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                  <text>Page 14 o The Daily Sentinel

· Pomeroy o Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 6, 1995

ROYAL
CROWN COLA
PRODUCTS

I!OREBODII
Monday thra

Ohio Lottery

OSU's George
named to AP's

Super Lotto:

5-17-23-35-44-47

top grid listing

Kicker:

3-8-5-0-0-3
1·4-7

Sports, Page 5

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD TBRU DECEMBER 9, 1995.

7Up

WE NOW ACCEPr WIC COUPONS &amp;
FEDERAL FOOD S.,AMPS

PRODDC'S

DOUBLE COUNNS EVERYDAY· SEE S'I'ORE FOR DE'I'ml

12 pk. 12 oz. cani

1-0-2-2

lb

'

.

BreasIs •••••• ~ ••••••
FRESH CHICKEN

en tine
Vol. 46, NO. 156
2 Section, 16 Pages

saaa
Ribeye Steak •••••••
sJ49
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF LB.

~~~

Pepsi Cola Products·
Ziller

C

LB

We1ners ••••••••••• ~

,$ 149

UMOUR

Sliced Bologna •••!~ •••

Sill

Friskies
Cat Food
s.s oz.

FRESH PORK STEAK OR

Roast ••••••••••••••• !~~

sJ49'
Rib ••••••••••••••••••L:·•••
s

COUNTRY STYLE

Racine .h ousing
renovation funds
are still available

Corn Dog •••••••••• !~·.

48oz.

IDAHO

IDIII.Bq

Potatoes •••••••••
TROPICANA

M.a. eta.

Orange Ju1ca ••

$199
$149

BALLARDS

8
.
I
DeIergen ••••••••••• .
7

JOY LIQUID

I

22oz.

MOBnN BOUSE

20oz.

I

1111111 111111AF•••••••••••••
Tide
Detergent
42...7oz.

szaa

'

c
c

Maxwell Housa
ADC, Fr. Roast, Lite

Collaa
• • oz.

•s••
Limit 1 Please

Biscuits:=~~:·:-~.
OR IDA

crlnlda or ~·

21
French Fried !~ ::

MEIIiOW GOLD
'

1

4 roD Pkg.

age
Golden .
Wheat Mac
8 Cheese
7.1 oz.

·$

1/lhl.

89

lea Cream•••••••·••••
Blue Bonnet Musselman.
Apple Sauce
Mar"arina
lb.

3/SJDD

Soft N
Gentle Bath
Tissue

$

II oz.

3/SJOO

GROUND
BEEF

s

10 ••••

•
Limit 3 Please

mix.

As workers dig up residential
water lines to install the new
meters, they are finding the old
water lines arc, in some cases,
almost entirely deteriorated.
"We are having problems with a
lot of the lines running from the
meter to peoples' homes," said
Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton,
showing a rusled, crumbling portion of waler line recovered
"Most of the homes in Racine
are older and we .are finding that
the homeowners need to replace
their line running from the meter to
their home," said Racine Mayor
Jeff Thornton.
"When installing the water
meters, the contractor will replace
one or two feet of the line, but the
rest of line is' the responsibility of
the homeowner," he said. "People
think we are running the line all the
way into their homes , but we
aren•t"
The contractor will let the
homeowner know if their line is
leaking, he said.
When working on the water
meters. the water is turned off, and

after the water is hooked up there
will be some dirt in the line, Thornton noted.
Residenls must open their OUI·
~ide faucet or bathtub and let it nm
until the water clears. he explained.
· Roger Jeffers' Excavating began
installing the water meters in October, a project thai will finish the
village's enorts to improve its 55year-old water syslem.
The meters will help the village
lind leaks in its water system and
cut usage lessening the cost of producing water, explained Thornton.
In addition, since the meters feature built-in backtlow valves, the
system will help the village comply
with Ohio Environmental Protection Agency regulations restricting
backllow.
Thornton said the system will be
one of the most modem in southeastern Ohio. helping take the village's water system into the 21st
century.
The meters are paid for by a
Community Development Block
Grant of $156,100 and an
Appalachian Regional Commission
grant of $80.000. The village's
share consists of $94,000 funded
by a two-percent loan through the
state water autlmrity.
Meters should be hooked up in
mid-January. Billing will be done
monthly starting in January.
(Continued on Page 3)

OLD WATER LINES - Racine Mayor Jelf Thornton displays
sections of corroded residential water line unearthed by workers
instaUing new water meters in the vUiage. Leaking water lines can
cause big problems to homeowners. (Sentinel photo).

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
As work begins to wind down on the Racine Community Housing
Improvement Program, local officials are scrambling to spend the remainder of the project's fund s.
Work began in June on the program, which is designed to help low-tomoderate income homeowners renovate their houses.
Tbe village was awarded tl1e CHIP grant last year, allowing households meeting grant guidelines to receive up to $18,500 for needed repairs
including roof replacement, new windows, furnaces and painting.
The original plan was 10 renovate 20 owner-occupied houses in the village, along with four rental units.
To date, 19 owner -occupied homes have either been repaired or are
now in the process. Two rental units have also been renovateoJ, according
to county housing coordinator Jean Trussell, who wrote the cHIP grant.
In addition, the village received $25,000 in new sidewalks through the
program .
Of the $360,000 allocated for renovating. owner-occupied homes,
$13,600 remains, Trussell said. In addition, $45,000 is left from money
set aside for rental building repairs.
Trussell said plans now call for .renovating a total of 23 owner-occupied homes, in addition to the two rental units already overhauled, by
requesting a transfer of the funds .
Trussell said she will apply for a siK-month extension on the project
which she said has taken longer than usual to complete due to the low
number of participating contractors. An extension is a routine matter, she
added.
.
Racine Mayor Jeff Thornton said his main concern is that the money
be spemlocally instead of being sent back to Columbus.
If the houses cannot be done, he said he hopes the money can be used
to put new windows in the Meigs County Home (infumary).
However, Trussell expressed doubt that the money could be used for
that purpose.
"Helping low income homeowners ... that's what the grant is for." she
said. "It can't be used for other things."

TP-C nets
funding'
for plant

Auction ·of dolls
slated to -benefit
the United Fund

Stokley
'omato
Juice

~~~

OLD SPRINGHILL

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
With more than half of Racine's
new water meters ·installed, village
officials and homeowners are finding out that new water meters and
old water lines sometimes don't

35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 7, 1995

Out with the old

49 ·

Liver •••••••••••• :b~..
KABI •

s

&lt;..:lulllly

•

Previously-used lines turning up
as Racine improves water service

BONELESS CHICKEN

l :r: ~

Low tonight In tbe teens
clear . Friday, increasing cloudl:
ness. Highs In the 30s.

Pick 4:

$279

288SECOND IT.
POMEROY, OB.

~:·_:=~~:r

Pick 3:

12 pk.l2 oi. cans

Sunday
BAM-10 PM

,.:~ :_··~\-~~~: ..~-.-~ ·.,. ·-~. ·.: ;~:~ ·. -~~
_. . 0::1 ~la.. ) ·:" j .. ~-; ~·

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Residents will be given an
opportunity to buy a beautiful
doll and contribute to a worthy
cause at the same time at Saturday· s public auction to be held at
the Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
The auction will take place in
the lobby of the bank at I p.m.
with Paul Reed, bank president,
as the auctioneer.
Proceeds from the sale of the
54 dolls costumed by area
womel\ in the dress-a-doll contest
sponsored by the bank will go to
the Meigs County United Fund. ,
Refreshment~ will be served at
the auction.
Wednesday afternoon , the
dolls were judged in several categories and the winaers were
announced.
The grand prize winner of a
$200 savings bond was Marilyn
Spencer of near Chester in the
crochet category.
Other prize winners were Pat
Wolf of Chester. the prettiest;

Louise Staat of Middleport,
bridal; Brenda Neutzling of
Pomeroy, character; and Trisha
Johnson of Chester, 1904 costuming. The year was selected
because it was in 1904 that the
Fanners Bank wa.s founded .
The first place winners in
each category will be presented
$100 savings bonds by the bank.
Joann Williams , the bank
employee who serves as chairman of the contest, met Wednesday with Dick Warner. Mt;igs
County United Fund drive chair·
man, and Susan Oliver, president,
to discuss plans for tl1e auction
and how the mcmey will be used.
The United Fund, which has
only been in existence in Meigs.
County for three years , distributes monies raised to various
non-profit organizations in the
county. Proceeds from the sale of
the dolls will go into that fund
and benellt those groups.
The talents of Bend area
women are well displayed in the
colorful and creative costuming

r

of the dolls. Many have spent
weeks making the outllts and it
shows in the design and work·
manship in both dress-up and
casual attire.
Those with bats and handbags.
umbrella' and other accessories

are coordinated . The hair on
many of the dolls bas been styled
to confonn with tl1e type of costume.
Some are dressed in sarin and
lace, others in calico and cotton
flannel. There are a number of

bride dolls, one or two representing popular singers, some in period costuming, others in pl ayclothes and pajamas.
They will remain on display in
the bank lobby until the auction
takes place Saturday afternoon .

Budget proposal calls for smaller cuts
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
White House is ready to band
Republicans its opening gambit at
the budget talks, a seven-year budget-balancing plan with smaller tax .
cuts and shallower bites from
Medicare Medicaid and other programs tha'n the GOP wants.
"It achieves supposedly what
they say they want to achieve - a
seven-year budget that ensures balance," while protecting various
domestic programs White House
Cbief of Staff Leo~ Panetta told
reponers Wednesday evening.
Republicans said they were
ready to bargain. but warned they
would not accept a plan based on
unreasonably optimistic White
House assumptions about the size
of future deficits.
"We can' t rely on some phon')'
White House scCJre " said House
Speaker Newt Ginarlch, R-Ga:
Panetta said that at today" s
negotia~ons ; be would also propose a mechanism "to enslJI'e we
achieve balance by 2002."' He provided no details, but adotiilisttation
and congressional officials. speaking on condition of anonymity, said
tbe White House bad several
. options in min~ .

Under one. some tax cuts including the president's proposed
$500-per-child tax credit - would
be withheld in any year that annual
deficit targets were not achieved.
Under aaother, automatic spending
cuts would be triggered in 2002 to
make up for any yearly deficit
goals that were missed along the
way.
Beginning in the mid-1980s,
Congress and Presidents Reagan
aHd Bush enacted a series of mecbanisms - the Gramm-Rudman
laws - that required automatic
spending cuts if annual deficit targets we~e missed. Deficits grew
anyway , and the automatic cuts
were almost always rolled back.
Panetta spent .Wednesday afternoon at a series of briefmgs in the
Capito~ explaining the administralion's plan to· Democrats. Participants said tbe new seven-ye.at
White House package has roughly
the same $98 billion tax cut and
savings of $12A billion from Medicare and $54 billion from Medicaid
that Clinton proposed in a 10-year
budget-balanfing plan in June.
. Administration officials and
congressional Democrats said the ·
new seven-year plan also contains:

..•

·. About $49 billim! i~ welfare
about $14 bt)hon more
than Chnton proposed m June and
much less than Repubhcans want.
• A freeze m general government spendmg ltlce road-butldmg
and federal salaries, a cut about
$60 billion deeper than Clinton
sought m June but far shallower
than the GOP P{oposal. . .
• About $2~ b•lhon t~ htgber
revenues by hm1ttng busmess tax
breaks, $4 btllton more than Cltnton proposed in June and $11 billion more than Republicans proposed.
.
.
• New Med1care pre~ums costing the elderly and dtsabled $50
billion less.than the GO~ proposal,
and reductions f?r.bospltals totaling at least $25 billion less than the
Republic:"~ plan.
. .
• Savmgs of about $20 bllhon
achieved by changing the '!fBY !he
government calculates the mflabon
rate .. Cost-of-l_iving i~creases for
Soc1al Secunty rec1p1ents and
income tax brackets are both
adjusted annually for i~_Jflation .
This cbange wou~d slow mcreases
in Social Securtt~ ben~fits alld
push more people mto htgber tax
braclcets.
savmg~.

PROMENADE WORK- Work on the Pomeroy Grand Promenade project continues this week 115 workers begin construction of
a gazebo on the upstream end ol tbe parking lot. Above, workers
set posts in preparation for concrete pouring, Earlier, workers
began pouring a concrete walkway also on the upper end. (Sentinel
photo)

By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
More than $500,000 in state
Issue II unds have been secured for
the proposed expansion of the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District
water treaunent plant at Long Bot'
tom , Meigs County Commission
President Fred Hoffman said thiii
morning.
TP-C requested grant funds
lotaling $885,400, out of whicl(
$650,000 wa.~ successfully secured
by the couuty. The grant will com;
bine with a $341.288 loan througq
Ohio Public Works and $431 ,000
in local funds for $1.42 million of
the $1.65 million project.
.
The plant expansion is just the
~rst phase or. a three step $3.2 mil-:
hon expansion project, whicl(
includes a new $950,000 transmission lines, a $605,000 main stbrage
tank, along with expansion at thetreaunent plant.
. :
"In the past. we've requested:
montes for the entire project. Thisyear, we broke the project down
into portions and requested monies·
for the portion that we need the·
most, the treatment plant. If we:
would have received anything·
under $650,000. we would have:
had to back off of the project." said:
Donald Poole, TP-C's general:
manager.
According to Poole, the current:
plant treats 1.2 million gallons a·
day . Expansion will double the:
, capacity to 2.4 million gallons:
treated per day, and also expand·
laboratory facilities for more on- :
site testing required by the state. :
"Over the past two· years, we"ve·
had so many service problems:
because during hot weather, we just:
could not supply the water. This·
expansion will allow us to serve:
our current customers better, and:
allow us to expand," Poole said.
TP-C currently services 4,200:
customers in both Meigs and ;
Athens counties.
·
Approximately $235,400 is stili :
needed to complete the project, :
with that money to come locally ..
The remaining amount will come :
from grants through the Ohio ·
Water Developmeut Authority and :
Fanners Home Administration, or a:
local bank.
' 'We still have a lot of work to :
do. We're now going to be able to :
complete half of the entire project. .
We'll now have about ·a one year :
cOnstruction time frame. The grant :
: money will come available in July .
· I, 1996, and we'll begin the bid- :
(Continued on Page ·3)
•

. I

�Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long . All letters are ~ubject to editing and must be signed with name.
&lt;1ddress an_d telephone number. \lo un.signed letters will be published. Letters
should be m good tas te. add ressing issues. not personalities

·Business Mirror:·

High interest rates,
inflation: monsters
·.who have retreated
By JOHN CUNNIFF
. :. NEW YORK - What ever happened to those two enemies of the peo. : . pie, inflation and high interest mtes?
: ·:
llle decline of the latter is especially interesting in view of all that talk
': · about a U.S. govenunent default. Even the threat of default, it was said,
::: could add to investor insecurity and cause interest rates to rise.
~·:
But the marketplace. it seems. ignored the all the hullabaloo as just
~: · that. Interest on the 30-year Treasury bond fell instead of rose, and j
::: seems destined to continue falling below 6 percent.
·
~
:. : Meanwhile, consumer inflation bas remained at roughly 3 percent for
·: • three years ami seems likely to oontinue in lhat range for many months
:·: more, a truly stupendous performance that contrasts with the repeated
&lt;· warnings.
; :: Fear of inflation bas been wi.th us all through this peaceful period, a
: ·: lingering neurosis from the 1970s and 1980s, when inflation was real and
::: painful and sometimes in lhe double digits. It may never go away.
~:.
While simple explanations never penetrate very deeply into the eco: ·: nomic morass. they do serve educational pUI]Xlse, at least until the time
::: when the more esoteric and less understandable explanations are offered.
In the case of interest rates, at least pan of. the simple, short-term
:
:·:explanation is tied to doubts about fiscal and political leadership, which
·: • warned of ru1 economic train wreck with unimaginable difficulties to fol·

:·: low .

Thursday, December 7, 1995
.Page2
Thursday, DeCember 7, 1995

Our boys in Bosnia: is this the '60s again?
"The genocide thing has eased
up," a Pentagon spokesman told
me. "But what we're finding is
some scorched-earth policy."
Croatians and Bosnians are burning
towns to keep lbe Serbs from moving back into them.
The same day . a woman called
to tell me about ber nephew sta·
tioned in Bosnia. "He says it's horrible. Ther have no morals. They
shoot you JUSt for nothing."
Let's see bere ... burning villages,
guerrillas who kill anything that
moves Bosnia sounds like a Winter
Games version of the Vietnam
Olympics.
I'm beginning to think the
1990s are really the 1960s upside
down - or some kind of flashback
you get from smoking the peels
from green bananas.
Here we are with another young,
handsome, charismatic. skirt-chasing Democrat who narrowly defeated a former Republican vice presi·
dent to win the White House.
Ignoring warnings from a popular
general. be is sending ground
troops into a distant war that most
Americans don't understand or
support.
The "domino lheory" is back as

same humanitarian bot-~es that
suckered President Bush into
Somalia and Clinton into Haiti.
It doesn' t stop there. Tbe haunting echoes of the '60s come complete with a new Beatles soundtraCk for our latest "polioe action."
Wben they sang, "Will you still
fication ." Troop estimates already need me, will you still feed me,
are doubling from 20,000 to when I'm 64?" lhey were not kid40,000. We've promised 600 mil- ding. Turns out lhat all of us wbo
lion to bribe the same kind of cor- played Beatles songs backward and
rupt tyrants who were our forward looking for the meaning of
"friends" in Viemam.
life were lost in the Norwegian
And once again, dissenters are woods. The meaning of life is
being told to shut up and support spelled $$$$, wilb lots of zeros.
our president - right or wrong Watch for George Harrison's next
without much debate or a declara- hit "My Sweet Hoard."
tion of war from Congress.
OK, so this is the 1990s. There
Because there's no other way.
aren •t enough pacemakers to get
But here's where it gets twisted: our generation Uuuugb a real repeat
This time , Vietnam doves are of the '60s. But these eerie oonnecclucking like hawks . lllis time, lhe tions remind me of all lbe mysteripresident is no PT-109 war hero ous clues on the cover of "Abbey
be's a Protest 101 draft evader. Road," that "proved" Paul
This time, we're not sending Amer- McCarhley was dead: He was the
icans to die to contain communL~m; only Beatie out of step; John wore
we're sending them to control white like a long-haired angel.
chaos where communism has with- Ringo was di"essed like a pallbearered like a cancer in remission.
er, George looked like a grave-digAnd this time, we're not even ger ~ and Paul was barefoot, in a
pretending our national security is burial suit. llle license plate on a
at risk. We're going to war for the VW behind them was 28IF, as in
"spreading poison ." Vietnam
"advisers" are now "peacekeep·
ers." who will die in "accidents or
incidents" instead of 1960s "paci-

Peter Bronson

E:T1Jir@l!95' fOitf WQ1I:1ll W.ll·~lEGI'II'I'~~'•'""-­
~ULMt;

11

. : • Treating lhe story as a parent might on bearing a fanciful account from
-:·an imaginative youngster, the marketplace said "really?" and went about
: ·: iL' real-world business of acting on its beliefs and disbeliefs.
. :. · Longer term . interest rates are relatively stable, at least for a while,
. : . (Jecause of many factors, among them improved productivity, the ability
: · : to finance out of profits, and government promises to cut spending.
:::: Some of lhe same reasons apply to lhe low rate of inflation, but you
. :. ~an add in a significant consumer factor. llle Consumer Price Index,
:·:which is only one measure of inflation, is held down by a changed oon.: · iumer attitude.
·:: : An interesting aspects of that altitude is a greater respect for tbe dollar.
·· :During lhe 1970s and 1980s. you just wouldn't have seen pre-Christmas
:: ialcs of the magnitude in which they exist today. Today, they are the
~. nonn .
· Retai l shoppers today seek an&lt;hxpect.bargains, and they are getting
lhem. and if you don't believe that you can check with retailers, many of
whom will involuntarily retire from business after Olristmas. ·
This resistance, although it is not the full explanation for tbe low level
of inflation. works its way back all the way through the production process, where manufacturers cut costs and inventories with the help of
autoJn.-'ll ion .

The pressure IS. of course, passed right on hack to the suppliers, who
must use every measure imaginable to remain competitive.
At every state in production and delivery of goods and services, oosts
are being kept low not just by improved processes, automation and generally greater productivity, but by keeping a lid on hiring and wages.
That closes one circle. Willi wage increases restrained and with a bigb
level of job insecurity, consumers simply aren't in the mood, nor in' many
instances do Liley have lhe ability, to buy casually or frivolously.
(John Cunniff is a business analyst for The Associated Press.)

Letter to the Editor
Support for Newt unthinkable
Dear Editor, .
How anyone can support Newt
Gingrich the way Mr. Price does is
beyond my wildest dreams. He said
that Newt was the next best lhing
to grandma's apple pie In that
case, all I can say is, that grandma
must have used rotten apples.
A letter to the editor is a way of

expressing one's opinion. So therefore, there is no reason Lhis letter
shouldn't be printed.
My personal opinion of Newt
Gingrich is that be is lhe norlh end
of a horse beaded south. His last
name should be spelled "Grincb."
Paul Clark
Middleport

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday. Dec. 7 lhe 341st day of 1995 . There are 24 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 7, 1941, Japanese wlll)llanes attacked the home base of the
U.S. Pacific fleet located at Pearl Harbor on lhe Hawaiian island of Oahu,
an act that resulted in America's entry into World War ll.
On lhis date:
In 1787, Delaware became tbe fust state to ratify tbe U.S. Constitution.
In 1836, Manin Van Buren was elected the eighth president of the
United States.
In 1842. the New York Pbilbarmonic gave its fust concert, performing
works by Ludwig van Beetboven and Carl Maria von W~.
In 1946, a fire at the Winecoff Hotel in Atlanta lcilled 119 people.
In 1965. Pope Paul VI and Orthodox Pattiarcb Athenagoras I simulta·
neously lifted the mutual excommunications lbat had led to the split of lhe
two churches in 1054.
In 1972. America's last moon mission to dare was launched as Apollo
17 and blasted off from Cape Canaveral.
In 1972, Imelda Marcos, wife of Philippine President Ferdinand E.
Marcos, was stabbed and seriously wounded by an assailant who was then
shot dead by her bodyguards.
In 1987, 43 people were killed in the crash of a Pacific Southwest Airlines jetliner in California after a gunman apparently opened fll'e on a fellow passenger and lbe two pilots.
·
, In 1988. a major earthquake in lhe Soviet Union devastated northern
Armenia; official estimates put the death toll at 25,000.
In 1991, 50 years after Japan· s sneak attack on Pearl Harbor, a visibly
moved President Busb led the nation in services comrnem&lt;nting the day
that brought the United States into World War II.
Ten years ago: Retire4 Supreme Court Justice Pouer Stewart died in
Hanover, N.H. at age 70. Death also claimed British author and poet
Robert Graves on the island of Majorca at age 90.

