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GATOR BOWLTICKETS

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Ohio Lottery

Wuerffel
captures
Heisman

2 GATOR BOWL TICKETS FREEWITH ANY NEW TOYOTA SOLD
WHILE THEY WT.

HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!

•

••

727-

Super Lotto:
3-12-20-33-41-46
Kicker:

6-U980
Pick 3:
3-HI
Pick 4:
5-6-5-7

Sports on Page 5

Occaelonlll rein tonight,
lowe In the 301. Tu11dly,
chence of rain. High• In
the 401 .

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Vol. 47, N0.1.
01RI, Ohio Yelloy Publlehlng Con pony

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2 s.cttono, 12 l'llgn, 3 8 -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 16,1996

AGannett Co. New-

·unsucces.sful local candidates r----Ne_w gauge-_
__,
.
outspent winners by 2·1 margin
· By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel ~~ Staff
·The s1ra1egy of outspending opponents to win counly office seats
proved unsoccessful in November's
general election, with losing· candidales outspending winners by nearly
· a two-to-one margin.
.
In four contested races, Republican . candidates for Meigs County
offices spenl a lOla! of $15,608.28,
while Democratic candidates spent
.. total of$8,950.18, according to indi.. viduat · state campaign financial
reports released Monday by the
Meigs County Board of Elections.
The most costly race proved to be
the race for the county commission. ers' seal of Democral incumbent
. Janet Howard, with a total of

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which saw Thomlon defea1 Harten- Republi~an incumbenl clerk of
bach by·nearly a 2-1 margin,
courts; Robert Buck, Republican
Spending in the race for Meigs incumbent probate judge; Howard
Co11nty,sheriff proved to be the most Frank, Republican incumbent couneven of any campaign, as Republican ty lreasurer; Robert Easton, Republi·
candidale Michael R. Canan and can incumbent engineer; and Douglas
Democratic incumbent James Souls- Hunter, Republican incumbent counby stayed within $300 of each other. ty coroner.
, Canan . outspent
Souls by
Campaign budgets appeared to not
$3,085.38 to $2,790.05 in an unsuc- be a determining factor in the success
ce5sful bid to keep Soulsby from cap- or failure of bond issues for the Eastturing a third term as sheriff.
. em Local School District and the
County officials running in uncon- Meigs .County Tuberculosis Clinic .
Jested contest races reported limited
The Eastern Local Levy Commitcampaign expenditures, with Ohio tee spent $542.17 in its unsuccessful
state law requiring only expenses' campaign to persuade. passage oftbe
over $500 to be reported on campaign district's emergency renewal levy, ·
financial reports.
while $1, 134.10 was spent in the sueAmong those reporting limited cessful campaign for renewal of the
expenditures were: Larry Spencer, county's TB levy.
.

·. Industrial ·output posted gain last month,

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$8,506.97 spent by Howard and
Republican challenger Judy Williams
in the race for the office. ·
Williams was the top spender
among all local candidates, tallying a
campaign total of $5,489.97 in her
unsuccessful bid. Finishing closest to
Williams in campaign expenditures
was Republican prosecuting attorney
candidate Steve Stoty.
Stoty outspent Democratic incumbent John Lentes $3,801.89 to
.. $1,785.69 in a race that saw Lentes
capture a second Jerm as county proseculor.
In the other county commissioner's race, Republican incumbent
Robert C. Hartenbach outspent
Democratic challenger Jeff Thornton
$3,231.04 to $1,357 .44, in a race

~

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
lines.
AP Economic• Writer ·
The Fed attributed half of the 0.9 ·
WASHINGTON .-. ~merica's percent increase in industrial proindustrial output shot up ·o.9 percent duction 10 the rebound in auto output
in November, the biggest gain in nine both at assembly plants and at relatmonths, with half the strength com- ed parts' manufacturing facilities.
ing from resumption of work nfler
The rep0£1 said that another 0.2
strike-related shutdowns at General percent of November's gain occurred
Motors plants.
because of increased utility output in
The Federal Reserve said today response to unusually cold weather
that last month's huge increase in during Noyember.
..· production at the nation's factories,
,The overall 0.9 percent increase in
mines and utilities followed a 0.5 ~r- industrial production was almost
ce.nt drop in production in.Dctober.,..d.W.i~bat_pr~vat~-eeonomists had
The huge swings in both mon!hS' been expecting. While such a big
were attributed 10 the ripple effeciS on . increase could norina.lly raise conU.S. production from strikes at Gen- cems that the economy was over. eral Motor's Canadian plants and _ heating, those fears could be allevlrelated labor disputes that closed iited by the fact that li)Uch of the
some of OM's American assembly increase reflected special .factors.

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E GATOR B

The rise in output led to an
increase in capacity utilization. U.S.
factories operated at 83.3 percent of
capacity in November, up from 82..9
percent in October.
Growth in the overall U.S. economy, ·as measured by the gross
domestic product, slowed to an annual rate-of 2 percent in July-September quarter, following a sizzling 4.7
percent GOP growth rate in the
spring. ·
. : AJialysts said the slowdow". was
just · .w
. hat Jhe Federal' R.es.~e was
looking for to ensure that hll!h factoty operating rates and tight labor mar·
kets don't trigger higher inflation.
The industrial production report
was tile ·last rnajor piece of economic news before the Fed's interest-rate

M.;r-

setting panel, the Federal Open
ket Committee• .meets Tuesday to
decide whether tq ·change interest
rates. Analysts believe there is
enough evidence of an economic
slowdown to keep the Fed on hold.
For November, industrial output at
factories· making durable goods,
items expected to last two or more
years, rose by I .2 percent while output at factories making nondurable
goods was up 0.2 percent.
Production at the nation's mines
edged UP, 0.1 percent in November
following decline of 0.6 pe)'!:ent'the
previous
month.
.
Utility output shot up 2.5 percent,
compared to an increase of 0.3 percent ·in Oc1ober, as power demand
surged because of the colder-thannormal weatber in November.

a

Chris Snouffer, 14, a member of ·Boy Scout Troop 299, constructed a high water gauge for Middleport •• part of his community Mrvlce work toward qualifying for his Eagle Scout award.
The 1G-foot red, white and black gauge haa been erected near the
Middleport levee. Chris expects to complete his requirements for
the award In early 1997. Greg McCall Ia his scoutmaster. Chris Is
pictured with Middleport Mayor O.wey Horton.

.State to implement competency-based arts education model
COLUMBUS (AP) -Art class used to he learning tbe colors in a turkey's
feathers or making a pinal~ or singing a song.
But the Department of Education wants art also to be experiencing the
history of the wild turkey, the cultural differences of Mexico and the evolution of a play, opera or musical from conception to production.
Learning these experiences is the goal under the department's competencybased model for arts education adopted in April.
"The model belps us look at what the arts have in common l"ith other
subjects," said Nancy Ditmer, president of the Ohio Music Education Association. "It encourages us to make connections with otl)er subjects in a substanlial, nota superficial, way."
.
The mod~!. for preschool through 12th grade, covers visual art, music,
dance and theater.
Ohio is the secqnd staie to devise a competency-based curriculum for the
arts. Nebraska was the .first. But Ohio is the first to fully combine the arts ·
wi~ other subjects, Ditmer sai.d.

· "The arts can be used to reintorce concepts taught in the regular classroom setting," said Marcia Caton Campbell, a Columbus mother of two.
Many researchers agree, finding that the arts provide intellectual development. They say ,the arts allow children to learn about the senses and emolions and can help them learn to think independendy, The Columbus Dispatch reponed Sunday.
.
.
Researchers, including the late Roger Sperry who won a Nobel Prize for
his pioneering research on tbe brain, have said the arts can provide children
a link between the outside world and their inner perceptions.
Music and visual art can help them figure out how to solve problems in
unique ways. Researchers found that music trains the brain for higher forms
of thinking, and visual art enhances~ child's spatial intelligence, the newspaper said.
But, like most any program that changes existing seuings, the model has
opposition from inside and outside the educational system.
·
. "Teachers teach the way they were taught," Ditmer sal d. "It also means

changing teacher training." ·
The education department will provide programs for teachers who want
help in following the new curriculum.
· ·
.
·
But it is up to each school to decide on its program changes, if any. And
·the state has not determined the methods·of testing student~ for competency in the ans.
.
"What can be done and what will be done' is the question. I'm worried
that it potentially may not make a difTcrcncc because of people's resistance
to change," Ditmer said.
'
Teachers also have to contend with money and time constraints. Nationwide, art programs have been among the first items cut by school districts
facing tough financial times.
"While the content of art education has expanded, the conditions under
which art is taught remain, in many cases, grim," said E. Louis Lankford,
professor of art edu~a1ion a1 Ohio St~J.c University.
.
. He said elementary school art teachers arc "constantly beset by tome pressures" and would w.:lcomc more or longer art classes.

Clinton nominee for CIA director
will face grilling from Congress
By CONNIE CASS
Aeeoclated Pre" Writer

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IODUIIIS
AU PIICISINCWDI!

AND

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OTORS .LEIUS
ST. ALBANS

TOYOTA

-.
,

MEMORIAL TREE ~ pt~rldng

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A ctlrllt!MI

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1111111101 'I of thOle wt1o hive died • • IIIUh of
• cln.llk drlftr'eiiCitlane hie .,_, piiCid an lhl

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lhl Melge Chepter,

·MviiiWI -'alinei Drunk Driving. Whlttl llghta
end red rlb,bone hen bNn piiCICI on the tne

by MADD 1111111bere Including Kathy Stacy, 1!1

ofnclr, end '-'oy Pollee Chief Jll1'y ~

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WASHINGTON - The White
House is confident that CIA directordesignale Anthony Lake can fully
answer tough questions being raised
by members of Congress about his
earlier role in Bosnia policy, a White
· ·House ·official said today.
Two key senators said Sunday that
despite his efforts to smooth things
over, Lake can expect a Senate
grilling on serious questions thai
may threaten his confirmation.
Asked today about congressional
objections, White House press secretary Mike McCurry said, "They
raised qQestions the White House
believes Mr. Lake can more than adequately answer."·
Lawmakers are especially upset
liy Lake's , role, as White House
national security adviser, in. keeping
Congress uninfonned when the Clinton administration decided quietly to
look the other way as Iran shipped
arms to Bosnian Muslims in 1994.
Lake has begun contacting Senate
lelldcrs to say he now believes it was
a mistake to keep the decision from
.Consress, a White House aide said
Sunday.
·
. . Sen. Richard Shelby, an Alabama
Republican expected to become
chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee next month, called the
,Bosnia poljpy that Lake master-

minded "duplicitous" and said, "It this case, I don'tthink it did."
crossed the line."
Panetta expressed confidence that
"It's too early to say what we will Lake would win Senate confirmation,
do with his nomination, but I think along with 'thc rest of Clinton's new
we 've got to be fair and we've got to national security team.
be searching and we've got to scru- . '.'Sure, he's going to face queslinize this," Shetby said Sunday on loons," Panetta said. "All of them will
. ABI:;'s "This Week.',' '
face questions, butt feel very con liThe Bosnian arms sale conflicted dent he'll make it."
with the admini£tration's public
Sen. Arlen Specter, the outgoing
stance in support of a U.N. arms . chairman of the Intelligence Comembargo. But the administration mittce, said prospects for Lake's
feared that without an infusion of hearing were "very much up in the
weaponry, Bosnia might collapse air."
'
under pressure from rebel Serbs.
"I think there arc serious qucsAithough Congress at the time lions," Spccter, .R-Pa., said on CNN's
was urging ihe administration to "Late Edition with Frank Scsno."
defy ttic U.N. embargo, congress ionSpecter and Shelby expressed
at leaders were upset when they concern about why Lake did not
learned the arms came from Iran.
immediately sell stocks in four enerShelby suggested that Clinton gy companies in 1993, when the
might withdraw the nomination as White House counsel's office told
· public scrutiny of lake intensifies, him' they posed a possible connie! of
but the White House showed.no signs ·interest.
of retreat.
White House spokesman Mike
White House chief of staff Leon McCurry has said Lake ordered his
Panetta ~efended the administration's accountant to sell the securities and
decision to withhold information thought they had, in fact, been sold.
from Congress about the events that Lake sold the stocks in 1995 when he
developed quickly in Bosnia in the realized he stoll owned them .
spring of 1994.
Asked whether the stock contro"lt's always better if you work versy alone could put Lake's nomiclosely with those in Congress when nation a\ risk, Specter ~aid, "My
you do tbese kinds of things," Panel- . instinct is it would not all by itself,
ta conceded on NBC's "Meet The ·but might in conjunction with other
· Press." "Sometimes time allows that things."
to happen, sometimes it doesn't. In

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The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

)lond8y, December 16, 1996

Commentary

P8ge 2

Monday, December 18, 1996

Electoral College sets
presidential vote today

OHIO Weather
TueldayJ Dec. 17

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AccuWulher• forecast for daytime conditiom and hilh temperatures
MICH.

The Daily Sentinel Evita's troubles began with her deallt
'Eslllbfisfrd in 1!J48
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·21!16 • Fu: 992·2157

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A.Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

co.n.ntl Manager

•

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Letters to the editor
~ Hard;..headed Independents
Dear Editor,
I thank Mr. Fields for his comments on the Reform Party and Mr.
• Perot. If we would have been walk~ ing in Mr. Perot's shOes when he
withdrew from the race, we might not
have done any different. He loved his
family who were under heavy
~ ridicule by the national media.
. :: He also was always described as
" looney, crazy and had· no chance at
even getting five percent of our
votes. Would you 1put your family
through this to lead 'a people that didn't want you?
:, The battles that the Reform Party
his put in front of our nation are more
" complex than the internatipnal capitalistic corporations doing what they
; are truly designed to do. They wan\

WASHINGTON -· No body
knows the travels Evita's body has
seen.
Since her death in 1952, the mortal remains of the immortal Eva
Duarte Peron have journeyed across
two continents, laid buried under a
pseudonym in Milan, shared the dinner table with Peron and his new wife
in Spain - ond been the subject of an
intense hunt by spies the world over,
including our own Central Intelli·
gence Agency.
The imminent movie release of
the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical,
"Evita," has renewed interest in the
life of the working girl who became
a saint to Argentina's Poor.
We've been just as fascinated by
the imertife of Evita's body ever since
our associate Pale Van Ana auended
a. huge Peronista rally -· complete
· wilh thousands of Eva Peron placards
and posters •• in. Buenos Aires in
1983. Arter the rally, he spoke with
U.S , and Argentine intelligence
sources about the mysterious mean'
derings of Evita's corpse.

Jack Anderson
•and
Jan Moller

to build more products of higher
quality at the lowest possible cost.
' The task of our unique middleclass small business Democracy is to
build families not products. The
answer to solving our probiCfllS is not
to seek a perfect politician. It is to. 1 ........ _ .
reeducate us so that we 'do not wild- .
ly defend our emotional, small group
personal opinions while ignoring the
facrual data that tells the reality of our
failures. Failure to live in balance .
with our planet, failure to keep the
balance and quality control in all
three elements of our government and
failure to protect our mission to raise
healthy, stable families. We are not
cultist. We are hard-headed indepen-·
dents.
C.E. Evans :
Dexter

Wants new dog shelter

•

*~Dear Editor,

They employ one dog warden to run
Meigs County Humane Soci- the pound and to deal with sti:ay dogs.
ety wants to build a new shelter fo~ One person for the entire county.
.both dogs and cats.
The Humane Society met with the
.. We do not suppqrt or approve of .county commissioners pleading with
" the Pound Upgrade Project. The ani- them to build a new shelter and close
. mals of our county need ·a modem, the old one. They were uninterested
adequate shelter free of neglect and and uncooperativ~.
disease. Our shelter will have a
We dttided to build our own shel• mandatory spay/neuter policy. The · ter.
. - ~resent county dog pound has no
The Meigs.Coun'ty Humane Socisuch policy. This is a major problem ety needs your help to do· it.
!here. It is like a revolvins door.
Please send donations for a new
Adding two runs and a roof will shelter to: The Meigs County
ho(l:ven begin to solve the problems _Humane Society, PO Box 682,
• atthe pound. All one has to do is dri- Pomeroy OH 45769. If you have
ve to the pound and look. You will questions, ideas, concerns pr can help
· see how inadequate it is.
in any way at all, call 992-2216 or
• · Donating money !O the upgrade 992-6064 (thrift shop). We have
project is giving money to a facility , money to purchase the land to build
~ iotally controlled by the ~ounty com- the shelter. We need money for the
missioners. Wouldn't our tax dollars building.
• be beller spent on a new animal shelSharon McLead, President
ier? The county commissioners have
Meigs County Humane
an obligation to care for the animals
Society,
• of 9ur county as well as the people.
· Shade

ne

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What does God think of homosexuality

Mario Savio's dream deferred
In 1964, Mario Savio, a student at First Amendment right to speak ••
lhe Berkeley campus of the Univer- Berkeley is a public university-- was
sity of California, led the Free Speech caused by its election day editorial
Movement against administration · supponing Proposition 209 because,
.crackdowns on freedom of political - - - - - . ; . .·---'·- - - •~pression on campus. His name and
spirit soon resounded at colleges
lhroughoutthe. country and S.rved to it said, affirmative act1on automatifuel civil rights and anti-Vietnam War cally assumes that "race probably
demonstrations during the 1960s.
indicates the. barriers a person has
In recent years, however. free faced.
·
speech. has lost Its priority on many
"It doesn't,'.' the editorial con tincampuses and has been replaced by ued. "Wealthy bla~ks benefit from
an insistence by some students and affirmative action, but not poor
faculty members that ·certain offen- Asians. ·Latinos in comfortable sub-

Nat Hen to"

sive expressions create a hostile

l~arning environment and must be

urbs receive affirmative action, but

not inner-city whites. ... In the
their disorder is deve·loped coimaty to curbed. This has generated speech absence of. affirmative action, the
their God-given identity. liarned ip codes aild, on occasion. more imme- state must develop programs thiu pay
.opposition to the created order. Pur- diate vigilante suppression by stu- special attention to economic status.
sued in defiance of the marriage ordi- .dents of incorrect views.
Low-income people face ,significant
nance.
For instance, ·on election -d~y , ·obstacles due to the ~ery fact that
We are told in God's word No~. 5, 23,000 cop1es of the Da•l~ they are poor."
·
!hat til( integrity of the family is vio- Cahfom1an, the Berkeley campus • In an editorial the day after the
lated by homosexual behavior: "Thou student newspaper, were stolen. Lat- theft and destruction of the newspashall not lie with mankind, as with er that week, some of the papers wen; pers, the Daily Californian reminded
womankind: it is abqmination" (Lev. burned at a rally by students protest- the righteous censors that "The Free
ing the passage of Proposition 209. ,Speech Movement 30 years ago
18:22).
, Leviticus 20: 13 further
Until I! was stalled m the couns. 209 affirmed.students' rights to champi·
underscores God's hatred for this sin: would hove ended state doscnmma- on a cause. Those principles must
If a man also lie with mankind, as he liOn or preferential treat~ent-- on the also apply to the Daily Californian."
basos of race, sex-or nat1onal ongon Meanwhile, a witness came forlieth with a woman, both of them
in
public
employment,
education
or
ward
to report that he had seen peohave committed an abomination:
pie loading copies of the Daily Calithey shall surely be put to death; their contractmg.
The attack on the newspaper's fomian into a truck s)ioning a bumper
blood shall be upon them." From the
Law of God. His verdict on homose~uality is inescapably clear.
In the first chapter of
Romans, Paul teaches that the wrath
of God is revealed from Heaven ·
against those whiJ turn li'rom their
Since I am the inventor of the Out- cially a nominee. And I 'hereby
proper relationship to the Creator, ' rageous Personage contest and since amend the rules to preclude any more
holding down the truth of God. and I write the rules, I really don't need dead folks. Halt! Too late, Kennedy
practicing idolatry. Bef ausc they do loopholes. But I found one anyway, . haters.
this, says Paul, God gives them over and I am herewith exploiting .itto,cer·
to impure lusts, the dishonoring of tify the nomination of a dead person.
their bodies. Men who give up God
It's Richard Nixon, wbo else?
are given up by God to wander in
The Outrageous Personage con_ lq ~00 hours of recently released
moral pollution. According to Paul, tape recordings, the 37ili president test, now in its eighth year, seeks to
homosexuality is the cultural culmi- repeatedly slurs Jewish supporters of honor the most absurd, asinine, boornation of rebellion against God. It is Democratic causes . 'Piease, get me ish, frivolous. hypocritical, inane,
symptomatic of a society under the names of the Jews," he told his preposterous people to strut across
judgment, inwardly corrupted to the chief of staff, H.R. (Bob) Haldeman, the public stage in a given January·
point of collapse. Paul regarded it as on Sept. 13, 1971. "You know, the· December period. lfthey gobble like
the evidence of degeneracy that big Jewish contributors to the turkeys, bark like dogs, stink like
caused God in 'His wrath to give up Democrats ... Could you please inves- rin·g-tailed skunks, send me their
the nations.
'
· tigate some of the (expletive delet- names. The contest is spon;ored by
Bob and Doris Richmond, ed)."
the Spear Foundation and the AssoMiddleport
The next day, Nixon was still ciation of Sagacious Pundits, which
stewing about the opposition's Jew.' will explain why the OPs are some·
ish donors and .Haldeman suggested times referred to as the ASP awards.
Some of the notables who hove
they "get a zealot who dislikes those
people" to investigate them. been 'DOminated so far include Bill
Responded Nixon (I will edit his Clinton, Bob Dole, Pat Buchanan,
remarks slightly in deferen~e. to our Ho~~~e, Speaker Newt Gingrich, Sen·
av The AaocltMd p,...
.
.
Today is Monday, Dec. 16. the 35lst day of 1996. There are 15 days lert . tamily audience): "Go after them like ate Majority Leader Tren1 Lott, Sen.
a son of a beach."
.
Orrin Hatch, Parson Pat Robertson,,
in the year.
The loophole? The rules don't the Rev. Jesse Jackson, the Rev.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 16, 1944, the World War U Battle of the Bulge began as Ger- mention the deceased. They forbid Lewis Famkhan, actor Marton Branman fortes launched a surprise counterattack against ~llied forces in Bel- foreign nationals and groups, but not do, entertainer Rush Lim,baugh,
the depaned. So Nixon is now offi- nitwit GeraWo R!vera, authors Joe
gium.

