tc:au 78
San Jose St. 68, Cal Poly·f'umonu S~

· )

Milwaukee ............. 10

Football

NFL standings

I
4

Dcrroil: .................... l:1
CLEYELAND ....... I2
AIIMIA ................... II

.

St. Looi1 8..".,Ak:onl Sl. 4~

Ctntl'll Dh·Won

~..................17

~~

••

a safety on an intentionalJfOUnding
penaliy in the end zone.
Ho.tetler, who was 13-of-27 for
1.50 yards, had ~~:oring passes of 34
yards to 1im Brown, 23 yards 1o
Derrick Fenner 111d one yard to
Andrew Glover. Cole Ford added a
43-yard field goal.
"People haye to realize we're a
pre!ly good team and gettins better."
Kaufman said. "We're peaking at the
right time."
11le Raiders, who 5eemed to be
out of the playoff chase wlien they
lost consecutive overtime games to
Tampa Bay and Minnesota last
month, have won three slraight since
then.
Oakland still inust win its final
two games - at Denver and at home
against Seattle - and hope for an
Indianapolis loss to have any chance
of making tile playoffs as a wild-card
.team.
By losing, the Chiefs failed to
clinch a playoff spot. Kansas City
also had several players- including
In the third quarter of Monday night'a AFC Weat
defensive linemen Dan Saleaumua ·
battle In Oakland,' wh- the Raldera won 26-7.
(AP)
.
(shoulder), Joe Phillips (shoulder)
and Vaughn Bo\lker (ankle) ~
injured in the game, though the
extent of those injuries was not
known.
backfield throughout the game.
tried to down the ball lor :1 touch·
Marty Schouenheimer said, "They
"We're beat up. and that's some- were a much better team than you 'd
hack. But he put his hand duwn
" He's the best inside Iackie in the
thing that always · happens in a expCcl. " ,
beyond the goal line and, after hcsleague," Chiefs guard Dave Szott
Raiders game," Kansas City coach
itating
for a lew seconds, realized he
The Raiders hpvc )liven up just 14 · said . ."He's strong cn 0 ugh to hullhad Ill keep going. He was tackled at
points in thei'r last two games. They . rush you a.nd quick cncll!gh to get
defeated Miami 17 -7 the week
arQund you. He's elusive ror such a the 10.
before in Oakland.
On the next play, Gannun was hit
liig guy, .that's what's unique about
. Defensive
tackle
Chester him."
hy Pat Swilling .and then McGioc~ tnn in the end zone. He was lluggcd
McGiockton had another dominoting
The Chiers came unglued at the
game for Oakland, forcing the safe- start of the sccund half.
for intentional gmu'hding when,
You. Libeny :'I, Austinlown·Fitch ol9
You. Mooney 76. Cn~ll26
ty and sacking Gannon twice. He
Tamarick Vanover slarlcd tn
while falling backward, he underYou. Rayen 71,lordii0Wn 17
also caused havoc in the Chiefs'
handed the hall to an open area at the
return the kickoff. then storoped and
three.

MOl-

2 ·
5

Toron1o 01 Boslon. 7 p.m.
Seott~ a1 New
7JO p.m.

•••
••
••
i•
'

Grate
of
Rutland

!_,

••

••
:

Dave

!t L fr:L

L .A. Lakcn Dl S.."mrnettln, 10:)0 p.nl.

:

By

AIIMiic Dl'ilillll

Cent. Connecticut St .

ClAflin 69, S. Clltl'tliM S.. 61
Kerwucky 90, Wripr Sr. 62
SE MiiiOUri 69, LouiliDAI Ttdl M
ViiJini:~ T«:b 66. N . C. ~~

:

•

·** *
Speak when you're angry,

m seven, seasons

Southern's volleyball seniors
·get recognition for 49-7 reco
Senior members of Southern's
volleyball team wrapped up .their
eec:onc1 straight Tri-Valley ConferHocking Division title and
concluded their careers with a 49-7
_.!I record. The.team was ranked
• hip u fifth in the state.
·
Senior members are Amber
'J11omM, Keri Caldwell, Renee Tur~· &amp;riMae Proffill. Hillery Harris
..., Balily Duhl: Howie Caldwell
IIGIIdlhll of 96 girls in the top three
~ld«l, :30 play volleyball, neilrly

To

Vtrmonl6.~.

NBAstandings
to.

-

Tcmp~67.Tutonc49

Basketball

I:

The Light

you and you doa't think they lhould,
you've got to find a WI'J to win. We
Mil to play four quarun. 1dtitllc this
is when the Raiden tum the-·
"We felt ,we Mil to 10 out there
and keep fiahtinsllld bell'em and
bell 'em and bell 'em until we were
absolutely certain they couldn't get
up and win."
,
Kansas City typically kept past
games close, waiting for the Raiders
to make a mistake thai would cost
them the game.
During the Chiefs' seven-same
winning Slreak, the Raiders turned
the ball over to Kansas City 17
times. Monday night, the only
turnover of the gtiTIIC belonged to
Kansas City, and it was the Chiefs
making the costly mistakes and the
Raiders playing virtually error-free.
. "It seemed like they Mil the ·
Chiefs' number," said Kansas City
receiver Sean LaChapelle, who
caught Rich Gannon's only scaring
pass, a 12-yarder in the fourth quarter after the Raiders led 26-0.
"We couldn't get anything going.
Normally, the Raiders give up the
.ball and normally they Jive up big
plays. They didn't do it today. 111ey
took it to us."
GannQn, who replaced Steve
Bono as Kansas City'ntartinK quarterback two games ago, was just 12·
of-33 for 88 yards and was called for

Scoreboard

9

Arizona, Kentucky and BC tally w·i ns
&amp;y MEL REISNER

OAXLAND, Calif. (AP) -· 11le
Oaldutd Raiden revened yean of
constat failure tpillll the Kauu
City Oliefa by bealin1 them .r their
own 1ame.
Jeff Hostetler threw for three .
touchdowns and Napoleon Kaufman
ran for 109 yard&amp;, helping the
Raiders tum around a onesided rivalry and rejuvenate their playoff hopes
with a 26-7 win over the Chiefs on
Monday night.
"I guess they were due for a
win," Kansas City safety Mark ·
Collins said. "Unfortunau:ly, it came
late in the season. This loss hurts
because we didn't play well."
"It wasn't much of a rivalry in
recent years. the way they beat us,"
Raider defensive end Pat Swilling
said. "We're on a quest now, trying
to get into the playoffs."
The Chiefs (9-5) blew a chlllCC to
cli.nch a post-season berth and saw
their record of success' against the
Raiders (7-7) - Kansas City had
won 13 of·the previous 14 games,
including the last seven straight come to a halt.
"lt feels good because it was the
Chiefs and they dominated the
series," said Raider cornerback
Albert Lewis, who formerly pl~yed
in Kansas City. "Anytime you get in
a situation ,mere someone is beating

:H

Top 25 college basketball,

The o.lly Sentinel• ' • 5

Raiders' 26-7 win over Chiefs
hurts K.C.'s playoff chances

...•
•

Tueeda~~ber10,1881

\

Behind a great second half effort,
the Eaatern Lady Eagles even up
their record at2-2 with a 44-34 win
o - the Miller Falcons Monday
nilht Ill Eastern High School. Miller
drops to 1-3 overall.
The young Lady Eagles, growing
toaether as a team as sophomores
,and freshmen, were led by a tremendous effort from point guard Jessica
Bnm.on, who notched a game-high
19 points and had 14 rebounds.
Bnnnon also had four assists in leadina a. peat comeback effort. ·
Sopohomore center Valerie Karr
knoued I0 points and had eight
rebounds in a great second half
effort. Kan- also led the team in steals•
with seven in·addition to Brannon's
six.
Two talented freshmen - Becky
Davis 111d Chasalie Hollon - added
to ' the offense with good defensive
efforts and seven and six points
~lively. Stephanie Evans added
two with a great floor game.
Despite going 0.10 from the floor
in the first period before finally
b!Qking the ice, Eastern rolled to a
6-0 lead on two Karr buckets and a
Davis jumper. Miller's Britnei Merckle and ~isten Plant picked away
at the Eagle lead as defensive intensity wavered and several bad passes
stalled the Eagle offense. Two Merckle free throws .gave Miller a 9-8
edge .r the end of the first period as
both Karr and Angi Wolfe sat out
mlic:h of the time in foul !rouble.
Eastern fell to 11-10 before finally settling into its offense, where
Brannon worked the back screen to
perfection off Hollon's feeds. Brannon also hit the boards hard and had
several .follow-up lay-ins as part of

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

'

I
I

�By The. Bend

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Leadoff witness for defense
still thinks Simpson guilty
ly IIIICHAEL f! I!'MAN

A11a:l 1 d Pt

11

Wth r

sloppiness while he collected evi·

dence.

SANTA MONICA, Cllif. -The
Vaanatter's Pronouncement was
first witness for OJ. SiJ11910ft thinkS the only new wrinkle to his testimGhe did it.
ny, The Rstofhis nearly daylong tes·
."I believe your client is' 1uilly of timony was dedicated to a third-time
murder/' Rtired Detective Philip telling of his actions at the crime
Vannatter told Simpson lawyer . scene and at Simpson's house, and
Robert Babr on Monday.
defending his decision ID enter SimpCalled ID kick off the defenae ease son's property without a search warin the wronsflal death trial, Vannatter rant.
startled the eoun with his outburst
Vannatter, who the defense has
after being asked if he was spending suggested was pan of a wide-ranging
his time "denouncing" Simpson on conspiracy to frame Simpson. faced
TV fleWS shows.
the same questions at a pRliminary
"1lllt's as much of a denounce- hearing and the criminal trial.
ment as you c:aft aer, isn't it?" Baker
The day began with the plaintiffs
; asked anidely.
resting their case after calling as the
"1lllt's .what the evidence indi- final witness Fred Goldman, whose
, cllles to me.'• said Vannatter, who furious quesi to prove Simpson killed
; Rtums today for friendly . cross- his son came to a sorrowful climax as
, exaniination by the plainiiffs.
.
he told jui'(Jrs of the huge void the
was to be followed by crimi- slaying has left in his life.
; nalis15 Andrea Mazzola and Greg
"TheR isn't a day that goes by
: Malheson. police nurse Thano Peratis that! don't think of Ron," said Gold·
• and Vannatter's former partner Tom man, shooting angry glances at Simp: Lange.
son and being overcome at times with
: In a surprise move, the defense such wrenching sobs that his lawyer
' tentatively eliminaled from its list one had to pause in questioning.
• of Simpson's favorite targeis, crimiJurors seemed grim as he narrat·
: nalist Dennis Fung, During the crim- ed a series of family snapshots and
: inal !rial, the defense a&lt;cused him of videotapes. Most looked down when
Goldman sobbed.

: m

In one chillinJ moment, Ronald
Goldman himself spoke to the jury,
remarking in a November 1993
videotape that, "God knows where
I'll be in 'a year."
Simpson, 49, was acquitted in the
June 1994 killings of Ron Goldman
and Nicole Brown Simpson. Fred
Goldman and other relatives of the
victims are suing Simpson.
,
The Simpson defense team is
attempting to recreate the criminaltrial success by shifting the focus of
the case onto the Los Angeles Police
Department - thus, Vannatter as the
first witness.
But relying on such a hostile wit·
ness proved troublesome for Baker.
First, Baker struggled to get many
of his questions answered, as the
judge sustained objection after objec·
tion from plaintiffs' lawyers complaining that Baker's questions were
irrelevant, argumentative and
duplicative.
Then came the Vannatter verdict.
. The remark appeared to startle
jurors, and also flew in the face of an
agreement by lawyers that neither
side's witnesses would declare their
feelings. about Simpson's guilt or
innOcence.
Baker tben attacked more fierce-

ly, accusing him of "cashin&amp; in on
your belief" by signing a boot deal
for S115,000. which Vannatter will
share four-ways with other authors.
"Like a lot of people aR,'' Van·
nauer said. "I'm attempting to better
my lifestyle and make some money."
But be insisted he was not lying in
order to help the plaintiffs and make
his hook a better story.
"Boy, I would have given up the
book deal not to testify on this stand
again," he said.
Earlier, Fred Goldman wept as he
told of finding a diagram in his son's
apartment after his death showing a
restaurant he dreamed of opening.
"I never realized how far Ron had
gotten with his ' plans and his
dreams," Goldma~ sobbed. ·
.The diagram showed a floor plan
in the shape of an· Egyptian ankh
necklace that Ron Goldman. wore.
Asked what it symbolized, tbe father
wept and said, "Eternal life," then
turned toward Simpson and added,
"He doesn't wear it anymore. Kim
wears il now."
Kim Gol~man, the slain man's
younger sister, sat in the front row of
the courtroom, dabbing at her eyes
with a tissue.

:FBI announces reward for tips on bombing
'

.

; By RUSS BYNUM
·, M~ Prell Writer
, ATLANTA- Concert-goers may
; have prevented more deaths in the
•' Olympic Park bombing when tbey
: accidentally knocked over the knap;; sack that contained the pipe bomb,
:: sending the brunt of the blast upward.
:· The 40-pound homb was designed
•: to kill more than the one person slain
;: in the July 27 explosion, FBI Deputy
r Director Weldon Kennedy said Mon·
·: day as the agency asked the public for
: belp in the investigation.
' The FBI ~ffered · a $500,000
· reward for inf()rm&amp;tion, photos or
videos that help identify the bomber.·
And for the first time tbe agency
· played a tape of the 911 warning call,
. hoping someone might recognize the
: deep, slow voice of a man who said:
· "TheR is a bomb in Centennial

Du.Pont
heir found
competent
to be tried

I

MEDIA. Pa. (AP} -John E. du
Pont was found competent to stand
triafnext month in the killing of an
Olympic wrestler after doctors spid
they have managed to control· his
mental illness 'l"ith.drugs. 1 ·
Two months ago, doctor,s on
both sides of the case said t~e 58year-old beir to the DuPont Co.
chemical fortune was too illlo help
his lawyers. He thought be oi,Jas the
Dalai Lama, tbe Christ chjld and
the last surviving membe ~ of the
Russian royal family, the ~octors
said.
\
But Delaware County Judge
P,tricia H. Jenkins, who previously liad round the millionaire too
delusional to stand trial, ruled hiip
cofl1'petent Monday. ijer dccisj.dn
followed testimony by .psychia·
tris.. that heavy doses of drugs
helped clear his head.
Although du Pobt is "admit·
tedly mentally ill," he now under·
stands reality well enough to be
tried and "is more likely than not
capable of cooperating effectively"
with his lawyers·, the judge said.
Thomas Bergstrom, du Pont's
lead lawyer, was disappointed.
· "I believe he's not ready, hut
I'm prepared to go and do what I
have to," he said.
He said he might pursue an
insanity ' defense, which would
require him to convince a jury that
du. Pont was so incapacillllcd by
· mental illness at the time of the
shootinJ that he did not realize it
was wrong.
· Last week, a defense psychiatrist testified that despite the help
of heavy doses of anti-psychotic
drup at the state mental hospttat
whmi du Pont is being held, the
defendant still believe&amp; communist
conspiratorS will kill him if he dis·
cusses hil case ..
A pro~CNion psychililrist and
other hospital officials, however,
·· nid duPont meetlleJal standards
for competency ..,. ullderstanding
the chqel apinll him, the roles
of people in cout1, possible out·
coma the trial, the coaccpt of
"plea barpinina" llld his c:onsti·

or

tutionll rip ID ~er- to eeatify.
Du Pont holed up inl,ide his
manaioll for two clays after the J111.•
26 llloocinJ bef&lt;n police captum! him.

I

Park:Yoli have 30 minutes. " A Iran·
script or the call had been released
previously.
Meanwhile, Richard Jewell, the
former Security guard cleared as a
suspect, reached an undisclosed c~sh
settlement Monday with NBC qvcr
his claim that news anchor Tom
Brokaw had implied Jewell twas
guilty. NBC said it agn;ed to the set·
tleinent to protect confidential
sources.
.;.,
The explosion during an early
morning concert killed one Woman
and injured more than I00 other peGpie, A TV cameraman died of a hean
attack rushing to the scene.
A group of young concen-goers
apparently knocked over the military'
style knapsack that was under a
bench, preventing a deadlier explosion, Kennedy said at a news confer-

He

ence.
declined to identify them or
say how long .before the blast they
accidentally knocked over the bag.
" Had it been left in place ... we
would have seen a huge number of
casualties and many, many, many
more people killed and injured," he
said.
Kennedy denied that inv~stigators
were at a dead end, and said the
agency has made "a lot of progress."
' Wayne Grant, · one of Jewell's
lawyers, said the FBI was scrambling
because il had "wasted three .months
fOcusing on an innocent man." ,
Kennedy turned aside questions
about Jewell, But he said it took the
FBI more than four months to piece
together fragments of the knapsack
and establish a 45-minute window for
when the homb was placed. He said
it was possible that one person made

the 911 call and planted the bomb.
"We firmly believe that some·
where, someone has a photograph of
a person carrying this bomb into the
park," Kennedy said, displaying a
rephca of the knapsack. "They may
not know it, they may not realize that
they have it. And that's what we're
asking the public to come forward
with ."

