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SAT9-6

SAT9-6

· Ohio Lottery

:AP selects

Super Lotto:
7-&amp;-40-41-43-44
Kicker:
5-1+1-7-8
Pick 3:
9-7-1
Pick 4:
4-1-2-8

··football AIIAmericans
._

Sllll-5

; Sports on Page 4

Chene• of 1 ahower
tonight, Iowa In the 301.
Friday, pertly cloudy.
Hlgh1 In the .eo..

•
2Seoti-11 .............
A Gennett: Co. Ns••prpu

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio, Thur.clay, December 12, 1996

r--Christmas
is
•.•
Whi.
t
e
House
deflects
criticism
..
~of tr_
imming spending. on poor
~

AS
LOW
AS:

.

'

·8Y SONYA ROSS

·Ill

grant to local governments would needs enemies?" said 'Rick Nelson, Urban Development.
Aleoclated Pntll Writer
undermine housing reforms and executive director of the National
"In some instances they would lit·
· WASHINGTON - The White invite Congress to "block and cut" Association of Housing and Rede· erally stop our reforms in their
House, annoyed that a· Cabinet sec- his ag~ncy's budget.
velopment Officials.
tracks," Cisneros wrote. "In others.
:J:C.tary publicly denounced its plans to
"Now is not the time to change
In a handwritten footnote to his they would concede ground we have
:mm the federal housing budget, is course," Cisneros wrote. "I believe memo, Cisneros told Raines that the successfully defended for four hard
~~~ecting criticisms that President this is a serious mistake."
budget plan could unravel. his legacy years. I'd like "to talk before we arc
~!IRIOn intends to cut deeply into
The departing secre!'U"Y's criticism at" the Department of Housing and locked.''
~grams for the poor.
'.
surfaced in Wednesday's edition of
: . The president's budget advisers The Wall Street Journal, prompting
'iii'C looking for ways to protect pro- McCurry to reply that Cisneros'
.
' · ·
· ·
·~s"thatareavaluablepartofthe argument "would have been much
~octal safety net," White House more influential if (he) made it·direct.
spokesman Mike McCurry said ly to the OMB first."
By WILLIAM M. WELCH
Wednesday. "We have to make sure
But congressional Democrats
USA Today
)hat they are well targeted and that defended Cisneros. telling Raines it
The Clinton administration plans to seek a 25 percent cut from federal
.they are funded at levels that will is "a sad irony" that the administra·
aid to the poor for home heating bills and will S(ek elimination of the prolikely receive support by a majority tion would consider reducing housing
gram in five years.
_of the members of the Congress.".
aid by SI billion at a time when
The White House's budget office, preparing the president's fiscal 1998
·. Those programs, McCurry sa1d, changes in the economy and changes
budget proposal due in February, intends to reduce the Sl billion in annual
jnclude federal subsidies for rent and in the welfare system have made
aid to $750 million as part of a phase-out by 2002..
'
'for heating bills of poor families in housing less affordable.
The plan is a re.versal of roles for the White House and illustrates bud',coldcliinates. Both were targeted for
." It is quite 'clear to us that fund,reduction under budget proposals ing reductions have fallen dispropor- get-balancing pressures.
Only last year, Hous~ &amp;epublicans voted to kill the program. It was saved
·offered by the Office of Management tionately on low and even moderateatthe insistence of the administration and the Senate.
and Budget.
.
income families . ... It is incompreNews of the plan came from senators from northeast and midwest states
In both cases, fierce · objections hensible to us how the administration
that
benefit ·from the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program.
w.ere raised. Abipanisan group of six could reverse gears so quickly,"
·Sen. Jw:nes Jeffords, R-Vt., is asking colleagues to sign a letter urging ClinNorthern senators asked Clinton not wrote Reps. Henry Gonzalez, 0ton to drop the plans; 28 senators from both parties have signed.
'to make substantial cuts to the ener- Texas. and Joseph Kennedy, Destimated 5.6 million households receive the aid. The cuts "could mean
gy program, which OMB suggested Ma.,.. ranking members of the th~An
difference between heating or eating for many recipients," Jeffords said.
'be cut by 25 percent.
House committee on banking and
Geoffrey Brown, legislative director of the ·Nonhcast-Midwest Senate
· The latest pr_otesl .came from financial services.
Coalition, said the timing couldn't be worse: Prices for heating oil, natural
~ousing Secretary Henry Cisneros,
Housing advocacy groups also
who complained in~ Dec. 3 memo to railed against the OMB proposal. gas and propane are all up.
According to the Energy Department, the average price of heating oil is
OMB Director Franklin Raine.s that.. "This Is stuff we've been lighting for
up from $.913
gallon at .this time last year. Propane
'aplan to dispense ·a housing block years. With friends like this, who $1.144 gallon,
high. $1.19(&gt; pao.,gall&lt;ll)

Low-Income
· • ·
h'ea·t"lng 81"d ..
targete·d for reduct"lon

ALL WHEEL DRIVE!
.AS
LOW

AS:

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•

:Dolls help
-the needy -

Abniul Wheels, V8 Vortec Elp, Air
Power l.cKks, CRise ·

I

I

AS
LOW
AS:

rears.

Fatal trailer fire
ruled accidental
.

ituctlon slated
'S aturday to aid
·the
Unlted .Fund
•

By Ct!ARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel New1 Staff
. Residents will be given an oppoi·lunily to buy a beautiful doll and con..tribute to a worthy cause at the same
,time at Saturday's public auction to
. be held at the Fanners Bank Saturday
,Jll I p.m.
·
, , The auction is the climax to the
;1996 Dress-a-Doll contest sponsored
:for the past several years by the bank.
·· · This year, 58 residents costumed
-dolls in several categories. The dolls
.,will be auctioned .otT with the proiJ;eeds to go to the Meigs County·
.United Fund;
.~ _ Earlier this week, the "dolls were
judged and prizes of $1 00 were
•awarded to the first places in the cat·
•~gories of prettiest. 1904 anniversary.
·.i:haracter. crocheted and bride doll.
·The one selected as the best overall
. ~lso received a $200 pri1.c.
. '" . Taking first place and the overall
·award was Mariana Staats of Mid;dleport with the anniversary doll. The
.~oil wa.&lt; in costume of the period in
·~ year the bank was founded.
~ Other winners were Ida Martin.
;Middleport. the prettie&lt;t; Brenda
:Ncutzling, Pomeroy, the bride doll;
petty Edwards. the crocheted co~;
;luJDed doll; and Louise Stoats. Mid-dleport, the character doll. Joanne
Williams, Dottie Musser and Ann
llrown co-chaired the contest for the
lb&amp;nk.
•· Dan Smith will conduct the auc!}on Saturday and refreshments will ·
11c. served during the event. .
·,.· The United Fund, which has been
~existence in Meigs County for four
distributes monies raised to
;i
(Continued on Page3)

GIVING FOR OTHERS- Employ-It VIler- Memorial Holpltlll)eve provided 30 Chrletmea glftl for underprivileged Melgl
Counly children through the "angel" progrtm of the Melg1 County Department of Human Servlcea. Pictured with thlglftl bllng
prepared for trtlnspon to the depenmant Thursday are hoapltll
employees Rae Gwludowsky, left, and Joyce Redman.

THE WINNERS- Dntii·I-Doll Conteet wlnnen _,e announcld W8dneadey by Farmara
Bank. Flrtt place wlnnera were by category,
from left, Ann Brown, displaying the doll made
by Batte Edwarda, crochet; Ida Mlrtln, Middle-

.

'

port, prettlelt; Joanne Wllllema, blink project

chairman; Mariana Stille, Middleport, blat
oYinlll, the 1904 ennlver..ry doll; Brenda Neu1· ·
zllng, Pomeroy, brill&amp; doll; and Loul" Stletl,
Middleport, charecter doll.

.

'

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Stiff
Stale fire investigators have rendered a final ruling on the cause of
the Nov. 30 trailer fire that claimed
the life of a 2-year-old Racine boy. ·
Dennis Ginly of the State Fire
Marshal's oll'icc ·. in Columbus confirmed Wednesday afternoon that the
state's investigation determined that
the Ore be ruled accidental.
"The investigation was unable to
determine a panicular cause for the
fire. Based on the evidence collected
at the lire scene. the lire has been
ruled accidental. " Ginty said.
"The investigation determined that
there were no apparent signs of crim. inal intent. We were able to determine
that the lire did start in the bedroom
area," Ginty said.
Two·yc&lt;tr nld Chrisl&lt;lphcr Gruescr .
died. while hi' 3-yeur old hrulhcr,
Michael. was seriously injured in the
blaze, which broke nut just after K
a.m. Nnv. ~0 at the State Route 124

residence of their parents, Kimberly
and Rodney Gruescr.
Michael could have also perished
in the lire, had it not hccn for the
quick enons of 20-year nld Donald
Shaffer, who ran into the burning
home and pulled Michael to safety.
:Michael has been' transferred from
Cahcii,Huntington Hospital, Huntington, W.Va., In the Cincinnati
Shrincrs Hospital and Burn Center,
where he' is recovering from second
and third degree burns suffered in the
fire.
He 1.\'DS listed in serious condition
this morning, according to a hospital
spokesman. He suiTcred bums to over
25 to 35 percent of his body in the
fire, and also suffered burns to the
throat and lungs.
Kimberly Grueser was also in the
residence at the time of the hla7.c, but
managed to c.,cape through a bedroom window in the rear nf'the tmil-.
cr.
'

Decline in retail sales posted

....

TO BE SOLO AT AUCTION - These dol11,
bllutlfully coetumed by Bend Am women In
the F1rrntr1 Bank Dreee-e-Doll Conteet, will bl

eold at public auction at 1 p.m. Saturday. The
proclldl of thl ..le will go tothe Meige Counly Unltld Fund.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Retail sales fell 0.4 percent in November, ao
om.inous start for the all-imrortant holiday shopping season. General merchandise aod apparel sales, often purchased a' gifts, both rusted declines.
Despite the lackluster start, most retailers arc optimistic about sales
,
· prospects a.&lt; Christma.i ncal'l!.
Anecdotal evidence suggested that sales picked up beginning !Me day after
Thanksgiving. the traditional beginning of the shopping ·sca.•on, which
accounts for as much ._, half of yearly sales and prol!ts.
· Because the season ha.' five fewer days this year many merchants hild .
attempted to get a jump on the holidays. Pre-Thanksgiving sales and aggressive advertising were prevalent early in the m&lt;mth.
The Commerce Department said today that sales totaled a seasonally
adjusted $206.1 billion in November. down from a revised $206.8 billion in
Octoher. The 0.3 percent increase in October was a hit bigger than the 0.2
· .percent initial estimate.
'
Many analysts had expected about a 0.3 percent increa.&lt;e in November.
The data was adjusted to take into account the shorter shoppin'g season,
which a department spokesperson said meant sales were weaker than the figtires showed .

·

~rson suspected ·as cause .of LaWrence County tire dump fire ..

)'rom AP, GNS Reporta
·
·
need to clean up the site. The Ohio EPA has hciin seeking to bring the site
~· . A111ALIA- Some Lawl'!:ncc County ruidents returned to their home• into compliance with tire storage regulations since early 1995.
;WcdiiCidly after beinJ evacuated becau~e of a til!: fire.
·
The roughly one-acre site last contained about 100,000 tires. but htl' held
., • A mctalstora,e buildina:lilled with tim on State Route 7 ncar Athalia as many as 300,000, officials said.
~n! up i.n flames at 10:45 p.m. Tuesday. The blaze was the ,;econd at the . M~ny of the tires burned in an Octo~r 199~ lire that officials believe was
'lite 1n a bnle more than a year.
tntcnuonally set. No one was charged m the hre.
'
Alherlff'1 dilpiU:her said 30 to SO llomes were affected in the area TuesThe Ohio Fire Manhal's Office is investigating the cause of this week's
:(lay nilht- The Rod CrotS opened • clllm:h as a place for people to stay.
fire . Ohio EPA assessed the site Wednesday, but has not concluded what long-~-. OMolala believe an anoni1t1tarted the fire, which happened 01 the MO!fle te~ environmental.im~tofthe smoke and the ':"noffwill hc:.omciuls said.
,).lump thll burned about• year 1110· No anuu have been made. ·
'The fire make&amp; II evtdcnt that we need 10 get 11 cleaned up, said Heather
.:. ·11te piles' fanner owner, David Jackson, remained in jail after heina IICn· • Van0ce51, spokesperson for the state EPA.
·
.
tenc:ed thla week 10 two four-year terms for llleJal dumpine at two of hiM '
Burnina tires c111it mainly paniculate matter. and hydrocarbons.
!i'JI d . . .
.
•
.
,
Parti~ulate millet i.s !Ride up of solid particles of mnttcr ran1ing from mil:ro• · Meinwhtle, olftctala said Wednesday the fire IS further evidence oo tho scoptc to clearty ·v•s•ble \O the hum1111 eye.

&gt;

CHEVIIOlEI • OlDSMOBilE • lEXUS • TOYOTA

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••
•
••
\1 .,'
.,

•'

1
~

J

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s

w

•'

r.

Emissi&lt;&gt;ns can'causc irritation and increase&lt;.~ respiratory distress, partieularly for people with chronic lung disea.&lt;e. a.'llhma and other chronic lung
problems.
'
The Ohio EPA referred the tire pile matter to the attorney general's office
in February t? seck money from the present owner, Brian Fancher, and past
owner, Dcnms Kelley, to clean up the site.
Fancher, of Fancher industries, paid $2S to Kelley, an Aslllo.nd, Ky.,lawyer
to buy the lo.nd after the 1995 fire, Kelley said Wednesday.
Officials estimate it will .:ost abou~ $200,1X_l0 to clean ,%the llile.
·Steve Rine supervisor of the comphance Ulllt.a tha S • - JOtlioiiM'i
Loaan ollicc.' Slid the EPA advl!led Fancher when M IICI
p;piiii)O
that the site was out of compll•- and still conlida lid • . . . ~
Fancher has been workinJ with till SPAID ... • JIIIIIIIIIO•••cry llu•i,_. .

tt ..

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�)'hurldly, ~ 12, 1tll

Commenta

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OHIO

Thur.dey, December12, 1101s
'

'

.The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

-Local News in Brief:-

V\Je;Jthel

FrltiJr, Dee. 13
AccuWCIIher" f - for

The Daily Sentinel Clinton plans cuts in health research
'Lstefislid in 1!J48

By Morton Kondrecke

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
814-992·21!18 • Fu: 992·2157

.2r

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT

Publlaher ·
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
o-r.IMBMS~W ·

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

·ts Sen. Thompson
'future of GOP'?
By DEBORAH MATHIS
Triburljt Medl• Service•
WASHINGTON·· The day after Bill Clinton won re-election, the natio,nal news media staned handicapping AI Gore for the_year 2000 presidential
nee.
Indeed, Gore's prospects for four years hence had become such common
hash for pundits that when Clinton stepped to the microphones for a White
House victory celebration on Nov. 6, I half expected to see "Lame Duck"
superimposed over his familiar face. He was old news.
This week, two national news magazines have put Tennessee Sen. Fred
Thompson in the running, proclaiming him "the future of the Republican
Pany" and "one of !he pany's best prospects for the year 2000." Meanwhile,
there are continuing buzzes about Dan Quayle, Lamar Alexander, and Phil
Gramm, all of whom have a heany hankering for the White House.
On Monday, an Associated Press reporter quoted anonymous Republican officials as saying House Majority Leader Dick Armey of Texas is thinking about a candidacy for president top.
·
However, "any decision to run is more than a year away," the story sa,id.
Oh no. 'Must we wait so long? WHatever shall we do without this criti·
. cal infonnation1 How can we possibly go·on?
. For normal folks, there should be no problem. But, the national media
are different creatures and, for us, a day without intrigue is like a day with ..
out sunshine.
·
Granted, we prefer naturally occurring sensations, but in !heir absence,
we are not beyond stirring the pol. (What do you think tracking polls were
. all about? What were most elei:tion polls about?)
Besides, many journalists live and breathe politics- far too many for
the industry's welfare, truth be told- and coming ofT the '96 binge is giving them the shakes. They need a fix, a rush.
Already. Even though the voting machines aren't even cold yet.
Consequently, barely a month after the Big One, political junkies are not
relishing and rehearsing it but have turned their imaginations to the Next
One. With chills zipping up and down their spines, no do~bt. .
lf only they could keep these obsessions to themselves for a while at least.
But, no. Talking and writing about it brings it to life, I suppose, so that'~
what they dO.
You know what they say. Any port in a storm. Beggars can't be choosers.
Keep hope alive.
I understand what's going on here':'l'know how the story-ginning business works.
.
But, to quote Ross Perot, who haS yet to be named a 2000contender, "Isn't
it sad?" Isn't it pathetic that so many prominent news people and organizations are no longer able to appreciate the here and now? No longer satisfied with an ordinary day? No longer able to wait and sec what happens.for
anything? Instead, they·have to have some of the stuff everyday and parade
their intoxications for all the world to sec?
·
And we wonder why people are cynical or turned off.
Why should they care when, by the time a. thing actually happens, it's
· already been predicted, spun, analyzed, rebutted, and is on the Internet.
· Who, pray tell, can get all excited about anything when everything is an
ant.i-climax and real time lags so far behind speculation that life seems like
arepeat.
,
. .
I'm sure the political futures markctts useful, even entcrtammg to someone, but my family and I have decided we don't care who is thinking ahout
running for president in the year 2000.
Nor.do we care who almost ran, should have run, or wishes he or she
had run in 1996.
Nor do we plan to cllre anytime soon.
Truck that,,you pointy headed obsessionists.
Write Deborah Mathis, Tribune Media Servites, 435 N. Michigan
Aveaue, Suite 1500, Chicago, 10. 60611.

Today i.n history
By The Aaaocillted Preaa

' •,

·

Today it seems almost a pathetic
joke that disabled actor Christopher
Reeve appealed at the Democratic
convention last summer for a major
increase in medical research funding.
As matters stand, the Clinton administration plans to cut it.
Administration officials say that
the Office of Management and Budget is urging a $200 million reduction
in fundjng for the National Institutes
of Health, although this judgment is
being appealed.
Without intervention from President Clinton or Vice President· AI
Gore, the final administration budget
figure coming out in February will
show little or no increase above the
NIH's present budget of $12.7 bil- ,.
lion.·
Even the Cabinet agency that
includes NIH, the Department of
Heallh and Human Services, originally asked for just $12.6 billion.
After OMB cut even deeper, I'IHS is
asking that last year's $12.7 billion be
restored -- but not increased.
After inflation, this would still
represent a 3.5 percent cut.
Apprised of the administration's

plans, Republican Rep. John Porter,
llf., NIH's great defender on the
House Appropriations Committee,
declared them "not acceptable:"

Morton Kondraclce
As he has in the past, Porter
undoubtedly will ·try to boost health
research funding by about 6 percent
next year, but it's a sad commentary
thai Democrats, who cheered former
"Superman" star Reeve 's speech,
now are turning their backs on his
cause.
Instead. Clinton, Gore. and Congress oughi to work together lo ereate a Health Research Trust Fund,
doubling the size of NIH's budget. It .
will save billions in the long run -not to mention saving countless lives.
It would also give the administnilion something "big" to stand for in
Clinton's second term, transcending
the midget-sized "incremental" programs that Clinton touted during the
campaign.
Paying for a major health research
initiative would require a revenue
source. Last year, Sens. Mark Hat-

field, R-Ore., and Tom Harkin, DIowa, recommended an appropriate,
if controversial one: a tobacco tax,
which could raise roughly $1 billion
a year per dime of tax .,
.
According to Harkm advosers, a
Sl tax on each pack of cigarettes
could raise $84 billion in revenue
over sevenyears. paying not only for
the health lnl~t fund, but Clinton's
plan to guarantee medical care to
poor children with funds left over for
deficit reductiO...
Studies show that increasing
tobacco taxes discourages smoking,
so that the proposal could savo lives
on its own .. perhaps as many as I
million if the tax were $1 a pack.
Clinton already is at war witb Big
Tobacco, so another battle would be
ent,irely appropriate. Paying 'for '
,health care could even he consodercd
a "user fee" for tobacco companies
and smokers.
A research' for-tobacco link ought
to appeal particularly to Vice President Gore, who has hcen the administration's key advocate of high-tech
solutions to the nation 's problems.
Additionally, at the Democratic
convention fast summer. Gore elo-

Edith M. McCullough

quently recalled hissister'sagoni~iog
death from lung cancer and latior
acknowledged that for years he h~
been remiss, ~ a Tennessee politician, in not resisting the tobacco lobby.
.
If the administration decides th'at
tobacco taxes represent too toug~ a
fight .. 'though they've been discussed as a source for .Ciipton 's children 's health proposal -- there are
alternatives to fill the research fuOd,
including a $1 tax on health insura.C.
premiums.
:
The main .reason for backing; a
health researcf1 initiative.is that it i 'll
save fives, but it will also help cut t
cost of health care · in America y
~eeping people working -- and pay- ·
· ing taxes -- instead of ill and dependent ';' · ·
··
'
Ac~ord(ng to Hatf!,eld, $1 spent on
medical research produces $13' in
long-term savings. AI a hearing last
summer. hio credile&lt;l strolie-prevention research costing $4.6 million
with preventing up to 30,000 strokes
per year and saving $200 million in
medical bills.
·
·~
Breast cancer research. one of tl)e
Clinton administratio~ 's · o~~
research priori'ties --:atorig with AIDS
research -- hBs increased women's
five -year survival rate from 3'0 pefl
cent to 72 percent, Hatfield said.
If the merits aren 't enough reasoil';
perhaps Republicans could give i(18
administration a political incentive t'rt
do right by medical research. They
could try to steal the issue. Porter
already is a hero.
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R·
Ga., is halfway there. He is proposd
·ing a major research push against di.r.:
hctes, believing that better treatmeoll
would lead to significant savings for
Medicare.
~~
He's right, of course, but that prin:;
ciple applies to many diseases aniV
disabilities: stroke, spinal-cord injury,!
Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's (the
cause I have worked lo promote fund."
ing for), and CaOCer.
' N .
Gingrich's stepfather just died o.J:
l~g 'ancer. There's a crusade to:f&gt;l
led here. If AI Gore won't lead it, peri
haps Newt Gingrich will. Or t~ey
co.uld even do it tog~thcr.
. 11 '-1
(Morton Kondracke is execu1
tive editor of R,ofl Call, the news.'
paper of Capitol Hill.)
'

.

..,.
...

Booting up.'a freedom p·ollcy
'

sen WeHenberg
In downtown Washington there is

' .!1

.

By

a brand-new office where the proprietors finally figured out how to get a
computer screen )o properly display
the characters of the Tibetan alphabet
It may be aiiTibetari to you, but per·
hap~ there is an onJscrrn message
there that can help sharpen the fli ~ k­
cring image of American foreign pol·
icy.
On the global scene, America is in
a remarkable and weird position.
Never in history has tb!:rc hccn a
nation so innuential. We are "No. I"
economically. militarily, gco-politi·
cally, ideologically, politically, culturally, linguistically, demographically, scientifically. educationally and
technologically. We a5-callcd, quite
correctly, " the workrs only surerpower. "
We ' re No. I -- S&lt;i what'&gt; What can
we do with all,that innucnce·&gt; In the- ·
ory. we w•nt to promote and defend
our Views and values around the
world. We believe in them . A world
based on political and economic liberty cnh'\nces our security and wellbeing. Foreig~ policy thinkers are atwitter with ideas that would share a
"post-Cold War" strategy,
The action is now with President
Clinton. He has chosen Madeleine
Albright a smart, tough lady, a
Democra\ and a democrat. as his secretary of State-designate..But toward
what end'!
'
Perhaps while we'rc 'all planning
how to cross that bridge to the next
century (always a healthy exercise),
w~ might think about wrapping up
lhc unfinished business of this one. ·
Folks, the Cold War may be over,

iJ !"

but there are still lots of powerful
commun·ists around, threatening
world peace and American security.
China is the world's.most populous

Ben Wattenberg
nation. It is a major nuclear power,
and building its military rapidly. It
supplies arms to renegade states. II
scares the hell out of ils neighbors.
The Chinese government is intensifying its crack-down on human
rights, all the while flipping the hird
to what is amusingly called the co•ort
of world public opinion.
If there is to be another superpower in the next century, it will
prohably be China. For the moment.
China is doing very well economi cally. But if h gets richer. and
stronger. without beO&lt;&gt;ming more
free -- the next century may well he
as turbulent 3$ this one, or more so.
We have tried to link trade with
some advance in Chinese political
liberty. China told us what we could
do with that. President Clinton folded a tough hand. There arc American
jo~s Iinked to the China trade. There
is a potential market there of 1.2 billion reoplc. The case is made that
Chinas booming economy. growing ·
within a market framework, will
lead toward democratic evolution.
May he. But the Nazis had a market,
economy so strong it lllmost allowed
,them to destroy the world in the early 1940s.
We didn 't win the Cold War just
because we had military power and
alliances. There was a war of ideas
going on. Part of the message came
from the outside, telling those trapped

Today is Thursday, Dec. 12, the 347th day of 1996. There arc 19 days
left in the year.
Today.' s Highlight in History:
On Dec. ·12, 1917. Father Edward Flanagan founded Boys Town outside
Omaha. Neb.
On this date:
In 1787. Pennsylvania became the second state to ratify the U.S. Conslitutlon.