.

-

.:·:.:·
. . ...,:·.
•

0 •••

......

C~OATS

D

SE~S5

"28 IF he lived" -etc. ad creepium.
That stuff was just hallucinations of Beatlemaniacs who spent
too much time in those strawberry
fields. It was John who was killed
- and now they've got him
SINGING AGAIN. For psychedelic. Lucy in the Sky With Weirdness, the "reunion" with a genuinely dead Beatie makes the magical, mystical sitar on Sgt. Pepper
sound like a ukulele.
Truth is stranger than prediction.
In 1971 I won the draft lottery
with number 325. I was lucky. I
avoided the war.
But not like President Clinton.
He was drafted, tben joined tbe
ROTC to avoid that, then ditched
the ROTC and ran off to England.
His letter to his ROTC officer on
Dec. 3, 1969 ·explained: "Because
of my opposition to the war, I am
in great sympalby with those who
are not willing to fight, kill and
maybe die for their country."
And now be is sending Americans to figh~ kill or maybe die for
Bosnia, while glibly declaring ,
''The war is over.''
I've got a feeling those heavily
armed Serbs might not agree when
they return to find ashes where
there homes were.
Saving Bosnia is a double-tough
decision. I'm opposed, but maybe
· I'm too hung up on the past.
I .So I asked an officer who went
to Vietnam if the comparison is
fair. The official answer: "This is a
different time, a different place and
we do tliings differently. I hope we
have learned something."
The unofficial answer was
slightly different. Military officers
are talking about the way Vietnam
was oonspicuously MIA from Clinton's speech.
"I went to Viehlam," one said.
"But a lot of people didn't. lllat's
not the problem. What's troubling
is what be did to avoid going."
I'd like to belicv.e this Bosnia
thing will be like a new Beatles
album - at first you bate it, but it
turns out to be great, nothing like
the past.
But I also wanted to believe
three greedy old guys peddling a
seanoe on compact discs were actually the Beatles.
Something is missing. I think
it's the leader.
(Peter Bronson Is editorial
page editor for Tbe Cincinnati
Enquirer.)

Lady Di's actions smartly shatter the mold
When Prince Charles inttoduced
the world to the quiet Lady Diana
Spencer 14 years ago, wbo could
bave imagined tbat she would
eventually bring down the bouse of
Windsor?
A shy kindergarten teacher wbo
was really little more than a girl,
Diana was selected as much for ber
plianbless and timidity as for her
grace and beauty. Camilla ParkerBowles. lhe prince's longtime mistress, encouraged Olarlfis to marry
Diana because sbe thought Diana
was stupid. says Richard ParkerBowles, Camilla's brother-in-law.
. "Camilla knew lbat as a woman
with a past, she would never be
accepted as Charles· wife. But she
thought Diana was someone whom
she could manipulate," ParkerBowles told the British press.
But Diana played a dirty trick
on Charles and his mistress. Sbe
grew up. And in doing so, she
learned not only bow to fight, but
bow to win.

And win, she did. Her surprise
interview with the BBC gained her
the support of 85 percent of the
British people and an assured a

.Sara Eckel
position in lbe monarchy.
It was a brilliant PR move, and
as she told her woeful tale, slowing
looking upwards with those big,
sad eyes, she very quietly, but everso surely unraveled her husband's
character.
'' Hell bath no fury like Di the
Destroyer," columnist Torn Brown
wrote in the Scottish Daily Record.
"And the beauty of it was that sbe
did it so sweetly. She came across
as caring, understanding, support·
ive and almost saintly in her tolerance of Charles' defects."
It was oompletely manipulative,
and !loved it.
No~ . I know that isn'.t very
sporting. I know there is too much
dirty laundry being aired these
.

days. I know there is too much psy"As far as I was concerned, I
chobabble, too much self-absorp- was a fa~ chubby 20-year-old and I
tion . And I know there are too c.ouldn' t understand tbe level of
many people who de.~erve our sym- interest (in me)," sbe said.
palhy more than tl1is very weallby
Tbe royals thought they could
princess. But! can't help myself. It · ignore the princess' despair at ber
was great.
husband's infidelity. They thought
There isjust nolhing like seeing they could scold ber for ber depressomeone wfto bas been completely sion and bulimia, ratber than help
underestimated get lhe last word.
her. llley thought they oould keep
Most everyone knows how it her in a box. Ob, how tbey erred.
feels to be underestimated, but
. If they were smart, they would
women understand this particularly have realized tbat witb Diana's
well. We know what it's like to be overwhelming popularity came
taken for a receptionist when we power. They would have realized
are actually an account executive. she was redefining the monarchy
We know what it' s like to see with her warmth and her heartfelt
clienl~ and customers prefer to do
smiles. And !bey would have real·
business with our ,male partners. ized that sbe was molding tbe
We know what it's like to see monarchy into a shape into which
someone surprised that we can they did not fit.
pitch a tent. fix a car, weld a pipe.
But instead, Diana realized it.
And we know what it's like to deal And thus she struck ber blow
wilh people who think they can ensuring that she would never ~
treat us like ciphers.
underestimated again.
·
The royal family thought they
(Sara Eckel Is a columnist for
oould walk all over Diana, and for Newspaper Enterprise Auoda·
lion.)
a long time they could.

Battle over deployment won't end soon
Tbe closer you look at the decision Congress faces on President
Clinton '.s plan to send U.S. troops
to Bosma, the more· momentous It
seems - for American leadership
in the world, NATO, Clinton's and
Democratic prospects for 1996, and
the soul of the Republican Party.
Clinton halj bet his presidency
that be can continue playing America's traditional role since World
War II as world leader. If be fails
- for instance, if U.S. forces are
withdrawn Lebanon-style - not
only will be be discredited and
probably defeated in 1996, but
Amenca ' s leadership role in
Europe and the rest of the world
surely will suffer.
Congressional Democrats,
deeply reluciant to use force ' in
Central America and the Persian
Gulf, now seem to have tied tbeir
fare to Clinton's. In two recent tests
of support for Clinton's Bosnia
policy, lbe administration received
I 00 Democratic House votes on
Oct. 30 and 159 on Nov. 17. Now,
the administration is counting on
substantJal Democratic majorities
in both the House and Senate wben
resolutions of approval for Clin·
ton's policy are voted on in early
December.
. Republicans,' wbo changed durmg the Cold War from America's
traditional isolationist party to its
militantly internationalist party,
now are undergoing an identity crisis. Judging by wbat aides say, a

similar crisis is unfolding inside the
head of House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga.
The Cold War generation of

Bosnia resolution that would
Congress's disagreement
w11b Clmton's commibnent of U.S.
forces before congressional
VOnd•acke
approval, but still support U.S.
Mo
__!.!;_ ~~---' ~- _
troops in Bosnia. The resolution
R
will also urge tha~ a~ an exit strateepublicanleaders, including Sens" gy, the United States ensures that
Bob Dole of Kansas and Richard B ·
Lugar of Indiana, continue to share
osman Muslim forces are sufficiently anned to defend themselves
the logic of foreign policy emi- when U.S. troops leave.
. nences such as former Secretary of
In the House and among more
State Henry Kissinger and ·Jrmer junior and more conservative GOP
National Security Adviser Brent
Scowcrof~ wbo warn that whatever senators, meanwb!Te, an enlirely
order now exists in lhe world will ~i'!~~~t~~~~de grevails ~ hardcollapse if U.S. commitments
•. .
me oppoSitiOn to
prove hollow.
· · !fsma •.nv?lvem~nt as being none
Scowcroft made a particularly
Amenca s .busmess. .
effective case recently when Sen
Tba! sent1ment dommated the
Dirk Kern thorne, R-Itlabo asked House m test votes on Oct. 30 and
him in a Senate Armed S~rvices ' Nov. 17 and seems to be even
Committee bearing to answer ~ stronger smce Cltnton .committed
question posed on the cover of ::;::;&gt;~i fueled .bY co0-nsut uent mrul
Time magazine "I B · w0 rtb
. s ~nnmg 1 to- 1 or more
Dying For?'' • s osn~a
agrunst &lt;;linton, harsh opposition
s
f
.
from rad•o-talk hosts, and distrust
Clio~~~ctor::f:i:~n~aotf, SIUnceS of ~linton:s character and foreign
.
· · poltcy abilities.
On Oct 30 the H
power, th1s, was no longer tbe
Important question . "The issue 315 to 103. (and Repu~~:;o~~~
now IS the role of the United States to 2) for a non-binding resol~tion
m the world and the fate of those sponsored by Reps Steve B
who depend up~mus. If no one .can R-Ind., and Paul McHale, D~~~r,
re~y on ~ Umted .States, temble warning Clinton not to guarant~
thmgs Will happen m the world.... U s troo s
·
A lot more Americans will die ~he ~as~fo:;t:gthe Bosma
someplace, S?mewb~."
On Nov. 17, it ado~ b 243
Do.Ie, with as~1stance from to 171 (214 to 12 among R~ubliBosma war cnllc Sen . John cans) a measure sponsored b R
McC;tin, R-Ariz., is drafting a Joel Hefley, R-Colo., barrin/fu:l
e~press

_.On

11

•

fo~ U.S. troop. deployment without
pnor oongress1onal authorization.
Conservative House freshmen
resolved to look for a way to get
the Hefley measure adopted by the
Senate - though tbey acknowledged they lacked tbe two-thirds
vote to override a Clinton veto and Sen. Jim Inbofe, R-Okla., indicated that he might filibuster to
prevent passage of a resolution
authorizing ttoops.
GOP activist Bill Kristol wbo
has sided with internation~list­
estab.lishment Republicans on
B~sma, tnterprets orposition as
b_emg mouvated by ' isolationism,
f1~rce nationalism, bitter partisansh~p, reJection of Clinton's leadersb1p, and I'Ciienbnent at his lack of
deference toward Congress.''
Among GOP presidential candidates, all except Dole and Lugar
have leapt to lbe anti-Clinton side.
Gingrich, according to aides is
tom between bis doubts about din·
!&lt;Jn' s policy and bis international·
1 ~1. pro-NATO instincts and tradi·
Uonal .support for presidential prim~,~Cy m foreign policy.
. For someone who usually
unposes his will on otbers Gingrich also seems to be lisiening
closely to his House followers and ·
·
public reaction.

(Morton Kondracke Is eJiecu. "
tlve editor of Roll CaD, the news- .
, paper of Capitol Hill.)

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Meigs·announcements

Fr1day, Dec. 8
AccuWealher• forecast for
MICH.

Arthur 0. Allen
PA.

IMansfield !29° I•
IND.

•

•lcolumbus!33°

•

I

•
Ice

W.VA .

Sunny Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

Clouds, cold are expected
to dominate Ohio's weather
By The Associated Press
Heavy lake-effect snow faile&lt;: to
develop Wcdnesday night over
extreme northeast Ohio as predicted but an inch or two could fall
today, the National Weather Service said.
Southeast Ohio got a dusting of
light snow overnight, while the rest
of tbe state bad clearing skies.
Lows were in lhe upper teens and
low 20s.
Fair weather will be the rule on
· Friday, thanks lo a high pressure
system. But it will continue to be
· cold with highs in the 30s and lows
in the teens .
Weather forecast:
Tonight.. .Some clouds and
evening flurries far norlheast. then
clearing. Clear elsewhere. Lows 15

Arthur 0 : Allen, 74; Fredericktown, died Wednesday, Dec. 6, 1995at
Knox County Hospital, Mount Vernon.
A retired employee of the Rockwell Corp., he was born June 27, 1921
in Dorcas. son ofthe late James and Jessie Brewer Allen.
He was a U.S. Navy veteran of World War II and a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. He was affiliated with the Church of Christ.
He is survived by his wife, Lucile Aulherson Allen of Fredericktown;
two daughters, Kay Ambrus of Newark, and Bonnie Di Blasia of Heath;
two sons, Ronald G. Allen of Fredericktown, and Larry Allen of Dayl'Jn;
six grandchildren and five great-grandchildren; and a sister, Hilda Hart of
Racine.
He was preceded in death by four brolhers, Charles. Wess, Austin and
Joseph Allen.
·
Services will be 3 p.m. Friday in the Ewing Funeral Home. Pomeroy,
with the Rev. Robert Knox officiating. Burial will follow in the
Stiversville Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and
7-9 p.m. rlmrsday.

Ida Elizabeth Smedley

© 1995 AccuWoathor , Inc

Via Associated Pr9ss GraphicsN9t

to 20.
Friday.:.Increasing cloudiness.
A chance of snow west late in the
day wilh some sleet possible southwest. Highs low to mid 30s .
Friday night ... Snow spreading
across the rest of the state. Snow
mixing witl1 or changing to rain in
the south. Lows from 20 10 25
norlhwest to 30 to 35 soulheast.
Extended forecast:
SatunL1y... Cnlder with a chance
of snow showers. Highs 25 to 30
norlhwest to lhe mid 30s southeast.
Sunday .. .Mostly cloudy. A
chance of snow showers norlheast.
Lows in the teens. Highs in the 20s.
Monday ... Cold. A chance of
snow showers northeast. Dry elsewhere. Lows 10 to IS. Highs 20 to
25.

Ida Elizabeth Smedley, 59, of Middleport, died Wednesday Dec . 6,
1995 at Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Born Aug. 31, 1936 in Rutland, she was the daughter of the late
Lawrence Hysell and Nellie Pierce Hysell Copeland. She was an employee of Reliance Motion Control, GaUipolis.
She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Connie and Paul
Barthelmas of Middleport; four brothers, Lawrence Hysell Jr. of Rutland,
William Hysell of LaPorte, Ind., Robert Hysell of Illinois, and Richard
Hysell of Ma&lt;on, W.Va .; two sisters, Fmncis Haggy of Minersville, and
Shirley Diddle of Rutland; three grandchildren; and several nieces and
nephews .
Services will be II a.m. Saturday in the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland. witl1 Eugene Anspach officiating. Burial will follow at Miles Cemetery, Rutland. Friends may call at the funeral borne from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Friday. .

TP-C nets plant funding

(C.mtinued from Page 1)
ding process after we -recei ve the
money. Estimated completion date
is October 1997 ," said Poole.
At a November meeting, members of tl!C State Capital Improvement Program (S CIP) Local
Review Committee approved five
projects to submitted for further
review at the district level.
"I feel the TP-C expansion project is a very good project, which
will provide great economic benefits to the county though the new
capabilities to provide water for
bolh industrial expansion and residential use," Hoffman said.
Receiving the highest ranking
was the proposed TP-C water treatsive industries, including stee l•. ment plant. Ranking second were
pulp and paper, refining and chemi- county paving projects totaling
cal.
$489,949. The Meigs County High·
The purpose of lhc alliance is to way Department sought $377,060
upgrade, expand, replace.-own, in grant funds to combine with a
and. in most cases, operate new and S10,000 loan and $102,889 in local
existing power generation plants. funds for eight paving projects on
steam plants, refrigeration plants, county roads.
compressed air facilities and relatAlso ranked were, in order. foled energy distrilwtion assets.
lowed by requested grant amount
in parenthesis: lhe Pomeroy waterline replacement project, $242.153
($233,316); Salisbury Township
Am Ele Power ....................... .38 1/8 Willow . Creek Road paving ,
Akzo ........................................S63/4
Ashland 011 ..................................35
AT&amp;T ............................,........65718
Bank One ............................... .J9 718
Bob Evans ............. ,................. l63/4
Borg-Warner......................... .JI SIB
Champion Ind ........................21 til
Charming Shop ....................... .l til
City Holding ........................... 22 3/4
Federal Mogul ....................... .lO Ill
Gannett ...................................63 718
Goodyear T&amp; R ...................... 43 3/4
K-mart ................ o .................... 7 718
Lands End ............................. .14 Ill
Limited lne ............................ .17 JIB
People's ........................................23
Ohio Valley Bank ................. .36 112
One Valley ............................. .31 J/4
Rockwell ................................SO 718
Robbins &amp; Myen .........................JI
Royal Dutch/Shcll ............... .132&gt;112
Shoney's Inc........................... to J/4
Star Bank ...............................611/8
Wendy lnt'1.. .......................... 20 112
Worthington lnd ....................20 t/8

AEP to form alliance
COLUMBUS(AP) - AEP
Resources bas formed an alliance
with companies in Norlh Carolina
and Pennsylvania that will offer
energy options to industries, com·
pany officials have announced.
Industrial Energy Partner~
includes AEP Resources, a subsidiary of American Electric Power
Company Inc.; Cogentrix Energy
Inc., based in Charlotte, N.C.; and
Zurn Industries, based in Erie, Pa.
The companies announced the
alliance Wednesday at POWERGEN '95, a conference being belt!_
in Anaheim, Calif., for the power
generation industry.
Industrial Energy Panners will
seek large industrial steam and
power projects in major llnited
.States and Canadian energy'intcn-

The Daily Senth,el
(USPS 213·960)
Publishe very afternoon, Mond:~. y through
Friday. I l l Cuurt St.. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

Ohio Val ley Publishing CompanyfGanneu Co ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2 156. Second
ci a~!' postilge

paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.

Mrmlxr: The Associated Press. and the Ohio
New~paper

Association .

POSTMASTER: Send addreu co~CIIOn .~ to
The Doily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy.
Ohio4S769

SIJBSCRtPTtON RATES
By Carrier or Motor Roule
One Week.. .
.. .......... $2.00
One Month...

... $8 .70

One Ye.1r .. ...

Stocks

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Stock rcporb are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided hy Advest of
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SINGLE COP Y PRICE

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Subscribers not desiring to pay the carrier may
rernil in advnnce direcl to The Daily Sent ine l
on n three, ~i x or 12 month bm:is. Credi t will be
given carrier each week.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

52 Week• . .....

.. ................. .... $27.30
. ........... . .... S53.82
.. .. S105.l6

Ralts Out..'lidt Meigs Counly

13 Wet:k...'i......
26 Weeks .. .
52 We&lt;:k,...... .............

. .......... $29.25
.. ....... $56.68

rant in Parkersburg.
Party planned
Burlingham Modem Woodmen
will have its annual Christmas dinner Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the
hall . GuesL,, family ru1d friends arc
invited and those allending are to
take a covered dish. At 3 p.m.. dinners will he taken to the sick and
elderly. There will he carol singing
followmg the •evening meal.

Mei~SWCD

Tbe Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District board will bold
their December meeting Saturday,
7 p.m., at lhe Point of View restau-

Meigs EMS runs·
Unit s ~the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 12 calls for assistance
Wednesday, including four transfer
calls. Unil' responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
9:44a.m .. Ash Street, John Hitc.
Holzer Medical Center;
2:21 p.m.. Overbrook Nursing
Center, Una Dotson, treated at lh.c
scene.
RUTLAND
10: 31 a.m , Mill Street, Eliza·
beth Corcoran, HMC;
II :40 am .. State Route 143,
Aldena Welsh. O'Bleness Memorial Hospitiil;
J: 14 p.m., Nyc Avenue, Be&gt;... c
Landaker. HMC;
10:59 p.m., Main Street, Sandy
Smith, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
SYRACUSE
10:28 a.m.. Waters Edge Apartments. Ricky Vorc, treated at th e
scene.
TUPPERS PLAINS
8:39 p.m .. Succe ss Road.
Richard Barton, St. Joseph's Hospital.

VFW supper set
The Tuppers Plams VFW Post
9053 Christmas supper wi ll be held
Sunday ati\:JO p.m. 'll1e supper for
VFW memhers ant! their families
and Auxiliary members and their
, fmnilies will he polluck witl1 meat
nnd beverage Ill he fumi she&lt;.l.

Racine water
(Continu&lt;d from )'ag&lt; 1)
The village will bill at S 12. a
month until the meters arc all
booked up. After lhat time. water
customers will have a lhrec-monlh
graoe period allowing them time to
fix their water lines.

Articles filed
Secrck'lry of Sk~tc Bob Taft bas
announced that the following article of incorporation bas been filed
with his office in Columbus: Meigs
County. Rutland Township; Wyant
ExploratiOn Co.; Tim othy P.
Wyant, incorporator.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Wednesday admissions Howard Damron, Pomeroy; Una
Dodson, Middleport.
Wednesday discharges - Elnom Adams, Pomeroy.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Dec. 6 - Penqy
Cox, Mrs. Jerry Hayman and
daughter, Bonnie Stevens, Nicole
Russell, Melissa Fetty, Mrs. Wes ley Young and daughter.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Brian
Eblin, son, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs.
Stacey Nutter, son,Le~. W.Va .
(Published with permission) •

DANGEROUS MINDS"
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
MARY STEENBURGEN,
JEFF GOLDBLUM,

POWDER ..,.,
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

SPECTACULAR

SALES EVENT
ONE DAY ONLY!

Our Diamond Representative will be in our Middleport
Store with hundreds of
.
mountings, diamonds, and gemstones!

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12'H

POMEROY

Inside Meig11 Counly

$123,584 ($109,990); and Syracuse's Bridgeman Street slip repair.
$116,431 ($104,788)
Local projects not approved for
f urthcr review at the district level
included a Racine water project
and a Chester Township, Oak HillSugar Run Road project.
According to Hoffmru1 , lhesc are
the first Issue II monies that have
been allocated for lhe TP-C district
in the I 0 years of the program· s
existence, while numerous other
entities throughout the county have
obtained substantial amounts of
funding from the program.
"I felt that as the cou nty 's representative on the executive committee, it was my obligation to try to
secure as much money as possible
for this, the number one priority
project in the county," explained
Hoffman .
Member s of the local review
committee were Hoffman and
Commissioners Robert Hartenbach
and Jinet Howard; Julia
Houdashelt, economic development director; Jeff Thornton, representing county mayors; Gary Dill,
representing township trustees; ru1d
County Engineer Robert Eason.

Concert announced
Tb~ Eastern High School concert bank will present a holiday
concert at 3 p.m. Sunday in the
school gymnasium . ·An art sbow
will also be held in conjunction
with the concert. The public is
invited. lllere is no charge.

All Priced At Over Yz Off Suggested Retail.