Jewell, cleared Oct, 26 as the.only
named suspect, was initially ~aised
as a hero for discovering the kn.apsack and warning some people just
before the blast.
. He was considered a suspect in
part because authorities believed be
fit a psychological profile - someone thirsty for tccognition, who creates a crisis so he can defuse it and
become a hero.

'PICTURE YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE ••.

Our special page(s)

"For Children Only"
(16 years of age or younge.r)

Will be published

Monday, December 23rd

'$1000
Per PicturePrepaid
Please enctose seK-addresse«j,
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photo.

HURRY, DEADLINE
FRIDAY, DEC. 16, AT 3 P..M.

Official
Entry

Iraq given green light to resume
oil exports,to buy food, m.edicine

-By- ROBERT H. REID

A8aocft1Wd Pntll Writer
UNITED NATIONS - Iraq was
free tnday to resume oil exports for
the first time since its 1990 invasion
of Kuwait, but the United States
served notice that it would watch
carefully to make·sure President Sad·
dam Hussein did not cheat.
Boutro~
Secretary-General
Boutros-Ghali gave the go'ahcod
Monday to allow Iraq to sell $2 bil·
lion worth of oil for six months to
buy fond and medicine for its people .
suffering from mtJre than six years of
crippling international sanctions.
In Baghdad's poor neighborhoods.
Iraqis greeted the news with dancing
in the streets. shouting slogans in sup·
pon of Saddam.
"It is a dream that we have had for
the past six years. We deserve to sec
it come true because we struggled
hard," said Amal Khalar. a 2K-ycarold schoolteacher.
The oil-for-food plan went into
effect auiomatically at 12:0 I ·a.m.
EST .today. Iraqi Ambassador Nizar
Hamdoon said exports could resume
in' a few days.
Deputy U.N. Amba..sador Edward
Gnehm said the U.N. resolution was
designed "for a cheater. ..
"We know him. We know him
well," Gnchm said, referring to Sad·
dam. "Every other time that he's
entered into any agreement he's tried
to find a way out."
U.N. officials said abl&gt;ut260 com·
panics from 25 countries officially
have expressed interest in bidding for
Iraqi coqtacts. but no contracts have
been approved. The United Nations
has hired four petrplcum executives
from the United States, France, Russia and Norway to approve Iraqi oil

contracts. They were barred from
even considering contracts until the
start-up hour.
Revenues also will go to com·
pensatc victims of the Persian Gulf
War and to pay for U.N. operations
to monitor Iraq's weapons programs.
U.N. inspectors will ensure the sup·
plies are distri.butcd fairly and arc not
diverted to Saddam's supporters.
' Energy futures prices .fell Monda~
after the go-ahead, but the dc.cline
was somewhat tempered by strong
world demand. Investors arc skittish
about selling because oil-for-fond
deals have fallen apart for the past
live years, said Boh Ayres, director of
crude supply hedging at Diamond
Shamrock in San Antonio.
"Anybody who sold (on) any of
these rumors that Iraqi oil was coming out got burned," he said,
Analysts also said world demand
is believed to be strong enough to
support the extra 580,000 '" so b&gt;r·
rei ~ thntlraq would ship per day. The
amount is a fraction of the 72 million
barrels the world uses daily ·nr the
17.5 million hurrcls that U.S. consufficrs dCmand.
International sanctions have prohibited Iraq from exporting oil since
Saddam invaded Kuwait in 1990,
triggering the Gulf War.
The United Nations agrcctl to
allow limited oil exports to alleviate
the suOcring of the Iraqi people. U.N.
agencies estimate that about. I KO,OOO
Iraqi children under age 5 suffer from
malnutrition hccausc of the embarg!&gt;lraq's ambassador to Turk~)'. Ran
EI -Tikriti, said Sunday that Baghdad
would ..,~ the United Nations to more
than double the daily quota after the
first three months, the Turkish Anatoliu news agency .said, --

In New York, Iraqi oflicials said
the increase was needed to compensate for the rise in fond and medicine
prices since the United Nations first
made the "oil-for-fond" offer six
years ago.
.
Before the invasion of Kuwait,
Iraq exported more than 3 million
barrels per day, At current world
prices, Baghdad would be allowed to
export about 580,000 barrels a day.
Iraq cannot resume unlimited
exports until the U.N. Security Council is satisfied Baghdad has dismantled programs to develop long-ran&amp;e
missiles and weapons of mass
destruction.
About 150 U.N. inspectors will
make sure humanitarian supplies arc
distributed equitably. Ahout30 other
inspectors will monitor impon• of
food and medicine.
In addition, 14 U.N, inspectors
. will monitor the. Oow of Iraqi oil
through a pipeline metering station
on the Iraq· Turkey hmdcr and at' seaports in Turkey and the Iraqi gulfpon
of Mina ai-Bakr.
At least half the oil must he
shipped thmugh the Kirkuk-Yurmur- ·
talik pipeline. U.N. ofl1cials said it
cannot he uflloadcd at the Turkish
port of Ceyhan until the United
Nations has apprvvcd a contract ror
its S6tiC.
Iraq long had refused to accept the
uil-fur-hxKI plan . saying it infringed
on national sovereignty. It linally
accepted the offer in May.
. Implementation has hecn delayed
by technical issues, llcbatc over interpretation or the plan: and Iraq's mil·
itary moves in the nonh in support of.
one Kurdish faction against ·an Iranian-hacked rival gmup.

Pacific Coast dwelle·rs bracing ·
for more mudslides, flooding
By The ,A11ocr.t.d Prna
Heavy rains soaked the coasts of
Oregon and California on Monday,
and hoth mudslides and Oonding
posed threats in areas already. hit by
heavy weekend rains:
Ri•ers in southwestern Oregon
and northern California were dan·
Jcrously hiJh, chasing families from
their homes, especially Ilona the
Umpqua River in Oregon from Elk·
ton ID Reedlporl. whete about 200
people spent Sunday niJht iri lhelten.
In California, schools wm ciOICd
in Eureka and in F~le , a Victori·

an village 220 miles north of San ·
Francisco~ and the College of the
Redwoods also closed after pans of
Highway 101 Oonded.
Minor street flooding was reponed in the San Francisco Bay area,
· frustratinJ drivers and triggering
fender•bendenl durin&amp; the morning
commute; the California Hi.hway
Patrol said.
Even as heavy rain wasletling up
Monday, a new storm was on the way
and was expected to drench some
already saturated .areas ovemiaht.
In the small Oregon.communitv nl

Myrtle Creek, residents were tryins
to dig out from a mudslide that darn·
aged four houses, said .James Akins,
whose house was spared.
"The house behind me, it filled it
up with mud and SOfi!C houses up on
the hill," said Akins. who moved hi~
83-year-old mother to a shelter at ~
local elementary •chool, then
returned to battle! the mud.
· "Right now they've JOt backhoes
up there trying to divert it, but it looks
pretty hopelcu," he said.

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

Thursday, 6:30p.m. at the Carpe~ters
Hall, Pomeroy. Take covered ~ish,
gift for gift exchange, for DemoCrats
and families,

LOS ANGELES - " 101 Oalma·
tians" was No. I at the box office for
a second straight week, earning $13.9
million and topping the debut·of the
Sylvester Stallone thriller "Day·
light."
The ~arnings for "101 Dalma·
tians," however, dropped sharply
from the $45 million it made over the
five-day Thanksgiving weekend.
The Disney film and "Daylight,"
which earned $10 million, apparently suffered from a troditional drop in
movie attendance jthat follows the
Thanksgiving weekend.
.
"Star Trek: First Contact" fin'
· ished third with $6.6 million. ':Jingle
All the Way" ($5,6 million) and
" Ransom" ($5.5 million) rounded
out the top five.
.
Two films performed well irllimited-release d~buts. "Everyone Says
I Love You," Wondy Allen's revival
of the inovie musical, made $! 31,600
on three screens. "The Substance of
Fire," based on Jon Robin Baitz's
play about a patriarch vs . his family,
took in $15,500 on tw&lt;t screens.
The top 20 movies at Nonh Amer·

Country-singer
Young critical
after apparent
suicide attempt

ican theaters Friday through Sunday,
followed by studio, gross, number of
theater locations, receipts per location, total gross and number of weeks
in release, as comf.iled by Exhibitor
·
·
Relations Co. Inc.:
I. . "10 I Dalmatians, " Buena
Vista,.$13.9 miliion, 2,812 l()!:ations,
$4,959 average, $63.7 million, two
weeks.
2. "Daylight,'' Universal, $10
million, 2,175 locations, $4,605 average , $10 million, one weqk.
3. "Star Trek: First Contact,"
Paramount, $6,6 million, 2,8121oca·
lions, $2,351 average, $71.1 million,
three weeks.
4. "Jingle All the Way," Fox, $5.6
· million. 2,404location~. $2,327 average, $38.1 million, three weeks.
5. "Ransom," Buena Vista, $5.5 ,
million, 2,4lllocations. $2,279 aver'age, $112.9 million, five weeks.
6. "Space Jam," Warner Bros.,
$4.5 million, 2,650 loc~tions, S1,713
average, $73.4 million, four weeks.
7. "The English Patient," Miramax, $2.7 million, 617 locations,
$.:1,388 a~erage, $13.2 million, four
weeks.
8. "The Mirror has Two Faces,"
Sony, $2.4 million, 2,050 locations,
$1,1.62 average, $37.2 .million, four ·
weeks:
9. "Set It Off," New Line, $1.3
million, 851 locations, $1 ,546 average, $32.4 million, five weeks,

I0. "Wi(liam Shakespeare's
Romeo &amp; Juliet," Fox,$ 1.3 million,
1,292 locations, $1,017 average,
$41.7 million, six week s.
II. ''Sleepers," Warner Bros.,
$327,200, 447 locations, $732 average, $51.5 million, eight weeks.
12. ~&lt;S wingers, " Miramax.,
$300,400, 160 locations, $1,878 average, $3. I million, ·eight weeks.
· 13. "Big Night," Orion, $201 ,300,
168 locations, $1,198 average, $10.5
million, 12 weeks.
14. "That llting You Do!" Fox..
$192,400, 395 locations, $487 average, $24.98 million, 10 weeks.
"
15. "First Kid," Buena Vista,
$190,900,
. 508 locations, $376 ·aver·

age. $25.7 million, 15 weeks.
16. "The First Wives Club,"
Paramount, $184,500,460 locations,
$401 average, $101.5 million, 12
weeks .
·
·1i. "Secrets .and Lies," October,
$175,700, Ill locations, $1,583 average, $4.8 million, II weeks.
·
18. "Shine," New Line, $168,800,
I0 locations, $16,888 average ,
$728 ,900, three weeks.
·
19.
" Ridicule, " Miramax,
$143,800; 161ocations, $8,991 aver·
age, $223,600, two weeks.
20. " Jack, " Buena Vista ,
$140,800, 351locations, $401 average, $58.2 million, 18 weeks. '

.

Save'l'ime and
••

Usa

RE CH OVER 18,.500

HO ESWITH
.

YOUR

.

SS GE!

ADVERTISING IN THE

TV TIMES::
'

AREA TELEVISION
LISTINGS AND
FEATURESEVERYWEEK IN THE
TV TIMES

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CAJ.t·NOW •••

.I Dea.e: F~ay,. Dec. 16 .at 3 p.m~ I
. Mall or bring the entry form:

The Daily Sentinel

GAlLIPOLIS

PT. PLEASANT, WV

446-2342

675-1333

POMEROY-IDDDLEPORT

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

992-2156

/

II
I

Ann
Lande'rs

NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP)
Country
singer Faron Young was in
POMEROY ·- Preceptor Beta
Beta Cliapter, Beta Sigma Phi, critical condition today, suffering
Christmas party, 6:30p.m. Thursday, from an apparently self-inflicted gunhome of Charlotte Elberf~ld. Mem- shot wound in the head. A suicide
bers to take items for Serenity House . note was found in his house.
Young, who had hits from the
and chapter craft sale.
TUESDAY
1950s
to the early '70s with .songs
SYRACUSE .. Carleton School
like "Hello Walls," and '' Alone With
will present "The Many Scenes of
You," was found at his home MonChristmas" at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
CHESTER •· Shade River Lodge day afternoon by friend and band
schooL Refreshments will be served. 453 F&amp;AM, regular meeting, Thursmember Ray Emmitt.
day, 7:30p.m., lodge hall in Chester.
Police did not release details of the
POMEROY .. Meigs County Refreshments.
suicide note.
Chamber of Commerce luncheon at
Friends said the 64-year-old
noon, Senior Citizens Center. Jobn
Young
had been depressed about his
Steinberger, executive director, the .
ROCK SPRINGS .. Rock Springs health. He had emphysema and
Ohio llural Development Partner, Grange, Thursday, home of Helen
recently underwent prostate surgery,
Ohio Department of Development
and Harold Blackston, potluck, 6:30 said his lawyer, Grant Smith.
p.m. followed by meeting at 7:45
Donald Reeves Sr., a neighbor,
POMEROY-- Board of Elections p.m.
said
the performer " wasn 't his same
meeting, Tuesday 9 ~.m. 8,1 the office.
old ex11berant ·self" the past three
TUPPERS PLAINS -- VFW Post
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport 9053, ·regular meeting, Thursday months.
A native of Shrevepbn, La., Young
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM special meeting 7:30p.m.
became
known as The Singing Sher·
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. with work in the
iff after his role in the film "Hidden
Master Mason degree, Refreshments. SATURDAY ·
·Guns. " His first hit song, ." Goin'
POMEROY •· Modem Wood· Steady,'' wasseleased in 1953.WEDNESDAY
men, Burlingham Camp 723.0,
Young recorded songs by Willie
· POMEROY -- American Red potluck dinner, Saturday, at Wodd· Nelson, Bill Anderson and Don GibCross bloodmobile, Wednesday, I to men hall. Meals to be delivered to
son early in their careers. Young had
6 'p.m. Senior Citizens Center.
elderly and shutins.
a No. I hit ·with Nelson :s "Hello
Walls'' in 1961.
THURSDAY
HARTFORD .. ULSWA 5171
In 1974, Young recorded his last
,.POMEROY .. Meigs County Christmas dinner, Union Hall, Hart·
top 10 song, "Some Kind of ·
Democratic Party, Ch~ist'!'as party, ford , II a.m. Saturday.
Woman."

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ill

AP Entertainment Writer

Santa Claus train rides are again this year being offered by the Ho~king
.Valley Scenic Railway of Nelsonville.
Special trains with old-time heated passenger cars pulled by a restored
1916 steam locomotive will be glowing with the holiday spirit.
Trains will depart from a turn-of-the-century depot in Nelsonville dec- .
orated for the holiday season at II a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, and Dec. 21 and 22.
Fares are $10 for adults, and $7.50 for children.
During the nostalgic train ride, passengers will be treated to aspecial nar- .
ration C~f Chrisunas poems, stories and holiday music. "!'here wtll be a treat
for the children and a visit from Santa, and plenty of ttme for takmg photo~raphs:
·,
. .
.
, .
Refreshments at the depot will include spectally made A"!tsh hohday
·,
cookies, hot chocolate and coffee.
'ro make the trip to Nelsonville complete; visitors are invited to view the
decorated historic Public Square and park near' the depot, all tnmmed wttlt
thousands of lights.
Seating on the train is limited, 'and for groups, reservations are suggest·
ed. More information may be obtained by calling, between 10 a.m. and 4
p.m., S 13-335-0382.
,
The Santa Claus train began running in 1976 and has a very special meaning to the children and families who ride .the railway, said Jerry Ballard, :yolunteer chairman, Board of Trustees, Hocking ~!ley Scenic Railway, a lion·
profit volunteer organization.
.,

The Community Calendar is pub,
lished as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or fund
raisers of any type. Items are printed
as space permits and cannot be guaranteed to run a specific number of
days ,

.,

...

By LYNN ELBER .