.
.
'
,
In IK70,Joseph H. Rainey ofSouth.Carolina ~came the lirsi black lawmaker sworn into the U.S. tlousc of Representatives.
In 1913, authorities in Florence. Italy. announced that the "Mona Lisa,"
stolen from the Louvre Museum in Paris in 1911. had been recovered.
In 1925, the first motel- the Motel Inn ..i1. oi'Cned in San Luis Obi•ro.
Calif.
·
In 1937, Japanese aircraft sank the U.S. g~n.boat Panay on China's Yangt&gt;.e
River. (Japan apologi7.cd. and paid $2.2 molhon on rcpar:mons.)
, .
In I946. 50 years ago, a United Nations com monee voted to accept a sox- ,
block tract of Manhattan real catam offered a.• a gift hy John D. Rockefeller
Jr. to be !he site of the U.N.'s headquarters.
.
In 1947, the United Mine Workers union withdrew from the Amcncan
By TONY SNOW
unearned afnuencc. /since Peterson
Federation of Labor.
Creators Syndicate
and Grossberg hailifom well-to-do
In 1963, Kenya gained it~ independence from Bntain: ,
.
' WASHINGTON .. Just as the lat- households. Maybe, but there 's a
In 1975, SnraJanc Moe; pleaded guilty to a charge oftryong to koll Pres- est 0). Simpscln trial degenerates more compelling fealur~ of the 1=aper:
ident Gerald Ford 'in San Prancillco the previous September.
.
into pure tedium, along ~omcs anoth· · The duo could have iOtten away with
In 1985, 248 American soldiers and eiPI crew members were krlled when er case to slake Americans' thirst for their scheme if they only had acted 24
an Arrow Air charter crashed after takeoff from Gander, Newfoundland.
the macabre.
hours earlier.
.
Ten years ago: Addressing a bipartisan audience of newly eleelcd state
Authorities in Wilmington, De't.,
Recall the circumstances: Two
legislators. Presideno Ronald Reagan vowed not to lei the controversy o~cr will seek the death penalty in the college freshmen spawned a love
the Iran-Contra affair prevent him from "getting on with the business _of gov- upcoming murder trials of Brian C. child. They didn't know what to do.
erning."
· ·
Peterson Jr. and Amy Grossberg. The They thought about telling their parFive years ago:. Russian Prc~ident Doria Yeltsin won !~slide approval two 18-year-old lovers delivered a · ents, but kept pulling il ofT.·perhaps
in the Russran lcgoslature for hos new commonwealth. while SoVJct Pre~o­ healthy baby boy in a Newark, N.J., in lhe impossible hot:te tl1e "condident Mikhail S. GortJachev edged closer to resigninj, aeyinJ, "The maon hotel room jusCJ!efore Thanksgiving, tion" would just JO away.
work of my fife is done."
, .
then wrapped tbe 6-pound; 2-ounce
As they fretted about their futures,
. One year ago: By only three votes, the Senate killed a conS!IIIItJonal \)Ike in pla!!\c and hurled him into a liii'IJI melted away llftd nat!B'e WSCrt·
,amendment giving.Congress atlthority to outlaw1lag buming and other forms •Mpster. Tile newborn' died of skull cd ftself. Amy 'Went Into iabQt, and
of desecration against Old Glory. Two French airmen shot down ov,er Oosnoa fmctures anti brairr injuries.
tlcr bc~u~orted .trund- a motel.
arrived horne after nearly four months as captives of the Bosnian Serbs. .
Pundits say the alleged crime
Despite the extraordinary exertion
Today's Birthdays: Prank Sinllra is 81. Jan singer Joe Williams .is, 78. symbolizes the corruption of allll pain, the ~wo stiliggled to remain ·

inside how a free world worked, But for North Korea, · Vietnam. La&lt;lh~
part of the idcologicallircpowcr was Cambodia and Myanmar' (Burma}•
aimed at what was going on inside You should he pleased to hear that the
the communist countries. For four Chinese arc not pleased about it. , ·.J
decades Radio Free Eurore (RFE)
The Chinese know all ahout thq,
and Radio Liberty (RL)· broadcast ncvt offices in Washington, contain,&lt;;
into the Soviet Union and its satel- ing rows of still unused cubicles an&lt;J,.
lite~ . This wa.' "surrogate" broad- radio studios. The place is almost
casting, telling listeners in unfree empty, but nol quite. A lew America~~
countries what their· news would editors and executives have alread~~
sou~d like if they had a free press.
moved in. A few · more men an&lt;i.'i
I served as vice chairman of the women of Asian countenance arc in,
Board of RFEIRL during lhc 1980s. place, tapping away at thcii wo'lh;
We knew the broadcasts were very processors. Many more arc coming.
useful, and so testified to the Con- There is Tibetan on a compute\,:
grcss. But not until the Cold War end- screen. The lettering is not yet on th!!;!
ed did we understand ·how truly door.but it will be there soon, in En~­
innuential the Radios were. We then Iish, reading "Radio Free Asia."
heard it directly from Loch Walesa,
, In my years in and out of this I
Vaclav Havel, Andrei · Snkharov; debate I have learned to stiOe my ten-;
Natan Scharonsky and the other dis - dcncy 10 scream when it is said, "Yes,'
sident heroes of our time.
butlhc Cold War is over," and "Yes, l .
It was tdugh broadcasting. beam- bu. t the situation. is diiTcrent.'' Stip~: ~~
ing shortwave signals around jam- latcd~-:
:
~ -~
ming. There were no nllicial rcpnrtcrs
But Asia is the commercially
i1n the spot. Yet, through intensive s4rging area of the world. It has mmc
research and clandestine sources. than 60 rerccnt of the world's popui I
nc'l's came . in and went out. The Iat inn. It is the oniy area where COfll;,
hroadcasts were not propaganda. munist governments still rule. threat; :
They were worse .. they told the en their neighbors, threaten global •
truth, almost -always calmly. and stphility and lcarthalthc truth will set
&lt;&gt;ITercd a range nf opinions. F'rom their reople ircc. We ought 10 try to
Czechoslovakia to Siberia, the word change that, over time, gently, as
went out The walls fell.
vigorous player in the global conteii
In the early 1990s I was a mcm- ' for ideas. As a government, America t
ber of two government commissions hasn't paid enough attention to th~l :
chaired by John Hughes. which rc.:. recently. Mr. President: 1)-ia~omc S~:. :
ommended the establishment ol' sUr- , ,retary-deStgnate, n's urllc-to rebopt;~ 1
.rogate ~rnadcasting in Asia.
Ben Wattenbef8, a seniorfellew•
Now, alter years of bureaucratic at the American Enterprise Insth
wrangling. Asian· surrogate b11iad· tute,ls the author of "Values Mat,
casting is in new quarters and on the ter Mos!'' and is the host of the l
air in Mandarin Chinese and Tibetan. weekly public television prograll); :
with programming scheduled soon "Think Tank."
.,, :

J

I

a

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Americans' thirst for the abhormal .

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quiet so as not to alarm other guests
or the hotel managemenL Unfortu·
nately, the huby didn't undcmand the
rules. He streamed and demanded
· attention. Th.c teens panicked -- and
their nameless son died.
Note the key features o( this
alleaed crime: An "unwanted prcgnancy," youthful anxiety l'!d the
decision to put their immedi~te needs
before the child's right to life.
Now, consider a different-scenario.
Suppose the two hid decided the
~ay before to find a dottor who
,l,ould perform a late•lerm abotlion ,
- co*"inJthe child's held tlirough !he:
birth carllr~evacuatins the bnin,
he fore delivering a corpse.
..
All the key conditions of the mur- '
der are present in thi~ ~cond case ..
,J

' ii

trepidation, sellishness and a desire:~;
kill the baby. The only difference is :
that partial-birth abortion is legal .• ~[
Moreover., il remains les;ai• 1
becausc 'Pi'csidilrirt:llinton wanted t r
preserve ·the rilhls of rouou~n~a ::'ij;l
like Amy ttl'' tenninate J
well i'n(o thc ninth montn.
a bail cin the.procedure ostensibly
protect lhd health"of pOicntial

1

Edith Murl Spence McCullough of Toledo. formerly of Meigs County. died
Thursday, Dec. 5, 1996 at the St. Luke Hospital in Toledo.
Born in Pomeroy on Sept. 19, 1901, she was the daughter of the late Herman E. and Addie Maud Spence. She was retired trom Owens-Illinois. and
was a member of the 0-1 Retirees Club and the Christian F'ellowshop of the
Toledo South Church.
'
. ·.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Vanan McCullough: and
a brother, Floyd "Bud" Spence.
,
She is survived by a niece, Carol Stss&lt;,ln of Pomeroy; and by a stepdaughter, a step-granddaughter and two step-gran~sons.
.
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Saturday on .the Chester Cemetery,
Chester. Memorial gifts may be made to the Chnsuan Fellow ~hop of T~le­
do South, 6711 Pilliod Road , Holland, Ohio. or to another chanty of chooce.

,,,,,

• IColum~sl40• I

Minor flooding noted
Creek banks were full after a
heavy overnight rain dumped
between two and three inches of rain
in sections of Meigs County Wednesday morning.
Minor nooding was reported in
the Dexter and Carpenter area, while
high water was also reponed in the
Burlingham area. As of II a.m ..
nooding had not forced a closure of
U.S. 33 at Burlingham, according to
Bob Dyer, Meigs County Emergency
Services director. ·

Deer destroyed
Meigs County sheritfs deputies
investigated a · deer/car accident
Wednesday evening ncar Rock springs, according to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
According to report s, Rebecca
Skatlag party planned
Camp 10900 will have its annua1 Edwards, Long Bottom , was lravelA family roller-skating Christmas family Christmas pany Saturday, 4 to ing west on State Route 7 in her 1993
PartY will be held Dec. 19, 7to 9:30 6 p.m. at th~ ·Lion's Club hall in Ford Thunderbird and · struck two
p.m. at the Chester Skate· A· Way. Coolville. Santa will come, food will deer tbat came fmm the left. One deer
There will he no charge to get in and go out 'for the needy and awards will , was injured and had to be destroyed.
no age limits. Door prizes · will be be presented to the 25 and 50 year while another deerran away from the
awarded for the best Christmas col- members.
scene.
ors worn, and the best spirit of
Damage to the vehicle was listed
Christmas costume. The event is Clinic aimounced
as
moderate
to the front of the vehi The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
being sponsored by the Meigs Area
cle.
Holiness Association, the Meigs Min- Club will have its blood pressure
isterial Association and the Middle- clinic at the townho~sc Tuesday, I0 Purse reported stolen
a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Following that, the
port Ministerial Association.
The Meigs County Sheriffs
annual Christmas dinner, gift Department is still investigating the
exchange and meeting will be held. theft of a purse containing a large
Examination slated
The pre-entrance examination for
the Washington State Community Program planned
College Practical Nursing Education
The Mount Union Baptist Church
Program ,will be given 111onday, Jan. will have ils annual Christmas pro13 at I2:30p.m. at Washington State gram Dec. 22. 6:30p.m . Pastor Joe
Community College. There is a $24 N. Sayre invites the public.
CL VELAND (AP) :.._ There
' fee payable before administration of
•
were no tickets sold with all si• numthe examination. To make arrange· Children's program
bers
drawn iri Wednesday night's
ments to take the test, call 374-87-J.Ii
The children's Christmas program
Super
Lotto drawing, which had an
or · register at the Practical Nursin~ auhe First Baptist Church of Racone
$8
million
jackpot, so the jackpot for
office at the college. A high school woll be held at 7 p.m Sunday.
Saturday's
drawing will be $12 mildiploma or GED equivalency are
lion, the Ohio Lottery said.
CouncU to meet
required to take the test.
Sales for the Super Lotto game
Racine Village Council will meet
totale~
$2 ,794,412. Kicker sales
in recessed session Monday at7 p.m.
Grange to meet
totaled
$475,247.
Racine Grange will meet in regu- at Star Mill Park.
There were 52 Super Lotto tickets
lar session, 7 p.m. Thursday. Mem. with five of the numbers
bers to take fruit and canned goods. Trustees set session
Letart Township Trustees will
m!'l'rmmmmltt!J
meet 6 p.m. Monday at the office
Modern Woodmen party
Modem Woodmen of America ouilding.
ROMEO AND JULIET'""

Meigs announcements

W.VA.

T-stonns Rain

'"

As rainfall ends, colder

temperatures to be felt
'
ay_
The Aaeocleted Preaa

The National Weather Service
end this
western
Qhio, but will last toward midnight
f!lr· northern and eastern parts of the
state.
As the rains die down in the east,
cloud cover over the southwest will
begin to decrease. Temperatures by
morning will be in the mid to upper
~a):s rain probably will
~vening in southern and

ws.
,. Skies will be panfy cloudy Friday

· around Cincinnati and cloudy around
Cleveland. Skies will range from
qfoudy to mostly cloudy elsewhere.
flighs will be between 40 and 45.
" Heavy rains that deluged the
nprthem and eastern parts of the state
Wednesday caused many rivers to run

near flood stages this morning, caus. ing a flood watch to ~ posted in
northeast Ohio.
·
More moder:ite to heavy rain was
moving into Ohio from the southwest
at S a.m.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 64 degrees in 1949. The
record low temperature was 2 degrees
below zero in I962.
Sunset will he at5:07 p.m. Sunrise
Priday will be at 7:45 a.mc
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Evening . rniil likely
nonheast with jusl a chance of a
shower after midnight. A chance of a
shower early elscwherc ... Except
extreme
southwcst...Otherwise
decreasing 'Clouds southwest half.

, I

Dolls help the needy
·~

the dolls will go into that fund and
benefit those groups.
The talents of Bend Area women
are well displayed in the colorful and
"
creative costuming of the dolls. Many
have spent weeks making th~ outfits
and it cenainfy shows in the design
and workmanship in both dress-up
· Minor injuries were reponed in a and casual attire.
two-car accident Wednesday on State
Some have hats and handbags,
Route l at the intersection with Hob- _ other umbrellas, and many coordoson Drive, according to the Gallia- nated '8Cccssorics. A variety of hair
Meigs Post of the State Highway ' styles arc featured on the dolls to COO·
P'atrol.
form with their costume style. The
" Drivers Roy W. Brinker III, 24, dolls .arc dressed m satm and lace.
Letart, W.Va.;·and Jeffrey A. Bole, cahco and cotton, nan~ I and noral~.
4'2; 38200 Horner Hill Road, There are numerous brode dolls. ~aoPomeroy, were not treated at the lored · outftts, hohday-th~med coss~ene. the patrol reported. .
tumes, plarclothe~ and ~Jamas.
· Troopers said Brinker was
They woll fl'~am on dos~lay m the
a!\cmpting·to tum left onto SR 7 from bank lobby untol the auctoon takes
Hobson Drive at 12:20 p.m. He. place Saturday afternoon.
~lied' into the path of Bole's north·
b\'und car and collided, according to
lfic rcpon.
· Both cars were severely damaged
Roger Holman was incorrectly
in' the crash and Brinker was cited for identified as Kenny Wiggins ·in a pho-·
fllilure to yield.
to on page one of Wednesday's Daily Sentinel. Holman is in chaf!e of
rccy~ling operations in tlic Meigs
·The Daily Sentinel County
Recycling and Litter Prevention
Office
which is directed by
(USPU13-960) ~
Wiggins. The Daily Sentinel apoloPublilbed every afrernoo•. Monday throuJh
gi7.cs for the error:
JW;day. Ill Coun St., Pomeroy. Ohio. by lhe

various non-profit organizations in
tlte ·county. Proceeds from the ~ale of

Accident causes
ml'nor ··nJ'uries .

Correction

. -.

Ohio Valley Publi-hii1J CompanyiOe~neu Co.,
Ohio 4l76'1. 1'11. 992-2! l6. Second

Po......,..

ulw;! poMDae paid ol

Pomeroy. Ohio.

1Mtmbrr: The A!'MX:illted Prtu. and the Ohio

PiewAPOPtl' 1\SIIOI."ialion.
J'dSTMASTIR: Seftd Dddm1 romction5 lo
Ill Coun S1.• Pomeroy.

tbt Daily Sentinel.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...................40 1/4
Altzo·........................................66
A•hlend 011 .......................44 318

Qllio 4516'1.

ATioT .................................38 118

'' •

9UISCRIP110N RATES
IJ C.rritr or Molor ,._,

Bob Ev..,• ........................12 112
Borg-Werner .....................38 518

(loc Monoh ................................................ $1.10

Ch8mplon................................22

t •·

Blink One ..........................43 314

Qnc wm .................................................. $2.00

o..v............................ ,..,, ................. $104.00
'-. '

SINGLE COPY PRICI!

o\iu1 ................................................... ~5 c....
SubKribcP not de&amp;iringto pay ~ canief may
remit In Pd¥a~KC direct to The Dally Seminel
db a three, Nx « 12 month bl~l1. OHit will be
..... caoriereach week.

Na aubKTipcion

by

mail permitted in

wtttrt home c.ner ~~tr¥1ce IR availlblc.

Bre\11

.

~~·~ reteTW~ -he riJht to DdjiMt mlc:$ durint lhe ~pllon period. SubKripl~ '*
cftanael may be impkmetftd by chanJI"' lhc
...... of the IUbKription.
'

MAIL SUISCRIPTIONS

t-Molp~

'
27:10

~=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~J:il

;2 -

........ ,........... ,,, ,. ........................ $105.!16
RIIH-Molp~

IJ -.s..... ,......................:................... $29.~
26 ...................................... :......... 156.~
:12 - . ......... ;,....,••••,.....•.••.•.•.......•.••... SI09.

Ch111111fng Shops ..............&amp; 511&amp;
CitY Holdlng ....................231/1&amp;
F.a.r.t Mogul ...................22 314
QanMtt ........ ,....................72 112
Goodyear .................................50

K..,.,ert ...............,...............10 718

l.end8 End .........................27 112

Wednesday's GPLA results
ciation:

Total head: 238.
HOGS -· 13. Prices. $11owcr
than last Wednesday's auction.
Butcher ·hogs, all weights, $25 ;
sows; $49.50; boars, $39-$40.50;
Feeder pigs. $36-50.
CATTLE -220: Steers .. $5 and
lower; heifers, $5 and lower: choice,
$66-70; heifers, $50-60; good, $5063; holstein . $60.

_._,._

Worthlngton ......................19 314
Stock 11iporta ar• tha 10:30
1.m. quat•• provf!IMI by Allw•t
·of GIHipolfa.

1

' COWS • Demand and price
!rend. $21owcr; utility. $22-24; Slan·
dard, $28-34: commercial, $15-20;
bulls. hutchcrs. $35-42 .
No sale Christmas Day. there will
be a sale on New Year's.Day.

lfSl

:xi~~:::..
liil...

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
PATRICK STEWART tN

STAR TREK: RRST

CONTACT"'"
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446-0923 .

(X:WIING SOOIU '81UVIS &amp; 8U1'TwHU.O
,
DO MBRlCA'

ClFT CE,TIPtCATBB

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service recorded eight
calfs for assistance Wednesday,
including three transfer calls. Units
responding included:
POMEROY
II: 18 a.m., Mulberry Avenue,
Kayla Grover, Holzer Medical Center;
9:03p.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Betty Binnedyke, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
MIDDLEPORT '
12:18 p.m., State Route 7, ,auto
accident, r,re department and squad.
Jeff Bole and Roy Brinker. refused
treatment.
RUTLAND
I :3.,6 a.m.. Kingsbury Avenue,.
Robert Mahr. lreatcd at the scene.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions
Woodrow Hall, Racine.
Wednesday discharges- Bonnie
Walker, Racine.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Dec. 11 - Amhcr
Montgomery. Doris Skaggs. M&lt;S.
.Thurman Smith and daughter. Torrey
Wolfe. Mrs. Thoma.' Perkins and son,
John Casey,
Birth - 'Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Porter. daughter, Racine.
(Published
with permission)
·
.'
.
.

c-f'his ¥ett'i ¥ou ctth leave those
.
'v'l)epaztmeht Stoze Cualt Catrb at-.
home kJki!h ¥ou .shop this cflolid.tt¥ &lt;:)t•a9&lt;1·1t~
With ¥ou'l ~azmezs Ba~tk cflolidtt¥ ~~""
¥OU kJOh't be sho'lt ~O'l J{ofi.J.tt¥ e~
1.1.ou
am 6o'l'lokJ 6etkJtett $1,000
M~"' . ' 1/i'
;r
.
"'N""
$3,000 on a tJtJo ¥ea'lloa~t. With ot&lt;'l
speci4lloan Mte we ~~Jill help i:lea'l
bkd.7et ~o'l mo'le J{olidll¥ Chee'l.

t'\•

J{un¥! 'this Special cflolid.tt¥ /!,oa.n
O#e'l JtJoh't la.st lon7.
i

POMEROY
Nur Pomeroy-MaMn Bridge

992·2588
VINTON
Gallle County Dlapley Yard
155 Main St.

.388-8803

Yotlr BankfnJi#....
FB Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

en.

•211 'MISt Second Sheet

Th11· ~ noble,
know the law. Ctium h...

· "ht:alth" f!1
ihlt
11\'tlytlltllt tton1
clition~· to mild
.. sucli
• younaster's- rei, that
' would klll hor ir they 'knew
prc:anant.

,,

IO~&gt;~UU!SU

"'~?~~.\!.'"~

Meigs EMS runs

.................................64

RD-Stlell ..........................165 314
Shoney"• .............................? 511
SW8enk ....~ ...................... 9111
Wend¥'1 ............................19314

-A TERRIFIC MOVIE!.

II MICI!l ll

to·f!2 million

Umlted ..............:...............18 518
Ohio Valley Bltnk ..............35 314
One Valley .........................37 314
Peoplell .............................26 1/4
~Jrem Flnl ........................... 12 314
Roc~l

'

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• ·~~~
VIUfUfll'fA~OIIUTfOIKI!INI;I
, ·t going
JackPo

Auction results from Wednesday"s
Gallipolis Producers Livestock Asso-

(Continued from Page 1)

sum of money from a Portland area
residence.
According to reports, Linda
Teaford, Barringer Ridge Road,
reported that she left her residence at
5:45 p.ni. Wednesday and had left her
purse at the residence . Shortly after
7 p.m., Barringer's father-m-law
called and advised that a neoghbor
had found her purse lying in the road·
way on Barringer Ridge Road.
The purse was recovered approximately one mile from the residence.
Authorities are still trying to determine how the purse was removed
from the residence. Reportedly, a
1994 or 1995 Chevy King Cab pick·
up was seen in the vicinity where the
purse was found.
.
Anyone with information on thos
case is asked to contact the Meigs
County Sheriffs Department at 9923371.

Member F.O.I.C.

o12120 Stole P'oAe 1
PO b339

104 Upper RWeJ Rood

PO Bot026
Pamer~ . OOI61tR

. _ , ...., ()&lt; 45183

6141992·2136

6IA/1Jt7.JI61

0141446-220{)
· ()&lt; ""''
IJANI(

--G:t

LOIIM auOtf!Ct to erecht approval Aile oflochvo at of 11126196 and aro sub)8CIIO change APR shOwn 1" based one ?&lt;l·ri'IOI11h loan ot $!:1.000 i'llitl'l a
$&lt;10 prfpaid t!Mnce cl'largo 2.. monthly payments of 1139.91 totallinance chlr!lll of SJ57 84 er.d tOI&amp;I peymenl$ ot $3.~! fJ.4 The smpllllfllfU&amp;st
rei&amp; Ia flUid Ia lhe tmm ol the _lOan Current Farmers Banllloans are 001 e4igible Other ratn and 1erms 11m avallabkl

\

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Sports

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.~ Wuerffel, ·Davis, Pace &amp; Curtis lauded
•

.;!4 Jt{lll~ :ta

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·-'**""'·"*·'.;:a, If

By RICHARD

'I ROSENBLATT
NEW YORK (AP) -After No.
3 Florida won the SEC champi·
I i onship last week, Danny Wuerffel
: • went looking for someone to wrap
; I his anns around.
!,., '
"The greatest time is when you
~- come together as a team and you can
~ . just hug each other. And for us, that
was after the Alabama game," the
Gators' quarterback said earlier this
week when be was awarded two
scholarships by the National Football
Foundation and College ~all of
• Fame.
"That's what it's all about. That's
- the fun of it. Not a lot of people can
experience !hat.·:
Wuerffel, who might get a chance
i
to hug the Reisman Trophy on Sal·
'::. unlay, has some new teammates to
;: hug. On Wednesday, Wuerffel made
The Associated Press all-America
: team.
·
The most efficient passer in
; ·· NCAA history was joined by a pair
.-,?'., of 2,000-yard runners - Iowa
?:J State's Troy Davis and Te~as Tech's
;; Byron Hanspard, along with Florida
:· · State defensive ends Peter Boulware
.. ~ and Reinard Wilson.
.
Wuertfel directed the third-ranked
;·~ Gators to a fourth straight SEC tide
~·.; and a rematch against No. I Florida
~; State in the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 2.
:::.; The senior completed 207 of 360
~: passes for 3,625 yards and led the
: , nation with 39 touchdown passes.
,; His passing efficiency rating of
;;· 163.6 topped the previous mark of
z~ 162.7 set by BYU's 1)' Detmer.
~'
Davis was the nation's top rush:::· er with 2,185 yards as he became the
iq first player in JliCAA history to run
::-; for 2,00Q·plus yards in '1"0 seasons.
::.~ He w~ second in scoring with 21
::· touchdowns.
Hanspard was right behind with
' 2,084 yards and 14 touchdowns,
:'"I
marking the first time two players
~ ' amassed 2,000 yaJjls in the same sea-

f'-i

- son.
Boulware and Wilson spearbead"' ed the Seminoles' third-ranked
;_. defense, which allowed 229.5 yards
1 per game. Boulware set a school
record with 19 sacks, while Wilson
I had 13 sacks lind a team-leading 101
• tackles. Boulware also blocked two
;I pu~ts. recovered three fumbles and
rl caused four others.
'
Five schools - Florida State,
• Florida, Arizona State, Colorado and
Michigan - each placed twO play' ers on the AP team.
• Along with Wuerffel, the Gators
~l had wide receiver Reidel Anthony,
! while the No. 2 Sun Devils had
~: offensive lineman.Juan Roque and
:• linebacker Derrick Rodgers.
' .Michigan had linebacker Jarrett
J Irons and d~fensive back Charles
Woodson, while Colorado had offenl l sive lineman Chris Naeole and line•' backer Matt Russell.
'
, Anthony caught 72 passes for
' I ,293 yards and a school-record l 8
touchdowns. The other wide receiver is Wyoming's Marcus Harris,
who had 13 touchdown catches and
set school ·records with 109 receptions for I ,650 yards. Harris also is
the NGAA's career leading receiver
with 4,518 yards.
Pat Fitzgerald of Texas is the tight
~ end, with a school-record 38 catch• es for 545 ·yards.
The all-purpose player is Kevin
Faulk of LSU, Faulk, one of three
sophomores on the team, averaged
191.3 yards per game. He had l ,282
yards rushing, 134 yards .receiving,
..: 375 yards on 24 punt returns, 313
·. yards on 14 kick returns and 14
;_ touchdowns.
Joining Naeole and Roque on the
. offensive line arc Orlando Pace of
; Ohio State and Benji Olson of Wash~ ington. K.C. Jone~ of Miami is th~
...' center.
•
Completing tile offense is North
) Carolina State kicker Marc Priman~ ti: He was perfect this season- 20; o(-20 on field goals and 24-of-24 on
; e~tra points.
.
Davis and Pace, who had 74 pan, cake blocks, are two of four repeaters
~ from last year's team. Northwestern
~ linebacker Pat Fitzgerald and Kansas
~ State defensive back Chris Canty are
· the others.
: On defense, the line is filled out ·
~ by Nebraska's Grant Wistrom, who
~ anchored the Cornhuskers' fonnida·
• ble defense. He had 75 tackles- 20
i for losses- alo.ng with 9 1/2 sacks,