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Dear Editor,
In the light of the growth of
-dois movement in our coUntry, we do
well to ask what the Creator thinks of
J hese things.
.
When God created the
world, He established a fundamental
"ttistinction within tbe human race,
·,eflected in the human body -· "Male
,Qi.d female created He them (Gen.
1':27, 5:2). It was God's plan forsex ual relations to be in the form of man·
Woman union, man and wife becom ~
ihg"one flesh" (Gen .. 2.24).
•
Homosexuals · and their
' defenders; who argue that all human
l:ieings have the right to self-under.6.tanding and expression, reflect their
determination to ignore God's design
and replace His intended distinctions
·with their own desire.
Because mans sexual identity is defined by God. because his
orientation is ordained by God, and
because his sexual activity is circumscribed within a heterosexual
marriage context, homosexuality can
not be viewed merely as a variant
. sexual preference or accidental variation within creation (akin to lefthandedness). It is not a third natural
sex or alternative sexual orientation
in God's diverse world. Instead, it
represents a choice, in some sense, to
set one's desires and satisfy one's
physical drives in a way contr"'?' to
God's appotntmenl and creation.
There is no nat~ral holl)osexuahty,
for homosexuality is precisely a perversion of nature (Understood as
God's design for human relations).
Homosexuals are made, not born;

Today

i~

out and Oowers and candles began
appearing around the truck.
The chronology becomes murky
after that, in pan because Peron had
ordered the sculpting of at least du.:c
"dummies" of vinyl and wax to help
conceal the rea[ body 's location. The
real body was probably stashed for a
time in a crate marked "Radio Equipment" in the office of the army 's
information chief. At one point, it
may have been stored behind the
screen of a Buenos Aires cinema.
What has been firmly established
is ·!hat the nervous military leaders
finally shipped the body to Italy in
1957, and had it buried in Milan
under the name Maria Maggi de
Magistris. 'There it remained, in a
plain grave, for 14 years.
In 1971. another Argentine leader ·
acceded to Peron's demands for
restoration of his citizenship and for
lhe return of his late wife's remains.
The body was dug up and rushed to
Madrid, .where Peron remained in
exile. When the silver coffin was
opened, wilh Dr. Ara present, both he
and ·Peron were pleased to find Evi·
ta as lovely as ever-- save for a few
chips in the plastic, some broken fin•
'gers and a bent ear from all the years
'of rough handling.
' But Peron had no place to put the
coffin. He chose the dining room,.
where he and his third wife; Isabel,
would sometimes refer to her open ·
casket over the meal. Actording to
one macabre report, Isabel would
brush and plait the cadaver's hair
each morning and would occasional
lay on it to pick up lhe vibes and aura
of Santa Evita. ,
It must have worked: Peron
returned to power in Argentina in
1973, · and Isabel succeeded him
when he died of a heart attack the fol·
lowing year. In 1974, Isabel brought
Evita's coffin bacl&lt;; home from the
Peron auic in Madrid, using it as an
icon to boost her own popularity.
. A military junta overthrew Isabel
in 1976, and Evita's. itinerant corpse
was quietly turned over to her two
sisters the next year. She has since
lain in a family crypt in the'fashion·
able Recoleta cemetery, secure two
ltories down, under two trapdoors
and three plates of steel.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
' - - - ' are writers for United Featuft
.Syndicate, Inc.
•

would preserve her beauty fOROver •
- inchlding keepins the heart, liver
and other organs intact.
After a funeral that brought thousands of devotees, Evita's body
became a three-year work-in·
By
progress for Dr. Ara. Occasionally, he
would roll her down from his workplace, resplendent in a glass coffin, to
bolster lhe sagging popularity of
President Peron.
leader and Cabinet member,
.But the well-manicured charm of
The two worked so well together Evita's corpse could not keep Peron
that they created a virtually unshak· in power forever. A military junta
able cult of personality as the leaders overthrew him in 1955, and the new
of "los descamisados," the shirtless rulers Were beside themselves over
ones. Evita reached out to lhe poor, how to dispose of this potent symbol
giving away food, clothing and hous- of Peronism.
·
ing '· and also brought Argentine
Concealed in a plain box, Evita's
women the vote for lhe first time.
.bo&lt;!y was first taken via an army
Evita died of uterine cancer attlie truck to a marine base,' wh~re the
·height of her glory, in J952, at the age truck remained for a day before the
of 33. Her husband soon made plans commandant discovered its contents
to build the world's largest mau- and nervously ordered it removed
soleum, three times heigh( of the Stat- from his jurisdiction. For want of a·
ue of Liheny. He also hired an emi- destination, the truck was simply
nent Spartish mortician, Dr. Pedro · parked in downtown Buenos Aires. It
Ara, to embalm her in a way lhat was moved again arter word leaked
Eva Duarte was a sometimeactress and radio personality who
eventually bedded and later mmied
Juan Peron, an ambitious military

sticker, "No on Proposition 209."
And an anonymous caller phoned
Mike Coleman, editor of the paper,
warning: " [ would really consider
what stances you lake. Don't even try
bringing that white-boy network
around here."
On Nov. 6, Mario Savio died.
Much ofthe writing in the obituaries.
of course, was about his role as an
influential advocateoffreespeech.At
a memorial on campus, candles were
lit Also aname was a copy of the
Daily Californian containing the editorial opposiqg governmental preferences. Savio was against Prop&lt;isilion
209, but the stealing and burning of
the newspapers were in contempt of
his legacy.
Anolher way of chilling speech, or
trying to, has been extensively cxperienced by Wi"d Connerly, the black
chairman of the drive to enact Proposition 209. Marc Fisher's profile of
him in the Washington Post began
with Conncrly "pointing out the bullet holes on the door and over the
threshold'' of his house. "Threats
have forced him t&lt;i hire bodyguards."
And Jonathan Mahler, managing
editor of the New York weekly Forward, a continually credible newspaper, notes that during the campaign.
Connerly was called a "house slave"
by Jesse Jackson. That opinion is.pro-

tected speech. but it illuminates Mr.
Jackson's concept of reasoned discourse. And has Jackson said anything, by the way, about the stealing
oft~ Daily Californian's press run?
Jackson's one-time mentor, Dr.
Martin Luther King -· as Richard
. Kahlenberg has pointed out. in the
Washington Monthly -· "proposed a
Bill of Rights for the disadvantaged.
... King l/8in 'Why We Can't Wail' ·
, 3/8,saw it 'as a 'matter of simple justice'that poor whites be helped too."
.
If Dr. King's cla.'IS· based approach
had been printed in the Daily Californian during the campaign to save
the specific racial and gender preferences of affirmative action, would .
that issue of the paper also have been
stolen •• and burned?
Various professors around the
. country have been insisting that pol it. ical correctness, if it ever existed, has
disappeared from college campuses.
Certainly not from lhc originol site of
the Free Speech Movement. And it is
~live on other campuses as well. We'
still have what we call "the Religious
Left"·· as rigidly convinced of their
preferred place in the moral universe
as their countcrpans on the self-consecratcd Religious Right.
Nat Hentoff Is a nationally
ftnowaed authority On the First
Amendment and the rest of the Bill
or Ri&amp;hts-

Nixon'S final outrageous act.
·Jo(leph Spear

1

history

I

Klein and Gary Al4ricti, and former
Clinton political guru Dick Morris.
To this list of luminaries, we add:
--Rep.' Dan Burton, R-Ind. Soon
to be chairman of lhe House Governr)le~t Reform and Oversight Committee, this goofball once demanded
an investigation of Socks the eat's
postage expenses. He is obsessed
with the notion that Vinee Foster was
Qlurdered and once . staged a "reenactment" of the alleged homicide
by firing a .38 into a fake head in his
back yard.
•• Sen. Carol Moseley-Braun, DIll. She took altother in a series of
trips to Nigeria to'lick the boots oflhe
dictator of the moment. This time it
was Gen. Sa~i Abacha, . who has
.locked up the .nation's elected president and thousands of dissidents and
allegedly looted die treasury of more
than $1 billion.
··Voce President AI Gore. With his
lengthy lament at tho Democntic
convention &lt;if hit sister's death due to
luna Clllcer, Gore llKended to lhe
rank or Muter Of Hypocrisy. His
family hu grown tobttcco, and he
took tobacco contributiona for aevor·
al years arter his sister's terrible

struggle with the disease.
-- American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers chief
John Lo Frumcnto. Las't August, he
acknowledged thatASC.AP had been
attempting to collect royalties from
Girl Scouts for the copyrighted songs
they sing round the compfire. "They
buy paper, twine and glue for the
crafts," he told the Wall Street Jour·
nal. "They can pay for the music,
too."

·· GOP senatorial candidate Rudy
Boschwitz of Minnesota. He publicly
questioned whether his opponent,
Sen. ~ul Wellstonc, had ever burned
the American flag. When Wellstone
accused him qf 111 "absolute lie,"
Boachwitz said he was just checking
and lNas pleased to hear Wellstone
hid nothina to hide.
Note: The current contest ends
when the ball falls on New Year's
Eve. Send your nominations to me,
care Of the New1piper Enterprise
Association, 200 Mltdison Ave, New
:vork. NY 10016.
, Je~epla
II a 11MIIe!*-d
for N...,.r Ellletp1ile

f!r1ter

s,....

....... .

~

•

D. Rowland Dais

IND.

...

,,,,,

•leoturnbusl44o

I

Margaret D. Johnson

42°

Da·mp, chilly week ahea~
:throughout Buckeye State
• The Assocletecl Press
:By

• A stationary cold front could pro!duce rain or a mixture of rain and
: snow across Ohio for the next sever: al days, forecasters said.
, : Colder weather will move into lhe
, region on Wednesday, with tempera·
~ lures dipping into the teens by later
"in the week, the National Weather
Service said.
Lows tonight will he in the mid·
30 to low 40s. Highs on Tuesday will
be 40-45.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 64 degrees in· 1984 while
the record low was 14 below zero in,
1951. Sunset tonight will he at 5:08
p.m. and sunrise Thesday at7:48 a.m,
Weather forecast:

Tonight...Oceasional rain, mainly
early west. Lows from the mid 30s to
the lower 40s.
Tuesday..·.Rain likely 'nonheast.
mainly early. Chance of raip elsewhefe. Rain could become mixed
with snow west. Highs near 40 west
to the low and mid 40s elsewhere.
Temperatures likely falling during the
afternoon.
Extended forecast:
Wednesday...Colder wilh a chance
of snow showers. Lows mid\ 20s to
around 30. Highs in the 30s./
Thursday .. .A chance o/ snow ·
showers northeast. Fair e)sewhere.
Lows 15 to 25. Highs upper 20s to
lower 30s. ,
Friday... A ·chance of snow showers. Lows 10 to 20. Highs in the 20s.

(, .Wednesday's Super Lotto
jackpot will hit $16 million
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were no tickets sold with all six num·
hers selected in Saturday night's $12
mill ion Super Lollo drawing, so
Wednesday night's jackpot will be
$16 million, the Ohio Lottery said .
' Here are Saturday night's Ohio
Lottery selections:
Super Lotto
3-12-20-33-41-46
Kicker
6-1-8-9-8-0
Pick 3
3-1-8
Pick4
5-6-5-7
Million Dollar Giveaway
":.; (Winning serial numbers from 3- .
:;of-6 Super Lotto tickets from
:: November) .
1
•..,., $300,000: 309-05100995-052
;:~Britton's Market, Columbu~
::; (309-05100995-052) 1I
:.:; $150.000: 306-0096 1429-137
:=:Meijer Inc . No. 62, Columbus
:::-: .(306-00961429-137) I
,.,,
$100000:
318-01991249-223
Le
-t!
'
\
-..;Monde Sunoco Service ~Cleveland
-· (318-01991249-223)
~·; $90,000:
314-04086145-088
' ,,
,_.Speedway, Gahanna
::::: (314-04086145-088)
::..: $80.000:
3119-02999986-211
- Columbiana Duchess , Columbtana
(319-02999986-211) ' /
· 1-r
$70,000:· 335-08098265-047
= Lykins Convenience Store, Cincin• .
.-,nat•
(335-08098265-047)
.
::,: $60,000 :
325-07099449-075
~peed-D-Foods. Canton
...... (325-07099449-075)

....

....

=
=

-·

t:...,
· ·~
... _
"1"'-~....;;..~_...-........,

The Daily Sentinel :
(USPS 113-960) .

$50,000:
311 -05969313-157
Roger's Deli-Man, Greenville
(31 I -05969313-157)
$40,000: . 311-00095243-061
Block N Barrel, Dalton
(311-00095243-061)
$30,000: . 31()-00750437-25.3
Minolli ;s Great Northern, North
Olmsted
(31 0-00750437-253)
$26,000:
307-06370421-160
Town &amp; Country Beverage, Garfield
Heights
(307-06370421-160)
$10,000: 318-06690216-200 Convenieht Food Mart No. 720, Elyria
(3 18-06690216-200)
· . There were 74 Super Lotto tickets
with five of the numbers, and each is
worth $1,422. The 4,009 tickets
showing (our of the numbers arc each
wonh $82.
In Kicker, one players had the
exact six-digit number and can claim
$100,000: The winning ticket was
sold at the Shop Kwik in Wheelers·
burg.
The seven Kicker tickets showing
the first five digits are each worth
$5,000. The ·56 with the first four
numbers are each worth $1,000. The
559 with the first three numbers arc
each worth $100, and the 5,502 with
the first two numbers are each worth
$10.
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$1,366,589.50 to winners in Saturday's Pick 3 Numbers daily game.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
$1,516,976.50.
In the other daily game. Pick 4
Numbers
players
wagered
$416,582.50 and will share $184,000.
Sales in Super .Lotto totaled
$3,826,249: · Sales in the Kicker
totaled $613,078.
~

Publiahed every afternoon, Monday throuJh
Frldiy. Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

Ohio Valley Publishina Company/Gannett Co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·21 .56. Second
'elw Po•taae ~d nl Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Auoeiated Prtu. and the Ohio
Newspaper A~sociation .

Akzo ......................................65~4
A•hland 011 ...........................44\

The Daily Sentinel, Ill Court Sl.. Pomeroy.
Ohlo45769.

Blink On. .............................. 42'h

SUBSCRIPTION RATI!S
B;r Cnritr or Motor RoUtt ,

SubKriben not detlrina 10 pay the clltritr may ·
remit in advance dir«l to 1'hll Dally Sentinel
on a thnle, 1lk or 12 month balll. Ctedi1 will be

aiwn eanier ach week.
No tubaertpdon by mail pennined in areu
wt1ere borfte Cll'l'ilr eervke it available.

Borg-W•nwr ..................... ~ .•.38\

Champion ............................. 24~.
Charming Shop• ....................5'1.
Cttv Holding ..........................24'1.
Fedenl Mogul ..................... :.22'4
Ganrwtt .................................72\
Gooc::twMr ..............................49,..

K-m•rt,..................................1r:lt..

LIII1CII .::nd .............................26~

Umltec:l .................................. 18~
Ohio Yalt.y Blnk ....................36
o.. v...., .........,...................37\
Peopln ...................................27
8ho~·.................................. 7\

t-Mottoc-wr
l l -........:....................................... $27.30
26 52 -

.................................................,3.82
............................................... $105.56

·- -.... ~
2.1
l •l -..........................................
.,....$29.68

26 ...............................................156.
51 Woob ................................... ,...........Sl09.n

COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prices at selected
buying points Monday as provided
by the U.S. Depanment of Agriculture Market News:
Barrows and gilts: mostly .50
higher; demand and supplies moderate.
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
points 52.00-53.00, a few at 51.50
and 53.50, plants 52.50-54.00, few at
52.00.
'
u.s. 2-3, 230-260 45.50-51.50.
Sows: under 500 lbs. ncar steady.
over 500 lbs. ' 1.00 higher to 2.00
higher. U.S. 1-3 300-450 lbs. 41.0045.50. few at 40.00; 450-550 lbs.
45.00-47 .00, 500-650 lbs. 48.0053.00, few over 650 lbs. 53.50,
Boars: 38.00-39.00.
Estimated receipts: 35,000.
Summary or last week's Producers Livestock Association auc·
tions at Coshocton, Hillsboro,
Eaton, Farmerstown, Lancaster,
Wapakoneta, Mount Vernon,
Bucyrus and Creston:
Hogs:·steady to 4.25 lower.
Butcher hogs: 25.00-58.10.
Caule: 1.00 lower to 5.00 lower.

.

EMS units answer 16 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emer- ,
gency Medical Services answered 16
calls for assistance Saturday and
Sunday. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
· 7:45 a.m.· Saturday, :Pearl Street,
Monserrate Cordera, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
9:56 a.m. Sunday, Overbrook
Nursing Center, Gertrude Johns,
Pleasant Valley Hospital ;
3:09 p.m. Sundoy, General
Haninger Parkway, Alic~ Plantz,
VMH:' .,
POMEROY
1;08 a.m. Saturday, State Route
338, Letart Falls, John Hill, Holzer
Medical Center;
II a.m. Saturday, volunteer fire
· department and sqund to Laurel Cliff
Road, automobile fire, Linda and
Frank Dickens o~ners, noinjuries;
2:58p.m. Saturday, Village Manor
Apartments, Floyd McClelland,
VMH;

6:25 p.m. Saturday, Wetzgall
Street, Nellie Morris, VMH;
8:24a.m. Sunday, U.S. 33, George
Skinner, HMC;
10 p.m. Sunday, Country Mobile
Home Park, Darwin, Byron Watson,
VMH; .
II :21 p.m. Sunday, Mulberry
Avenue, Gerald Sellers, PVH.
RACINE

II :56 a.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department to Main Street, automobile fire, Tim Hill owner, no injuries;
8:20 p.m . Sunday, Stiversville
Road, Angie Hill, VMH.
RUTLAND
1:15 a.m. Sunday, Kingsbury
Road. Robert Mahr. VMH;
2:32 a.m. Sunday, Stover Road,
Bernard Neutzling, PVH;
3:25 p.m. Sunday, volunteer fire
department and squads to White Hill
Road , four-wheeler accident, Tom·
Molden treated at the scene;
10: 16 p.m. Sunday, Higley Road,
Mary Smith, PVH.

Meigs announcements
Christmas program
Program plannoid
A children's Christmas program
Hillside Baptist Church will be
will
be held' Sunday, 10:30 a.m. at the
having a Christmas program on Dec.
Portland/Racine
Reorganized Church
22 at 10 a.m. All the Sunday school
classes will ·he panicipating in the of Jesus Christ of Laller Day Saints,
program. That evening at 6, a musi- f91lowed by a birthday celebration for
cal program will be presented. Both Jesus at 6 p.m. at the church. Moneadult choir and junior choir will be tary donations will be used for repair,;
to the church building. Icc cream and
singing.
cake will be served. All welcome .
Correction ·
The family roller-skating Christ· Long Bottom UMC
mas party sponsored by the Meigs
The Long Bottom United
Area Holiness Association, the Meigs Methodist Church Christmas pro·
Ministerial Association and the Mid- - gram will be Friday, 7:30 p.m. All
dleport Ministerial Association will · welcome. ·
be held Thursday, 7 to 10 p.m., not
9:30p.m. as previously reported, at
the Chester Skate-A-Way,
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)Here are the winning numbers selcctMeeting changed
.
ed Saturday in tl!e West Virgi11ia State
, The Leading Creek Conservancy Lollery:
Daily 3 .
·District's regular board meeting has
4-5-9
been changed to Tuesday, 5 p.m.
Daily 4
6-5-0-5

sw link ............................... . .

_.._._

Wencty'a ................................ 1.~
Worthlngton .......................,..11)..

Stock report• are tha t0:3
a.~IIDIH provld1d by AtMat
of
llpolls.

... ~~--==----!111=-11

Slaughter steers: choice 62.0073 .i5; select 30.00-66.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 61.0072.25; select 35.00-65.00.
Cows: steady to 4.00 lower; all
cows 47.00 and down.
.
Bulls: steady to 2.00 lower; all
bulls 42.75 and down.
Sheep and lambs: uneven, 4.00
lower to I .00 higher; choice wools
80.00-95.00; choice clips 85.0095.50; feeder lambs 99.50 and down;
aged sheep 49.00 and down .
Feeder caulc: 2.00 lower to 3.00
higher. . . .
.
Yearlings: 9.00-60.00; heifers
11.50-52.00.
Calves: steers 20.00-61 .00; heifers
20.00-53.00.

Deputies arrest
Gahanna men
Two Gahanna men were arrested
following a routine traffic slop by
Meigs €ounty sheriffs deputies early Saturday.
Just after midnight, deputies
· stopped a vehicle with expired registration.
The driver, KyleS. Armstrong, 22,
was charged with a felony count of
possession of cocaine, possession of
drug paraphernalia, expired registration and an expired driver's license.
Chris S. Schirtzinger. 22. was
charged wjth possession of drug
paraphernalia, a minor misdemeanor.
·
l3oth were ' lodged in the Meigs
County Jail pending a hearing in the
.Meigs County Court.

Ruby Smith Grueser, 77, Minersville, Ohio. died Thursday, Dec: 12, 1996
at the All Saints Hospital in Fort Wonh, Texas..
. •
A homemaker, she was born January 4, 1919 on Portland, Ohto, the daughter of the late Benjamin Franklin Smith and M"'?' Amos Wade Sm1th. She
was a member of the Minersville United Methodist Ch~rch.
She was the beloved mother of a daughter and son-m-law, Mrs. Becky
(Jim) Baker of Fort Worlh, Thxas; tWb sons and da~ghters-in-law, Mr. Charles
(Sandy) Grueser II of St. Simons Island, Georgta.• and Mr. John (Ang1e)
Grueser:
.
M
d B'll
She is also survived by brothers-in-law and sisters-m·1aw, aryan '
Russell of Pomeroy, and Walter and Mary Grueser of Pomeroy; and II grand.
children and five great-grandchildren.
·She was pn:ceded in death by her parents; her husba~d, Charles, tn February 1995; brothers. Roy, ·Paul, Frank, _Bud and Bert Sm11h; and sosters, Hattie McMurra~. Nora Hoback. Zana Gouner and Mary Wood. .
.
Services will be held 1 p.m. Tuesday, December 17, 1996 m lhe Ewmg
·Funeral Home, 106 Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy. Ohio, with the Rev. Charles
Neville officiatins. Burial will follow in the Minersville Cemetery. at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m: Monday. Dec~ber 16, 1996.

Meigs County hunters killed
355 fewer deer compared to 1!195 ·

during this year's Ohio deer gun
season, which ended Saturday. '
Hunters tagged 3,271 deer Ia
Meigs County, according to pre·
·lirninary figures fro"' Game .Protector Keith 0. Wood. Last year,
hunters tagged 3,626 deer during
the two-week season.
· Wood , speculated that some
hunters were awaiting the muzzle· ,
l&lt;iader deer season, which is being
held earlier tbis year and will run
for six days.
·
"There are a lot or unfilled tags
ouf theft," he said.
Two hunting·rela,ted inddents
were reported in the county durin1
the two week·season: a window was
,shot out or a residen&lt;e and an
unQCcupied· motor vehicle was
damaged by gunfire, he said. Thooe
remain !Jnder Investigation, he
added.
No injuries Weft reported locally, ae&lt;:ording to Wood.

.
Half Price ...
GIFI' CERTIFICATES .••
Give a gift they'U always cherish
The Gift of Memories
' From now until Dec. 23 our portrait Gilt
Certificates are haH-price- The Perfect Gift for
Friends &amp; Family
· Some -l~ns apply

.

County's deer kill
lower than 1995's

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - none.
Saturday discharges - none.
Sunday admissions - ·none .
' Sunday discharges - none.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Dec. 13 - Jasmine
Sparks, Mrs. Jason Tucker and son.
Reavis White, Beth Kuhn.
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Moore, son, Gallipolis.
Dischafles Dec. 14 - Lillian
Hurt, Mrs. John Colley and and son,
Mrs. Thomas Moore and son, Andrea
Wellington.
Discharges Dec. IS- none.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Baker, son. Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.
Tony Vance, son, Bidwell.
(Published with permission)

W.Va. lottery piCkS

Ruby Smith Grueser

'

Ho.spital news

'Bob Ev11111 ............................12\

Pretn Flrd .................................13
Roolcwtll ............................. ~.80~
RD-IMII ..............................181\
MAIL IIVUCittri'IONs

Today's livestock·report

AT&amp;T ...........................·............39

:: ~: : _ : :::;::: . : ::::::::::::::::i:;a:s ,
SINGLE &lt;:OPY PRICE
Daily ..................,.............. ,.................. 35 Cenu

Aug. 15, 1910, in Ubenan, W.Va. He auended the Forest Run United
Methodist Church at Minersville.
·
Survivors include his children. Selma Call of Long Bottom, and Fred
Yahya Sr. ofWtehita, Kan.; a daughter-in-law, Jean Yaliya of High Point, N.C.;
and II grandchildren. three stepgrandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren, seven stepgreat-grandchildren, four great-great-grandchildren and one step-greatgreat-grandchild.
Services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday in the Banlett-Burdelle-Cox Funeral
Home, South Charleston, W.Va. Friends may at the funeral home from 5-8
p.m. today.

Am Eie Po_, .......................39'J.

to

c~tiOn!l

assure his re-election with the Electonl Colle&amp;e. a change in the distri·
bution of about 600,000 votes among
the states could have elected Dole,
273-265.
The ort-maligned Electoral Col·
lege- the last indin:ct voting in lhe
country - was established by lhe
nation 's founders to protect the ·
impressionable citizens from themselves. They feared the public could
be too easily swayed by passions and.
rumors.
Each state gets the same number
of electors as it has lawmakers in tbe
House and Senate. In addition, the,
District of Columbia gets three elec·,
toral votes even though it has only·
one, nonvoting delegate to Congress.•.
New York 's elector meeting !)as:
traditionally been one of the more;
lavish stale events - lunches at a•
French restaurant and pewter plates!
as souvenirs. The 1992 meeting of33:
slate delegates cost $10,000, but this'
year's pomp and circumstance. has
been toned down by the Republicanrun New York legislature ..

Darra Yahya

Stocks

Mtn~btr :

POSTMA.STER: Send addrt11fl

WASHINGTON (.AP) - Presi·
dent Clinton is already planning his
D. Rowland Dais, 78, I'Dmeroy, died Sunday. Deco. I 5, 1996 at the Ohio next four years in the White House,
but the 1996 presidential election is
State University Hospitals, Columbus.
·
.
A lifelong farmer, he was born April 16, 1918 in Bedford Township, in officially undetermined until tbe 538
the house where he spent his entire life. He was a graduate of Pomeroy High members of the Elec10ral College
School and Ohio University. He attended medical school, was a member of cast their ballots.
Keeping with tradition and the
the National Rifle Association, and a member of the Harrisonville PresbyConstitution, electors were assem·
terian Church.
He is survived by a special cousin and his wife, DenZil and Barbara Welsh; bling in state capitals and lhe District
of Columbia today to cast !heir bal·
and by several nieces, nephews and cousins.
·
lots. Vice President AI Gore, in his
He was preceded in death by his wife, Helen Burson Dais, in 1987.
Services will be II a.m. Wednesday in the Jagers &amp; Sons Funeral Home, constitutional role as president of the
Alhens, with the 'Rev. Alan Blackwood officiating. Burial will be in the Wells Senate, will announce the results dur~
ing a joint session of Congress on
Cemetery. Friends may call a.t the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.
Jan. 9.
"It's ceremonial and somewhat
anti-climatic," soid New York elector
Margaret D. Johnson, 93, MiddlepPrt, died Sunday, Dec. 15, 1996 at HoJz. Deborah Glick, a state assemblywoman from Manhatlan. "The gener Medical Center. ·
·
'
A homemaker. she was born in Meigs County on July 3, 1903, daughter eral public believes the president was
already elected."
of the late Castine and Della Davis Reiber.
Clinton won the most popular
She is survived by sons and daughters-in-law, Stanley and Belly JQhnson
votes
- a shade under 50 percent of Racine, Carroll and Mildred Johnson of Middleport, and Fred and Esth~r
and
is
anticipating a 379-159 ElecJohnson of Delaware, Ohio; 12 grandchildren and 26 great-grandchildren; a
toral
College
tally over Republican
brother and sister-in-law, Roben and Wilma Reiber of Racine; and several
challenger Bob Dole.
nieces and nephews.
In tbe past. three '!len who had
She was al~o pn:ceded in deoth by her husband, Lee Johnson, in 1972;
fewer
popular votes than their rivals
and by two daughters, Kathleen McNickle and Belly Templeton.
became
president: Benjamin Harrison
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in lhe Fisher Funeral Home, Midin
1888,
Rutherford B. Hayes in 1876
dlepon, with Pastor Jesse Wingrove officiating. Burial will be in the Gilmore
and
John
Quincy Adams in 1824.
Cemetery, Minersville. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m.
Hamson was chosen by the Electoral
Thesday.
College, Hayes was declared president by a joint session of Congress
aqd Adams' election was decided in
Darra Yahya, 86, Middlepon, died Saturday, Dec. 14, 1996 at Veterans the House of Representatives.
. While this year's pop4lar vote
Memorial Hospital.
·
A former restaurant owner and operator in Charleston, W.Va., be was born gave Clinton enough of a lead to

..

446-7494

1-aao-272-5327
l'lul

�•

•

Sports

•

s.c.._

NBA standings
Att.ntic DhrW...