·-community calendar~

•

'0

HOCKING VALLEY SCENIC RAILWAY SANTA TRAIN

:(

Form

you have? From my past experience
and from the leuers I have read in
your column, I doubt it I have a suggestion for them:
If you honestly believe your lover
wants to marry you, appear at his
front door and a.&lt;k him point-blank.
You will ·be mighty surprised at the
results of ·such a confrontation. It
would unmask the phony and put an
end to game playing . .. Not Dumb in
Missouri
Dear Missouri : Showing up at the
door of a married man hoping to
embarrass him into marriage would
cause more problems for the other
woman than it would solve. The
woman who believes her lover would
choose her under those circumstances
is hopelessly out of touch with real·
ity. It doesn't happen often that a mar· ·
ried man chooses to leave his wife for
the other woman.

once. If he molested your 5-year-old
daughter, you can be sure be has done
the same to others and will continue
molesting unless something is done
1995, 1..61 AAfekl
to put an end to his deviant behavior.
1 m1t1 SyndiaiC: lilld Cre·
Your parents ' opposition is short·
1t011 Syndk:l11.
sighted and selfish, There's an old
saying that evil will triumph when
ribly upset about my parents' lack of gond people do nothing. This is a per·
concern.
feet example.
I also believe more should be done
Dear Ann Landers: You have writ·
about this hoy. He often hangs around ten at length about "the other man"
other young children when he visits and "the other woman," but you say
· his grandparents. I want to make sure very little ahout the wives and hus·
he doesn't molest any other little girls bands lefi sitting at home while the
·or graduate to something worse. Can unfaithful partner continues to cavon.
I report him without having to go to
I'm the wife of a man who recent·
trial and put my daughter through ly turned 40, and I wish I could put
more trauma?
an end to the secret phone calls, the.
I have done nothing so far, out of lying and sneaking around.
respect for my parents' wishes, but
I wish all those "other women and
the problem is not going to go away. · men" out there would take a good
Please respond in the paper. l really look at their lives. They would dis·
need your help. ·· Grieving Mom in cover, if they were willing to face the
the Caribbean
tnith, that they are living in a fantaDear Mom: The boy should defi- sy world. Is he going to leave his wife
nit~ly be reponed. Please do so at
for this blissful relationship you think

~Dalmatians' tops at box office on slow weekend

•
m

-ONLY-

Pege7
Tuesday, December 10, 1996

Evil will triumph when good people do nothing
Dear Ann Landers: During a
length)' visit with my parents, my S·
year-old daughter was sexually
molested by a neighbor's grandson,
who is IS. She told me about it a few
weeks later, after we had returned
home. ' I am shocked and broken·
hearted ahout what happened to ber.
Sbe is a precious gem and as sweet a
child as you could ever imagine.
I am not sure wbatto do about the
neighbor's grandson. I told my par·
ents that 1 was going to report the boy
to the authorities, buttbey are strong·
ly opposed to this, saying it could
open a can of worms and label us as
"troublemakers." They promised to
talk to the boy's grandparents. ·
Since then, my parents have
refused to ask their neighbors to stop
inviting the hoy to visit when my
daughter is there. They say they don't
want to "damage the relationship."
This means it is highly unlikely tbat
we will ever visit my parents' home
again, since there is no guarantee that
the molester won't be there. I am ter·

The Daily Sentinel

The D-aily Sentinel

.'

&gt;

�Page 8 • The Dlllly Sentinel

Pomeroy •

~ Ashley

chosen ·as
Grange Princess

RAchel Ashley, cJ.ughter of Keith
and Emma Ashley of Rock Sprinp
recently competed for the title of
Meias County Orange Princess winning the title
through a test on
the programs and
history of the
grange.
This is
the second time
she has held the
title.
ASHLEY
Rachel began her
Grange experience
by becoming a member of Silverton
Junior Orange of Ravenswood,
W.Va. She became a charter member
of the Wtst Virginia State Junior
_Grange and served as W.Va. State
Grange Junior Princess. She then
became a member of Star Juriior
Orange No. 878 of Meigs County
where she served several terms as
. master. She also attained the highest
rank in Junior .Orange --that of
Super Junior Granger--being the
only one in the State of Ohio in that
year. She was mantle orator of her
Junior Orange gradualion class--the
most outstanding member in 1994.
She became a member and officer of

•

Service awards .highlight Christmas party·

Lost bfictv wn ftt male .t.usti;.lafl

'Dancing
Cop' is back
on the street
PROVIDENCE. R.I. (AP}-This
city's "Dancing Cop" is back on the
street and he hasn' t missed a bell
Tony " the Dancing Cop" Lepore
returned to directing traffic Monday.
The 49-year-old was called out of
retirement to help with the holiday
trafftc and to give folks in the downtown area a treat.
Within minutes of his return to the
corner of Dorrance and Westmin~ter
streets, he hJI(I pedestrians laughing
and molorists looking perplexed.
"This is something. When I was
a steady policeman I didn't feel as
welcome as I do now. This is great. I
wish you all a merry Christmas and
a very healthy and happy New Ycor,"
Lepore said.
Pirouettes, windmill arm motions
and butt ·s~akes all are part of Lepore's routine. When it's time to let
pedestrians cross the street, he 'blows
his whistle and yells, "Everybody out
of the pool!"
Doug Michael; a hOI dog vendor,
ha.• seen Lepore work since 1980. He
said he is most impressed by Lepore's
"ability to spin and still make for·
ward and back ward progress without
getting hit by a bus."

Sheplit&lt;d : lound: lull "'""""" ,.,
m~~ le

~&lt;

•

.

BANKRUPTCY

can ntMeve a debtor o1
financial obligations and arrange a fair
dlatrlbution of assets. Oeblors In bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for their personal uae.
This may Include a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods.
For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

(614) 592·5025

,,

PubUc Notice

Public Notice

ADDINDUI!I TO PART 1,
, ITEM 0 {2180UTHERN

loc.itod on ·tho Albany, .
Rutland, Wllk..vlllo ond
Ylloo Millo 7 ,1/2 mtnilto
u.s.a.s. quodrengte mapo,
beginning 1.1 mlloo north
oaol of Point Rock, Ohio
ud oxtondiiiO :u mlloo
·oaet oftd 4.4 mHoo oouth
ooot of Point Rock, Ohio.

OHIO COAL COMPANY·
MEI08 lilliE NO. 2
LIGALNO~

louthorn · Ohio Coal
COIIPI..,.IIIIgoi!IIMNo.2,
'-0· lox 410, AIMne, Oltlo

411701, h81 aubmllted on

r11· rnt lr'N 1¥Jpllaa"M1o

Cool
lllnlng
end
Rr r' r ttan Pennll Humlter
D-tall-4, to tho Ohio
Deportment of Noturol
Roooureao, Dlvlolon of
._.IIIII Rtcltr,...an. 1bt
=11111 ooel rnlnlnt and

......... .,........ will
110 conducted In 11!'1:

County, leltm Tuwnllt ,

Iuliano 11, 12, 1f. 17, 11,
n.
a, JO; ,,.....,. n
and • and; ...... County,
~

Columbia
"tow•IOhlp,
leotlono 7, 11, 11, 11;

The=II Jlk!n ptopOIIIIO

• '

. ... _lorfullcoel

oxtraetlon !Wining by
..,._. n...,adt and room
on4 ~- m1n1nt (lcMogwlll

dlvtqiWII'II).
Tile ::111111 lo on ftlo
.....
ofiMI!Itlto

County Reoorclor, llolto
County Court Heuoo,
..oOnd Stroot, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45711 for public

k---'"'·'"
viewing. Wrlllon -

and/or roquooto for on
1M)' ...
Dlvlolon
of

"", ....... 111111111 -

otnt to tllo
Min.. lind Roolamotlon,
11!11 Pounteln lquoro
Court, lulldlng H·J,
Colu1111Jue, Ohio 4U241111', ...... ...,. oil ...

,_ ....... 1111........ , . .

loti . . . of )11111111- of

J'Nala.lel, 2, 4, 1, 7, 12, IJ.
17,11, 1t,l4, II, ao. "· ..

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

....... Tile ,.., .....

oorto r"• and pillar

.......... (I,IU toUI) ..... Ia

11()

Help Wanted

LOAN PROFESSIONALS

,
'
'

•Garage•

-----

Complny, Is a $130 milan flnlnl:lallnltftudon with
line fuJJ.seMce .olllt:es In Milan, ~ ..... and

Pdnl...._,

Well~

"-CIIIact:

Mktllell.llnfnt
f •••• \1c:oe-Plnldlllt
. (304) 675-1131

·Holiday Gift Subscription Coupon ..

~--------------------­
~--------------~~
CITY,..._
_ _ _ _ _ STATE-ZIP---

'ADDREss ______________,_

~E--~~------------~--

~---------~------~

IS RUSH
UIIIIUGH
GOOD FOR IHIS
COUIIRY?
. 1 (800) 378-83881
Ext.1951
$2.1l91mln. Mull bo tl+
Touch-tone Phone ·
PROCALLCO.
1102 954-7420

CHIISIMIS IllES .
15·110
Darwla
.., .... 1/2 IIIII•
992-6071

·environment• .
Cover your mosquilo infested drains .
with gusran~-l~struct/1*
mad" from the sidewalls of scrap tires,
manufactured in 41eet lengths with IDs of 13, 14
or 15" and an average 00 of 22".
(Larger slze,s also available.)
Never polluting, EPA approved, impervious to
attacks from salt or other minerals, lasts forever!
$5.00 per linear foot, F.O.S. Pomeroy, Ohio
Contact:
National
Recycling Center

RACINE, OHIO
AMERICAN LEGION
POST602
EVERY SUNDAY
Doora Open 4:30.
Game Slarts 6:45.
Ply outlo ocoorcllng to
number of playoro.
Under naw menegomont
Public Welcome

In Memory ·

(PIIntlflor Chrlltmal)
Spruce and White Pine
$811.

BARR'S LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
Slll.'o I Sun.'lllll Chrii-

St Rt. 325, Danville, Oh.
l'h. 742-3141 or 1112·7285

''""',mo. pd.

(UmeSion•
Low Rat")

DAVIS
CONTRACTING

WICKS

-Roofing

HAULING

oRei~llng

-New Construction

Limestone,··
Gravel, Sand,
-rop Soli, Fill Dirt

ebecks .

~=-

614-992-3470

2·6711

4

RADIO CONTROL
Con•Tm..
1... &amp; Electric)
Alrplale..- leats
lollc8pton·
SUPII SEUmON

RUTLAND,OH
Hm:negrown· Carefully
Sheaftd Scotch &amp; White ·
Pine 4' &amp; Up with a Rreal
seleedon or larger trees.
Cell742-~143 or

llfllslkM•••I•
Tn!C.~Trei·•·Tral••

742·2979
On S./11 Nov 28th

HOI BYLAND

o•

· Proctorllllla,
lcrou ••• rlvor froil
EaatHa•H..taa.WY
Ollie Statt lt. 7 lort.

.HUBBARDS
GREEN HOUSE

1·100.776.0527
10 AM fO I PM NllY
SUIIIIYS I PM fO 6 PM

Great GrandchildrenJessica Brannon.
Bradley Brannon, Jilllan
Brannon

____,

-- .

:J tlllltllltll
tltltlt t II II t lllttll
-···-· · · - - · · · · · · · · · · -

tltll
lttttttlllllltttlttt
I Ill C
------------···········-

-----------------::
BULLETI N BOAR D DEADLINE:
:: 2:00 PM DAY BEF ORE PUBLICATION!
----

-

PVH MEDICAL
EXPLORER MEETING
fueeday, Dec. 10. 1 p.m.
· Topic
"Diabetes Education"

The Daily Sentinel

· WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS
TREES

·

..__
.,...

.

'·

I

I

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

---

·Now Open For
Christmas Season
6 1/2" Poinsettias (6
colors) ....... ......... $3-$5
Poinsettia
Baskels .. $7.95-$17.95
Christmas Cactus
.........•... $1.75 or 2/$3
Cut Treas.:...... $8-$18
Small Holly Trees ..... .
............... .......... $2.50
Wreaths .. $4.95-$9.95
Grave
Blankets ..........$19.95
Cemetery Vases,$9.95
Monument Sprays .....
...................... ~ $18.95
OPEN DAILY
II a.m.- 5 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. • 5 p·.m.
Free Coffee &amp; Cookies
During Christmas
Season

992·5776
Make your wife's
Christma.s one t.o

remember.
Call

Jt COWiillmOII
. lor IIOmO ldeeal

"'41

Jolin
. 111111 or ltNie7
Dille Jlrnll (114) IIIII
25 yaiiSillptllleiiCI
LlcanlecJ &amp; lnoured .

t•

"

II

.

.

,....,_

1100-900-3040

.

IVYDALE

SAVE
50%·75%
TIM'S CUSTOM
CARPET
Just ott Bradbury Rd.
(look for signa)
Middleport, OH
614-992-5379

H,..
tft'MI mo.

Day • Evening

1

DATELINE
The Girls of
your dreams

P icked Up My Dog A 4 lb. 'ftl! rk\e

In Vi"tOr\ Area , Pleale Return

F•mUy

70

Advance . D E ADLIN E : 2:00 p.m.
thtt d ay before th e ad 1! to r un.

Svnday ed•t•on · 2:00p.m Fmiay,
Monda ~ edttton . 10:00 a..m . Salurday.

All Yard S ala1 Must Be Paid In
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the· ad is to run , Sunday &amp; Monday ed iti on - 1 :OC}f)m

Fri day
On the T '" Mtdd tepo rt, Oh. at O\d

boys clothing, lo ts ot misc.

80

TRUCKING

South of
Tuppers
Plains on St.
Rt. 7

DUMP TRUCK
·sERVICE
Limeslone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand

90

CHRISTMAs TREES

10/25196 TFN .

Open
Evenings and
Weekends
11/2VDSpd

CUSTOM BUILDING &amp;

!Vtoii?~ tffeta~

• REMODEUNG ·
New Homes, Additions:
Roofing. Painling,Bams
Garages. Concrete

Authorized AGA Distributor
; Welding Supplies •Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Stainless • Tool DreSBing • Ornamental
Steps • Slairs, Ralfings, Pallo Fum~ure, Fireplace
he~. Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lois of olher stuff! I
"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
. We will work within your budget.
Ph. 77;1-91 73
FAX 773-5861
Mason, wv
108 Pomeroy Street

Free Eslimates
25 years experience
We fio.; li cu if it were our
f1Wit llomt ar busintss

Ask for
John (614) !191-3987
or Dallas (614) 94'1-3036

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

JONES' TREE SERVICE .

537 BRYAN PLACE

20 Years Experience •

IIIOOLEPORT
1192·2772
1:00 o.m.-3:30 p.m.

Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

•R....... Willlows
eWc!Gtnges
o$10111 Dton &amp;

Wlntlows

2 Cemetery. lots tn Kt[kland Ce·
metery. 304 -6 75-2 t95.
~1

Absolu te Top Oo (lar: ·AII U.S. Sil ver And Gold Cotn s, Prootaets,
Dia mond s, Anttque Jewelry, Gold
Rtngs. Pr e - 19 30 U.S. Curroncy.
Sterling, Etc. 1\cqutstuons Jewelry
- M.T.S. Co ~n Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis, 614-446-2842.

•R01111 Additians

Deer Cut

at

J &amp; D's Auto Pa ns. Buy ing sal·
vage veh1t!es . Selling par.ts . 304·
773-5033.
Top dolla r- antiques , luiniture,
gla~s. china.. clocks, gold, silvet,
coin s, watches, estates, old stone
jars, old blue &amp; whiiB dishes. ·old

wood bo•es, mllk bottleS; MeiQ!
Gounty Advertisement, Osb {.
Martin, 61 4·992-7-44 1.
Wanted To Buy Used Mobillt
HomGs. Call : 614 -446 ·0175 Or
304..e7S-S965.

Momlng Star RdJ
CR 30, Racine, Ohio
·~oping •Wreaths
oSwags
-Grave Blankets
•Artltlciel Poinsettia

•s.OOu,
949-2115

1112M111 mo.

raa

Pick up discarded
appliances, balteties,
many metals•
motor blocke.
614-992-4025 8arn-B m

~~o..-4':

,S Constructlo~
"""
Co.
r:ll
We specialize in :
Residential
Commercial
New Home
Remodeling
Custom .Design
· we lreal your home like
our home"

Call614-949-2600 ·
ask lor Rick
Sllbslciary oiiFC

005
Personals
"::11":'da-y-::R-om_a_nc_e-:G:-u-:yiG:-a-:-ls-,'"'Mee-tl
:":H0

30 Ann'ouncementS

CHRISTMAS TREES

Easy Pay Auto

j
tja

INSURANCE
Any Car
An y Driver
DUI &amp; S R-22
&gt; Ooscoun ts &lt;
Compuler Ouo l es

.

Wreaths· Swags &amp; . .
Grave Blankets

j,

Ill

$10 &amp; Up .

·,'.'lOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

(614) 992·GG77

Rt. 124 Rutllnd, Ohio 742·3051

Pomeroy

OPEN NOV.

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

c.,

Body work,
truck
• truck'pttlntlng,
minor machlnlcal

fllllllr.
Tuno-upa, 011 c~~anga, ·
Will, Bufllng
Long II., Rutllnd, 011.

'

5887
WanJed To Buy : We Buy Au to's
Any Conditio n, 614 ·388-9062, Or
614-446·PART.

Wanted : Foot PoWfH e d Scro ll

Saw, 614-446-0609.

EMPLOYM ENT
SERVICES
Help Wanted

110

' ATTN : Po int Plea sant" Postal
Pos1ttons . Pcrrnanent lull time tor
cl crkl so rto rs . fu ll Aenehts. Fof
eKam. applicatton ' and salary info
call : j 630)906- 235 0Exl,3670.
8am -8pm.

AVON I A ll Area s I

Able Avo n Rq pre sontat ives
needed . Earn m onoy lor Christ•
mas bills at homelm work. 1·800.J
992 -6356

Rop.

or

30-1· 662· 2645 ,

lnd:

AVON - SB -S1S /Hr. No Doof TO
Door, " Bonu s~s· Fun &amp; Eosyl 1800-827· 4640 tndiSISJncp

Avon Chnstmas SEI ·$15 IHr, NO
Mtn1mum OrdtH, No Door · To Door. llnvon tory. 1· 6Q0-736·0 t68

lndlslstJcp.