~ two blocked kicks and an intercep:~ tion.

·
"
Rodgers had 12 sacks, forced four
fumbles and recovered a fumble.
. 'The other linebacker is Canute ,
l c~nis of West Virginia. Curtis led
: the Big East with 15 1/2 sacks and
. also had three fumble recoveries for
the Mountaineers' top-ranked
defense.
.
Fitzgerald led Northwestern wath
114 tackles, including a career-best
19 again51 Michiaan. He ~}so broke
, up eight passes and had mne tllckles.

i

for losses.
Irons tied for the team lead with
99 tackles, including eight for losses, three sacks and a fumble recovery. Russell was t~e Buffaloes' second leading tackler with 137 stops,
including 13 for losses and three
sacks. He also recovered three fum bles and one interception.
The secondary features freshman
Dre' Bly of North Carolina, Kevin
Jackson of Alabama, Canty and
Woodson.
Bly, just the fifth freshman to
make the AP team, led the nation
with II interceptions for North Carolina's second-rated defense.
Jackson was the nation's third
leading interceptor with seven,
including a 44-yard return for a
touchdown against Vanderbilt. Canty
tied for the Big 12 lead with five
interceptions and also broke up 12
passes and caused two fumbles.
Woodson had four interceptions and
14 breakups for the Wolverines.
The punter is San Diego State's
Noel Prefontaine, second in the
nation with a 46.54-yard average on
48 punts.
·
The other freshmen to make the
team were . UCLA kicker Bj'orn
Merten (1993), Sari Diego State.running back Marshall Faulk ( 1991 ),
Georgia running back Herschel.
Walker( 1980) and Pin running back
Tony Dorsell (1973).
In addition to Faulk, the other
sophomores are Olson and Woodson.
There are eight juniors and 14
seniors on the team .

••

, . By DAVID GINSBURG

~

LANDOVER, Md. (AP)- Most
; NBA teuns hate playing JlltlCI on
~ · successi~ nilhls. This time, though,
· • the WashmJIOn Bullets and Juwan
! Howard welcomed the opportunity.
; • 'The Bullets were coming off a
' humbling loss to the New York
' • -Knicks in which they scored only 73
; points, and Howard was looking to
~ bounce back from a 2-for-13 perfor' ' mance in l"'hich he contributed just
: four points.
"We were e~ciled about playing
:•
~ here tonight. We were all looking to
·: .. pu,t that New York ·game behind u•,"
, - sa1d Howard, who scored 2S points
~ ail Washington snapped a five-game
·' • los inc streak by beating the Cleve~ land ·Ctivaliers 106-9S Wednesday
~ . night.
~
The Bullets became only the sec·: . ond team to reach ., 00 points against
. the Cavaliers this season, shooting
~ 56 pereent and repeatedly converting
; Cleveland's. season-high
20
• turnovers into easy baskets.

First-team defense
Llnl!'men- Pc1er Boulware, Flonda Stare, 6-3.
255, jumOf, Columbia. S.C.; Detrick Rodgm, A.ri·
zona ~Ulte, 6-2, 220,junior. C91dova, Tenn.; Reinard
W1lson, Aoilda State, 6-2, 15S, senior, Lake City,
tla.; Grant Wiitrom, Nebraska, 6-S, 1SO, junior.
Webb C&amp;l)'. Mo

Linebackers- Canute Curos, Weu VirJinia. 6J, 260, 5enior, Amily~ ille, N.Y.; Pal Fitzgerald.
Northweilm'l, 6-2, 243 , senior, Orland Park, Ill.; Jar·
rei! lroni. Michigan, 6-1, 231. senior. The Wood·
lands. Tua5; Mall Rusitl! , Colonldo, 6-2, 245,
se nior. Fairview Heights, Ill.
Back! - Ore' Bly. North Garolin a. .5-10. 190.
freshman. Chesapeake. Va.: Oui4 Canty, Karis~
Slate, S-10. 190. junior. Voorhees, N.J.; Kevin Jackson, Alabama. 6-·2. 206. senior. {)(!thlln. Ala ;
Chari!!'$ Woodson. Michigan. 6-,1. 192, sophomore.
Fremont. Ohio.
Punter- Noel Prefontaine. San Diego Stnte. 6·
0. 200. Knior. &lt;X:eam1de. Calif.

-·-

Guard'" Tacklt1 - Olris DishiTIAft. Nebruka;
Walter Jones, Aorida Sta~ ; Dan Neil, Tcxu; Steve
Scirret, Wyoming.
all · purpo~c- Terry Baltic. Arimna S1a1e.
Placekicker- Rafael darcio.. Virainia.
Second·~m dele""'!
Lu'lemen --, Cornell Brown. Vira:ini11 Tech;
William Carr. Michi1an; Jiln:d Toinich. Nebruka;
Mike Vrabel. Ohio Stale.
Linebackm- Andy Katu:nmoycr. Ohio Stille:
Dwayne Rudd. Alabama: Briun Simmoru. North
Carolina; Takeo Spikes, Aubum.
Baclu - Kim Herrina. Penn Stale: Shawn
SprinJS. Ohio State; Bryant Westbfook. TeAas: Kenny Whea1on. Oresoa.
Pun1cr- Bnd Maynard. Ball State.

-·- .

.

Thlrd-team olrenst

Quarterback - Peyton ManninJ. Ten~see .
Running backs - ROll Dayne. Wisconsin:
Corey .Dillon. Washington
'
Wide ~ceivers - lice Hillinrd. AOfida: k~'in
Locken. Kansas State.
·
Ti&amp;hl end - Dnvid LaAeur. Louisiantl State.
Cen1er - Jeff Mircftell, Aorida.
GunrdJ. Tackles - Ben Klwrrnan. Texos Tech~
Adnm Meadows. Georgia: Scott Sanderson. Wash·
lngron S111te; Jerry "!'Juru:ch, Wisconsin.
nil-Purpose- Beau Mor@~. Air Force.
Placekicker- Damon Shea. Nevada

~

Our special page(s)
"For Children Only"

Third-team defense

(16 years of age or younger)

Linemen - Jason tliorak. Washin@lon: Grey

Second• team orrense
Quancrbock- Jake Plummer. Arizona Suue
Runnln! bock..~- Dlli'TI('ll Aurry. Nonhwesu~m :
Wrwnck Dunn. Aoridn Slate
Wide rccl!'ivers - R~ Carrulh. Colorndo: Kei·
1h Poo!L":. Arizona Sr~te .
Tigh1 end - Ton)' Gontnlel. California
Center- Aaron TnyiQI'. Nchrnska.

Ellis. North C:lrOiina; Leonard Little. Ten!IC'ssee;

Will be published

Darrell Ruuell. Southern California.
· Lineb.xken- Tyrus McCloud, Louisville: Kti·
1h Mitchell. Te~;,s A&amp;M: Amwaune Ponds. Syrn·
cuse; Anthony Sinunons, C1emson .
Backs - Eric Allen. lndin1111: Ronde Bnrber,
Virginia: Sam Madi son. louisville: S1eve Rosga.
Colorado.
Punter - Toby Gowin. Nonh Tex.u.

'•

:.()pposing rookies' 'bricks·'
;·. help .Celtjcs, .Heat &amp; Bulls win

in

The Daily Sentinel
-ONLY-

'
· By ~HRIS SHERIDAN

, AP Beaketball Writer
,
Those young point guards suie do
· ; shoot. They don'talways shoot very
· well, but they sure do shoot.
Damon Stoudamire of Toronto,
last season's rookie of the year, took
37 shots Wednesday night in a 115113, triple-overtime loss to the
Boston Celtic&amp;. He made II .
Allen Iverson, the favorite to win
this season's rookie award, was
almost reluctant by ·comparison.
' Iverson still managed to hoist' 17
attempts in Philadelphia's 84-791oss
· .. to Miami, but be made only two.
Stephan Marbury of Minnesota,
. , the second player taken in fast summer's draft, didn"t have much of D
night either, shootingjust3-for-IIB&gt;
: · the 1imberwolves were beaten I03. · 86 by Chicago.
Everywhere else, the point guard!
were older and played better. Robert
.. Pack of New Jersey was 9-for-15 as
; the Nets ..stunned Seaule 110-101,
, and Muggsy Bogues .of Charlotte
:. was 4-for-8 as the Hornets defeated
:. Denver 101-97 .
: · Two games bucked the trend.
·' Nick Van Exel was 3-for-11 as the

$Iooo

~.

Per Picture·
Prepaid
Please enclose se~·addressed,
stamP,ed envelope to return your
photo.

NAME)
Parents' or
lL,Girantdpalrenlts Name

-·-

Fjrst·team orren'se·
Quant:rbad:.- Dnnny Wuerffel. Florida. 6-2.
' 209. senior. Fort Wahon -Beach. Aa.
Running backi- Troy Dnvi~. lowm Stn.te, 5-8,
190. junior. Miami: Byron Han spard. Tua.o: Tech, 60, 19~ . junior. OeSom. Texns . .
Wide receiven - Reid~ I Anthony. Fl&lt;lrida. 60. 181 , junior.' Sculh Bity. Fla.: Mw-cus karrit .
WyonUns. 6-2. 216. 'senior. Minneapolis.
Tight end - Pat Fitzgerald. TeliBS. 6-2. 228,
senior. AJoura. Calif.
Center - K.C. Jonc.s. Mi nmi. 6-1. 267. sen1or.
Midland. Tt:lttlS

Official
Entry
Form

. AMONG ALL-AMERICANS -Iowa State's Troy Davis, shown eel·
ebratlng with fans during a game earlier this season at Ames, lowe,
was among the headliners on this year'a college football all-AmerIca list. (AP)

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lead with 38 seconds to play. But
Tom Hardaway, who led the Heat
with 21 points, drove around Iverson
for a layup and made two free
throws to put Miami abead for good.
"We've come to the end of the
first block of our season," Heat
coach Pat Riley said. "If you had
told me we've had 14 road games,
nine back-to-back, and a 17-5 record,
I wouldn't have believed it, but I'm
tickled to death."
.
Bulls 103, Tlmberwolves 116 ·
At Chicago, Michael Jordan
scored 27 points and Scottie Pippen
had 26 as Chicago overcame Dennis·
Rodman's absence and ended its
two-game losing streak.
"We'll survive and find a way to
do our jobs with or without Dennis,"
Jordan said of his teammate who
began a tean1-imposed two-game
suspension.
"Will he come back and play the
game like we expect him to'! We
hope so. If he doesn't, I'm pn:lly sure
we're going to do what we can to try
to maintain our winning lradltion
here in Chicago. If he's a part of it,
great; if not, we'll have to deal with
(See THIS on Page 6)

....
0

....0

Accessory Package lnchides:

Los Angeles Lakers beat Indiana 7976, aDd Washington defeated Cleveland 106-95 despite a 10-for-16
shooting night by Cavs point guard
Terrell Brandon.
Stoudamire's ll·for-37 night
translated into 31 points, but it was .
no solace to him or any of the other
Raptors following the emotional
triple-overtime loss that left the
Raptors winless on the road.
Rick Fo~ won it for Bo51on with
a three-point shot at the buzzer.
"We played hard for a long time
and still didn't come out with a
· win,'~ Stoudarnire said. "So regard·
less of how many points I scored, it
docsD 't matter."
It was the third triple-overtime
game in the 50-year history of the
Cehics. They've won all three.
Fox led the Ccltics with 24 points,
and David Wesley added 20 points
and 10 assists. The Raptors dropj)ed
to 0-7 on the road.
Heat 84, 76en 79
It was the I Oth straight road vic·
· .
· tory for Miami. ,
The 76ers got a three-pointer
from Jerry StaCkhouse and a driving
layup from Iverson to take u 79-78

., .

'0

c:
c:

Howard had scored in double fig. by only 80-76 after dwe periods, but
ures for 33 straight Junes before get- a 12-1 run put the Bullets up by 15
ting only eight in Atlanta on Nov. 29. and decided the issue.
He was averaging only 9.6 points
Chris Webber had 23 points and
over his last five games before II rebounds for the Bullets, who
ilmlkinaloose against the Cavaliers. · scored more that half their points
"It felt great just to gel my flow (S6) inside the paint.
going," Howard said. "In the past
"If you're going to let them have .
few games, I hadn't felt that I'd been all those dunks a~d layups, you're
there to help the team. Truly, that had not going to win," Fratello said.
been very depressing for me. Tonight "You can't allow those breakdowns.
it really felt good to see myself get It was not a typical perfonnat11le by
going and also the team."
us, but you've got to give Washing1be Cavaliers were also playing ton credit because they made it haptheir second game in two nights, pen."
only the results were very gratifying.
It was not by accident.
"II was a horrendous perfor"Tonight we got into the offenmance ·with the basketball on our sive flow and had the Cavaliers play
pan. I can't remember the last time 'our type of the game, the up-tempo ·
we had 20 turnovers.,'' Cleveland style," Howard said. "We got a lot
coach Mike Fratello said. "We were of buckets off our transition game."
just giving points away."
The Bullets' 56 pereent shooting
· The game turned in the second was the best again&amp;! Cleveland this
qUarter, when the Cavaliers missed season. The only other team to score
their first eight shots and fell behind IOOpoints against the Cavaliers was
by 17 points. Cleveland closed to 71- Detroit (102) on Nov. 16.
68late in t~ third quarter and trailed

; . In other NBA action,

Monday, December 23rd

The all-America team was selected by a nine-person panel of AP
member sports writers and AP sports
writers: .Andrew Bagna(o (Chicago .
Tribune), Mark Blaudschun (The
Boston Globe), Chris Dufresne (J,..os
Angeles Times), and Ban Hubbuch
(Dallas Morning News), Bob Baum
(AP-Portland, Ore.), Rick Gano (APChicago), Paul Newberry (APAtlanta), Doug Tucker (AP-Kansas
City) and AP college football writer
Richard Rosenblatt.

•

•

Guardi·Tackles- Chris N.eole, Colorado, 6-4, JOS. senior. Kaaawa. Hawwi; ~njl 01100. Washin&amp;ton. 6-4, 310, ~omore, Pon Orchard, Wash:
Orlando Pace. Ohio State, 6.6. 330,junior, Sandusky,
, Ohio, Juan Roque, Arizona Stare, 6·8, 119, .enior,
Ontario. Cilif.
all-Purpose- Kevin Faulk, Louisiana Stale• .S\0, 192, sophomore, Carincro, La.
Placck.ick.er- Marc Primanli, NOI1h Carolina
Slat!!', 5-7. 11 1.. srnior, Thorndale, PL

beat Cavaliers 106-95
}·to cut five-game losing string
&gt;

I

'
'+

~ : ·Bullets

•·)!~

: PICTURE YOUR CHILD .
AMONG THE ..•

AP all-America college football teams named

.

!Thu~r~ld~ltY~·D~~~c~em~be~r~1~2,:_1~8~81!_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~P~OI~m~Mtr~ov • MldclleDott, Ohio ·

Thursday, December 12, 1998

-6

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The Daily Sentinel
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111 Court St.

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.••. .

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Pomeroy, Ohio 46789

· .• ·

~IIM#I H~l·ri·l'ita· ttllltrMIH ·r ::.
,,

•

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•.•
"
••

,.

)·

'

'

.
:

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�col,.,

In Top 25

Thur8d8yI December .12, 111MJ

Pomeroy •lllddleport, Ohio

baalcetball,

Thul'lldlly, December 12, 1 •

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

!

.

No.1 Kan·s as pounds GW; Michigan and Duke also win
lr TOll Wii HIM

All Ill Dria Will

F

Shlqllyclr ndinuuit,J~Cq~~e
........ wa:bud from~· bench
lllp-tlnbd Jayhawb slnclded

and he'll immoA' lrly 11ep '-It iniO
lhe lllnill&amp; liMUp !II 10011 u his

,et UOiher ....!M'eat. Thuii-Amuica JIOint a-d miJht be s..Ung 10

wOIIderifhe'IIMveajoboacehe's
n:ldy 10 play.
Vauahn's job is safe, of course,

injurodwrilllshAJc4,Thcquellioll
ia, though, doea Ku• rally need
him?

.Jenvd Huse scoml22 points and
Kansas blew open lhe game early in
the second half to overwhelm
Oe011e WuhinJion 85-56 Wcdnesday night in Lawrence.

•lhe
NBA games..•&lt;:.;;;.;cont;.;;;;i;;.;;•ued=rrom=Paac;:.;;..;;.:.s&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~--~
IIIII when the scuoa's over."

Robert Pack finished with 19 plints rebounds in 47 minures for the Hor'Nat and Tom Gualioua · - includina eipt stnisht to put the nets. playins their lint aame a1
ICCinllll9 points each for Minneso- Nets ahead for goc;d - and 12 home followins a scven-JIIIIIC road ·
.
i@l. ~JSipinlt Chlcaso since enler- usists as the Nets posted their first b1.p. . .....
NBAin 1989.
win in 26 lames over a team with a
Dell CunY pot lhe Hornets ahead
:~ Nils 118, Sap orSanla 101
10 stay on a three-pointer with 3S
plus-.SOO rcconl.
•' AI lhe Meadowlands, Kendall
seconds left, helping send the
Honets 101, N....... '7
DiiiiiCORid II ofhiJ 24 points in the
·
Anthony Mason had the first 2~ NuiJCIS to their eiJhth consecutive
I)Uirter lpinst his former
20 game of his career with a season- 1011.
hip. 2S points and a career-hip. 21
Labn 79, hcell"

Dout

,..lhe

'*""

c-s. 49,......., Elmo !7
a ... ~62.Nno• ' , t&lt;M
~ 0111-41, CiL llcAuJor 25
Cle.l..ulhtfM w. 42, eo· m· l7

PottiMdll L.A. Laten, 10:)0 p.m.

NCAA Division I
men's scores

NBA stegdlggs

-.. ·:c . . . . . . .

I!AS'I'EitN CONnlli!NCE

r..

ll I. lll.

.................. 17
-Yort ............. l3

liA

5 .77)
6 .614

..................... s .529
8 .. .oz.
, . ••' ' ..........._7 )] , .:uo
-

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

7'1&gt;
9

.m

- - , ........... ..5 11

5~
5~

9
II

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1

II

M'

11 ................1

14

o.-. .....................5
s . -............. l
v~ ...............l

&gt;

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II \;

17 .227
16 . 151
11 .14:1-

14
14.

J~)

~

3\

21·79
Oiap 101. Ir I
16
LA. Lobn 79,1-76
..............

I

I

*

T................

Non......rtrence

I

m

y_,_.,_..., .IOp.m. ·

Soo • LA. C1ipp&lt;n. ID:JO
, ...llll....
·· .._..
-~
.........
10:~
IV•••
&gt;vp.a

Ohio B.S. girls' scores

......... .UIIh.9p.m.

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

..._.w-w am
•

- · - 7 : , 1 0 p...

l9

Ooldl• State al CLEVELAND. I

..................... ,.Ill

Hockey

~ +1. OJrnMcd hill 42

Clllap. Now-· 7:lll ~ ...
7:30p....
'H' 3 ':
a.rtaae. 7:JD ,....
I

2~

S!li ll'l
IOJ IOJ
UM 109
17 90
72 1\4

Cmtf'lll Di"Won

lil'. L I !II. lif liA
J!li MJ

Derroh ................. U 9

~

:\~

au

StLouiJ .......... ~. UI4
Cllk:IIJO .............. Il15
Toronto .............. l2 18
P'tloeni~ .............. IO 15

I
:\,
0
4

31
27
2;&amp;
24

90 91 ·
1$ . 76
86 10~
69 " W

Colorado ............ IB H 4 40 IOK

6l

JO 101

"1:\

~7

"12
&lt;.Hl

2\1

l...oiAna~ks ....... J214
San J~ ............. 11 14

27 79
26 1S

J

Tonilbl'slames
New Jersey Ill Boston, 7:30 p.m.
Hartr\llllut Pbiblclphia. 7::10 p.m.
F.drMf\IOft ill Tampa Bay, 7:.l0 p.n1.
Chic:tgt~ nr Otrnrit, 7 : ~p. m
Cu l~;ll'y ar Lu~ An~clr~. 10:-'C) fl.nl.

7~
~ .1

Odllu ................. l6 10 J

Edmornun .......... 141$ 2
V:mcouver ......... 14 1:\ 1

Snn Jose .l, Wll5hington 2

Friday'sgames
· N.Y. Rangers nt Buffalo. 7:JO p.lll.
Photni11111 Ollawa. 7:?10 p.m.
Cbicttgo m Sr. L,luis, M:JO p.m.
Vancouver 1M Ollollas, M:.lO p.m.
Pill~~'"' at SIVI JQ!W;!i_. 10:.10 p.m.
WliJhlnlllUA al Anahetm, 10:;\0 p.m.

Transactions

t)J
2$ K5 101
24 71 IU

Baseball

A.JHrkan Ltaaue

CHICAGO WHITE SOX: Agreed to
lf.."f"mll with RHP Jnillk' Nav&lt;lfT'O on a four·
year ~:ontm~:l and LHP Tnny Castillo on a
IWt.. ~i· CVO!fik.1 .

CLEVELAND INDIANS : Nal'ocJ
Phi II Cuok urea scnut for Ohin. Mi~hipn
and Southdn Indiana.
MINN ESOTA TWINS : A~·quir~d
RHP Brent St~otl from !he I.Jdrtlit Tigm
rurC M11111 Walbeck.
'
'
N£W YORK YANKllf..li: ~,well to
t~·rnls wi1h LHP Mike St;UIIlm oil :tlhra:·
)'\:ar commcl.

SliAl"I'LE Mi\RINHRS: .-\a;n:cd 10

h:nm with LHP J;tson Brusnan . LHP

M;~~rk Holitcn~r. C-18 Ahlll Zinter. INt-'
J uhn Plllll'f~ln Jmd OF 1Ccvi11 Rcintt:r 11n
mitllll'- l.cii~UI.' l'UIIIr:l'.-1~ .
•
·

'l'f.X"AS RANGI~KS : .-\~n.'Cd to ll'fniJ
with 21J M:u-k MdA.'tl'lllft.' 01111 thfL-c-ycnr
'OOlrtM:l.
TORONTO HtUE JAYS: Scnl I.HP
Mike Hnlpt.'riu. IF Abraham Nul'll:' :1ntl C&lt;U:
Wilson (II Pitbbur~h ,,, o:omplc:tc lhc Nuv. l.f' !r.Mk invulving Carlo11 ·
Oarci~a. Orlomdo Mcn:ed und Dan Pk.'!OC.

em,.

.

_. _

A.,. ~. WeiUIIJion 29
Avo. Ute•:\. N. Oimlled :n
Jay .51. Rcdy River J7
1ldlaire Sc. JohD's116, CDIKIIton Vall.

NHL standings

Ban ll. N. Royalton 1•

l:Ja

EASTERN CONFERENCE

•
Br«bville 76. Brunswick 47
Brooklyn 47. Ramo.:l Ht1. :\6
Buckeye Tooll60.
40

lll L I !II. lif fiA

fo"klridl ............... ll 6 7 41 90
I'Wiodol!&gt;fU ...... 16 12 2 l4 ..
NR&lt;Jm.:y ........ l!li II I Jl ft9

c-.,

. OI'IIMoa VMCOYWI', 10 p.m.

Lb.

Smjth Buick- Pontiac's
award-winning service
Department is highly
trained and ready to get
your automobile ready for
winter...
Take advantage of these
valuable coupons!!!

Na1h CGui Alblelk Cao.r.
KenJon 79.1lcoi... )9

.

BoWliq 01'11e1174. Duqua.lllie 66
Haft Drulc. Ohio J6. Obain !lil

3

30
29
28
2.\

NAPBL: Rc ·tlccted D;~n Ulm.:r

c.iuUrman of fM Board of TOIIICCS.

·'

· Ohio women's
college scores

.,... • ....._a:,op....

;

82

Hanfonl ' · Florida 2
IMJ.Qio .1. MOIIIJr:Q] 2 tOT I
N.Y. lslandcn 5. N.Y. RanJ,t&gt;U)
St. l.oui1 5. Oalla~5 , 1ft
Color~ 6, Viit~~:ouvtr I
Pill-bu!Jh 7. An:thcim J

National Auodll'-"

ol Prol'eaioAal Butball Lupn

AWord To The Wize: WINTERIZE·.

1

Noa-eaul'ere- play

- · M l - I : J O p.lll.

I

2
-3
4
!li
0t!IIWII ...... ., .........8 fl 7

4
Anahcim ............ IOI6 5
CaiP')' .............. 10 16 4

11

-Una GoOco 90. WriAht St. 6!
Hi,.. Col. 67. Gro'ICCiry !li!li
LC*isvillr 80. Dl)olon 67
Ollio Northem 60. Def..:e 1,1
Oom&gt;e;o 89, W;tten~&gt;eoz 16 (2 OTI

-Scoot • - Yort. 7:30 p....

l..
•

~B), lite~"

Lonli11 Adm. . ... VermiliM ·0
Lani• Cadi. Rl. Cle. l.i-.:oln·Wes1

lolm~74. M..-70

14 .m . s•
14 .26.1 • ~~

~JOJ,Daovo&lt;97

88

Podii&lt;DI.W..

.

Jell'Cnolll. f'ai.........., 6.1

ObJO Albletle Conference

7~
8~

WM r t11'• _...
-115.T-.JI)(J01')
Nowl«tq IIO,SaonleiOI
w ,.,,.. 106.CL£Vfl.AND95

.

c- Alblelk eanr.

~n 66, Kcn)oon ~5

·.m

)4

Iaai

collep scores
Nar1h

9 .571
13 .:181
10

Holylfame6.1....... .W

76
84

WedDfllday's scores

n

after Paul Pierce picked up a loose'
ball and made a blind lob toward the
basket.
" He did everything rigllt
tonight." Kansas coach Roy
Williams said of Haase. "He look
good shou and the pused tbe bolito
our players instead or their players."
Lafrentz added 12 points and
nine rebounds, and Paul Pierce, who
had just two poiniS and six turnovers
in tbe first half, finished with II
points and nine rebounds.
Ryan Robertson. filling in for
Vaughn. had a team-high . eight
assisiS and made all three or his
shots. He :ilso held Colonials point
guard Shawnta Rogers to 1-of-10
'
(See TOP 2S on Pa~ 8)

Ohio men's

"~

7 .'NIII ·
7 . .696

LA.Libn ............ l7
·- .:: ................. 16
......... ................. 12
QoldoaSO. ............ I
LA.Cii)&gt;pen ........... 7
Sou
o.............7
.....................!

)9

Oooup91.-SI. 76
S.JooeSL65.S.-'J

Gil

.~1

N. !7

93

WFSI'ERN CONFERENCE

43

Oomtll&gt;ille 71. 5lneiJbon&gt; 19
Ollmow42. B ltwoud 3K
. ~Co. (Ky.J ~. fnlnklin fur.
ftlll.'CGrml28

hrWat

t:.
...... Jf ~ .m•
u.. .....................

El)ria Colli. "·
flidoom67,
_.,,

6

-·-

n

a.f.ni Hta. l6. Wanm~viUe 29

Nebru1cri 76, Mo.-KaMas City 64

WIISTERN CONFERINCE

· 1~

-)9

Mlohral
- l i q Go0co 90. Writ, St. 63
~-·St94.
St.. 1
low•
74,Clllcap
Or.te ~
KMua 85. Gaqe Wulli._l6

6\
7

E1Jria 57. N. .

E"'
-!9. oas.l9

l.AiolovllloiO. Dayton 67
Soulhem Mia. 75, Nicbolh St. S6
· Va. Commoftwt:allh 79, SW
t.c*iliMI59

I

-·-

Jlo;.,Q,~JD

1JoooPa s.. 82. Ccmnonl n

c.niQicoao................. ll 3 .157
J .102
8 .600
.a .600
9 .550
9 .526
l -...................1 II .421
...................7 14 .m

Cresowoool67, WoodrioJoe !9

llulro 15,Do.- 58

10~

.................... 16
................... 12
aBYELAN0 ....... 12
0.0.. ............-. 11
- -............. 10

c - 7 1 , ...........
Crooksvil~ 5l. Tri· VIIIJor 47
o.~ Htl. 48, lr.dqxDdenc:c

109
10
74
71

jected as a top NBA pick. It wu a
mismuch.
Paul Pierce. Raef Lafrenlz and
Scot Pollard combined for 31 poin1s
and 24 rebounds while holding Koul
to 16 points and seven rebounds.
Koul did have his moments inside,
l;&gt;ut was continually fruslnl(ed 115 lbe
Jayhawks (8-0) used a variety or
defenses on him.
"It was a real good challenge 10
play again»l such good players,"
Koul said. "It was just challenging."
Haase scored nine points in a 25·
4 run, with a three-pointer, two driving layups and a breakaway dunk

Not'hntDi.W..
Hanford ............. 14 1
Ufalo .... :..-....... .14 13
PilllburJh .......... 13 IJ
Montre~l... ......... l2 I.S
Bmlon ..... ,.......... IO 12

57

South

'

10 .26.1

.....,.62.. _.. .

East

-62.

2~
'~

N.Y. Ranp ..... l3 14 5· 31
N.Y. l1landen .... IO II 8 28
Wuhiftpon........ IJ 15 I 27
,.,..,. Bay ........... " 2 20

ClneJoool ""· 54, ........... l.,
Col DoSolaM.Col. ~ 5I
a.J.
Col. w....._ 68, Nn.t Cllhalie

IMIII. Fairldib Dldi111110 58
Micbia-76,&amp;.Joha's61
Md.-Jialti .... c-r 5I
51. 8oMweMure 19, M~ St S4
VenMII: 73, St hlicnltls67

t

. Shaquille O'Neal had 33 points
and 10 rebounds as 1 Los Angeles
moved into first place in the Pacific
Division with a home victory over
Indiana.
The win was the rounh s1n1ight
and seventh in eight games for the
Lakers, and gave them victories on
back-to-back nights for the first time
this season in their si•lh try.

The game was previewed u a
matchup between Kansu' frontline
and OW cenler Alexander Koul. pro-

fH

112
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ENTIRE STOCK OF HOLIDAY
HOME DECOR

99
14
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INCLUDES ALL TREES, TREE DECORATIONS, INDOOR
AND OUTDOOR DECORATIONS, COLLECTIBLES,
HOLIDAY CANDLES AND CANDLE HOLDERS.
REG. 99¢-249.99 SALE 69( • 174.99

lndoor/9Ufdoor
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§hoM lf)doOI ..., OUfGoor ltmpl'f~Uft
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ON. 01 w.;l
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I.

.l

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• Middleport, Ohio

"'·

..

••

Davis and Harris
take different views
on Robinson issue

'

LADIES SWEATERS ...........
LADIES
WESTERN WEAR.

Cavanaugh pulls out
of running for Pitt
head coach's post

Tops, Jadlets &amp;

DnlreN

(Continued from Page 6)

timtl.

AlA-. Iowa. 6-fool-11 Kelvin
Louisville'• defen•ive quickness
C. iWild a_.hiah 21 poillll
fon:ed
Dayton (2·2) into 19
..t clolnitllled Dnb's front line,
tumovera,
resulting in 2S points for
, .· w11011 flllelllllltlr a 6-71'resh- the Cll'dinals.

';; --.

'·

·

.

..

P-ae I

Thursday, December 12, 1991

MIDDLEPORT

Zippo
Lighters

Amity Billfolds
Mens &amp; Womens

30o/o OFF 1/2 P~ice

30%.off
Russell Stover
Assorted Chocolates
2 oz. Reg. 99¢
ONLY

.

2 Ct. TWfor

$699

.

~-

~-

----·

..

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Dla. ·
Pendant

14K Dla•o•d

Earrl•g•

141
y. Tw.
$249

SALE

$14
Yt Carat TW

$299

Reg. $4111

DIAMOND PENDANTS
.'til Carat Reg.$1600

SALE

1.22 Carat Rtg.$4900

$

Fro• y.
C•at to
'\ 1Ya C•• /

79.9 '\.,_

SALE ~2,9().0

.

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PRESCRIPTION
PH. 992·2965
E. Main Friendly Service Pomeroy, Oh.
Weal&lt;

•

MIDDLEPORT

FRIDAY 9·8
SATURDAY .9·6
'SUN.AY 1•4

Reg.$329

69,
SWISHER LOHSE
.

Pomeroy: Jesse Klein, Kyle Kinnan,
Brandi Reeves, Jill Reeves, Randall
Reeves, Cassandra Patterson, Alexandria Patterson, Jesse Mowery, Lind·
sey Roach, Mian Herman. Robert
Foreman, Thcresh.ia Howard, Nathan
Timmion, Hanna Faulk, Brandon
Shull, Amanda Smith, Courtney Hag·
gy, Ashley Freeman, Heather Fink.
Harrisonville: Jennifer Partlow, .
S.ira Bradshaw: Bradbury: Brad Mor·
rison, Will Kauff, Steven Major, Jennifer Foreman, Meigs Jr. High:
Devlin Clemons.

Bartels, Barb Crow. Teresa Carr, . Rutland: M·aggie Rupe, Dakota
Roger Birch. Tammy Chapman, and Arms, Lindsey. Houser, Tiffany
Shirley VanMeter. Teachers in the McDonald, Samantha Oil bert, Salisschoolwide program at Pomeroy in bury : Stephanie Snider, Anthony
attendance included Janet Hoffman, Shamblin, Kayla Caudill, Matt WanBecky Triplett, Bryan Zirkle and Joni dling, J. R. Greene, Edgel Goble,
Jeffers. Title I teachers unable to Kayla Diddle, Trista Randolph, Faith
attend included Ron Drexler, Eliza- Dye, Amanda King, Melissa Grueser.
beth . St()ry, Julia Vaughan. l'ara
Middleport: John Lamb, Teresa
Woods, and Judy McCllf(hy.
. · Lamb, Tiffany. ,Simpson, Holly