WI..Mli.l

s

Milllai ..................., l8

.783
NewYork.. ............ : ~ 6 .714
W-.hin&amp;eon............ IO II .-476
OriMdo ...................9 10 ....,...
Pllil.tclphia ............7 U .318
lenoy .............. ! 13 .278
..................... ! 16 .238

12

6

fl:l.

li.l

.m

12
13
16&gt;

--

PoniMd ................ .13
LA. CliPP"'···········9

.348
.2011
.190
.167

16

.600
.S-42

4~

14 .391
15 .308

8
9

............ $
Golden8we ............8 16

Phoenir. ................. ,.7 IS

2

9~
9~

.333
.3 18

91.

81

68

UCLII72. OHIO 61
Utah 83, WCbcr St. 47
Wuhif'!(!lon Sr. 69, Idaho ~7

Saturday's 1ournamonts
Corrier a...k-mplonshlp
H. Micbi8:1111 68. Syr.K:usc tiS
Third place
Old Dominion 56, PCJ'I)t'l'dine 47
Coup• Claal&lt;..:hamplonshlp
Sr. Mary's, Cal 58, Boise St. S1
Thlnl pion
Houston 89, Briaham Young 69 ·

Sunday'ucOftl
Detroit 99. Bolton 89
Wuhinaton 110. Golden State 102
Phoenix. 103, Vt.ne011ver 84
Houston 99, Portland 89

Hawaii-Nih Falival-tirst Nllftd
Ball Sl. 82. Ala..-BirmiiiJh.lm 70
Hnwali 86. Cal Poly-SLO S4

IMIIau Clallk-ct..mpionJWp
lodiann86, Srut111 Cl111'11 '74
Third place
E. Illinois 88. ·Louisiaria Tech 76

Toniabl's pmes

(OT)

Sroalh

Auburn 80, W. Carulirlll S~
North Carolina 105, VMI61
TeMCSsce 57, Memphi1 47
Vonderbil18:'i, Nicholls S1. 37

~lone

or ~iladt:Jphia. 7:30p.m.
lndi:n.lll Mimu, 7:lo p.m.
LA. Liken Bl a.ir;aa:o, 8 p.m.
AIIQIICaat Dallas, 8:l0p.m.
'Golden Stale til Seanle., IOp.m.
Houston at Vancouver. 10 p.m.

Michigan 70, LSU 59
Minnesota 71. St. John's .19
Miuouri 64. SE Missouri 50
SW Miuouri St. 72. St. LAlui1 63

Ell.~

' I. Koruaoi66) ................ 9-0 1,770
i . w•Fomo(5) ........ 7-0 1,703
3. Kentldy ......, ............7· 1 1.617
• . Mld&gt;lpn ...........•........ 7-0 1 .~2

I
2

3

!
6
8

1,4)1
1,286
1,199
1.175
1. 156

10
9

I.ITI

4

22

4S7

20

326
2111

2.17
169
158

81

Ohio men's
college scores
O.io Cgnrtnnce
Baldwin-Wallace 7;\, Capital 68
Heidelberg 89, Onerbein 74
Mount Union lt9, John Carroll 83

II

12
13
1.1
17
19

Non-oonlcrmu play
Dcai101193, Bct~Y. W.Va. 66
Urbana 106, Coli. of W.Va. 91
Xa..,ier 79, Hof1tra 43
WilbtrfCli'Ce 99, Cedarville 96

16

2J

Saturday's action
.
l!ul
Olrlmouth 73. New Hampshire ~
O..ke 87, Villanova 79
~~ 91 . lllinoi1 Sl . 64
F1oridl AdaMi~ ~9. Roben Moms~~~
lona 89. Comel\61
La Salle: 6~. Drtxcl !i8
LonalslniWI U. 104. Niapra 84
Princeton 48. Monmouth. N.J. 46
~idet 66. Md.-BalliiWI'l' County 49
R•am ~7 . St. Pe!L,.·s s~
Sr. Francis, NY 69. Cenl. Ct~OIIil'ficut •

Sr. 66 '
Va. Commonwtakh 58. Pi,nsburgh j5
Well Virainia 110. E. Tennessee S1.
.

Ohio women's
college scores
C9nltrence USA
Cincinnati 69. Dayton 55.

6h5o Conlermt:t

Capital76, Baldwin ,Wnlla&amp;:e 62
Mutkingam 84, Hir.un 4.1
Ohio Nor1hern 65. Mari&amp;.1111 51
MoaDl 72. John Cllf!VII 54

S2

South
AlltmmlliOO. W. ~tina 48
AlaboUnll A&amp;M 58, Allb3ma St. ~4
Akonl S1. tii. Jnd.-Pur.· l~l• . 58

·
Mo

Cimdcl 82. Win&amp;* 5~

C'*'al C;wolina 74. ~McRae 60

Coli. of Chllrleslon 62. Prc:sby!(fian

E. KeNucky as. FlA. lntcrnarional74
EaR C.OJiM 65, SW Louitillllll5b

Keoruoky 80. o- !6
MARSHAU. I 1!. Mor&lt;locail St. 9J
MidiUt Tenn. U Tc:nn.~OWranoop
7)
•
MiJSiiJ,ippi 6&amp;, Wktrita St. 6,, ·
Nillillippi St. 91. Loyola. NO J2
J&lt;.C ~ 10. lll•idloo 6A
N.C.·Wi-on 63. Complodl61
NW LouisiiRI Sl, Slrnford o46
NewOrkant 71. Soarhml Mill. 61
........ 66. Certr. Floridl41
S&lt;MIIbem 98, SE Louisiana 91 (OT)
Troy St. "'· Georail St. 'Ill

-

w•Fome71 . ~t47

llowliol0....119, Mln69
Bot1or ,I. E-•ille SO

Amhenr 7~ . Brunlwi~-k ~~~
Anna ~7. M..-ion Local J6
Anthony Wayne 71 . 'BiiuFithJ. Mich.
Aul'tlfa n, Berbhire 52
lka.lh'o11k 74. Wt11m'ord -'2
Bellevue 58, Sandusky Pm.int ~~
Bi' Walnu1?6, Bucktyt Val. 62
Bmtol S4. Wrdsmwn 49
Bryan 65, Fairview S6
Celina 76, Oa)'. Meadowdok: 67
Olelapratc 49. Galtipol.il .\4
Cin. Hilll 6S. Felkily·fr•klin !i$
Cin. Prinmon Ill , litn:~ SS
Claymom 84. Sandy Val. 6.1
Clc:, Bc:ncdicline 74. Mentor Laoke

Cadl. 61

.

Cit. Sc. Jtnntius 70. Warren.._...,
~7

Cl)'dc61. Willard4.1
Col. Hanley 7b. Bc~~oley 72 (Of)
Col. St. Ctuwlct64. Col. BriiJI S~
Cootineillal 61. o\ntwerp 5~
Covet~lry 66, Cuyat~oaa Val. Cht. 61
Crestline 71 , Plymouth 67:
Cmcvlew 7:\~ Fon Rcconry ,_..
llttnbwy ~.alai~ 7J. G-112
Day. Slt'bbins 58. Ltmon Moaroe 48
Drfiance 64 , Bowlin&amp; Green S1
Drlphos Sc. John 6S. Sr. Mllf}'t )9
Dunblr 121 . Jeffcnon 61
E. Clincon 60. C'tdarville 49
Edison ~s . Berti• ee.r weac:m Re·
"""'41
Eljio!2. Marioa-48
EJyria SB. Aabllnd -47
Fairfakl Unioft 12. Ubeny UnMHI 57
Fairporl70. -~St. loOo !I
frlnklin MoMoe 71, BrootviUe 66
F""""i VI&lt;1"YIJ. Ubeny 0.. 71
a .... Millo How... !5. KinJ.J -10
GlertOot 72,l.oultrille 64

Rivmade: 49, Asblabult

Riehmoad Ediloo B . Oak Olen,

W.Va. 52
.
RIVerview 55, Tri VII. :u
Rocky River Lutheran Wen
Bttchwood 1S
·

Football

NFL standings

!610T)
Shaker Hit. Andrews 47, Shaker H1s.
Brown44
,
hlby S!J. NorwBik 46
Sidoey SO. Celina 3.5
Spencerville 43, St. Httwy 30
SprinJ. Show~ ~6 . Kcnron Ridse
46
Spri,.U.Id S. "·F--43
St., ffMcil DeSaks 64. Wheelersbu!J
l6
Stn1then 66. Howtud .5)
Tmrlllllh 39. &lt;lromoo 2S
T-Ie Bopo. S4. Open Door 36

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
WI..Ibl.lErA
-~~~, .,.... Enalond .. Jo
o .667 m 291

Ira

~

Buffalo ................9 ~ 0 .643 28~ 241
lndi""'J&gt;D&gt;i• ........9 6 0 .600 l9l .10)
Milllni .... .............6 Iii 0 .429 292 283
N.Y. Jeft.. ........... .l 14 0 .Ofl7 2.~1 423

~l .

Rocky River Mqnifkal68. Solon 46
Salem .53, Polaad 41
Sudusky Perkins 63. Mila.n Edison

St. Lwil )4, Ata... 27

Cnlral DMDen '
II·PilfJburJh ....... IO S 0 .667 :0 0
Jacbonvifle ........&amp; 7 0 _5j3 )()()
CINCINNATI .....7 8 0 .467 :WI
Howron ..............7 8 0 .467 121
&amp;ltimore ............4 II 0 .267 3~
WetmOM.-.
·11-Denver ............ l3 2 0 .861
Kansu'City .........9 6 0 .600
Oaklond ..............7 8 0 .467
SanDieao ............7 Iii o .467
Seattle .................6 9 0 .400

-·-

l39

318
345
290

417

181 l.'l9
288 280

)19 265

294 :'66
289 355

San Francisco 1'\, PilllburJ.h 1.5
Minat101a 21 , T-.. Bay 10
CINCINNATI ll. tto.ton 13
l~i1 24, 1CMA1 Ciry 19
Deaver :U. Ollt.JMd 19
AnlOUI21. Washina1011 26
Jt.eboiiYiUe 20. Salek n

TCJOiaht'spme

Buffalo 01 Miami, 9 p.m.

NHLstanclinis
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Au..&amp;k Dh•ilion

W I. I 1:11. lll! liA

florida ............... IB 6 7 43 96
Philadelphia ....... l912 2 40 99

67
84

........ l61l
N.Y. Ranpn .... .l4 14
WIIShiAJIOn ........ l) I b
N.Y, lllll!Micn .... IO 12
Tampa &amp;y ....... .IO I~

74
93
85
81

New~y

. NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Temple Cbr. -44, World Harvest 42
Tiffin ~vert 61 , Tol. Otris~ian Sl
11ffinColumbial'! 87, Galion 44
Tol. Ccatral44, DoardiTIUI4:t
TreeOfUfe 39. CardinJIOA 37
Triad 68, Rid&amp;emool 38
Triway ¥J. Canton Cear. Calh. 51
Tllscnwu Clllb. 40, lld«ewood 37
Unll&lt;d Local !7. CaaJon llorit'l• 27
UPJlOISanduky64; Willud48
Urt&gt;ana64.Spnq. Nord&gt;ealtem49
\.!lice 40, Bi&amp; Walnut ~7
Vinoenl Warren S2. Waterford 50
W. Br&gt;ndt 60, Akron ~•8 · !7 (OT)
W. Holma 66. Bl&amp;t Riwr 22
W , Jeffenon 61, Jonathan Alder :W
W. Liberty s.Jem 54. DeGraff Ri..,erUde4!

'

EaltemDivl:lion

~.... . . . . J6~~.~~ ~

y·l'llllodolphia ..... 9 6 0 .601) 3)4 122
Wuhinaton .. ,...... 8 7 0 .5l1 12~ 302
. Arizono ...............7 g 0 .461 2KI 168 ,
H.Y.Gi111111 ......~ ...6 9 0 .400 220 274
•

•

*

Ctntraf 01-wWon
•-Green Bay ..... .1·2 ' 0 .800
y-Minnewta .. l •••••9 b 0 .600
Olic&amp;~o ............... 7 8 0 .467
DclrDII ................. ~ 10 0 .:U J
Tampa Bay ...........'\ 10 0 }JJ

2

3.t 79

S

:n

l
8

28 fl2
21f' fll

--llh&gt;-·1

HIIrtfonl ............. l. 9 6
BufJDJo ............... IS 14 2
Pittlburah .......... 14 14 1

MDN..Ol ............ l215

~

11

Ill
7"i

n

107

WESTERN CONFERENCE
418 200
277
264 271
28S :\44
187 274

m.

WntemDhWon
y.Carolima .......... ll 4 0 .733 349 104
y-Snn Francisco .ll 4 0 .733 374 243

.

CeMf'IIDI-wlsion

Ia..

.1! I. I 1:11. lll! liA

Oallu ...........•..... l8 10 3
Dl:troil ................ l7 9 5
St. Louis ............ 15 16 I

39 89 1l
39 90 :;6
31 91 103

ChiCJ40.............. I.. 16 3

:\1

Phocnix .............. l2 IS 4
Toron1o .............. 12 20 0

83

.Wickliffe :'il, Pmy 4~
Woodridge Sl, NewiNry 45
Woodward 86. Taft 62

Wonh. Chria1ian .59; Academy .57
Wynlvrd 54, U- S-lly 36
You. Ursuline S2. Canton Catb. 51

Ohio U.S. girls' scores
Salunlay's actiOa
Akron Elms 61, H.udton W. RCICI'Ve

!7
Amhml S4, Bay Vill~&amp;e 37
Alblaad $-4, Admiral KiftJ 49

AshlllldC--., ~. S. Cc!ml48
A1htlbula H.tor 41, Oc.wa 32

Avon Lake47, Fai~1ew Park II
Bellfontlli.e 6t. Spri~&amp;. Noctb~

41

.
Col. DoSaleo64, - · · l 6
Col. Hanley70. Col. Ready 41
Coldwa&amp;a 66. Lima Bath 62
Collin• Weacern Reserve 52. Mon·
roeville 48
Colonel Crawford 49, Crelllifttl 46
Columb\~:~55,

Cop~)'

Cuylhop Hta. 19

86, Medin~~ HiJhllltd 4)

Cretewood 57. TwilllburJ S2
CroobviUc 57; Shoridan 42
Cuyahop Val. Chr. S5, Kidron 46
Danville 64. Worth. &lt;;hrillian 46
Dover S~ . Bertin Hipland41
E. ClitiOn 63, Cl.aynbu 211
E. Cleveland Shaw

Fw,.42

«. P•ma Vul .

E. Kno116.,, Millenpofl rt

Elai• 70. Mlrion P~ .tl}
FJyria Ant 84pt 40. Wayaulre Chr.

FDirview 1•. Milker Cily 6:'i
Fon LtwOmie :\7. hfln11et ~l ·
Frcmoot Roll ~~- Tol. Waire l)
Cilltllwmy61 . S!~fJ 17
Garfttkl H11. 49, Sh&amp;er Hr,. 44

J2

Gnrfiekl His. Tfiilily 94, Elyrl11 Calh.

.

o..... 49. Ot.... .14

(lrah;n 66.

SW.y Flirllwn S6

GrwwiUe ~. LickinJ

HeiahfJ 4)

· 'IMiian Vat 58. Clnaidllr3l
Jdfmon Ara 69. Alflttbwla 36

Jeweu-Sdo -'8, l...lkcllad :W
, Jolw~GWn 66, Lucas l2
Klllidl 7.t, Fon ktwa•IJ ).4
K_. LAAiou. .... Pe~M~enille Ells!-'
wuod ll
. Kcuton 60. Chlrdull41
~ Ridtt .tS, Willo-Hilll.1
Lakewood Sc. Autudhw :U, Shaker
H11. I...MIIe142
Uclt.inJ VII. -'9, LAkewood 4~

Uma Calh. ~7. Kenr011 .. l

63, Drlphol If. John...,..
Lwn ... •Ue Aqu1nu 47. Srow W1llh
lcsuil46
Madl10113 . .......,.. ,.....,. .t.'\
Malvcnt 40, Newcom&amp;n~DW~~21
Mwr.eld
.tl. ttiiW. 32
M:1pk101 Sl, Pl~l&gt;
. . 27
M•t-tra 55,
41
Llnt~nv~

a..

Manon
Girb!l

-

c.... 5.• Col. Sehool (or

H.rirrs !1

~

Mtrlinaton 61, C.... S.. 43
M-.illoi6S.C...T..... 41
Miooilloo I - 64. Pllllarlol·
phjol6
Moulllort l'eny !1, A - l l .
Medi•-.,.•l.W........ 21
Mall.- Lib c.... Sl, P.... lila.
HolyN-!1
.

Mioom ... Clnrlll!ao 42

.

~n Top 25 college basketball, •

.

Sy The AeeOcllled Pntll .

CHQI~TMA~

GREETING EDITION
Tuesday, December 24th

.. With Wl't'!ntbs ef holly n~d mllltl~t•""• lltOC!klng,.. hu••• by
. the lire ami seena blanketed with
11nuw. t:hriNtmaN
I
.
eneompasse11 warMth and goud eheer.a." we eherl11h the
blf'Minflll we•ve f..haretl this past yenr. •'or WI It me111nN
lln,·ln• "thanks,. to yot1• nur many frlt'ndM, uld and new.
wlut~~~e kind support we"ll aht'RYN h'C!'RMII.,.. lhtln,r
butt~lne88 with ynu 111 n11r lfl't'!ntat pleal!llu"'J

Wish all your customers and
friends . q, very Merry Christmas
.
in our Christmas Greetings Edition
on December 24th

«Jree.ev1ew •U. Oakwood45

Hudlon 42. Talhnllfle :W
H•ronlJ. s-tb~. M"''"•43
.............. 54. -lya 211

:S99.
'

.

.)1

F-.tirbMkJ 43. a.n;.min Lupn Jl
hirffekJ 49, UJN l8

with 45 I«''OIds 1c11 in the pme. quarier. River hit 5·9 treys, 21-$4
River's Mike Gehri1. howoYer, hit two-pointers, and wu 12- 18 at the
two straight tines, Ed ThfonoiY also line.
hit a three and several Pilots hit flee
Eutern crabbed 25 re!lounds
throws to cut the lead to 74-71 at the (Casto 8, Dilllrd 6, Otto 6); had two
buzzer.
.
blocks, six steals (Dillanl 3, Otto
Eutem made some near-fatal two); 12 turnovers, ten assists (Dil·
mistakes going down the ""'ICh, but lard four); and had 16 fouls.
·
managed lo hold on for the win.
River had 24 rebounds (Gehrig
Eastern had only one field
8); had two steals. 15 turnovers, 21
goal in the lasi round despite scoring assists (Trifonoff 7); and 28 fouls.
20 points, mostly at the line.
. a-rv• nota: Eastern lost the
Eastern hitl3-24two-pointers. 7- reserve game 70-46. Todd Frye had
21 three-pointers. and was 27-37 at 16 for the winners and Ryan Rosnick
the line.
17. Eastern was led by Eric Smith
including hitting 18-24 in
founh with 14 and John Driggs II.

p.e

On Thursday, Wuerffel won the urday with a degree in public rela·
Davey O'Brien Award as the nation's lions.
top quarterback, the Maxwell Award
R11nning backs had won the last
for college football's top player and two Heismans- George and Colthe Honda Scbolar·Athlete Award.
orado's Rashaan Salaam in.I994, but
On Friday, he won the Unitas quarterbacks won four out of five
Golden Awanl as the top senior quar- years 1989·93: Andre Ware of Houston ('89), 'I)' Detmer of Brigham
terback in the nation.
Young ('90) , Gino Toretta of Miami
W~l has said all week that his
('92). and Florida State's Charlie
teammates shared all the honors.
'"I hope they're excited," Wuerf· Ward ('93).
Wuerffel set 47 school, Southfel said of his teammales. "I bope
everyone feels a part of il and I hope eastern Conference and NCAA
we CIJI celebnte together."
records during his career. This year.
"It definitely takes a team effon he completed 207 of 360 passes for
(to with the Heisman)." Gators wide 3,6~ yanls and 39 touchdowns. He
broke SEC records in the latter two
receiver Jacquez Green said.
Added Florida guard Donnie categories and led .Division I·A in
Young, "'There's a lot of 'learn' in touchdown passes.
that Reisman Trophy."
Pace (6-foot-3, 330 pounds)
Wuerffel finished third in the · became known as ,"Pancake Man"
Heisman voting last year behind for his flattening of opponents and
Nebraska's Tommie Fmzier and win· the creative Ohio State Heisman ploy
ner Eddie George of Ohio State.
of counting "pancakes" as a .statisWuerffel had a 3.75 grade point tic this season. He was trying to
average and will graduate next Sat· become the first offensive lineman to

·

win the award.
Davis led the nation with 2,158
yards and WRS secon~ in rushing
touchdowns with 21 during his second straight 2,000-yard season. Iowa
State's 2·9 record probably doomed
his chances.
.
"I don't know what else I have to
do to win (the Heisman)," Davis
said.
Plummer led Arizona State. to a
shocking win over Nebraska and II·
0 season while could culminate with
a national title if the Sun Devils with
the Rose Bowl and Florida beats
Florida State in the Sugar Bowl.
Plummer passed for 2.,77 yards and
23 , louchdowns but Wuerffcl had
momentUm from a year ago, the
nation's No. I ranking most of 1he
season and fancier numbers to caleh
voters' eyes.
· .
· While Wuerffel has been labeled
a "producl of the system" by many
and has found il tough shaking lhe
tag, teammates disagree.

,

Eutem

17·21-16-2(}o74:"
River Local
16-16- 13-26=7 1 "!
~astern: Brie Dillard 2-J.;..
12113=25, Josh Casto 6-0-4/6=t.&gt;,'":
•
Rickie Hollon 1-1-214=7, Daniel ;
Ono 1-2-6110.:14, Sieve Durst 3-1· •
314=12. Totals 13·7-Z7/37=74
I
River Local: Mike Gehrig 4-2· j
517'=19, Ed Trifonoff 0-1-0/2=3. •
Justin Isaly 2·1 · 212=9. Mario :
Costanzo 1-0-011 =2. Nalhan Barker :
S-0-{}oiO, Kevin Knighl 1-0-212=4. :
Jim Hunt 11-0-214=24. Totats ·l4·4· !
1Vl8=71
•

,
I

l

'

:

No. 8 Clomson 80
Charleston Southem 57
At · Clemson, Greg Buckner.'
scored 18 of his 24 points in the sec·
ond half as the Tigers (7·1) beat
Charleston Southern (3·4) for the
II th stroighl time.
'
No.9 Utah 83
WeberSL48
At Salt Lake Cily, Keith Van H&lt;im
scored a career-high 41 points and
grabbed 14 rebounds as Ulah (5· 11
beat Weber State (3-3).
No. 11 Duko 87
No. 10 VUianova 79
At Philadelphia, Trajan Langdon
scored 19 .Points and Ricky Price
added 17 as Duke (7·2) handed Vii ·
lanova (6-1) its flrslloss.·
No. 12 North Carolina lOS
VM161
At Le~inglon, Antawn Jamison
had 21 points and 11 rebounds as
Nonh Carolina (6-1) ·routed VMI (2·
4).