•

B aDy snt er nee ded Slaning Jatt
1st. 2 or 3 days a weok , must bl:t
a non -smok e r, ro forencu rei '
qwed. Call 304-675-8646.

BANKING
Ohio Valley Bank Is Seeking Ei perlonood ~nd Qualified lndlvidu·
ats For Three Fulr-'fimo Posi tions
In Our Opora tton s F;~ cllit )'. Pr~ ­
vtdmg Gon orou s Ben olits. Pac¥agc Includ ing 401 (k) Retirement

2 Po s1t1ons; Pl'lOOF OPERATOR •
· 1 OayShiiT: M .r: 8 '15 ·5' 15
• 1 Eli e,nin g Shif t: M -F 12 :00 "
9 :00

Job Roqu 1r r.&gt;n ~ent s. .
• SoU MollvHIC
:d /Ocpc11dable
• Annlylo /Sol ve lranS&lt;1Cttons
• Pcflorm Ropotlttvc Tasks
• 10 Ko~ Add tng Expen ence A

Plu s!
Salnry : Depends On Experie nce
... Merit Bonus

1(1-

.~. --------~----------------~--~
•

Job Rcquiromonts:
·Sol! Mottvamd IDopo nda t)Je
·Compute F•guros And Analyze
• Enter Commands l11l o Compute('

40

Frt Christmas Puppies, To A
Good Homel 814· 386·8815.
Male Dwarl Rabbtts., ·a, • -368-

9123.

Equal Opportuntty Employ er

..

·~

E arn S1 .000 Weekly Stu lfmg E n~,
velopes At llorno. S1an Now. N ~ ~
E•por 1~ n c e . Fre e Supplies, l nfa:t
No Obl1g 8 tto n Sel)d l SASE Td:"l
ACE . Dept 1351, Box 5137, Oia..-_,
mond Bar, CA 91785.
-~

Puppitl. Mother 11 rtdlwhttt co-

. optr nosed Beagle. 304-6 75 - Euy Work! Excellent Pay! As- :
531&gt;1.
• semble Produc; t&amp; at Home. CaD

6()

Lo&amp;t and Found

REWARD! 304·&amp;aS.3333 or 30&lt;·
522·1077.

Toll Ft ee 1-800- 487 ·5568 EXT.~
12170.
•

HOME

COMPUTER

USERS 1

NEEDED. 145,000 lncoma PO"'
ta,tlll . 1-800· 513-4343 Ex1.

ll36a Coli For De•ll•

,',•.

,,

Shirle~

Spears, 304-675· 1429.

System
• IBM System 36 Or hS /400 Exnight.
pcrtcnce A Plus I
~-----.,.-------1 Salhry · Depends On Expcnonce
We proceu deer, mak41 hickory ... Plu s Mcnt Aonus
smoked hams, tra il boloona, pop· Locahim:
.._
peroni, Jerky, summer sausage. 420Thwd Aven ue
...,
Cooler "kept. clean, san1taty. Hunt · GaHtpolls, Ohio
lng suppltel , license &amp; oame Interested? Ple ase Call Mr. Phirip
'heck Slatton . CAAWFOAQ"S Hen - Armsuono AI 61 4· 4&lt;4 6·26 31 Or
defson WI/
. Send Rosumo To HA Depar tmenl.
Oh10 Vall ey Bank , !lox 240, Galli·
Glveav.ray
oo ~&gt;s, Ohio 45631
'

LOST: Black lab. brown &amp; white
Englilh Seiter, Plain Valley Rd.

614-992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

No hunting or trespassing on tl'\8
Char.lGs Vostlarms. Violators will
be prosecuted. Stay off dar and

9 Month Old, part Beagle pup,
malt , gentle. 304-882·2925.

23-10 TO 9:00

BISSELL BUILDERS1 INC.

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

Wanted To Buy: lin le Tyke!
Kitchen Set, Workshop, Plaw.house, Possible Any Other Little
Tyko Toys , Ple ase Call 6 14-245-

In ~our Area. Newill , _ 1 Posiclon:COMPUTER
900·48&lt;· 7070 Ext. 4&lt;13, $2.99 ./ OPERAfOR
Min. MuSil Be 18 Vrs. Serv-U 619- , 1 E\IOnirv. Shift: M-F 12:0 0 :9:00
845-8434
.
.~
Singles

Ronnie Jonea,...;

ALL OHIO

Model · Ca rs Or

Trucks , 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Bu ick Pontiac, 1900 t;ast·
ern AvenuG. Gal!i po~s .
·

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Owner:

wanted .to Buy

Clean la te

(614) 667-3483

985-4422
Chester, Ohio

Public Sale
and Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lu ll time aucfi oneer, complete
a uction
service . Licensed
#66 .0hio &amp; West Virg inia, 30~ 773-5785 Or 304· 773-5447.

SUE'S
GREENHOUSE
2V. Miles

·

Riverboat. Monday-Fnday, 10am&lt;4pm, brand new clothing &amp; shots.

1212196 1 mo .. JXI

CONNOLLY'S

•

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

949-2734.

R. L. HOLLON

•

ALL Yard Sales MuSI Be Pakl IQ

(6, 9) 645-6434

31801 Amberger Rd.
Off Forest Run

E...-.&amp;w.....,.Ho.s

Yard Slle
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Skin-Cut-Wrap

949-.2057
MIKE IlliG

Will Gtve Re-

38(1.9686.

Maplewood
Lake

REPAIR

~ltated,

ward No Ouelliona. Asked 6 14-

Must be l8 yrs.
Serv-U

39507 Rocksprings Road (at comer of
US 33), Pomeroy, OH (614) 992-5702
Carol and David Riggs

AUTO

-213e, Alk ~~~':n

Lost Woul d The Person Who

RIGGS TREE FARM .

BING'S

742

....oy. I1&lt;--6S8:1.

$2.99 per min.

Choose and cut your lree. We will
mechanically clean your tree for you so
no more needles in the carpet. We will
also bale it if you like.

•

lOit: II'WN '(Mf ~ lerrate Coli~el
~FeM(" . toll 1212196, goad temper•mtnt, Ra t•MI S ~racuu vf·

1-900-990-9330
Ext. 1553

~lggs Christmas Trees

SL Rt. T
Tuppara Plalnl, Ohio
614-985-3813 or614-867-6484
PlaBIIc Culvert.· Dual wall and Regular 8" thru 36'
4" S&amp;D • perf. · solid pipe
4" &amp;6" Flax pipe
4" &amp; 8" Sch 35 pipe
'/,' &amp; '/." C.P.V.C. pipe
1'/." thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
.
'/." &amp;1" 200 p.s.i. water pipe (100' rolls lhru 1,000' rolls)
'It U.L approved Conduit
.
8" Gravetass Leach pipe
Gas pipe 1" lhru 'Z' ·fittings- Regulators - Risers
Full assortment ol P. V.C. &amp; Flex fittings &amp; Water fittings
Full line ol Cistern, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks

Landocape Stock

nre

.,

614-797-4491

ANGELS
LIGHTED BASKETS, WREATHS, SWAGS,
YARD ORNAMENTS, QUILT RACKS, PAINTED
CANS AND SAWS, DOG HOUSES, SHELVES.
GIFT BASKETS FEATURING WATKINS AND
TUPPERWARE PRODUCTS.
UVE TREES, WREATHS, CROSSES AND
POINSETIIAS BEGINNING NOVEMBER 23
2 MIIM North of Sllvor Bridge on SR 7
· 11J.6 M-F; 1-1 Sundllr
Phon• 448-4530

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

Chliatmas TrHI
Wo haVII on oxeail..t
aalecllon of belullluUy
1hearod lr"a up to t4 fl.
Prices $111-$20. Cell for
, whoteNie prices.

CULVERT DRAINS .

BINGO

at

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut/Uva
Any Scolch or White Pine- $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends
Rt. 33 Ill Darwin, East on Rt. ~ 1, 4 miles lo Cherry
Ridge Rd ., 1 112 miles to tree farm, Follow signs.
Daily 1a em til Dark
Nov. 29th thru Dec. 24th

1-800-273-3385

CIMniiiO
Rolncopo, Sc,_.,• I Full
Lln•oiAc-ooriH.
24 Howr An-1110 ·
Servlea
Sefety tnopoellano
Senior Citizen Dloeeunt
Fully tn1uowd

CHRISTMAS in the COUNTRY

BUD FORD'S

•

'

•

ott..AAQE INYEHTOR't FOR
-~1£ IIISTAU.ATIONI.

Highest "R Value"
Blocks 99.5%
ofUY Rays

CHRISTMAS ·TREES ·

Adkins

CITY------STATE-ZIP·--..:.

.

iiML

FI....I-IFumKO

Cell for Demonstration &amp; Free Estimate
614-992-4119
1-800-291-5600
110 Court SL
Pomeroy, Ohio

We can help you; snd you csn help the

In Memory of
MARY MCGREGOR
NICHOLS JAMISON
September 24, 192tDecend&gt;er10, t995
Goodbye Is such a
difficult
word...when
.. someone is loved so
deeply. We wanted you
to know how ·much yoti
are missed, loved and
apprecialed. You were
always there for us and
we know at .limes it
wasn't easy.
Your daughter- Melanie
Adkins
·• Grandchildren-Paul and
., Jay Brannon, Paula and
Norman Hansen, JeHrey

~----~----------~~

111 COURT 8T., POMEROY, ottO 41711

-lllltiPOT...••111• to OUALNO

a+A~P••
ey -5ervkes
Duot~ua-otove,

QUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

•Complete
RemOdeling
Stop &amp; Compire
FREE
ESnMATEES

srA)rroarveRY DATE ____

llllnallao.

-

IICIIIILOIY
"HUT MROR• patlltH systl&amp;

~New Homes

12 Mon1hs $83.20_

111)10.17.!'4-a1;4TC

11111111 . .