Students from each o( the partie- ' · White, Daniel·Morrison, Tylor Little,
'ipating schools presented a program ShaWnaAnnstong, Breanna Mitchell,
for the parents and students in the Michael Sellers, Shawntay Gamer,
audience. Students attending were Sarah Engle, Beth Cremeans.

FRIDAY 9·8
SATURDAY.9·.6 '

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1/2 Price
.

Prr program

THREE DAYS ONLY·

DIAMOND IUCELET

E.arrings
Complete Stock

.

nation's SOO largest companies. Last
year, women held 9.5 percent of
6,274 seats.
The survey found 16 companies
have three female directors and five :
have four female directors. Only two
companies - ·College Retimncnl
Equities Fund and Teachers lnsurance &amp;Annuity- have five or more
female directors. Most large companies have about a dozen directors.
The biggest companies are most
likely to have female board members.
the survey found. Of the lop 100
companies by revenue, 97 percent
have at least one woman on the
board.

THREE DAYS ONLY

.

25% off

.

Christmas caroling was set for
A program on "What Kids Need to
Dec. 30 at the hall I p.m. A soup sup- Succeed" was presented by Wendy
per will follow with third · degree Halar, Title I Director for the Meigs
practice at 6}0 p.m.
Local School District during the
Vicki Smith presented the literary annual district-wide Title I par·
program on December. Readings ents/teacher meeting held at Salisincluded ''The Meaning of Christmas: bury Elementary ..
b.v . Pauline Rife; "The Needs o(
The program came fropt the book
Christmas" by Christine Napier; "Old by Peter Benson, Judy Galbraith and
Grumpy's Christmas" by Opal dyer, Pamela Espeland. Parents were givand "Keep that Christmas Spirit" by en handouts on the different assets
Vicki Smith. Christmas show aruj tell students need to be successful.,
was done by Tom Bartley. Eldon Bar- · · Title I teachers present were Paula
rows, Rick and Jan Macomber, Pat- Chimcey, Linda McManus, Vicki
ty Dyer, and Connie White.
Haley, Tim Lawson, Beth Meyer, Ed

50% 70%*

Mens Colognes &amp;
After Shaves

.

change is slowing. The number of .. list of potential board members, it
bOards with female directors rose by was a thin list, and each of those
7 percent from 1994 to 1995 and 9 womenwereonfiveboards,"hesaid.
percent from 1993 to 1994.
"Today, that list is an inch thick."
"While the Catalyst survey is
Companies that don 't appoint
encouraging, it's clear that corporate women to their boards typically have
America has away to go in attaining all-male leaders, Catalyst said.
parity for women on boards ,of direc"When the entire leadership group
tors," said Paul Allaire, chainnan and of a corporation are people with the
chief executive officer of Xerox same perspective, the probability is
Corp.
that there will be fewer new ideas,"
Preston said he believes the pace said Catalyst president Sheila
of change would pick up because Wellington.' "That's got to be bad in
more women'"'" gaining the man- a rapidly changing business environ·
agement experience needed to win ' ment."
top posts.
Women hold 626- or 10.2 per. "When I first began to lo()k for a cent- of the total 6.123 se~ts at the

Meigs Title I director presents

crafts.

SAVE
TO
-cOMPARE ANYWHERE-

Only$3.69

KennethMCC~~Ha~nning, A. Ph.

nies have one or more women on

theit boards, a gain of 13 companies
or 3' percent from the previous year.
While the number of women ()n
hoards increllses each year, the rate of

I OK AND 14K GOLD CHAINS
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· Rince Matcha\Jelli Spray
Cologl)es Cachet, Windsong, or
Night Musk .75 oz. Reg. $5.50

Pharmacy

works to advance wOmen in business,

found that 417 Fortune 500 compa-

$995

1/2 Price

Nuts Fresh from our Christmas Decorationa
Lights, Garland,
Machine
Ornaments
Buy 4 oz- Get 2 oz
l/2 Price

Alarm Clocks ·

Macomber talked about earaches
sometimes resulting in hellring loss.
Judy Gannaway, first grade
teacher at Salem Center Elementary
School and member of Star Orange
thanked Martha Bartley for assisting
her in the classroom by listening'to
students read and Janis Macomber for
the donation of a computer to use in
the classroom.
Dyer announced upcoming meetings as follows: Eno Grange Christmas Dinner, Dec. 9, 7:30p.m.; Huntington Grange Christmas Dinner,
· DeC. 12, 6:30 p.m.; Star Grange
Christmas Dinner, Dec. · 21, 6:30
p.m. potluck followed by games and .

$59 5

Christmas
Christmas.Cards
Wrapping Paper
Boxes

1/2Price

NEW 'YORK (AP)- Nearly a
fifth of the nation's ~00 biggest companies do ~ol have a woman on their
hoards of directors and typically
have all men in top jobs - a lack of
diversity that will dull their competitive edge in the long run, a research
group says.
.
An annual survey released
Wednesday by Catalyst, a group that

GALLIPOliS

992-3684

w•
•

The Daily Sentinel·

Women hold 10 percent of Fortune 500 board seats

: · Do you sometimes make quick
Pecisions and then think, "Why did I
Po that?"
·
.
: Does figuring out how to solve
problems seem overwhelming? Do
you. ever wonder how you can
resolve complicated difficulties?
l Situations that require some type
of action and affect people are known
':Is practical problems. Practical problems don't have one specific answer.
Jn fact, there may be several altema~vcs that could be chosen to settle the
'
matter.
:· J'ral:ijcal problems cati have far· '
leaching impacts that affect others. In
!irder to make the best decision for
~veryone involved why not try the
·"REASON" approach when tackling
the decisions that you face?
_. '"R" Recognize the problem.
Sometimes you have to "wade"
tf.lrough the external situations to find
oul what the real problem is. What
must you decide?
. "E" Evaluate the information. Try
to .find out as much about the problem as you can. Mak.-sure the irifor·
matioii is reliable and unbiased.
"A" Analyze the choice~ and the
SUNDAYJ~4 .
consequences. Try to brainstorm all
of the possible solutions to your problem. Consider the consequences of
each alternative. Ask yourself, "What
could possibly llaPpen if I chose this
solution?" You might want to list the
advantages and disadvantages on
paper. lhat way you can sec which
alternative has the most benefits.
, Before making your decision,
remember y()ur values, goals and situational factors. Values are those
•
things that are important .
Examples may include family,
friends, honesty, beauty and self-fultillmerit. Ooals are what you want to
accomplish. Think of the desired out·
come that you Want for your problem.
14KT GOL.. RING WITH
Situational factors are those things
OYER% CAUl OF
·that influence our decisions over
which we have no control. These
DIAMONDS
could consist of laws, rules and even
the weather.
~ "S" Select the best choice. Based
Reg. 5995 SALE
upon reliable information, considerrt'J.~::r-ing your values, goals, situational facEiegant DiaMond Ring ·
tOrs and what would be in the best
interest for everyone involved, make . Marqul•• Cut Center with
your decision,
lagHtt••· 1 Carat tdw*
• "0" Outline and implement your
~lan. Think about how you are going
Reg.$1495
to put your plan into action. What
SALE
would be the best procedure for you
tp .follow? What resources or assisCHOOSE FROM HUNDREDS • Ill STOCK
ljtnce might you need to accomplish
your plan? What barriers might hin-.
der the implementation of it? .
~: "N" Note the results of your
ictions. Evaluate your decision. Are
yoo happy with your choice? Was it
• good decision? Was it the best fl)r
y00 and everyone else involved?
'
What could yOu have done differentI;Y 'i( YllU were not satisfied?
·• Using the "REASON" decision.\wcing process can help you become
IOLD•s•BAR
more confident and adept at solving
your problems. Why not give it a try?

20%.oFF

290 NORTH SECOND

No..UL41UY111e80
Daytoll"
At Louisville, DeJuan Wheat
tcored 18 ofhis25 points in the second half as the Cardinals (5-0) beat
the Flym for the 19th consecutive

lecky Beer Melga .
County Extenalon Agent .

200/
Skirts........ .
'0 OFF

Buy 1 Carleton Christmas
Card &amp; receive an 89¢
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Candy for 17¢

Cato made 10 ()f 17 shots. including seven ,straight at one point. and
gra\&gt;lled 13 rebounds injustl6 minutes as the Cyclones (5·0) beat their
in-state rival f()r the II th straight
time.
.. Drake is 0-6 under first-year
coach Kurt Kanaskie - its worst
start since 1931 -32.
No. 14 Duke 115
0.-ricllon 58 .
At Durham, N.C., Greg Newton
scored a season-bijh ~2 points and
Ricky Price had 19 as Duke regained
its outside touch and running game
after stru"ling offensively in its last ·
two games.
·
Tile Blue Devils (6-2) have heat·
en Davidson (4-3) 10 straight.times.
Duke came into the game 12-for5 I from three-point range in its previous two pma -a win over Florida State and a loss to Michigan .

,iTime out
for Tips

The Plate for Work aq.d Western

. By DENNIS GEOAG4TOS

ihe rijhttt.ack.
SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) "Jlle)"ve got the right approach
Matt Csvanaltgh'helpOd the Univer- to how they want to get that thing
sity of Pittsbllrgh win the 1976 turned around and !know he'll find
national championship u one of the a guy that's capable of doing that."
best quarterbacks in the school's his- - - Trcstman has had discussions
tory. He won't be going back to try with the officials at Minnesota, but
to win another as Pitt's coach.
added that neither he nor university
Cavanaugh confirmed Wednes- officials has mape a final decision.
day that he has withdrawn his name
"A lot of people are speculating
from consideration · for the head and calling me on different things,
coaching job at Pitt, opting to remain but there's nothing substantial to talk ·
with the San Francisco 49ers as their about," Trestman said. .
quanerbacks ·coai:h:. ,
But club president Carmen Poli·
The 49ers might lose another of cy believes· Trestman is leaning
their Ulistanis, however. Offensive toward taking the Minnesota job if
coordinator Marc Trestman has it's offered. Trestman would finish
emerged as a leading candidate for out the season with the 49ers.
the head coaching joli at the Uni·
"It's my understanding he's not
venity of Minnesota, where he only their No. I candidate. but the
played quarterback from 1974-76.
only one they'redealing with," PoiCsvanaugh didn't want to detai I icy sa.id. ·
his reasons for removing himself
Trestman at times . has had an
from'contention for the Pitt job.
uneasy association wi.th Bill Walsh.
''I did it for personal reasons that the Hall of Fame coach who returned
I won'texpound on. I just didn't feel tci the 49ers us an offensive assistant
the time was right," said Cavanaugh, this season. However, Policy said
adding he .informed university offi- Trestman and Walsh have develored
cials of his decision Tuesday night. a better working relationshir, the
."W~ never got to the point where
team was benefiting from it and that
they said, 'Here's the offer.'"
he didn' t .think it was a factor in
Cavanaugh said it was a diffiCult Trestman's willingness to consi.der
decision because it involved his leaving.
alma mater'and because "they're in . Cavanaugh said he expects to lle
need. Bull was very impressed with ·wUh the 49ers next season, and that
Steve Pederson, the new athletic be hopes to become a head coach or
diicctor, aJld I'm convinced he's on coordinator one day.

~· 'Christine Napier won tint place
on· lemonade cookies in the subordiDate grange baking contest held
d:ccndy at Star Orange 11778.
Other winners were Rose .,arrows,
SFCOnd place; and Opal Dyer, third
place. In the young adult quick nut
i'udge contest Rick Macomber
received first place in the men's division and Opal Dyer received ftrst
. place, Janis McComber, second
glace, and Patty Dyer third place in
tj1e women's division.
·
~ Master :Patty Dyer conducied the
meeting with ·reports from the Legislative chairman Eldon Barrows on
filing reports with the Bureau of
~otor Vehicles. Deaf chairman Janis

250/
.
/0 OFF

CHRISTMAS CARDS ••

'I

-By The Bend

"Grange recognizes
contest winners

Earlier, Hicks raised the possibility
of Robinson ~linquishing the coaching job and assuming duties as a vice
,played for Bddie Robinson at Gram- president
After the meeting. Hicks reiteratbling State and have respect for coll~ge· foocball's winniqest coach, ed that he has given no ultimatum,•
dtffer on bow Robinaon's career and no decision W!IS made on the
Robinson's future.
should finish after S6 - "I'm still waiting to hear,"
' "I think C011Cb Robi111011should
Robinson
said after · the meeting.
atep down," saidlflrris, one of more
than 200 players - including four "We talked, hut I can only say I want
to coach another year. It's up to Dr.
Pro Football Hall of Famers ,Robinson has seat to the NFL. "He'i Hicks to make the decision· on
kaoWII u a winner and it hurts to see whether that's going to happen."
The comes just 14 months after
. bim walking the sidelines 'and not
wittnina.n
.
Robinson became the first college
, Harris, now a ICOUl for the New c~h to break the 400-victory mark
Yllllt Jets, reflecu the part of the with a.victory over Mississippi Val- ·
.Grambling community that is is ley Stat~. Tile event drew national
. worried about the direction Gram- media attention and resulted in a
' bling football has laken. It is sniart- telephone call from President Clin·
•inl under back·to-back losing sea- ton.
"When I was getting a call from
· 10111 for the tint time in school his'
our
No. I citizen and people were
. tory, an NCAA inquiry into possible
lining
up to shake iny hand, no one
Jnde changes for as many as 70
whispered
in my ear, 'Coach, you
players, allegations of rules violations and charges that four players better quit now,"' Robinson said.
and one former player raped a I5· "Now they're saying I should go.
"Well, I don't want to go out a
year-old girl in .a dormitory.
loser.
I want another chance to quit
BIG BUCK - Kimberly Cremeans of Pomeroy dropped this 1oAll of that has resulted in a
-aroundswell of feeling that Robinson on a winning season, and I'm hop· polnt buck on Dec. 7 during Ohio's deer gun season, Which will conshould quit. It also has sparked sup- ing all these people who are so wor- . elude s.turday. Cremeans shot the buck, her first, with a 2G-gauga
pon to allow the 77-year-old coach ried about my ,good will give it to Remington 1100 shotgun, recently, given to her.as a preient• ...
to stay on for a final season with the me."
Robinson is 405-157·15 with
llgers. Davis, a mainstay of the great
only
seven. losing seasons. Bui four
Green Packer defenses of the 1960s,
is foremost among diem.
· have come in the last 10 years .
Doug Williams, the fonner Gram"After all coach Robinson has
bling
quaner who became MVP of
done for the school, I would think
the
1988
Super Bowl, said late
he's earned the right to have some
Wednesday
that he would be intersay on when it's time to call it quits,"
ested
in
a
head
coaching job and
said Davis, one of four Gram~ling
Hall of Famers. "We're all con- thinks he could handle it. But
cerned about the program, because Williams, now a scout for the Jackit's been our bragging rights in so.nville Jaguars,.said there is really
:many ways: !Jut Ifeel sure it would nothing to talk about yet.
" ... You can't apply for a coach. survive another year."
Grambling president Raymond ing job until there's an opening," he
"UANING TRD"
..
Hicks met with Robinson for a sec· cautioned. "There's no opening at
~......
:Ond time Wednesday to discuss Grambling at this time, and I have
Robinson's future with the school. too much affeCtion and respect for
Coach to speculate at this time:"

shooting.
.
Elsewhere in the AP Top 25, it
waa No. S Michigan 76, St. John's
61; No. 6 Iowa State 74, Drake 50;
No. 14 Duke 85, Davidson 58; and
No..22 Louisville 80, Dayton 67.
. No. 5 MkhlpJI '7'
St. John'•
At Uniondale, N.Y., Maurice lily·
lor Met Robert Tnylor took over for
the Wolverines (6-0) in the second
half.
lilylor, who finished with 19
points, was called for his founh foul
with 11:59 to play, and St. John's \2·
)) quickly took a 47-461ead.
·
· 'l'llylor didn't score in the pme 's
(1111 21 minutes, but converted a
~~play to give Michigan the
leld farloodM.:oo Bilton added 18 points
8IICI 8rUdun Hughell6 for Michi.... olfto its lint 6-0 1111t Jince winllill lite lllltional chalrtpionship in
1. .89.
~ . Hamilton had 17 points
tor St Ialtn's.
·
No. Uowa SCI* 7'4

-

"

By MARY 1"08 I iR
GRAMBLING, · La. (AP) Willie Davia and J - Haria, who

Top 25 hoopS...

..

1
,r

�Page 10 • The D•lly Sentinel

;!!1unct.y, December 12, 1881

ThUrtday, December 12, .1

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

SUV supports preservation move

ATTENDS NATIONAL CONVEN110N • The
Rllclne-Southem FFA members traveled to
~naaa City, Mo. tor the Nlltlonal FFA Convention recetotly. Stephlnle Sayre, 1 gradueta
of Southern l;tlgh School and 1 llinlor at the
Untver.lty of Rio Orencle, pictured aecond from
left, racelvMI the American Olgrae. Studente on

A donation of$100 to the work of
preserving Camp Dennison which
was a Civil Wu Camp where most
Ohio Union soldiers were inducted
and trained was made by BrooksGrant Camp No. 7 Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War during a
recent meeting at Hope Baptist
Church, Middleport.
·
The Ohio Society Daughters of
the American Revolution owns a
hbuse on this site which it plans to
make into a'Civil War museum. it
was reponed.
At the meeting the members
enjoyed a dinner in celebration of the
first Thanksgiving holiday set by

w.re from the left, front, Tracy Cerd,
(Steplienle Sayre), Jeaalca Sayre, David Routh,
and Jolh Pulllne; and back row, llhillp Hamm,
Jaeon Lambert, Paul Smith, John Matton, and
Matt Hill. They were accompanied by Shirley
Sayre, Southern stafl, left, and ,Aaron Sayre,
FFA Instructor.
·
the trip

'

Christmas
Qecliner ~ale

'

Many here for Mora funeral
Numerous relatives and friends and daughter, Little Hocking.
were here for the Nov. 29 funeral serLouise Fisher Smith, Baltimore;
vices of Mary J. (Maidie) Mora held Ay. Erik and Gabreul Perry, The
at Ewing Funeral Home.
.
Plains ; Ashish Agramal. Pittsfield.
The Rev. Roland Wildman and the Mass.; Bob Shumaker and Nancy
Rev. Sharon Hausman officiated at Robinson, Somerset; Charles Shuthe service. Pallbeilrers were Paul A. maker, New Lexington; Donna 'Nib·
Hayes, James ThomaS, Reid Young. ert, Todd and Tammy Nihert; Denise
Woodrow Mora, il,oy Holter, and Payne, Pam Massie, Opal, Betz,
Keith Little. Honorary pallbearers Jeanie Roberts, Gallipolis.
were Jack Carsey and Howard Frank.
Dr. and Mrs. James Bratton, Dr.
Burial was in the Pine Grove Ceme- Erik and Jane Ann Aancstad, Sue
tcry, Chester Township.
·
- Damron, Roger and Mary Morgan,
Here for the services were the Rev. Diana Carsey Kider, Dianqc Boukn·
Mark Mora, Tulsa. Okla.; Harry, er, Yuling Wang, Susie, Robert, BobRhea, Amy,' and Lisa Slawtcr. Madi- by, Sebring; John and Jan Carwell,
son, Wis.; Gary and Sally Gibson, Laura, Tom, Natalie Bennett, Flnyd
Bryan, Stephanie, Sarah. Brynn and Frances Brookins, Kathy Hoislngels, Brad Gibson ; Gary and ington family. Atl)cns.
Colcen Davis, Earl Ingels, Jr.. Cine in·
Pam Jenner, ChantcUe Ammernati; the Rev. Craig. Anette, Alyssa, man, New Richmond; Bess Ingels.
and Lydia Hayes, Judy Slawtcr Mason; Mary Virginia Kautz, Joy
Marinicd,. Tina Parsley, Barbara Russell, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Ann
Knight, Rock and Kim Krauttcr, Holter Muncfo, Middletown; Bob
Thompson, Keith Krauttcr, Colum- Kautz, Lexington, Ky.; Rev. Jeff
bus; Dan Hayes, Jtm Hayes. Middle- Holter. lnd.; ,Brcnda Buck. Machelle
town; Paul and Carolyn Hayes. Noble, Point Pleasant; and Mr. and
· Charles and Ingrid Alloway, Earl and . Mrs. Lela~d Bigg• and Basil Biggs.
Joan Smith, Jim and Kimberly Pagett Coolville.

Community calendar
The Community Calendar is
publishe!las.a free service lQ non·
profit groups wisbingto.announce
meeting .and special events. The
· caleaclllr Is not ~ipled lQ promote
stiles or fuad raisel'll of any type.
Items arr printed as space pennits
aad cannot be guaranletd to run a
specific number of days,

•

THURSDAY
. POMEROY .. Meigs County
Democratic Party, Christmas party.
11iursday. 6':30 p.m. at the Carpenters
Hall. Pomeroy. Take covered dish,
gift for gift exchange, for Democrats
and families..
·
POM.EROY .. Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Bela Sigma Phi, Christ·
mas party. 6:30p.m. Thursday, home
of Charlotte Elberfeld. Members to
take items for Serenity House and
• chapt"r craft sale.
CHESTER .. Shade Rivcr Lodge
F&amp;:AM, regular meeting. Thursday, 7:30p.m.. lodge hall in Chester.
Refrcshmcnts.
4~3

ROCK SPRJNGS ·.• Rock Springs
Grange. Thursday. home of Helen
and Harold Blackston, potluck, 6:30
l'.m. followed by mectin~ at 7:45
p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS .. VFW Post
9053, regular meeting, Thursday 7:30 ·
p.m.

rating contest judging Friday, 6:30 to
9:30p.m. Judging to be done in the
village and within a two mile radius
or the village corpor;uion signs. Win·
ncrs to be announced in ·newspaper.
POMEROY .. Christmas open
house and walking tour, Meigs County Historical Society, meet at muse·
urn at 6:50 p.m. Trip to Trinity
Church for performance of hand bell
choir, tour of Hartwell House, return
to Museum
for refreshments.
.

agriculture or any other industry.
He said that FFA members grow
in many ways. "They develop the
ability and confidence to become
leaders by conducting meetings, serving in ele.cted offices and participa·
tion in competitions. They broaden
their perspectiVe by attending con-·
ferences and workshops, and mentaring younger students. They know
how to make teamwork happen."
"The real world" comes alive in
the agriculture classroom for FFA
members. Hand-on programs let
them explore their interests, such as
starting a lawn care business assisling a veterinarian, conducting laboratory research, or caring for livestock and crops. When FFA members
finish high school or college and stilrt
a career, they are prepared to move
successfully from school t&lt;;&gt; work."
Sayre concluded. ·

HARTFORD .. ULSWA 5171
Christmas dinner. Union Hall, Hart·
ford. II a.m. Saturday.
POMEROY .. Return Jonathan
Mei,s Chapter. Daughters of the
American Revolution, Saturday. I0
a.m. at the Mcig.&lt; County Library.
Members arc to take nostalgia from
a Christmas P,ast. · ·
SUNDAY
!lAST MEIGS •• Eastern High
School holiday band and art show, 3
p.m Sunday at' the Eastern High
School gymnasium.
POMEROY~ Big Bend Cioggers

annual Christmas show al Grand
&lt;;:entral Mall in Vienna, W. Va. 7 p.n:o.
Sunday.

FRIDAY
LONG BOITOM ,- -.Pailh Full
Gospel Church, Long Bottom, 1 p.m.
hymn sing, Friday at the church. The . MONDAY
Clarks and the Peacemakers to per· ·
EAST MEIGS •• Eastern Board of
Education ')'ill meet in regular sesfOIJll .
sion, Monday, 6 p.m. at Eastern
RACINE .. RACO home deco- High Sl:hool.

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aunt has been wanting to go visit her
children in Toledo for several years.
She is a working woman of modest
means. My sister and I (also working
women) would like to buy her a ticket for her biithday in February. The
problem is as follows:
'
NOW
Aunt "Maisie" weighs at least 550
pounds. There is no way she can fit
into a regular seat on a plane.
We phoned two airlines and were
told we would have to buy two tickets in either coach or first class. lsn 't
this discrimination? Shouldn't this be
considered illegal under the anti-discrimination act? Please respond in the
column. The public should know
about this. --Livid in Boston
Dear Livid: Sorry, I must side with
the airlines. They are in the business
of selling space. If your aunt requires
two seats, you must expect to pay for
them.
I phoned American Airlines and
asked if there were any other restrictions against morbidly ohese passen'. ADDRESSES NEWS MEDIA· VIcky Rkllout,
gers. The reply was "Only one. They
pot11r1 look on. Rkllout waa on hand to pre:director Of the Children • Medii Program at
may not be seated in the emergencysent a three part ttudy of the HXUII content on
~hlklren n-,~peaks to memlleq of the ne'wa
talwlllon, and the Impact on children and their
exit row." P.S.: Others excluded from
•medii Wed! 11day In B...._.k, CIIH., whle •upf1millea. (AP)
the emergency-exit row are passengers under 15 or over 65. those with
handicaps and non-English-speaking travelers.
Dear Ann Landers: I have a dear
sister with whom I have been close
since childhood. Last year, "Agatha"
I
.
called from 'hei home 2,500 miles
stxual content, telephone surveys of
8y JENNIFER BOWLES
dren Now .said.
away and asked if she could use my
AP Ttlevlllon Writer
The ·study of programming by patents with children ages 6 to 15, credit card to rent a car when she
: BURBANK, Calif. -The sexu· ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox urged net- and eight focus groups with children came to visit me.
ages 8 to 13 in Chicago and San Jose,
~ themes &amp;nd in~uendoes during tele- works to 'be more aware · of their
Agatha's credit cards were
Calif.
~ision's nighttime family hour fail to shows' impact on children but did not
revoked
several years ago. If I loaned
In the focus groups, most children
lf'&amp;Ch children about the risks and take a position on whether they
her
my
card,
I would be responsible
ages 8 to 10 understood a joke in
f!!Sponsibilities of sexual behavior, a shOuld restrict sexual themes.
for any damages to her car. I am a
~udy found.
"Our point is not that television CBS' comedy "The Nanny" about struggling single mother of two and
, Just 9 percent of scenes of a sex- should avoid the topic of sex. Our the title character losing her "Virgin cannot afford such financial risk .
ual nature·addressed issues such as point is that we need to be aware of ... airlines ticket."
When I told Agatha, "Sorry, I
Youngsters also understood a refljnplanned pregnancy or birth control, the kind of messages about sex that
lend my credit cards to anydon't
s)lid Dale Kunkel, a communications we are sending our kids," Rideout erence to whipped cream in NBC's one," she told me off and hasn't spo"The Jeff Foxworthy Show" to be
Jlrofessor at the University of Cali- said. ·
LarrY Brown, o,f Granlta Bay, Calif., carries a 15·foot white fir
about
a man ' intending to "sq~in ken 10 me or answered my lette~ for ·
The study round that children
,fpmja at Santa Barbara who analyzed
more
than
a
year.
tree
he and his family cut down at the North .S tar Tree Farm in
whipped cream all over (his wife) and