No. 13 Indiana 86

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR DAVE or BOB·
992-2156

THE .DAILY ·SENTINEL

After a monlh of things falling
their' way. the Jacksonville Jaguars
need one more week of good fonune
to join their expansion brethren from
Carolina in lhe NFL playoffs in their
second year.
.
Arter' a season of ups and downs
in a futile attemptlo get a bye in lhe
first week of the NFC playoffs, the
Dallas Cowboys learned Sunday
they, are· getting a bye any"'ay ,.. in
,the final week of the regular season.
. Th~ · Cowboys clinched a fiflh
stmigl)t- NFC East tide as kicker
Chris Boniol provided alllheir points
in a victory for the second time this
• 'season. Boniol bailed out the slrUg·
gling .(&gt;alias offense with four field
goals against New England, and lhe
Cowboys won 12-6 by holding tbe .
NFL's highesl"scoring offense 10
two field goals.
Wilh one week lefl in the NFL
season, only the malchups for the
playoffs in Jhe NFC ,need 10 be set· ·
tied. Three qualifiers were determined· Sunday as Dallas, Philadel·
phia and Minnesola joined Green
Bay. Carolina and San Francisco.
Green Bay" and either Carolina or
San Francisco will get first-week
·byes in the playoffs. Bu1 with lhe·
Cowboy~ locked into a home game
that weekend, lheir regular-season
finale-at Washinglon, .whiclt fell out
of playoff conlention wilh a 27-26
. loss a! Arizona, is cssen1ially a rest
.,
..
.
.day.
Coach Barry Switzer sa1d runnmg
back ·Emmin Smith and other bat·
tered Cpwboys won't play at Wuh. ing1on.
"We 'II treat the game as a bye in
sevcrai ways." SwiJZer said. "We
have seVeral players who should be
rested, including Emmill."
A Jacksonville loss to Seattle on
Sunday night would have meant that
all six of the AFC playoff teams were
seuled, too. But the 11111um won 20-

~

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•'

~

•

I•

••

DANNY WUERFFEL

'
••'
•I
••
••

"Whal it really comes down lo is •
· he's lhe one who 1hrcw the ball qn l
the mark all year," Young said. j
"He's the one and the receivers were t
the ones who were catching it."
:
· One of the first people 10 con- :
gralulate Wuerffel was Doug Flu lie,;
the 1984 Heisman winner.
:
"He is joining an elile member- i
ship." Flulie said .
:

•••

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•
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••I
I

ass~sts as Louisville improved to .6- :
Santa Oara 74
Q
•
· At , Bloomington, rit'eil Reed
No.
20
Alabama·
100
~
scored 30 points as Indiana (9-1)
Western
Carolina
48
:
won the Indiana Classic champi·
AI Tuscaloosa, Eric Washington :
onship.
and Demetrius Alexander each :
No. 14 Texa&amp; 98
scored 20 points. as Alabama (8-0) I
No. :U FresDO SL 86
:
At Austin, Reggie Freeman rov1ed Weslem Carolina (3-2).
No.
22
Stanrord
72
~
scored a career-high 43 points as
San Diego 70
:
Texas (5-1) beal Fresno State (6·2).
AI San Diego, Kris Weems scored •
No. 16 Minnesota 77
a career-high 18 pointi; and Sian ford :
SL John's 39
AI Minneapolis, .Minnesota held (4-1) lied a school record with 12 3· :
J
S1. John's to its lowesl puinttotal in pointers.
TCU93
33 years and handed the Red Slonn .
I
No. 23 Texas Tech 89
I
' one of their worsl .defeals.
NO. 17 Xavier 79 .
AI Fort Worlh, Damian Walker :
scored 22 points, including Jwo :
Horstra 43
AI Cincinnali, Gary Lumpkin and clinching free throws wilh 6.6 sec- :
James Posey scored 13 poinl&lt;apiece onds lefl, as TCU (7- 1) beal Texas :
as Xavier (7-0) eXJended ils besl stan Tech (5-1).
•
since 1992-93.
No. 24 UCLA 72, Ohio 61
No. 18 Louisvillo .88
At Los Angeles. lR. Henderson •
Purdue 72
and Charlqs O'Bannon each scored :
AI Indianapolis. DeJuan Wheat 16 poinls as UCLA (2-2) rallied to :
had 25 points; lhree sleals and eight heat Ohit;&gt; (2· 3).
:

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by Leroy Hdard.
. .
·Meadowlands mcan11ha1 the Giants' i
· Ben1aiS 11, Oilers 13
13, their fourth slraighl victory when played."
Minnesota will play at either DalBoniol, who kicked a recordJam~s Francis intercepted two
co-tenant, lhc Jcls, arc assured of :
a defeat would have meanl eliminalas.
Carolina
or
San
Francisco
in
lhe
seven
field
goals
in
a
21-6
vic·
passes,
one
for
a
42-yard
louchdown.
ncxl year's lop draft pick . The Sainls ;
tying
tion
first
round.
The
Dues
(5·10)
lost
for
as
Cincinnali
moved
to
6-2
under
made sure of that by breaking a sev· :
Before this year, no NFL Jearn in tory over Green Bay earlier in the
only
lhe
second
time
in
six
games.
coach Bruce Coslel and knocked en-game slide under interim coach :
its second year had made the play· season, has 26 straighl wiJhoul a
Cardinals 27, Redsldns 26
Hous1on oul of playoff contenlion.
Rick Ven1uri.
r•
offs, and the Panthers, who joined miss, a club record.
Washinglon (8·7) started the seaj!lsewhere Sunday, it was Caroli·
Coslet, who replaced Dave Shu·
Mario Bales and Lorenzo Neal •
. the leagoe along with Jacksonville in
son 7-1. but another wild loss to Ari- Ia on Oct. 27 as interim coach, was ran for louchdowns "and lhe Sainls :
1995, have already done ilthis sea- . na 27, Baltimore 16; Green Bay 31,
zona (7-8) knocked lhe Redskins out rewarded before the game wilh a limilcd New York (6-9) lo 36 yards :
Detroit
3;
New
Orleans
17,
New
son.
of
playoff contention. The Cardinals four-year deal.
in 1he second half. They also forced
The Jaguars (8· 7) got some help · York Giants 3; St. Louis 34, Atlanta
also
won 37-34 in ovenime at Wash·
Broncos 24, Raiders 19
four IUrnovers and sacked Dave ,
witb losses by the Chargers, Oilers 27; San Francisco 25, Pittsburgh 15;
Oakland (7-8) set a team record ·Brown and rookie Danny Kane II scv- •
and Raiders over the weekend. If Minnesola 21 , Tampa Bay 10; ington tliis year as Boomer Esiason
lhrew
for
522
yards.
Cincinnati
21,
Houston
.
13;
Indi'
I
.
witli
20 penalties for 157 yalds and en times.
Buffalo loses to Miami ·lonighl,
Kevin
Butler's
28-yard
field
goal
commiued four turnovers, leading to
Rams 34, Falcons 27
Jacksonville would make the post· anapolis 24, Kansas City 19; Denver
with no time left was Jhe gal!le·win· 17 Denver points. The Raiders ,fell
season with a victory over Allanla 24, Oakland 19.
St. Louis (5· 101 won a gm~e over ;
ner for Arizona, capping a 15-play, two pena)ties shy of the NFL record Atlanta thai had II turnovers. Rams •
Jacuan 20, Seabawks 13
next Sunday, provided Kansas City
. Tony Brackens had an intercep- 69-yard drive that consumed the of 22. set in 1944.
and Buffalo don'ttie.
quarterback Tony Banks lhrcw for ••
final
7:02.
Kent
Graham,
who
got
his
tion,
a
sack
and
four
blocked
passes
The
victory
capped
a
perfect
If Buffalo wins tonight and
304 yards, but he fumbled four j
secures a playoff benh, Jacksonville for the Jaguars. Seattle (6·9) has los1 staningjob back from an angry Esi- home season for Denver ( 13-2) and times and threw an mtcrccpt•on, ~
ason early lasl week, was 16-for-40 gave John Elway an NFL-best 126
would make it Sunday with a victo- four of five.
while Bob!&gt;y Heberl was picked off l
until he went 4-for-6 on the final career victories, one more Jhan· Hall
Mark Brunell threw Jwo touchry and a loss by ei1her Indianapolis
six times for host Atlanla (3 - 12). j .
of Farner Fran Tarkenton.
or Kansas City. Denver, New Eng· do~n passes to Jimmy Smith, march.
Keilh Lyle had three of lhc imercep- :
Colts
24,
Chiers
19
including
a
39-ylrder
that
the
visit·
Packers 31, Lions 3
land alld Pittsburgh already have
tions.
.
Rookie Marvin Harrison caught
ing Seahawks almosr inlcrcepted
Desmond Howard, the 1991 Hcisclinched AFC spots.
Rams rookie Eddie Kennison •
three touchdown passes from Jim man winner as a college star, slruck
"Four weeks ago, I wasn't aware with a 13· 7 lead.
caught five passes for 226 yards, :
Harbaugh
againsl an injury-depleted a Heisman Trophy pose afler return·
Panthers 27, Raveno 16
of it,".QB Mark Brunell said of Jhe
including three long 1ouchdowns, :
Carolina ( 11-4) improved to 7-0 Kansas City secondary.
ing a punl92 yards for a touchdown,
Jags' fading playoff hopes when they
and Isaac Bruce set an NFL rccoril 1
Quanerback Sieve Bono; who his third runback for a score this seawere 4-7. "This week I'd be lying jf at Ericsson Stadium, where "the Panfor most reccplions in the lirsJthrce ;
·
came
in for an injured Rich Gannon son for Green Bay (12-3). ·
lheJ:$
have
outscored
the
opposilion
I said I'm not looking around and
years of a career wilh 216.
!
83-13 in the second half ~f those in Jhe second quarter, hit Kimble
Antonio Freeman, Green Bay's
j
seeing what's going on."
Anders for a5-yard 1ouchdown with hoi receiver, and Dorsey Levens, its
Dallas (10-5) bas won lhe divi- games.
'•
1:17 to play 10 make il 24-19. The hot runner, each had a louchdowtl.
. With a tiebreaker advantage over
sion 18 times, and the Cowboys have
'
'
Chiefs
(9-6)
recovered
an
onside
the
49ers,
Carolina
needs
only
to
win
The
host
Lions
(5-IO)"Iost
for
the
won five Super Bowls, including
•
Jhree of the last four. Few of Jhose at home against Pittsburgh to secure kick, and Bono passed them to the eighth lime in nine games.
•
Saints 17, Giants 3
championships were as difficult, lile NFC Wesl and a flrs~eek play- Indy 13 with 18 seconds lefl, but
Jhey, were stopped in four plays.
New Orleans' victory at the
with suspensions lo Michael Irvin . off bye.
''
"With our record, I think any
and Leon Lett, a spullering attack
•I
Jearn
should be afraid 10 come in
and injuries to key players thwaning
'
'
them despite big victories over here," linebacker Lamar Lathon said.
Baltimore fell to 4·11, including
Green Bay, San Francisco, Philadel•
~ew
0-8 on the road.
phia and Washington.
•
49ers lS, Steelers 15
"I told the team they ought to be
'
San Francisco ( 11-4) became the •
damn "proud of the fact they're the
first team to ever win five consecu· firs1 visitor to win in 13 games a1
tivc NFC BaSI titles," Switzer said. Pittsburgh (10-5). Steve Youn1 threw
"We've had to fight and slrUggle three first-half touchdown passes•
all year," Irvin said. "But our the first against Pittsburgh's defense
Your pa r/rr~r in prpteef{on
~
defense' won it for us. If we play like at home in 13 quarters, and !be 49ers
•
this on offense. we 'II be out of the turned a fumbled punt, a safety and
•'
a 43-yard pass inlerference penalty
playoffs as soon u they stan. It was
'
against Pro Bowl cornerback Rod
flat-out embarrassing the way we
•
•
Woodson into a 16-0 lead.
Vlldnp :n, Buccanetn 10
!·
· At Minnesota, the Vikinp (9-6)
11 I E. Second St, Pomeroy
held Tampa Bay lo eight fJnt downs;
I
just one iri the first half, and801101
yards rushin8 ~d two touchdowns

CHECl THE CIASSD1fJ)S FOR~ YOIJB

!
i

NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS

THE POSTMASTER AT REEDSVIJ.LE HAS
NOTIFIED US THAT ALL TAXPAYERS
SHOULD USE THE 5-DIGIT HOUSE NUMBER
OR THE CORRECT P.O. BOX NUMBER AND
UPDATE ANY FORWARDING ADDRESSES.
PLEASE CALL OUR OFFICE AND YOUR
. POST OFFICE FOR ANY .CHANGES.
HOWARD E. FRANK
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
'

(

O..ertcr ltdlla

Panthers, Cowboys and Vikings win ;to get NfC playoff berths

Ccntcrbura 10. "4onMdac 43
Centerville 55 . .)prinafaeld N. 31
Cho&lt;don N().Cl 06, Cle. C.... c.....

~T-~1

NEW YORK - . The Danny
WJ!erf[el Traveling Awards show
finally ~oncluded at 8:20p.m. Sat·
urday, when he was ann!llfnced as
the 1996 Reisman Trophy winner at
the Downtown Athletic Club.
"This is the award you helrd
about when you were little," Wuerf·
fel soid. "This is the thing that kids
dream about."
He received 300 fll'SI·place votes,
158 for second and 147 for third to
finish with 1,363 total points. Troy
Davis of Iowa State, who ran for
2,000 yards for the second straight
~ear. finished second with 209 firsls,
~06seconds and 135 thitds for 1,174
)otal points.
• Arizona State quarterback Jake
Plummer finished third with 116
lirsts, 113 seconds and 111 thirdsfor
1685. Ohio State's Orlando Pace had
:S7 firsts , I 01 seconds, 136 this for

Wuerffel dominated the Votinl in
, the South, getting 358 poi11ts to 141
to second-place Davis. which e!!ded
up being the cushion he needed to
win it.
The ceremony marked the end of
a long, award-filled week for Wucrffel, wbo became the third quarterback from the Sunshine State to win
the Reisman in the 1990s and the
second Florida Gator to win it.
. Florida coach Steve Spurrier won
the award in 1966. He became Jhe
first Heisman winner to coach anoth·
er winner.
"He's won just about everything
possible. It's unbelievable,". Spurri·
er said.
Soid Wuerffel: "Things are hap·
pening so fast. It's really overwhelming at this point."
On Tuesday, W'uerffel received
the Draddy in New York - wonh
$25,000 in postgraduate scholarihip
money. He is the first to win both the
Draddy and the Reisman.

In the latest NFL action,

S.Jp. 61, Fon Frye )I
Beta S2, Medi11 3!
Be11lq 51. Orandview4l
Qoddu 60. Allen E. ~
BrecJu.villc 70, SttonJaville 39
Brunawkk 61, N. Royalton 37
BcyanlO, R...,.Clld 40
Budceye Local 52, BltiOU: W.Va..l8
Bucyrus 62, S.llewell
C~t~~ton McKinley BS, Cle. Manhall

Clc. Hci&amp;hc1 46, Meotor :18
Cle. St. ~- 61, Latewood ..
Cit. VA·SJ t9, Akn:NI St. V-St.M .t4
Col. Brookhaven 75, Zaaaville RDR-

Oehrii-

In other Top 25 gatn~s Sunday, had 17 points and 12 rebounds as
' Kartsas was 100 big, 100 strong No.4 Michigan beatLSU 70-59, No. Wake Forest (6-0) avenged last sea· .
12 Nonh Carolina routed VMI 105- son'sloss to UMass (3-5).
and 100 quick for Nonh Carolina·
61,
and No. 16 Minnesota downed
Asheville..
·
No. 3 Kentucky 80
Raef LaFrentz had 23 points and St. John's 77-39.
Notre Dame 56
On Saturday, it ·was No. 2 Wake
I0 rebounds as the top-ranked Jay·
AI Lexington, Ron Mercer scored
hawks breezed to a 105-73 victory Forest 71, Massachuselts 47; No.3 21 points for Kentucky (7-1), includKcmtucky 80, Notre Dame 56; No. 5 ing eight during a 27-3 run that broke
Sunday.
Iowa
State 81. Iowa 74; No. 6 Ari· the game open.
·~1 really can't say it was ncr·
Ill , Jackson State 83; No. 8
zona
No. 4 Michigan 70
vousnes; because we waniCd to play
Clemson 80, Charleslon Southern
with them," said Robert Stevenson,
LSUS9
At Auburn Hills, Maceo Baston
who scored 19 points for Asheville. 5(; No.9 Ulah 83, Weber Stale 47;
No. II Duke 87, No. 10 Villanova and. Louis Bullock each scored 13
"lbey"re a really good team."
79;
No. 13 Indiana 86, Sanla Clara points as Michigan (7-{1) beal LSU
, Leading 50-i3 at halftime,
74;
No.
14 Texas 98, No. 21 Fresno (3·.5).
Kansas (9-0) opened the second halfStale
86;
No. 17 Xavier 79. Hofstra'
•. No. 5 Iowa St. 81, Iowa 74 ,
with an 11·3 run and c111ised to its
AI ·Iowa Ci1y, Shawn Bankhead
.321111 straighl victory at Allen Field 43l No. 18 Louisville 88, Purdue 72;
No. 20 Alabama 100, Western Car- scored 23 points as Iowa Slate (6-0)
House.
1
· Kansas coach Roy Williams sub- olina 48; No. 22 Stanford 72, San beat Iowa (6-3) for lhe third lime in
.
. stituted frequently. Ten Jayhawks Diego 70; Texas Christian 93. No. 23 four years.
Te·xas.
Tech
89;
and
No.
24
UCLA
No. 6 Arizona, 1ll
played at leasl 13 minutes.
Jackson SL 83
''Overalll was really pleased with 72, Ohio 61.
No. 1 Wake Foresi 7l
At Tucson, Donnell Harris had 21
the amount of playing time we were .
Massacbuetts47
points and 16 rebounds - bo1h
able to give our players," Williams
career
highs- as Arizona (5-1) won
At Winston-Salem, Tim Duncan
said.
despite a shortage of players.

Wesrervinc S. 82, OkNan&amp;y 37
Wheclcnbur&amp; 68, Ponamouth C111y

Cin. Mother of Men:y 68, Wanenon

rt.cing four playm in double figures in a great team effon. the East·em varsity boys' basketball team
boosiCd its record to 3-1 by defeating non-league foe Hannibal River
74-71 Saturday night.
The Eagles are off 10 their best
start in the four,year reign of veter·
an mentor Tony Deem.
Deem noted, "This is a unique
group.
They play hlrd and they
1
enjoy what their doing. We were able
to play everyone and run eight men
in and out of the lineup. We were a

lillie tired after Friday's pme, but we
Jim Hunt led Ri- with 24 points
were able to keep our lep fresh fQr oun 11 for IS ni""' from the floor.
a final run in the last q - ."
while Mike
had 19, Mario
Eutem wu led by Rnior point Cor"&amp;'" 10 andJIIIlin Iuly nine.
guard Eric Dillard, wbo ICOI'Chnd the
Ri- started hot, bul E Ill ft held
nets for ~ poiDII, hitting 12-13 free a 17-16 edge at the end of the first
throw$, includinJ 9-10 in the final period. Eistem turned up the wick,
round. Dilllrd also had four 111ists outscorins River 21·16 in the second
with a great passing game and had round to lead 38-32 at the half. Dil·
six rebounds, while senior Josh Cas, IIIII had 11
to nolched 16 points with a 6-7 night at the half and Cas1o had 10, while
from the floor and a team-high eight Durst had nine and Otto had eight.
rebounds.
Hunt and Gehrig each had 13-point
Daniel Otto added 14 points and games going at the half. .
six rebounds, while Steve Durst
Eastern built up a specious 54-45
canned 12 points and had two assists. lead after three rounds, and led by 12

By The A88oclated Prell

Wayne Tmce 6:1 ColdwiUer 56

!2

By aeon WOLFE
81nllnel Corn IP Oi'ICient

:Kansas blasts UNC-Asheville;·UK wi·n s and UCLA beats Ohio

Vu Wcn74, Pwldiq !i8

3.,

84

28 78- 95
24 90 IIJ

Warrensville HI$. 96, Cle. Rbocles 31

.

1.12

8011on ................ 10 IS S U HI 107
QUlwa ................ &amp; 14 7 2.l 74 92

Tree af Ufe 55, World Harvar42

52

87

34 90 K9
89 R8
31 108 IM

29

Eastern varsity boys hand Hannibal River 74-71 loss

· By DAVID JONES .
Florida Today

Hockey

Ita

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wue~el's awards tour ends with Heisman· Trophy

,

Trorwood-Madison 7S, Middh:town

Saturday's action
Mo

M-

Caroti-.27. Baldmote 16
Grtn Bay )I , Oecroil 3
Dolloo 11. New Eoalaod 6
New OrJe.ll7, N':Y. Giantsl

Tol. Cachollt 32, Akron St. V·SI.M

51

Akron Firestone SR. CUyahoga Filii•

am.oo tiD. Charlcllon Southern 57

OtorJia 60, VirJ,inia T«:h ~7
Ge&lt;q:Ja Southern a Mm:t'l' .!iS
Otambli., Sr. 88. Wiley 73
JektonvtUe St. RO, M111. VttUt:y Sl.

Tifri11 M. Notn: (.}.Jmc, Ohio 41
Wilmlngron, Obi" 67, Alll.letJ004.'
Uncb&lt;:y Wilson 91 . Wilbctt'o t(e 42

38

Sunday's_..

oaoa :w

!~

Ohio U.S. boys' scores

Amcrii.'lll U. K!l . How;u-d 7
BaykM 6H. Auburn 63

florida"·
$k110141
Floridl:l St. 108. J.cbonville 84

Non-conrntnct play
67, Moan1 VerMn Naz.atc:ne

woc.~er 37.

Pbilo -40, W. Mulklapm 37
Pkkerinaton 67, Upper ArhiiJIOn .t8
Piketon 71 . Chilloccche Zoe Trau ,

Philadtlptt.ia21. N.Y. JctslO
O!iAF 27. Suo (l;e. . 14

Woodmon: 63. Elmwood ll
Wynford !)4, Riverd:lle 34
liHia 0.. 4!,
Clw. 41
You. Uttuliae 19, You. Chaae)' :\4

hiM Val. 70, Westf.U 46
Pwa'la ...... 63, Bedford Hca. ~I

SllUnltiy'sscoru
•

SpriDJ. S~~ 67, G~'C~eneview 66
Sprinafleld 63, Clay 54 ·
St Henry's 77, Wapatuoeta 60
S1. Wendtllo 67, SUitch 47
Stow · w~ Je.uil ~Akron N. 46
SIT)'lea 70, Hiekl\'ille 68 (OT)
'limn Columbian .SS. Marioa Hanlin&amp;

Mid.()hlo ConfereMe
Findlay 70. Walsh SO
RIO GRANDE R7 . Cedarville College 75
Shawnee S1. 9S. Mnlone 50
Urbana 66. Ohio Domink an 65
K~nyoo

55

ll.~lilthed division riUe

y-ell- p1oyolf .....

Darnell
Readia&amp;76, Landmark Olr. 41
Ridacd* 73, Marion Calh. 41
S, Ccntra168, St. Peter's a · .
$. Char)eston SE 64, Waynesville 46
S. GaJia 57, Caclenaburg Chr., Ky. 47

Salurday's action

WiiCORiin 71. St. Bonaventure 611

Wyomi"' 76. - · Puy 71

n

Molone69, R!OGRANDE67 ·
. Wal1h 71 , Shawnee S1. 49

21
18

NCAA Division I
·men's scores

!A
.
· Jtlllfl Madison68. Montana St. 63

-k64.B.....,.c-.161
MI. Gilalll 1,1. Dlaville 5o&amp;
MI. Vernon 51. MU1011.SI
N Ccatn160,- S4
,
New Knm.aville
Fan Jea.inp ]8.
· New Ricaal76. V~nluc 52
Ncwart. 67, Co..~ Fruldin. 5:1
Nonhridae 71, Utica S7
Nonhwa~ $4, Colerain 52
OaYrio 80, Buc:ynu 59
Ormllo 60. a,. Forl&lt; !8
OtiiiW..O- !9, U11111 Callt. 48
Ott..Uio! I, Holpre ..
Painesville RJ¥a1ide 63, Painesville
Ham:y44
.
Pandl;n.Gilboa 54, Ada .Sl
Parkway 74. Ansonia 60
Pettisville 76, MOftlpelier S1
Por1Jmouth 72, Wuhill&amp;lon C.H. 71
Ponsmouth W. 74. Panarnoudl Nom:

Mid·OIIio Conl'ertnce

WMhlniiOII S!: I'

56

..... ot
Minford 66. Lua.vine Val. 46

lOT&gt;
Muskingum 63, Hiram 49
Ohio Nonhcrn 65. Marienm 60

24

MAIIoll 63. Unioolowa Lib 5I
MauilloD J.::boa. 67, Akroa Stwia;a.

M""""' v~. Couatty Illy 70. Mooroeville 69
.
Milu EdiJon 55. Colli• w_.. Re-

Saturday's actioD

14

Odttn rtedvirc vOles: Ortgon 1-'1 .
Bos&amp;oa ColleCt 128. TcJud ChriSiillll 36,
Coli. or Charlc11on 32, Wiscon1in 21 ,
Tuba 23, E.. Michi1an 18. Virainia 18,
Rhode lsbnd IS. Connc&lt;:~icur 12, Gcoraelawn 9, W•hinJIOn I. West Vlrafnia I.
GeorJia Tech 6. Iowa 6, Oklahoma ~ .
5cMib Carolina 5. George WMhington 4,
Nebralk4·4, Califomial. Old Dominion
2. Baylot I. Florida. S1. I. Oral Robcft1 I,

!19

!2

Sunday's tournaments

?

1,044
1,026
1.018
907
807
634
61S
520 .

J51

Mlrioa IUver VII. 69, Karoa 47
MIIOII (jf. FiMC)'IOWD 61 (OT)

Far West
S~themCall07, UC ln-ine45

H•w•ll Nlke Fatlwal-champlelahlp
Hawaii 83. 1•11 St 7~
nlrdplace
.
Ala.·BirminP&lt;lm 93, Cal Poly-SLO

.
Mlrion ElJin 52, M.-ioa: PleuaM 48
M•liaaton ... Tidcel'l 35

Mld~at

The '&lt;&gt;t' 1S team! in The Auociated
~~· men • college balkelball poll, wilh
linl·pii'Ce vOleli in pnrenrhcse1, records
lhroaJh Dec. 15, 1o1a1 poinrs based on 1.~
pofnll for a first-ploce vote 1hrouJ,h one
poinr for o 25rh· phace vole, 1nd lost
weet'J r1111king:
·
.
'
Lui

S. lowa 51 .......................6-0
6. Arizona ...................... 5-l
7. CINCINNo\11 ............ 2-2
8. Clemson .....................7-1
9. Utmh ........................... 5-l
10. Villano~a .................6-l
II. Duke ........................ 7·2
12. N011hCarolina ......... ~l
13. lndillftll ...
.. ..... 9-1
1-'. Teut ....................... S-1
IS. New Mui~;O ............ 7·1
16. Mianesota ................ 6-l
17. Xav'ter(Ohio) ...... :..• 7.0
18. LouiSVille ....~ ........... 6-0
19. ArkUIIW ........... . ... ,4-1
211. Alabomo .................. 8-0
21 . freiRDSt ................. 6-2
22. SIMrord ....
.. ... ..4-1
2.1. Texu Tech .............. S-1
2• . UO-A ......................2·2
1.&lt;. Mlrylond ............ .... 1-0

!1

Kow;u 105, N.C-A!he.,.ilk: 73

Top25men's
. college poll

c.m. 63, Fimandf 48

'Lonia et.v~cw 49, ve:rm.uon 26
Loveland 57, Clinton t,!aslie 41
M•fid&lt;J Clw. 73. Ceooertltft •s

. l!ul
Cllnllius 69, Aknm 4H .
Manhano.n 61. Fordham ~7

Tuesd•y's games

W:.ld

Li~~= 71
47,lti'mdale
27
Uma
, Tol. Bowsher60
l:.cnia

Wan-entvllle Hr1. 57, Pt.riNI Nor.
mandy !2
Wllk.iftl Memorial 59. c-1 Wia'h·
eller 30
Wayoe Tnu 37, F~yttlt 3;';
WaynsOeld-Goshen 6$, Indian L.akt:

&amp;IJOwooclll

l..dplic: Bl. Mila a.,. 66 ·
l.Wr1110a 60, Sbl6y !II

Sunday1s aclloil

Utah at New Yod. 7:30p.m. .
Toronlo at New lmey, 7:JO p.m.