No su b~cr ipti o n by mnil permined in aretls
where home canicr serv ice is 11\'nilable.

L' Weeks..... . .
26 Week• ..

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

992-2588
VINTON
Gallie County Display Yard
155 Main St.

.. .. $109.12

388·8603

I

This is one sale you can~t afford to miss!
And as always, the lowest p~ices on 10 and 14K gold.
•LAYAWAYS WELCOME
-90 DAY INTEREST FREE FINANCING

•FREE PARKING
·~~E GIFTWRAP

5tCQV1SIIJ'I09{S
Speeial Rolida, Hours

~1 MILL ST.

(614) 992-6250

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

OPEN FRIDAY EVENING
UNTIL 8:00 P.M.
OPEN SUNDAYS 12 NOON·5:00 P.M.
STARTING DECEMBER 11r~, DAN'S WILL
BE OPEN EACH WEEKDAY EVENING
UNTIL 8:00 P.M.

• ...

290 NORTH SECOND

MIDDLEPORT

992·3684

•

•

�Thursday, December 7, 1995

The Daily Sent~.-:1

Sports

By RICK WARNER
NEW YORK (AP) - During
his four years at Nebraska, Tommie
Frazier has been the ultimate team
player, winning lots of games, but
few individual awards. Until now.
The senior quarterback recently
won the Johnny Unitas Award and
was honored as the Big Eigh.t' s
offensive player of the year. He
also is one of the favorites to win
the Heisman Trophy this weekend.
Frazier added to hts collecuon
Wednesday when he made The
Assoctated Press all-Amenca team.
Frazier, who led lltc top-ranked
Huskers to their third straight undefeated regular seast .n. was joined in
the backlield by rushing champion
Troy DaVIS of Iowa State and scoring leader Eddtc George of Ohio
State.
Frazter dtrected an optton attack
that averaged a nation-leading 52
points per game Displaying his

Thursday, December 7, 1995

whtle Watcrlord !ell vtcttm to
Zanesv tlle Rosecrans, a regwnal
fmalist whose lone tourney loss
carne to state linalist East Canton.
The sLage was ~et for a barnbUiller
and mdeed 1t wa.'
Both clubs h;lttled evenly
throughout the flfst half With Eastem once gaimng a stx point lead in
the lirst period bel ore LeAnn Huck
Jnlled a three pomter to c ut the
lead m hall Eastem's early offense
worked like clockwork. but as m its
prev1ous games. Eastern missed
several hrcak away lay -u ps and
shon shoL' m the paint.
The result was Waterford took
advantage of the mtsscs and
climbed hack illto contentton, leavtn g the ltrst canto tied at 12-12 .
Laura Goms has been the Wtldcat
playwaker all year long. but Huck
proved to he the thorn in Ea.,tem' s

s1de early Huck scored six second
period pomls Eastern, meanwhile,
had a well-rounded attack ; Jessica
Karr and Jessica Brannon each had
four, Ntcolc Nelson two and Patsy
Aeiker two
Jess1u1 Karr h1t a 30-footer at
the buzzer, but the ball was
released Just after the hom sounded, nullilymg the goal The two
clubs marchcJ tn the intermission
at 24-24
Eastern playeJ a good overall
defenstvc game. ptckmg up the cutter 011 tlte pass ;md cut offense and
also takmg away Waterford's post
ga me Waterford also countered
East em's zone offense very well.
The hrsl part of the third frame
was a see-saw affatr. Both clubs
traded baskets. then Eastern started
to pull away slowly , gettmg bucket' from Rebecm Evans, Karr and

Nelson. Eastern once led 37-31
gomg down the stretch, but Huck
drilled a 25-foot three-pointer to
cul

~

the lead in half. Eastem held on for
the 37-34lead.
Eastern led the enure fourth
quaner by at least three, hut never
once had any breathing room. The
Eagles ran a patient offense. then
got penetration off the weakside at
just the right times and thus drew
the fouls . Senior Evans came
through in the clutch with a perfect
6-6 fourth quarter from the line.
while Nelson drilled a pair of
clutch smgles going down the
stretch. Eastern outscored Waterford to win 13-8.
Karr led the win wtth 14 pomts
and three assists. Evans canned 10
points .and had seven rebounds,
whlle Aeiker had 12 points and

nine rebounds. Goins bad 15 for
Waterford and Huck 14.
Eastern's Tracy Whtte and Beth
Bay were credited with playing .
good defense off the bench.
Eastern ht! 19-40 for 49 6 percent from the noor and bit 12-19 at
the line, grabbing 32 rebounds
(Aeiker 9, Evans 7. Brannon 7);
nine steals (Brannon 3): 14
turnovers, nine assists (Brannon 4);
and 10 fouls.
The Wildcats were 19-48 overall, httttng 16-34 twos and were 1-3
at the line They grabbed 23
rebounds, led by Goms with 7 and
Huck 5. had six stealo (Goms 2); II
turnovers, two assists (Huck 2):
and 17 fouls
Reserve notes: Coach Paul
Brannon' s reserves remained undefeated at 4-0, unseaung undeleated _
Waterford 28-20.

· Eastern's Valerie Karr had 16
point s and 14 rebounds , while
teammate Kim Mayle had I 0
points and five rebounds and Juh
Hayman had two pomls and mne
rebounds
Katrina Greene had 10 pmnts
for WHS.

-*-*-

Eastern
(12-12-13-13=50)
Rebecca Evans 2-0-6/8= 10, Jessica Karr 5-0-4/9=14, Ntcole Nelson 2-0-2/2=6, Patsy Aeiker 6-00/0= 12, Jesstca Brannon 4-0-010=8
Total&lt;: 19-0-12/19::50
Waterrord
(12-12-10-8=42)
Jenn1fer Nichols 2-0-0/1=4,
Laura Goms 6-1-011 = 15, LeAnn
Huck 4-2-0/.0=14, Knsta Neill 2-00/0=4, Stephanie Waller 2-0-1/1=5
Totals: 16-3-113=42

In Top 25 college hoops,
shot. There were a couple I thought run in the final 90 seconds of the
I could make but didn't. He got his first half 10 get Wake Forest to 30shots. tbc turnarounds . lie took 27
them and made them ."
Cold was being kind. In one 12While Camby and Duncan were minute span in the second half, the
being watched by everyone in the Demon Deacons bad three field
sellout crowd of 9,493 at the goals and during that time the MinMullins Cen ter and hy everyone m utemen bad an 8-0 run that gave
a national television audience, them a 52-39 lead with 2:26left.
th ere were so me players who
''That defense was just hustling,
just playing with passion, just playgrabbed the available spolltght.
Donta Bright had 22 points for ing with emotion," Massachusetts
the Mmutemen (4-0) and fellow coach JQhn Calipari said. "That's a
forward Dana Dingle had five habit of how we play and it's the
points and 10 rebounds.
only way we lrnow how to play.''
The Wak e Forest backcourt of
Wake Forest came in averaging
Rusty LaRue and Tony Rutland, 70.7 pomL~ and shooting 49% from
under scrutiny all preseason as the the field. Massachusetts held the
Demon Deacons (3-1) look for a Demon Deacons Io 30% shooting
replacement for Randolph Chil- {15-for-50) and they allowed just
19 points in the second half.
dress, combined for 35 pomts and
"The%ages were low for both
went 7-for-14 from 3-point range .
" We had a couple of stretches teams," Odom said. "The defense
where we went cold and could have wa.~ extremely tough and it should
gotten belter shots," satd LaRue, be ahead of the offense this time of
who had three 3-pointers in a 9-0 the year."

By The Associated Press
The Montreal Canadiens had
Patrick m goal and a win on the
scoreboard.
Things were not as they seemed,
however.
•
It was Patrick J ablonsk.i minding
the net, not Patrick Roy, and the 42 victory over the New Jersey Devils was a rartty this season, snapping Montreal's live-game winless
streak.
"A win cures a lot of things,"
Montreal coach Mario Tremblay
said. "With everything happening
in the last four days, we've just
been talking team, team, team and that's how we played."
Jablonski 's lirst NHL victory
since Feb. 10. 1995, when he backstopped Tampa Bay to a 6-2 win
over Ottawa, carne jus! hours after

"I JUSt played my hardest ru1d
The Minutemen shot 39% (21for-53) and they all agreed Dun- got a lot of support.· • Camby said
Neitlter wtll say i~ but you can
can's inside presence had sometell
both would love a rematch.
thing te do with that JUSt as Camby
In
other Top 25 games. it was
did on the other end.
"I've had guys have t11eir hands No . 5 Kentucky 74, Wisconsinin my face before on my Green Bay 62; No. 9 Connecticut
turnaround, " Camby said, "but 85. Notre Dame 65: No . 14 Utah
I've never played anybody with 89, Weber State 60; No. 20 Maryland 88 Howard 71; and No. 23
arms that long."
And unless these two schools Louisville 119, Morehead State 61
No.5 Kentucky 7&lt;1
meet again in the NCAA tournaWisconsin-Green Bay 62
ment it's likely these two junior
At Lexington, Tony Delk scored
centers won't face each other agam
until they are playing in the NBA.
17 points to pace the Wildcats (3"Early on we made Duncrut out 1), who shot just 39%. Kentucky
to be (Hakeern) Olajuwon and they led by 22 in the flfsl half. Wisconmade Marcus out to be Olajuwon," sin-Green Bay (2-2) was led by Jeff
Calipart said. " They both started Nordgaard' s 29 points.
slow, feeling each other out. We all
No. 9 Connecticut 85
knew that was going to l1£ a factor
Notre Dame 65
early."
Doran Sheffer scored 23 and
Both players said tl wasn' t.
Ray Allen had 19 as UConn (5-I)
"Everythmg I took tomght were pounded the Irish {1-3) on the
sbots I think I can make," Duncan boards in their first Big East borne
said.
(See TOP 25 on Page 5)

&lt;0

W Kentucky 5(1, Buller SO

Lexmgton M, Phtlo 31
Newbury 38, Woodndge 29
Oherhn 5R C\enmew 29 •
N~w

Midwest
Akron K2. Slippery Rock 58
Connoclu:: ut K5. Jliotre Dame 65

NBA standings

Olmsted Falls67, Fa1rV1ew 44
Pm-ma 58, Norrmndy 32
Pmtunoulh E. 4~ . Rac.ne Southern 43
Ret(JSYIIIe Eas1ern 50, Walerft•rd 42
Rwers1dt: 73, Geneva 31
Sandusky 4K, i..clmm S11ut!Jv1ew 34
Shenrlan 72, Maysv1lle 70
Solon 70, W Ge:1uga 43
Spnng Soulh 52. rmrborn 43
Tol Bowsher 70, To! Ro&amp;et&amp; 33
Tt~ Ca.hohc 51, Tnl Notre Dan~ 50
Tol Senti 50, To! Waitt: 39
Tol St Ursula 110, Tol Woodwan:ll4
Tol Start 40, Tol L1bbt:y 38
Tnmty 110, Cle Catholic 32
Twm~ l'ourg ll3, W1ck.llffe 39
Umt«ll...clcuJ fl?, Wotcrloo65 (Of)
Vt:rrrulJOn (.l, M1dnew 30

DePaul 77 E llhno1s 50

Dt'lrml 57 Cent Mtdugan 54
ww,•ts st tr6. m-uo r.s
Juwa St 65, Drake 62
lJ:,)ula, Ill 77, lrl&lt;hana St 71 (OT)
Mru4lltllt 95, Coppm St 69
Mwnu (Oino) KS , XaVIer (Ohw) 71
Mtdn~an St 67 , Evansvtlle 63
Nehrad'a RK Cre1ghtort 67
Punlue 17, Oklahoma 63
ValparnL•;u 76, Manan . l~ r.s

EASTERN CONFERENCE
1\ ll:mru Olvhion

Itwu

.ll: L f&lt;l.

l.ill

\ltta/111
o, ~.. tun
New Jersey
Washtngwn

II

5
5

7
7
7

I5
25
65

9

l 'llllatlclphl;~

J

I3

15
I3

l&gt;rl.tndt l
New Yurt

7K9
1::!2
688

'

9

m
.,,

65

I"

Ill)

m

9

65

Southwest

Cwtral Oivblon
14
2 871
529
9
7 8 467
10 &lt;44
7 10 &lt;12
6 10 ]7 \
5 10 JJJ
6 12
333

CIH C.Il!''
Atlanl.l

I kiT! Ill

r.,lll nlll

Te x.l~

15

ColurJdo St 1)1 , CollJradn71
!t.lallo 54, wa.~hmgtun 61
lnn11: Beach St 7 1 llawau (J(i
Soulhnn Ca196, How.ton 73
UC Sant a Billbo.rn76, Sart D1r:gu 73
Utah 89 Weber St ((t

'

M1dwHI On•iNon

:ww
llou., lon

ll!

L

f&lt;l.

liJI

,, 9'5

714
706

2
II

r.

4110

II

4

II
1(,

113
2(,7
Ill

'"7 I

4

14

10
12

'an AnttHuu
1 tah

Ucnvt"r
I J,dla\
\.linllt'"'l,t
\;,,n~"U'~ f

m

Ohio men's
college scores

CLEVELAND (AI') - Cleveland Browns owner Arl Modell
revealed in a recent deposition that
he obtained a $50 million loan
from Firs! National Bank of Mary.land to pay for the team's planned
rrlocation to Baltimore and any litigation caused by the move,
jlccording to a published repon.
Madell, who claims he is in
severe linancial dilticulty and that
the Browns have lost $21 million
over the past two seasons, intends
to repay the loan wilh proceeds
from the sale of permanent seat
licenses m Baltimore.
1
Tbe licenses are one-time fees

''7 10'8
II

500
412
353

9

Po &gt;rll.md

Ptn•t:IHX
LA U •rr \·r~
]t!ut

6
9

II

Sl·altk
LA l...tlt:f!.

(n

" '

710
647
500

l1. t l~

(,

500

I5
4
4
4
55
(, I

North Coast Alhlellc Conf.
Cue Reserve 91, Oberlin 70
Dem10n 84, Oh10 Wesleyan 62
Wtttenberg 70, Kenyon 67
Wooster 79. Allcgh£1 '"' 61

Wednesday's scores
f'!ul;.~ delp hL3

W L~lu~glun

Non-confert!DCt! play

!OK, Da.ll:u: 87
IJ6, Atlanta 79

Hanover 83, W1lrnmgton (Ohto) 4 I
T1ffin 94, Wtlberforcl· 76

&lt;11.1rluttl· 94 CLEVELAND 82
[h•Siill\ 105 MWIIII 101
Cl1~t: ago 101, New Yort ':14
MtnncMJta IOK, New 1ersey !J7
lluuslon 11 2. I. A l...aktn CJ.J
Orbndo !01), Golden Stall.' 107

Ohio women's
college scores
Norlh

A.ntu ntu :ll Atlanlrl, 7 30 p m
&lt;'IIppe r~ at Mtlwaukee 8 30 p m
J)~·uvt'r al Utah, 9 p m
I "uont•l at l1urtland, 10 p m
fk:rnu1 at Vanc11U\er, 10 p m
LA

Hockey

19 7
17 7
17 8
1212
10 12
II 13
(, 17

New Jcrsey

Tampa Bay
Wa.shm!jlon
NY Islander.;

ti5
K•) Kent 71

d~tCWII&lt;.&gt;(t (,I Harvey sr.
Avon 4S Wclltngtml 3H
AV&lt;lll La(e S2, Rocky RlH!I 4\
B~rllcrtnn 66, C!e John Marshall 411

A&lt;,JII .IbUI J I

a1 Hou.,lon, 8 30 (I m
Jlh PL' DLX ::tl Denver 9 p m
TClr&lt;~ntu ::tt LA !.....akers, 10 30 p m
J&gt;dru/t al Go Men State, 10 30 fl m
't'alllt' .11S.llf'Jfllt'Oto, 10 30 p m
W &lt;~.\lllnl;(ton

B e.t vt:re r e c~ H7, Xema 31
Bcrkslure 62, Stretliboro 37
Brouk!ltle 71. Elyfla W 39
Brookvtl le 63, Arcanum 35
Buckeye Trat l63, Sheoondoah 40
Cant nn Cat.h 49 , Man!Jield Sl Peter'!i

NCAA Division I
men's scores

46
Carrultt on 50, Canton S 40 .
Centemll t: 48, Sprmg. Nort11 43
O.ag:rm Falls 62. Kenslon 57 (QD
CbruOOn 60, Orange 35

Easl
Army 6H &amp;Utany,W Va 37
Oo,.lun C'oll q~e 55, Pttt~bW'gh 53

Ches h~re

Cornellll2, ~lugh 61

R1ver

V~ll

H Chesape::tl.:t'

47

Man st 4'J, Stena 47

C111 St

M:»~.~achw;etlll

60, Wake Forest 46
Moun! St Mary's, Md 81. La Salle f16
r~.~nn (,7_ TilWlWR St 61
R111t-r 74, Amencan Umv 66

Ursula 59 Cm McN1d1olas

47

Ue

He11~h1Jo

44, E Cleveland Shaw 22

Ck VNSJ 51. 01ardon ND-CL 27
C:ul Hartl ey 84 Newark Cath 59
Col Wa11erson 58, Col Ready 31

Serun Hall 79, Providence 72
St Jotitpll'~ 74, Budndl 54
Swarthmore 70, Lafayeue 6!J

Day Dunbar 63, Day Meadowdale 36
Day Pauenon 55, Alter 48 (OT)
Fmrmout58 , Wayne 48
ftrelandli41S, Keystone )9
Ga.rret~vt ll e 43, Canhnal 36

Soulh
Al.JhauM 9tL Tenm:ssee Tech 78
Clemson 79, Charleston Southern (,()
c~~~tal Carohna 91. Allen 64
E Kenluclcy 71. Dayton fl5 (Gf)
Annda Atl::mttc 80 Nova Southeastern

Grand Vall S2. Ledaemont 39
Hann thal R1ver 59, Monroe Central 53

Hoban' 60 , Padua 54
John Glean 46 , Trt-Vnlley 41
Lake Calh 63, Walsh Jesu1t 59

Jad;sun St M7 , Toug:dou72

~3.

Kcntudcy 74, W&amp;!! -Green Bay 62
LI.JU ISVI lle I 19, M&lt;lrehead S1 61
Mary lund 81', Howard 71

Valley

For~

49
Lurwn Cath 60, Sandusky St Marys

LaKewood

&lt;6

l.nu"vtlle 55 , Akron Sp nnK 41
Madtson 70, Conneaut 23
Mmrm Vall 32, Ctn Seve n Htlls 29
Mmerva SO, Marhngton 41
Morgan 41, R1ver Ytew 3!1
N Ol~ted 50, Bay 41
N Rtdgevtlle 59, Loratn Adm Kmw:

Mercer6&amp;. Wnfford 56
N c -Grl"enGt'luro 80 Appalachian Sl
Soutl1 Cillo
99, Furman Kl
St Frunc11~, t-IL 82, Delaware St 64
St Pt!ter's 76, N Carol ma A&amp;T 59

Tennes.&gt;;ee 63. W Caroli na 51

ST LOUIS RAMS · WaJved Pa..chall
DaVIs, ltnebacter Announced the rellre -

SAN DIEGO OJARGERS Relea.~ed
Durt Grt~S5man, deferuw1e end Re--stGne&lt;l
Seballttan Barne, 1lefewuvc tackJe
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS
Jeff Brulun, quarterback

Basketball
Nllllonal Bukethall As110rlallon

St~ned

Hockey

DETROIT PISTONS Watved Matt
Ftsh, center
SAN ANTONIO SPURS S1gntal
Dav td Robin~on, center. 1o a mulltyear
contract

· NaJionaiiiMkey Le.. ut

BOSTON BRUINS Sent JOOn Gruden
and Alexe t Kasat&lt;mov, defensemt!n to

:Braves to host
fndians in March
~xhibit/on game

Prov1dence of the AHL
TAMPA BAY LIGmNING Recalled
Otrt:k W1lt.I BS(In,
lanta of Ute lliL

Nallonal footb.U Luttue

~on ltender

from AI ·

t

I
4
4
3

l
2
3

39
38
38
27
25
24
iS

95
100
107
71

65
64
84
68

76

92

,.

68 72
72 107

17 5 3
13 II I
II 12 2
10 II 4
10 I 3 2

Dnslon

Hanfunl
Ottawa

6 1M

l

17
27
24
24

125
77
77
90

22 65

77
78
75
96
77

13 62

1)9

HoHo
Home

It!...._ I
I

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Din~lon

W L I I'll. Gf liA
17
13
12
II
11
9

5 2
11 J
9 5
9 7
12 4
8 6

36 103
29 98
29 86
29 93
26 69
24 69

61
93
78
85

75
71

IE:

16 7 4

Colorado
Los Angeler;

12 10 6
II 16 2

Anahei m

Vancouver

8 II 7
7 15 5

Edmonton .
Calgary
San Jose

.5 16 6
4 19 4

36 119
30 93

81
89
92

24

88

23
19
16
12

95 101
69 107
6S 95
80 tlO

1&amp;'.

Wednesday's scores
Han ford 7, NY Islanders 4
Montreal4 , New Jersey 2

Tampa Day 2, Anaheim I
Chtcago S, NY Ran~s 5 (he)
Los Angeles 6, Wmntpeg 3

0
DO

'I

- - ATLANTA (AP) The
Adanta Braves will open their 1996
home schedule by playing the team
tbey beat in this year's World
Series.
The Cleveland Indians will
come
to town for a March 29 exhi:
bition ga1ne at Atlanta-Fulton
County Stadium.
The 7:10 p.m. game is included
in
the Braves' season-ticket plan,
-but at least 20,000 tickets are
expected to be available when they
go on sale in early February.
The Braves are considering a
"Turn Back the Clock Night,"
V'ilh both Atlanta and Cleveland
players wearing old-style uniforms
and umpires wearing beanies.

and get 20% off the
subscription price.

Frlda)''s games
Detr011 at N Y Rangers, 1 3U p m
Boston at Tampa Bay , 7 30 p.m
St Lou1s al VaDoouver, 10 30 p m

Transactions
Baseball
American LuJuc
CALIFORNIA ANGELS Agreed to
tern1.., w1U1 Dick Schofield, shorutop, on a
nunor-league contracl
CLEVELAND INDIANS A1!1eed lo
term.'&gt; wtth Tony Pena. catcher on a one-.
yea r contract and Casey Candaele and
Gary Hagy, 1d1elders, Scott Pose, outfielder, and Darryl Scot!, Wtllte Smith
and Jmuny Wtlhanu, ptlchm , on nunor-

leaL!Ue contraclll

Special Holiday offer ends
December 31, 1995.