t~e content of TV shows from 8 p.m. · generally understood sexual cornI
love
Agatha
very
much,
even
Kelsey,
Calif., recently. The Bowen family has been coming to
lick il off."
U&gt; 9 p.m.
.
ments and innuendoes.
North
Star
for their Christmas tree for the past10 years. (AP)
The family hour sexual messages though we don't always agree. How
• The study released Wednesday by
Chris Ender, a CBS spokesman,
can 'I get her to understand? .. Miss
t'e Kaiser Family Foundation and said attitudes toward sex and its pre· were mostly moderate, portraying My Sis in Michigan
&lt;;:hildren Now shows that about 75 sentation have changed dramatically kissing and flirting, Kunkel said.
Dear Mi.chigan: Agatha sounds as
Not all sexual themes were bad,
t1ercent of family hour TV shows in 10 years, so it shouldn't be shockif
she
is not only irresponsible but
~ntain sexual. content. That's up
ing that the volume of sexual content tl\e study found.
On NBC's now-canceled "Malibu unreasonable. Chances are. had you
!fom 65 percent in 1986 and 43 per· has increased.
Shores,"
a high school girl who loaned her your credit card, eventuqlnt in 1976.
He said CBS sbows sexual content
ally, you would have been stuck with
: ':What we found is that there is a responsibly and that the network's 8 thinks she might be pregnant told her charges and then the relationship
tl-emendous amount of sexual content p.m. to 9 p.m. lineup is "program- children, " If you're worried about would have blown up anyway.
·
&lt;ln TV during' the family hour, very ming that the entire family can watch your future. you shouldn't have sex,"
NEW YORK'(AP)- Frank Sina- what spokesmen :-oaid was a pinched
If
your
sister
has
ignored
you
for
and "even condoms aren't I00 per·
little of which makes any mention of together."
tra·is
"in very poor health" and will tlcrvc, giv ing rise tO rumnrs that his
over
a
year
because
or
this
incident.
the risks or responsibilities of !exuBI
The study included analysis of cent."
never
perform again. the New York health was deteriorating.
·
More than 43 percent of the par· she is a "user." But do keep the lines Post reported
'l"tivity," Vic.toria Rideo'ut of Chil:
today.
Blue
Eyes
planned
to
celebrate
01'
cnts su[Veyed say they worry "a great of communication open in case she
.'
"Those days arc over. He will ~is 81st birthday today with family
deal" about how much sex their chi I• wants to reconnect. Make it easy for
'
never
sing in public again,'' a .source and friends al a party at his Beverly
dren see on tclevi.sion. At the same h~r.
Dear Ann Landers: I've had close to the legendary crooner's fam - · Hills horne, publiciSt Susan Reynolds
time, they said television can help
enough
of those "you owe me sex" ily told the Post. "He's in very poor said Monday.
teach important lessons and help
The Post said only his children,
letters.
It
has never been determined health and it's only a question of how
them raise issues with their children.
long
he
will
live
.
He
cannot
sing
anyNanc
y, Tina, Frank Jr.. h.is wife, Bar1lle nonprofit Kaiser foundation is how much sex is "normal." Furthermore."
ham.
and a few other c!osc friends
devoted to health. Children Now is a. more. no one knows exactly why
will
attend
his hirthd ay ce lchration.
In early Novemher. Sinatra was
"I don't take it pel'!lonally. In gcn- national nonpartisan group aimed at some people have a stronger sex dri·
;:" TEXARKANA, Texas (AP) hospitalized for more than a week lor
vc than othCrs.
·eral, I can see why people who want improving children's lives.
P You might need a lawyer if ... you
to sec this (execution) happen don't
· ~come too close to Jeff Foxworthy's
wont to sec me coming," Prejean
i: famous line.
said.
·
; The star of-NBC's "JeffFoxwor:lJhy Show" is suing Small World Inc.,
MIDDLEBURG. Fla. (1\P)- In
~ciain\ing the Arkansas company prof- .
the
new movie "Mars Attacks'" the
• ited from a knockoff of the phrase
fate
of the world rest&lt; on one extrai~~~wonhy uses to set up his one-lin- ordinary
man: Slim Whitman.
•
Whitman,
the
country
yodeler.
• ' Foxworthy leads into his jokes
~iJh "You might be a redneck if ... docsn 't appear in the movie but his
:=;! 'l'he lawsuit, filed Tuesday, said the distinctive high-pitched sound plays
:c_ompany pri_nted T-shirts with the a pivotal role in saving humankind
:fphi'ase "You know you're a redneck from bloodthirsty Martians.
"I'm (ltllud of it. The president,
• ..." followed ,by a joke similar to one
the Army, they couldn't do it. So,
. •,or Foxwonhy's.
here comes Whitman," said the
E .Randy Pendergraft of Small World singer,
who lives in Middleburg.
••atd the coo:npany stopped ·pnntmg
about
15
miles from Jacksonville.
~~ shirts after being contacted by
. . He plans to sec the movie when it
~xworthy 's lawyers, but the lawsuit
opens
Friday and hopes it will pave
: chiims the company continued to sell
the
way
for a 1998 world tour..
"'\n~ shirt.
"This
is, I think, a kind of talk: Foxworthy, seeking unspecified
show
thing.
The ·phone will ring,
! damages, claims the hootleg mcri:cbandisc hun sales of his own prod· hopcfully," he said.
•
tlicts.
---.
LONDON (AP) - · Morrissey,
'LOS ANGELES (AP) ·- Jcan- who sang melancholy songs for The
:Ciaude Van Dammc has checked Smiths, was branded "devious, tru· .
::fiil!lself into a hospital for a 30-day culcnt and unreliable" by a judge
•[ubstancc abuse program.
who awarded a greater share of royTI)C action fllm star was admitted allies to the bood's drummer.
. Welcome your family and friends with the comfort of genuine La.·Z-Bo'('
o the Daniel Freeman Marina Hos·
Mike Joyce won his daim'.ror 25
seating, Choose from our wide selection of styles .al')d fabrics that will
ifpital on Wednesday, Van Dammc's peri:cnt of the group's royalties and .
add wa'rmth to any room. All specially priced for a limited time only.
~blicist, Jonathan Perry, said in a could get $1.6 million. the , British
&gt;tatement: · No other details were news agency Press Association
eleascd.
·
.
reported Wednesday.
Van Damme's wife, Darcy, filed
The g'roup broke up in 1987 but a
or divorce in Junc, but the couple ha.&lt; compilation album, "Best ... I." was
:.ince reconciled, Perry said:
No. 1 in Britain in 1992.
•
Guitarist Johnny Marr and MorAUSTIN. Texas (AP) - SiSler rissey. who founded the group in
::liolen Prejean, a death penalty oppo- 1982. said they had oo agreement that
pt~'Jit who wrote "Dead Man Walk· gave them each 40 percent of the roy·
ng," was denied a visit with a Texas allies. and IQ per;cent each for Joyce
mate. Authorities suspect she was and bass guitarist Andy Rourke.
ust seeking publicity.
,
Judge John Weeks said Joyce and
· .The Roman Catholic nun, whose Rourke seemed "straightforward and
I
......
k was made into the ·hit movie · honest" in their testimony, ' but he
MASHLEY"
RECLINER
:!atrins Sean Penn, said $he had fOund Morrissey to be "devious,"tl'l!·
oo(ol(rolo Appealing, softly tufted transitional
. · Cjlllg~ to visit killer David Powell oulent and unreliable when his own
interests
at
stake."
.
St the Travis County-Jad on Wednesstyling that welcomes with the promise
D&amp;y. Powell faces a possible death
Rourke settled out of coun for
of
deep comfort. Sizeably proportioned
"Pitrltllount" Chaise
'ntence for murderins a police ofti· $137,000.
for even man-sized reclining, it features "Dalln" Smaotly styled Reclina·Resl"
Recllna·Rocke,. recliner
cllaise recliner featuring a channel·
or Reclina-waye wall chair
an e~pansive back, thickly cushioned
!"woody Simmons, director ·of
LOS 'ANGELES (AP) - Mel
stitched back and plush padded arms.
willt pillow soft cuShioning.
flared
arms.
nt and inmate services, said Tonne ·is back in the hospital just one
's visit seemed like a media month after bein&amp; released followina
. even. thou1h news outlets trellment for an August stroke.
~n 't lc!ld about it: He also sai.d she
"It's nothin&amp; to be alarmC!i
llctn't been clelred for the visit.
·about," Rob Wilcox, the singer'&amp;
'~ean said the jail's ·refuaal · spokesmiR, said Wednelday.
the fint time lhe 's been
Tonne, 71, bad developed pneu~ away rrom an inmalll villt.
monia after the stroke•

Poxworthy claims bootleg
_sales hurt his -products .

PlelqOIYillE, 01

23,L

there is nothing of substance to keep
the embers glowing, the fire goes out.
Ann
Good sex is like the frosting on the
Landers
cake, but it's the meat and potatoes
19¥,, Lot: An,cle•
that provide the nourishment.
T~ S)'lldkiM:lllld CrtGem of the Day : It has been said
•klR !iyndicMI:.
that the difference between savagery
and civilization is a little courtesy.
I refuse to believe something is There is no telling what a lot of cour·
wrong with me because I don't want tcsy might do, but it's worth a try. I
my husband hot and wild all the time. recommend it.
I know that sex is important in a mar- .
riage, but if that's all there is, the mar· ·
Send questions to Ann Landers,
· riage is doomed. --Jamestown, N.C. Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
Dear N.C.: Amen, sister. When the tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
first flames of passion die down, if Calif. 90045

Friend says crooner's
singing days are over

DOWNTOWN POIIIIEFIOY,

1llrltlan111 ·Boats•

1

Dear Ann Landers; My beloved

1

UDIO CONTROL
Cars· Trucks

or

By ANN LANDERS

Family-hour television shows fail to
mention risks, responsibilities of sex

1

.

SATURDAY
POMEROY .. Modern ·wood·
,men, Burlingham Camp 1230.
potluck dinner, Saturday, at V(ood· .
men hall. Meals to. be delivered to
elderly and shutins.

Huge selection of Flexsteel and Berkllne Recliners
Choose from durable fabrics or soft leathers.

leadership. personal growth and
career success they need to win in

I

Family tradition___,

, 1

Racine-Southern FFA members
attend '96 national·convention
Ten members of . the Racine· University of Rio Grande, walked
Southern FFA attended the 1996 1across the state at receive her AmerNational FFA convention held recent- ican Degree. This award is given to
ly in g.nsas City, Mo.
the top two percent of FFA members
During the week there members in the nation and make Stephanie the
attended several sessions where first Meigs Countian to ever receive
speakers like Ter:ry Bradshaw, former the award.
Pittsburgh Steeler quarterback, Dr.
Going from Southern were Jessi·
Debbie Turner, a former Miss Amer- ca Sayre, Tr~cy Card, Philip Hamm,
ica, and country performer Ty Eng- Joan Lambert, John Matson, Matt
land sang were .among those speak· Hill, Josh Pullhls, David Roush, Paul
lng and panieipating in the conven- · Smith; advisor Aaron Sayre and
chaperone~. Shirley Sayre and Hal
tion.
Kneen.
"FFA-- Leaders with a Vision"
The group attended the American
Royal Rodeo where the country .was the theme of the national congroup Diamond Rio performed. vention which is ~eared to buildin~
Sightseeing included visits to the leadership through quality education
Harry S. Truman Library and Muse- and positive activities.
um, Royal Stadium where the Kansas
As explained by Sayre, "FFA is
City Chief s play, and the St. Louis meeting the needs by employing students to develop and fu Ifill a vision
Arch.
The FFA members also attended a for themselves, their communities
career. show · where more than 300 and their nation. FFA works hand in
exhibits about careers in ·agriculture .band wilh agricultural e.ducation, but ·
were displayed.
its impact reaches far.beyond preparHighlight of the week at the con- ing employees for the food, fiber and
vention for the local members was natural resource system. S.tudents
when Stephanie Sayre, a junior at t~ develop the ·potential for premier

,,_,

•

•

Airlines in business of selling ·space

1

Pres. Abraham Lincoln· durins the ~I Day events at the Civil \\111 stat~
Civil War.
tn ?omeroy. The event is tentativeJy
Keith Ashley, commander, report· set for Sawrday. May 17.
,
ed that he and several other &lt;I'!"P
The commander recoanized ~
members had attended the dedicatiOn present !"he! were SM'Vice veter....
of a grave marker for Pvt. John Van These we111 Jmy De.vol of Mariet(J,
Meter, who received the Congres· Dale Colburn of Pomeroy, Ron "-'·
sional Medal of Honor for his brav· man of Pomeroy, and Ted Barnes tf
ery .at Ft. Gregg, Virginia, Ashley Manetta.
· _.
made attempts to locate descendants.
Election of officers was held a*
but the family disappeared from the include: Keith Ash~y, com'!'1111d_ot;
area.
Jerry Devol of Manetta, senoor vite
Plans arc helng made to partici- commander; Tenen~e Cummins· ~f
pate in the I 75th birthday celebration Spencer, junior vice comm1111der; tll
of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant at George· Cuckler of Shade, oecrelary: Jamfs
town on April27. Other plans of the Mourning of-Middleport, rreasure.l!
camp include an expanded Memori·
1

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

--

:
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-

were

•

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•

I

I f

I

"

(

"

I,

•

�Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

•

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursdey, December 12, 19fll

The Dally Sentinel • Page 13 •

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio·

30 Announetmtnla

Name.s drawn for potential county court petit juror serv~ce
.

.

The following were selected as
potential petit jurors for the Meigs
County Coun of Judge Paltick H.
O'Brien:
Maniin Eugene Taylor, Pomeroy;
Kenneth R. Davis, Pomeroy; John.B.
Pooler, Pomeroy; El~ano~ Louise
Paeltz, Racine; Coral Davis, Syra·
cuse; Harry E. Roush, Racine; Leoma Jean Pullins, Long Bottom;
Lucille Hendricks, Middleport; Jason
C. Parsons, Pomeroy; Jeffrey David
Howell, Pomeroy~ Michael L. Barr,
Pomeroy; Melanie ~. Daniels,
Pomeroy; Michael Dale Combs,
Coolville; Keith T. Bailey, Pomeroy;
Joe Alan Young, Reedsville; Tammy
Jo Klein, Middleport; Bonnie J.
Lightfoot, Pomeroy; Gary F. Hysell,
Pomeroy; Don E. Harrison, Middleport; Robert Hayes Eason, Pomeroy;
Alice L. Hawthorne, Long Bottom;
Bo Frazier, Racine; Sarah J. Philson,
Syracuse; Julia A. Kennedy, Tuppers
Plains; Elaine M. Ralston, Middle- ,
port;
Vickie L.. Skidmore, Rutland;
Charles L. Sarson, Racine; William
Bruce Gillogly, Albany; John Elmer
Fitzpatrick, Albany; Lue.lla M. Powell, Racine; Jarrod Christopher Holman, Rutland; Betty Lu Fife, Middleport; Leisa J. Perry, Middleport;
Christina A. Teaford, Pomeroy; Rosalie G. Sayre, Rutland; Mary Huffman, Pomeroy; Clarice G. Krautter,
Pomeroy; Steven D. Pullins,
Pomeroy; Judy Kay King, Pomeroy:
Eleanor K. McKel.v,ey, :;yracuse;

Robert E. Davis, Langsville; Juanita Racine; Marlene A. Demko, Dexter;
I. Whytsell, Reedsville; Sarah E. Pamela Lynn Hensley, Pomeroy; Carl .
Caldwell, Pomeroy; David R. Crit- Eugene Mitch, Pomeroy; Christopher
tenden Jr., Vinton; Kermit Anthony L. Richmond, Rutland; Clarice M.
McElroy, Pomeroy; Charles L. Erwin, Middleport; Paris R. Hess,
Spires, Rutland; Terry L. Smith, Pomeroy; Grace E. Weber,
Racine; Harry Leland Parker, Reedsville; Kristina Suzanne Boston,
Pomeroy; Timothy Mark Spencer, Reedsville; Ilona Jean Butcher,
Coolville; William P. Neutzling, Pomeroy ; Jeffrey G. Skinner, RutPomeroy;
land; Ama Sue Williams, Rutland;
Chung Cha Stewart, Cheshire; Rena M. McDaniel, Middlepcrt; Dale
Vaul(hn Leroy .Sauters, Pomeroy; Allen· Barr, Reedsville; Jason Alan
Steven Mark Hagerty, Albany; Jason Rupe, Langsville; Robert Brian
David Shain, Racine: Dennis M. • .Cleek, Pomeroy ; Edgar H. Florian,
Smith, Middleport; Sarah L. Johnson, Pomeroy ;
Middleport; Lajean Armstrong, MidEdith Louise Hubbard, Rutland;
dleport; Brent William Hanson, Rut- James H. Smith, Racine; Kevin Ray
land; A. Scott Rose. Racine: James Roush, Racine; j\nna E. Griffith,
Edwin Miller, Portland; Kate Jarrell, Shade; George R. Sisson, Pomeroy:
Pomeroy; Sheila A. King, Reedsville ; Sadie E. Carr, Pomeroy; Evelyn L. .
John· Andrew Cox. Portland; Carol Hobbs. Dexter; Duane K. Black,
Sue Brickles , Middleport; Joseph A. Middleport; Jeanette Renee Cline,
Riffle·, Raci.ne; Ga.ry Lee Smith, . Reedsville ; Patr.icia A. Jones,
Pomeroy; Crystal Gale Donohue, Reedsville; Catherine F. Cox , MidPomeroy; Charlotte M. Erlewine, dleport; !;Iizabeth R. Allman, Albany;.
Dexter; Wayne M. Neff, Middleport; Carolyn K. Call, Pomeroy; Sandy L.
Diana Lynn Windon, Pomeroy; Demoss, Racine; Marion Rizer, SyraWilliam Ray Brooks, Albany; cuse; Mildred Leslie Nutter, Shade;
Charles E. Nease, Syracuse; Lois Judith E. Martin, Shade; Beulah M.
Irene Ebersbach, Chester; Ida Diehl, Crabtree, Albany; Robert H. Bratton,
Pomeroy; Gary L. Bates, Pomeroy ; Middleport; Christopher Todd Wolfe,
Tanya Lynn Woodard, Racine;. Racine; Steven Craig Hill, Racine;
Paul Anthony Davis, Middleport; Thomas M. Parker, Pomeroy;
Carolyn Kay Teaford, Chester; Kim Michael P. Salser, Racine; Robert H.
·Michele ,fackler, Rutland; Dorothy Smith, Racine; Kathleen A. Snyder,
Frances. Davis, Middleport; Annette Pomeroy ;
Kay Fick, Long Bottom; John R. NelPaui J. ~ hancey, Syracuse; Rachel
son, Syracuse; Kimberly June Dawn Hawley, Long Bottom;
Arnold, Pomeroy; !-larry C. 1-lill,

Recorder posts -land transfers
• The following land 1ransfers were

posted in the office of Meigs CounRecorder Emmogene Hamilton:
Deed, Roy F. Boggs to Roy F.
Boggs and Lyvonnia E. Young, Mid~
Deed, Keith .0 . Wood to Paula J.
Wood. Chester parcels; ·
Right of way, Antho11y w_. and
Wendy R, Deem to Tuppers PlainsChester Water Districl, Chester, 3. 7
ty

acres;
Right of way, Fred E. and Ruth
Smith to TPCWD, Suuon·, 62 acres;
Right of way, Joseph and Kerry
Lynn Moodispaugh to TPCWD,
Olive, 2.094 acres:
Right of way, John and.Susan Sut·
· de to TPCWD, Olive, 5.00 acres;
Right of way, Greta and Sheridan
G. Brown to TPCWD, Olive, 67.00
. acres~
Deed, OMEGA JV5 to State of
Ohio and · Department of Natural
Resources, Olive tracts, 108.25 acres;
Deed, Clara Haning, deceased, to

Lyle Bruce Haning, Scipio parcels;
·Deed, Bertha E. Bing to Vecron
W. and Darleen Bing. Salisbury,
.3149 and .9881 acres ;
Deed, Patrick L. and Julie A. Lawson to Christine W. Lawson, Columbia, 11.60 acres;
Deed. Austin G. and Christine W.
Lawson to Patrick L. Lawson.
Columbia;
Deed, Gwinnie L. White to Tcxanna Wchrung. Middleport parcels ;
Deed, Sharon Drasko to E. Loi s
Moore, Sharon Spencer, Racine lots;
Deed, Alben R. and Macie E.
Deweese to Roscoe and Sandra J.
Mills, Letart lots:
'
Deed,. Sandra and James W. Nelson to Sandra A. Nelson and Alesha
M. Russell, Chester;
Deed, Ralph Douglas and Maxine
Shain to Jason David ShaiA; Sutton,
.25 acre;
,
, Deed, Gertrude Goodnilc Rizer to
Kelly Dawn Rizer Her~es. Sutton:
Easemenl, John G. and Barbara J.

Bailey to OMEGA JVS , Chester;
. Deed, Fanners Bank &amp; Savings
Co. to Clarence E. and Delores A.
Evans, Salem;
Deed, Jack and Terri L. Mowery
to Kimberly Sue Smith, Salisbury,
one acre;
Deed, Southern Ohio Coal Co. to
Rich~rd A. and Dorothy Hagerty,
Salem parcels;
Deed. SOCCO to Richard A and
Dorothy Hagerty. Salem, 16.85 acres:
Deed, Bobby and Bonnie G.
Arnold to Melinda S. and George E.
Gaines, Scipio;
Deed, Thelma F. and Elroy E.
Kaylor to Randall Browning, Olive
parcels;
'
Deed, William H. and Emma M.
Rife to Larry E. and Dale Rife,
Salem;
Easement, Herbert L. and Helen
Ruth Grate to the State o( Ohio,
Orange; ·
·
Deed, Dean F. and Irene M. Bowman to Rick L. and Denise D. Garber, Lebanon, 10 acres.

wo PIOCHI - · motw ~-.,
- . nil bologne, ~
peront, }tttl1. IUI!Nner .........
~ ltopt.-- .....,. - -

Colleen C. Martin, Pomeroy; Michael
Todd Hawley, Pomeroy; Michael E.
Cremeans, Middleport; Andrea Marie
McDonald, Langsville; Charles W.
Curfman , Racine; James Paul Porter,
Middlepcrt; Dorothy Leota Parker,
Pomeroy; Jeffrey Alan Westenbarger, ·

int •uHit.s. llcenM &amp; OliN
chtck
C't"f?'D HM-

••lion.

Shade; Teresa Lynn Collins, Phyllis Morris, Pomeroy; Sue Ann
Reedsville; James Leroy Mash, Mid- Roush, Rutland; Berdena M. Gilddleport; Tammy Lynn Parker, Racine; ner, Middleport; Deborah Anne
Larry E. Powell, Racine; Janice L. Roach, Albany; Carol Dennis, Port·
Elkins, Pomeroy; Lee Anna Hendet- land; Dolores Jean Watson,
son, Pomeroy: Roger D. Brown, . Reedsville; John Wesley Moore,
Pomeroy; Theresa F, Manuel, Racine; Pomeroy.

"II.._,_
Air Cnlll1

~ ·re~~r~e a debtor ot
financial obligations and arrange a falr
dllltrlbutlon of alllats. Debtors In bankruplcy may
keep "e~tempt' property for their personal use.
This may Include a· car, a house, clothes, and

BANKRUPTCY

10
111n . .

Sy MICHAEL FLEEMAN

on
new "'I' '; -lt.

household goods.
For lnloi'!Mtion Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

-·-

Attorney William Safranek
Attorney At Law
. (614) 592-5025

SANTA MONICA, Calif. - It's
not evidence. It's not testimony. But
it reached1hejury nonetheless in the
0.1. Simpson trial: the defense's
· claim lhat police planted blood and a
glove.
' Through questions the judge
deemed objectionable, the father-son
defe'nse lawyers- Robert Baker and
Phil Baker- neshed out a frame-up
scenario slarring ex-Detective Mark
Fuhrman.
To suggest the bloody glove was
planted at Simpson's house, Robert
Baker asked retired Dclecti ve Tom
Lange on Wednesday: "Do you know
whether Detective Fuhrman was
leaving ... so he would be all by himself so he would have the opportunity 10 plan! a glove?"
Objection sustained, point made.
To suggest that socks. taler found
to contain blood matching Nicole
Brown Simpson's, were planted, Phil
Baker, asked police videographer
Willie .Ford: "Someone must have
put them there after you were there ?"
Objection sustained, point made.
The defense effort to bolster the
frame-up theory resum'es today with
the testimony of police investigator
Kelly Muldolfer, who looked into the·
· break-in of Simpson's Bronco in a
police tow yard . The defense con-

· 30 Amouneementa

Fo!UciRun
Sportsman Club would like to

COngratulate

Chuck Atkinson
. on winning our
4-wheeler rattle,
and thank
evarybody who
purchaeed tickets.

30

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB ·
GUN SHOOT
FRIDAY,
DEC. 13

6 P.M.
---------------::
:
--

Saturday, Dec. 14, 1996 - I :00 P.M.
In the lobby of Farmers Bank in Pomeroy
Stop in and bid on the dolls in our "Dress A Doll" Contest. All
proceeds will go to the United Fund.
DAN SMITH, AUCTIONEER
Refreshments will be served. OJ)en to the public. Call 992·2136
for more information.
·
· ·

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

WAYNE'S PLACE
of Middleport, Oh.
SATURDAY NITE ONLY

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1'/."lhru 4" Sch 40 pipe
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Gas pipe 1" thru 2" - fittings - Regulators - Risers
Full assortment o1 P.V.C. &amp; Flex linings &amp; Waler fittings
Full line.ol Clstem, Septic &amp; Water storage tanks

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"""'tnl miJ..,""""'

DuPont heir
attorneys will
plead insanity
for their client

WIIER•s

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RUTLAND,OH
H111110Krown- Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp; White
Pine 4' &amp; Up.with M 111'1'81
selection nf lllrJ:&lt;r trees.
Cafl742-2143 or
742·2979
· · On Sale Nov 281#1

HUBBARDS
GREEN HOUSE

22-PC.

NowOpan For
Chrlatmaa Season

w/FREE 16'

6 1/2" Poinsettias (6
colors) ................ $3-$5
Poinsettia
Baskets .. $7.95-$17.95
Christmas Cactus
............. $1.75or2/$3
Cut Trees........ $8-$1 B ·
Small Holly Trees ......
;........................ .$2.50
.Wreaths .. $4.95-$9.95
Grave
Blankets .......... $19.95
Cemelary Vases .$9.95
Monument Sprays .....
................... .... $1§.95
OPEN DAILY

SCREWDRIVER SET

TAPE MEASURE
1699·1692

SPOlUGHT
.,

·rm trying lo make you look like my lump of
modeling clay inslead of the other way around."

9 1.m.· 5 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. • 5 p.m.
Free Coffee &amp; Cookies
During Christmas
Season

IIIACK I D£Cial CAR VK. PLUS

nla."""'Yk~l&gt;dm.~­
ill..illllll
.
.

992·5776
Make your ·wife's
Chrislmtl!l one lo
Offon ~)~X'd ot II.. porticipoliog NAPA AUTO PARIS -

:

...

Leads-.

11-. Tasls
llwlllj Ugltts
ltlts """"

Vests

O.,S
hils

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

Deer Cut

at

949-2734

949·l057

SUI'S
GREENHOUSE

MIKE BING
Ev... &amp;W..... IItws
mo. pd ..

Momlng818rRdJ

"

R. L. HOLLON

CONNOLLY'S

TRUCKING

2'6 Miles

-swags

South of

eGrave Blankets

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Tuppers
Plains on St.

•Artificial Poinsettia

Limestone • Gravel
Dirt •Sand

Rt. 7

949-2115,

(614) 667·3413

985-4422
Chester, Oliio

CHRISTMJ\s .TREES

5.00au,

1

tti2MII11'1t0.

Open
Evenings and
Weekends .

·n•
Pick up diaCIIrded
·•PPilancel, batteri11,
mtny nletal• &amp; · ·

11122M,pd

CUSTOM BUILDING &amp;

motor blOcks.
614-1192-4025 8 am-8

REMODELING
New Homes, Additions,
Roofing, Palnllng,Bams
Garages, Concrele
Free Estimates
25 years e,(perience
Mi• jix it w; if it "Y'((' our
OMI lroinr or husittt.\'.'

Aulhorized AGA Distributor
• Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
Services • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrlcalion • Repair Welding
• Aluminum/Siainless • Tool Dressing • Omamenlal
Steps • Stairs, Railings, Patio Fumiture, Fireplace
llems, Planler Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other sluff!!

Ask fnr

"No Job Too Large or Too Small"

Jnhq (614) 991·398'7
or Dallas (614) !149-3036

DAVIS
CONTRAaiNG

oflooflng

oRemodellng
-New Construction
oDecks
•VInyl Siding

olnaured

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;
INSULATION

JONES'
TREE
s•RVICE
. 20 Years Experience •

li37 SRYAH PLACE
MIDDLEPORT
1192·2772
8:00 •. m.-3:30 p.m.

•51-0..s&amp;

Wildows
•R. . AMtlols

Free to tovlnv country home,
healthy neutered cat. gentle &amp; all&amp;elionale, will daliver, 6114 -092·

"""'· Lost and Found

ALL OHIO
Easy Pay Auto

j

INSURANCE

' DI~COLJiltS .
Computer OuoiL•s
(614) 99?-G677

Trsl••
HOB BYLAND

GRUESER'S
GAUGE

j_

!
!:

..............
,.,
..........,.7 ......

"

$10 &amp; Up
..
BOB SNOWDEN'S LQt• .

111M-ups, Oil Chlngt,
WIX, Butllng
Long St., RUttend, Oh.

614-992·7643

• truc:ll pelntlng,

742-2831, Alk for Kip .
I

(No Sunday Calls)

l '
'
I

LOST: ·Black Lab, brown &amp; White .,. ,
Envllsh Sauer, Plain Valley Rd . .
REWARD! 304 -895-3333 or 304 · •

522-1077.
lo&amp;1 : Red &amp; Whue Bull While
Face 550 To 600 LD. Vacinily 01 ...
Taylor Road &amp; 775 614-379-2275.

~

Stol&amp;n: Please Return Bag Full Of
Pictures 01 Children That Was
Stolen From 2012 Ct1atham
Street,_ 12/5196 . No Ouesuons
Asked Leave On Porch Of Mary's ·