I.-

M.,,.....,,.,,.

Pai~~etville

St. ~ ...•.......... ! 10 0 .!33 219 l\16
Adua .................1 12 0 .:1110 291 ..2
New OrJoono ....... .J 12 o .:1110 216 m

lOT&gt;

26

M.....,..61,Soulhla•ootl2
Mqaeua 76. SU!haty Sl. Mary' a

S111 Jose St. 92. Portland 88 !2 (OT))
Stanford 72, Sao 1);•8• 70'
UC Stnla Barbara 7\ S1111 FfllfK:isco

Saturday's IICOra
Miami 89, Toronto 88
New Yod89. Denver 82
Atlanta I06, Philadelphia 81
CLEVELAND IOI,Minne10h\9J
0Uctao81.0wlone82
S.. AIIOftio 106. C.UU I~
Milwaukee 101. New .Ieney 91
Ullh 101, Orlando 68
Hooston 109, Selltle 100
L.A. Oippen 106, s.crameruo94

MiiWGUicee ar Bosron. 7 p.m.
Detroil a1 Toror11o, 1 p.m.
Phoenix ..... L.A. Clippers ,at Ann·
hcim. Calif.. 10: ~ p~ in. · · .
Washinatoft. a1 Sacrmmcnto, 10:30
p.m.

Orrville 49. NorwaP.C J5

l.oocaote&lt;64, W!Oidllll 06
l..ebonon 75, Clltisle 41

Ican ~9
Thba 67, Temple 60

7 .720

9
II

Labwood St ..\uauttiiW: 81 , Wat·

(OT)

~n 60, St:rin&amp;. Nmlautan SO

17~

Nonan 29, On!cn 26
Norwalk Sr. Paul S4. New Londoa 19

16. -12
:O:!:r
!9, WiJJo.Hin 42

,.,..32
l.abwood St. Edwanl 54,· Tol. S1.
1... 3!

Tew 98. Fraao St. 86

FarWat
Arizona II I. lKbon St. &amp;3
Cal St.·Fullcrton 89, Loyola. Ill. 68
Coklrado St. 62, Utah St 59
Moarana 67, Gonuta63 (on
Nevadt 78, UNL V 69
C.aoa 88. Clew:Land St. 6$
Oreaon Sr. 79, Por1land Sr. 60
PacifiC 90, CSU-Otico 5S
Son Dqo Sr.
Loyola

61, Loui•~ille 29
Northwood 67, Gi-&amp;48

)9, Wlllti• Memcrial37

M&lt;NmeS1. 1I,Lamar61

2

North~

Old Fort 10, Follorill4S
Olnwled F.. k "· Ro!.:ky River 34
ONario SO. Fredcrieklowa 48

~

w........,.,

9!. Ridlfiold ~tnm 32
WapUoDttl S7. Fon Reco..,ery 41

. . . . . - - !l, Akroo Ke......
-71.-•ille47
N. Claloo 72, Oliollowa Uke ~
N. Olnuood !l, w..IUe 4l
.
New l..l:xjapon J6, John onn 38
New 1Ueaol43, Aoudia&gt;IO
Newark Calh. 79, Hcmlol:k Miller l2

Kalidl6!, Dolploo•- 41

TcUI Ovisliari 9:\, Text~~ Tech 89
TtUI Southern 82, Texii·Pillll Amer-

Mkfwett·Ol¥lliaft

51

Huroall. Nonnlk S6
llwliaa Hi1198, St. Beman~~

01&lt;1...... 89. c.nrenory 4!
SW Texu S1. 71. Hardin-Simmons

9~
12~

-~-

LA. LIIrm ............ l8
Seanle .•................•. 16

66

k

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Uloll •...................... l8
Dol"' ......................8 u
MirmctOta ............... &amp; IS
llonY&lt;t ...•. ,.............. 5 19
San ARCOfliG ............. 4 17
VMCOU'm' ..............4 20

-·-

Arbruao St. 70, t.1umy St. 69
E. Wuhincton ~. Sam Hoa11o111 S1.

.... l6.1loy. ..
.... 4!, Spri.,tloW Cadi.

H.- Nonbn 64. Spu:.oenille S!li
Hlrri~ $6, Rca Sl
lieMh 70, Joh~ ~9
. Hlllfham 64, Ononflold McCioin !1
Hllltlll' 70, Dolla •1
H.... W. -.e 70. Comfo!oeD 09

NE 1Uinoi1 76. Oral Roberu 71
Ohio St. 10'2. Gecqe Muon 72
St. L.ouia M , ·Furman -41
v-.;.. 71. lll ..a.Jcoao 68
W. lllinoia93, Cwdi~ Strilch 53
XIV~, Ohio 79, Hofstn43

10~

2
!~

Marquette 55. Wia..Oreen Bay 39
Miami, Ohio 19, Writt.t St. 58
Mo .• K.~ qty 84, M011rnoulh, Ill.

.

_
-

Nonhweslem 73, Seton HJII6l

1
'
JO'h

ao..,•.. . . . . . . .

.913
3 .8!7

63

2

C.-IIW20 J .810
Detroil .................... 17 4 .810
t'LEVELAND ......... 8 .636
.... - ................... 13 8 .619
Mihw..tec ............. ll 9 .S7J
Cbrw1arro ................'12 10 .S4!
&amp;.di- .......... .'......... 9 I I . ~
TOI'OQio ...1............... 7 IS .318

:rw ...
ttc.ron ................. 21 2

•z

KonsuSI. 61. ~~
iMab'lille 88, Purd~te1l

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Monday, December 11, 1111

Scoreboard

Crdplao 59,
s..
lloaoill6, MldiiPI Sl. M,:IOT
mi.ai• 91, Cappia Sr. 55
Iowa St. 81 , Iowa 1&lt;4

Basketball

X.. .

The Daily Sentin,~J

Monday, o.cember 11, 1811

' I

Wishing You
Peace And .Joy
This Holiday Season
And Throughout
:
The
Year.
•

I
i

•

Downing, Childs, ,•
Mullen, Musser •
!
992-3381

•

�•
~.December 11, 1. .

P-ste 6 • The Dally Sentinel

HarrY

1

.I

al's aerospace and defense business·
es.
Boeing builds the 777 and 747
commercial airliners, the AWACS
radar plane, the Comanche helicopter
and portions of the space shuttle.
McDonnell Douglas makes the
MD· II civilian airliner, the Navy F18 fighter, the Air Force F·IS fight·
er, the Delta In launch vehicle and
the C-17 cargo plane.
Last month, the Pentagon
announced that McDonnell Douglas
wasn't being considered to build the
new Joint SDike Fighter. Boeing and
Lockheed Martin remain as finalists,
but Boeing hasn'tmade a fighter aircraft since before World War II.
The new company will have its
corporate and commercial headquar· #
ters in Seattle, its defense systems .in
St. Louis and the space division will
probably be based in California. said
Tom Williams, a McDonnell Douglas
spokesman.
The 'companies talked sporadically about a merger for nearly three
years. Two weeks ago, Boeing and
McDonnell Douglas said they would
team up on future wide-body commercial airplane projects. The merg·
er deal was struck last Tuesday in
Seattle with a handshake between
Condit and Stonecipher, . and
approved just four .da)is later by the
corporate boards.
Boeing's largest international cus•
tomer, Britis~ Airways; said it wasn't concerned that shrinking compe·
tition in the airline industry might
raise the price of commercial jets.
"There is no monopoly situation
yet. There's still competition and
when that happens, ·you'll always
have competition for price,"
spokesman Sandy Gardiner said.

,

,
.
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
coun by the estate of Ms. Stmpson
Associated Prell Writer
and liy the pareqts of Ronald Gold·
SANTA MONICA, Calif. -The man. M~. Simpson and Goldman
same lineup of scientifiC expens tllat were kmfed to death on June 12,
cast doubt on police evidenee-gath- 1994. Simpson was acquitted of the
ering in O.J. Simpson's criminal tri- murders.
al is ready to try similar tactics in the , The fJJSt part of the week, .accordcivil case.
mg to the dl:fense WJtn~ss hst, feaStarting today, the defense was tures forenstc pathologist M1chael
expected to roll out expens to throw Baden, blood _ex~rt Herbert Ma~. scientific weight behind the police I?onell and~ VI&amp; VIdeotaped depoSl·
frame-up theory and to sketch an t1on, forensiC expert Henry Lee.
alternate scenario for the killings.
All three testified f&lt;ir Simpson in
Simpson himself may return to the the first tnal.
.
stand this week, answering questions
The Simpson camp used Baden,
frOm his own lawyer before the j~ry -~former t~ coroner for New York
is sent home for a 'two-week Chnst- Cuy, lo nuse ·quesuons about the
mas vacation. Cross-examination prosecution's version of. how the
would then take place in 1997.
killings happened and how long the
Also possible this week is a ruling slayings took.
from an Orange County judge in a
Baden said it was possible that
custody battle between Simpson and two knives were used, suggesting two
. the parents of ·his slain ex-wife, killers.
.
Nicole Brown Simpson, over SimpMacDonell, a bloodstain expen,
son's yo~nger children, Sydney and testified in the first trial ~ha! a killer's
Just1~ .
. . .
. . . foot couldn't have been msode a sock
S1mpson IS heong sued m c1v1l when it was stained with blood con.

By JENNIFER BROWN
AIIDCiilted Prest Writer
WASHINGTON - Wearing a
blue Georgetown University baseball
cap, 19-yeai-ol~ Brian O'Connor
·walked to the polls Election Day to
cast his first ballot ever in a national
election. Then, for 30 minutes, his
right to vote was challenged. · .
"It was discouraging," said
O'Connor. the first of nearly 400 students whose residency was questioned in the exclusive Georgetown
neighborhood of the nation's capital,
"Of course I'm going to vote again,
but it might be more out of spite."
Long-time resident&lt;, embroiled
in a bitter fig~t with students over
such issues ·as limited st,reet ,parking,
say they made the Election Day
challenges because they wanted to
make sure all voters- including stu·
dents - were kgal residents.
But the students claim they were
the victims of voter intimidation by ·
the neighborhood residents who tried
to stop anyone who looked like a student from voting.
In this case, the American Civil
Liberties Union is siding with neighborhood .residents. ACLU attorney
Art Spitzer says citizens hav.e the
. right tQ question the residency of vot·

ers.

•

•••
•
••

••
••

CRASH SCENE - A Co88t Guud bo8t dkl
pmol duty bHicl8 ltl8 fnlght8r Bright Field '
Sunday In th8 Port of N8w Orle8na. the damega that ltl8 fr81ghl8r C8UHd when H Cllllhed

111111 the RIWI welk lhopplng,'llcal complex s.t·

urd8y Ia vlllble In the I!Kkground. More than
100 people were lnjur41d, but 10 fllr no cleatha
haw liMn 1'8p011ed. (AP)

Safety debate heats up after
freighter .h its waterfront mall .
By KEVIN McGILL
AIIDCiiltlid Prell Writer
NEW ORLEANS _ A quickthinking crew may have narrowly
avened what many feared when a
freighter barreled into a riverfront
stretch of sto~es, restaurants and
hotel rooms_ a disaster on 100 most
dangerous pilrt of the Mississippi

foot of Canal Street to the suburbs on
the West Bank.
Emergency hom wailing, anchors
dropped in a desperate attempt to
stop, the helmsman managed to avoid
two cruise ships holding some l,700
people and.crashed into the riverside
mall near its central foOd coun.
The 735-foot freighter - the

"Threatening someone with being
arrested or deported (if they vote),
that is intimidation," Spitzer said.
"But the idea that it take~ you an
extra half hour1o vote is not intiinidation."
The students' attorneys, meanwhile, compare the 'dispute to voter
intimidation cries in California,
where newly naturalized citizens
.were questioned at')Kllls about their
residency,
..
"If this voter intimidation of a,suspect class wa.S by race, or ethnicity,

,.

or religion, or based on immigration·
status,... there wouldn't be any question that this is intimidation," said
attorney Daniel Bromberg.
Bromberg represents student Dan
Leistikow, who filed a voter intimidation complaint with the District of
Columbia Board of Election's against
Westy Byrd, who is one of 200 D.C.
neighborhood commissioners.
"I don't hate students," Byrd
said. "But when people who don't
live here vote, the vote of the residen'IS who do live here becomes
meaningless."
In fact, the students flexed their
power that contentious Election Day,
electing two of their own to the
Georgetown neighborhood commission. 'fh111 panel advises the city
council on issues such a.&lt; land use,
parking problems and zoning.
The dispute has turned into a
morass of suits and. countersuits, at
least one of which has heen referred
to the U.S. attorney's office.
The question of where college stu- ·
dents should vote has heen going on
"for years and years," said Cunis
Gans, director of the Committee for
Study of the American Elect~te.
"This is an issue that gets de hated any place where there is a large
majority of .students . .In the 1960s,
you had it in the South becatiK of different views of searegation. Later you
had it because of different views of
Vietnam," Gans said.
Election residency laws vary from
State to state, said Bill Kimberling of
the Federal Election Commwion.
Washington voters must sip a s~
statement t1wt they ... D.C. residents .
and do not claim the riaht to vote
anywhere else.
Student O'Connor, who was
allowed to vote despite the chlllenge,
said he doesn'i claim the right 10 vote ·

•••
••
••
••
•

•••
••
••

H

·•••
•

l)olembers of the National Trans- :
ponation Safety Board headed for :
New Orleans to join the Coast Guard :
in trying to detennine the accident's!
cause. Initial reports indicated the :
engine shut down because of "a lube- •
oil type situation," said Brinson. He :
~
'did not elaborate.

l'he Coast Guard said the river',
was very high in the area and had~ ·
been since Thanksgiving. .Coast;:
Guard Rear Adm. Timothy Josiah;
·
said traffic had occasionally heen
.
. . . .
,
trapped or !tilled when the grain those cruise ships and the casino, it limited for safety. The river was
sJstent With Ms. Stmpson s.
freighter tore through it Saturday.
was just beautiful work " said Doc closed to traffic in· the area after the
MacDonell said the blood had
"We're pretty confident that, so . Hawley a Mississippi pii:X and for 20 accident. " .
soaked all. the .way through the sock far, there has been no loss of life," years c~n of the tourist paddle
More than 400 barges, tugs,
- tmposs1ble If there had heen a foot Coast Guard Capt. Thomas Landvogt wheeler Natchez
freighters and military ships daily tra·
in it. The defense used M~DoneU:s said.
An estimated j ,000 people were in verse the bend, which lent New
tesumony to bolster Jts clrum that t~e
Mayor' Marc Morial said 116 pea- the mall, many of them holiday Orleans Its nickname of the Crescent
blood ':"as plan!ed on the sock wh•le pie were treated at hospitals- many shoppers and people in town for high . City. The Coast Guard said about I00
11 was ,m the cnrne lab. .
injured in the panic that followed the school football championship games. of them lose power each year while ·
Pohce reco~ed fin~mg the socb crash. All but three were released.
They scrall!bled 10 safety as two lev- moving through the Port of New
at the foot.o~ S1mpson s bed the day
Early reports of deaths were nev· els of the tri:level Riverwalk col- Orleans.
after the killings.
.
er confinned.. and those ,reponed . lapsed into the· water. Most of the
"It's the busiest and most treachLee. the. he~ of the ConnectiCUt m1ssmg were later accounted for. At injuries were broken bones suffered erous stretch of the river," said Coast '
St~te ~hce. cnme lab, was the s~ . mid~y Sunday, there w~s no s.ign of in the tligflt; some people were Guard Lt. Verne Gifford.
·
scJenufic :W'tness for the defense 10 bodtes or trapped surv1vors 10 the reported trampled, while a few
The river takes a tum of more than
the firs,t tnat
.
pancaked wreckage or the murky riy- jumped into the water from the river- 90 degrees and current reaches up to
.. Lees. ommous !~•!•many about er belo':". .
.
. front and the gambling boat.
I0 mph, he said. "On top of that you'
~omethmg wrong 1n the. pollee
"Th1s JS really an answer to th1s
"It just kept coming," said mall have traffic going upstream, downcnme l~b gave the defense liS best community's Christmas prayer," said worker Chris Storey. "It stoned 10 stream, and back and forth across the .
ammumtJon to argue a frame-up. .
Ron Brinson, executive director of shake and we looked out the store river."
S1mpson may take the s~d m h1s the Port of New Orleans. "If we can . window - glass and &gt;l(atc~ and the
Rep. Billy Tauzin, D-La.. held a
own defense as early ~ Fnday, the get through this without any fatalities, ceiling just starting falling in. People ;neeting of the U.S. House Coast
final day. befo~ the Christmas bre.ak we win consider ourselves very for· started running out in panic and it just . Ouard and Navigation subcommittee
-. al.lowmg him to leiUieJurors With lunate indeed."
went black inside."
in 1993 at which shipping officials
81
his s~de of the ?ry.
.
.
The Liberian-registered freighter
The mayor said the ship took out opposed adding casino boats to the
Simpson testified earlte.r dunng l Bright Field, o~rated by a Hong a 200-focit section of t~~ ~all a_nd a mix.
the platnuff'~ ~.ase. telling JUrors ~ . Kong compan¥, app~ntly lost pow- parking garage. The adJommg Holton
· "It's a very .dangerous river, next
was ~ot the killer and he couldn 1 er about. 2 p.m. as 11 hended down- Hotel said 20 rooms had serious dam- to a very populous c.pmmunity," he
explam the phys1cal eYJdence.
rivet, just below the Crescent City age, but th~ hotel continued to oper- said. "We need to be constantly on
Connection bridge leading from the ate.
guard."

Student voting in college towns
..
under fire by residents, ACLU

l

By SYNOIE HOFFMANN
GM.'18lt Newe Service
and JANISCHORIA MEISNER

•
•t
k
d
·SClentl 1·c experts .to ta e stan · ' Riv:~scueworkerswi"'dogspicked :~"~]!:~;or:~~~·~ Fl::
for defense in Simpson civil case 1 Fr~~~E;2~~~i~fta~e~~ f~;~7i~::o~:hh:::i::
e

anywhere else even though his permanent address is with his parents in
New Jersey.·
Georgetown residents and students at the $20,208 annual tuition
college have quarreled for years.
Bill the recent unpleasantness
began after th~ city council- at the
recommendation of the neighborhood commission- began cracking
down on.issues affecting students.
This summer. the city eliminated
special parking stickers that let students keep out-of-state car registration and park in resll'icted zones set
up to protect limiicd street parking.
The change only affects student$ who
live near Georgetown.
Also, the city i~ considering
changing zoning rules to allow · no
more than three unrelated people to
liv~ in the same residence. This
would affect Georgetown students
who are not guarante~~ on-campus
housing after freshman year.
"We decided to get involved after
aiot of really bad thingHiarted happening to students," said 19-year-old
Rebecca Sinderbrand, one oftwo S!udents elected to.the board- the first
students ever.
The students' election .was helped
by the fact that of the 4,000 people
reaistered to vote this year in the
Georgetown precinct involved; at ·
least 900 were. students.
"Students packed the polls and
out-numbered residents," said Byrd,
who was re-elected without opposilion. She has joined defeated eandidates Beverly Jost and Patricia
Scolero in tiling a federal lawsuit to
1top the student commissioners-elect
from taking office in January.
· The three women sa9 out-of-state
students who want to 'vote in D.C.
mutt pay local taxes, pay higher car
registration fees and iret a local dri·
ver'1 license.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 7

'Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Value your holiday keepsake ornaments

No layoffs slated in merger
of aircraft-making giants
By AUDRA ANG
ly aanctive," Said
Stonecipher,
Aaaoclatecl p,... WI Iter
McDonnell Douglas' chlinuan and
SEATI'LE - The $13.3 billion chief executive officer.
deal combining Boeing Co. and
In the new company, Stonecipher
McDonnell Douglas ~duces the will be the No. 2 person behind Connumber of major commercial airline dit.
manufacturers from three to two and
Although the companies characcreates a giant defense contractor terized it as a merger, the tenns clearwith a hand in every fighter the Pen- ly show Boeing is buying MeDon·
tagon is buying.
nell, whose shareholders will receive ·
Corporate chiefs insisted the deal 0.65 shares of Boeing stock for each
would not lead to widespread layoffs share they own. McDonnell's operam a combined company with nearly tions will· be melded into Boeing's
200,000 workersacrou27 states. But and two-thirds of the board of direcBoeing is looking for savinJS of SI tors will be Boeing people.
billion per year and did not specify
Combining the companies would
how th.at would be achieved.
end the storied life of McDonnell
"This is, I believe, a historic Douglas as an independent firm,
moment in aviation and aerospace," maker of the. Mercury. and Gemini
said Philip Condi!, Boeing's president space capsules and once the world's
and chief executive. "We can get dpminant manufacturer of military
more done, we can meet new and planes. McDonnell is the nation's
exciting challenges, and we can solve second largest defense contractor,
significant problems."
behind Lockheed Martin Corp. Boe·
The deal, announced in Washing· ing ranks ninth.
ton on Sunday, would leave just BOO'
Workers at both companies said
ing and Europe's Airbus lndustrie as the deal would create a stronger finn
the main commercial airline manu· that could compete with Airbus.
facturers.
"It's going to keep more jobs in
If approved by stockholders and America," said Mark Tetzloff of
federal regulators, the combined .Boeing. "Less airplanes are going to
company under Boeing's name . be sold by the Airbus corporation."
expects sales of $48 billion next year.
Julia Adams, a McDonnell Dou·
Officials said they expect federal glas employee for '29 years, agreed.
,approval in about six months.
.
"We know fighters and they know
"The synergy of the corporations commercial ·aircraft," Adams said.
should help to ensure the continued "We live in a changing world and we
leadership of the U.S. in the aero- . just have to accept that."
space industry - both in the comMcD.onnell Douglas had been
mercial and military sectors," said struggling to keep up its commercial
House Minority . Leader Dick aircraft business. Boeing had heen
G~phardt of St. Louis, the home of heavily weighted toward the comMcDonnell Douglas.
mercial side and needed added mus"The fact that we are able to do cle in its defense business even after
this without really impacting the agreeing in August to a $3 billion
work foroe significantly, that's real- acquisition of Rockwell Intemation-

•

Monday, December 16, 1996

lo
. Ho
Home

I!Efj

1£:1

I&amp;{. I
.I

Thi&amp;yearbuy • s;tt thalia
cUllom made lor anyone on
your llat. With horne delivel}',
a aubec~lon 18 Ideal lor
lhoae with a built-in curlollty.
Give a gill that COI11Ie more .
·
than once a yaar.

I

Send In the following coupon

and $83.20 and gel 20% oil
the aubsc~ price.

The Dee Molnat Regt.ter ·
When decorating for Christmas, memories of the past may come flooding back as
each ornament is unpacked 10 hang on the
tree. But unbeknownst to many, those cute
collectibles may be wonh J;lluch more than a
memory.
In 1973, Hallmark Cards began its
·"Keepsake" ornament line by offering a
$2.50 glass ball adorned with a Kewpie dol~
like little girl named Betsey Clark. That
bauble is now wonh $125, and Hallmark's
popular Christmas ornaments have become
the source of collectors' frenzy.
"We introduce an entirely new line each
year," says Linda Fewell, a collectibles
~xpert for Hallmark.
This year's Keepsake· line consists ·of
mo~ than 200 new ornaments including
special editions, series collections, miniatur'es, aild ''magic ornaments" that include
light, motion, sound and music.
. The popularity of collecting ornaments is
following five trends this year - licensed
products, series, increased spirituality, multiculturalism, and baby boomers - and
!:fallmark products reflect those trends, says
Fewell.
"(lbis year) Barbie has been big and so
has the Lionel train," says Fewell .
• The nostalgia quality of these ornaments
make them favorites among the baby
boomer crowd, and the fact they are both
licensed products as well as pan of a series
makes them even more popular.
Tradition is the selling point of another
'ornament ·collection .