- - - - - -Holiday Gift Subscription Coupon
SUbacrlptton ordorlld by:

~E----~----------------ADDRESS
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
cnv __________ sTATE _ _ zrp ____
~e

______________________

Darnphousse for a power-play goal
3:18 into tlte match.
Oleg Petrov's goal at 6:02 of the
third penod broke a oe and Damphousse added an empty-net goal
with 32 seconds left in the game.
Pierre Turgeon scored Montreal's ftrst goal, in the first penod,
while Petr Sykora scored his stxth
and seventh goals of the season for
New Jersey. The Stanley Cup
champtons are wmless in their last
seven road games (0-5-2)
"It's more satisfying because
we needed to win," Jablonskt srud.
" We tned to put everything behind
us , and I think we responded
well."
Blackhawks 5, Rangers 5
Pat Verbeek scored New York's
fifth power-play goal of the nigh!
with 12:07 left in regulation, and

the Rangers extended their home to make only 17 saves for Tampa game , th e n ag,un &lt;II 6·3~ on a
unbeaten streak to II games by Bay
rebound ot Glen Wesley's slap
tying Chicago
Sehvanov's game-winner came shot
New York goalie Mike Richter on a power play at 2:03 of the secBoth the Whalers &lt;md Islanders
made several critical saves in the ond penod and snapped the Ltght - scored a scason-h1gh three powertina! minutes of regulation, and in ning's two-game losing streak . It play goals
overttme both teams mana~ed ius! was Anahetm's fifth loss in seven
Kings 6, .lel&lt; 3
one shot on goal. Richter finished games and set a club record wmless
Jart Kurn. Pat Conacher and
with 33 saves. Chicago goalie Ed streak of seven games.
Wayne Grctzky scored during a 3
Belfour stopped 30 of 35 shots.
Bergeron 0-5-1) saw actton 1/2-minutc span ot the second periChicago rookie Eric Daze when Jeff Reese missed hts second od to lead Los Angeles over Win scored twice, while Eric Weinrich, consecutive scheduled start after mpeg
Jeremy Roentck and Gary Suter becoming dehydrated dunng pracGretzky also set up a pair of
each had a goal for the Black- tice . Starter Daren Puppa is out power-play goals and Kurn added
hawks. Verbeek scored twice and wtth a hrmsed right lrnee.
a goal and two assists to help lift
Brian Leetch, Luc Robitmlle and
Whalers 7, lslandtrs 4
the host Kmgs mto th1rd place in
Nelson Emerson scored two the Western Conference standings,
Adam Graves added goals for the
power-play goals m a 71-second a point ahead of the JeLs, Toronto
Rangers.
span as HarU'ord dropped the visit- and Chtcago.
Lightning 2, Mighty Ducks 1
At St. Petersburg. Alexander ing Islanders
It was Gretzky's 78th career
Sellvanov scored his team-leading
Emerson connected on a feed by goal agamst the Jets - the most
16th goal and J.C Bergeron needed Geoff Sanderson 5:28 tnlo the he's scored agamst any team

for the right to purchase season
tickets, in this case for the 70,000seat stadium in Baltimore's Camden Yards promised 10 the Browns
in time tor the 1998 season.
"We recetved a $50 million
loan from a local bank to cover our
cost of relocation, which is collateraltzed (by the sear license sale),"
Modell said in the Nov. 18 deposition, !he Akron Beacon Journal
reponed today.
Modell expects to generate $75
million from seat licenses, which
the Browns must market themselves under terms of tit ~ Baltimore

agreement.
Modell, however, remains
barred from marketing the seat
licenses as part of a preliminary
mJuncuon handed down last month
by a Cuyahoga County Judge that
blocks the Browns' move until a
trial is held on the matter.
Modell also must await the Jan.
17 vote of his fellow NFL owners
on the Browns' relocation. A threefourths majority of the league's 30
owners is required. "
Details of l.be loan were offered
during a nearly five -hour depositiOn Modell gave 111 West Palm
Beach, Fla., as pan of the lawsuit

filed by the City of Cleveland to
prevent the Brow!IJ' move.
Asked by City of Cleveland
attorney Fred Nance if the bank
loan has to be repaid, Modell said:
"Yes. There ts no up-front cash
payment that (the Browns) don't
bave to repay in the Maryland deal.
There is a bridge loan on the PSLs
(personal seat licenses)."
In the deposition, Modell
revealed why be acted midway
through this football season.
"There were two other teams

that wanted to enter U1e Baltimore
marketplace, and we were fearful
we would be head ed off at the
pass," Modell said.
Modell is not speaking to northeast Ohio reponers, and his Cleveland-based spokesman, David
Hopcraft. did not return phone calls
seekmg commem Wednesday, the
Beacon .loUillal reponed
A call early today was placed to
Hoperaft' s office. A message seeking bis comment was left on an
answering machine.

Meanwhile, a heanng was held
Wednesday in Painesville Municipal Coun for longtime Browns fans
Milton R. Stem. Anthony C Pace
and Edward D. Reed, accompanied
by Painesville lawyer James V ::
Aveni, in their attempt to get::
refunds for the four home games on·the schedule after Modell
announced that he was moving the
team to Baltimore.
Judge Michael A. Ctcconettl
heard arguments but made no
tmmedtate decision .

Jim Ferraro, who represents a
number of former Miami players
now m the NFL and contributes
$10,000 annually to lhe school's

Top 25 hoops ...
(Continued from Page 4)
game. Notre Dame treshman center
Phil Hickey had 16 points.
No. 14 Utah 89, Weber St60
At Ogden, Kctth Van Hom had
25 points and 16 rebounds for Utah
(4-1). Weber State (3-2), which
shot just 29%, was led by Jimmy
DeGraffenncd wtth 15 rebounds.
No. 20 Maryland 88, Howard 71
Johnny Rhodes had 19 pomts
rutd set a school record with seven
steals as Marylancl (2-2) won its
40th consecutive non-conference
home game. Phil Chenier's 20
poinL~ led the Bison (0-5)
Nn. 23 Loui&lt;vllle 119
Morehead State 61
At Louisv1lle, DeJuan Wheat
scored 23 points. and the 58-point
victory margin matched the most
lopsided win in coach Denny
Crum's 25 seasons. Louisville (42) scored tts most points since a
132-87 romp over George Mason
on Jatt. 4, 1994

alhletic depaconent, denies having
financed the rides for running hack
Danyell Ferguson and receivers
Jammi German and Yalil Green
Among Ferraro's clients is former Hurricanes star Wesley Carroll, who now works for a Miami
television station Ferraro said Car-.
roll ordered a limousine from Gene
Maro, Ferraro's chief recruiter, for
last Thursday.
Ferraro satd be later learned the
three players also had ridden in the
while 1995 stretch Lincoln Town
Car, and the trio had requested the
same limo and driver the next day
- the day the NCAA placed
Miami on probation for three years
- though Carroll was not with
them.
When they did not pay the
$1,032 bill, the incident was reported 10 Coral Gables police.
"The university is cooperating
rully," pohce chtet Jtm Butler said.
"(The Flonda Department of Law
Enforcement) has been called in 10
assist us to look imo the actions of
the sports agent - whether it's a
criminal violation ol a state of
Florida administrative violation.:~ _

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Dallas at Dd.r011, J 30 p m
Ottawa al Oltcago, 8 30 p 111
Edn¥"~nton at Colorado , 9 p m
Wmntpeg at San Jose, 10 30 p m
WaslHngton a1 Buffalo, 7 30 (l m

star goaltender Patrick Roy and
team captain Mik e Keane were
traded to the Colorado Avalanche.
In return , l11e Canadtens acquired
goaltender Jocelyn Thibaull and
wmgers Andret Kovalenko and
Martin Rucinsky.
Roy, a three-time Vezma Trophy winner as the NHL ·s top goalie
who led the Canadtens to Stanley
Cups m 1986 and 1993, was suspended by Montreal aller a blowup
with the team's coach and presi dent. The goalie satd he was humiliated when Tremblay left him in
Saturday's game until Detroit bad
scored nine goals en route to a q-1
victory.
Kovalent.o became a crowd
favorite right away Wednesday
night when he dug the puck out
Irom behmd the net to teed Vmcent

This year buy a gift lhaflacustom made for anyone on
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a subscription ia Ideal for
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Tonight's gamos
Mn ntr~l

y:lfdage.
C:mty ttcd for the NCAA lead
w1th eight mterccptions, including
two for touchdowns Milloy led
Washington with 11 5 tackles and
forced three fumbles
Punter Brad Maynard of Ball
State led the nauon wtth a 46j yard average
There arc tour sophomores and
ctght JUIItor;; on lhc team. which
was sc lcctcd hy AI' college lm thall
wnter Rtck Wamcr and regtonal
AP Wfll ers
Davts. Pace. Reeder and Canty
arc sophomores 'I he JUnior s arc
Glenn, McElroy, Brown, Tom1ch,
Lewis, Fitzgerald. Mtlloy and Maynard.
The AP all-Amcnca IC&lt;Im wtll
be mtroduced hy lloh Hope dunng
NBC's postgame Nf'l. show on
Dec 23 The segme nt wtll aH
hctwccn 3:10pm ;md 4 p m EST

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MIAMI (AI') - The University
of Miami attd two law enforcement
~gencies are looking into limousine
rides taken by three Hurricanes
football players that might have
~n paid ror by an agent.

tnent .of Ron Wolney, ruruung back

Football

National Leque

P•rme Dlvlllon

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

['Ill
rtwlollc ,JI Orlunllu, 8 p rn.
L A ( ·rtppds .Lt Mmnesmu, II fl m
S.m 1\nlonw .d O!lcago, B 30 p m

StJU!id

ST LOUIS CARDINALS Stgned
Dave Etland, ftlchet, Dann Howttl , outfielder Paul orres, fin! bru;eman -o ut fielder, and Ty Gnffin. fi«nnd b:meman
to mmor league contraW

Fitzgerald anchored a defense
that gave up the fewest points in
l.be nation . His 130 tackles were
second in the Big Ten even though
he missed Northwestern' s final
game with a broken leg.
Hardy , the latest m a long lme
of great Illinois linebackers, had II
sacks, intercepted three passes and
forced live fumbles. Lel\'tS led the
Btg East with 160 tackles and had
two interceptions . whtle Thomas
made 131 tackles, caused six fumbles and recovered four.
The secondary feature s Greg
Myers of Colorado Stale, Chris
Canty of Kansas State and Lawyer
Milloy of Wa.,hington.
In additton to hts standout play
at defens1ve back. My ers se t a
school record by retunung three
punts tor touchdowns and broke
the Western Athletic Conference
mark lor career punt return

University of Miami &amp; police investigate
limousine rides by three football players

Kendncke Bullatd wtde recetver from
Ute pracllce ,;quad
NEW YORK JliTS Stgned Vmce
Stewart, deft nMve tackle, to the practice

PIIILADELPIDA PIDLUES A!ll'•ed
to terms wtth Mtkc BenJamin , mfidder
on a une--year contraL1

Northeasl Division
Ptl tsburgh
Montreal
Bu ffal o

N1J~:JJa

NcN:u;k~

CIN CINNATI BENGAL~ Sianed
Dryan Dtc~er!illn, lull back from the prac·
IJce ~~quad
NEW ENGI_.AND PATRIOTS
Watved Brandan Moore, tackle Watvcd

velopmeot, Riel Sweet and Brent Strom
to the niiJur·leal!ue tilaff, and Alan A~hby
to the rrunor· league st.alf
NEW YORK MEl'S Agrwl to terJRi
wtth Jose VtZcruoo. shorutor. on a twoyear contract

.ll: L I fiL li£ liA

Flonda
Pluladeljlhta
NY Ra11gm

Non ·confcrcncc play

r

~erve

Allanllc Dlwi.Jnn

:WW

Coast Alhlelic Conf.

Aluon 91

ARIZONA CARDINALS Clatmed
Brandon Moore, offenstve tackle, orr
wa1vers from tile New England Patnoh
Placed Janue DuW, cenler, on tDJUf~ re.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

n

l ndJ~n~ ar Nt!W Jer~&gt;ey, 7 30 m
l'l ulad~lph1.1 .1t CLEVELAND. "I 10

(,,

45

Alkgl1eny H W oost ~r 41
Ca.~t' ReH·rvc 7M Otlerhn 45
OhiO Wesleyan
Uti\ISOO 62
Wtllcn!lt·rt,! (,2 Kenyon W

,,1/1

47

W Mu.~k.ingum (13 Cronbv1llt: 48
Warrrruv1 Hc 57 Shaker Hl5 47
Westlal:.c SS, Am.hen;t 26
Zanesville Ro~ecrarl.'&gt; ~5. Col IXSales

Crntral

Tonight's games

Friday's ga mes

3(·

w1U1 Hal Morns, ftr~t ba.~e man, on a twoyear contract
COLORADO ROCKIES Agreed to
terms Wtlh Mtke Munoz , p1tcller , on a
one·year contract
HOUSTON ASTROS Nametl Dave
Hudgens autstant dtrector u( player de

NHL standings

Baldwm Wallace 80, H~tam 16 (2 Of )
Capttal 86, Oh10 Northern 77 (OTI
John Carroll 7S, Mount Umon 68
ManettaM, MU5bngum6J
Otterbein 71, Heidelberg 68

12

W Branch 57, Canal Fulton Northwest

CINCINNATI RWS Agreed 10 \erlT5

Ohio Athlcllc Conference

XI

r:.dlic U1v•"'•r'"
'f,fLJIIIt/llo&gt;

Suultwrn 'JJ Texu.o; Cu ll 71•

Far Wc..&lt;iit

'-

H5

WESTERN CONFERENCE

tl)

Texa.~ A&amp;M GK, Nort11 Texa.~ SO
Tcx.L~ Oln~tt~n 93, Cenlt'nary Kl

55
(, 5
7

'

'

M!IWJUkt· ~

Ol:.hhull l.'l ~1 SU. Tt'L'l!&gt;-Arhnp:lon

MILWAUKEE BREWERS Named
Oavt! Mach.emer manafer. M1ke Caldweall p1tch1ng coach, on Pont h1ttma
coach., and Bryan Jaquette tramer of E1
Paso of the Texas League
NEW YORK YANKEES Sent Steve
Shoemaker, patcher, to Colorado to complete the Joe Guardt trade.
OAKLAND ATIILETICS· Promoted
nunor.league rovmg pttc~ tng tn,tru ctor
Bob Ouck to p1tchang coach and asststant
dirt(;tor of player development Brad Fts·
cher to bullpen coach Named Denny
Walltng htttaog coach, Duffy Dyer thtrd
base coach. and Ron Washtn gton ftrsl
base coach
TEXAS RANGERS Clatmed Darren
Lewts, outftclder, off waiven from the
Cm(:tnnatt Reds Agreed to terTllli Wllh
Warren Newson, outfielder, on a one·year
contract Stgned Mo Sanford, p1tcber, to a
co ntrac t wllh Oklahoma Ctty of the
Atnertcan As.&amp;oc!a!1on
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Aa.reed to
terms wtth Danny Coli:, pitcher, and Rtch
Rowland, ~:atcher, un nunor·leaaue conUl\CLS Traded Howard BatUe, thud baseman, and Rickey Jordan, pllcher, to the
Ptuladelphta Ph11!1es for Paul Quantnll,
pttcher

repeater from last year's team
Bruschi had 14 1/2 sacks to tie the
NCAA career record of 52 set bv
Alabama's Derrick Thomas.
Also on the defensive line are
Tomich, Cornell Brown of Vlfgmia
Tech and Marcus Jones of North
Carolina.
Tomich was one of the leaders
of Nebraska's swarming defense,
which held opponent~ to 78 rushmg
yards and 13.6 points per game. He
had I 0 sacks and 24 quarterb~ck
pressures.
_
Brown had 103 tackles, mcluding 14 sacks and II other stops
behind the line, for the nation· s
top-rated run defense. Despite constant double-teaming, Jones had 17
tackles for losses and six sacks in
his la.~t etght games
The linebackers are Pat Fitzgerald of Northwestern, Kevm Hardy
of Illinois, Ray Lewis of Miam1
and Zacb Thomas of Texas Tech.

Maryland bank loans Modell $50M to pay for Browns' planned move

Scoreboard
Basketball

Keyshawn Johnson, who set a Pac10 mark with 90 receptions and an
NCAA record with 12 straight 100yard receiving games.
Tight end Marco Battaglia of
Rutgers led everyone at his p~si­
tion in reception ~ (69), recetvmg
yards (894) and touchdowns (10).
The all-purpose player is Leeland McElroy of Texas A&amp;M, who
rushed for I ,122 yards, caught 25
passes for 379 yards, returned rune
kicks for 208 yards and scored 16
touchdowns .
Joining Pace and Graham on the
offenstve line are Jonathan Ogden
of UCLA. Jason Odom of Florida
and Hcatlt Irwin of Colorado.
Rounding out the offense is
placdicker Michael Reeder of
Texas Chnsoan. Reeder was 23-ol25 on lleld-goal attempts and made
all 20 ot hi s extra-point trtes.
The defense is led by Arizona
lineman Telly Bruschi, the only

Canadiens beat Devils; Blackhawks and Lightning also win

•

13 years ago, Camby had the bencr
game and got the vtctory, Massachusclls' third over a ranked
team already this season.
Camby llntshed wnh 17 pomts
on 6-ot - 19 shootm g with ntne
rebounds and lluee blocks. Duncan
had nine pouus on4-ot-18 shooting
with 12 rebounds and four blocks.
"Th1s was JUSt another btg
g&lt;une," satd Crun by , who had 32
points in a w1n over top -ranked
Kentucky and 30 against Flonda on
Sunday. "I didn't want to m~e it
mto a big individual matcbup.
Once I settled down and got into
the flow I hit a couple of
turnarounds and played some
aggressive defense ."
That delense caused problems
for Duncan. who came into the
game shooong 77% from the licld ,
although he hadn ' t seen a center
like Crunby so tar
"He pla yed a great ga me ,"
Duncan sa td "He atlected my

versatility, he passed for 17 touchdowns and ran for 14 scores.
Davis ts only the lifth runner in
NCAA history to gain more than
2,000 yards in a season. He finished with 2,010 yards, including
an Iowa State-record 302 against
UNLV
George led Division 1-A with 24
touchdowns and was tifth in rushing with !52 yards per game
Ohw Stale and Nebraska each
placed three players on the AP
team.
Along with George, the Buckeyes had wtde recetver Terry Glenn
and oftcnsive lmeman Orlando
Pace. Frazier was joined by
Nebraska center Aaron Graham
and defe nsive lineman Jared
Tom1ch
Glenn caught 57 passes for a
school-record 1,3 16 yards and 17
touchdowns The other wide
receiver ts Southern Ca l's

In the NHL,

UMass downs Wake Forest; Kentucky &amp; Louisville also w1n
By JIM O'CONNELL
AMHERST, Ma ss. (AI') Marcus Camby prevailed over 1'1m
Duncan Ill the malchup neither said
mattered a whole lot.
No . 3 Massachusells, on the
other hand, beat No. 10 Wake Forest 60-46 Wednesda y night 111 a
result that demonstrated both teams
have other qualtty players and the
Minutemen can play some nasty
defense.
"There was no way thts game
was going to be those two guys
dominating and it anyone did they
were barking up th e wrong tree,"
Wake Forest coach Dave Odom
satd "Both teams have good players and you saw them tonight Both
of the b1g guys will use this game
as a springboard alter scemg what
they did well and d1dn '1 do well."
In th e be st regular-season
match up of collegtate centers since
Ralph Sampson of Virginia and
Patrick Ewmg of Georgetown met

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Frazier &amp; George among AP college football all-Americans

Eastern girls beat Waterford 50-42 to stay undefeated
By TOM HUNTER
Se ntinel Staff Writer
Eastern's varsity girls' basketball team shot nearly 50% from the
licld for Lhc third straight game, but
It was an 11 -15 mght at the toul
Ime m the lourth quarter (6-6 from
Rebecca Evans) that preserve the
50-42 Will over Waterford Wednesday mght at E"stem H1gh School.
The L,uly Eag les pushed their
overall season record to 4-0 and
won th.c hatUe of Ule unbeatcns.
Ea.stem also leads the Tn- Valley
Con ference Hocking Division at 30 Waterford Jrops to 3-1 overall
and 3-0 111 the Pwncer Valley Conterence
Both teams came mto the game
undefeated llte two clubs spin in
their mectmgs last year Also last
year. Eastem lost 10 state champton
Jackso n Ce nter 111 the rcgwnal,

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�'
In the NBA,

Bulls down Knicks; Hornets sting Cavs
· By The AssocU.ted Press
Dennis Rodman came back and
practically stole the show from
. Michael Jordan. Derrick Coleman
·· · came back and stopped a slide.
· · Rodman, who missed lbe previous 12 games wilb a calf injury,
was a surprise slarler for the Bulls
· against New York on Wednesday
· night and made his mark, grabbing
. 20 rebounds in 38 minutes as
: Chicago rallied for a 101 -94 viciO.. ry .
''Teams have to pay him
- . respect," said Jordan, who scored
, · 18 of his 22 points in the secoml
, half. "He gets you so many offen.: sive rebounds that sooner or later,
. -you're going to make some shots."
· Coleman, who hadn't played
this season due to an irregular
heartbeat and was traded from New
Jersey to Philadelphia on Nov. 30,
helped his new team halt an 11game losing streak in his 76ers
debut. He had 17 points and II
rebounds in 31 minutes a~ Philadelphia routed Dallas 108-8 7.
Rodman scored Dnly six points.
· hut his basket on a give-and-go
pass from Jordan cut the Knicks'
lead to ncn after three quarters.
Jordan started poorly, missing
13 of 15 shots hcfore finding the
range just in time to give the Bulls
their fourth consecutive victory. He
had nine points during a 16-4 run
• that put Chicago ah ead lor good
. early in the fourth quarter.
Scottie Pippen also scored 22
points for Chicago, which ha' the
NBA's best record (14-2) and is 70at home.
John Starks scored 25 points
and Patrick Ewing 22 for the
Knicks, who won their first three
games during a tough stretch of
. four games in five night,.
In other games, it was Washington 96, Atlanta 79; Charlotte 94.
.Cleveland 82; Boston 105, Miami

1()1; Minnesota 10~ . New Jersey

97; Houston 112. the Los Angeles
Lakers 99; and Orlando 109, Golden State 107.
76t!rs 108, Mavericks 87
Vernon Maxwell scored 25
points and Jerry Sk~ckhouse bad 21
points and 10 rebounds in Philadelphia· s victory.
Max ~ell was 6-for-9 from
three-point range, and Stackhouse
had eight assists for the Sixers in
Coleman· s debut.
Jamal Mashhum had 22 points
for the Mavericks, who lost their
tl1ird straight and their lOth in the
last II games. Dallas finished it'
road trip 1-5.
Bullets 116, Hawks 79
Washington snapped a 10-game
losing streak with a victory over
Atlanta.
The Bullets built a 21-poipt lead
early in the second half, and the
Hawks never cut tl1e gan below 12
poiius the rest of the way.
Chris Webber made II of 18
shots for 27 points and bad 10
rebounds. Juwan Howard scored 14
points for the Bullets in their first
win over Atlanta since Jan. 5,
1993.
Steve Smith had 14 points for
the visiting Hawks, who shot 35%
in their third straight loss.
Hornet&lt; 94, Ca-valiers 82
Charlotte, who had been allowing orponcnl&lt; to shoot almost 50%,
limited Cleveland to 39%.
Glen Rice scored 25 points and
Larry Juhnson had 19 points and II
rebounds for the host Hornets, wbo
won for the fifth time in seven
games. Scott Burrell also scored
19.
Terrell Brandon, who was 8-for12 from the tleld, led the Cavaliers
with 22 roints. Bobby Phills had
20 points.
Celtics I OS, Heat I 01
Todd Day's tiebreaking three -

pointer from the corner with 17
seconds left helped Boston heat
Miami for the second time in three
nights.
'
The Celtics defeated tlle Heat
121-120 in double overtime Monday at the FleetCcnter, lben did it
again at Miami Arena.
The Heat's Alonzo Mourning
had 26 points, 13 rebounds, nine
blocked shots and seven assist~.
Dino Radja scored 22 points and
Dana Barros 20 tor Boston.