~~~~·'=··~1.--~~~------ ~,_.,

70

Var.d Sale

=======
:
Gallipolis
A VIcinity
All Vard · Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance . DEADLINE : 2 :00 p.m .
the day Delore the ad is to run.
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edilion · tO:OO a.m. Sat·
· urday.

80

'
t

•
•

:._
•.

.,

Pomeroy,

•

Middleport
&amp; .VIcinity

"•

All Yard Sales Must Bo Paid In
Advance . Deadline: 1 .OOpm rhe
day b&amp;lore the ad ts to run, Sunday &amp; Monqay editiOn/ 1 :ODpm
Ftiday ' .

'•

"
":
•

•

•
:·

Public 5afe
and Auction

•

Crown City Auct1on Friday At 8
P.M . Laroe load Of Namo Brand
Tools. Also Animaled San ta .
Uidtey Etc
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer, complete
auction
serv1ce.
licensed
r86,0hlo &amp; .West Virginia, 304713-57850r304·773-5447.

90

'

.
'

~
~

•

•
"

'

,.•

•'
'

.

Wanted to Buy

2 Cemetery lots 1n Kirkland Ce·
me!Cr)'. 304,.f;75 -2t95.

Absotlne Top Dollar: Ali U.S. Sli-

•
'

'

'

'

ver A11d Gold CoiM, Prootsots. :
Diamonds, Ant1que Jewolr)', Gold ·
Rings, Pre·1930 U.S. Cutrency,
Sterling, Etc. f\cquisi11ons Jewelry
· M.T.S. &lt;;oin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, GallipoliS. 614-446-2842.

:•

J &amp; D's Auto Parts . Buying sa lvage vehicles. Se1!1ng parts. 304773·5033.

't

dollar- ant1ques, turntlu~e .
glass, china, GIOGks, gold, s'ifvor;
coins. watc~s. ostates, old stone
jars. old bluo 8. wh.te dishes, old
woad bo•cs , m1lk bottles. Meigs
Count)' Adv&amp;fi19Un'lent. OsDy
Mar11h, 614·992-7441 1.

Top

Wanted To Buy Used Mobile
l-lomes . Call: 814-446-0175 Or
304-675-5965.
.
Want~d To Duv : lillie Tykes
Kllchon Sci. Workshop, Play ·
house, Poss1blo Any Olhor L1111e
T~~e Tors. lllc;Jso Call 614 · 2tt5-

5887
Wanted To Buy : We Bu~ Au to's
Any Condilion, 614-388·9002. Or

614-446-f¥\RT.
Wan1ed : Fool Poworod Scroll
Saw, 814·446·0609.
Wlll bU)' old Ma'rtbo;o Unlimited
mi!.os. Will poy $.01 por mile .
(Unlimited milos only I) Call 304 -

675·6276.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

lcreu th riMr tre.

1400.776.0527
IIIMIOI . . IIIll

SUieiiS1PMT06 . .

110

Help Wanted

"ATTN : Pomt ~'foasan1• Pot~al
Pos111ons. Pormancn1 lull limo lor
clerk/SOrters Full Boneftls . For
ellnm, applicat,on and salary 1nfo

.__ _ _ _ _ _ __. call:

(630)906 ·2350En3670 .

6am-tpm.
AVON 1. Au Areas ! Shirley ·
~ars, 30+6 75-1429.
Abla AYon Rcpresenrauves
needed. Earn money for Christ mas bils ar hot'I'IOiar work. 1·800·
992 -6356 or 304 ·882 ·2645 , Ind .

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Body work, c., truck

I

Prectorllllle,OII

Rt. 124 Ruth!tnd, Ohio 742·3051'
OPEN NOV. 23-10 TO 9:00

Ponwroy

I

mothers trail tlems accjdentaHy
lell at the corner of First and lo- """
cust St. needed lor Christmas ra.
ward please call 614-44.6-2296 or_ ~,
614·245·5344 after 5 f)ITI ·

992-6711

SUPai SILicnON
Pleltlc ......
Trlllu·hi..

Wreaths· Swags &amp;
Grave Blankets ·

1
I

Losl 12108196 larve basket of my "

Want 10 buy slate pool table, 614 -

. ,..........
........"

CHRISTMAS TREES

£J

Any CJr
Any Driver
DUI &amp; SR&lt;'2

~

Found: Camera In Front Of RCYCO
P1c1ures Were Oevotopod Please
Call To Identify, 61 4-446·6542

992·7789.

Can•l'nlcb
Chs &amp; lltclricl

Ronnie JOtnel......,.

7/1Mfll

Fre Chrlsrmaa Puppies, To A
Good Homel61 4·388-8815.

FTH EathMIH

UDIO CONTROL

. Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;
Stump .Grinding
owner:

'tt'•••l
WW..ws
•
Garlllll

•

·~

. - - - - - - - - - , Clean La1e Model Cars Or • :
Trucks, 1990 Uodels Or Newer;
Smith Bu ick Pontiac, 1900 East·
em Avonue, Gallipolis.
'

We will worl&lt; within your budget.
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
108 Pomeroy Street ·
Mason, WV

01'

Dlllll.llmtl (114) ... 30111
25 ~experience
Llc-ld &amp; IIIIU~

18.1

oRoplng •Wreaths

minor rnechlniell
rtpllr.

...... a- (114) •• 31117

2823.

1212196 1 mo. pd

for 101M ldeuf

•cMI..ntll

ltlhWiefert, 11711'alaat St., n2-JI3I

t' •

Coats - D119 Coks

RIGGS TREE FARM

New Homes • Vlhyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

~member.
Call

The Mo.t or Pans ~mpany
.

RUTLAND, OHIO
614-742·2656 .
1 Briar Proo(
Hunting Clothes ·

C.R 30, Recine, Ohio

WICKS

Cho&gt;teiiiiOtg .......
179'1·2229, li,JI

RUTLAND MINE
SUPPLY CO.