Christopher Radko's mouth-blown glass daUghter is into them or their granddaughter
creations are fast becoming the number one loves them," says Linda DePue, owner of
collectible ornament in the country, accord· Linda's Hallmark store in Urbandale, Iowa.
ing to Nita Whitesel, owner of Christmas
" And when the granddaughter pulls that
Attic in Alexandria, Va.
ornament out at Christmastime, she will stop
Each Radko ornament is handmade and think about Grandma. Even if it's 20
blown by mouth, silvered, then painted years from now, she is going to say, 'Grandand can take up to one week to complete. rna gave tllis to me.' It's the emotion behind
Most of the ornaments are made in Poland Christmas. That is what truiy, bottom line,
and range from the midteens to more than drives them."
The secondary market value of ornaments
$100 an ornament.
"The Radko ornaments are the best can drive collectors as well. Keepsake oma·
example of collectiblity," s~ys Whitesel. meilts usually appreciate in value within the
"They exemplify traditions, memories, and first year and cOntinue to appreciate.
family customs."
·
."The 1997 Greenbook Guide Devoted
The Radko line currently contains 750 Exclusively to Keepsake · Ornaments"
different designs varying from traditionally ($19.95, Oreenbook) is a guide to whatomareligious themes to Disney and Warner ments are selling fo~ on the secondary marBrothers characters that are new this year. ket and is available exclusively where Hall·
Every year Radko retires some ornaments mark ornaments are sold. Secondary marand introduces now designs into the collec· kets are dealers who offer discontinued or
tion with series and limited editions.
single edition collectibles.
"This year is the founh year of the
The ornament guide, which first came out
Tweleve Days of Christas series that has in 1990, gives a bench mark price for ornebecome very popular and highly prized ments after they are no longer available from
among collectors.'' says Whitesel.
the manufaciurer or retailers.
,.
Another popular ornament is the limited
"0\lr highest compliment would be
edition ·Esquire Santa, a hand-painted Santa someone telling us the book is fair," says
on a glass ball, all painted by one artist, . · · Louise Langenfeld, publisher of "Green·
"Anyone who buys an ornament in my book."
store is usually adding to a collection," •ays
"Greenbook" relies on sales repons from
Whitesel, whose own collection inspired her · retailers in the secondary markets and histoto op'en the Chrislmas store 15 years ago.
rians, who travel across the country buying
But what actually makes an ornament and selling ornaments, since they are not
valuable?
directly involved in the secondary market.
The true. wonh of ornaments, some colM,any people use the "Greenbook" to
lectors &amp;ay, is in evoking memories through insure their collection at the current worth of
the years- and through generations.
the ornament rather than the original retail
" ...Or they buy a Barbie doll becaus.e .price.
they played with Barbie as a·kid or their , Some ornaments have skyrocketed in the ··

--Mili~ary news....,__..
. ...---

Looking for a lovely t·ettuc.e

Air Force Ainnan April D. 1994 graduate of River Valley High
,'
of Laura and School. Cheshire, recently departed
James Childers of on a six-month deployment to the .By ANNE B. ADAMS and
seeds.
Rutland,
has Mediterranean Sea aboard the NANCY NASH.CUMMINGS
.
As this is a Vennont company
graduated from amphibious transpon dock ship USS
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: A and winter is on its way, both catabasic
military Nashville as part of the USS Nassau friend of ours treated us to some let- logs and seeds may be in shon suptraining ai Lack.· Amphibious Ready Group (ARG).
tuce he had grown in his garden this ply until January or February. But
la'nd Air Force
Bias is one of 420 Sailors and summer. It was so delicious, sweet there's no hann trying!
Base, San Anto- 900 Marines ll!hO left his home port and crunchy. It's the green oak-leaf · As for 'the screen for your
nio, Texas.
of Norfolk , Va., along with the .. lettuce. We can purchase the seeds shelves, to be on the safe side DO
During
amphibious assault ship and ARG . for the red in this area. Can you tell , NOT USE metal screen, vinyl-coatthe six weeks of flagship USS Nassau, the doc)&lt; land· me where I can find seeds for .this? · ed screen or fiberglass mesh. Things
CbUders
· training, the air- ing ship USS Pensacola and the 26th
Also, many years ago we pur- you can use: nylon mesh, a double
man studied the Ail: Force mission, Marine Expeditionary Unit.
. chased a ratherlarge food dryer with thickness of bed sheeting, two layers
organization, and customs and
Bias joined the Navy in August several shelves in it. We are unable of cheesecloth (hard to clean), or
received special training in human 1994.
to find screen to repair the shelves. you can cross-hatch a good twine or
relations.
We need screen that is safe to dry string between the sides of the tray.
foods on.' -, GLADYS OLSEN, (Caution: Don't use hay-baling
In additio~. airmen who complete
Larry G. Romine
Nonh Bend, Ore.
twine as it has been treated with peshasic training earn credits toward an ·
associate degree through the Com·
Marine Sgt. Larry G. Romine,
DEAR GLADYS: Ther~ are a ticide.)
munity College of the Air Force.
son of Kenneth H. Romine of Rut- number of green oak-leaf varieties
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: About
Childers is a 1996 graduate of land, recently reponed for duty with (curly oakleaf, royal oakleaf, salad 50 years ago I used to take the funny
Meigs High School, Rock Springs.
2nd Battalion, 1st Marines, 1st bowl and tango just for starters), anq papers, . c~t out a picture and used
Marine Division, Marine Corps we don't know which your friend something from the kitchen to put
Base, .Camp Pendleton, Calif.
grew. You might ask him.
on it to transfer the picture onto a
Jeremy D•.Bias
If he doesn't remember, we sug- · plain piece of paper. Do you know
Romine. is a 1984 graduate of ·
Navy Fireman Jeremy D. Bias, a Meigs High School, Rock Springs.
gest that you order a catalog from what this was? -- MAYBELLE
The Cook's Garden, P.O. Box 535,
.Londonderry, VT 05148 (802-824·
· 3400). They offer a staggering variety of lettuce and salad-greens
CHECK THE
FOR ALL YOUR NEEoY

Ci CIAS~D'IED~
EACH OVER 18,500
·.HOMES WITH
YOU ESSAGEI

• •Holiday Gift Subscription C9upon •
Clift to:

-·---

~--------~~---------~U------------------CITY'----------STATE _ZIP ___

~----------~----~---­
MKm~--------------------C:ITY---------ITATE -ZIP ____

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

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

12 Montlll $83.20_

·
KOST, Sedalia, Mo.
. DEAR MAYBELLE: We don't ·
know exactly what it was that you
used, but here's a recipe for Nutty
Putty that should do the same thing.
putty
or
dip into warm water and Kne:ao .

NUITYPUTTY
I tablespoon liquid starch (com·
bine 1/2 cup com.stlf\'h with I cup
cold water: Stir until dissolved). Add'
l·. teaspoon more starch for morerubbery putty
2 tablespoons white glue
3 drops food coloring (optional)

· Write to "Ask Anne &amp; !'lan" at
HO. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048.
Questions of general· interest will
appear in the colurrtn. Due to the
volume of mail, personal replies
cannot be provided.

Put the starch in a bowl, add glue
Anne B. Adams and Nancy Nash. and let sit for 5 minutes. If desired, Cummings are co-authors of "Ask
add coloring. Mix until starch is dis- Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone) and
solved and color is spread evenly. "Dear Anne and Nan: Two Prize
HINT: The more you mix, the better Problem-Solvers Share Their
it gets. Store in a tightly covered jar .secrets" (Bantam). To order, calllovernight, then use to pick up pic- 800-888-1220.
tures from· comics ori use to mottl · Copyrigltt1996 NEWSPAPER
into different shapes. Keep in the ENTERPRISE ASSN.
covered jar when not in use; if the

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446-2342

675-1333

8TAR1' OEUVERY OoliTE - - . - -

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT.

The Daily Sentinel

992-2156

• Mulft.Purpo•llmer
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Credit Terms
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--~
Mon.-Fri.
H

Sttt. N; Sun. 1-4

OliO 41711 .
(

ASK ANNE • NAN

I;

Special Holiday ofler endll
December 31, 11186.

--·-...-........"''

KEEPSAKES • Pictured are Ornaments from the Hallmark Keepsake Ornament
collaetlon; Chrlety·AII God's Ch lldren, left, ACelebration of Angela and Making Hla
Rounds•
secondary market, like the 1982 first edition
And for anyone holding a Betsey Clark
in the Tin Locomotives series. These items ornament thai sold for $3.50 in 1977, it's
originally sold for $l3 an(! now go for $565 now worth $425.
on the secondary markel .

'

.

''

Middleport, Ohio 45760

.

(614) 992·2635
1-800-426-5581
•

1!!11 . . . . . . m1!!! 1!.

11!U11!1 BV

..-.,nrw r wr1llli Iii" .,..l'l'liiW"J r •

INC.

.• ir··

.'

Chock: Duo II&gt; oondltl&lt;&gt;nl bOyond our control, we may run out ol a n - special during our sale. It !his shodd
uk lor a Rllln Chock that gua-lha oato price wf1en the Ham becomes avalloble.

•

'-"to your

�I

~ P~~ge 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, December 16, 1 •

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

.

P~_oy • Middleport,

The Dally Sentinel• Page 9

Ohio

t: End-of-year reminders from Social Security
8y ED PETEA80N
.Social Security manager In
'Att.na
: Have you ever paid a bill late and
incurred a late fcc simply because
'you forgot to drop it iD the mailbox
;on time1lt's easy to forget. So, with
rthe end of the year fast approaching,
· !I want to remind you that. there are
!certain Social Security-related mat~rs that you should tell us about.
;You don't have to run to the mailbox.
Just call 1-800-772-1213 and let us

•
'

'

know.
To get a replacement card, you
If you changed your name lhis usually need one identifying docuyear (through marriage, divorce, or ment. To change the name on your
any other reason), make sun: your card, you need documentation that
new name is listed ori your Social shows your old name and your new
Security card and in Social Sccuri- name. If you were born 'outside the
ty's records. If you don't do lhis, we United States, you generally inust
may have problems posting your show proof of U.S. citizenship or
· earnings to Social Security's files. lawful alien status. Your replace(This could reduce · your future ment card will have the same num. Social Security benefits.) Also, the ber as your'old card.
Internal Revenue Service ~y have
If you have a child who was born
problems processing your.tax return. this year and doesn't have a Social

and Social Security immediately if
you change your mailing address. In
fact, failure to report a change of
address is the leading cause of
checks not arriving on time. Your
repon should include your claim
number. your old address, and the
new address, including ZIP code.
Give the names of all family mem·
bers who should receive benefits or
information at the new nddress.

Security number, make sure you get Service (IRS) will 1101 process a
one before you file your taX return return without the correct Social
next year. The law requires you to Security IIUIIIbers for dependents.
list the Social Security number oo
your tax return for each dependent
If you're already getting Social
born before November I, 1996, Security benefits and you moved
being claimed on your 1996 tax lhis year, make sure we have your
return. If you have a child born new address. (Sometimes people
before November 1 who dOesn't who have their checks sent directly
have a Social Security number, you to their bank forget to tell us about a
should make sure you get one before change in their mailing address.)'
you file your tax return next year.
You must notify the post office
Remember, the Internal Revenue

BANKRUPTCY

can relieve a debtor of
ftnanclal obllgallons arid arrange a fair
dletrtlutton of aaaets. DeblOIS In bankruptcy may
keep "exempt" property for their peraonaJ use.
This may InclUde a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods.

_..,..,,__
........,.

IISltiiATE&amp;Oft

For Information Regarding Bankruptcy contact:

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

Attorney William Safranek
Attorney At Law

(614) 592·5025

• ••

.

I

The Community Calendar Is day at Southern High School.
publllhed 11 a Cree service to DOD·
prollt IJ'OUIII ....w.tq to IUIDOUilee TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE -- Senior
· meetla1 Uld special events. The
Citizens
Club , blood pressure clinealeodar Is not deslped to pro. mote sales or flmd ralsen ol any ic, town house, 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. ·
type. lteiDI are printed as space followed by Christmas dinner, gift
permits 8lld caanot be guai'IIJiteed exchange, 8!'d meeting. ·
to run a specific number of clays.
WEDNESDAY
· MONDAY
RUTLAND -- Rutland Township
EAST MEIGS -- Eastern Board
of Education will meet in regular Trustees .will hold their year-end
session, Monday, 6 p.m. at Eastern meeting on Wednesday, 5:30p.m. 8l
the Rutland Fire Station.
High School.

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

t
•

•

The Point Pleaslll)t Register host- .----------....:.._ _ _ _ _ _.;__ _ _ _ _ _
ed the 1996 Ohio Valley Publishing
Company's Olristmas Pany Thursday, December 12, at !he American
Legion.
Register · Advertising Director
Brian Billings' served as emcee for
the event given for staff members of
the Gallipolis Tribune, Pomeroy
Sentinel and Register.
· Publisher Bob Wingett recognized four employees with service
awards. They included Jim Freeman, Pomeroy. Sentinel, five years;
Jean Davison, Gallipolis Tribune,
15 years; Eloise Juniper, (not present), Gallipolis Tribune, 15 years;
and Fred Hoffman, Gallipolis Tribune, 40 years.
Wingell also introduced. retirees
in attendance including Cleo Lieying and Phyllis Roach, Point Pleas·
ant; Emma Lou,Davis, Helen Davis
and Bob Hoeflick, Pomeroy; and
Otho Mattox, Don Wright, Belly
Thpe, Gayland Bush and Charlie
Snodgraq. Gallipolis.

•-ret•

Public Notice

CHIISIIUS IllES

N011CE TO BIOOEAB

execut.d by 'the bidder ond
the ourety _..,, In on
·omount equol to five percent ot the bid eholl be
oublii!Md with MOb bid.
hid BCNird
of Educltlon
reeoi'Vft
the right
to wolve

'5·'10

• Fntun Local Bo.rcl of

Eduodon

....led pr.,.,....Je win be
· received by the BOIIrd of

ldu011t1on of the. eeetern
Locol School Dlotrlat of
Reecltvlllo, Ohio, by 12:00
Noon on Jonuory 3, ond ot
thot lime opened by the
r-urar of ulcl 8011rd u
provided by low for (1) 71·
72 poooenger IIChool bjla
oc:cordlng t~~opeclfte811ono
ol ulcl boord of edua ollon.
8pultlaotlone end
lnotrucllone to bldde .. moy

be obtolllld It the otllce ol
the T........-, Eutem High
School bulkllng.
A cwtlflecl check

peyoble
· to the Tre..urer of the
obovo B011rd of Educotlon
or o utlofoctory bid bond

. LETART -- Letart Township
Trustees, 6 p.m. · Monday, office . TIUJRSDAY
:
building.
POMEROY-- The Me•gs County
·
Public Library Board of Tfi/Siees
RACINE -- Southern Board of will meet at 1 p.m. Thursday at !he
Education will meet at 7 p.m. Mon- library.
.

forPoint
the ·evening
wasEntertainment
provided by the
Pleasant ~~===============================::....~
High School "Swinging Squires"
HONORED FOR SERVICE ·Four Ohio Valley Publishing Company employees -re rec:ogniDd tor
Jazz Band and Dancers.
Mrvlce to the company during Thuraday's annual Chrlltmaa party holted by the Point Plee88nt
Those allending !he event were Register at the, American Lag_lon. Above, Publl1her Bob WlngMI presents
to, lett, Jim FraeBrian Billings, Gayle McClintock, man, Pomeroy Sentinel, five yeara; Fred Hoffman, Gallipolis Tribune, 40 yeera; and Jean Davleon,
Michele Caiter, .Pam and Roger Galllpolls.Trlbune, 15 yeara. Not attending we•.Eloln Juniper of the GalllpoUs Tribune who was rec·
• Caldwell, Terri ·'Shinn. Janice ognlzed for 15 yeara•nrvlce. .
.
• Veazey, Jim arid Mary Freeman, Jo
Ann Errett, ,Charles and Maxine
Lieving, Henry and Judy Rayburn. Hobart and Beverly Wilson, Odie
Snodgrass, Donald and Evelyn Wright, Mindy and Chris Kearns, Emma O'Donnell, Margaret and William Lehew, Judy and Ron Clark, Margaret
Lou Davis, Helen M. Davis. Fred and Pauline Hoffman, Ray and Amy and Jack Finnicum, Sharon Stewan, Bonnie Dolan, Charlene and Bob
Keefer, Debbie and Steve Call, Larry and Pat Boyer, Bob and Joy Atwood, Hoeflich, Christy and Ronnie Williams, Diane and Heath Hill, Dave HarOtho and Libby Mauox, Phyllis and Tom Roach, Bob Wingett, Jean Davi- ris. Larry Ewing. Mary Lyons, Dave McNutt, Tammy Coe, K.imlierly and
Edward Howard, Mall and Mindy Isaac, Tom Hunter, Lauren Young, Jill
Williams and Kevin Kelly.
Beuy Tope, Gay land and Helen Bush, Amy J. Leach, Cleo and Norman

Public Notice
Purchou of.,_ Bualor

MIDDLEPORT - The Middle-·
pon Literary Club, annual Christmas
program, home of Mrs. Eldred Parsons, 2 p.m.. Wednesday. ·

RACINE-- Racine Village Coun. cil, recessed session, Monday, 7
p.m. at Star Mill Park.

~'":~~~~:~:;::.~ ,

ony - oil bld8. .
No . bldo . mliy 'be'
wllhdJ .., tor ot -tlhlrty
(30) deye . ofter tho
oolledulecl aiMing Ume tor
.-lpt of bldo.
a-d of Educolloa of
EaWn Locollchool
Dlltrlot
Eloloe Booton
T,_urw of EMI8rn Locol
Schoolo

3.008R7

R-..!lle, Ohio 411772

(12)2,9,1~234tc

I

ttassifieds•••
Real Time
Savers

"The First 'Christmas" and "The Many Scenes of Christmas" were presented recently at Carleton School.
· .
Taking roles in nativity scene were Meri VanMeter as Ma!Y, the mother
of Jesu.s, Jacob Wilson as Ji&gt;scph. and Tracy Smiih, Todd Quillen, Clifford
Bosweii1 Bradley Donaldson, J:W. Poner; Dale Elis and Deanna Cundiff as
the animals:
.
Cast as sHepherds were Bradley Coppick, Nick Hubbard, Sean Coppick,
Scott Trussell, and Michael Wills, and as angels, Amanda Wolfe, Janessa
Laudermilt, Melinda Miller, Shelby Powell , Kim Deaver, Holly Jeffers and
Patricia Clark. Ponrayed as wise men were Scott Ramsey, Casey Sargent,
Bryan Bun, and Garrell Haptonstall.
·
· Role in "The Many Scenes of Christmas" were Ashley Rhoades, Nicki
Wilson, Derrick Trimmer, Luke Lowery, and Mark Bogard of the primary
class; Deidra Carleton, Amy Jo Davis, and Jessica Simpkins, intermediate
class. and Mike Bissell, Angel Day and Chris Lee, transition class.

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RACINE, OHIO
AMERICAN LEGION
POST 602 .
EVERY SUND.ov
At

==.

· Doorw Open 4:30.
Game llalt8 6:45.
10
PaXu:"t!
Under - nienagement
Public Welcome

'

..
I

Sabrina

Grumpier
Old Men

Housecalls for
repairs- usually
the same day
youcau us

Harrison Ford
Julia Ormond

J~ekLemou

·Walter Matthau
AnDMarp-et
Lortu

rRII

•

•.

'·'

Call Tuesday ··
December·-1 7th
~~

·"'

.n_•y
·, i ..•..,
..:JJU e .
r

,

I

l

Pick up diocerded
appllancn, battorleo,
monymetell A
inotor blocko.

..'

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1114-1112-4025 8 em4

,,•'
\,~ ·-

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f ..•. ,~~ ··

•

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J , ~'

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..
'

') :."Y:V

•

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• 11

•
•

Peqples Bank
Pomeroy

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Coats For Kids

•

Predictabie local .
lfe.ttber- At 8, 18, 28,
38, 48 &amp; 58 mlautq
after every llour.
You'll get Uae _;,
locaJtorecuc oa '1\
WeaUaer Chaauet. e

.'

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•• •• • •••••

Drop Off Locations
'

I

P.t Pita_, 675·3398

1
.T .

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•

Pomeroy office
Middleport office,

•

•

Rutland Ofllce,

••

Vaughan's I~A

I

'

o

..._...,..

llwl . .

lftlds

6 1/2" Poinsettias (6
colors) ... :............ $3-$5

. Poinsellia
Bask818 .. $7.95-$17.95
Christmas Cactus
............. $1.75 or 21$3
Cut Trees ........ $8-$18
Small Hoily T~ees ......
........~ ................ $2.50

Free EsllmBtes
25 years experience
W.[u itaJ ifirwt~rr our

own home or bwiness
Aokror

John(614)992-3987
or Dallu (614) 9411-3036

J&amp;L SIDING &amp;

INSULATION
S37 BRYAN Pl.A,!:E
..... Gar IllS

·

eSt- Doers' ' .
· WJ
..... Allllllws

••ws

SAVE
50%·75%TIM'S CUSTOM

CARPET
Ju1t off Br'iiilbury l;ld.
(look for ligna)
Mlddlopolt, OH
614-982-5378
Dey a Evening Hrw.

.SALESPERSON NEEDED.
Requires Experience to Sell
New and Used Vehicles at
Local Dealership.
Call Bob Ross to Inquire at ·

614·992·2196

1 1 Month old, tamale, black &amp;
tan coon hound . Shephard mix
squirrel dog. Must take b~'th : To
, good home on~. 3QOI. 773·9554. ·
Desperately Seeking New OWn, .

era I ·Adqrable 5 Wondettul Pup·
plet, 10 Weeki Old , 614•441·
1707.

Female Tiger Kitten Liner Trained
1 Male. Par1a-, 81H5e-1!58.

Pari Bes.gle pups, 8 wk.&amp;. old, 614·
985-&lt;316.
Part Chow puppies, 3 Male, 2 Female614-36Hl575

Puppies , 6 Weeks , 614·4463193.

367-0283.

Lost and Found

Found: CoiUe Shepherd Dog,·
Black Ny&amp;on Collar, VICinity: 1 Mile·

Our Addison Pike, Pick-Up Ar
Dog Fbundl
1.
Found: Pair 01 Childrens Glover
In Parking Lot At Sen ior Citizens'
·center , 1187 Stale Route 160;

Gallipolis. Come To Identify.
lost : Black &amp; White Cat. 2 -31

Years Old Answers To Buckeve.
Vicinily : lower Third Avenue
614· 446·3137,
.
• .... :

.

CONNOLLY'S

DAVIS
CONTRAaiNG

2%MIIn
South of

-Roofing
-Remodeling

Tuppers
Plains on St.
Rt. 7

-New Conatructlon

oOecka

(614) 667·3413
Open

CHRISTMAs TREES

.

-;:--,.,....,,--.....,----Z:-

StolOn: Pfease Rerurn Bag Full ot~ .:

Plcrures Of Children That Waa r~
Stolen Frofll 2012 Chatham ~ ,·
Street, 1215/96. No Ouestiona ... r·
A&amp;ke&lt;l Leave On Porch Of Marw-s
MarkeL
.....

t;

,_

FtN E•IIIM'"

992-6711

t112VNpd

SUE'S

Yard Sale

70

•VInyl Siding
-tnaurecl

Evenings and
Weekends

Morning Slar RdJ
CR 30, Racine, Ohio

-Roping •Wreaths

•Swaga
-Grave Blanketa

.

11IJI.INI'I mo. .

SMIIH'S

JONES' TREE SERVICE

CONSTRUCnON
Cutllm luldlng ...... d lf19

•NowHomoa

•Addltlono
-New Goragoa
ofloiiiOdellng
'Ill •Sieling
•Rooting
•Pelntlng

Top, Trim,
Removal &amp;
Stump Grinding

FREE ESTIM.t,TES
(8141992-6535
(8141992-2753

.'-'
·-

• ~~

&amp; Vicinity

r;

All Yard Safes Muat Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m. " ..
the day before the ad is to run. ~· •

Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. Friday. · ~
Monday edition · 10:00 a.m, Sat- ·:
urday.
n...

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

'

All Vard Sales Uusr Be Paid In ~r
Advance. Deadline: 1:OOpm the · ..
day before the ad is 10 run, Sun- •.
day &amp; Monday eclirion · J:OOpm&gt;
Friday.
;.;;80:;:;;.::..._ _ _ _ _ [.

•Artificial Poinsettia

•s.ooau,
949-2115

-

Gallipolis

GREENHOUSE
·; .
Authorized AGA Distributor
., • Welding Supplies •Industrial Gases • Machine Shop
i · Servi(:es • Steel Sales &amp; Fabrication • Repair Welding
~ Alumlnum/Steinless • Tool Drawing • Ornamental
Steps • SlaitB, RaiNngs, Pallo Fumhura, Fireplace
Items, Planter Hangers, Trellises &amp; lots of other stullll
"No Job Too Large or Too Small"
.,
We will work wHhln your budget:
Ph. 773-9173
FAX 773-5861
Mason, WV .
1GB Pomeroy Street

":'""

LOst Siamese Cat In Mud Soekr ;.
Area Otr 01 White Hollow ~a ad £"'
814' 256-6033.
-

Public Sale

•·

and Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Company ~:
full time auctioneer, complet8 : •
auction
service . licensed .. •
t88,0hio &amp; West Virginia , 304 - •;
773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.
~.

90

Wanted to Buy

~,
'

2 Cemetery lots In Kirkland Ce- ·
metery. 304-675-2195.

Absolute Top Dollar : All U.S. Sil· '
ver And Gold Coins, Proofse1s ;
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry Gold ~
Rings, PrcH930 U.S. Cur~ency,

Stefling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second •
Aven.~e, GallifX)Iia, 614-446-2842.

Clean late Model Cars Or •
Tru~~s. 1~90 Models Or N~wer, •
Sm1th Bu•ck Pomiac, 1900 ~asl ·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

-:--:-c::-:-'----:=
-- '
J &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buy1ng sal·
1

'":

vage veh•cles A~elling paris. 304· ~ ~

773-5033.

CHRISTMAS TREES

4

Top dollar· ant1ques , lurniture
gl~&amp;a, china, clocks, gold, silver:
~oms, watches, oslales, old stone
JBIS, old blue &amp; white dishes, old
wood boxes, milk bottles, M&amp;lgs
Cou~ty A.dvertlaemenl , Osby
Martin, 614·992·7441 .