Offered Exlualvely
by

SPIAIC UP
MIIICAI

----

~~~~·· lpilon ......... ..,,

Air (II

IIU'IIEIIS

'

Gill ...

......... ,..

Tllllllll II BIUCI.In WINDOW

MI'"-Fw--.

'

•

new .. 'J

7/22/lln

December 31, 1998.

n.e Peoples llonk. 111 1111111e o1 CJty Holdlns

•

•

985 4473

the subicrlptian price.
"
Special Holday ofler 1111111

advance your cner, we IOOUid Mke to speak with
you reprdJns eo•iployment opportunltles within our
loin deplltnlft
•

I

-

CONnRUCfiOII

;

Send In the following coupon
• and $83.20 and get 20% oil

If you 11M! experience In lhe fleld of lendlna or
colleal0111 and are-looklnfl for the opponili\lty to

I

.

IOIEIT IISSILL

This year buy a s;tt thalli
custom made for anyone on
your lilt.With home dellv81)1,
. a aublct1Jiion II Ideal lor
thoae with a buill-In curlolllty.
Givo a gill ihat COlliN more
1han oncoay.•.•

11• :· ... 1

0 •

Attorney At Law

•
•

,,
HoHo
Home

lll'i:... I

I

Attorney William Safranek

Jury awards nearly $6 million to three keyboard workers .

liE:;· ..,,
IEC::I

Collie, Roy Jonta "¥1C1nlly1

,,.... 2.2800.

KEYSTONE HEIGHTS, Fla.
(AP)- Call it an order of chicken to
go.
.
City officials have told 9-ycar-old
Edward Martin that his pet chicken.
Mrs. Cluck Cluck. has got to lind a
new place to roost. 'Fhcy say if she's ·
not gone by Jan. 10, Edward's fami. ly could face a fine and possibly jail
time for violating a city ordinance.
Thoma.~ and Niurka Martin claim
Accompanying the group to the
Pacific in 1805-1806 she was iovalu· Mrs. Cluck Cluck is , no ordinary
able as interpreter and guide pointing chicken, bul a family pet who likes to ·
out landmarks familiar from her be petted and frolics with the family
Shoshone childhood . She 1aught the · cat.
men to find etliblc roots and mediciKeystone Heights became aware
nal herbs, made their bu~kskins and of the chicken after a neighbor com. moccasins, and oticc saved their pre- plained. The Man ins were denied an
cious journals which had fallen into exempl'ion to an ordinance thai forthe wat.er. Sacajawea is now recOg- bids chickens within city limits.
nized as an American heroine. Mrs.
Mrs. Martin said the family plans
Hayes said.
to appeal the.decision, and her husWhile a continuous waterway band says he will go to jail to keep ·
rrom to cast was nol round to exist lhc chicken.
Lewis was .ablc to 'report to Prcsidcnl
"To defend my children's rights
Jefferson in a leiter wrincn on Scpl. and happiness, I would go to jail with
23. 1806 from Saint Louis: "In ohe· pleasure," he said.
diencc to your order we have peneCouncilman Tony Browe doesn't
trated the continent of North Ameri- sec the siluution going that far.
.
ca to lhc Pacific Ocean and sutro"Thcre's .no way,I'm going to vote
cicntly explored the inlcrior of the tn have somebody put in jail over a
counl•y lo affirm .thai we have &lt;lis- chicken," he said. ·
'
covered the most procticable cnmTEMPE. Ariz. (AP)- While lhc
munkation which docs exist by
means of 1hc navigable branches M Arizona Cardinals and Dallas Cowthe Columbia and Missouri Rivers .. ." boys played before a national TV
Mcriwclhcr Lewis and William audience. two Dallas fans were
Clark played a major pan in lhc coun- arrcslcd l(&gt;r allegedly having blazed
try's history, said Mrs. Hayes, who away on a bulle high above the field.
concluded her presentation with a
FOX-TV's John Madden diaquotation from the aulhor, "They . gra!J)med the action as police wove ·
were the first bul nolthc la.&lt;l of a long Iheir way . through rocky tcrruin on
line of pathfin!lers of the Wcsl."
Hayden Butte just west of Sun Devil Stadium. where the Cardinals play
hqmc games at ,Arizona State Uni·
versity.
'"These arc live policemen up
bas~d Digital said it would appeal if
Ihe judge dncsn 'I sci aside the here." said Madden as he circled lhc
olliccrs' lncutinns:
awards.
1

and Found

16() · Lost

'Undaunted Courage' reviewed
for Middleport Literary Club

. NEW YORK (AP) - Princess hear these tunes from lhe '40s, it
Diana made a quick dash across the would enlighten them and they would
Atlantic to attend what was 'billed as say, 'Hey. these songs aren't bad,"' ·
Gardner said in a recent interview.
America's "Party of the Year."
Gardner was lhe original lead
The princess and her sister, Lady
Mrs. Helen Hayes reviewed the of exploration and aoscovcry which
·Sarah McCorquodale, arrived in New singer of the R&amp;B group The Coast·
book
"Undaunted Courage: Meri- would cross lhe unknown wilderness
York just houn before Monday's ers, who recorded hils such as
Annual Costume Institute Benefit at "Yakety Yak" and "Charlie Brown," wether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson and lo the Pacific and with learned prothe Opening of the American West" fessors in Philadelphia studied minthe Metropcilitan Museum of Art.
in the 1950s and 1960s.
by Stephen E. Ambrose at the recent eralogy. plant life the art of deterAlso on the guest list: Madame
meeting
of lhc Middleport Literary . mining longitude and latitude. every
JacquesChirac,wifeofthePrcsident
NEW Y,ORK (AP) ..:... Whal
Club
held
at the home . of Pauline elemenl which could lead to Ihe suc.,of France, designers Bill Blass, becomes an anti-hero most?
Horton.
·
,
· cess of his mission.
',
' Calvin Klein, Isaac Mizrahi, actress
According to Esquire magazine,
In her 'review M·rs. Hayes ·said
He chose a's his companion red. Isabella l{ossellini, model Linda their very own Dubious Achievement
lhal Meriwether Lewis, born in Vir- haired Lieutenant William Clarke
·Evangelista, and home guru Martha Award.
"Stewan:
.
·
.
0.1. Simpson, Dick Morris and ginia in 1774, lost his father at an ear- c~pa~lc. co~ragcous and eager to join
~
A spokesman for tbe museum SaJd · · Dennis Rodman were among the ly age and was befriended by Thomas this wild advcnlure. Mrs. Hayes
900 guests attended ror donner ~hole dozen-plus winnen of this year"s Jefferson. The members of 1he Lewis brought out that ·it would be difficult
family, like most colonists, were to lirtd two.other people who worked
• 2,000 more were let on for dancong to golden "Dubi" awards. Winners adventurous
woodsnlen. horse lovers together so well as if they were of one
pop singer Maxi Priest.
as expected - weren'l on hand
The newly divorced princess Monday to accept the awards at a cer- and extremely palriolic, she said. mind. It look the fony-fivc members
also noting that considered "learning of the team two years and four
:sashayed out of lhe ball just bef?"' II emony.
.
months to travel almost 4000 miles
p.m ., dashong rampant wh1spers
Being stood ·up is all part of the as ali advenlure."
In 1801 Jefferson was elected · from Saint Louis to 1hc Pacific. ·
about who would take her hand for game, in the annual rilual started in
With few exceptions, Lewis and
the first dance.
1961 when then-Vice President president ofthe United Stales by only
one
vote,
thai
cast
by
Alexander
Clark
managed to cstublish friendly
Richard M. Nixon won the inaugurHamilton who was no friend 'of Jef- relations with the nativps as they preALLIANCE, Ohio (AP) - Coasl- al honors.
crs singer Carl Gardner is lrying lo
The trophy, similar to an Oscar ferson but hated ·his opponent. Aaron sented gifts, observed their r)!uals and
Burr, even more, Hayes reported.
/ win over young fans of grunge and slaluette, bean Nixon's face. · ·
received help from them When pos·
The new presiden1 did nol lorgct · sible, Hayes reponed.
::rap"music widi 1unes from 1he era of - -Simpson won this year's "Lifellenny Goodman and Duke Ellington. time Dubious Achievement Award." his friend, Mcriwclhcr Lewis. now
The s1ory of the Lewis and Clark
• Gardner has jusl recorded his firsl for lhe continuing saga of his crimi· serving in lhe U.S. Army and imme- expedilion would not he complete.
-solo album, "One Cool Cat," which nal and civil trials since th.c slayings diately asked him 10 acl as' his privalc Lhc reviewer slated, without mention
features songs daling back 10 1he Big of ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson secretary. lhc reviewer stated.
of lhe Indian maiden. Sacajawea.
Mrs.
Hayes
said
thul
for
some
Band era of lbe 1940s.
Kidnapped by an enemy tribe. she
and her fricad Ronald Goldman.
"These are good, listenable songs,
Rodman, the multi-lattoocd, crOss- lime the President and his young sec- had been sold· to Toussaint Charund I figured if (today's youth) could dressing Chicago ~ulls forward, was rclary had dreamed of an expedition boneau, a French trapper and lradcr.
named .. Alien of the Year:·
Poets are invited to
The "Man of the Year Award"
· submit contest entries
went to Morris. the former Clinton
' '
The National Library of Poetry has advisor who resigned in the fall after
returned last week _in Brooklyn. wus
a
proSiitute
claimed
he
divulged
state
NEW
YORK
(AP)
Digital
announced lhat $48,000 in prizes will
made public Monday.
be awarded this year to over 250 secrets during their trysrs at a Wash- Equipment Co. was ordered lo pay
. In a stalcment, Maynard, Mass.·
nearly $6 milli&lt;in In lhr~e w&lt;imcn
poets in the North American Open ington hotel.
who blamed keyboards )(or disabling
Poelry Contest.
unn and wrisl injuries. the lirst time
LOS
ANGELES
(AP)
Stan
The deadline for the con1es1 is
a
computer maker has hccn found
Dec. 31. The contest is open 10 every- sprcadin' the news- Frank Sinalra
liable
in such a ca.'iC.
is turning 81.
one and there is no entry fee.
'lbc
women worked on keyhuard!i
01' Blue Eyes plans lo celebrate
Any poet, whether previously
that Digital knew could result in
published or 1)01, can be a winner. his birthday Thursday with family carpal tunnel syndrome and mher
and
friends
at
a
pany
at
his
Beverly
Poets from lhe area have successrepetitive slrcss injuries, said their
fully competed in pasl compelitions. Hills horne, publicist Susan Reynolds
lawyer, Sleven \'hi lips.
Every poem entered also has a chance said Monday.
"This is the first one nf these casto be published in a deluxe, hardNew York City also will mark the · · es to succeed," Phihp~said. "We've
bound anthology.
day:
1bc top of the , Empire State sell led cases he fore, und wc·~c tried
To enter, residents arc invited to
Building
wifl he lighted blue in hon- cases that have . lost. D~fcndanls
submit one original poem, any subcrooner.
~I ways won on the early gotng. Thos
jccl and any style, lo: The National or of. the venerable
bo De 12 1915 .
·•s the moment where 11 1urns
Library of Poetry, I Poetry Pla1.a.
Smatra wa.~ m c. .
, m around."
Suite 19810, Owings Mills, MD Hoboken. N.J .. across the Hudson
Patricia Gcrcssy. a sccrclary at the
21117-6282. The poem should be no Rover from Manhanan. A plaque Port Authority of New York and
more lhan 20 lines. and the poel's markong hos bonhplace was dedocat- New Jersey, won nearly $5.4milliun;
name and address should appear on cd t~rc last month.
. .
Jill Jackson. a legal sccrclary, was
the lop of the page.
Sonatra recently was hospotah7.cd awarded $306,000; and Janet RntoThe National Library of Poe1ry, for more than a wcckfortrcatmcnt of In, a hospital billing clerk. was
founded in 1982. is the largest poet· . a pinched nerve .. Reynolds says he awarded $278,(MXJ.
ry ·organi1.ation in the world.
contonucs to rcce1ve get-well cards.
The verdict, which a federal jury

•,

The ·Dally Sentinel • Page 9 ·

Odds and ends

Sw- Subordinate Oranj!e transferring this year to Racine Subordinate
Gran&amp;e No. 2606 where she serves
as Ceres and Junior Granae chairman.
Rachel has been active in the
Ohio State Orange talent contest
winning fint place in the state in categories such as vocal solo, vocal
duet and instrumental solo.
The Meigs High School junior
will now compete in the Ohio State
Orange finals for the title of
princess.
She serves as a state officer in lhe
Ohio Department Auxiliary to Sons
of Union Veterans of the Civil War
da Dalley, RN, BSN, dnctor of nuralng; Mildrid
SERVICE AWARDS • Service awerda wtKe
and the Ohio Department of Union
Fry, 4,000 hou,.; Ml~ Welle, 4,000 hOura;·
pl'lllllted Friday nlghtattha annual Chrlllmlll
Veterans of the.Civil War, a national
Juanita
Rouah, 3,000 houra, and Elizabeth
party of the Women'a Auxiliary at Veteran•
officer in National Department,
Leighton,
a 50 hour patc!1.
Memorial Hospital. From the left In the photo
Daughters of Union Veterans of the
are Abbie Stratton, auxiliary prealdant; Rhon·
Civil War, and second vice president
of Pleur-de-lis Society Children pf
the American Revolution.
·
She is also a member of Meigs
County First Families of Ohio, First · Service awards were presented Fri- singing of Christmas carols wilh later. Mrs. Beuy Sayre ·read the
Families of Ohio, Ladies of the day evening at the annual Christmas Mrs. Abbie Strauon, auxiliary presi- Christma.• Story. Holiday sacks conOrand Army of the Republic, party of the Women's Auxiliary of dent, presiding at the organ.
taining favors were given to each
Chesler Council #323 Oaughter! of Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Strauon was presented a gift auxiliary member and guest there.
America, and Racine American
Mrs. Dailey and Mrs. Stranon preFollowing prayer by lhe Rev. from auxiliary members and she preLegion Auxiliary.
sented
service awards to Mildred
sented
gifts
from
lhe
unit
lo
Mrs.
Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr., a turkey dinner was served buffet style in the hos- Rhonda Dailey, RN, BSN, director of Wells and Mildred Fry. each having
nursing. and Bob HocOich, hospilal 4.000 hours: Juanita Roush, 3,000
pital cafeteria.
. Hal Kneen, Meigs County's Agri- public relalions director. A girt for hours and Elizabclh Leighlon, a 50
culture Agenl , presented several Scou Lucas, hospital administrator hour patch. A I00 hour patch w'ill be
vocal solos and conducted group unable to •!tend, will be presented given laler to Sylvia Cnok.

Princess Diana at
'Party of the Year'

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tueedly,~10,1111

Middleport, Ohio

'

a. •.

�n.day, a.c.ma-1o, , .

•

,..._10 • Ti. o.Hy Sentinel

Pomeroy • Mldd..,., Ohio

The. Deily Sentinel • Page 11 ~

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

T__.,, December 10, 1111 ,

.. . •

•ama.s
PHILLIP
ALDER

, .....

--- 17_--. . ....
.. ....
-

a~

::=rorv.

12Hom-'CI
131om

2 Bedrooma, furnished, located
in Middleport. Rtftrtnces r•·
quired, deposit 1200. $275
Month, no lntidt peta. 304-773-

...,,...1111

,5165.

UooMM
Coamorolo·
lllot Mol E-*'"&lt;f Nail Toch,
leool Floouoile To: P.O.
741,

Alraol ..,.,. ICIYenlolng In·

Lone Tonn C... Nursing FocUity

U1iBF
·
subjocllo
lho
- Foir
Houolng
1111.
of 1968 wNch makes" illeglll
to aCIYeprularanco,

B••

........ OH&gt;IIA! .

·any

~ Enlhuol11llc Ohio Slllo
Teatad Nurae Ald11. Excellent
lnctuc:ttne: v.c.

11m11111onoroolor, rottgton,

-eex on-·llatua or national

..,..., a.+aoe

- . Cliri-1 Club."401K P1on,

flmlllll
origin,"'
make any 8UOh preie11111C8,

any_,.

tnaurance, And More. Sign On

Ploue170
~
At ""-..
C..·c.n.r
Pinecralt
Drive,'
...._.. lnatructora In Tht Fol·

ltllling

Atleo; BuliMII

Adninl ..

•

~occopt

-liOn""'""'-·

~

lhlo-

Informed lhld al diU.IIII!Igl

, _ 1142, - · OH 45043;

aCIYertllelltn

,.,,.nmo Bebyliner /HoM), f'o.

are

Hagodob!o,
RofotO!'CII Roqulrt&lt;l, 114-251·

eldon Avallblo, Plr

... Doposi~ 61.-4&lt;11-2565.

-

Very nic:e ground floor apartment
in quitl surrounding• loc:tled
thrtt miles from the RaveflswOod
Rlthlt Bridge In Ohio. Co..,..rely
furnillhed with Mat., a-yer, dishwasher and large kitchen with all
appllanc•s. Nice bath Witt'\ large
shower, large master bedroom
with a working Urtplace. Living
area has lots of room . At S-490
I* mon1h with ulilitias included. A
dtpoait of $400 is required. For
mare information call &amp;14-84353&lt;13 and Jaave rr.ssage.

450

•VI!!._. on an equal

-rturOty billa.

home. Garage, large lot Home·
11ead Bend, Broker. 304 -875·

55o10.

.

Four bedroom home in Middle·
port. S3501ma. _plus deposit, refer.ericft requited, no pets, 61.•·992·
3457 aher 3pm.

Pert-Time Tr•lnin~ Clerk 18
HO&lt;III ,_k H.S. D1otomo, Gen.
etal Ollie• Slc1U1, ba1a Entry,
MHuain O.ta BaH WP Typing

29 Neil AY811ue, Galllpollt, $3.01

Two ·trailer spaces for rent In Micf.
cleport,l14-992-3194:

..,... Aectulrl&lt;l.

Colt

ee-.. 9

~EMS~

Helpful 3 Bedroom, 2 Be1h, AC. Jonn Ail,
Send Ro&lt;mo To: SE0£MS O;,. 2.8 Acres. Custom Kilthen, Ap·!lie~ P.O. Box 527, Korr, OH
pUancts, Secluded, 4 Minutaa 10
Holzer.e1•·«6·•1199
S, DoconW II,
Pitople ., _.k during dMt" He~ . '3 Bedrooms, 1 Balh, Kitchen Appliances, A.uractive 1n1erior, Full
aon. No ••Ptrienc:e nec~uary.
Appty at Ctawford's, Hend,erson Unfinished 8aaement, 1 Car Ga·
rage, New Vinyl Sieling a H..t
wv. »HH1ti-5&lt;04.
Purrip, City SchOols, 614~-i1·
8ALIS PERSON NEEDED FOR 0951 .
IIC)81LE &amp; IIODULAR HOME
-CALL D &amp; W HOMES 114·2811Two 1 bedroom apattmanlllor
·1101.

1-

tale with alorage building. Will
tell on land contract," 814-902·

One bedroom house In Middleparr, stove ancl refrigerator, at·
tached huted g~rage, 11-4·992·
2854or&amp;14-81i12-8408.

Two bedroom house,

carpeted

and clean, no inside p.ls, deposit

reqilwect, &amp;1•·992-3090.

Bab Ao11 to inquire at 814·092-

·

for Rent

·

16JC70 2 Bedroom lt'lilet, 2 Balha,
CA. No Pels, 2 Rtftrtncll, 814·
388-8903, 814~48-0737.

&amp;14-446·8805.

On E

It ~-

1982 14x85 Brookshire 2bed·
room, total eleclric, l:leat pump.
16,500. 3CM·576-2046.
1982 14• 70 Mobile Home On 1.8
Acres, Porches, 115,900, 513·
574-2539.
"1 083 Shultz 14170 With 7-621 E•·

Home, Vou Pay Utililiaa, &amp; Depos·
it, ~ ~tier ",.. $275/Mo., AeJertn«&lt;s Required, 814-388-9182.
2 Bedfoom Trailer: In Small Trailer
Park, Deposil &amp;
Required, Phonefi14-446· 1104.

plndo Heat Pump, CA; Deck,
Awning, Storage Building lnclud·

ties, $100 depoa 1t, referencta,

Muc~
814· 448-23n.

w Offer

xper · -·

e

2

Bedroom 1 112 Oath Mobile

Rel~rences

2 QedroOm

510

trailer! you pay utili·

Morel SU,DOO, · . 110 pors.3Qoi.87S.2535.

,

Physical I Drug .Screen, S.nd
Re,umt To; P.O. Box 789, Galli· Buy in December No Payment
ROiii.OH•5831 .
Until Marcb_of "t997 E-Z Finane.
Ina cali rt'le Fin'a nce.line 1·800·

1

180

wanted To Do
251·5070 All Homes on Salt Free
..:..;;.;......,......,_,..,....,...---::-:::~ 1DeiMry and Set Up.
EIK•iclan looking lor IITIIII Oloc·
vical jobl. reaoonablo rares. 61.. BUY IN DECEMBER. No pay·
$185-3121 .
tnenl til March 1087. E-Z financ·
ing. Call the lin&amp;nc:e line 1-800·
GeotQtl Portable Sawmill, don't
hlul ~ur k)gl co the mill ju1t call

251·5070. All homea on sale.
FrM dalivllfy &amp; setup.

:J)4-67S.1e57.

For S.lll: 1981 14X70 3 Bedroom,
lnllficW end ExteriOr finishel tar· 1 112 Bath Mobile Home, Lots 9f
pentry, ·lireplace tefinishing, ad· Remodeling Done. Very ~ood
dillon&amp;. porches, decks, have Condition; 614·367·0208, 614·
,.~e&amp;. -304-875-1013.

441·0178.

v.a

1881 Ford Ranger Standard 2
Wheel DriVe, 81 ,000 Miles•
$3,000 QBO, 114-~8 ·0151, 114•
2!8-1233.

'

Need A Rasume1 Or A" You .Limited Oflefl "1G87 doublewide,
Trying To Get Noticed On Paper? 3br, 2balh, S17D9 down, $2791
You Tell It, I Creatt It I ~U.- 245· mon.th. Free delivery &amp; se1up.
!013.
Only a1 Oakwood Homes, Nitro
.
Slump WV. 30+755-5885.
P,otnsional Tree Ser
. vtc:e,
Removal, Frat Estimates! In- Mei(ll County, approximately 21
,.,.,.., Bi..,.ll, Ohio. 6U·:l88· acres with v•ew Ohio R1vet,
.....1.. 387·7010.
woo&lt;fed with pouible logging,