AUTO ·
31801 Amberger Rd .
Off Forest Run

'.

'•..

mo.

AKC . reviatered male Cocker
Spaniel, buff colof: black male
dog, GOOd wilh kids ; 614· 949 -

60

BING'S

U!ndlcepe Stock

BARR'S LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
Sll.'l &amp; Sun.'s till ChriltmM
St Rl 325, Dlnvllle, Oh.
.Ph. 742-3149 or 1192·7285

12flr'll t

Maplewood
Lake
Skin·Cut·Wrap

REPAIR

.(Pionl-r Chrlatmn)
Spruce end WhHe Pine

•

.(ioolltor •Igna)
Middleport, OH
614-982-5379
Oay a Evening H111.

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

Tuppers Plains, Ohio

St. Rt. 7

Eab"l Goo&lt;li6,.·38S·9335.

· Just orr Bnldbury Rd.

Riggs Chri$tmas Trees

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

WHITE RAVEN

'\bur Bank~J#...

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut/Uve

9 Prop. Pupa Ovtfltockeel 1St
Come 1!If Serve, 7 Weeks Old,

liM'S CUSTOM
. ·CARPEl

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 llltn North ol Sliver Bridge on SA 7
1M 11-F; 1-5 Sunday
Phone 446-4530

Any Scotch or White Pine· $15.00
. Wagon Rides on Weekends
At. 33 to Darwin, East on At. 681, 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd., 11/2 miles to tree farm, Follow signs.
Dally 10 am til Dark
Nov. 291h thru Dec. 24th

:.J
I I 1111 I II
I I I I I I·-I II··----·-···
Ill I Ill I Ill I I I I..I I I I I I I I 1111 I I II I I I I II I I I tilL:
-·-·-·
----

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

IUDFORD'S .

•

1 Month olt1 Fluffy, all or~~noe or
al ~eck care 614·256;81091

9 Monlh old, pan Beagle pup,
male, gentle. 304·882-2925.

50%·75%

CHRISTMAS in the COUNTRY
. atlVYDALE

CHRISTMAS TREES

KIT "N" CARL vu: ® hy 1-urry Wri~thl

1.

Iii tc. luen1, Some Penia, , l lUtr
Trained , 8 -..hi old, 2 Sepefatt
Motherl614·44 t-o6e5 aiW 8 pn'1

SAVE

hrwl•
....... I/2.Jie
9t2-6071

7215.

Under

new tnllftlg1menl

•

5 month old, 112 Cocker Spaniel,
112 British Spar11el. 304· 675·

6 Week Full Blooded Chow Chow
Puppies, 814-.446·6772.

Public Wek:orM

CHRISTIW IllES
15-1 10

give med ia interviews defending

himself and the Police Department.
Frank Spangler, who was. with .
" We have been vilified to unbeFuhrman at the crime scene.
li cvahlc cx.trc~~s in this case," the
Simpson, ·49 , was acqu,ittcd ·last ' u s t.~ally quiet Lange said, raising his '
year in lhc killings of Ms. Simpson voice.for one of the few times in his ·
and her friend Ronald Goldman . The testimony. "It's about time we stood
victims' relatives arc suing him.
up and replied.''
Simpson didn 't attend Wednesday 's session. He was in an Orange
County court for final arguments in
his battle with his c.-wife 's parents
for custody of his two younger children, Sydney and Justin.
Superior Court Judge Nancy
Wieben Slack took the case under
consideration. It was unclear when
lhe judge would rule .
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - John
In Santa Monica, meantime, E. du Pon.t's lawyers say they plan to
defense lawyers pressed the cvi- pursue an insanity defense, claiming
dencc-planling theory by asking the multimillionaire was psychotic
questions thai the judge ruled objcc- when he killed an Olympic wrestler
tionablc.ln court, lawyers' questions and remains mentally ill.
.
cannot be considered evidence.
DuPont's mental illness shows up
First, it was Robert Baker. who in "grandiose and pcrsccutorial delusuggestcd that F.uhnnan was ahle 10 sions and disorganization · of
roam Simpson's property unmoni- lhought," the lawyers said in court
.
tared for 30 minutes to plant a papers Wednesday.
bloody glove the morning after the
Du Ponl, 58 , believes he is the
June 12, 1994 , killings.
Dalai Lama. the Christ child and the
Lange said he cou ldn 't recall sec- last surviving mcmhcr of the Russian
ing fuhnnan at Simpson 's , house royal family, witnesses said during
,
between 5:45a.m. and 6:15a.m., but court hearings.
he refused to give even the slightest .· DuPont is charged with shooting
hint of support 10 Baker's attack. and killing wrestler Davc'Schultz on
Jan. 26.

985 4473 _

L

2-• -8weak old, Chow !&amp;mate puppieo. 30•-1175-1!1120.

Doorw Open·4:30.
Geme llttrtl 6:45.
' P.,- out lo ICCOI'dlng to
number 01 ployere.

7/22/tfn

,j

-2!1113 Allo&lt; 3 ~~~ .

AMERICAN lEGION
POST 602
EVERY SUNDAY

•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
·ESTIMATEES

lUI PUlPS

""no Good lOYJng- et ..

UCINf,. OHIO

•NewHomea

-DIATE INtTAUATIONI.

tends the break-in made the blood Lange testified he will continue to
cv.idencc in the vehicle unreliable.
Also set to testify was police Lt.

CONmUCTION

"'Oi THE P O T llnll til to OUALJAID
IIU'IIRS
-&amp;.ARGIINVEHTORY POR

porto

2 Adult Ftmllt Call To Giva• r

BINGO

101111 IISSill

AM •llllt ,_,._

Fraine-up theory surfaces again in trial
Associated Press Writer

-WY.

!

Reo. •

ANNOUNCFf,1ENTS

: 005

. Personals

Holldor R o - Glly/Golo. -

AVON · S8 -S151Hr . No Door To
Door, "Bonuses· Fun &amp; Eas~l l ·
b00-827-4640 ar.d~Sis/Rep.
,-von Chris1mas $8 ·$151Hr, No
Minimum Ofder, No· Door · To Coot\ /Inventory. '1·800-736-Q168

lndi&amp;ISirep.

Slnoloo. ln Youo Arta. Nowtll •· Babysitter nHded for 1 child, o4
11110'414-7070 Eat. 4413, U.llllt daw-• 1 WHk, mature. non·amolt·
.Min. Mull So 11 Yra. Soni.U Ott-

141-1430.

2/12/WitfU

'

ing adult, rtltrtnctt ttquirtd.
30H75-4421 Call oftor 5pm.

,
!.'
~

•

II&lt;

-.-.

�,
Pomeroy •

• l'lunday, Dlclmber 12, , . .

Thursct.y, December 12. 1111

;-·All-EY OOP

••
••
••

•I

The Deily Sentinel • Page 15

Mlddlepor".. Ohio

•'

NEA Cro••word Puzzle
PHILLIP

'

ALDER

AC,.:JII
1 II:

'I

·=)Dour....,

,,.,.,._ .. ''"'""u*-•--

41

1 ~

• ll'lltoulr

~~=
.=:..::."
12181.......
!!
,.,_
_

.....

"!We .. ~

(boa-)

.

,
:'a

llluo Fountoirlllolll 151 Uppor GOOD USEO APPliANCES·
Rood, Golllpoh. PIMOO Col Wtthtrs, dryers, refrigerators,
P.ll. ·7 P.M.
l'l.ngea. Ska~• Applllnc... 71
For Rool Or 111111: IH7 14xll0 2 ~~s.:~'toe;u &amp;14-~ote -73_aa.
Very CIHn,

non·amoker, reftrtnctl

quftcl. Col 304-117~.

~byan•r nHOtil to babyail in

&lt;Our ~lit&gt;Oill F""Y homo lor o 2

,,.., Old. ~ 10 sl8n imme·
:•~~~r- 304-II"IS-15011.

Houl S.rvlco: Will Houl Almoll IUY IN DICIMIER. No poy·
Anylhlngl Col A.M. Boloro Noon, mont UIMorcll IH7. E·Z fl,.nc.
Atlt4-251-1037.
lng. Calllho flnoncollno 1-100251-5070. All home1 on aolo.
lnWior and Exlorior • - ..,,
1penlrJ, ftroploc. roflnllhlng, ad- :;;:;;~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;:

MNKIIQ
oOIIio \Iaiiey Bini&lt; II SMklno Ex·
~-- Cld And Ot.laliied lrJvidualt for llv• FuM·Timo l'alilkmlr
tn Our Operations Facility. ProYldint Generaua Benefits Pack·

I

FNo-,

•or-304-1175-IDI:I.

~~=nl

W•ntlng TO Do HauHQepfng
Col~. 814-441-1047.

FINANCIAL

210

on Experience

Business

Opportunity

1-COMPUTEA
OP9WI)R

VALLE%~1SHING

•1 Ew!*'ISNII:M.f 1 - -O:DD

OHIO
CO.
recommends that you do bni·
•SliM 1 1.,.. 10 " ' 1
ntll with ptOptt 'you know, and
And~
• £- Conll•ldl lnl) Comclullir NOT 10 Mnd monoy lhro ..... tho

M A 4 ' • •••:

I lr2 Blfl MObillr -·LOll 01

mall unlilyau ha¥8 lrwealfpilld
tho olllrlng.
~

...,_A PlusI
W.A-11-T-£.0
~: Depends On Experience Are You lnlereartd In A PEAL
+PM Mlfll &amp;n.a
Home S.a•d Bualnett? Thla Ia
l.aii:IIIIDn: '
The One You've Been Looking

GOTHol-..

a •:' , •Qtio

.

-lltl? - - Col Mr. Philip
-'rmttrang All14-448-213• Ot
ro HR
0111o Yolloy
Bonk.
BooDet&gt;or......
2.0. Gdl....... Ohio 4Mlll ·
.
Equoj ()pporUiilf """'.,...,...
~~

For. For F.-.. Book Call4111-470'

21so.

:::!:::---::--:-~-....:...-

23,0

AplrtmentS

for Rent

monlh. Free delivery 1 lltup.

Professional
se rv....,..
·~

1 and 2 bedn:lam

Lorge Solocllon 01 Carpel Rom In
Slack Corpel I Viflyl ~- 00 Vd .1
Up Mollotlln Carpels. 114·4,..
7444.

U1ed Furniture · 130 Bulnille
Pfu - Slot&gt; BY and - our lArgo
S.CiectkJn al good Uud Furni-

...._ HFIS.-4. 01-..112

nl&amp;hod and unlurnllhod, aocurily
1182-2218.

depo1h requlred, no pell, 114·

530
Bu~ or

AnUques
tell. Riverine Antlqutl,

1124 E. Main SlrH~ on Ill 124.
· Ohly ot OalnifODd Homoo, Nllro .2bdrm. ap11 .. ·lolol etoclrlc. op- Pome.roy. Houra: M.T.W. to:oo.
wv. 30+1H-511S.
pllanc" furniahed. laundry room
. to 1:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 10
loC.IiH; CioN 10 Klroolin IOWn. .
:
p.m . 114-892-2521. Ruu
Ut..lll Mit- 1H7 1•a10 ttvM beef. ApptiCI~ianl IVIillbll 11: Village Uaore awner.
-.., includn I-IIII FREE len Grotn Apta. l48 or c:oll614·112·
- - 0n1y s11s.s7 por "'" 3711. EOH.
540 Miscellaneous
-down.
Col 1-800-«37-3231.
3 Room. unfurnl- .... rice loMerchandise
Ntw , ..,80 Only make 2 par·

cation, refef'anctt &amp; dapo1it remonll I 1110\10-ln, no PIJmonl ol· quoad. 304-&lt;I"IS-10110.

Y"''·

ter 4
frtl ~1-up I dtlivory. 304·755-51185.

NIWI B•nll R•p•'•· Owner fi-

fW'tC!nll

1Miabltl $17111110. FtH

doiNOry 1101-up. 304-755-7111.

Furnllhod Ape,...,. 1 Bodroom
S30Mio.. Ulililitl Pold. 107 Soc·
onc1 Awnue, Qallipolil, 614-4&lt;48·
384 .. Ahtr8P.M

· ·
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
loc ltloo
BUD.GET PRICES AT JACKSON
lluii·HII 5 di&amp;Piar moclol Dou- ESTATES, 52 Wt&amp;twbod Drivo

Oo-

blllWidet. $$$SAVEtt$ FrH Hl·
up I delivery, frH
I

Homoo Nino,

from S244 to 1315. Walk to 1nop
1 movitl. Call ·et4•441·251!58.
Equ-' -lling()ppo&lt;lunily.

11l85 1 1111 Holiday Barbin
814-441-0423.

S2,8001irm304-87S-3000.

lt'll. Wa1her.• Dtyer, Stove, Frlg

P'llakeett S9aa. 304-895-3852.

2 L Shape Fuel Tonks And
Pumps 55 Gl. Eo. $250. For Both.
614-258-8385.

I c-::-=='-':----~-:­

Bad. 61 .. 388-9878.
40 lnc:h Snaw Thrower, For · 18
Cral~man Trac:tor WHh
WhHI Welghtt/Chalns, Fit1 8'

Very Cl.. n. No
HARTS MASONARV • Block, SeCtional HarM 80x24 3 BR 2 Garbage.
Smokoro, No 1'111. S300 O-IL
Bath,
2
LR's,
On
Rtnltd
Lot,
1350/MO.,
814 .,441 .220S, 1114 •
Jbric~k~l;110no
work, 30 y•ro oxrMIOMbll rl:l81. 30..

388-1579.
Bar~t power whttll corvette,
good cond. rochorgoalrllr banory.
ri&lt;Mivorll35.
Bundr Trombane w/ctae, exc
candS200.304-175-7Q).

----J-.;::...'::585=·-------

Ii,............