·career.

The Dallas Mavericks center
·was banned by the NBA for the
second time in just over four years
Wednesday ror using alcohol.
Already banned once by the
league for cocaine use, Tarpley
violated the terms of his aftercare
agreement hy testing rositive for
alcohol consumption three times,
most recently last week, the league
said.
The violation nullified the con-.
tract that was to pay him $23 mil:lion the next five seasons.
Tarpley denies that he has been
drinking, blaming lbe test results
on a liquid cold medication lbat
contains alcohol.
"We're all just dumbfounded,"
be told Dallas television station
KDFW on Wednesday. "This is
JUSt a way lor tbe Mavericks to get
out of my contract."
His agen~ George Andrews, did
not return a phone call from The
Associated Press on Wednesday
night.
Tarpley could apply to the NBA
and the players association for reinstatement.
"He's gone. I gave him my best
shot," Dallas coach Dick Motta
said. "I gave him a.s much advice
a&lt; I could give anybody. It's a sad
case, but he's a product of his own
behavior. It's too bad, but Roy
Tarpley screwed up big-time."
Tarpley, 31, who in 1988 won
the NBA's sixth man award a' the
league's best reserve, was banned
in October 1991, played two years
in Greece and was reinstated by
commissioner David Stem last fall.
Dallas owner Donald Carter
welcomed Tarpley back to the
team, giving him a six-year contract.
His contract also contained provisions for his aftercare rrogram
and could he voided if he was
round to he using alcohol or drugs.
Maverick.&lt; rresident and general
manager Norm Sonju said Carter
indicated on Wednesday that Tarpley had blown his la&lt;t chance with
the Mavericks, with the owner saying, "This is the final chapter. The
book is finished ."'
In 55 gmnes laq season with the
Mavericks, Tarpley averaged 12.6

losing streak to ihc Los Angeles
Lakers.
Clyde Drexler scored 19 of his
34 points in the third quarter and
Hakeem Olajuwon took command
in lbe fourth. ·
Olajuwon, who finished with 30
points and 13 rebounds, scored 14
points in the tlnal 7:46.
Cedric Ceballos led the visiting
Lakers with 27 points and 17
rebounds.
Magic 109, Warriors 107
Anfernee Hardaway had 23
points, including a pair of free
throws with 23 seconds left, as
Orlando outlasted Golden State.
Dennis Scon also had 23 points
for the Magic in a game that
included 52 fouls, six tecbnicals
and a flagrant foul.

Timherwolves lOll, Nets 97
Minnesota shot 70% in the first
three quarters en route to its third
win in tlve games.
Isaiah Rider had 20 points on 9for-12 shooting as the Timberwolves snapped New Jersey's
three-game winning streak.
Christian Laettner added 18
points and seven assists for the
Wolves, while Kenny Anderson
scored 22 points and Jayson
Williams 18 for the Nets, who fell
to 1-9 on the road.
Rockets I il, Lakers 99
Houston snapped a five-game

Tim Hardaway bad 31 points
and Chris Mullin 18 for the Warriors.
After Anfernee Hardaway bit
his two free throws, the Warriors
fumbled away their last chance for
a tie wben Lauell Sprewelllost the
ball.

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I bad

been transferred to

~: _ Augusta, Ga., and my ftrStSunday in

.. 10wn, 1 friend Invited me 10 go 10
'{. Sunday School with him. As we
f· 'enleml the assembly room, I saw the
:' most balutiful young girl giving the
!: devolional.

~ ready

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

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22No
0

Ill

The Daily Sentinel
-ONLY-

(CHILD'S NAME)

Ploaao ancloaa aolf-addraoaed,
stamped envelope to return
your photo.

Parents' or

Names

I

HUR&amp;Y!DEJtDtlNE
FRIDAY,
DEC.
..
. '· 15;' .,,AT
. :.· . 3/P.l'{.
. ·.r, ..
k·~"' ~\ )~·

for

By FRAZIER MOORE
:,: AP Television Writer
;,:
NEW YORK (AP) - What do
r· you say to Michael Jackson?
"
-"How come your HBO con: .. cert special is called 'One Night
;· Only' when it comes from TWO
• live concerts?"
;,
the deal with the
,, -"What's
.
, surgtcal mask?" .
;
~"How's the wife?"
.•·
Hard to know just what to say to
'.· the world's greatest pop star. But
i · it's a moot point. Michael isn't
:. _rea)ly ~~!king to the rress here in
1 ~ the Beacon Theater this Monday
t._ afternoon.
•. That is, earlier at the photo op,
:) he didn't say much. The mumbled
;-,. "thank you" he directed to the
;i gathered throng is two Words more
~- than will be exchanged between
. . him and a lone reporter now watch~· ing the rehearsal from the theater's
~·· ·back row.
t: Nor, come to think of it, is
.;. Michael wearing the surgical ma&lt;k.
; ; It came off a minute ago. Clad in
~ casual garb - black pants, slippers
•':1 ' ·and hat· white socks and T-sbirt·
•.~ sequined toreador jacket - Jack:..•son is up on stage, batl1ed in Oashf•.ing, sweeping lights as he goes
~.- through his moves, surrounded hy a
; ·'dozen dancers. .
~ · Lip-synching to a pounding
; -rehearsal track (something about
=: the girl being dangerous) he is
·. preparing for his two,hour show, to

Will be published

Per Picture Prepaid

We waikecl down lhe aisle 10 take
our ICIIS, and I turned 10 my friend
and said, •rm going to marry lhat
girl. • And I did. We will be
celcblaling S3 years of 1 wonderful
marriage soon. You may usc my
nanie. - MANSFIELD LATIMER,
ROCinuu., S.C.
DEAR MANSFIELD: What a
~-warmer. I hope you and that
bawlifulgirlcnjoy tli(Rhappyycars
together. Keep reading for other
lovely love-at-fii'St- sight siOries:
Dear ADD LaDders: Here's my
instant-love story, and I give you
pcnnission to print it and usc my real

· 1 loclal gathering where- I was
pruenl KnOwing I was an Oakland
Raiders football fan, he walked in
from walching TV to tell me that
&lt;Jeorse Blanda had kicked another
last-minute field goal to win the

pmc.
As he l8lked 10 me, he purhis arm

around my shoulder. Well, I fit
petfcaly,andhcdidn'tbavcachancc
after that
We will be celebrating our 20th
anniversary soon. Some time ago, we
were fortunate to meet George
Blanda and tell him tbissiOry. He said
his last-minute game winners had
name.
been responsible for a good many
Twenty-plus years ago, a casual cclebrations, but ours was the fii'St
acquaintance of mine - 4S years old marriage that be knew of.- EDrrn
andaconfll1lledbachelor--attended DYGERT,
DESERf
HOT

SPRINGS, CALIF.
Dear Ann Landers: You asked in
your column for unusual siOries of
how couples meL WeU, ~·s mine:
I was widowed at the early age of
31. I was in a deparUnent store with
my two young children, one barely
walking, struggling with a laJge item
Jhadpurchasedinlhesponinggoods
department
In the checkout line in front of me
was a very nice-looking man. Mter
he paid for his pwchases, he waited
10 help me talce my huge box 10 my
car. I thoughtiO myself, "What a rme
gentleman -- wouldn't it be
wonderful if ... •
We just celebrated our 12th
anniversary and have a 2-year-old
daughter. So you see, dreams

do come true. -- BETHANY, led 10 the altar. It was 12 years ago.
CONN.
.
We couldn't be happiet -- ,
. DEAR BETH: They do t'ndeed. ·TORRANCE, CALIF.

Here's~

'1.'.:,. '

Official

I

'

met the man of my dreams" story up
against the best of them.
I was divorced when my son,
"Michael," was 10 years old. He kept
talking to me about "Natalie," a girl
in his class at school who he thought
was wonderful.
One day; he said, "Mom, Na131ic
saw you in the supermarket and says
youareveryprettyandlbatsinccher
mom died a few yean ago and her
dad is lonely, maybe you'd go to
dinner with him."
The kids fixed us up, and lhat date

hi~

In a marked derarture from his
bent for magnitude, Jackson decided to stage the show from a relatively intimate venue, the 1,500seat Beacon on Manhattan's Upper
West Side.
For the two tapings Friday and
Saturday, a hand-picked crowd will
share the house with II TV cameras. What will they see? Few
details have been disclosed.
Oddly enough, the person doing
most or the talking is a mime the world's greatest mime, Marcel
M:'trceau, who is collaborating with
Jackson on "Childhood (Theme
From 'Free Willy 2' ). "
Jackson and Marceau have
already rehearsed this five-minute
blend of music, mime and dance.
The 72-year-old creator of Bip lbe
Clown, still in his familiar striped
shirt and white makeup, lingers to
watch Jackson run through "Dangerous."
His number with Michael will
be dangerous, too, he predicts.

·--""

The Alfred United Methodist
Church will present a Christmas
program on Dec. 17, 7:30 p.m. A
gift exchange will follow.
Sarah Caldwell attended the
wedding of her granddaughter,
Beth Ewing. and David Acree Saturday

"Those are five minutes within
a very dynamic show," says
Marceau. ''It could destroy the
whole !bing. Very dangerous!
"But in France three months
ago Michael calls me and says,
'Marcel, please, I would like to ere- ·
ate wilb you the song of my childhood.'

Garret Ritchie was a guest at the
home of his grandparents, Wilma
and Harold Lee Henderson recently.
Kevin O' Brien of Columbus
visited his grandfather, Garner
Griffin. Other guests were Linda
and David Williams, Belpre.

"I said, 'What could I do?'
"He said, 'The lyrical quality.'
' 'Michael saw me in Los Angeles when he was maybe 15 years
old," Marceau says. ''He was
impressed with the slow -motion
walking that I did. It became his
'moon walking.' And he was
impressed by the silent outcry "
As rehearsal continues, a 40root-high man is now silboueued
against a towering screen. For this
song, "Smooth Criminal," the figure dances to the music and sings
to Jackson· s vocal. Then the screen
ascends to reveal the man behind it,
who is- wait a minute, Ibis isn't
Michael Jackson! For the technical
run-through, a pretender is subbing
for the King of Pop!
In the dimness ot the fourth
row, under his hat, Jacks9n looks
on quietly. A star soon to shine for
a quart~r-billion fans be is out of
the spotlight.

Nonna 1ean and Gerald Swartz,
Reno, visited Nina Robinson
recently. They aho visited Leola
and Otto Swartz at Shade.
Guests at the Poole-Parker home
were Andy Smedes, Detroit
Mich.;' Terry Fetty and Josh of
Springfield, Bill Cougar, Sr. and
Bill Cogar, Jr., local.

~

SPECIAL

• Entertainer Michael Jackson, right, poses
wit F ncb pantomime artist Marcel Marceau Monday at the
Beaco Theatre in New York City during a rehearsal For Jack·
son's
0 television special "Mkhael Jackson: One Night Only."
Jackson, who usually plays in large stadiums, makes a departure
rrorn the norm in filming the special at lhe Beacon later this week,
to be telecast Sunday at 8 p.m. Marceau i.~ collaborating with jackson on "Childhood (Theme from Free Willy 2)", a five-minute
blend or music, mime and dance that will he part of the special.
(AP Photo)

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April and Todd l.cwis. Kacie
and Sydney, Springfield, Pauy and
Aaron Parker. Germantown, and
Nellie Parker were recent visitors
of Wilma and Howard Parker.
Debbie Barber was honored
wilb a layette shower recently at
the home of her parenl~. Ruth and
Lloyd Brooks, Lina Mae Murphy
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Whalcanyougivethepersonwho
has everything? Ann l.Atukrs' bookItt, "Gems: is ideal/or a nightsrand
or coffee 14ble. "Gems• is a co/leelion ofAnn Landers' mosl rrquuted
poems and essays. Send a self-addrused,long, businus-siu envelope
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Alfred
news notes

HBO special

be telecast Sunday at 8 p.m. EST.
"Michael Jackson: One Night
Only" is a followup to his 1992
HBO special, "Michael Jackson in
Concert in Bucharest."
Like everything the King or Pop
does, "One Night Only" will be
king-size in many ways. The special is expected to reach a global
audience of more than a quarterbillion people.

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oo.::

Dear Ann. I will put my how I the closing hean-warmet It's lovely

t Mi~hael Jackson: getting

Our special page(s)

~

;I

lhcu spouse 10 write and tell you.

;;

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27C CAN

an ~usual story about how they met

' · Hue's mine·

I_

~P-ri-nc_e_M_a_t-ch-a-be_l_li~---D-~-,-r-ab_o_w--~[t
Cachet

Dear Aaa Landen: In a recent
~ colwan, you asked people who had

~

.

-Sports briefsFootball
IRVING, Texas (AP)- Dallas
Cow)lo )lll defensive end Charles
Haley underwent back surgery in
Los Angeles.
Robert Watkins performed the
two-hour operation and found a
fragment of disk in Haley's back
between the fourU1 and fifth lumbar
venebrae on the left side. Haley,
31 , told The Dalla' Morning News
on Monday he was retiring, but
said Tuesday he hoped to return for
the playoffs.
Football
NEW YORK (AP) - Detroit's
Hennan Moore, who had a clubrecord 14 receptions for 183 yards
and a touchdown in the Lions' 27.7
victory over Chicago on Monday
night, is the NFC offensive player
of the week.

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The Dally Sentinel• Page 7

~..,• Readers tell how instant love stories stand the test of time

l . PICTURE YOUR CHILD i
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Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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points and H-2 rebounds but clashed
with Motta.
Tarpky began this season on the
susrended Jist because of a pancreas ailment that bothered him
throughout the surruner. On Nov. 6.
he was transferred to the . injured
list, which allowed him to begin
receiving his $3.9 million salary,
and the 6-foot-11 center bad been
working out in recent weeks.
The announcement that he had
tested rositive for alcohol came
two days after another· Mavericks
player, Donald Hodge, was arrested
on charges of possessing marijuana. The Mavericks and the league
have taken no action because marijuana possession is not a violation
of the NBA drug policy.
"This is the stupidest thing I've
ever beard or," Tarpley told The
Dallas Morning News. "You tell
me, what's going on here? Marijuana isn't a big deal to anyone, but
alcohol is?"
Motta, whose team has lost 10
ot II games, acknowledged that
Tarpley had been a disttaction for
the team ever since be returned
from the drug ban.
"They could have built a circus
tent around us last season." Motta
said.
Tarpley's former teammates
were more sympatlletic.
"All his teammates really care
for him," Jamal Mashburn said.
"He'll still be one of my teammates, no mauer what. "
Said Popeye Jones: "He was a
good friend and I know his family .
I really feel bad for him. I don't
know what bis plans are now, but I
know be really loves basketball."

.Thursday, December 7, 1995

. Various Size Bags

40%oFF

NBA bans Tarpley
.for using alcohol
. DALLAS (AP) - Roy Tarp·ley •s attempted comeback from a
·drug ban has failed, probably ending a troubled, turbulent NBA

Thursday, December 7, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

· Page 6 ··The Daily Sentinel

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•.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Herbal healing gaining popularity in ·modern m~dicine
By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
AP Medical Writer
In the jungles of South America,
a lith-century Jesuit missionary
discovered that Indians were using
a tree bark to cure fevers such as
malaria . His discovery gave the
world quinine.
Since then, herbal medicine bas
come a long way.
It is still practiced in iiS basic
form in both primitive and modern
societies. And it gave rise to hightech research and manufacturing
that no primitive healer would recognize.
Tons of leaves from a Madagascan periwinkle plant are harvested
yearly 10 make precious ounces of
a powerful drug against childhood
leukemia. And scientists are
searching the world's disappearing
rain forests for cures for cancer and
AIDS .
At its most basic level, healing
witll plants is still one of tile leru;t
understood ;md most mistrusted of
arts.
The United States is v like a
developing country" when it
comes to herbal remedies. says
Professor Nonnan R. Farnsworth. a
globe-tmtting expert in natural
medicines at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Govemment rules and the lack
of a long .tradition of practice have
kept tile herbal therapy out of the
mainstream, Farnsworth says.
"We don't have a history of it

like in England or in Germany. We
have Indian medicine ~en, and
nobody thinks much of them,"
says Farnsworth, director of collaborative research in pharmaceutical
sciences.
Four-fifths of all people still
rely chiefly on traditional
medicines. largely plant~ and their
components, the World Health
Organization estimates.
Many developed countries have
integrated herbal remedies into
their health care, says Roy Upton,
president of the American Herbalists Guild.
Such countries include Germany, the United Kingdom,
France, Belgium, Australia, New
Zealand. China. India, Japan and
African nations. he says.
' 'In many of those countries, not
only are herbal medicines widely
utilized. but they're also reimbursed under the national insurance
plans." says Upton, quality manager for an l1erbal products company
in Scotts Valley, Calif.
Mainstream U.S. medicine is so
uninformed that it has been a
source of llagrfmt misinfonnation
in the field, says Farnsworth. who
also has served as a consultant to
WHO and to the National Institntes
of Health.
·'The worst articles condemning
herbal medicines used by humans
are published in tile Journal of the
America11 Medical Association,"

be says, citing misidentifications of
plants and misinterpretations of
plant chemistry.
·
Dr. George D. Lundberg, editor
of JAMA, defends the journal, saying it depends on "a vast number
of high quality reviewers" to guide
its choice of articles.
One University of Michigantrained physician who uses herbal
remedies in her practice estimates
fewer than 5,000 of almost 700,000
U.S. doctors accept such treat,ments
as legitimate and use them.
"All we learned about (in medical school) was drugs," said Dr.
Joan Priestley, who incorporated
holistic remedies into her practice
after seeing patieniS improve while
taking them.
American consumers are
embracing herbal remedies.
The U.S. market for them has
more than doubled since 1985, to
$1.13 billion in 1993, excluding
teas and homeopathic remedies,
acconling to the London firm
McAlpine, Thorpe &amp; Warrier, Ltd.,
which bas the latest figures.
Growth is expected to continue
at 10 percent to 15 percent armually
through I997, the farm says.
The World Health Organization,
recognizing a global increru;e in tile
use of herbal medicines, in 1992
issued guidelines for countries in
regulating their manufactnre, safety
and sales.
It also promoted their benefits.
Herbal medicines are different

froJD higb:tech pharmaceuticals
using plant compounds, WHO
noted.
High-tech medicines use highly
isolated chemicals alone or with
other active chemicals. Herbal ·
medicines are actual pariS of planiS,
or their juices, oils or gums. They
may be used in extraciS, tinctures,
teas, capsules or tablets with inert
fiUers.
In the United States, the booming popularity of herbs and other
dietary supplements hru; so worried
the FDA that it bas cracked down.
The backlash led to a new Cederal law lru;t year that restrained the
agency and called for a new reg~la­
tory approach, which the FDA is
developing.
About 400 herbs are in general
commerce in the United States ,
· including 75 to I00 exclusively in
herbal remedies, estimates Robert
S. McCaleb, president of the Herb
Research Foundation in Boulder,
Colo.
Medicinal herbs with clear benefits include gingko for treating
aging-related conditions, saw palmetto for benign prostate enlargement, ecbinacea for strengthening
immunity and garlic for protecting
against heart disease, McCaleb
said.
Gingko is used to increase blood
flow to tlle brain and relieve shortterm memory loss, ringing in the
ears and dizziness.

Thursday,Decernber7,1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page ~

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--Poet's Corner ___
"Poetry in Motion"
By Martha V. Parsons

Beat of the Bend ...
by Bob Hoeflich
As Red Buttons used to say:
"Strange things are happening."
At least they are for Melvin
Smith, ReedsviUe, but aU-in-all the
"strange things" are not really anything new for him.
For the past 13 years, Melvin
has been receiving unusual Christmas cards. The cards are cutouts
from cereal boxes as wei! as other
products including d-con. The
handcrafted "cards" are never
signed but always have a holiday
message for Smith. The greetings
feature misspelled words and poor
grammar. Smith even moved the
pru;t year and he thought that might
: change the pattern, but the "cards"
: are stiil with him this holiday season.
By the way, Melvin is now 83
and he still enjoys the joke.

Poetry: a word, a song,
a ballet, a dance, a poem.
The wind blowing through the

Big Bend area and come back four
or five times a year to attend special evenlS and visit relatives and
. friends . By the way, they've subscribed to The Daily Sentinel ail
these years to keep tabs on their
former home area.