g11, TPC water. 1993 Kentuc:llian
mobile home, 80r14, 2 bedl"oom,
F-I NANCIAL
bath &amp; 112, cenval air, tange,
frigeraiDt • Olhet' adds., 0011 own1

r•

----::--::-----1.,,
'"""-·coli IJ&lt; ~
210
Business
e1 ..ece.m1.

I
I
orantt, nanclnu

FREE MONEY

,
NEW! Bank Repo'1, Owner h·
CUll ..._..,,, ~tvate
avaiable l $1 71/mo. Free
11en1. mtfiont avatlable. Source detlvefy &amp; 181-up. 304·755-7191 .

1 -«11111111111. 2018.
HJtiON WANTED

"J'o

OWN

1 =::::::.::.::::.:::::..:::._=.:.c..:c;_
:
SIICrillco
Muat sell 5 display model Oou-

And Opo&lt;ora Rell\1 Candy Shop b!ewldn. $$$SAVE$$$ Free 181·

In Galllpolil Arn .. Low Invest- up &amp; delivery, tree central air.
ment. For Information Call Mra. · Oekwood Homes NiltO, WV. 30-i·
- · Goulmet Conay Compo· I 75&amp;5885

"'Do11U. TX lfl72llltl1-8239.
W.~T-&amp;·D

-"• 'tllu lnreroo1od In A REAL

Home BaNd Butlne11? Thlt 11

:,:::=:,:·~-:-:--:---::--

Schult 121165, lair cond., 2br, reJrigerator, 11ove &amp; 2 window ac,
$2.800 linn iiOH75·3000.

.

.

Lqoklng Secrional Mome 60•24 ;J BR 2
Clll 4te·•70. Bllh, 2 LA' I, On Ren1ed Lor,

The One You'v• Been

_,

For. Fot FIN·.21111.
.

640

Hay &amp;

Grain

Lasl Chance-Alfalfa Hay Rallt

Only·Morgan Fonn Rt3S 304·937·
2016.
Square belli, S2.00el. Alfalfa,
clover, orchard ura11 mix. 304·

Phono: 11 .....,·3547

Hl94 Full" Size Dodge Truck, 2
Whet! Drive, 311, Auto, loaded,

rMaon.ble· rates. 304-

JH-:11111; ...... I:DOpm, no job IO
.,.. or 10 BIG. WY-021201

350

1 Acre Lola Fo Sale, Cora Mill
hoad, 814·245· 788 Call Even-

••so

LISSIN, PAW II

WHAT ARe TH!M TWO
TALKIN' ABOUT?

258·1233.

Pass

for Rent

1 ancl 2 t.droom lplfVnentJ, luf.
nished •!ld unturntsllea, securil)
deposit required, no pets, 6U·

992·2218.

2 Bedrooms. Batli, living Room,
Kitchen, Ommg Area . A~ Eiecttic,
Carport $'2SIUo., OepGs•r. 61•·

2•5-5053.

2belrm. apts .. total electtic, appliances furnished, laundry mom
facilities, close to scho~ in town.
Applications available, at: I
Green Apts. W49 or call 6
371t.. EOH.

FRANK ·&amp;: EARNEST

"ITTI-f .1AG~ ttOflN~, S~T
./""""
.
IN A tO,ilfll ....

'

1991 Dodge C.tavan LE, loaded, :
ureat condition, aharp, high •
m1111, need .to Hll, redu.ced •

price. $1,000.1514-441.0135.

3 Room, unfurnished apt, nice location, references &amp; deposit requited. 304-675-1090.

Furnished Aparrment 1 Bedroom
S3001Uo., Ulilllies Paid. 607 Sec·
ond JNenue, Galhpohs. 6 t4 -H6·

38AoO A""' 6 P.M.

.

Merchandise

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENTS AT 3 Pc . Whne Po11er BUroom SuBIJOGET PRICES AT JACKSON •te, Cheat U1rror Oress&amp;f', Canopy
ESTA-TES, 52 Wellwood Oma
from

t2.u 10 $315. WaHl: 10 shop

Dowmown One Bedroom, Carpel·
ed, Comple!e t&lt;itchen, All Electnc,
44
81•· 6·.438.4.
Furnished J Rooms &amp; Bath, No
Pets, Reference And OEtpOsil Re·
quired, 814·-i48·15t0.

Bed, 61"·388-9818.

"I 11 ,500, Aaking $1,000, If lnret'•
es1ed Ca11614·••8-6691 .
Barbie power wheels corveue,
gDOd cond, rechargeable banery,
r&amp;eharger$135.
Bundy Trombone wfcafe. ••c

eond$200. 30-i-875-7630.

Gracious tivirig. 1 and 1 bedroom Boots By Aedwing, Chippewa,
aparlmenta al Village Manor
Rocky. Tony lama . Guaranteed
RivetSide Apartmenl&amp; in MiO
. Idle · I ~polow:.SI PrM:es AI·Shoe Cafe. Gal·
port From S232· S35S .

992·5084 . Equal Housing
Junitles.

Brand new 26. ladies bike, 10
apeed Huffy Expedilion, 175, call

6.,.·992-6531 . .

P8811
Pau
Pass

~·
s•

THE BORN LOSER
•

1f\€/IJ!:l)()fll-1€. NM ~TN~ ·";a I C,OT UP Nol HCJ.JR WJ.-'( TO,
Tf\t\1' 1.£ WEY£ 6011-16 mee

~lfl
fS(~.....

Pomeranian AKC Reg•Siered 4
::;;.::..:~:=:;.=-:----:~-=-:-:.- Females , Ready Fo r .Chris 1m
Nice weddinG ring set, 614-742-!' 614-245·5095.

;

2192.

.

:;;:::.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ;
Packard Bell 386 SX. Computer, '
SXIO.
.
I
Weslo· Cardio Glide Plu1. StOO. ,
:KM-675-2157.
. :
Queen Size Manreas &amp; Box 1
Springs $25, Compaq 486 Com·
puter'$500, 81•·446-0571.

~RC':":A.;.2.;7:-:.;.;S.;18-r-t-o":c"o-:-10-r"'r"."-:-.::,::20::0:1

...
EntenaJnment Cenler Cabinet,
SSO; Ex8rcist Bike S10o; Turnt·
able $25. All Excelleru Conqiilon,
Prices Reductd, 614·448-1 155.. ·

as,

:.::..:.:::.=::.::..._____

Tl~ ...

570

FOR

TAAT~

I.OT.:ft

.

·SA~E;

Mus! Sell lmm•d~ely. Spinet
Piano w11h bench
. 304-6757911 · Ask for Bee y or leave

Sora And Coucn like New, Kitchen Table I Chairs, 3 Pc..Bedroom
Suite, Sigler Woodburner, Sigler

610 Farm Equijxnent
'·78

.

21

Eul
Pass!
Paao

1992 Chev Camero RS V-6, 5
Speed, 25th Anniversary M~del
-6s.ooo Miles, S5. 500. 61&lt;4· ·448 ·
BOSO.

New 9as tank9, 1 ton truck
wheels &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; R Auto,·
R1pley, WV. 304·372·31133 or 1·
800·213·9329.

Venlleu gas healers !Hafling at

286-6522.

1995 Mome Carlo LS. Shtrwooa
Green, Rear SpoiiBf, loeded, AMf
FM Cassette, Clolh Seats, 34,000
Miles S15,100, 6 14· 44t -0753,
614·2-i5-5624.

WottiTtnnlng Btda
buy

TAN AT HOME
DIRECT ond SA'Iil

CommerciaVHomt unilllrom

S199,

Low mon~Nr paymenrs
FREE colo&lt; coiiiOg.

Cell TODAY 1·800...2·1305.

550

Building

Block, brlck 1 " " ' pipet, wind·
owl, linlefa, etc. Claude WirJttra.

BtG SAVINO$! 0"4 Financ•ng On
New John P.ete Hay Equ ipmenl
For 36 Monthl. Purchase A New
5000 Series 40 To 73 HP John
Deere Tractot AI The Same Time
And Get 0%. For 36 Months Or
'3 .9% .For flO Uonttts. Car·
michaers Farm &amp; Lawn Gallipolis,
Ohio 6U ·-446·2111it2 Or 1·800 504·1111 .

Ferguson 30 With New 5" Bush
Rio Orondo, OH C::oll IU·2•5· Hog
Scraper Bladt, And 011CS ,
5121.
Excellenl Candil ii:H•. tl14 -446·

580

w"""

Pets for sara

me:

e
Ful Sloodod C::'- Cnow Gtttl grinder miJCer. John Deere
Pupplu, $50 Eac~ . 11•·441· urain drill. 121t.transport disk .
OWi.tonna hay bkle.Jinlernatlonal
&amp;7n.
801 Farm AI di,ttll tractor, aU
A Groom Shop -Pel Grooming. good cond. 304-273·•215,
f81luring Htdro Bllh. Don
Shntt. 373 George• cr..k Ad. Hutqvafnt model &amp;1 chain saw
11~1.

810

Home
Improvements
!IASEMEHT
~ WATERPROOFING

· 1995 New Style Cavaliet, 4 Door, Local references furnished. E1·
Aulo, Air, 11 ,500 Mi.l&amp;s, $7,300 labtished 1975. Call ~61-!.J 446·
OBO,
6U·256·63•o: 614·256· 0870 Or 1·800-287-0578. Rogetl
trans, 4 year or ot.OOO hour dtive 6&lt;67.
~aterproofing.
train wartantr. Wodd famous air

eqUIPPed same way 119,000. Did

on saltl338 this month only.
free cau &amp; lrte ' h1in &amp; free
gleves. Sidera Equ•pmtnl 304·

31=r-

&lt;4

37 Mil.

"il

.

2 Rebuiklable Btreua·s 1990
1992$1,800 For· Both : 61

40

a.pct

:

ana

A
V

ComJ~Iete 1he chuckle Qu9ttd ·
by ·fillinfi in the missing words
dovolop lrom 11ep No. 3 bef9w.

w

,
'

•
'
j

l

SO WilEN I CALL. '(OUR

HO, I CAN'T
C"IRP!

NUMBER, SA'( ''loiERE! ''

&gt;

-,
")

!•

.

~~-=-

....,•.
ASTRO·ORAPH

I

•

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

e~

and

Refrigeration

Wedneoctay, ~. 11,18te

..., .
••
"'

·-...
~

A C., No Crodlt, lila C.~ Reaidlnial or Cornmercill wiring,
ABA rag\111red Amoricln bu\ldoO
1\ Be'*ruptcr? w. Con Hoto AI· niW Mf'Yiee o.- MPfitrt. Mas• IJ.
tslebllah Credit! Must Mallie cenaed tltctrlcl•n. RiMnour
puppy, rtmalt, tlrlf 11'\0tt • &amp;75-7421.
S150 WHkty Toko Hom•. 15'11o Et.. UICII, WV000301, 300·1711wotmtd, like ·chance• in l'n0¥11.
H)Oroullc Oil S12.50·5QII pall . Down In ,Calh 0. Trodo. To Dull· 17111.
H0mfl ard Boin:l, .14-512·1125.
Sidtra Equlpmenl, Htnderaon,, ily F01 This Bank F1nancing. 114·
Aetklenual Or ~ommerclat Wlr·
«l-ol07.
A&lt;forll&gt;lo eooro~&gt; Torrlef """"'"- wv. 304-675-7421 . .
iiiiJ,
Now Service 0. Ropatrl.. Ll· q •
Jus1 tn Ttmo For Chri11masl UtMDn UMd Caro 1'1. 11·3 Mlloo unaed eteerrtelan. Wetlh EIIC·
Tt~no llofroli1, 614·318·H25 Or t.H. Cub wlln ~oo~~y ,-. 8"112"
1r1t1ttr. 2 ulu ~:eos-34• 1 ••· Soul~ ol L..n. WV. FlnaMI"G tric IU·4•e.euo. Golltpollo, . ·~
11 . . .11413. ·,
Ohio.
....llob!.. 304..aa.1oee.
~4:00pm. : '
.

...

-·"'

.

-~~~~

••
•
••

~·

Conditions In ganerat' took promlllng IOf
)'011 In the YM' lhelrd . ....-.y .. 11 eoc..-y. uoe caution wtren deciding
Who to Inial wtllt opJJrllnanCIAI-.

IAGITTAIIUifNclw. aa-aaa. 111

n,.

lill1ocM )'011 to llllnk Hrioully eboull»w
)'011 Inland to ., obligltlon )'011
hllw 10 IWO . . _ 1 pertlal. h can blr
eccanrptlalled. Altro-Graph predtcttona
lor lhe year ahead make wonderful
Clwlllitwllloddng....,.,. for Ille~ ol
lhiiJOdllc. Mallia for . . . and """" to

will resent it today if you'ra too curious
Altro-Graph, clo lhll Mwspaper, P.O. 'libciut his confidenllat affairs . .Do nol
Box 1758, Murtay Hll Station, New York, probe tor inlormatlon.
NY 10158. Make lUte )'011 state desired CANCER (June 21-July 2Z)Later in the
10dllc oigno.
day, ne"hlr you nor your ma1e will be
CAPfiiCOIIH (Dec. 21-JM. 11) Do 1101 very loter~nl ot one another : ll ·a PIS·
.... IOtoad to make on ~ dac:lalon ag'""*'t ariSes. don't air 11 1n tront of
lall!ln .... day. An. cilia may 1101 piO- .

:.='1~;,.. might

b1r ~ to a-.lta UI)NCIII&amp;ry PfOb·
lama lor yourullloday. If you keep lhla
fact In mind, )'011 can aVoid lhia J)llfaH.
NCI!I (M. »II lllo 20) II m~l be

Wtte 10 avoid atlalldlng I IOCIII funcllon
lhll Mnlng, HpiiCialty K you could run
!No an Lddtral )'011 atgUad wtlh

•-lly.

A111U (....... 11·o\lirrl 18) Today you
could be more vulnerable lhan uouat
wllere your ego II concerned. Do not
e1!p1101 praiM from lrlandl H they have
clone men !han )'011 .....
TAUAUI (April Ill lilt 10)1- a1
1oo1r1ng tor t.utat today 1ry to locua on
fMndl' viii.- H -.them
wl Nlpolid
limlll1r fuhlon.
•
OIIMI (lllr J1.Junl20) A - fliand

=

In~

y;,.,

LEO iJuly 23-Aug. '22) Pace roursell
appropria\Wfy today. Othi1Wise, you m111ht
pilltl yourNif beyond your llmlls. Do leU,
• bill llrlve 10 do rt well.
.
...... 22) Toaa
ou
YIIGO (Aug. :a._,...
y, y
\lf!OUid 1ry to relax and avoid competing
with frlandl. 11 yoU gol uptighl, you
1
1 1 dl
·could ·apoll everyone' a. un. nc u ng

~ (llept. D-Oll II) You thOUid try

to bagln loouHI1old projeclo late In
1101
lhe day . II you do, you mlghl dlorup!
..,ryo~•ln !lie f8mlly.

ICOIIIIIO (Oot. 14 Nev. II) H you go
· DUI an ll1a 1111 ..,111tng IIIII K
a IIIII ...,.., dan1 -lljiiiD - . up lor
Ioiii IIme
epeadltrg homl. .,.... filly.

~

A

'

\

''

!,

Auto Loans : Auto Dtlltr' Will Ar·
rtnge Financmg Even II You
DRVWALL
Haw BMn Turned Down Before.
llnilh,
'"""'· pJaarer ,.,.lr,
Loan&amp; AYsillblt Far No Credll, Cethriu•
texrured,
~d CrecM And Blnluuptc:y 8ut· Con Tom 30•·175·4111. 20 '""
ers, Cal Olarelt.t -446·8' 72.
OXptritnco.

-

LETS ANSWIIS

TUESDAY

ylnrl siding, •'
carpentry, 'doOrs, window&amp;, blltht.
mobile home ·r8Piif and more. Few
rrte etlimllt Clift Chat, 8t4. ge2.
8323.

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
lrea now. Call '·800·!513·4343
LAWRENCE
ENTERPR1SES
Ell S-8318
Hell Pumtll. Air C::ondlooriiiiJ, II
Clean ug1 4 OoGr Oldtmobllt You Don1 CoM Uo Wo Boll loMI
Cltr11, •l,oela P1uo M111o, 16,100, frH E1timate1, 1·100-211-ootl,
61H41·1301, WV0021k5.
11 .._11117.

SCU.~

..

J

:::n~;a~s~~ ~~::~-~e=~:

EleCtrical

I

peltflllllt

;:, t

Appltanc:e Parts And Service: All

840

, ..,

...... .......
41 ....lean

Demise- Witch - Giant- Potash -'WIT/i the TIMES
Overheard at political convention: '"We don't· need a
musical ear to know when someone is out oftui'M! WITH
the TIMES."
&lt;

9~~~~~~~~~--...,llenenct· Painling.

CARS· FOR S1001 Truckl; lloolt,
'·Whteltrt, motor hOinft, furnilurt, tfictrontca, computtra tt~.
t&gt;j FBI, IRS, DEA. Avollab!o )OUr

1

32~

~~

=
••
..•••

_1233=.;:-·.:....-::-::--:--:----,1
48 Chevy 2 dr.
French Ciry Maytag, 614 -448·
shape, $2,400; 89
7795.
.
'
."
:~o:ulo, nice, SS.eS,O,
CIC General Hamt Main· : :
-:89 Honda CRX Sl, tao., tun roo~
61-4·912-3885.

,,'
.,,

34...,._
om.,....
___ --,•&lt;I.

UNSCRAMBlE FOR
ANSWER

,:
1...

Unconditional lifetime gUaranree.

Agco -AIIis tractor spec•ala . 4680

you know that it lakes 6 usaDie
hp 10 run 1 watch pump cooling
IYIIem? t&lt;aeler's Service Center
51 Rt. 87 Leon, WV 30'·895•387•.

.

2•5-5677.

...

....

••
••
."'

2wd, 52PTO hp, radial tires. 1
remote valve, 12 speed Syncho

cooled dieseL S15,900. 4wd

.338.

SERVICES

1:.

Oll1lllo

a&gt; PRINT NUMBERED
a ' LETTERS IN SQUARES

1993 Tempo 4 Doora, $4,500
Loaded, Auto, Air, PS, PB, 814·

Ron Allison, 1210 Second Ave'nue, Gallipolis, Ohio fiU: 446 ·

Dlclure
lnlloln In

30NMI '

Dbl.!

l.,....L-.I.-.....1'--L-'--' you

34 Horse Power 4K.t! 0 1eset Tractor SS. 795, Massey Fetguson 135
Diesel $4,995; Fotd 8 N $2,595;
Gravity Bed Wagon, $295. 614-

WHI,TE'S METAL DETECTORS

=.::. "'4

27~ -~

5•1

B

Trl Star Cleaning Syslem, Tank
!~~-~~~~t New $700 080,

4508 Dozer With .A 6 Way Blade,
19118 Fo1d True k, ·Trailer, Tractor
And Equ•pment, &amp;t•-256-127•.

:~

f .~•
&gt;';I
...J.;

II

...
l.)

'"

"

In general. I am not fond of fictional
stories built around an occastonal
47
., !
bridge deal. They tend not to be funny
~- ~~
or well written. An exception is "Tales
511emJMd
- ~·
. .aund
....
Out of School" boj David Silver !Mas~r .....-+-1-;-._,
UTenly
1,1
Point Press; US $9.95 or Can. $12.95; 1-...l.-.&amp;.........t....83 Diving bini . '1 4
800·749·3292 in tbe United Slates or
IICampMapl, tt
800·263-4374 in Canada!. It appealed to
.. Dropblrlt
my sense of humor and contains a fair
amount of bridge, some of il even in·
structive. I particularly.liked lhe last
·
by lule Campos
two chapters. in which Silver hypothe·
~ CipNr
CMitfd from q1 IIIiA • br . _ . ...-. pua
P'8M
Ed
.,.In . . ciptw --lor lnlllhtt". Todly-. ct..· S ~ V
sizes on bridge in hell. This is one of
the deals.
p D A H.
DJ LI J W ' ' 0 Z N DZ A
'T Z X N
Silver was sitting Eulln six spades
ZFEFDAFD.
doubled, declarer won the first trick
with his heart - . drew trumps end·
ing in the dummy, rufted the heart sev·
z P FA A W
I P L
ND
TZB
'B L
en in hand and exited with three
\
rounds of clubs . Silver switched to a
ON·
SN.JNYHO.'
INJJ
IIFNAH
ND
,.
·diamond, finding the queen for South.
'·
. For Silver's partner. Bruce Gowdy,
DFAZIA,
who had suffered many similar dlsas·
ters this was tbe last straw. jle tried
to throtlle Silver, but. was restrained
by kibitzers. Aller peace was restored,
here is ho., the story continued In lhc
WOlD
book.
A quiet, middle·aged woman as~ed
Silver about his diamond shrft.
"Wouldn't it have been better merely
Reorrange laHars of the
I
to continue hearts?"
four scrambled words belOw to form . four simple wOrds.
Mr. Silver responded. rather sarcas·
lically, that one didn't attain his
stature as a playet by giving deClarers
FELBUO
ruffs and.sluffs. Mr. Gowdy, as one wit·
ness putit, •went berserk.".
Screaming·"What good could it have
•
done him? He opened one diamond
and there were four in the dummy,"
Mr. Gowdy kicked the table over and
lunged at Mr. Silver for the penulll·
mate time.
For the rest. yo• 'II have to buy the
Tile salesman told us about
book.
all the fine features of our new
appliance. My husband says
'
lhat a~tomatic means you cen't
repair~·--···-- . .

"

I P:M.

Washer, Orytr , Stove ElecttiC,
Relrigerator, Kenmore, Excellent
Shape , 814-446-17•9 Aller 2:30
OnWeekda)•

OF i!AI!&gt;IE ~ ·

--z

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Fuel 0•1 Stove, Rod Iron Porch
Furniture, 814·379 -2720 AFTER

24Grollcl!y

I

I

NOT UNUSUAL !

CONSOLE PIANO

Slab Wood 01.11 To Preferred
Length $35 Truck Load, O"elivered, 614-256-1602.

,

.25

Pass

Responsible Partyv1Wanted To
Make low Monrhly F¥iY'ments On
Plano. Sn locally. 'Call; 1·800~

268·6218.

....,,

0

1&lt;1'.\/E CONEHEAD~ 1

.Musical
Instruments

Set of two end tables and cotra,
rable, excallenr conditiori, nlca
Christmas gift! 61•·985-3894.

30&lt;t-87S-7421 .

f'Wt.E.C&gt;"1'Efl

oor~&lt;£r
rowoo:.~

Rottweiler Puppies, AKC Regis·
tered, OSA Certlfi~d_51re, Bolh
Parenti E•cellent Wilh ChUdten,
Depo1it, Will HOld Till Ctwlatmas,
$350 61 ..24~~: 1\433.
' ·
ii'V
Two full blooded miniature Collie
puppies, one male, one female,

5 piece Pearl Drums. Ziidjian,
(:amber aymbols, paid $2,000, 3
months old, sell $800, 614·742·
Zl03.

.$129.95 &amp; up. Siders Equipmen!

Sitl£11$\

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

Santa's Christmas Trees , 1501
State Route 850, &amp;14-245-5595.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upr~ghl, Ron Evans ~flterpr•ses.
Jackson. Ohio. 1·800-537-9528.

':&lt;I

0429.

$12Sieo .. I1H•2·2050.

Sega Genesis, 10 games, 3 conrrollers . Cost $725. Will sell for
$150. 304·675-6158 aher 4pm,

•

()¥.:no Aflt&gt; rtl\ ~11u..
SNOWEit&gt;'l~ ew-a£ fl..'(

:5I'DVa fll.'( t:e:II/E:. ~ ! ccu..o
(:£1' lo\'( w.

Puppy Palace Kennels, Boarding,
Srud SerYice Puppies, Groomit:~g.
Buy. Sell &amp; Trade, All Breeds.
Payments WelcOme. 614 -388·

Refrluerators, Slaves, Washers
And Dryers, All Reconelilioned
And Gauranteedl 1100 And Up,
WiH Deliver. 614-669-6441.

.

po1lriOIIc

•

••

Up Mollohan· Carpets, 814-448·

540 Miscellaneous

Weal ·North
Pasa I •

11~-::.,n

23 WOmen'•

toe~··

ccz=r••• ..
z

•• •

Slock Carpt1 &amp; VInyl $6.00 Vd I

Moore owner.

--

4 Not ......
5 Compos pt.
6 Tantacta
7Wuyol-

CELEBRITY CIPHER

............. lfCAUSf t4t
I&gt;IPN'T TlP ·Tttf
MAint P'.

"Large Selection Of carper ~em In

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques.
1124 E. Main Stteet, on RL 124,
Pomeroy. Houri : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m.. S..nllay 1:00 .,
6:bo p.m. 814 -992~ 2528. Ruu

11 Adnlll
17--1111411
tF--

.

1·900·•99-34G9.

Antiques

•,._,.,.0

3~ord

·=
· ~UI.)

whael drive, auto trans, carrll)lell "'
•ngine rebuUCI_. lront &amp; rear au•· 1
pension rebuiJd, new paint , new ..
wheela &amp; lire&amp;: axe condition. -;
, $5,800. 304-89§.3874.
I

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, Cltyets, refrigerators,
ranges. Skag11s Appliances, 78
Vine Streer. Call814·446·7398,

530

DOWN
1 Mow . . . . ,
28mdaat

""'""

258-1238.

H\00·-3099. •

(-)

12 Plant ftulll
83 Slant

41 F,...nt

Freezer, Washer, Dryer, VCR,
Police Scanner, Microweve, 81•·

lrich Electric Range Whitt, $85;
Refrigerator Apartment Size Almand $95: Refrigetator White, 2
Door, US: G.E. Froll FIN Relrig.
erator $150; G.E. Side By Side
Nice l1a5; G .E. Refrigeratot New
Model 1 V..r Warrnaty $350 ; 30
Inch Gas Range While. S1SO;
Gas Range 36 Inch Almond Nice
11 75; Waahe:r Whirlpool Heavy
Du1y Was 11225, $205 1 Vear
WarrantJ; •Dry..- Whirlpool Heavy
Dut1 1 Vear Warrantf 1205;
Skaggs Applianees, 76 Vine
Street, Ga.HipoMs, 614-446-7398,

0 Q J 10
Soulb
oKJ542

HRolnendolen
21 ,.._,. rind
from
HActor-033-darlng
' 35 cer
36 llolturlng oganl
37 Wired
311--'CIIy
40 Stain
42 languego

her8ldry

By Pblillp Alder

a,

440

11 -fill•

Astep above

•
•
:'

1817 Ford Bronco, full size, 4 •

Country Furniture. 30•·675-6820.
Rt 2 N, 6niles, Pt Pleasant, WV.
lues-Sat 9-6, Sun 11-5.

US; 30

20Liclr ....
imlgM

• K Q J 10 B S 2
• 72

PUI 3•

lo

'::.......
=:..:$3,=000.:::.·.:•1;....;.....,:.::.:.-6.:.1..:511::._ _ :

Supplraa

HENTA LS

Soulh

BARNEY

34.000 MIIH, $12,500 090; 61C·

1978 Ford F-250 4 WO 314 Ton

lots &amp; Acreage

ingll P.M.,8 P.M.

•

014·:

080,81 ..742-3148.

1795.

Inc~

5i ........ '""'
IOCII'-,·111

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

'II S-10 CheWy Blazer 4x4, v.e
automatic, 04,000 miles. 13500 r

ApplianceS:
Recondilionad
Washefa, OtyetS, Ranges. Refrigratora , 90 Day Giuaranleel
French City Maytag. 814 -448·

Elecolc Ra"Ge 30

11 c ...tureof
loltdote
18 Robouncl

22 01 vlvlll - •

+ AJ 9 4

7444.

ApanmentS

ICing of-

21Ciel

• 74 2