Downtown One Bedroom, Carpet-

.a, ~te KiiChan, An Electric:,
~~~~·;::':...'4-3~711-:...S~~~------1'--•:...•~·~~:...4=~~----------••
AM:con Ct'" No

PO,

Dtpo&amp;it,

a Balh, No
Retet-ence And Dtpo1it R•

Furnilh~ 3 Roamt
~~..

Chifoproctlc olfic:o an
· Mil
appearing,
par_
_ _ Faal-

• At 2
t K Q J ID 9 4

'" Table &amp; Cl'leirt. 3 Pc. Bedroom
Suite, Sigler WoodbiJtntr, Sigler
Fuet Oil Stove, Rod Iron Porch
· Furntlure, 614-379-2720 AFTER

• 9 8 4

•Jt875
• 10 54
• .i 3
6 A K J

STORAGE TANKS :i",DOD Gallon
Uprighl, Ron bans Enutrprisea,
......... Ohio. 1-800-537~528.
Surp4ua Army Camouftagt Clotl'l·
ing. (Insulated coyera!ll , brown
duck bib1 135). Sam Somtt·
villa'• by Sandyville Post Ollice.

Friday-Sunday Noon-6:00pm.

t A 7 2

• Q 10

(Junior SizHI-

Trl Star CleaninG Sylttm, Tank
Type Vaccum New $7DO 080.

614·446-2301 .

lllflililt.

350 Lots &amp; Acreage.

Campuler Usera Needed. Work
own houta. l20k 10 SSOklyr -1-

1110 341 71116 l1508.
Elln 11.000 W- Sluffing En·

vefOpH At

Hot:M.

~xperlence.

Start Now. No
FrH Supplies, lnlo.

-anylllcllprtlaror ...
lrrtlatton Of' dlalii•iliilllb-...

No Ollllgolion. Sond LSASE To:
ACE, ()opt 1351, Box 5137. Diomond Bot. CA II 715.

lo ..... Qy..,...,.
IIINerUIImelllalor .......

Eaar Workl Ellc:tllent Payl At·

whicll II I n - ollho i1W.

eembee Ptod11c:taat Home: Cal

'awMnlllllkllnthlaNW
•.,..,.. '*.. dhoroby
•• lUI
I ,.

Toll Froo I ·100·417·55fl EXT.
12170.

Thit MIA IPIPif wll nol

Our-..

-

allavtillbllrononoqull

__

""""""""'

Job ()ppo&lt;lunity
~~!7.1ilt And NaH lechnician
N
. Call 814·4 ..8·1859 For

....

REAL ESTATE

31·0 Homel for Sa Je

r

West

Paas
Pass

ComrtliWciaiiHome units from

$199.
low monthly paymer11s
FREE color catalog.

CaHTOOAY I·B00-842·1305.

Pus

KEI:P YORE ILIOWS

PAW II YO'RE
TEACHIN' TATER lAD
MANNIRS II

640

TAN AT HOME

buy DIRECT and SAVEl

TH' TAILIII

pliencea, Anraclive Interior, FUll

clover, orchard grass mix. 304 ·
67S-3960AfterSpm.
Square bates, mixed , easy access in all weather, $1.25 per
bale. :ll4-895-3590 Ahet' Spm.

550

Building
Supplies

:Coo.::.:k:.:Mo::::111::"':;.·:.":,.:4_-&lt;:.:4G-0:...:.'::03=·~­

.

Rio Grande, OH Call 614 -245·

5121.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

730 Varis &amp; 4-WDs

Pets for Sale

560

It :t ttAl&gt; yl /trfTf:f)
TO $Pf/t~ TO A
·

\~

' 614-

IIHuly Shop Equipmlnl Wei Un11
HydroUc Chair &amp; Dryer &amp; Chair,
014-148 1033.

m
i_ _

~

~
~AVf 1&gt;1/tl..ff) T~f:
~
TIMf·ANf)·TeMPf:,ATVItf ~

trf:C.O,I&gt;Irf6, :t VIOULI&gt;

I"'UM,ftr/
•
t'

.

or limp

e.-af
purple
t - - 1111

ground-

5

10 Kind or fuel :
12 OllkiiiMI
'

dog.:

11 Drtllllr'e
11 - llllnll
20AWIII
diCIUon
21-

''

r;

'

......ov-'• :

.-.t-- "'

22 OMtl

I

23 Futun ~L.a..'

==I .

Nort~

· Eul
I t
Pass
Pass
3.
Pass
Pass

~· ~

tMm numllel'
27 Prtc.
'
21Small blllt j
30Pinlaua

,

ltonM
32 Mia. DICk
Tracy
se Morell
39eo Procle

'--

••
•

~

•
.

.1 ~81•1141

42 ,.,...
_,
Why are the Quakers 110 called?
.
. pronoun '
If we may change the subject slight·
.u
-44 Woe Ill mal "'!
\ ly, The Brld&amp;e World runs a feature
-.e-~
cllled "ChaUenge the Champs.• Each
e7 - or Wight a
iaeue, twa _e xpert pairs bid 10 hand e.
ee Scol,e.g.
Dillicull to start with , the bidding is
50 Altai\
'•
made even more tricky by the match·
holld8y
52 An.mpt
pointed pairs scoring, which gives a ·
premium to ftnding no-trump and major-suit contract&amp;. ·
The magazine has just published ils
CELEBRITY CIPHER
eighth booklet of pasl matches . ll conby Luis Campo•
tains 10 oets from 1972. You bid lhe
CMibriey Cipl* CfYI)IOQI"amm are crealld from~ by I~ I*JP!e, pe.. tnd p....nt
Each r...r- ~~'~"" c~pMr _.,. lat~U\Cthef. ray'l c~ue: u equq P
hands on the supplied sheets, then
..•
lool&lt; in the booklet to see how you
,.•
fared and to compare your efforts with
CKS
OARC.
K
AFCDKA
OJIZX
'R
••·.
thoae of the "guinea pigs." .
•
This deal is based on a pair of hands
J S K•
CDFS
~
S. JCKE
CDJIEFSX
"from an earlier booklet. How should
the play proceed in three no-trump af~
fZUDFWK' C .'
CDK
J N
ZKCCKA
ter West has led his fourlh-highest
'••'
spade?
WKKCDJGKS.
GFS
ZiiXORI
North's jump to three diamonds was
.•.
invitational , in the modern style .
PAEVIOUS SOLUTION· "lngmar Bergman taught me how lUIIe you can do.~
South was lured by the vulnerable
rather lhan how much." - Liv Ullmann. .
•.
game bonus.
.
J
Aller winning the first trick with the
epade k\ng, East cashed the ace ."
'.
WOIII
•t,
West, knowing South atilt held the
lAM
I
PIULII
queen, dropped his jack. East, receiv- - - - - - lhlltH loy C\AT I . POllAN .
'1
ing the message , switched to a club,
•-ro•oo
lellora
of ""'
which .allowed the defenders· to take
four ~erornb'-d ward1 be·
tbe first live tricks.
.
low
10 form four simple word1 .
"Ghsllen&amp;e the Champs, Book 8" :
.coals $UO, poolplid; from The Bridge
World, 39 West 94th 8\reet, New York,
NY t0025-7124.
The origin of the nickname
"Quakers" for the Society of Friends
was given by the group's founder,
SIJTO
Gear&amp;• Fox: "Justice Bennet of Derby
was the first that called us Quakers,
because I bid them tremble at the
word of the Lord. This was in the year
1650."

~

Ql!ltG~NE.A 11 -.; \.,..-\/)..IJI:s:&gt; 13fz

1

I'

. f

•

.

"

'.

I+ ACfoo, Golllpollo area. ·2. 7
miiOI" OUI Nalghborhood Rd.
••e.ooo nogotlablo. 114·441·

·-~-

,.,., ...., s~~l\)A~4t.~~·

.

Pan;;ela an Ra,-burn Rd . Water,
paved roiMI, reason.Ne realflttiona. 30-t-875-5253. rno tingle·

RENTALS

' Bedroom Hou• in Rio Grande
$235 month plus deposi1 will be

.

2 -....,, fuU ._.....,,_ 205 II

,~;1~I~~~1~'
L• I1 0 1.Y E1 ~- ..~,'
I

2 Poplar Sl $275/mo. 304-675·
3812.
2 BedtoOm1. furnilhtd, located

lnduslries, 12 .Ft. Pro 12D
Bass Boar, Sportan Trailer, Minn
Kota 3.1 HP Motor, Batlery
Kl

.--1

One golfer to another, ' The
·
biggest disappointment I ever
,__.....;......;.______, had was when I hit a hole in one
K WY E L E and no one -.- - - -1"

ChartiJtr, Accessories, New Never Used, 11.960, Firm. 614-446-

8325.

760

I

Auto Parts &amp;

3 Bedroam On tcll'r Road, Refer·
' 1989 Plymouth Coli Wagon. 3

Doors, 87 ,000 Miles, 5 Spee&lt;J,
$1.500; 1992 Shadow Au.._ 4 Cy-

Complete '"" chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words
L........l.-.J.L-...1..._J._-.l--.l you develop
from srep No. 3 below.

Budget Pri~e Transmiss ions,
Used tRebutll, All Types. OYer
10,000 Transmissions, Clulches
flywheels, Onr.hual Kits. 614245-5677

.

..•'

linder, Air, S2,200 080, 814-2561ZJ3. .
Ford True11 Frames And Body
Parts, 90's Vintage Cab Pans, 2
1990 Chevy Lumina. Runs a· New Coral Springs. Back Glass
Locks Good, Good Shape 91 .000
Etc. Also, Ht95 CoDra Hood, .R S
Mies, S3,995,.814-386-8706.
F 0 R. , Other Misc. Late Model
1990 Thunderbird, red, automatic, Paris, Slight Damage Take Ofr As
power ·w indows and door locks, Ia 50% Ott Ust, 814 ·388·9,181
tires, A-1 shape, call David, Leav&amp; Message.
4· 742· 221 1 days or 814-949late Model New I low Mileage
2389 evenings.
Used ~u to &amp; Truck Part Motors
1991 Dodge Stealth Garage Kept, T!ansmissions, Body &amp; Suspen:
low Miles. $9 ,900 Neg, 614-387· s1on Paris. Domestic· &amp; Foreign.
Wide Seleetlan Towerline Auto
7117.
Svs1ems. 614·532·0139, Or 1·
1991 Milzubishi Ecllpae Turbo,· 800·482·6260 . .

Gdlpdl Hauu For Rani .t BR,
t 1J2 Bath Brick Ranch, Fam
Room, New Furnace, Air, Oily
~hooll. $5751Mo .. Call 614·448-

2055AIIor6:00.

Newt~ R8modelad, 1 RoomsiBalh.
Stove And RefrigttiTOf Furnish~.

Washer IOryer Hook-Up,
29 Nell Avenue, Gallipolis, 1340/
Mo., S275 S.curily Dopolil, Rei·
.,..... Rtquirld, Call 8

A.M. -0 P.M. 614·441·9211.

~·

SCIIAM-I.m ANSWEIS

Gunmen - Lucid- Twang - Immune- WINNING
As a kid I wasn't very athletic and never won at any
sport. My dad said that wanting to win has more merit
than WINNING .

!THURSDAY

Loaded, CO. Su,.ool, $8,000, 614·
New gas tanks, 1 ton truck
843-2265. .
.

One bedroom .houae in Mlddlt·
pon, 11ove and refrigeraror, tl•
raehed 1\Httd garage, e14~62·

wheels &amp; radintora. 0 &amp; R Auro
Ri~ley, WV. 304-372-3933 or 1:
.
Player. 52K Miles. $5,500 OBO. 800-273·9329.
1989 Dodge Grand Caravan V-6,
11OK Mil es. E rc. Condition,
SERVICES
$4 ,000 090, 6U-.t4t -0607, 614 ·
1992 Geo Tracker 5 Speed. CO

.

Two bedroom houae, carpeted
and .ciMn, no inside pats, cMipalil·
reqwtd. 814-992-3090.

I'VE TOLD VOU THAT TIME
AND A6AIN,O'IERANDOI/ER,

NO, I CAN'T ALWA'fS
1-!ELP I{OU WITH

IA~IDA4;AI~ AND A6AIN ..

'IOVR HOMEWORK .:

245-5592 Aller 5 P.M . "

HOW OFTEN
I I--IAVI:.TO

FOR THE
UMPTEENTH TIME?

TELL I{OU?

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

440-e890

.

.,

r.~ERCHANDISE

510

HOusehold

Goods ·

814-712·3177 . .
Ronweller Puppies, AKC Regia·
tared, OSA Certihed Sire, Both
Paren11 Excellent With Children.
Deposit, Will Hold Tilt Christmas,
$350, 014·245-0433.

ASTR.O-ORAPH

Two lull blooded minialure Collie

puppies, ona male, one tamale,
S125ioe., 814-742·2050.

570

Muslc•l

•

Instruments

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

S piece Ptarl Drums, Zildj ian ,
Camber symbo11', paid 12,000. 3
months old, sell saoo. 814-742·

2303.

MuJI Sell tmmtd ltlely. Sp inet
Plano wilh btnch ·t350. 304·675·
7i17 .Ask for Beck~ ar leave

meuage.

·

sao

FruHs &amp;
Vegttables
Corn $3.00 bulhll, whllo pidrlng.
Drllrd 111111 corn $1.00 por 10011&gt;1
In bulk. 304-372·5023 From dark

CAH::i t-OH 11001 lrtick1, baatl,
4-wheelets, motor hom11, furniture, alaetronlct, computers ttC .
by FBI . IRS. OEA. Available your
atta now. Call 1·800· 513 ·43"'3

"

Exl. 5-8368

llllpm.

I AHr.1 SUP I'lit S
II. LIVES lOCK

111 D F.-m Equipment
140 inlomlliOJIII WICIOr W/Culli·
valOr, ' - drelutS. 30+175-

3241.

I

iI

F~,Dec.

13,1988

You will hava many opportunlllea IO
1n1:1eaae your _.. In 1111 year ahetcl .
llowl,.r,.you mua1 be aware of yourlm·
111. a.oc... your 11 d i - carefully.
DGITTAIIUS (lloll. D-OH. ll1) Thla
w1 l!e a good day 10 aool*llza with an
Individual IWtlo can help you reiOIYa a
bulineM INlier ..FO&lt; beat reaulla. klap
evetiUolug poelllvw. AllrO-Qraph predlouona for 1111 year IIMad makt -.llfflfl
CtoiiMIM a10 ld rg IIUflerl for II I!IIDI of

.'

GEMINI (May 21 -'Uno 201 Today . do noI'
1111 zodiac. Mall $2 lor each alld SASE to .· turn down an invitation to go to ·a place
Aslro-Graph. c/o lhia newspaper. P.O. where yolJ can meet new people . A
Box 1758, Murray HUI Slallon, New York. j!laalanl surprise might be in store tor
NY 10158. Mllkt sure you alate deslnod
you.
zodiac aq.e.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Thill will be
CAPIIICORN .(0.0. 22-Jan. It) Con- a good day for the whole family to pull
dllionl IIIII neve a ·direct affect on )'OUr _logelher. Your eflona could transform a
matefilll well-bttng wf(i work lo your lavor negative slluatlon into aomtllhlng posi today. Antlclpattcl retuma might come to .
live.
you in an unusual fuhlon .
Lf.O (July 23-Aug. 221 Today, olher~.
AQUAIIIUI (Jan. 20-Fob. 11) In order lo
mlghl lhlok lhll you are more realleas
accampilt1l your pia todly. Imaginative
then usual. Try nol Ia lock yoursalf Into
taclkll will be ~eq~~lltcl . Do not llmH your an agreement wlllch could hold Y.u in
OIIPOf1Unlllti.
one piirCe for 100 lOng.
N Cll (Feb. 10M olo 10) Today, you VIRGO
(Aug. :aw.pJ. 22) You will bene·
might "prollt from IOmtlhln{l thai II llie
fit todly Wyou are more .-tlw in titupmcMit of another .,.._., eflolta. Your
allont wlllch otler ~ rwnuneratloo.
penlclplt(an wl be Wlloomed rather than
You will be lucky In~ malletS. .
,... ,tad.
LIIAA (Sept. H-Oot. :PI Your flbl1lty lo
AIU!I (Marull at-April 111 People malllll* 0111111 w1n be . . . ...,. today.
WliOit aupport you1 .... todly wtfl be
make a dleltlon, don'l back
llllpful, bul you ~, go ovetiiOatd. After youwdl.
AIIOCiaiH _,, l'll!)eCI
Donot ............ liiii!IIIJ dln•rdt.
your
outllorlty I you do.
TAURUI "(Aprtl . . . . 10) Today you
ICOIIPIO (Oct. ~. 21) I you --.1
Will ...... -!Ubll lblflty lo
of
to .-.olve a lroubltiOmt matter today,
-yo lo make lllugh lObe aaaler. Wyou
•you may hive lo prod family merr,.,.:.. IO
pul your ldtlllnlo IICiion; you wfll .....
gat"""' lo COIIij)oOftllle.
lot of ttinot .

_,or

"**

,.

•

;\f

.l&lt;l
~

t,;

~.

t..

DECEMBER 12 I ~~

..,.,..

"'
,•.1.•
..
A

....,"· !
"

RtQiSttred Gtrman ahortha ir
pointer· pUps, great girt for hunters
aod excellent pet lor all . S175,

I'

.,-.1..

~t

14170 Two Bodrooms, Privole LO!
CioM 10 goHipolil; No I'll~ ·

enc:ea and Deposit Required 8t•-

Ie

....
5_""TI-TI-TI;;_;;.I~,I-.-l

Accessories

D•posil Referencet, 614-446·

21540&lt; 81 ..1182-64011.

,.

l

I lLAI coR
u
I Jt.l
I
2
I

410 Houses for R•nt...-llac.ID, II4-381--

."'.

I

0

-lnquiroo ploiMI

3-4 bedroom house. htlt pump.
flat I·Time S.bwolittet" /Nanny, Po· kilchen appliance•. b'"zeway, 1
c:er garlgt, full blltment. nice For renl or lilt- two bedroom,
~tton Mailable, Pay Negoliable,.
a.Mrencn Required. 814-258- 101, CioN to hoapital and IChool, ni&lt;» tatd, lull basemtnl. S14-G92in Pomeroy, . 814·i92·3119 or 2304.
155e.
By Owner: lower Rau• 7 On IWtr Side, 3 Bedraom1, Twa Story,
$52,000. 1!514-251!5-6780.

-

.a,.,.-..

1994 Full Size Dodge TrUck, 2
Wheel Drive, 318, Auto, loaded,
34.000 Mileo, $12,500 QBO; 814·

$5.500. ~-875-1602.

Block. brick, sewer pipes, wind·
OWl, 1intell, etc. Claude Winters,

3 Bedroom houll tDt- l'lf'll on New
Haven HeighiS. 304-882·2797.

114-982-11451 .

•

By Phillip Alder

1994 Toyota 2wd truck, maroon.
oleyl , standard, 88,000miles,

tneur1nce, And More. Sign Qn
Pump, Clly Schooll, 114-441 - oncot.llopolil.l14-41&amp;-2!85.
Bonul PIHN Apply AI Plnocrnl 0151
.
Care c.mtt 110 Pinecrea1 Drive,
~

I'

19-1111'1'*'
2001DOWN
22 W1kl plum
1 w. Cout coli.'
25 Alllr
2 ·- onlo
IIM'*'25Itlt,e·t·
3~ol)
2t I.IIIJIIOfllll
!-n
31 ftcw&amp;plper
• Mlechlevouo
clllld
. 33 Lilli llllry
5 ....,lcurtat'a
35feet
bolrd
31 Pigpen
IActrHI
37-1,002
Winona31 Cot ...,
7"Jypeol2t -l&lt;aewory

Tough, fun practice

Every Op1icm NADA $7,550 Sale
Price $5,250; 1991 S·10 Sport
NADA 15.000 Sale Price $3,150,

258·1233. .

-fil Poollago lnoluding: Voca· u~nniohod Baa..,.nl. 1 Car Go· 2419 ·
ion. Chrill,.,., Club. 4011&lt; Pfan,
rage, New Vinyl Siding &amp; Heal

5I llurgtcel ...-

Opening lead: • 7

~--~~~-=-~~~~2~~
' ------------­
Square bales. $2.00ea. Alfa lfa. 1992 GMC Sonoma FLE With

in Middloporl. Relorencn roLicensed M(llnag.r'o Co.smetolo- "CHRISTIIAS SPECIA~• New in quired, dopoail $200. $275
Qitt And Expertenced Nail Tech, slock. doublewidel, move in Uanrh. no Inside Pfll. 301-773·
s.nd Rnvme To: P.Q. Bo• 741,
51 85
now, no paymen•• tor ao days. I : -::-·:--"""7:----::----:
0 s; 1&amp;. OH 45831.
Only al Oakwaod Homes, Nilro, 2 Bedroom&amp;, Upata.,1 , Duplex 15 .
·112 Vine. Near F111.1 Avenue,
L·ono Term Care Nursing Facility WV. 304-1S5-6885.
SHIUng Elllllulilollc Ohio Sralo 3 Bedroomt, 1 Bllrtl, I&lt;IU:hen •~&gt; '$340/Uo., Water Patd, Garage,
Teettd Hurtt Aides. EJictllent

,.......1

motor

eum

Venrtau gas heaters ararting at
s8te $339 thi1 month only. I~~~!±~:!!;~~~~
$129.95 &amp; up. Sider• Equipment .on
tree ease &amp; free chain ' tree
304-67S-7421 .
gloves . Sidecs Eq ulpmenr 304 -· tG91 Ford Ranger Standard 2
Wheel Drive. 86,000 Miles.
Wllher, Dryer, Stove Electric, 675-7421 .
Refr~erttor, Kenmore, Excellent Hydraulic Oiii12 .50· Sgai pail. $3,000 080, 6U.446-D159, 814Shapt~, 814•44G -174g ~Iter 2:30
Siders Equipment, Henderson , 256•1233.
OnWOIII«&lt;oya.
W\1. 304-675-7421 .
Hlg1 S-1 0 Tahoe V-6, 5 Speed,
Hay &amp; Grain
93,ooo Mil es. ss.5oo. 3o4-576·
WotH TaMinQ Btd1

of1988--lll"!!ll
111-rllt"'nyprtlarora,
lmllallonor-•lloo ·
bold 00 1'108, color, religion,
NXfamillllllliUI Of nlllonal
artgln."' a n y - ..

o.r-

55 14111Grd1nate

HUsqvarna model 51 cha!n IIW

porl. From $232-$355 . Call 11411112·5084. Equal llouaing Oppor-

lor Mike.

11 Get rkl ..
11 f.IIC. 111111
17 Guns 1111

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South.

nlc. HilS 14x'70 with 2 Gradoua living. 1 and 2 bedroom
barhs.-Larg1 l1land kitchln ~ whh ' apartrnants at Village Ptlarior and
pella door. C.H 614·315-i821 all&lt; Riverlide ,Apartmeritl In MkJdlct-

AI lUI oila1e ~In
11110 .. .... .. lollllljociiO
lho F - Fair lloullng Act

6 7 I l 2

• Q42
• KQJ 6

very

10 "'lm- Can-

• 8 73
• 8 5

South

quirod.ll4--1511.

soma dail)l baok-

E11t
• A K 10 3

Weal

I P.M.

3 Pc. Wt'ti1e Poeter Bedroom Suile, Cheat Mirror Oreaaer, Canopt

Wholil, UIDd TWict, $750. Sl4·

~~;::•:.•=::~1:.14-:.,441-354=-=:::.7:....
ollor 1:00pm, no job 10 ::
Two Bedraom Furnished. On
"'10 BIG. WV-0212111

• 6

Sofa And Couctt t.lke Naw, Klich -

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Buckeye 5:
12-22-25-27-32

ports on Page 4

Mostly clear tonight,
lows In the 30s. Saturday,
partly cloudy. Highs near

50.

•
Vol. 47, NO. 151
011116, Ohio V•lley Publlohlng Compeny

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Clinton expected to clear air
on appointments to cabinet

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to II a.m. to greet the children and
pass out candy treats, advises CharMeigs County postal workers arc lie Grim. postmaster.
Meanwhile, with just 12 days 'til
showing their holiday spirit in a variety of ways, in addition to delivering Christmas, residents arc reminded to
greeting cards and holiday pack- gel those greeting cards out and the
packages mailed.
ages.
Suggested dates are Christmas
They have already taken part in
village Christmas parades. handing · card~ by Dec. 17 ; prior.ity packages
out candy to the children as they by Dec. 21 ; express mail by Dec. 24;
moved along the route. and nc&lt;t foreign priority by Dec. 17; and forweek arc planning special events at eign ex pre" by Dec. 19.
Grim said thai only express
post offices.
An open house will be held at the overnight mail, both letters and packMiddleport Post Office on Monday ages. will he delivered on Christmas
with punch and cookies to be served Day.
According to Wayne D. Rogers,
and entertainment pro~idcd by a
l010al pianist Sunny. Postmaster Jim district manager for the Columbus
District. which indudes post offices
Sundquist announced today.
He said that in support of local in southeastern Oh(o, the "busiest
businesses, post office patrons may mail'day" will be Monday.
He said ..that nationwide, post
bring in December sales receipts
offices
will cancel approKimately
from any Pomeroy-Middleport mer- ·
.chant and receive 20 percent off new 275 million cards aod letlcrs. On a
seasonal packaging products avail, normal day. about 900,000 cards and
able at the post oflicc through Christ- . lencrs aic mailed, he said.
. The advice of postal officials is to
mas.
"mail
early in the day and early in the
' Santa will he at the Pomeroy Post
Office on Saturday. Dec. 21. from 9 season" in order to help with the

.

AluDiln Wheels, VB Vortec
·Conclt~'Power l.o&amp;s, lit,

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aides said there was a remote chance

that Clinton could opt for another
U.N. candidate at the last minute and
put Richardson at Commerce.
That would trigger a domino
effect, moving Daley to .Transporta~
tion and leaving Slater out of the picture.
Richardson, 49, has hccn playing
unofficial American ambassador to
rogue states since December 1994,
when he negotiated the release of a
U.S. airman whose Army helicopter
went down in Nonh Korea. He has
also helped captured Americans gel
out of Iraq and Bangladesh .
Daley, 48, is brother of and close
adviser to Chicago Mayor Richard
M. Daley and served as c0 -chairman
of the 1996 Democratic National
Conventi'on's host commitiee.'
With the Justice Department tied
to several White House investigations. Reno's job status became a
major issue in the transition to a sec·
ond Clinton term. If she left now,
questions would he raised about
whether she had been pushed .
The president fueled the speculation by refusing · to comment on
Reno's future.

Poll finds most citizens
satisfied with president
By RICHARD BENEDETTO
Gennett News Service

WASHINGTON- President Clinton prepares to begin his second term
with most Americans approving of the job he's doing and expressing a
higher degree of satisfaction with the course of the nation .
A USA TODAY/CNN/Galiup poll finds Clinton with 58 percent JOb
approval. up 4 percentage points from late October, .shortly before he won
re-election .
Looking ahead, the outlook is upbeat:
• 39 percent think he will do a better JOb as president in the second
term.
·
• 46 percent expect ~im to perform at about the same level as he did
in the firsllerm .
• 14 percent 'expect a worse job.
In keeping with the optimistic spirit, those who think Clinton and
Republi cans in Congress will cooperate more in the ncK! four years outnumber by over 2-1 those who think they will cooperate less. Both sides
have been talking up cooperation since the elections last month ended a
bitter campaign.
Also, 67 percent think things in the country will be better or the same
· in the next four years; 32 percent say worse.
"We're in the honeymoon period before the start of the second term
and everyone is getting the bcner" of a doubt. We' ll sec how long that
lasts," said Emory University ·political scientist Merle Black.
.
Overall. 43 percent say they arc satisfied with the way things are going
in the country, a relatively high pcrccn1agc.
'
Ever since the end of the Persian Gulf War in March 1991. when satisfaction reached 52 percent. public contentment has nose-dived. In the
more than si• years after the war, satisfaction has averaged 32 percent. It
began swinging upward again early this year as public perceptions of the
economy showed improvement.
The Dec. 9-11 poll of 813 adults nationwide has a margin of error of
plus or minus 4 percentage points.

Holiday rush ·d~esn't -s top----~easonal ~pirit at post office
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Naw1 Stiff

i AS:

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Administrator Rooney Slater would
be the strong frant-runner for transportation
seoretary;replacing FederiWASHINGTON - As President
Clinton winnowed his vacancy list, co Pena ..Slater worked for Clinton in
Democratic activist Bill Daley of Arkansas. The announcement was
Chicago emerged as the likely choice not e&lt;pected today.
• Former Federal Reserve Vice
for commerce secretary and Rep. Bill
Chairman
Alan Blinder, a Princeton
Richardson the probable pick for
U.N. ambassador. Attorney General economist, emerged as the front-runJanet Reno's fate also hung in the bal- ner to replace Joseph Stiglitz as
chairman of the Council of Economance.
Administration officials, speaking ic Advisers. One aide said Blinder
on condition of anonymity, said the was offered the job but was·demanddecisions could be announced at an ing cenain . conditions before he
would take it.
afternoon news conference today.
It was less dear who was in the
Clinton, who left Reno's.status up
running
to fill the chairmanship of the
in the air for weeks, met for 30 minNational
Economic Council. Divid- .
utes Thursday night .with his indeing
the
duties
was still a possibility,
pendent-minded attorney general.
only report,ing to aides that it was "a but not likely, aides said.
.· With Reno' s situation coming to a
· wonderful meeting."
Going into the one-on-one ses- head, Clinton still has five Cabinet
sion, senior advisers said Clinton vacancies to'fill : the departments of only Cabinet position tho.ught to be
summoned Reno to.ask her to stay- Commerce, Transportation, Energy, ready.
Clinton went round and round
Labor and Housing - in addition to
and she was expected to accept.
In a series of meetings that the two economic panels, the U.N. with the latest batch of vacancies.
dragged into the night, Clinton sig- post and several While House posi- leaving even senior aides hedging
their bets about his plans. Though the
tions.
naled to aides that:
He could fill several of the posts · Daley and Richardson choices were
· • If Daley replaces Mickey Kantor at Commerce. Federal_Highway today; though Commerce was the all but locked up Thursday night,

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By RON FOURNIER
Associated Pra11 Writer

L

2 Soctlono, 12 Paget, 35 cent. :
A GanneU Co. Newop•per :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 13, 1996

anticipated increase in mail volume.
The total volume this year is expected to be about 4.5 percent more than
last year, according to Rogers.
. To help the mail move more
quickly. these tips have hccn given by
the Postal Service:
• Write or print t\lc address neatly.
• Always include the apartmeni or
suite number in the address.
• Neyer guess a ZIP Code. Call
your local post office for the correct
one.

• When sending a package. usc filament tape to seal the package. make
sure it is well padded, that nothing
rattles, make sure the only writing on
the outside of the package is the "to
and from address" and finally. include
your return address inside the package.
• When writing to Santa. be sure
and usc a return address if you wunt
Santa to write back.
• And don't forget, we're open
Christmas Eve which means we can
get that la~l minute package delivered
Christmas Day. via Express Mail.

Rural households face major deficiencies
Gannett New• Servlca

WASHINGTON -About 9 million rural America households · induding many in the Huntington
· area- face major problems. such as
debt. overcrowding, no running water
or plumbing, a report issued by the
Housing Assistance Council conduded.
"We have seen the quality of rural housing improve. but the affordability of housinl! is a growing prof&gt;.
Jem," said Moises Loza, executive

director of the nonprofit council.
Loza said about a third of rural
households with incomes under
$1 0,000 pay more than 50 pcr~cnt of
their income for housing. '
·
Rural housing problems arc most
severe in Appalachia, the Ozarks, the
Southeast and Mississippi Della.
along the U.S.-Mexico harder. and on
Indian reservations.
In the budget-cutting atmosphere
on Capitol Hill, more federal aid for
rural housing is unlikely as Congress
'

looks for ways to balance the budget
" House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
R-Ga .. has said.it is easy to cut housing programs because they don't
have a vocal constituency." Loza
said.
·.
Rep. Bennie Thompsorl, D-Miss,
whose congressional district has a
large population of low-income residents. agreed.
"It's easy lo pick on people who
J;an 't defend themselves." Thompson
said. ·
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the busy downtown shopping scena, and a few
dog biscuits as well. Pogue, who llv.a undar a
downtown highway overpass, hal been home- ·
less "too long," she says, or about two yaars.
(AP)

HOMELESS AT CHRISTMAS _:_ ' "Blue,"
deckad out In a Sanja hat and carrying a cup
tor donations, waited patiently Thursday aa
owner Rabacca Pogue adjusted tha dog's vast
on 1 Seattle streat corner. Tha homeless pair
brought In a steady stream of dollar bills amidst

De Wine will chair newly-created panel
WASHINGT0N (AP) - He's put in charge of a new panel: the jobs and on wqrkcrs.
"I'm going to be focused on
.been senator for not quite IWO years, Employment and Training Subcomthings
that affect _people, and pro- ·
'mittcc.
but, come January, call him "Mr.
grams
that
affect people and what
The scnawr told reporters it's the
Chairman."
The Senate Labor Committee assignment he had hoped for, with works and what will nul work "
Thursday completed organizational jurisdiction over job-training legisla- DeWine said. "I'm going t_o he worktasks for the coming session, and tion , pension and retireme nt issues, ing on results and what works in the
Ohio Republican Mike De Wine was and examining the effect trade has on real world.' ~

a

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Courts brace for flood -of litigation prior to tort reform implementation
By I(EVIN O'HANLON
AIIIOCiated Prall Writer

.
CINCINNATI-An avalanche of lawsuits is expected to soon hil Ohio's
courts as lawyers race against a new state law limiting damages.
The law takes effect Jan. 27.
"Thousands and thousands of lawsuits are going to be filed," Cincinnati
!rial lawyer Jeffrey Bakst said Thursday. "I alone probably will file I0 suits
Jhat I never would have filed before- I would have tried to settle them."
Cleveland lawyer Bill Bartel, whose firm specializes in personal injury
and~oducl liQbility cases, said he will file as many as 20 cases before the
•
i~
.
.
· '' e'rc going to have to jump in sooner instead of tryin1 to settle," he
said, 'Others will do the same."
.
.
,
The limits placed on awards not only mean pOtentially less money for people l!'ho sue, but also for those lawyer$ whose fees are based 011 the awards.
, ..ynong the Ohio law's limits:
.·
.
..
• Noneconomic damages (pain and suffering): 11Je gf'l'&amp;ter of $250,000

CHEVIIOLET
• OI.DBMOBILE • LEXUS •
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or three times the economic damages (medical bills and lost wages). Maximum award, $500,000. But ~n lases ~here -the plaintiff has sustained per·
mancnt injury or loss. the limit would be the greater of $1 million or $35,000
multipl ied by the number pf years remaining in the plaintiff's life expectancy.
• Punitive damages (intended to punish the wrongdoer): Three times the
compensatory damages (all other damages combined), or $1,00,000,
whichever is less. But if the defendant has more than 25 full-time. permanent employees, the limit is the greater of $250,000 or three times the compensatory dnmages.
Injured Ohioans still will be able to collect the costs of medical care, lost
wages and other quantifiable damages.
The issue has been debated for ye;u-s.
Supporters of the new law say it' will lead 10 lower insurance premiums
and product costS. They also say it will protect Ohio businesses from frivolous lawsuits and staggering damage awards far out of proportion to the wrong
that was done - such as the $4 million ,iury owad to an Alabama doctor
'&gt;$

dissatisfied because his new BMW had been partly repainted to cover dam ·agc in sbipping.
·
. Opponents say it simply will allow businesses, ho;pitals and manufacturers to duck their responsibilities to provide safe goods and services.
Twenty-one other states, including Illinois and Michigan, have enacted
tort reform, according to Rep. Pat Tiberi, R-Columbus, who sponsored the
bill.
Earlier this year, President Clinton vetoed a measure that would have Iimited ~unitive damage awards in lawsuits over faulty products.
R1ck Hoffman, who heads the issue desk for Hamilton County Common
Pleas Court said he and his staff arc expecting a rush.
· "There's going to be a big in nux."
Common Pleas Judge Thomas Crush said he feared all the extra filings
could create problems.
.
"Two or three months down the road ... it will probably cause a prcuy
·big trial backlog," Crush said.

.

.

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