Of course, many of you will
remember Mr. and Mrs. Roedel
who had the store at Kerr's Run in
Pomeroy for many years. The oddshaped structnre which housed the
store--buil{ that way 10 confonn to
the terrain a"ailable for the construction-later became the headquarters for the Meigs County
Bookmobile. And still later, the
building was razed 10 make way for
highway improvements in upper
Pomeroy.
By the way, the Ewing-Acree
wedding was beautiful. Gold
Racine's Marilyn Powell sent cherubs in various positions of
along a couple of tapes for me to repose were used lavishly 10 decor.njoy. Tbe tapes are "my kind of rate the Trinity Church windows
lusic" and Marilyn knows what -1 . and the dining tables at the recep•':e. Trust me these tapes have all tioo. And after the ceremony, there
.f the golden oldies which I enjoy was no rice to tllrow as the couple
tboroullhly . By tbe way, with exited the church. Instead, small
music ? what it is today, can you bells tied in ribbons were given
: get arrested for having tapes of each guest. And you guessed it, as
those great hits of yesterday in your the couple left the church everyone
borne? Wouldn't surprise me none.
rang their little bells. Now that was
'
a nice switch, to say the least.
Pan! Clark of Middlepon bas a
favorite poem from the McGuffey
Remember when you could buy
Reader called "Forty Years Ago." the people on your Christmas gift
Paul believes that this was set to list abbut anything and you scored.
music a!ld in fact. recalls sin_ging a Today. all of us have too much
part ·of it with a quartet 111 the "good stuff' and gift buying takes a
1940's. Would anyone have a copy Iotta thought and a Iotta money.
But you keep smiling. ·
of the sheet music?

The annual live Nativity scene
: will be presented Saturday evening.
Dec. 9, at the Father's House
: Church at nearby Hartford, W.Va.
: The scene will be quite exten: sive with live animals so you might
. want to pop by to view it. To get
: there you hang a tum onto Fifth St..
· in Hartford and motor towards the
· Ohio River. I am assured that you
: can't miss it.
I had my first chat with Bob
Harnm: I(Jrtner Meigs resident, Saturday at the wedding reception of
. Beth Ewing and David Acree held
at tlte Meigs High School. in probably over 50 years.
Bob is a first cousin of Ben
Ewing, father of the bride, and be
and his wife, the former Martha
Roedel of Pomeroy, daughter of tlle
· late Mr. and Mrs. J. 0. Roedel
carne in for the wedding and reception. Bob and Martha left Pomeroy
· in U1e 1950's and settled in CbiUicothe. Over the passing years, Bob
has been involved in his own insurance agency and real estate firm
but is now practically all but
rctireo . He and Marthastiillove the

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''StiU"
By Martha V. Parsons

To listen be stiU
trees
To hear be still
The children playing in the
To hear the sweet sounds of
leaves
peace
Snow falling, icy crystals
Silence at times to bear God's
forming from our breath
voice
Sledding down a hill
Listen at what He says
coming to a crest
Rest at the end of day
A snowman in the moonlight
still to feel the calm embrace
witl1 a scarf on his breast
of quiet time.
with a slight grin on his face
Still to take in natures vasbless
thinking what Poetry and
Still to listen til your heart
tapping top hat in place
Still to look at the Heavens at
A skater on a frozen pond
night
a swan with his neck held low
and marvel at God's holy lights
A dancer witl1 a red dress on
Still to listen 10 God's sound of
Poetry in motion
music,
Birds floating on air
leaves against branches, wind
and the waves of tile ocean
whistling
A baby learning to walk
around windows, '\:hildren
more poetry in motion
laughing at play,
A wave of the hand
birds singing and farmers
a blink of an eye
putting in hay,
a smile, a frown, a tear
waterfalls and rain bitting metal
To wiggle you toe
rooftops
to breath a sigh
like millions of dancers tapping
to whistle a tnne
away.
Ob my. more Poetry in Motion
Be still to bear ,.
A hug, a kiss, a pat on the back
Be still to listen
a word of love
So you can always bear
a show of kindness
what He bas to say.

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iiS residents. Even IS include regular

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programs, and theme week participation.
Ashland University is a private,
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north central Ohio between Cleveland and Columbus. On-campus
enroUment is 1,800 students while
total enrollment, including graduate
and off·c~unpus progmm centers, is
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�Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 7, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

County recorder announces recent Meigs land transfers
The following land transfers 1
were recorded recently in !he office
of Meigs County Recorder Emmagene llamillon:
Right of way. Anthony Bowie to
TPCWD. Olive. 10 acres;
Right of way, Michael and
Sheila Connolly to TPCWD. Olive,
2.8976 acres;
Ri ght of way, Rkhard and Deborah Gilmore to TPCWD. Olive.
2.2303 acres;
Right of way. Chester Wells to
TPCWD. Olive. 2Y acres;
Righ i of way, Rober! and Mari lynn Tru sse ll to TPCWD, Olive.
99.50 acre':
Right of way. Patricia Ingram to
TPCWD. Olive. 5.039 acres:

Right of way, Roger D. and
Mary Lou Mace to Columbus
Southern Power, Columbia;
Right of way, Janice and Tom
R. Reuter, Marilyn Ann and Dow
Graham, .Jean Strauss and Bernice
E. Riffle to CSP, Bedford;
Right of way, David R.. Carol
M., Herbert 0. and Gloria M.
Riggs, Edith M. and Jimmy A.
Hecker! to CSP, Bedford;
Deed. Theodore P. and Carol J.
Sauber to Kelly P. Sauber, Bedford
parcel. 23 acres;
Deed. Ellsworth J. and Ann F.
Holden 10 Kristina Chase Strom.
Columbia parcels;
Deed . Jerrod S . and Amy B.
Barber to Oral W. and Cora A.

Raines, Olive lot, 70 acres;
Deed, Mabel A. Sheets to Gregory C. Sheets, Bedford;
Deed, David W. Grindstaff to
Mabel A. Sheets, Sutton parcel;
Deed, John R. and Violet F.
Hunnell to George D. Stobart Jr.,
Antiquity/Letart. 1/4 acre;
Right of way, Leonard and
Tanya Huffman to Buckeye Rural
Electric Cooperative, Bedford;
Rigbt of way, John and Marjorie
L. Hunter to BREC, Bedford;
Right of way, Davey and
Catherine Wolfe to TPCWD, Letart
lots, 50.160 acres;
·
Right of way , Michael J. and
Mindy Hill to TPCWD. Sutton.
2.1 B9 acres;

- - -- - - - - -- - -

Problem-plagued
probe reaches
Jupiter
Atter an ePIC s1x-year voyage
through space that earned 1tto
encounters w1th Earth. Venus
and two astero1ds. the Galileo

soacecraft nas arnveo at 1ts
des!lnat1on.

~~plte~tac;~

Dlameter:BB.

730

miles

Right of way, Thomas M.
Theiss to TPCWD, Sutton, 39.70
acres;
Right of way, Paul imd Allie
Simon to TPCWD, Salisbury, 1.01
acres;

Right of way, Bruce and Pamela
Blackston to TPCWD. Chester. 13
acres;

Right of way, Wenda
Williamson and Ken Hymes to
TPCWD. Orange, 22.50 acres;
Right of way, George and Virginia Foster to TPCWD, Letart,
13.682 acres;
Right of way, George and Virginia Foster to TPCWD, Letart,
13.700 acres:
Ri~hl of way, George and Vir-

ginia-Foster to TPCWD, Letart.
22 956
:
·Righ~c;;CS:.Vay, Miriam and Dale
R eo lime t 10 TPCWD Letart,
59Jpcres· n
'
·Ri b~ of ~ay, Joy Ann Ellis to
~. Lelart, 20593 acres;
Right of way , Mar~ Jane and
Matthew M · Carr 10 TPCWD,
Lelart, 10.30 acres;
Right of way, Union Sunday
School to TPCWD. Letart.. 50

TPCWD, Letart, 48.57 acres;
R1ght of way, Jay Hall Jr. to
TPC~. Letart. 3 acres;
R1gbt of way, Jay Hall Jr. to
TPCWD, Letart, 64.453 acres;
Right of way, Tberon and Mary
Johnson to TPCWD, Letart, 31.80
acres;
Right of way, Henry Lauhon,
deceased, Margaret Lauhon to
TPCWD, Letart, 5 acres;
Right of way, Rex and Julia
Houdasbelt Thornton to TPCWD,

acre;

Letart, 16.20 acres;

za

Right of way, Kermit and Belva
Fisher to TPCWD, Letart. .35 acre;
Right of way, Eugene E. and
Hilda Davis to TPCWD. Letart,
13.00 acres;
· Right or way, Jay Hall Jr. to

Right of way, Larry and Nancy
Cummins to TPCWD, Letart, 33.33
acres;
Right of way, Darrell and Jan nette Norris to TPCWD, Letart,
5.23 acres.

Scientists .cross their finger as they
I await Galileo'~ arrival at Jupiter
1

PASADENA, Cahf. (AP)- ~a1t about an hour for confmnaWhile pushing on toward
Sc1enbsts could only hope~ Jll'l!Y lion.
. .
. •
Jupiter, Galileo has been making
tod~y as they awa1ted Gahleo s
Once 10s1de Jupl!er ~ atmo - and relaying measurements of
while-knuckle rendezvous with sphere, !he probe was des1gned to interplanetary dust and Jupiter's
Jupller. !he culmm~~on of a trou- sl~wly parachute down and_ relay far-reaching magnetic field -the
Moons: Four ' bled stx-year, 2.3 b1lhon-mile jour- cn!Jcal atmosphenc mforma!Jon to stron~est known.
Critical low-gain
ney.
the orbiting mothership before
major
antenna
The spacecraf!'s 746-pound melting and vaporizing in intense
(the "Galilean
The $1 .6 billion Galileo mission
Tricl&lt;les data to Earth In a dispersed.
Moons,·
probe !hat it released it July must pressure and heat.
has suffered its share of setbacks.
low-power beam thai carries only 8
show
enter Jupiter's gaseous atmosphere
Unless !he probe perishes soon- The spacecraft was launched from
to 16 bits ol1nformation per second
below):
today at exactly !he right angle to er, contact between !he two spac;e- a space shuttle in 1989 after a delay
12 known
hegin transmitting data. If not; it craft is scheduled to end after '?S that was caused by !he explosion of
.~-7-·' ; ·
additional
could
be hurtled into space or minutes, when !he orbiter will bum the shuttle Challenger.
'·
small
incinerate.
its engine for 49 minutes to get into
satellites
Then its high-capacity main
' 'This is clearly !he most critical position for a two-year journey
antenna failed to open properly,
day we've had since launch," said around !he giant planet.
Torrence Johnson, Galileo project . "The bum that gets us into orbit forcing scientists to find alleJ11ative
Earth to scale
methods to beam data home by
scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion ts when my while knuckles will
•
using a slow-speed antenna. That
Laboratory and a veteran of the begin to show," said Gary Kuntsreduced the craft· s capacity for
Galileo mission since planning man, deputy manager of Galileo's
0
0
0
began in 1974 . "We've done engineeringoflice.
capiUring and sending home picOnce in orbit, Galileo was
' everything bumanly possible to
Jupiter's largest moons
tures; scientists bad hoped for thou•
make
sure
we've
got
all
contingenexpected
to
sqnare-dance
in
space,
sands
of images.
frOm ~n to rigl1t: lo (2.256 mies across).
cies covered."
using !be gravity of Jupiter's
Europa (1 ,950 mi.), Ganymede (3.2"(0
Most recently, the failure of a
The probe's arrival at !he band~ moons to make II different-shaped
mi.) and Callisto (2.983 mi.)
tape
recorder forced engineers to
, j ed, red-spoued planet was scbed.orbits of the planet. The journey
restrict
its use today so they could
uled for just after 2 p.m. PST, but should yield !he closest-ever views
focus
on
!he probe.
Balky tape recorder
scientists said !hey would have to of Jupiter's moons.
Jammed main antenna In October. Galileo's tape recordermallunclloned.
~~----------------------------Now useless: would have blasted data back Engineers managed to get it workmg again. but have declared part
ot the tape "off irrils'lor lurure recordings. whicn reduces the amount
to Earth at 134.400 rnts persecond.
Rotation:
9 hours 51 minutes
Grovtty: 2.69times
that of Earth

I

•

Galileo
Orbiter

ol data Galileo can store.

Instrument capsule
parachutes into Jupiter

Encounter events: Dec. 7, 1995
All times are Earth-received times (allowing

fo~ B: l9~.m. EST: .

Orbtl Insertion

signals to travel/rom Jupt/er at me speed ot light
- approximately 52 minules)
Europa's orllrt

.. - ···-···-·· -··· ········ "· ······-

~.

1

,~ Ga&lt;too
oatateception
..
up&lt;o ·76

~

, • tapsule as itctescenc:ts into

ath ,._

GallleoOrbitetSP ..... ··A probe capsule carrying Instruments was
O)e&lt;te&lt;l by Galileo 1n Ju~ On Dec.1. the capsule
wrll stnke Jupter's atmosphere at 106.000 miles
per hour (left}. creating a hreball hotter than the
surtace of the sun.The probe decelerates to
only tOO mph 1n about two m1nutes. A

parachute then will pop out (r~ghl). and the
probe will descend. transmiltmg rts data back
to the Gatrteo Orbiter, until itrs crushed by
Jupiter's h1gh atmospherrc pressure.

I

,.,. To Earth
' and Sun

spacocrahtnto·Oiblt '

""C-1&gt;.

10's ~~,, -- · ·-Jup
·
Probe capsule's pa~h
-

Gab~ s rodfl!t engKte bums
for 49 mlllllcs to put ltle

roco~

~

.mmutesoltll\llllroorttte

~·--· ·· •

JL ._. . .

JUJllle(s.·almosphere

-""s ,;:pmEST

1'38 p.m. EST.·

Probe entry

Ia flyby

tnSirument capsule '1lakes

Gat•eo passes 600 miles at&gt;ove
f1ery entry 1nto .Aip!ter·s
Juprter's mooo lo. Plans br dose-up atmospt,ere. begirs
pt\(ltr.'l!; ;m! r.:anr..elled to $3\'6 spacA .transmitting read~ bed.
oo Ga•teo·s tape recorder
to Galileo

Once in ortJit. Galileo uses the gravity of Jupiter's moons 10 swing from one
encounter to another during its two-year mission. Gafifeo will Hy by Ganymllde
four times, Callisto three·and Europa three. lo gets no more visits, because its

---h~h-~d::: .•:viron::/. would damage Ga/ileos electr~~ics----~_j

~

AP/Kart Tate

Source: NA SA Jet Proput s1on LatJOratory

-----=-. Community
The Communi!)' Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non·profit groups wishing to
announce meetin g and special
events. The c·alendar is not
designed to promote sales or
rund raisers or any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
THURSDAY
RACINE - Ann Angalouc,
learning style specialist, will give
program from 6 to 8 p.m. at Southern High School, Thursday. for
Letart Falls Elementary staff and
parents. Any teacher or parent in
Meigs County is invited to allend
the workshop whtch IS provtded by
Vcnture Capital and Title I.
REEDS VILLE - Cool ville
Community choir will perfonn !he
cantata, "Make liis Praise GlonOtls" at Riverview Elementary
School. Thursday, 7 p.m. The performanc e is sponsored by the
Reedsville and Long Bol!om l,Jnil: ed Methodist Churches, Failh Full
. Gospe l Church . Reedsville Ch~rch
of Christ , and Eden Umted
Brethren Church. Public invited.
RUTLAND - Rolland Town·
ship tmstees regular meeting. 6:30
. p.m.. Ru 1hu11.1 Fire Station.
POMEROY
PERl group
: meetin g. I p.m., Meigs County
· Senior/Mu ltipurpos e Center.
Speakers and lunch will be at 12
noon . All mcmhers are urged to
. auepd .
POM EROY - Pomeroy group
of Alcoholics Anonymous open
disf uss ion meeting , 7 p.m ..
Po'l'eroy Municip'a.l Building. .
RUTLAND - Senior Saints to
meet at the Rutland Church of God,
1 p.m. Thursday. Rev . John Evans
to speak. Potluck luncheon.
RACINE Meeting of
Racin e· s Christmas in tbe Park
commillee, 7 p.m. Thursday at Star
Mill Park
FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM
H)'mn
sing at Faith Full Gospel Church

calendar----

Friday. 7 p.m. Pas!Or Steve Reed
invites all.
SATURDAY
RUTLAND- Living Christmas tree, Saturday, 7:30p.m on !he
Rutland Civic Center lawn. Public
invited.
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter. Daughters of !he
American R.:volutioil, 10 a.m. Saturday at !he Meigs County Public
Library. Holiday music lo be lead
by Laura Guthrie. Members to take
favorite music hox or instrument
for display. Chairman is Mary
Rose.
SUNDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern High
School holiday concert and art
show to be held at 3 p.m. Sunday in

!he gymnasium.

•

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections, 9 a.m. Tuesday
at !he office, for regular monthly
meeting.
RACINE - Southern Local
Building Committee meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m. ill !he high school cafeteria. All district residents urged to
attend.

CHQI~TMA6

Thursday, December-22nd

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at !he borne
of Mrs. Wendell Hoover. A Christmas program will be presented by
!he music committee.

With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung by
the fire and scenes blanketed with snow, l:hrlstl088
encompasses warmth qnd good eheer as we cherish the
blessings we've shared this past year. For us It means
saying •'thanks" to you, our many friends, old and
new, whose ldnd support we'll always treasure. Doing
business with you Is our greatest pleasure!

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Thursday, December 7, 1995

The Daily Sentinel • Page 11

Top Clinton aide
pledges limited
role in Bosnia
. By JOHN OMICINSKI
Gannett News Service
WASH1NGTON - Because of
!he biller lessons of Vietnam and
Somalia, American troops won' 1~
try "nation-building" in Bosnia;
President Clinton's national security adviser, Anthony Lake, said
Wednesday.
Rather •. U.S.-NATO troops in
Bosma ":!II try l? give warring
s1des a breatb1ng space" to
rebuild, Lake told reporters at
breakfast.
Lake's remarks reflected how
deeply !he Vietnam and Somalia
experiences are felt among the
: White House's lop strategists.
"We learned in Vie!Darn and in
a much lesser way in Somalia that
. the international community,
mcludmg the United States, cannot
build nations," said Lake. "The
international community neither
should, nor can, nor will underlake
such a mission in Bosnia.;' Nation. building is lhe responsibility of the
. Bosnians, "not us," said Lake.
· "I spent !he tirsl I0 years of my
(working) life on Vietnam," said
'·-Lake, who resigned from Henry
Kissinger's White House staff over
. !he Nixon administiation · s conduct
. ·Of the Southeast Asian war. " ...
•.. we asked our troops to do things
!hat were beyond !heir capacity.
"So we have defined a mission
: ... very carefully .. . and the

prospects of success are very
bigb."
He said missions of !he U.S.
forces will include keeping the
warring part.ies apart, overseeing
!heir movements into designated
zones. maintaining !he ceasefire;
and enforcing a ·'climate of security ."
Lake said these were "very
clear and very achievable ... within
a year."
Although orinion polls are running against sending 20,000 troops
to Bosnia. Lake is confident the
momentum will shift when the
"public sees highly trained American tioops doing U1eir jobs. Opposition will start to fade away."
Lake predicted Congres~ will
support Clinton's move to send
troops to Bosnia wilh a resolution
both critical of !he president and
calling for certain restrictions. He
said !he administration is bargaining with Congress on the language
of !he restrictions.
"In the end , they will be supportive of the troops and of !he
national interest,'· Lake predicted.
But he acknowledged !he political volatility of Bosnia.
Asked if it could lose the 1996
election tor Clinton. Lake replied.
"Of course it could - this is a
tough issue. It's an old:fasbioned
view I know. but I thmk m the
long 'run !he. best policy will tum