~~~~~--------~-1002 lsuzu truck.- oicly.• SIP.•

Wan10d To Buy: Squ.,. Beltl 01
Har e1 ..-1o52.
·

• K 10 B 3
oAKS
Eosl
0 9

¥A

Price 15,250; 1881- 5·10 Sparl
NADA $5,000 Silo Prico U, 150,
COok Mo-114-441-0103.

175-3910 Aller !iflm.

s

10 ........
14 . . . ...

Opening lead: • 3

balhs . large 11iand kitchen wllh

polio door. Call &amp;,.·385·9&lt;!21 Ilk
-__..,.,,_.,,.:;:~:-=:::;--;;;:::-I
HARTS
t.IASONARY . Block, lor Miko.
~

• Q 6 ·5
• 9 86 5

I

11e2 GMC Sonomo FLE Wl1h
'Every Opllon NADA $7,550 Silo

71,000 ml~•. nice, $4,-450,
11112·2584 ...... 8pm ..

TRANSPORTATION

Very nice 1885 1-4x70 with 2

. . . I 11DN wortl, 30 JMII tk·

0 10 8 8
• 9 4 3

2-

790
Campers&amp;
John
'Deere
2840,
82
hp.,
Motor
Homes
' m·ov•el cau 151-4· 4'8 · 2568. .co Inch Snow Thrower, For 18
1657 hrs. with 146 ~b endloader1 t992 Geo Tracker 5 Spe~ , CD
E-~-~~&gt;uwog ()ppor1"""Y
Horse
Crattman
Tractor
With
Super
Single
4,
Pcister
Waterbed
_ _..:Op:.:
. :;po=::rtu::;,.n_lty..:....__ Mull Mit· 1e97 14•70 """ bucket anCI forks, '$13,500, call Player, 52K Mileo, $5,500 080, 1985 Rockwood Motor Home low
1 room, inckldas 8 months FAEE iol Oort1 Let Tl'os One Sip By II Sn-o\1 Wh-el Weie~tHs JChains, Fits 8' For Sale. 614-446-7123.
INCJHCEI
1989 Dodge Grand Caravan V-6, Mileage, With Royal Oak Reaort
614-992·7•21 .
Wheals, Uaect Twiee, $750, 614·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. rent Only $165.57 PI' """'"'will\ One Bedroom Wuh loll Of E• · 388-8579.
t10K Miles, Exc . CondWon, lifetime Uembershlp, 614·388·
Surplus Army Camouflage Cloth·
tecommends that rou do bull· 19QS down. Cllt H00-837-3238.
uas. Wuher. Oryer, Stove, Frio. =:.:::.::..,--~-----1 ing, (Insulated coveralls. brown 140 lntemational tr~ctor wtculd·
S4,ooo oeo. 614·441.01307, e1•· 1100.
Included. ; We Pay Water . And 486 SK2 Paekafd Belt Compul&amp;r, ducK blbt $35) . Sam Somer - vators &amp; side dressers, 304-675·
245·5592 Aller 5 P.M.
~· wM1 people you know, and New 1•xeo Only ·make 2 pay · Garbilge.
32' 1984 Skylark with screened bi
Very Cteaf'! . No Ful~ Loa"-d With 12 CD't1750, vllle'a by Sandyville Post Qflice. 3246.
HOT ID tend mont)' lhrough the mentt &amp; ·move-in, no payment aiporch and ulility building, on lot in
·t993
Sunbird,
5
speed,
2
door,
Smokers.
No
Pets.
t300.
Deposit.
IS14-4-4&amp;-9278 Arter •:eo.
Friday-Sunday Noon-5:00pm .
IMI until ,au have lrwtsligated ltr • years. free &amp;et·up &amp; deliv22' Slh Wheel Livestac:k Trailer,
air, POL, easy on gas, asking beautiful trailer court, Arcadia, FL.
l350tMo.,
614·4&lt;46
·2205,
61•·
Other
days
call
304
-'273-5655.
ory.304·J'!i5.58BS.
.
Sacrifice $1,600. 614-843·2285.
()14·949·2253.
446·9585.
$7900, coll61•·992-6975.
"rchive Eternily "Ring Appraised (Jurior Sizes).

......

w..t

18e1 S.10 To,_ V·l, 5 Speed,
13,000 MU.I, SS.IIOQ. 304·571·

2 Tan Swivel Rockers AnCI Ono·
man Excellenl Conelilion: $1 50,
Fisher Graf'!CIPa Woodbu"rning
Stove Wilh Acceasoriel, $250,

New-1097 1-4 Wid•1 bath, te"9W
down; 1139/mo, wllh approved

&lt;iooa MVR No DWI'I Post Dor WV.30+75S.5B85.

31• Ton Pick·Up

White Appaloou colr,' 17 months
Did, 55 inches. SSOO , 61&lt;11·992 ·

6313.

ii8S, 614 · 592·5~~-

o.c~g,

Good Bo). 'S3,g()(), 61•·....-

Household
Goods

2 bedrOO.IJl, eleclric heal, 2 miles
out of Rutland an New Lima Rd., Used Furniture · 130 BuJaViUt
814-742-2803or61 .. 742·2421.
' Pike • Stop
and see our large
credit Call1·800-691-t7n.
Secl~tion of good Used furni 3 Bedroom, 2 full bat hi, 13751 tuf8. MRS.-4. fl14·446 -4782.
1897 18180 3 bedroom, 2 bath, mo. $200/depotJt. No pets. Ref·
$1,325/dOWn, I2HIImo, free air, erencet. 3:&gt;4·576-4024.
Used Furniture 130 Bulavtlle Pike,
with approved credit. 1-800-691 ·
Chrlstmas Gifts: Old Milk Cans.
8777.
Nice 2 Bedrooms, S225JMo., 8 Sweepers: Hand and El"lric
Miles Down 2t8, Nice. Referenc- Clocks; Microwave Carts or
1997 Doublewiele, 3 bedroom, 2 · es, Deposil Requited, eu-usBookcases: Good Couches,
batt\, 11,445/down, $221/mo,lree 8172,614-256-6251 .
Chairs, Sofa Tab*es, M)crowavts;
air, wi1h approved credit. 1·800T,_ Orivet' • RuMinG Extl'l Man 891-6777.
Two 2 Beclrooms $180 -$240 Plus Classwate, cookie Jan. Hours
Job Opening Gal~polis Area, ApOepasil, Near NGHS Stove, Re· 1P.&lt;4 614-~-4182
proxh1111t1ly $30,000- 135,000 1997·14i80 w/Giamour bath. trigerator, Water. Tralf1 .Paid. New
Vtllr, Must Have: 1 Year Eapetl-' 1179/JnO; Free dellvtll' &amp; Ht·up, Pai.nt, Newly Remodled, 81&lt;4·.388· "Whirlpool Oryet" $75; Whirlpool
tnct (Minimum) ClaSIJ A - COL, only II Oak Wood Homes. Nitto .· :83::,7:..:1,;.·- - - - - - - - - lltyor SitS; G.E. Washer $95; G.E.
pending

A 401k Program As Well AI A
Cafel.,-11 Style Btnefil Package.
Tows Art Seldom More Than
Tint Lengths At One nme. Year
Round Work Whh A Growinu
'-bung Comp~~n)'. Send Re1uma
h:tudi'tg Preunt Salllry And Job
tftstory To: CLA 388 r;Jo ~ilipolis
l)elfy Tribune, 825 Third AVenue,
GINIPQflt, OH 45831. All Inquiries
• VM8tHtld~Conlldlnce.

For Sate: Ook $35, Pi&lt;:k· salt, top Garman bloodlines, pat·
Dollvtrod IU·25e · ents OFA certil~d and on prem-

1118e

.,

Auto, New Tlrea. Rttte Hitch

15Z2.