Wreaths • Swags &amp;
Grave Blankets

~~~~~~---

$10 &amp; Up

; i.

:
..
;

l.·:
1
,

..

'•

Wanted To Buy Used Mob il e , •
Homes. Call : 614· 446-0175 Or
304-675-5965.

,.

BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

Wanted To Buy ; Little Tykes
Kitchen Set, Workshop, Play - .

1

house. Possib'e Any Other Liflle . ·
Tyk(t Toys, Please Call 6l4·245·
5887.

OPEN NOV. 23-10 TO 9:00

f.:
J-

Wanted To Buy ; We Buy Auto's ,. :

BISSELL BUILDERS; INC.

Deer Cut

at
Maplewood

New Homes • Vinyl Siding 'New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

Lake

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESnMATES

Skii-Cit·Wrap

614-992·7643

949-2734

. Arfl Condition, 614·388·9062, Or : ~
814-446·PART.

••...
·~

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

-------- '·
110

Help Wantld

'-

~AV~O~N~I~AI~I~A-,e~as~I~S~hl~rlo-, ~
Speers, 30•·67S.t429.

:

Able Avon Representatives ..
needed . Earn money for· Chritf·
mea bids 11 homel at work.
t.~
0~2-8358 or 30 4-882·211~5. Ind . • •

,.eoo-

j Rtp,

t

~:
•

'·

•
•

Glveaw
, ay

60

Rt. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742·3051

.

40

·

Cemetary Vases.$9.95

•

!IIDDLfi'ORT

• 1112-2772
8:00 o.m.-3:30 p.m.
eRIJII•c••••• WW.ws

deraonWV.

To Good !-tome Hall Akita Pup-'
plea, 5 Wteks, Wormed, Black
With Brendal 614-367-9389, 614-

992-5776

QISTOM BUILDING &amp;
REMODIUNG
New Homes, AddHions,
Roofing, Painting,Bams
Garages, Concrvte

cl'leclt station. caqmap·a Hen·

Wreaths .. $4.95·$9.95
Grave
·
Blankets.......... $19.95

OPEN DAILY .
. 9 Lm •• 5 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. - 5 p.m.
Free Coffee &amp; Cookies
During Christmas
Season

limestone • Gravel
Dirt• Sand
9854422

Help Wanted

.

lng oupplieo , llcenot &amp; gam•

T.....

............. :......... $111.95

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

Chester, Ohio .

30 Announcements
Cooler kept, clean, aanhary. Hunt·

.

HOLLON
TRUCKING

·Min. MuSt Be 18 Yrt. Serv·U a1a. ·
&amp;OS:.8434.
•

._ Stnps

Now Opan·For
Chrletmaa Season

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

Singles In Your Area. Nowlll 1·
900-484-7070 Ext U13, $2.09 1

Doa Cii.J

HUBBARDS
.GREEN HOUSE

RIGGS TREE FARM

Holldav RomanCe Guy/Galt, Meet

1 __.

... lilts '"'"'
~,:=::......:::....:;;:,;;;,;.;;;;;11

'====:=:::::::::::::,'
1-

Personals

Wo proce11 dee•. make hickory
amoked t\ams, trail boiOWia. pep.
peranl, jerky, aummer uutagt.

M--

a.,.

Phone 446 4530

MIKE BING
! IYMt
&amp;..Wtoboollloon

1.,..t ...

.'

Yuh

Amberger Rd.

,.... pd.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

•

Monument Sprays ..... ·

· · R. L~

Um'lstone,
• · Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

4

Caals
.....
..,

949"057.

:-, . . ...

CHRISTJUS

•

·

RUTLAND, OHIO
814-742-2158 .
Briar Proof
Huntlnn Clothes

·· Off Forest Run

BARR'S LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
Sot.'al Sun.'a II Chrima .
St. Rt. 325, Dllnvllle, 011.
Ph. 742-3149 or 8112-7285
-·

RUTLAND MilE
SUPPLY CO.

' -, REPAIR
.. .

$8ft.

-

10 All TO I M NII.Y .
SUIIIU I M TO 6 1111

.•' AUTO

.

Long St., Rutland, Oh•
742·21135, Alk lor

1·100.776.0527

BIMG'S·

Wehilveenexc:ellent
ulecllon of beauUtully
o - t-.eo up to 14ft.
Prl- $111-$20. C. II !or

Tl!nHipa, Oil Chlnge,
.Wax, Buffing

Oltle ........ 7 ......

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.

614-985-3813 or 614-167~
Plaatlc Culvert - Dual wall and Regular f!' lhru 36"
4' S&amp;D- pail. "solid pipe
4' &amp; 6' Flax pipe
4' &amp; 6' Sell 35 pipe
• '/," &amp; '1.' C.P.V.C. pipe
1•t,• thru 4" Sch 40 pipe
'/.' &amp; 1' 200 p.s.l. water pipe (100' rolls lhru 1.000' rolls)
'I•" U.L·approved Condun
6" Graveless Leach pipe
Gas plpe·1'thru 2!'··fittings - Regulators- Allers
Full assortment of P.V.C. &amp; Flax fittings &amp; Water llt1lngs
Full line of Clatem. Septic &amp; Water storage tanks

(Plant otter Chrlotma)

•I

1

ProctniA•,

Riggs Christmas Trees

Tuppera Plalna, Ohio

Spruce end White Pine

"II says I'm not allowed In the United States till I get an air beg Installed!"

1IHI M-F; 1-&amp; "u_ncloy

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

l.ondlcope Stock

Alwo coleltr•t• tho •.Witlon of 3 now cunHII

" - 24th

~~~~~~o~~~~ru~~~-~· ~~~~i
'"

WICKS
.HAULING.

~·

o•......
.......
"""'
............... "'

ANGELS
LIGHTED BAS!(ETS, 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 Mlleo North of Sliver Bridge on IR 7

Any Scotch or White Pine· $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekends
Rl. 331o DaJWtn, East on Rt. 681, 4 miles to Cherry
.Ridge Rd .. 1 1/2 miles lo tree farm, Follow signs.
paily 10 am 111_Dark

whoiMale prlca.

' '

.

HOBBYLAND

at IVYDALE

Cut "our Own
••
Freah Cut!Uva

Low Ratel)

•

. . . . . . . . . . .0

CHRISTMAS in the COUNTRY

BODFORD'S

&lt;Um• sto-

'

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

005

CHRISTMAS TREES

st. Rt. 7

·Carleton School hosts
Christmas activities

min. on WBYG 99.5 FM

IUNIIIUCIIOII

611W..ti/2MIIe
Hl-6071

. 11~~""*'"""'"""'~~¥=-"''-'"''-'""~

Body work, car, truck
• truck palnllng,
minor niechlnlcel
repair.
.

-,:~:;;.~

.......

-

Listen·&amp; Win • Every 30

ce.a...-,

7/Zl/tln

Community calendar

Employees recognized_ during OVP Christmas party

,I

C...hdlt

tNewHomea
•Gal'lgea
•Complete
· Remodeling
Stop a Compar•
FREE
.ESTIMATEES
985 '1473 .

new eq·ofpnent.

GIUESEI'I·
. GAUGE
.
.

UIIO 'OIIIOL

ROBIIIIJSsiLL
COiniUCTION

•

,

�•

•

.......,, Deoernber , .. 1811

,... 10 •'lbe Dlllly Sentinel

... ,,

·-

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dilly Sentinel • P9 11

BIIIDOI:

NBA Cro11word Punle

ALDER

1 ........

44Coltl ....
• OltiiMD.....

• 111-'¥(
Nat fuiiGIIonllll
...)

•

12FRM

180t $-tO T•holl V-8, 5

.........

TRANSPOfHATION

8_
07 Steond Avtnut. Gall lpolit

apartments tt Village Manor and
Riwlrtide Aparrmenll in Middle-

port. From $232-$355 . Call 514Gt2-50&amp;4, Equal Hou•if'Q Oppor-

1 Acre On Ponum Trot Raad,
Poulbte Land Contn~~Ct. t10,000,

514--78.

e.

Acres, Galllpolla aru, 2.1

1S2. Leave me,•ie

~LAND

114-77s.t1T.I

Fiscal Officer • A Community
Mental HNitll Agency Serving A
ThrH -Coun1y Area 11 Seeking
Candidate• For The Position or
fiscal Officer tMIS Manager. A
CPA It Preferred Or An MBA .
With A Strong Accoun1in9 Btlckground: BA With E"'perience WiH
Be Conlldered. Qualified Applic•nt Uu1t Alao Posseu Strong
Coq»uter Science Skills. AppUcllntl Wllh Experience In Lo1Us 1,
2, 3, Manae~ement lnforma11on
Sva1tms, CMHC And Govern~
• F
ment unding SourcH Preferred.
Send Resumes To : Manager 01 ·
Hum•n Resources, Woodl•nd
C~r~tera, Inc., 3066 State Rou1e
1110,Gdipalis. Ohio 45631 .

L'~

F

N F - Fair Houllng Ad
of 11188- ....... llleQIJ
10IIWIIillonor-olll•lloo•
"'ny "'"'"""""·
.baed on rloe, cokw, l'lllglon.
sex famllll aiiiiUI or niUOnll
oolgln,

01""" _

..

Thl8 01

1*'4•

"

w11 not

Mo. Athens Schoott.

krMIWiiliglyiCCIPI
edverttlemetltl
torrlllllllate
wtichloln-llonofthall.w.
Ourl'lldlllarthtl'lby
lnbmld ..... J IIQB

In-...

T

QllPOitllnity
. ..._

Call For Maps &amp; Owner Finane·

.

ng

r

COMPUTER

NEEDED. $45,000 Income pa·
tent1•1. 1-800-513-4343 E)lt. B-

8368 Coli For Oeoais.

3·4 bedroom house, hnt pump,
Job """"rtunl"'
kitchen appllan&lt;:tl, bfeez._y, 1
ovwv
''
ear .,.,..,., full baaement. nice
Hair St1ll1t And Nail Technician
•
•
Needed. Call
4_446 • 6959 For lol, close to hospital and school,
Morelnbrmalion.
in Pomeroy,' 814-902-3110

6,

~.:.;._;__;_.:.;._____ l_s1.,.4_-892_,..-&amp;0_5_1·_·

....-1

410 Ho~ for Rent
1 Bedroom Haute Within Walking

Olst•nce Of Univertlty Of RIO
Grande Clean, New Carpet, Wa·
ttr, Tra•h Paid., Good P•rklng

Area, 814-368-- , ·
2 Bedroom. full basemenl 205 11
p
S
2 oplar Sl. 275/mo. 304-675·
3812

·
For ~Two bedroom all electric

------I home.

6 Roam houn, t1Drage building
I nice yard. 304'87~·3030 or

SHklng Enthusiastic Ohio State

Parcala on Rayburn Rd . Water,
paved road, reasonable restriC ·
tiona. 304 •8 75-5253. (no single·
widllnqulm ~--

310 Homes tor Sale

EmpiiJI'O'c

Te11ed Nurse A idea. Elce11ent
Benefit trackage Including: Vacalion. Christmas Club, 401K Plan,
Insurance, And Mort. Sign On

n

RENTALS

lmmtldlte Full·lime Poaillan
pllanc...
Full
A Custodian /Housekeeper.
Unflnillhed S.Nmlfnt, 1 Car Gasume To Phillip Armstrong ,
m•n Resourcea, Ohio Valley raQe, New VInyl Siding &amp; Heat
Bank, 420 Third Avenue, .Gallipo- Pump, Clry Sct\Gols, 8U..t41·
lil, Ohio 45631 . Equal Qppartunity 0851 .

LonQ Term Care HurlinG Fllcllity

11

REAL ESTATE

•

HOME

·
0
w
°·
,044
own + · t
·~::~•l.ance. 10'V. Off
1

....,. : hv~tyle urniture, 858 hlrd 1 ~---·••••""'ll
Avenue, Gallipolis, No Phone 1•

CllltPinoa1

se.soo- t1.ooo o_,. S103.75

304-675-3431.
By Owner: lower Route 7 On Rlver Slde, 3 Bedrooms, Two Sror~.

GaraQe, 1arQelot Hometltld Reau,., Broker. 304· 875·

5540.
tl"'lllpolil Houoa
" Fot Ren.10 BR.
...,.
1 112 Bath Brick R•nch, Fam
Room, New Furnace, A.ir, Ci1y

Bo.-.. 1 Ptoa11 Applr At Pinocreot SS2,000,8t4-25U760.
Schooll, 1575/Mo., Call 814-446g:~~or 170 Ponacrel! ll&lt;ivo, .:.=::.:.:C::h.:r::"J_;..:.;'I::F.:am.:.::IJ:::.LI_vll_'_
l _ l _zos_5_A_rter_5:oa_._ _ _ _ __
lnRuHa. :•4bedroomhou&amp;e,
recently ranavated. C/A, naw car-

Needed Experienced Oryw•ll
Han.,ers And Finishers With
"
· Toolt. CIH 814--.acJ.45.
PHYSICAL THERAPIST ~ Holzer
Clinic, A Vary Progre.,ive Multi Special1y Group Practice Wtrtt

port, doort, new lldina, oulbuildi""' $28,000 080, 814·992· 4 14.
...,.
. Hou .. And Lot For Sale:

s

0&gt;'Sr .100 Pn&gt;Vidaro E•periencing

-

0'/tt 250,000 Patient Visits An·
nuany, Seekt And Eothustaallc
Ptty.-al Th&amp;rapill Fot Outpatient
S.rvicea. Ohio LicanH Required.
New Grad1.1ates Wlih Eligibility For
License .In January 1997 Are
Welcome. Competitive Salary
SWCIUre, EJtCellenl Fringe Benefit
And Grea1 Retirement Plant. Call
Brande Garrett A1 «114·288-8792,
Fu, 814-446 -5284, Mail (90
Jackaon Pike, Gallipolis, ·OH
45831), E-Mail (Holzer@zoomMLMII) Or VIsit Us On 1lle Internet AI www.Holzercltnlc.com.

2 Bedloomo, One Bath, $800
Down, WA.C. Easy Term•: 1-800"*'1908, Ask For Oowid.

420

lrweslment property- lor sale-Two
one bedroom apartments localad
on large lot. .Homestea .. Realty
Stoker: 304-«175-5540.
Newlr buill home on approximately 3 114 acre&amp;, 3 bedrooma. 2
baitl, spacious living room, lai'Qe
kitchen, 3 minutes off of SR 33,
$65,000, 814 -092-4254 call aher
7:3)pmor814-992·28SO.

2 bedroom double wkle 1raUer, 8
miles 011.t 143, 814-982-3743 no

Two 1 bedroom apartments for

oncao Required, 814-388-9182.

aale with storage building . Will
sell on land contract, 814 -992-

Equal Opportoonlty Employer.

5858.

SALES PERSON NEEDEO FOR
MOBILE I MODULAR HOME
CALL D I W HOMES 614·288·

320

2101 .
TowbOat PilOts

12x6D Kirkwood 2 Bedrooms, 1
Bath, Excellent Condition, 18,500
304 -738-7295.

MObil&amp;
fOr

Homes
Sa
le

Wanted Li cenud Towboat Op; 1-,-2-,-.4...,-Pa-r'"kv"'le-w--:-2-,B:-e.,-dr-o-om-1,-1
erators To Join Our Company. Bath, Newly Remodled, $5,500,
We Ply Up To $205 Per Day De· :304-7.!6-72115.
pending On Experience. We Otter
A 401tC Program As Well As A Ux70 Homeue, totalli remo·
Caftrerla Style Benefit Package. deled , gas cook/furnace, ac,
Tow• Afe Seldom Mort Than electric block step&amp;, new doors.
T,_l.ongtlls At Ono Tlmo. Yoar REDUCE01304-675-63~7.
Round Work With A Growing
VOuno Company. Send Aesul)le 1982 uxe5 Brookstlire 2bed·
tncludlnQ Present Salary And Jab room, total electric, hear putT~p.
History fa : CLA 39,8 r:Jo Gallipolis $8,500. ~-576· 2048.
Oailr. Tribune, 825 Third Avenue,
Galll.,mta, OH 45631 . AIIII"'QUirlea 1982 14x70 MobUe Home On 1.8
Wil Be Held In Confldenel.
Acrea, Porches, $15,900 , 513~

574-25311,

WANTEO

1882 14X78 Mobile Home, 3 Bed-

OEUVEAV PERSON
Loc•l Furniture Co. Competitive
WII08'· benefits. Send resume to:
Box P -12 cia Point Plta&amp;ilnl
Register 200 Uain St. Pt. Pleas-

ont, WV 25650 '

rooms, Need&amp; Moved. Located AI
K&amp;K Motlile Park, $18,500, 614·
446-2281.
New·1g97 14 Wide·1 bath, $6~/
down, I 139/mo·, with approved

crodit Coii1-800-8DHI777.

.

for

Homes

Rent

calla after 9prn.
2 Bedroom Mobile Home Close
To GallipoHs. $2.75/Mo., Includes
Water, S200 Deposit Reference's,

614-446-8805.
2 Bedroom 1 112 Bath Mobile
Home, You Pay Utilities, &amp; Depo•
II, In Porter Area S275/Mo., Rolor2 Bedroom trailer. you pay u1ili·
ties, S100 deposit, references ,
no pets. 304-875 · ~5.

730 Vans &amp; 4sWDS

11121190, 1 Female , 2 Males,

Roduo:ad, Dopolit W~ l Hold,

304~75-1PS!-

. 11&lt;-256·1037.

- "· 304-675-1013.
IIOf!NINGSTAR EXPRESS· will
lfont •ddtelll mail Christmas
carda. do hotidar shopping. RtaIDNbtt ralft. 814-949-2-4-115.
Wentl ng To Do Housekeeping

An,-.61 4-441-1 047.
FINANCIAL

!NOTICE I
OHIO VAUEY PUBliSHING CO.
recommendl that ,.au do bull·
neal wirh people you know, aDd
NOT 10 ltnd money ttlrough the
mall until you hav.e tnvesdgated

onoolorlng. .

'. 32 111 lllwn

• Qg8 $

.

·

IA&lt;:II Ylnding Rouoo For Silo, Be
Your Own Boll. BiG Cuh w..k11'• Coli ' -800-350·113«1.
VENDING : Now, E"iting, And
Mofl Of All P.-ofitablel 1-800·820·
4311

DOWN
1-oiiM2
3
do ....
4 lnvMI will!

1'.:&amp;:' '!-

2401•31 Placeaflaa
17 . . . .
• Niiilbar ol

_,

·=

: 40 .............

Dealer: South

..

Nice two bedroom aparlmant in

f'omoruv, no pets, 614-882-5858.

BARNEY

dlopor1. al utiliti.. poid, S2701m0.,

West North

15

Pua

1+

Pau

S NT

·=

19 F.._tl

TWin RlvOrs Towtr, new oceoptlrig

t917 Ford Bnmco, full site, 4

appllca~ons lor 1br. HUO aublid-

11 PCIIIIIIIW

pronoun

cappad: EOH 304&amp;75-ee711.

pension rebuild, new paint, new
whee11 &amp; ,1irll, tac condition.

VALLET VIEW A-TIIENTS
RIO GRANDE
Wooll To W11l Corpering, On S!Qiot

P8u '
AD pu1

Oftlct Houra: Tuel·

pric:o, $6,1100.614-441-0135.

dayo, Tllurldayl 1:30 -3:00 Wldnncfloy Noon -3:00.
.

targool

t11ree n'iilllrom tho - -·
Rltdlil BrilljiO In Ohio.
fu(nilhld With we1tw, dryer, dishwasher ancl large kik:hen witt! all

Corr"""'"'1

applillnces. Nice bllth with large·
showaf, llrge murer bedrCHJm
with a working tlreplact. living
arta hulota or room. At $480

per montl\. will

uw~..

lnduclld. A

depatit of $400 Is requlrH. For
more inlor~,..tion call IU-143-

5343an&lt;lloo,...__

450

Furnished

Rooms

Rooms for rent • week of month.

Starling 11 1120/mo. Gallla Holol.
614-4411-11580.
Sleeping rooma with cooking.
tra iler space on river. All
C•ll •her 2 :00 p.m.,

Z71 N. Stcond Avenue
Mlddllpo&lt;I,Oh.

114-812-4114
We will bt open 22nd, 23m. 24th:
. ol Oocarnbe&lt; 12-12.
•
. ' SPECIALS:
·ii
$10 lor pet balh &amp; conditio~
(dOgs or cats), call ~ran appoint·
manL

20% orr of everything in s~ell
"GreatGih Ideas .~

Coupon
"'MERRY CHRISTMAS"·-~,•
Oob8fman Pups AKC Males, Females. 1st Stlots, g Weaks $200,
Black Female, To Good Home
Housebroken, 614-319-2126.

1987 Oldsmobile Cala is 2dr,
good condition, high mileage,
engine just rebuilt. S1,000 OBO
CaN 304-8895-3598.

Goods
Appliance&amp; :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges. ReJri·
grators, DO Day GUarantHI
French Chy Maytag, 1514·-446· '

52 ClniiVII

.,I

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Campo•
afl:l+
w1w . . cr.-6 tnJm
lall • by fwnciUI peoplil,
Eadl
n ... ..,......._ror..,...,.

c.e.Drily ~

1989 Old_s Toronado Excellent

er.. $1,150 OBO, 1981 Honda
XRSOR $875, 090 Both E"ol-

Condition , loaded, Must See To
Believe Dartime Call M-F 9-5 Or
Leave Message At 614· .4148·
94 16.
.
1989 Plymouih Colt Wagon, 3
Doors. 87,000 Mi les, 5 Speed,

1990 Ttlunderbird, red,. •uiOmatic,
power windows and door locka,
~w tires, A-1 shape, call David,
614 -742-2211 days or 814· D49·
2389evanings.
1991· Mitzubishi Eclipse Turbo,
Loaded, CO. Suorbol, $8,000, &amp;14-

643-2285
1991

Z-24

·,
NADA S7,250, Stll

Price $4,395: 1989 Cavalier 'Liko

'L

....
&amp;

'

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~~~

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liE YO

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IJTB
OY

II V T

L

LK

...

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WBTPTNLOVDYW)

,,,
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I!VWCLKS .

\

........
oT

1904 Honda Stladaw V&amp;OO, - ,:
20.000 miles, minor damage, 11
12150, 814-941·2211 davs. 814- ,.

1148·2144 eve.

::

Honda· Z- 50 · 2 Wheeler $400: : :
Honda TRX1 25 ~ Wheeler, l 1
$1,400, 814-....·1349.
.
~ :

I

::;:--:-:-~~--:-:--::-:--::---,~ -

KL lndutlrle" 12Ft. Pro 120 --J
••• Bo•r. Spo,rlan Traiter, Mlnn
·:
Kota 3.1 HP Motor, Baltery 1 '
Charger, ACCHIOriel 1 New Hav- 1 - :
er Used, S1.1NIO, Firm, &amp;Jot-448~ 1 •
1
8325
·
,
• :

760

Auto

A

Parts &amp;

1e

FINKE

I
. 1!-1

·V'~::

; ::

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:....~:
- "'
...,, •
,...,, •

,0,

J ..p Wrangler sliding glaas ___.

..-:.;
......

Ultd /Rebuilt All Types, Over
10,000 Tranamiasiana, Clu{chll
Fir-wheels, OvarhuaiKhs, 81-4·
245-5677

\vii

""

."\. :!

1-:---,---,----,.- - - ,.:'-!
Windawa, replaces zippers, SSOO ~

1093 Tempo 4 Doors, ·$4,600
l011ded. Auto, Air, PS, PB, 814·

new, asking 1225, call David at
61•·M2·737S.
..
.
Lat8 Model New a L~w Mileage
Used Auto &amp; Truck Part Motors,
Trantminlonl, Body &amp; Suspan·
sian Patti, Domestic &amp; Foreign.
Wide Se1ection Tower11ne Aula
Systems, 814 -532·0139 , Or 1800--482-8260.
N
.
tw Qll tanka, 1 tan nuck
wheeiJ &amp; radiator~. 0 &amp; R Aulo,
Ripley, WV. 304·372 ·3933 o·r 1-

245-5677.

800-273-G328.

1885 Montt Carlo LS. Shot oaod
Green, Rear Spoiler, loaded, .AM/
Fll Casoane, Cloth Soob, 34,000
llllu $15,600, 6t'-441-0753,

790

"':":1

otor Homes

""
"'"

"' •
.~ •

.n I

1

,.,. •
·' :

"!' 1

SCUM LIT$ ANSWIIS

,1

; -q

1

J

1vt·

Heaven -Atlas Major- Magpie- SOMETHING
A famous person ot'ice said lhat, •A hunch is crealivity trying to tell you SOMETHING."
\

·~ •·
11

o

•

1:
J I
&gt; 1

'

I MONDAY

1

-;;;;;;:-:::;::--;:;::::-:-:-:~..:...:,..._ "'' :
1992 27fL FleiiWOOd Terry Resort L~-1

SERVICES

Home

810

ACCORDIN6 TO T~DITION,
TODA'( 15 TI-lE DAI/ WI-lEN
. eoo(s ,61'¥E ElCPENSl'¥E
PRESENTS TO 61RLS ..

IIAPP'( BEETIIO'¥EH 's
BfRTHDA'(!

Improvements

949-2045 or 814-9.si-28311.

1~75.

..---~

Call (614) 446·

Waterproofing.

·

Appllan~e Parts And Service: All - :
Name Brands Over 25 Years Experience All Work Guar•niHd,
French Cltt' Mayt•g, 8U ·U8C&amp;C

Gener•l

Home

ASTRO·ORAPH
.,

MiiJ1·

~.&amp;nenc:e - P•lntlnQ, vinyl tidihQ, ~

car,.,.rw. doors, Windowl, baths, !!"
mobile home replir aM mar•. Fai Jill'

,,.. esd~Nte call Chit e 14· H2· '
8323.

llRYWAU.

lionshlp work. Mal $2. 7~ lo Matctwnakef,
c/o thl• .newspaper, P:O. Box 1758,
Murray HNI Station, NeW Vonc; NV 10158.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.hin. 191 Family
difference• could be dlftlcun to reoolve ·
today. Howe ..r, you muot
llll .ellort
10 allevlale this llltualion.
AQUARIUS (Jen, 20-M. 11) Toy not to
. be overwhelmed K you recehla mora !Mn
your u.ual share ol C0111P!Imenll today. ·
'this pralle wilt be llnCere.
·
PI8CI!8 (Feb. 20-llaroh 20) Peroonal
acqulallton Ia pi'Obeblti loday, bacauae
you'll undtiooUtud one ollhli -'C1'1 great
oecrele: You muol give If you wanllo

•

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

CtilinQI lftxturtd, ptaller rltplir.
C1ll Tom 304·075·41 • . 20 yMrs
eaper.ence.