GOP senators remain
split over supporting
U.S. troop deployment
By JOHN DIAMOND
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - An internal debate among Senate Republicans is
intensifying as lawmakers look to a vote next week on whether to supporl
deploying U.S . troops to Bosnia.
Wilh Senate Republican leader Bob Dole trying to craft a mea,ure !hal
can win wide acceptance, eight GOP colleagues offered a ri val resolution
Wednesday against the deployment. Republicans on opposite sides of !he
issue were to meet today to map out next week'~ debate .
"I'm concerned about !he policy !hat we've adopted in !his administration of gelling into these humanitarian involvements and U1en coming to
Congress and asking for support," said Sen. James lnhofc. R-Okla .. an
Armed Services Commiuee member who led the push lor the anti-deployment proposal.
.
The Clinton administration. while insisting it does not need congressional authority to dispatch some 20,000 peacekeepers to th e former
Yugoslav republic. kept up its campaign for congressional support.
DISCUSSING BOSNIA - Assistant Secretary or State Richard
President Clinton hosted a meeting of fonner national security official s
Holbrooke, lert, coruerred with Joint Chiers Chairman Gen. John
at
!be
White House and dispatched three of his own top defen se ant.! for·
Shalika.&lt;hvili during testimony on Capitol Hill Wednesday berore
eign atlair.s adviser.; to the Armed Services hearing.
tbe Senate Armed Services Committe. hearing on the Bosnian
Dole and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., are working on a draft proposal
peacekeeping mission. (AP)
that reluwmtly suppom the deploymcn: while, at the same time, insistin g
on a definite plan to arm the Bosnian government. Only by rcanning the
Muslim-led government can the United States ensure !hat peace will hold
out to be the best policy ....
of 60,000 drawn from NATO and.
after
the troops come home in about a year, the two senators argue .
"The American people in the in all , 25 nations.
According
10 a dmfl of !he Dole-McCain proposal obtained by Th e
end want a president who makes
Tbe Bosnia peace accords will
Associated
Press.
the resolmion would require that the United States
hard decisions and takes responsi - be signed next Tuesday in Paris,
"lead
an
itruncdiate
effort. separate and apart from lhe NATO implemen bility, even if it's on a hard issue. "
wilh Clinton planning to auend.
force
,
to
provide
equipment. arms. training and related logistic s
tation
Wilh some public opinion polls
Also Wednesday, the prcsidcll!
assistance
of
the
highest
possible quality" to the Bosnian govcmmcnl .
running 2-1 against the U.S. met at the White House with a
The
aid
could
include
surplus
U.S. anns.
deplpyment, Clinton got a li,tlle cmss-section of supporters of the
Detense
Secretary
Willimn
Perry told the ;mncd services rancl that
more time Wednesday to avoid military mission, including AlexanClinton
was
not
prepared
to
accept
that provision , but was willing to ·
what would be a politically embar- der Haig, secretary of state in the
negotiate.
Like
Senate
Republicans.
Clinton
wants to equalize tile military
rassing- and historically unprece- Reagan administralion. anti Zbigimbalance
that
kept
Bosnia
on
!he
defensive
against rebel Serb auacks for
dented - rejection of actions t.'llt:en niew Brzezinski, national security
much
of
the
three-year
civil
war.
But
!he
administration
is anxious to
as commander-in-chief.
adviser to Jinuny Carter.
avoid
putting
U.S.
uoops
in
danger
by
appearing
to
take
sides.
On Capitol Hill, !he Senate post' 'Today you have joined across
A more direct challenge to the Clinton administration came from tl1e
poned until next week a debate on partisan lines to make a suong case
eight
Republican senator.; who said they will propose a separate resolu !he deployment of 20,000 troops to for America 's leadership in
tion
asking
the Senate to reject !he Clinton deployment.
Bosnia. They will be part of a force Bosnia," Clinton said.
"I think !he president has made a mistake," said Sen. Don Nj.cklcs, ROkla. "I t11ink it's important !hat Congress express itself."
·
At the same time, Nickles conceded !hat "!his resolution is not going
to stop the deployment of troops ."
In a sign of splintering wilhin the Republican ranks. !he eight senators
•
!he alleg~tions .
royalties on each copy sold . The included Alfonsc D' Amato of New York, one of Dole's leading supportIf charges are filed. Gingrich committee said the deal "grea!ly
ers in !he presidential cmnpaign. Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss .. assistant to
would have a hearing to conlest exceeds !he financial bounds of any
Dole in the Rcpublic;m leadership, broke wiU1 the majority leader earlier
them. If the commiuee finds the book contract'' contemplated under !his week over Bosnia.
speaker guilty of major violations, House rules .
The oU1ers supporting !he proppsal arc Sens. Larry Craig of Idaho. Phil
it would recommend punishment to
The committee "suongly ques- Grmnm and Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas. Hank Brown of Colorado
!he House - ranging from a repri- tions !he appropriateness of what
and Jon Kyl of Arizona.
mand to expulsion.
some could describe as an attempt
Some Democrats said !be pressure on !hem 10 oppose the deployment
The investigation of !he coUege by you to capitalize on your
was intense.
course's financing with tax- office.'· !he Ieuer to the speaker
deductible contributions may not said.
be !he only remaining ethics problem for !he Georgia Republican.
The panel recommended that
The Federal Election Commis- curbs be placed on income from
sion last week released documents
future book deals and !hat rules for
of GOPAC, !he Republican politi- floor speeches be clarified "to
cal action commiUee led by Gin- guide members with greater preci·
grich from !he mid-1980s U1rough
. "
SIOll.
earlier !his year. The FEC contended !he records demonstrated t11at
The comminee recommended
wilh Gingrich at !he helm, GOPAC
!hat
book royalties be included in
violated federal election laws .
c;urrenl
rule s limiting outside
Bonior has said he soon willl11e
earned
income
for lawmakers to
a new ethics complaint based on
$20,040.
!hose documents.
In Gingrich's favor, the conunittee said !he contract for .Gingrich's
book, "To Renew America," was
in "technical compliance" with
rules !hat a publishing arrangement
be "usual and customary."·
And it found no violation in
allegations thai signing a dejil with
a publisher owned by media owner
Rupert Murdoch - who lobbied
Gingrich on legislative matters constituted a conflict of interest.
The panel dismissed a complaint
that Gingrich received a gift of free
e.rteading retailer of DSS, in the USA
cable television time and !hat a
publisher's auction for the book
• Only national retailer with the
was rigged. The auction drove up
the advance Gingrich was offered
hard-to-find DSS accessories
to $4.5 million- an amount be
relinquished after intense criticism.
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.Ethics Committee cites Gingrich violations
By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON House
Speaker Newt Gingrich committed
lhree etllics violations, and a college course he taught will be invesligated by an outside counsel, the
House ethics committee said in a
highly critical letter on his conduct
Writing to Gingrich on fmdings
it approved I 0-0 on Wednesday,
the panel also admonished the
speaker for signing a lucrative
book deal !hal created "!he impressian of exploiting one's office for
personal gain."
While a Democratic nemesis.
Rep. David Bonior of Michigan,
said !he findings made Gingrich a
"wounded politician," the feisty
speaker cited several complaints
.that were dismissed and pro·
nounced himself pleased wilh !be
outcome.
"I am conlldent, after !he oommiltee examines the remaining
charge, it too will be dismissed,"Gingrich said of the outside coun.sel's investigation that was so
•eagerly sought by De~ocrats.
The comm1t1ee ac!Jon means the
:speaker will be under an ethics
:cloud 111 1996 whtle Democrats
·make h1s part1sansh1p and conser·
:va!ive legislative agenda !he focus
·of !heir effort to recapture a majori:ty in the House.
. _
.
: The comnuuee of hve R~pubh·can and f1ve Democrats d1d not
:vote to punish Gingrich for' the
:lhree violations. but it recommend·ed changes m ~ome House rules.
· According to !he findings, Gin·grich:
..
• Allowed a trusted political
adviser, Joseph Gaylord, to use his
congressional office, violating a
rule prohibiting use of official

resources for unofficial purr.oses.
• Misused his floor privileges in
House speeches by giving out a
toll-free number In order Gingrich
political 1m!terials. This amounted
to an "improper solicitation" for
commercial purposes.
• Conunitteil a similar violation
by using lloor speeches to publicize a nationwide town meeti11g
sponsored by GO PAC.
Committee Chairman Nancy
Johnson, R·Conn., and ranking
Democrat James McDermott of
Washington did not say when the
special counsel would be appointed.
The cummillee already bas
interviewed candidates, including:
Ronald A. Pearlman, a Reagan
administration Treasury official;
Cono R. Narnorato, a fanner Justice Department lawyer: Milton
Cerny, a former Internal Revenue
Service official; and· James M.
Cole, a former Justice Department
- prosecutor.
House Majority Leader Dick
Armey, R-Texas, appearing with
Bonior on ABC's Nightline, minimized the committee's action.
Armey said !he panel investigated
65 allegations against !he speaker.
and found "no cause for action"
on 64 of !hem.
Bonior who has led !he ethics
attacks ag~inst Gingrich. was carrying out a "vendetta," Armey
said.
Armey said the committee wanted a special counsel because it
needed " technical advice" on tile
tax questions related to !he course
Gingrich taught.
The outside counsel's investigalion only starts a long process !hat
eventually will result in a decision
to file formal charges or dismiss

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.Report indicates economy slowing again
WASHINGTON (AP) - The effect on U1e gauge 13 limes in !he expansion ahead .
In a cost-culling move, the
j!Overnment' s main forecasting last 14 months.
gauge of eoonomic activity plunged
Wall Street has continued to beleaguered Commerce DepartIn October to its lowest level in soar as t11e evidence of sluggish- ment is transferring control of tile
morethanayearandahalf.
ness mounts. The Dow Jones Index of Leading Economic Indica: 1be Commerce Department said industrial average on Tuesday set tors to the New York-based Conference Board. a private· research
~ednesday its Index of Leading its 67lh record for !he year. ·
Economic Indicators fell 0.5 perThe government has estimated group. The switch will take place
cent in October, !he biggest drop that gloss domestic product, the later !his month.
Republicans have called the
since it skidded 0.6 percent in broadest measure of economic
April. The gauge has not been activity, advanced a robust 4.2 per- Commerce Department a wastcful
lower since February 1994.
cent in the third quarter or more hodgepodge and propose eliminat·
"The economy is running out of til an three times the increase the · ing !he agency. 11m! plan. has been
shelved for now.
gas. It needs help," said economist previous three months.
Seiren of !he II component~ of
Maury Harris of PaineWebher Inc.
Economists said the growth was
A barrage of data lately suggests overstated in !he July-September !he index made negative contribua sluggish economy, raising hopes q~arter, and predict only modest tion~ to the gauge in October.
the Federal Reserve will lower .,.;._ _""!'"!!'.1_..,__________________•
interest mtes at its last meeting of
!he year on Dec. 19.
Analysts said uncertainty over
budget negotiations between Presi·
dent Clinton and congressional
Republicans could persuade !he
Fed to delay any cut. The Fed may
want concrete, evidence of reduced
govemmelll spending before it aets,
.
analysts said.
The central bank, after doubling
!he 1111e banks charge each other for
overnight loans over a one-year
span, lowered !be rate in July for
!he fust time in nearly three years
and ~ remained on hold since.
· The (1Jdex of Leading Economic
lndica1ors, which is about to be
turned over to private analysts. bas
advanced only twice !his year. It
fell 0.1 percent in September after
a 0.2 percent gain the previous

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�If

.: ·Page 12 • The Daily. Sentinel

Thursday, D~mber 7,1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 7, 1995