614·4•6-,168. '

420 Mobile Homes

Sat~eperaon wilh expenence 1 ;:585:B·----~--- 2 Bedroom Mobile Home Cl ose
10 HI\ - ond used ... 320 Moblla Homes
To GallipoHo, $27Sit.lo., tncluclel
hlcltl 11 local dealership. Call
for Sale
Water, 1200 Deposit References,

od, Plus

AKC German Shepn.rd pups tor

• 1

MERCHANDISE

A.M. -ll P.M. 01•....a.e281l.

Yilntad licensed Towbolill Opennora To Join Our Company.
Wo Ply Up To $20S Per Day 0..

Wagon,

t.lo., $275 Security O.,,tlt, Ret·

31 o Homes for sara

Tawboalpilot&amp;

$1SOea. il0c.&amp;7S.7771 ,

X»•·773-585t, .Maaon WV.

Stove And Refrigerator Fur nished, Washer /Dryer Hook-Up,

Pon)

AOHA Stallion Brood Maret
Wealingt, And Yearlingt. -40
Acte Fatm, With Bains, 6H·288·

Also tra1ler space on river. All
hook-ups. CtH alter 2:00 p.m.,

1551.

1
4513 •

0&lt;02.
AKC Gilman SheJ)tlarcl Puppies,

Sleepin~ foomt ·wl.th cdok.lno.

460 Space for Rent

2111.
Taldng Appllclltions On Motorcyde a ATV Meehanic. Rive, Fronl·
Honda, Send Resume To: 4315
Stltl Routt 7, Glllipolil, Ohio

Firewood for salt, $30Jioad, yau
11
7
·
pick ""' .. e&lt;e-302 .
fii8VI!&gt;Od IDf salt. 304-773-5629.

Pon) Soddlo, Now
11H41-2222.

Rooms for rBflt · waek or manth.
Starting at $120/mo. Gallia Hole! .
814-448-9580.

Newly R...-locl. 7 Rooms 18alh.

-1.

AKC Chihuahua Puppies , SDtn
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•
Vol. 47, NO. 155
e1t86, Olllo Y_.ley Pubn.hlng eomp.ny

Pomeroy-Middllport, Ohio, Wedneeday, December 11,1996

2-ona,1ti.....,35Mftili .
AO.nrwtt CO. NawiFIFIF

Rutland to discuss flo·od
control with ·teds, state
I

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AUTO., A/C, VORTEC V-6 ENGINE.

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* Pr:tce lncludefl All Rebates to Dealer
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FULL CONVERSION
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727·2921

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MOtORS .ToYOiA~---.~
ST. ALBANS ·

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ONN 8 A.M. TOt "M' DAILY-sATURDAY 8 A.M. TO I R~Y ~ lUI. TO I AM.

.L1·5

727-2921
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Lswrence County tire dump burns again

&amp;LEIUS ~

RT. 80 MecCORKLE AVENUE-ACROSS FROM SHONEY'S
.
WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 GM DEALER SELLING CHEVROLET AND OLDSMOBILE AND TQYOTA AND LEXUS

.

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' By TOM HUNTER
."
·Stntlnal Ntwl Staff
"Meigs County, Where . the road
p!cels the river!" highlights the cov- ~­
er of the county's newest tourism
brochure, inviting travelers to what
·local tourism officials tcnn "the per·
feet weekend destination ."
.·. The new four-color bi -fold
brochure was unveiled by Meigs
Tourisni Director Karin Johnson dur·
ing Tuesday's Meigs County Cham·
ber of Commerce monthly luncheon
Tuesday afternoon at the Meigs
Senior Center.
· · : lnfonnation on county attractions
s~ch as the Ohia River Bear Co. and
Forked Run Slate Park are listed in
the brochure: along with infonnation
on area festivals and events including
the Racine Flower Festival, Big Bend
Sternwhcel Festival, Buffington
!~ land Re-enactment and the Meigs
County Fair:
'
The brochure features full color
. NEW TOURISM BROCHURE -' Meigs County Tourltm Dlrec·
photos of the Burlington Island re- tor Karin Jllhnaon dlaplayad one of·the new color Malgt Coun·"
enactment. the stemwhecl ,festival. ty tourism brochures that ware unveiled at l'ueadty't monthly
meeting of the Meiga County Chamber of Commerce.
Racine 's nower festival , as well as
ihe Meigs County · Courthouse,
FO.kcd Run and the Ohio River Bear
Co. ,
Transponation, and by convention mcnt people together to dctcnninc
"The brochure has hccn in the and visitors bureaus statewide . The what the best · uses arc for rural
'
•
brochure will also · be available to ·land." said Steinberger.
planning stages for some lime . Aller tnivclcrs nationwidc·who contact the
Current projects the ORDP arc
we received first place and prize
money for our booth at the Ohio State state's I-800-BUCKEYE tourism pursuing include recording the
Fair in August, we decided that we . 'hotlinc. and by direct request from amount of land owned by coal comthe Meigs County Tourism Bureau. panics in eastern and souihcastcm
would be able go forward with pro·
duction of a four' color brochure."
Special guest speaker for the lun- Ohio. ·and dctcnnining ' what those
cheon walii John Steinberger. I!Xccu- lands could be used for once they arc
!aid Johnson:
tive director of the Ohio Rural De vel- reclaimed , Steinberger stated .
. · The layout' and 'copy work were
"We have to take our blinders off
~ompleted
in house, while Chapman opmcnt Partnership.
,._.
,Steinberger, a Champaign Coun- and look al all opP911unities to devci·
ninting, Huntington, W.Va., printed ty native and former chief of Ohio'&gt; op this land in southeast Ohio. EcoI0,000 of the new brochures. Prior to Weights and Measures division in the nomic development isn't something
P,.inling, a film and proof of the new state auditor's oflicc, discussed the that you can grant write to yourself. ,
lirochure were made of the brochure · purpose of the Ohio Rural Devclop- You need someone lobe available in
lly a ColumbuS area graphics design , ment Pru:tmirship.
this .county to develop the lead that
firin. ·
The ORDP was organized unde r the Ohio Dcpanment or Develop·
, "So far, we'vc' had great response the Bush administration, and hrings men! gives you. If you don't have
tQ the overall design and content of together puhlic and private interests someone doing thai. who is the state
ttic brochure. It's much more colorful in an effort to develop the hcst uses going to call'?," said Sieliibcrgcr.
t~an brochures we've had in the past.
for rural lands.
In other matters :
1'here are more aclion photos. I think
Ohio is one of 39 states that have
• Highways Committee Chainnan
we did .a good job for the limited groups such as the ORDP.
Steve Story updated chamber memfunding we had to work with," John· . "Everyone in this partnership is a bers on a recent developments sur·
son said.
' volunteer. There arc no 1\:cs to he a rounding tl)c Athens to Darwin U.S.
:· The new brochure will be distrib- part of the group. We want to bring 33 project
ufed through the Ohio Department of local people and economic de~elopIContlnutd. on Ptga 3)

.

$

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SAVED FROM LANDFILL- Cla'bllda recycling got underway In Racine Tuaaclay. Mai9t County Rtcycllng and Lltttr Program Director Kenny Wiggins, above, loaded Items into the program'•
apacltl recycling trailer.
·
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Meigs tourism office unvei.ls Racine takes to curbside
new brochure touting _·county _.-recycling in a.big ,.way

NEW97 5•.10

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nesses that lie in the village's 100- council, the following village fund
By TOM HUNTER
year flood plain, in compliance with balances were reported for the end of
.s.nunet Ntwa stttt
November by Eskew: General Fund,
Rutland officials plan to meet with FEMA's request for them.
"There are roughly 35 more pho- $7,139.95; Civic Center, $3,153.61;
'officials from the Federal Emergency Management Administralion los lhal need to be taken, and we hope Police, $3,337.57; Law Enforcement,
and the Ohio Department of Natural to gel those lhis week. The counCil '$487.33; Street, $3,638.55; Highway,
'J!.esources next week 10 funher dis- would like to thank JoAnn May and $4,293.57; Water, $1,269.53; Sewer,
cuss potential flood control projeciS Pat Patterson for their assistance in $4,532.93; Sewer Debt, $22,495.0i;
collecting these photos," Ead,s said. Utility Deposit, $9,872.()9; Replace·
.f.or the village.
State officials have made a tenia· ment Fund, $19,588.37.
· Members of lhe Rutland Flood
,
live
recommendation that $300,000
The · · treasurer's report was ,
Con1rol Committee and council will
in
flood
assistance
1J10nies
be
made
approved
and accepti:d by council.· .
:ineet with Rusty Rickard from
.In other matters, council :
:fEiMA's Chicago offices Dec. 19 al available to the village for possible ·
• approved minutes from the Nov.
the Rutland Civic Center to discuss flood control projects. FEMA . will
'.what the next steps are in planning review the state recommendations for 28 meeting.
· • approved paying expenses and
nood control projects for the village fundin2 allotments and make final
decisions
on
projects
sometime
in
fees
for Eskew to attend state clerk
. ~nd making them a reality, Flood
training on Jan. 21.
Control Committee member Joe January 1997.
Council members discussed the · • approved the November mayor's
·Bolin said during Tuesday's regular
purchase of new overhead heaters for report in lhe amount of$3, 185, wilh
:council meeting.
the
gymnasium at the Rutland Civic the village retaining $2,350 after pay:· Rutland Clerkffreasurer RoseCenter,
reviewing estimates for the ment of the stale share of $835 .
.rruuy Snowden Eskew noted that offi• heard a report from Dave Davis
;cials from the Ohio Depanment Of project.
No fonnal action \"as taken on the of the village maintenance depart·
" Natural Resources are also scheduled
'to meet wilh village officials pee. 19, purchase of the: new heating system mcnt
. '
• entered executive session to dislp .discuss the village's flood plain for the gymnasium. Council members
did approve ,the purchase two new · cuss personnel mauers.
insurance.
Present were council · members
Mayor JoAnn Eads said that pho- ventless heaters for the lobby and viiDick Fetty, Danny Davis, Judy Den·
tos have been taken and processed for lage offices.
In routine financial review by ney, and Vera Martin, Mayor J" Ann
'!lost of the 81 residences and busiEads, and Eskew.

NEW 97 S-10 4x4

.. NEW.S·l-0·EXT. ·CAB4X4

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.• ATHALIA - A tire dump off
Stale Route 7 at Athalia- the site of
a previous major blaze- caught fire
gllin late Thesday.
. -Firefighters from 10 units around
thr tri-state area responded to tbe
blaze overnight, accordins to pre·
. liminary information from the Iron·
' tlJII Post of the S~te Hi1hway Pat~ol.
'The patrol, which was assis11n1
the Lawrence County Sheriff's

I

Department with traffic control, also
took a hand in helping deputies evac·
uate between 30 · and 50 nearby
homes. SR 7 was closed and )'las not
expected to reopen until midday
today.
. 1be Lawrence County Emergency
Management Agency and the Amer·
ican Red Cro&amp;S reponedly were on
the scene, and the Abundant Life
Baptist Church in Proctorville was on

standby as a shelter if needed.
The state tire marshal's office and
the Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency have also been called in to
investigate, according to the patrol.
Further details were unavailable
bef(lrc presstime today.
The .dump was the site of a spectacular fire in November 1995 that
was fought by several area fire
departments, including some from'
Ga_llia County.
·.

' · ·tributcd· 365 ·re sidential ·rccy ~l!ng
·· 'bins througho~tthc village and ut
sentinel Ntw11 Staff
Curbside recycling got under· · other homes served by the village's
refuse service.
way in Racine Tuesday morning
Village officials were pleased
wilh about two-thirds of the comwith the number of residents parmunity's households panicipating.
ticipating in the new program,
Meigs County Recycling and
saying it will cut down on the
Litter Prevention Program Director
amount
of trash hauled into area
Kenny Wi~gins toured the village
landfills.
around 9 a.m. while workers were
"I know personally nur trash
emptying the blue recyCling bins
was
down two hags from normal."
into a trailer specially designed for
said
Village Cquncilman Roher!
recyclable materials.
Beegle. "It's going 10 he a gn\)d
Although the program is popuproicct."
lar in Syracuse, Wiggins wa.' cautiously optimistic driving into
"In the long run it hopefully will
Racine. His concerns vanished as save the village on ·refuse Ices," he
he saw the n~mcrous recycling said .
bins along the curb being used hy
Street Commissioner Glenn
the village's residents.
Rizer said the recycling program
'Tm impressed." Wiggins said. cui down on the work load for
"Racine exceeded my expectations refuse workers
for the first d'ay."
"II did help, i) helped quite a
· Workcrs.collc:cted 2. 994 pounds . hit." he said.
of rccyclahlcs in Racine Tuesday.
"Some people that usually have
similar to the amount collected l_a.,l
three bags, some were down to one
week in Syracuse.
hag nr two hags," he said. "II cui
Although similar in size, Racine
nur load down quite u hit ."
ha.' more businesses than Syracuse.
Rit.cr estimated uhout two of
leaving questions about how 1&lt;&gt;' three hnusehnlds in the village par·
handle business recycling needs.
tic ipalcd in the program's first day.
Early last week. wnrkcrs disor the hou seholds thai did nol

·ay JIM FREEMAN'

participate; Recycling Coordinator
Roger Holinan said some would
likely stan when they noticed their
ncighhnrs pulling nut their bins.
Also, frnm his eXperience wiih
the Syracuse program, Wiggins
noted that snme people. particu·
lnrly ·those living alone , muy nut set

""' their hins every week - pre_lcrring to wait- until the hin is full
until setting them out.
Since May; atl&lt;Jul 25 Ions of
recyclable material has hccn collected in Syracuse. mmc'rial that
would otherwise have ended up in
a landlill.
,
· Retyclahles will he picked up
every Tuesday. in conjunction with
regular trash pickup. Residents
can put their rccyclahles next tn
their regular refuse for pickup,
Wiggins said.
The Racine and Syracuse programs arc administered by the Sut·
ton Township Board of Trustees.
through a grant received by the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources' Division nf Recycling
and Liner Prevention and with
assistance from ttic Gallia-JacksonMcigs· Vinton Solid Waste Dis·
trict and the Meigs County Board
of Commissioners.

Stock market relativ~ly unruffled
by October's rise in infi~Jion rate
Last week. comments hy Federal
Reserve Chairman Alun Greenspan
about ''irrational cxuhcram:c" scOt
stock. prices tuniblihg worl~widc.
On Monday, the Dow Jones industrial' average shot up hy K2 'points and
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
gained another 9 points on Tuesday.
AP Economlct Writer
Many economists hclicvc that
WASHINGTON - Innation at Greenspan was engaging iit a hit of
the wholesale level jumped 0.4 per· jawh&lt;&gt;ning 10 alert markets to concent last month a.&lt; a slight decline in cerns ahoul stocks being driven HKI
the cost of food was overwhelmed by high in a speculative frent.y. '
·the biggest increase in energy prices
With inllation remaining wellsince April.
hchavcd and the overall 'economy
The Labor Department reported
slowing
markedly in the ~ccond half
today that Novcmhcr's iocreasc in the
of
this
year, analysts said they
Producer Price Index, designed to
measure inflationary pressures before believed the Fed w()uld ·no\ feel the
they rc~ch fhe consumer, matched an need to rnove.from talk lo ·aolion and
identical 0.4 percent October gain . . actually raise interest rates. ·
'
Excludin8 the volatile food and .
So
far
this
year,
wholesale
prices
energy see!ors, wholesale prices
edged up only 0. I percent in Novem- have been rising at an annual rate of
ber following a 0.3 percent drop in 2.6 percent while inflation at lhc con·
October.
:
· sumcr level has bc'cn rising only
Financial markets could be rcas· slightly faster at an annual rate of 3.3
surcd by the fact that the underlying percent The government is scheduled
rate of inliation has remained well· to .-.pon on November consumer
. behaved at both the wholesale and prices on Thursday.
retail levels.
In the report on wholesale prices,
While stocks have heen surging to
record levels, there is an un.usual th~ g~vernment said that energy
amount.of •:11atility in markets now. pnccs JUmped 2.3pcrcent in Novem·

· Energy prices
undergo biggest
rise since April ..

\•

her, the biggest one-month gain since
a· 2.7 percent rise in April.
Ga.&lt;olinc prices were up 2 . ~ per·
·cent last mnnlh while natural gas was
up 3.8 rcrcent. Home heating oil
prices c~ged down a slight 0.4 rcrccnt. ·
. Food costs, which had shot up 0.8
percent on Octohcr, actually declined
on Novemhcr, edging down a slight
0. I pen;cnt.
·
The decrease on t,ood costs, the
first in seven months, rcllected a huge
17,7 percent rlrop in fruit prices as the
cost of navel oranges plunged 57.4
percent, cantuloui&gt;c prices were down
·33.3 percent and the wholesale cost
of honeydew melons fell 20.4 percent.

The slight increase in the so-called
core rate of innation after a big drop
the previous month renccted in large
part a turnaround in car prices, which
had been down in October.
Prices also rose in November for
cosmetics, hou.'iChold furniture and
drugs. Prices declined for women 's
clothing, newspapet'li and household
appliances.

..

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...

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