'

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Ani

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,. ;;;l

·••I'
1Uftie

....."
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.

ohd;\

.,.!;., o,J

look to you today to take charge 01 dave!·
QPm9~1s thai will affacllhem u well. 11

you letthem down, you'llrigoet k later.
CANCEfi(June 21-.luly 22) ltlnly ....m
aa H IMOrything is going againet you aar1y
in lh&lt;tday, bu1 you should not -.y. The
p;Ciurs could Change qiOiddy In 1M after·
noon.
LI!O (July 23oAug. 22, Today, doing
lhinga ~II by yourself could 1aave a lot to
be dellr~. SMio 1111 • ...._companion
or companion~ with whom you can shars
yourtlmund lt11W1-.
VIRGO (Aug. D tr pL 22) Make ad(uel·
menta loday 10 1wo altuatlana that have
not been ruMing u lmOOthly u you'd
rsootve.
llle. Coudltlol• Clln be tllteled 1o p!Oduce
ARit!S (llanllo 21·Ajlrll11) TOday, you : lhe delired .-Itt.
. wlilaucllNd where otherl,lwll beclluae L.IIAA (lap!. D-OoL d) A partnn~o~p
you will not gat dllclalngld K'you dan' ............,.t can be ll0011piNd 14 II
get-t1111ngyouw..tonlhlitlrlltoy.
fully todaV K you UH k~ which
Tf!UIIUI (April IO·M•r 10) II _you . - helplulto you In lht Pill uncllrllml- .
~to IIIIIIY VQUrllllloday, you- · larcondltlol••
--sJ8 your t!MrallkiMully. Do nol ICOIIPIO (Oat. 14 ..... D) lin~ 110011put • IUfnllla.. ln n ,rve o l - mal·: blllttM you iltJIIQed '-!II you though! I
llfl.
· they ontghl be too ~ WI nat gat !~biNI
11-Ju~ 20) Frtencll ·wilt 1e&lt; ulltne IJ01Iil by. a.t them over wjlh •

mal&lt;•

Hong, lnol!, ropoir,

You c:en toloeuglh«l your relllionlhiPiin
the year ahead, eopeclally wit~ your :
cloM fltendl. From time 10 lime you will :
'- in a po11t1on to llalp.
BAGITTARIUI (Nov- 2:HIH. 21) You :
· ahould be eelectlve today regarding :
IJ"IUP aciiYMtM. Your enjoyment will be '
dlfMd 11Qm qullllly, no1 ~· Toying
lo patch up • broken romance? The :
AIIRJsOrepli Matohmoker can l1alp you
underllt.ncl what 10 do 1o noaJ&lt;elht 1ft· ·

i

i

(...,

"

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I,;~~·

~-- •
""

1992 S1,800 For Botti; 814 -258·

1233.

•••
,...

..""'
•
DECEMBER 16 j· -~~:

I

"

campers &amp;

M

·-

!Ill

,

----------1
pull behir'ld c•mper, like new,
2 Atbuildable BereRI'I 1990 GTZ $10,000. 304-773-95S4.
48 Chevy 2 d,, Std•n . QOOd
stlal)e, 12,400;,89 Grand Pm, 2
dr., auto, nice, $3,950, 2 large
show cases, good shape, 814·

p .,

''
''
'

,992 Chev Camera RS Y·8, 5
Speed, 251h, Annivera•ry Madel
85,000 Ullea ) $5,500, 814-448·

814·245-5624:

KYXYCF

p1st and prftenl

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "EIIentially what actors do is pul cOlors on a palolle
·.
·for directors to paint wllh."- Scott Glenn.

0

COuntry Furniture. 304 -675-8820.
R1 2 N, 6miles, Pt Pleatant, WV.
lues-Sat 9-8, Sun 11-5.

1893 Ford Escort LX:. 4 door,
47,000 miles, tan with t:ln ~Oitllnterior, a:Jc, arwlm tllllttt, auto.
$4950, 6U-·9•9·23n d•y•. 014·
849·2844 fl\le.

OI!VO

SYC

DKBII

OYKFV

7795.

Player, 52K Milea, $5,500 OBO,
1980 Dodge Srand C•ravan V..e,
1101&lt; Mlles, Exc. Condition.
$4.000 080, 8,-"1-441..()607, 61-"1·
2-"15-5592 Ahtr 5 P.M.

l)ll'fOnMr

.. 1~ '

69K $1 ,595: All Tradoo Accopt- -:::::::-;:;:cc:;::e-•,.so::::r:::-s::-:;=- w
eel, Cook Mo10f1. 61 4,... 46-0t03.
. Budget Price Trantmiaaiona, \~

1892 Goo Tra&lt;ker 5 Splld, CD

:;

r~ew~ Gflquai•IW

:

1187 Honda TRX70 Four Wheel-

New Condition, $2,895; f988 VW

6050.

q1

OEVKO

OI!BWB • .

Suzuki RUBO, new molar, IIA'
new parll, QOod Christmas ' ;

,........ $500, 51•·882·5456. .

?

··

IS Sibling ol ala "-

(OYPc;JE·OY·OYPOE

nwny

,

-.t"'

51 Slory polnta :.'.

".!

740

·ae

)·~

50 Small ""'ount&lt; 4

xvw

1989 Serena GT Red Sunroof, 2
Coon, Eligine &amp; Transmission,
15K $4,900 51~574-25311 .

:43
S1~1~
·45Fiow-u

' 49 Chlel

AMIFM C•11ette, 24,000 Mllet,

$1 ,800. 090. 304-675-5332.

\':

Arnu

$14;400, 814-445-5423, 814-....tl- :..
0852.

Motorcycles ·

'"

. 48 Blnc:hr CW

Cluloo, -'

~~----:-:------:----

1233.

Household

TM~

''
•:
~ ..

. 45 Actor
~
· Montane!
'·47 Pigpen 1011ndf~

!

~;

1988 Nlssan Pulsar, new ti~et,
brakes, exhaust, · aura, It,

Mobile tlome spaces for rent:, up
10 18x80's,' $85 per month, water,
sewer and trash Included, 114·

510

AC, PB, PS,

.'

:;

' 38 Actor

plant•

Whilii1DI• ChiYy Asrro LT, Ext ,.:
~.

"

:

MacLechltin ,·:r
41 CrytlliiiiM ,,

:

- · 304-875-5332.

460 Space lor Rent

MERCHANDISE

;l:iow the experts win

19ge Ch...,,. ext ub. 4wd, 350 :::
aulolcwtrdrivt, 32,000 miles • .-o~

Chn•y'1Pota

$1,500; 1982 Shadow AuiO, ~ Crllndar, Air, $2.200 090, 814-256-

9112-2167.

heraldry

1992 Chevy full size corwer&amp;ion · ~ ·
van, very clean, low miln, call •
Tom Andlnon, 114-812-3348.
.:

Verr nin ground ftoor •partment
In quiet surrounding• located

·

30 Skidded
·33 Actrno
'
R~IYe
, 38 Grafted, In

::.""'·::.11.:::..:..
.;:•:.200:::;..304-8:.;...:7...;5-:.1...;54...;5:..- - :
1'181 Oodgl C1rovan LE. 1olded, •

Paid By OWnor. FMH,\ IEHQ 114-

]J

29 Manlcutllt'l

r

Qrtat condition, , aharp, high
mllu.. need to sell, reduced

•1

"r:.i

1017 S.10 Bl•zer •x4,_ tligh ;
mil", new mo10r, new ps~lnr and

Laundr,.. Fenced In Pl•raround.
On Sight Man•ger And Main·
ten•nce W•ter, Sewer, Trash

;.,

-rd111111n
'1:1 MUIIC· ·

-,-+--+- i ·28 Her81dlc
bordw

But ·

1

ss.eoo.304-685-3674.

Now Accepting Appllcadons For
1 And 2 Bedroom Ap•rtments.

26 Roylf

plo,_r

,

'

. .•
'"

aynthtHizer

wheel drive, •uto trans, complete ,
engine rebuild, front &amp; rear lUI· \- 1

ized apt. for alderly and ha,ndi-

245~9, 70,

.

..

21 ..........
23 Film critic

PlluHM...
2 4 Q u w - 'I
25 Annoy
•

10Summll

Plnsant 814-9112-5858.
One bedroom furnished apar1~
mentln Mlddleporl. caH 814-4-463091, 814-092-2178 or 814-9925304 or814-092·S231 .

••t

atontWtre

w ron

T
8 Eggdlab
• Recognlnd

opening lead: • J

One bedroom •partment in Pt.

I il l

Business
Opportunity

......
_....

• 10

Vulnerable: Both

2566.

77G!i.

lruerior and Ellterior finishes carpent~y. Jirel)lac:e relini&amp;hing, ad·
ditions, porchea. decks , have

=-.•

1111 1'rtiiiM
IIIIIAI - -

IUp I rvll Dl"'

• Q. 5
6 A 7 4 2

tobiished

·

Haul Service; Will Haul Most AnyiNngl Call Anytime, Leave ~es·

0

31 Mind

0870 Or 1·800·287·0578. Ao9ers

Georoes Ponabie Sawmill, don't
Nul your logs to the mill just call

210

• 976
•QJ872

Local relar•nces furnished. E1- ,

875-7112.

-(Jwdl.l
liD' .,
~57-··
_.,...

ooo••
*

Soulb
• AQ 4
•AK3

'

•
•
Unconditional llletime guarantH. ~

Any odd jaba, painting. gutters
cleaned. 6141 -245 -5879 or 304 -

. Col

Mobile

,,

-~

•11 Nat 11111gt1
eo
1n •
22 'IUIII"Y· .
wlriW ..,n
D ...
11 Lang24 Q II Cllglll gill 12 at ap I ~
17 fu
Willi

Eut

• 10"
, tJll13
6 KJ s

BASEMENT
WAl€RPROOFNG

110 wanted To rio

-

Small 2 bedroom tlouse, furntshed 304-675-6512.
.
Two bedroom· hou,se, carpeted
and clean, no inside pets, deposit
required, 814-992-3090. .

81"'882~t'2.

Welt
6 K J 10 5

&amp; rer.rlt'!c.tt requlrtd. 304·882·

$100 deposi~ col l14-882-l'80e.

._.elg&amp; Co: Le11 Thin lot Rent +
You Own In 8 Yral 5 Aerts •

I

N. 3rd. Ave Middleporl, OH . 2
Bedroom, furnished apt Oepotlt

One bedroom •Pirtmen1 In Mid·

$25,1100.

1

-------

Friendly Ridge • Xlra larga Oau·
blewtde 3 -2: Fireplace &amp; large
Porch •·47,500 $5,000 Down +

Acre Parcel&amp; 110,000 +. Gllllpo·
lia, Neighborhood Rd., 10 Acre•
$17,000 Or 22 Wilh - Pond

naetrlj'_p......
••~, or c~~~c~tr~n~on.•

Modtfri ·2 Bedroom Apartment,

.(&gt;
Galli&amp; Co : Off Clay Ch&amp;pll,

Wo'll RM~ Tho l!allnct. ,\IIC,
8 + Acr•a $7,500 Or ,9 Acr..
111.000. T-• Run Ad. Thrlo 10

ptpl'
adYertilld
.. .-..
_..,.
ll'tM rcwonan.......-

Furniture, Salas, ·Retail Salea
H.tpfullmrnedlate Openings, Ap- .

_..

ttilt4a~ri1NJ~~Ctto

10

AKC ChlhuthUI Puppl11, 'aorn

61H4!1-0380.

miles out Nelghborhaod Rd.
S11,DOQ ntgotrablt. 814 ·•U1 ·

........ -~~

lUnitin.

AKC Chihuahua Mill,
lotanthl, $1!0, 514-2SH804.

:z::•:

11-111-85

• 96 5
tAK74' 2
.• 10 3

1887 Nlsun 21&lt;4, 5 opeod plclwp, "''
blllCk wilh rlld lntlfior, driv«&lt; ap- '
pro~imately one month. IOmiOM
" buy or pormonts, coli

Gracious i~lng. 1 1nd 2 btdroom

serviCes

2:..

251-1233,

S1115/Mo., Ulitltl.. Paid, &amp;t4-ol4tl38« All&amp;&lt; 5 P.M.

Professional .

1904 Full Size Dodge Ttuck,

NOI'Ih
• 8 3 2

WhMI Drlvo, 311, /wiO, loadld, 34,000 111101, $12,500 OliO; 114- :

Furnlohlcl Efflcl..,.y Share Bath,

131!pl1. · 14.......
1511aqUIN
11 llelch haturw
17
bird

$9tld.•.,:

a3.ooo Milos, s•.eoo. 304-571·"
2431.
.~

-"""*

M" l

I

n

w

Furnlal'tld 3 Rooms &amp; 811th, No
Pot~ Atltronc. And Dopollt RtquiNCI, 61H48-1518.

AlAI-.- ..

,. . . ·=

tW..

Very nice 1P85 14x7G with 2
bathl. large illand kitchen with
patio door. Call 114-311-1821 alk

=. . .

a c..

PHn.LIP

•

�.. .

GATOR BOWL TIC

•

SOLD

2 GATOR BOWL TICKm FREE WITH ANY NEW
WHILE THEY WT.
HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!

..
....

... .

Ohio Lottery

·· Dolphins ·
defeat
Buffalo

SII.N
Af1ll

••.s·

Pick 3:
2-7-1
Pick 4:
3-2..()-3
Buckeye 5:
12-14-34-35-36

Sports on Page 4

Cloudy and colder
tonight, lowe In the 201
Wedneeday, cloudy, snow
likely. Highs In the mid
30s .

•

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a1
Vol.47, NO. 1St

..,

.

"'"

; 'I

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Y-

New•

~omeroy Council

m·
. o ves to correct
~rainage ·problem

o

according to Commission President Fred Hoffman.
Commissioners asked Arnold to provide more·information about the proposal.
"We're interested and would like to see what you plan to do," said commission President Fred Hoffman.
"We want to see whatever happens up there (at the county home) be for
the benefit of the residents," said Board Vice President Janet Howard. ·
Commissioner-elect Jeff Thornton said he wanted to see a more detailed
proposal from Arnold and Tackett.
"You want to plan before you make a change," said Thornton.
Commissioners made plans for the group to discuss the concept \Vith Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes.

Ill

'

may requi.re 2nd
flu immunization

•

•

·oW
'"as

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I

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ST. ALBANS

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: WASHINGTON (AP)- Federal
!eservc polic)-makers have left
jpterest rates unchanged for almost a ·
xcar, and despite Chairman Alan
Greenspan's worries about "irta·
tlonai exuberance," they could keep
tlleir powder dry for some months to
/!orne.
• In advance of today's final mect~g of the year, there was widespread
belief among private economists that'
the central bank will leave interest
rates unchanged . .
~ ''We still have very modcmte
l!rowth and low inllation," said Sung
)'on Sohn. chief economist at NorWest Dank in Minneapolis. "The Fed
has time to wait and sec how things
develop."
.
: Indeed. while most economists
liclievc the central bank's next. move
will be to increase rates slightly to
thakc sure f9stcr growth doesn't triglfcr higher inlla1ion. some economists
~elicvc the ccon\lmy at present is
weakening so much, that the Fed's
ACXI move will he a rate CUI.
: "Things are getting weaker than ·
we thought they would," said David
:f{yss. chief financial economist at
"RI-McGrnw Hill Inc. of Lexington,
r,tass: "II is quite possible if this
!!lowness cQntinucs, you will sec the
~ed ca..c next year."
::, The Fed's 'policy-setting Federal
!:)pen Market Committee, composed
(f( Fed board members in Washington
i!nd regional bank presidents, meets
l:_ight times a year to review the
~JrSC Of. the economy and determine
:ll'hether io change interest rates. An•
i!,nnounccmenl of their decision is
made once the meetingll!nd.s.
~ The ccntml bank last changed
. interest rates on Jan. 31, when it
reduced iL~ target for the federal funds
f,ltc, the interest that banks charge
o:pch other, by a quarter-point ~own
1.$ S.H percent.
.
• It was the third in a ~ries of rate
&lt;ijlts aimed at spurrina an economy
illat looked!# choup it couid1opple
.
iito a m:easion.
:i WheQ economic IJTOwdl lUlled in .
tfte spriq, the fed awi~ from
'falryin' about rocwioo ilnd started
Watching for alrn•lhll inllltion wu

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TOYOTA
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By LAURAN NEERGAARD
.Aaapcla~ed Preas Writer
WA-SHINGTON --' The government.told doctors today to consider giving a second nu shot to people with chronic·heart or lung diseases and othe"" at high risk of llu complications because ono vaccine offered this year
was not potent enough.
·
Healthy people should not try to get revaccinated, the Food and Drug
Administration emphasized. And because. vaccine supplies arc dwindling,
doctors should give first priority to any high-risk patient who hasn.'t yet had
·a flu sho~ over anyone considering a second injection .
"It's not that there's no protection. It's a moderately lowered level," FDA
Commissioner David Kessler said of 1he lcss-potcnl batches. "We don't
believe if's a major risk ."

The FDA discovered last month that a few batches pf Parke Davis' llu
vaccine, called Fluogen, were losing some effectiveness at fighting off the
Nai!Chang flu, anew strain of the usually harsh TYpe A llu Ihal is hitting-the
. counlt)'. Parke. Davis cepallcd ll ·balches last -month.' • .• : · ·~ • . -~

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.Fed expected to leave
interest
rates untouched·
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In other business, the board:
• Paid weekly bills of $910,950, consisting of 725 entries.
• ApprovCll·a request by Meigs County Human Services Director Michael
Swisher to allow usc of sick days for serving as a pall bearer and to expand
the definition of "immediate family" to include parents, legal guardian (or ·
other person who stands in place of a parent). siblings, children, grandparents, grandchildren, uncle, aunt, niece, nephew and first cousins.
• Approved closing county offices ai noon on Christmas Eve .
• Passed along a letter to the county engineer from th\: Salisbury Township Board of Trustees concerning roads leading to township cemeteries.
• Met in executive session to discuss a persOnnel maltcr.
· Also present .were Commissioner ll,obert Harteribach and Clerk Gloria
~-.
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want..........._ High-risk patients

.:. Pomeroy Village Council made Jo1lowing financial report for
plans to temporarily correct a November: general, $87 ,089.42;
Alrainage problem on Brdwn Alley at · safety, $3791.29; street. (-$962.64);
.Monday night's regular council meet- · . state highway, $3,230.75; tire dep:mfllg.
ment,
$24,308.06;
cemetery, ·
• Council met with Mr. and Mrs. $10,048.68; water department,
ilardner Wehrung, who have $73,986.88; sewer, $57,388.30; guariddressed council before on the anty meter, $18,598.75; utility,
ilrainage problem. Members ofeciun- $15,765.93; fire truck, SO; perpetual
:Cil said workers would dig a ditch to care, $7 ,296.9'1; cemetery endowZiivert the water flow W&lt;¥~nesday.
ment, $38, 153.24; police pension,
= Plans call to install a permanent $2,691.06; buildin~ fund. (-$57.84); .
;c:urb.
·
insurance retainage, $2,405; recre~ In other business, council ation, $4,864.32; FEMAI, $3,1!14.50;·
:ipproved Mark Norman as a fire- permissive tax, $1,750.14; law
fighter for the Pomeroy Vo' unteer enforcement, $2,479.91; COPS
Fire Department and gave ""eond FASfgrani,(-$1,189, 64~FEMAII,
~in11 to a' parking ordlnaricc that $2, 73~; downtown r6vualization,
'Will: aiiloog'olller·things, limit street- $89,500; total, $447,692.02.
~ide parking to a maximum of two
The Rev. Thomas McClung, pas·
consecutive hours and set the rate for tor of the Pomeroy Church of the
l'ermit parking.
Nazarene, asked the blessing before
, Council also approved the minutes- the meeting.
llf the Dec. 2 meeting and set the
Present were Mayor Frank Vaugh)997 organizational meeting for Jan. an, Hysell, Council President John
1&gt; at 7 p.m., to be followed immedi- Musser and council members Geri
~tely by the regular meeting.
W~lton, Scott Dillon, William Y~ung,
• 'Clerk Kathy Hysell submitted the Larry Wehrung and George Wnght.

MOTO

A Gennett Co. Newopoper

Commissioners hear new ., idea on home's.operation

II

By JIM FREEMAN .
S811tfnel
statr
The Meigs County Board of Commissioners, meeting in regular.session ·
Monday afternoon, heard a proposal for an alternative method of running
'he county home . .
.. Bobby Arnold of Hanisonviiie and Christine Tackett of Pomeroy suggested
Commissioners consider contracting.with an independent firm that would con. :tinue county home services for the county.
; Arnold said the county tiome is currently a financial liability to the coun- .
Jy.
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• Commissioners had anticipated spending about $60,000 on the county
home this year, but have since surpassed ,that estimate by about $25,00(),
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2 5e&lt;:ti!J11S. 12 Pages, 35 cenUI

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 17, 1996

01881. Ohio Volley Pubtllhlng Compolny

Youngltera attending the annual Breakfalt with Santi at the
Melga County MuAum Saturday had an opportunity to give thalr
gift ll1t1 to Santa Claua In peraon. Here, 5-year-old Duetln
McDaniels of Rutland, son of Tom and Sheila McDanlell, tells Santa (a.k.a. Curly Wllea of Pomeroy) what he wantl for Chriatmaa.

getting out of hand.
While some economists have been
looking for the central bank to begin
tightening credit for six months. the
centml bank so far has passed up
evcryopportunilytodoso,preferring
to watch and sec if the economy
would slow enough on its own.
With mounting evidence that
slowdown is occurring . . investors
since ·early November have staged
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - The ·
big ralli.cs in both the bond market federal Mine Safety and Health
and stock market, believing the Fed . Administration has unveiled new
has decided to put off indcfi'\itely a ..standards to protect the hearing or
move to higher rates.
mine workers.
•
·That euphoria. however. was · Mine operators would have .to
called into question 12 days ago reduce noise - not just hand out
when Greenspan expressed concerns earplugs- under the proposed stanabout "irrational exuberance" in dards unveiled Monday.
financial markets, raising concerns
Without new rules, 14 percent of
that the central bank was preparing to miners - about 46,000 individuals
prick a specula1ivc bubble by starting - will suffer a serious hearing loss
to raise rates.
as a result of noise in the workplace,
Private economists said they says MSHA. which expects the .
believed Greenspan's remarks, which change to prevent two-thirds oflhcsc
sent stock markets tumbling from cases.
Tokyo 10 New York. were an effort to· . · The current approach, in place
talk stock prices down from execs- since the. mid-19.70s, has been inefs,ve levels without resorting to actu- fective because it relies on earplugs,
al rate increases.
said Davitt McAteer, assistant labor
They said Greenspan and the Fed sccrelary for mine safety and health.
may have become worried that if Miners remove the plugs because
stocks continued their record surge, they can't hear their co-workers,
it could make any ·correction more . tiu:n don 't replace them because the
severe in 1997 if the central bank i!'arplugs get diny. - "Unles~ lhe
does beoin tightening in the late inspector -is there, you don't usc
•
them ," McAteer said.
spring or summer, as many analysts
The new standards, which would
predict.
They · believe by that time the app1y.. 10 surface an d . un dergroun d
economy will probably 'be growing mines, require mine operators to usc
b k .1 all feasible engineering and adminisfast enough thallbe cenlra1 an ,wll
trative controls to . reduce miners'
engineer one or two small, quarter· exposure to noise. That means adding
point increases in the federal funds noise reduction equipment, such as
rate, sending interest rates hishcr for
millions of consumer and business mufflers on jackhammers and padded
cabs on mobile equipment, and rotat·
~~:~·might have 10 tighten a ing miners out or par1icularly noisy
nC?~ch or two by late spring or early are~hile the new rul~s would cost
summer, but it will be no more than
a mid-course correction," said David the mining industry about $8.3 milJones, economist at Aubrey 0. lion, they also relieve mine operators
Lanston &amp; Co. in New York.
of an estimated 90.000 hOU!l a year
Jones said that in the aixlh year of spent Qlling out forms reporting the
an economic m:ovory that iulroady · source of noise and who is exposed,
the th.ird long~ on record, any sus- MSHA says..
taincd pickup in economic activity
The maximum allowlble noise
raises conc•m• about inflation le•ei would remain at 90 decibels.

The vaccine is safe. The question is whctiiCr people who got the recalled
shots have a greater chance of catching the Ou.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention compared .88 elderly nursing home patients in New York who ~ad received the recalled Fluogcn with
nursing home residents who received another manufacturer's vaccine.
Those who gal the recalled vaccine produced 39 percent fewer nu antibodies, immune cells that fight off disease, said CDC Associate Director Dixie Snider.
Generally, the more antibodies sorr.eone has, the better the protection
against Ou. The CDC cannot ~ay whether those patients still have enough
antibodies to protect against Type A Ou .
And a separate CDC study of healthy young health-care workers found
no difference in antibody levels between the recalled and more potent vaccines.
There's no guarantee a second shot o( morc ,potcnt vaccine would give
more protection. To be cautious, the government told doct(/rs today to consider rcimmunizing patients who got the recalled Fluogen who are at high
risk of complications from the llu.

Ml"nes·must
re'duce nol"se,
MSHA rules

HOLIDAY OONAnON - Melnbert of the
PO!neroy Preceptor Beta Beta chaptlr of Beta
Slgml! Phi Sorority hope to make the holidays
brighter for women and children atlylng at
· Serenity HouM, with lhla donation of toya and
peraonallteme to the Galllpotil baaed shelter.

At Monday's presentation of the donation
were, from left, Priltcepior Beta Beta chapter
. president Carolyn Grueaer, Melg• County Victims Adyocate Connie Dodson, Serenity HouM
director Hilda Tirado, and Preceptor Beta Beta
chapter service chairman Carol Adami.

Natural gas price futures increase
NEW YORK (AI')-'- The price of
natural gas futures skyrocketed 10 a
new high on forecasts for extremely
· (risid weather, threatening consumers
with rising heating bills. .
Prices for J4nuary heating oil,
crude oil and un.!Caded g•s 'also
soared M~n,day as ~n:tlc air contiri-

ucd to move into the ltnckies and
northern Plains, and forecasters predicted one of ihe coldesl weeks of the
year for parts of the country.
"The weather is easy to give credit to, but I think a majorily .or the
behavior today was due to more psy-

chological and emotional factors
rather than fundamental," said Drew
Dickson. director of trading at GSC
Energy in Atlanta.
"But if it gets cold and stays cold,
natural gas mighi .actually b&lt;; worth
this much," he said.
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