The Dally Sentinel • Page 13

Po.meroy • Middleport, Ohio

~~~Conservative, liberal win Oregon primary to replace Packwood
accomplished for uregon.
&lt;;&gt;regonians ~ill have no trouble telling Smith and Wyden apart. To
busn~ssman Smtlb, the less government, the better. To Wyden, government needs reshapmg, but the GOP "Conl;.lct With America" goes over·
board.
Although victorious, W&gt;:den emerges battered from the Democratic
pnmary. DeFazw, who tmUally lagged far behind the better-known
Wyden 111 the polls. accused his Democratic rival of selling out to corporate mtercst.,.
And Wydcn had to overcome his poor showing on the TV pop quiz.
Conservattvc ~1lk show host Rush Limbaugh reran footage of the quiz,
showmg Wyden unsuccessfully trying to find Bosnia on a globe. Wyden
srud he couldn't see w1thout his gl~es; Limbaugh sent him a globe with
arTOws pomtmg toward Bosnia
Nut t11at Li mbaugh's audience is likely to go for Wyden anyway.
Wyden. who went to Congress in 1980 as an advocate for senior citizens
and consumers, is a Lraditional urban Democrat who has put protecting
Medtcare and Medtcrud at the top or his congressional to-do list. But he
also has slr~sscd his ability to work with people on both sides of the aisle.
DeFazio. who relishes his image as a scrappy outsider, mocked that, too.
. The pnmary leaves DeFazio in a strong position to run for Sen. Mark
Hatfield' s scat in November. But because DeFazio would have to give up
Ius 4th Congressional District seat representing Eugene and southwest
Oregon. that race C&lt;'UTies additional risks.

:::By JILLYN McCULLOUGH
• :. Tht Saltm Statesman Journal : : PORTLAND, Ore.- Oregon voters will choose between conservative
Republican Gordon Smith and liberal Democrat Ron Wyden in the Jan.
30 election to fill Bob Packwood's seat in lbe U.S. Senate.
The two political opposites won their respective primaries Tuesday in
tb ~ nation 's first mail-in congressional elections. The January general
election - to replace Packwood, who resigned in September after facing
ethics complaints of sexual and official misconduct - also will be by
mail.
Smith, who Lrounccd GOP moderate Nanna Paulus in Tuesday's pri. mary election, wasted no lime in going after his new rival - hoisting a
.. . loaf of hrcad, a jug of milk and a gallon of gasoline in his victory speech
:-. at a downtown hotel.
·
·'The kind of people I'm meeting buy this stull everyday,' · Srrjtb said.
referring to Wyden 'spoor showing in a TV station's pop quiz on just how
much people had to pay for bread and milk :Uld gas.
Wyden, &lt;UI eight-term congressman. had a much closer race, wiUJ fel low Democratic Rep. Peter DeFazio running a respectable second.
The TV quiz w"' also on Wyden's mind Tuesday night.
"The people of Oregon have restored Utc.hopes and dreams of every
student who ha' failed a pop quiz in school," he said in a speech to supporters at :moUwr downtown Portland hotel. ·'I'm very emharTa~sed tbat I
hlew tbe pop 4uiz, but you have made it clear the real test is what I have
..

"

"' as support· DeFazio wasn't saying Tuesday whether he would run. But
!ers at a Eugene hotel shouted for him Lo run, he shouted: ''I'll make y~ a
'promise. You haven't heard the last from Peter DeFaziO, the underdog.
, Smith, who is in his first term as a slate senator from Pendleton,
:already has used the Democrats' bickering to his advantage. .
. Last week, be began airing a television commerctal accusm~ . Wyden
and DeFazio of being career politicians more intent on attackmg each
other than balancing the budget. Smith was barely known outstde of h!s
eastern Oregon district and the state ::apiLOI when he launcbed hts candt·
dacy, just hours after Packwood announced his resignation in September.
But as the multimillionaire owner of a Pendleton frozen food company,
he bas deep pockets. Smith set aside about $1 million of his own money
to win tbe primary, allowing him to hire staff quickly and go on tbe rur
with nonstop television commercials.
He drew some criticism for accepting the endorsement of the conservative Oregon Citizens Alliance, which ha&lt; pushed anu-gay nghts measures .
But the criticism didn't seem to slick.
Social issues were never a big part of Smith's campaign. Instead, he
pledged his ~uppon ror a balanced budget amendment. lower taxes and a
more business-like approach to government
And because Paulus, who was state school superintendent, didn't have
the money for TV. ads, Smitb was able to concentrate on his l\~n message,
rather than having to respond to Paulus' charges. She pnrnanly accused
bim of buying the election and lying about her record.

I

·Paper history of the United States on view at the National Archives
. By HOLliS L ENG LEY
· Gannett News Service'
· Mi It Gustafson thinks we arcn 't
as civil 10 one anolher as we once
· were.

The se nior archivi st at the
National J\rchivcs finds his evidence in a piece of paper no bigger

than a note ca rd. dated Ocl. 2.
1865.
" I, Ruben E. Lee of Lexington,
Virginia, do solemnly swear, in the
presence of Almighty God, that I
will hcncef(\f,Ul faithfully support.
protect and defend U1c Constitution
of the United States, :md the Union

lhereundcr , and that I will in like
manner abiJe by and faithfully support all laws and proclamations
which have been made during lbe
existing rebellion witb reference to
the emancipation of slaves, so help
me God."
The amnesly oath of the great

In Memory
In loving memory of
SHERMAN I.
ROBERTS,
who passed away
13 years ago,
December 7, 1982.
As the days slowly
turn to years,
The love we shared
will never disap·
pear.
You will always be
in our hearts and
in our minds.
Sadly missed by wife,
Dorothy, children and
grandchildren.

Are you looking for
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Longterm
relationship?
1-900-255-1515
Ext. 1064
$2.99/Min ..
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Touchtone Phone
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TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

CHECK THE CLA~~IFIED~ FOR ALL YOUR NEED~!
In Memory
LEONARD
BASS
Dec. 7, 1991
We still love
and miss you,
especially
during this
holiday season.
Wife, Ora; Children,
Grandchildren,
Great-Grandchildren

GUYS &amp; DOLLS
FIND YOUR
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SAWMILL
Portable
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32124 Happy Hollow Ad.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

992·2269

614~742-2193

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In Tho Motter of Damian
Michael Bloke
Caoo No. 29200
NOTICE
Rovtoad Code, Soc.
2717.01(A)
Notice to hereby given
that Damian Mlchool Blake,
Call No. 29200 of 409 5th
Avo .. Middleport, OH 45760,

712')}'~ 4

A'ri'ENTION
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WOLFIE'S POOL HALL
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also bale. it if yolJ like.

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

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2 LOCATIONS
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91 Mill St.

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992-6250

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992·2549

WICKS
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Pomeroy, Ohio

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local (rafters
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SAT., 6:30 P.M.

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holiday baking

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ext 6694
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$300&amp; up
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69 N. Locust St.
Cheshlre,Oh.
614-367-0302
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11124/9511 mo.
1)\\~\

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c:.~9.'l,c

Round
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Hay for
Sale.
•
Call
614-949-25 12
Will PHOTOGRAPH
ANY SPECIAL
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including weddings,
receptions,
anniversaries,
reunions. Special rates
for individuals,
couples, family groups
in the privacy of your
own home.
Reasonable rates.
Call992-7747.
11/1411 mo.

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THE FUN WAY
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1·900.388·0500
- EXT. 3754
$2.99 Per min.
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Tou1h ·Tone phane
Required
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614-245-0437

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614 992·2753

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OH
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Call 742-2143 or
742-2979
KP's CLEANING
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and Homes.
Have 4 years
experience. Call
for estimate Karen
at 614-843-5327
or 614-949-2632
after 10-1 0·95

LOOKING
FOR LOVE?
1-900-255-4242
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$2.99 per min.
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8 Styles To
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SlartingAt

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At. 2 Pt. Pleasant 304-675-9915
Live Entertainment Dec. 8-9
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Every Wednesday "KARAOKE"
Tues. &amp; Thur. Pool Tournament

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ARE HERE!
Come Early - Big
Selection of Scotch &amp;
White Pine 4' to 9'

On Site Dry Cleaning
Now Available

Premier Cleaners
and Coin Laundry

Rayburns Market

397 West Main St.,
Pomeroy
Under new management
New equipment

KANAUGA, OHIO

992-9923

$12- $20- $22

10% Discount w/Ad

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut/Live

Sweetheart, you ard a
wonderful and sexy man, ·
and have brightened up my
life since I've met you.
Love, Brown

Located on Cherry Ridge: From Rt 33, turn East at
Darwin onto Rl. 681. Go 4 miles to Cherry Ridge Rd., 1
1/2 miles to tree farm. Watch for Signa. 10:00 a.m. til dark
Nov. 24 thru Dec. 24
Wagon Rides/Craft Shop · Weekends

'

Rt. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742·3051

HIOO

OPEN NOV. 23- 10 to 9:00

650-1234

COUNTRY TANN

Repairs/Additions
Craig 614-367-0567
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Personals

005

Gentlem an S6ekmg CompaniOn ·
shtp From Ntce Female For Talks.
Walk s &amp; Fr1end sh1p . Send Re p!ie~ Tu CLA 309, cro Gal lipolis
Dal l y Tr1tlune. 825 Tt11rd Avenue,
Gallipolis. OH 45631

30 Announcements

34480 A Rocksprings Rd.
Co. Rd. 20 North of Meigs Fairgrounds first
drive past horse barns

No huming or 1respass1ng day or
n1Qhl. Charles Yost Farms . All
prev1ous hunt1ng perm1ss1on canceled.

Is your summer tan fading?
New beds with dual face tanners
Also new High Turbo Bed in mid December.

992-5756
HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

Chuck Stotts
614-992-6223
Free Estimates
•
Insurance Work Welcome
State Rt. 33
Darwin, Ohio

Insured

Free Estimates
Stump grinding
Gallipolis, OH

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE• TRUCKING
_

614-441-1191

10121/Mitfn

614 742 2138

~=======~========.
J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

J.D. Drilling Company
Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
Trackhoe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhammer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put In septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call 949-2512
8/3/lln

PENING NOVEMBER 25th
Antiques - Gifts - Folk Art

HA ~TWELL HOIJSE
102 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH 45769
614-992-7696
Holipay Hours: M·S 9:30 · 4:30 p.m.
Sun. 12:00 . 5:00p.m.

949·2512

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, INC.

P.O. Box 587

REASONABLE JlATES

Umestone &amp; Gravel,
Septi( Systems,
Trailer &amp; House Sites.

Licensed &amp;

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20. 00/HR

____

DAILY

Cut &amp; split
Firewood

HOROSCOPE
Up-To-Date
Soap Results

CALL NOWU!
. 1-900-3 78-1800
ht. 633S

992·6.142

$2.99 per min. Must be 18
yrs.

Call Evenin s "''" _

At : Gallipolis Oa1ly Tribune, 8~5
Th1rd Avenue, Galltpoli s, In Back
Of Bu1ld1ng.
Go lden Retriever 3 -4 Yea rs Old,
Loves Children! Wormed, Shots ,
Country Home, 614 -446-0132.

G&lt;ay

vety

and whne cat, hllet·l&lt;ameo.
playlul. answetS 10 Toby. call

614 - ~2 - 7492

alter 6pm

Male, gray &amp; wh1te tiger stnpe cat.
Has had all shots, neutered &amp; declawed. To good home only. 304 -

675·6223.
Mixed Breed Puppies . 614 -446 6233.

.

614-367-0528.

Poodle mix puppies
614·992·5240

giveaway,
.

10

Three

geese to g1veaway, o~e

60

Lost and Found :

Racine, Ohio 45771
male and two females. 61H89·
(614) 949-3013 Phone
4902
·
(614) 949-2018 FAX
I
.
,!!S!!I!4!l!S!
lot l&gt;tewood. You cui down
94!;i•Z!2002!B!.!N~IG~H~T~ : &amp;Ttees
haul away. 304 -675--5091 .

FOR SALE
All Hardwood
Pick-up or Delivery
Available.
Ball logging &amp;
Sawmill

Free Sk1ds To Giveaway, P1ck -Up

Pupp1es. 614-44&amp;-3823.

28563 BASHAN RD.

L

5 Pups, 112 Beagle To G1veawav.
614 -379- 9112

Nice Puppies,

Cheaper Rates

HYDUUUC REPAIR
$32 00/HR
-~==·::::::.•

2 pups, 2mos old, park Elkhound,
part Chow. 304 -675-5621 a lt er
4pm

Touch~ toi'MI

phone ,_.,

s.,..u (619) 645-8414

Found - jacket, Middleport vic1nity,
owner call to ID, 614·992-3503. ·
Found: BlacK Lad1es Le ll Hand
Glove. lsotoner. V1cinity : Noor
Par kmg lot Juanita's Beallty
Shop, Downtown In GallipOl iS,
614 -446- t546
Lost' Black /Purple Gym Bag &amp;
Bla c~ Noteboo~ Case. VIcinity ·
ln ter sect1on 554 &amp; Alr 1ca Road ,
614·446-7750.
'
Lo st Ma le Shu zu Dog, Brown : &amp;
While, Long H aired. Needs Sur ·
gery t217195, 1204 Clark Chapel
Road, Btdwoll, Reward ! 614 -38&amp;--

6679

Sotv·U (619) 645·84J4

Ext. 1525

BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE

ROMANCE

LIVE GIRLS
CALL NOW

.. '

Snow tires now in
stock
Check out our
prices.

••••••
DATES

1112W0511 mo. pd.

:

Wreaths ~ Swags &amp; Grave Blankets

949·2882

One Stop Complete Auto Body Repair

614·949·3027

NEFF REMODELING
SERVICE

$10 &amp; Up

3rd St. Racine, OH.

Racine American
Legion #602
Starting
Sunday, Dec. 3rd
Doors Open
4:30P.M.
Bring !Ill for Free Card
Phone 949-2044
949-2685

Home or
Trailer

111911 mo.

supplies)

9127195 tin

Auto

l/2111n

Gallery

WATKINS
PRODUCTS

CHRISTMAS TREES

1112tr'i511 mo

Accent

FIRE DEPT.

•

Gallipolis
Middleport

Visit Our
Curio

RACINE

Riggs Christmas Trees

ago from the Rochester Psychiatric
Center. He l1a' been in and out of
mental hospitals since 1970 and
had a history of arTests.
A judge ordered a psychiatric
exam after Coco's court-appointed
lawyer said his client was too
demented to di scus s what hap pened.

Check Acquisition's prices before you buy anywhere!
- Lowest Prices on Diamonds and Gold -

mo.

4/13195

to see a li!Ue more of in our country today."
That's tbe point of the archives.
puuing 1995 (or 1865 or 1945 or
1968) in his~rical context through
the 4 billion pieces of paper. 7 million still photographs, 2 million
maps and nearly 9 million aerial
photographs in its collection.
The point of "American Originals," said curator Stacey Bredhoff, is "to let people lcnow what
we have."
About I million visitors come
through the Archives' rotunda
every year, most of them tourist~
peering briefly at the Declaration
or Independence and the Constitution.

OPEN TONIGHT

$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 years.
Touch·tone phone
required.
SERV-U (619) 645-8434

House Repair &amp; ·
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Remodeling
Room Additions
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Reasonable
Insurers- Experienced
Call Wayne Neff 9924405
For Free Estimates

" I thought Lee's oath is one
item lhal rellects what I would like

Santa ·says
'Remember To Shop
Mason Furniture For .
~ieGreat. Christmas Savings!' .·

1900·484·2600
Ext. 6927

FREE
Pick-Up discarded
washers, dryers, hot
water tanks, stoves,
furnaces, and any
. metal materiaL
Call gg2-4025
between 8 am - 8 pm
Mon th ru Sat.

cases, blood tests tlOJ! 't detect the
HIV virus that causes AIDS until
·three months to a year after exposure,
Bellevue
Hospital
spokeswoman Lorenda Klein said.
Angel Coro, 51. has been
charged with assaulting Collcte.
State officials confirmed Tuesday
that Coco had escaped two years

DOZER

CALL YOUR
DATE NOW!!!

11f14/1

relax.

Needle used to stab girl free of AIDS virus

Country Naturals
Gifts &amp; Accessories
317 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH 45760
992-4015
Mon-Sat 9-5;
Evenings Mon. Thurs.
Fri. til 8:00 p.m.
Come in and see
what we have for
Christmas.

11/I J/95 mo.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
985·4473

ment for the territory of Alaska
(with a contemporary cartoon by
Cincinnati Enquirer artist Jim
Borgman reacting to demands in
Russia for return of Alaska); and an
1882 indictment of Jesse and Frank
James "for conspiracy to commit
robbery and Lo defraud tbe United
States."
But the mere existence of Lhe
Lee oalh is enough to tell
Gustafson about how confrontational we have become since the
bloodiest confrontation in our
national history.
"We had a civil war here," he
says. " And yet right after the war
is over, here's Robert E. Lee signing an oath saying he will be Joyal
to the United States. We can batUe
and we can light, but when the battle is over. let's not fight Let's

Confederate general is a small part
of "American Originals." a new
exhibit of documents from the
Archives, displayed in the same
room as the Constitution and the
Declaration of Independence. The
exhibit runs through December
1998.
· The collection of 50 pieces ot
paper and photographs covers 300
years of history, from the last will
and testament of Spanish conquistador Don Diego de Vargas, to
George Washington's lin;t inaugural address, to notes from John
Kennedy's speech at the Berlin
Wall, to Richard Nixon's fofTllal
Public Notice
letter of resignation from the presihu applied io tho Common dency.
Plou Court, Probate
Also: the treaty of tbe Louisiana
Dlvlolon of Motgo County, Purchase; receipt ror $7.2 million
Ohio, for an order to &lt;:hange in payments to the Russian govemhla name to Damian Michael
Wloe.
Satd application witt be
hoard In oald Court, at 1:30
p.m., on the eth day of
NEW YORK (AP) - The neeJanuary, I 996, at Probate dle used by an escaped mental
Court.
patient to stab a 6-year-old girl on a
(12) 7; 1TC
subway train appeared free of the
AIDS virus, in fact free of any bod·
ily fluid, a newspaper reported
today.
That result comes from police
experts who performed tbe test
after Saturday's attack on Collete
Lopez, the New York Daily News
quoted a source as saying. The girl
was wltb her mother and sister
when attacked.
"Based on visual and microscopic examination. there did not
appear to be 3J!Y blood or lll!id'' on
the needle, the newspaper quoted
the source as saying.
Edward Fagan. the Lopez family
lawyer. said Wednesday that they
DUMP TRUCK
bad not yet received the official
results
of tests on the needle.
BACKHOE
Collete underwent a series of
SERVICE
blood tests on Tuesday . In most
•licensed
•Bonded
•Insured .
Jim Hawthorne
985-4386 11/'l/1 mo.

K.&amp;W.

'

(Lime Stone Low Riles)

. MODERN SANITATION
POMEROY, OHIO
Trash removal- Commercial or residential.
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toi lets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAULING
Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE

110\\\1(1)

E\CW\TJ:\(;
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking· Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

992-3954 or 985-3418

LO S!: Smal l Black Dog In Btdwell
SPORTS
Vtc1n1ty. Name· Kat1e. 6111 -245 POINT
1107,614-388-0110
SPREADS
Reward . Lo st Blonde Ge rman
Shephara, GallipoliS Ferry. Found :
AND MOREll!
Bea g le wired colla r 304 . 675 1235.
1-900-884·9204
Ext. 2912
Yard Sale
' 70
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Gallipolis
Touch-tone Phone
Required .
&amp; VIcinity
Serv-U (619) 645·8434 ALL Yard Sales Mus t Be Pa1d In

911-4/95 2 mo. pd

Advance . DEADLIN E : 2:00p. m.
the day befo1e the ad i s to run .

, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , Sunday ed1t1on · 2:00p.m. Fnday.
Monday edit1on · 10 :00 am . Slit·
urday.
·

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

New At King Hardware

&lt;lhe ~'lame
eo'l1te'l
Picture Frame, Mats
&amp; Framing Accessories.
405 North Second Ave., Middleport 992·5020

New Homes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643
( No Sunday Calls)
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;,
2!.;;
&gt;21.;;.;.
9211ln;;_j
..

HOCKINGPORT

MOBILE
HOME PARK

Mobile home
sites for rent

614-667-3630
101111'95 1mo.

Let A Psychic
Answer Your
Questions
1·g0().255-0200
Ext. 5g93
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-Tone Phone
Required
Serv-U (619) 645-8434

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Solid Vinyl
Reph~cement

Windows
We have the
best window
and the best
price

~ ~-,

Movmg Sale : 239 Cora Mill Road,
Rodney, Ffl, Sat, Sun, 9-5, InSide I·

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sales Must Be Pa1d In
Adva nce . Deadl ine · 1 :OOpm t ~e
day before !he ad •s 10 run Sun ·
day edit ion - 1:oopm Fnday.' Mon day edition ! O:OOa.m Saturday. :

6.

Ga rage sa l e - Dec. 7 -9, 910
138400 SR . 124 W. . Pomeroy, new
clolhes, c rafts. jewe lry, used
clothes &amp; m1sc. 1tems.
:

Water

~ ~ Tre~tment

Equ1pment

Du1ribu1ed by

ln s1de -corner ot_Un ion &amp; Long,
Ru Uand beh•nd grade school, Friday &amp; Saturday, qlHit tops, bed spread . Slippe rs . purses, lar g,e
dresses, coats

80

TRI·STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.
The water treatment company cordially invites you to
participate in a free, no obligation , comprehensive water

analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:
TDS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH.
Please call Rnir.Soft at 992-447i or 1-800-606·3313
to set up vour free wat r analysis. 11l15/lfn

r--------------~--

BIB ROOnNG aad'
...
ION
Co,NS7RU
U I
{
)
_

614 992 5041
ReS ldentl a I • COmmerC Ia I • In d USt r Ia I
ONE CAlL DOU JT ALL
~
•Pressure
•Plumbing
•Tile
Cleaning
OCerpentry
-carpet
•Rooflng
.,alntln"
•Dryw·all
·~
-Gutters
oCablnets
oMasonry
•Electrical
&lt;Siding
•Oecka
We Have Emergency Services
7 Daya AWeek, 24 Hou111 A Day.
35 Yea111 experience, all wortc gua111nteed.
"Fall Specials" Leaves cleaned up and hauled
away. Mostyards$49.00
Gutte111 cleaned and screened,
moat 1 story homes, $49.00.
L.--,:;:O;:,:H:;;:IO;,;;-;.:W;.:E;;;S;,;.T.;V.;;,IR:;;:G;;,:IN;::IA;;.,;;-.;:K;:;.EN;,;.T;,;U;,;;C;;,;K.;.Y_1_01&amp;/1_mo_._.

Public Sale ·
and Auction

Auct io ns every Friday -Saturday,
7pm , Mt. Alto Aucuon, At 2· 33
~Crossroads~ . New merct1andis9,
grocer1es &amp; lots more. Ed Frazier

930.
Rick Pearson Auction Compan~.
full ttme auctioneer. complete
auction
service.
Ucens&amp;d
#66,0h10 &amp; West V1rg inia, 304-

773-5785 o, 304-773-5447.

90 Wanted to Buy :
Anl;ques. collectables, eSIBiel,
R1venne Antiques, Russ Moore,
ownet. 614·992·2521i.
·
.'Clean lale

Model

Cars

6r

trucks. 1987 Models Or Newer,
. sm;lh Buick Pont;ac, 1900 Eaat·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

Don·• Junk It! Sell us You1 NonWo1king Majdt Appliances, Color

· TV's

EIC 614-256-1238.

· J &amp; D's Auto Palls. Buying aal•
· ~~g·~·c les. Selling pans. 304-

Top Pnces Pa•d•Old u.s. Co;n,;
Collecl&gt;bles, Papetweig~to. Etc:
t.U.s . co;n Shop, 151 Second·
Avenue,Galhpolm, 614~28&lt;2. .
Used 0'""0 '"re- antiques, on•
Sliver , .Gold, Di amonds, All Old-

1

~=~ti~. ~ 1 ~ ~~~;~~otatea, Oo~

�•

·Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

ThL!r&amp;day, December 7, 1995

Thursday, December 7, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..... ,ALLEY

.,

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright
'Wanted To Buy Little T1kes Toys

.E14 245-5BB7

1076 Chevy P1ck Up Truck Good
Cond•tlo n, $1 300, 080 614 441

E Mam Street on Rt 124,

Furn1shed Apartment. 1 Bedroom, 1 Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00

"tlers • Comact SA lee 682 Mo
~awk Street Columbus
.43206,614--444-3861

1199

I $:!75/'Mo. UUhlles Paid, 607 sec- I am to 600 pm Sunday 100 to
GaUipohs, 614 446
600~m 6149922526
Afi01 7RM
540 Miscellaneous
Rem In Gallipolis,
Merchandise
614-446-2131

·WANTED Book "Waterloo Won
OH

I

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11 0

720 nucks for Sale

sell Rn1eune An!lque s

ESTATES 52 W estwood Dove
hom $226 10 $291 Walk to shop
&amp; moves Call 614 446 256 8
Equal Hous ng Opponun~~y

Help Wanted

$1 000 Weekly Stuff1ng Envet
opes Free Info Send Se ll Ad
drvssed S1amped En velope To
Explorer Dept 91 6069 Old Can
ton Road Box 510 Jac Kson MS
39211

s

992 7476or614 949 2879

29gal f1sh aquanum $100 10.gal
11sh aquanum $40 w1accessones

1987 Mazda p1c k up mea ll!U e
truck, 4cyf 5spd needs some
t&gt;ody work, pr1ced on •nspec110n

304-773-5524

Country S1 de Apartmen~ Large 1
Bedroom S290/Mo Deposit 513

4 Cemetary Lots Oh1o Valley
Memory Gardens Leave Mas
sage 6 14 446 3387

~1~600-~53~7~9~s2~8c_~:::::=~~J:;;;;=~;::::;;::::==::=~T;;;;=;~;::~=:;:.=::::;~1

E l eeir~c Wheelchaors 1Scoo1ers
New /Used Scooter !Wheelchaor
lilts, Sta~rway E levators, ltlt
ChaHs Bow~an's Homecare
614 446. 7283
firewood for Sale

Seasoned

Oak HICkory &amp; Walnut $35 De
ed 6 14-379 noog

I

IV8r
80Q
Flea Markel lots of msc 1tems
One pnce takes all Phone 304
675 1090
FleJ~ Steel Three Cush1on Couch
H1sto r y Of Waterloo Wonder s
Book Zennh T V Needs Some
Repa1r ArtifiCial Chnstmas Tree
Small, 61 4-446·2857

Fodder Shocks $2 Each And In
dtan Corn F1ve For $1 00 614

245 5887
Great Chnstmas Gtfls Boals By
Redw1ng Chtppewa, Tony lama
Gua ranteed lowest Pr1ces At
Shoe Cafe

HARDWOOD FLOORING

Eastern local School D•str•ct, Reedsvi lle IS 1n need of substitute
bus dr•vers for the school year If
Interested please stop by the Su
penntendent s olllce or call 614

965-4292
Easy Work I Exce l lent Pay I As
semble Products at Home

Call

Toll Freo 1 800 467 5566 EXT
313
Ftscal OffiCer Commumty Mental
Health Agency Servmg A Three
County Area Is Seekmg A MBA
W1th An CPA For The Postt1on Of
F1scal Off1cer Ouahf1ed Applicant
W1ll Possess Knowledge Of Oh1o
Commun•IY Uenta l Health Ac
coun !ln g Operat ions, Three
Year s Exper 1ence In Fmanc•al
Man agemen1 Expenence W 11h
Grants And Multiple Fundtng
Sources Superv1sory Exper1ence
And Computer Knowledge W1th
Programs Such As Lotus 1, 2, 3
And CMH C Send Re sumes To
Manager 01 Human Resources
Woodl an d Centers 3086 State
Rou!e 160 Gallipolis Oh10 45631
Home Typ1sts PC users needed
$45 000 mcome poten11al Call 1

600 513-4343 Exl B-9368
If you are lookrng for a career m
the health care l•eld are hard
woril.lnO camlQ and have a des re
to care lor people We w111 prov•de
you w11h 1he educat1on you need
to oe a STNA Compeuuve salary
benelils heallh 1nsurance and lut
liO n re1mbursemefll lo r lull 11me
employees Please call Penny 01
Suzanne a1 614 667 3156 or ap
ply rn per son a! Arca d•a Nurs1n9
C~nter Coolv•lle Ohro
Immediate Opemng Ava1tabte For
Part T1me AN Superv•sor Com
peti!I'Je Wages D•tlerental Wrth
Expe11ence Contact Tne D1rec1or
Of Nursmg Pmecrest ra re Cen
ter 170 Pmecresl Dnv~: Ga ll1po
liS OhiO 45631 614 146 7 11 2
Equal Opportun•1y Employer

NEED IMMEDIATELY
Serv1ce Tec hn1 c1a n For Vacuum
Cleaner Co Mu st Be Knowledg e
able In ElectJomc Moto rs Expen
ence A M us tl Calf Fo r Interv ieW
614 44 1 1975
No Expene nce Necessar y 1 $500
To S900 Weekly 1Potent1a1 Pro
cess1ng Uor 1gage Refu 11ds Own
Hours Call ~909) 715 2100 Ex1

782 124 Hours)
NOW HIRING
McCLURE S RESTAURANT
GALLIPOLIS &amp; MIDDLEPORT
APPLY IN MONRINGS
Part Trme Desk. Cle1k. App ly AI
Holtday Inn Gallipolis No Phone
Calls Please
Postal Jobs $1590 IHr Bencf1ts
On Job Tra1n1ng For App11ca110n 1
In forma tiOn 8 18 764 9048 Ext

7092
Aecep! lomst fo r med•ca l of l 1ce
Exper~ence preferred Send wr 11
ten resumes only to Oll •ce Man
ager PO Bo• 779 New Haven

'1/11 25265
Recep11on•st lor mod1cal ofl!ce
bpene nce preferred Send wr l!
ten resumes only 10 Of11ce Ma n
ager PO Bo)( 779 New Haven

'1/11 25265
Sales Rep Fo r Snap On Tools
Equal Opportun.ty Em plo~ er 606
928 6128
Secretary 1Aecept1on• st Needed
Blackburn P:eal1y PO Box 783
Galhpo iiS OhiO

ABSOLUTELY NO PHONE
CALLS I
Small lo cal F1rm Seekmg Pan
T1me On Call Ctean1ng Parsons
Send Resume fo SCCS PO Bo)(

536 Kerr OH 45843
VACANCY t.4a• ntenance I BUI Id
1ng &amp; Grounds Superv1sor Qual
illcaoons H S Diploma IGED Re
1a1ed Trammg /Ex peoence Con

18CI Supl Office By Dec 11 1995
Galha Jackson Vtnton JVSD,
p 0 Bo• !57 R1o Grande OH

45674 614-245-5334 EEO

21 0

Unlurmshed two bedroom house
ntce and clean depos1t requ1 red
no tnS1de pets 614-992 3090

Business
Opportun lty

Wetzg al St reet Pomero~ WID

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bUSI
ness wHh people you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma•l unhl you have mvest1gated
the oflenng
Investment Proper ly In GallipOliS,
Owner May Be Able To Help W1th
Some F1nancmg Call 614 797

4345 A1tere RM

$350/Mo DepoSit, 513 922 0294

$1 20$1 50bd II Prem1um grade
$1 44$2 61bd IL All floor~ng sold
314• thick Random Width &amp; ran

dom lenglhs

614 992 3055

-----------1
2 bedroom mobile home re fer
ences &amp; depos11 requ1red, M1
nersvllle area call aher 5pm 614

992 6777

2 Bedroom Mob1le Home At Ever
green 614 3 79-26 78 No
Calls Please

304-586 3821

While quantibes last

Twm R1vers Tower now accept1ng
apphcattons for 1br HUD subs1d
•ze d apt for el d erly and handl

H1·EHec1ency l P. Or Natural Gas
92"/o Furnaces 100,000 BTU 1

800-287-8308

capped EOH 304 675 66 79

Mobile Homes
for Rent
:-2-:-b-ed-:-r-oo-m--,-do-u-:-bl:-e-w"",d-:-e-.-:-6-m""ll:-e-sl 450
out 143, no calls alter gpm, 614992 3743

614 446 6308

Duct Systems And Alf Cond1t1on
ers Free Esumates.
Home keg system $80 Homel1ta
240 chamsaw $175 4 full s 2e
Chevy truck ral ly~ $100 14 112
K19PIICh SS boat prop $250
P1oneer 80watt rece1ver $175
P1oneer turntable $30 25" color
conso le TV $100 614 441 1084
after Spm

Furnished
Rooms

Circle Motel Gall•pol1s, OH 614
446 2501 Effec1ency Rooms Ca
b!e A1r Phone Mtcrowave &amp; Relngerator

Hundred s of yard salo and flea
market •tams for sale lots of good
s!Uifl Due 10 mov1ng any reason
able offer, 614 992 5322

Rooms for rent week or month
Starling at $ 120/mo Galfta Ho tel
614 446 9580

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Repa1red NJ &amp; Rebutll In Stock
Call Ron Evans, 1 800 537 g529

Kill RATS AND MICE I
All real estate advert1slng

ENFORCER® rat and mouse k1ll
ers are GUARANTEED' Ava11
able at

tn

thiS newspaper Is subJeCt to
the Federal Fa~r Housing Act
of 1968 whiCh makes 11 111ega1
to advertise "any preference,
llmllatlon or Cl1scrlm1natton
based on race, color, religion,
sex fam1t1a1 status or national
ong1n, or any 1n1ent10n 10
make any such preference,
~m1tahon or d1scnmmahon •
This newspaper Will not
knowllngly accepl
adverhSemenls lor real estale
wh1ch 1s m v1olahon of tne taw
Our readers are hereby
Informed that all dwellings
advertiSed 1n this newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

CENTRAL SUPPLY
0 DELL TRUE !1/ALUE LUMBER

4bedroom 1ra1ler lor rent St
143 304-882-2004

K1ng S1ze Water bed $1 00 614

N1ce 2 bedroom mob1le home 1n

256-6723

Mlddleporl. Oh 614-992-5858
R1ver Front Property Remod eled
12x60 Mobtle Home 2 Bedrooms
Washer /Dryer Hook Up Small
S1orage Bu1ld1ng Low Utd•tles
Nrce Neighborhood , Chesh~re ,

$285/Mo 614 36HI415
Two and three bedroom mob1le
homes, s tarting at $240
sewer, water and trash 1nc1

614 992-2167

MERCHANDISE
51

o

Household
Goods

Lazy Boy Rocker Recliner L1ke

Brand Newl $200,614 256 1638

5pc Days~rom dtnette set. Oak/
cane/c hrome cha~rs &amp; 45•
square/rounded glass top table,

New Bush l1ne Sofa And

Chair, 614 446-2871

very good cond $200 304-675

Load locks $80, Sem1 Camaro
S1de P1pes $35 Wood Turn1ng
Lathe New $170, Sma ll Wood
M sc Tools Others Too Nu
merous To M enuonl 614 386

----------------1
Two bedroom tra1le r lor rent
Appliances

Reconditioned
Beech Street m Middleport $1
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refr1
mo plus $100 depos1t 614 -992•-1 graters 90 Day Guaran tee!
2395 or 614 992 5961
French C1ty Maytag 614 446

6835

7795

31 0 Homes for Sale
2 Bedroom Br1ck Hom e In Gall i
po l1 s Incl udes Garage, Centra l
A1r LR K•tchen And Ba th 614
446 8576
Nme room house lour bedrooms
ne wly remodele d kitchen and
bath new carpeung large corner
lo t $28 000 614 992 6173 or
6 14 992 2015 al1er 5pm
Three bedroom home m country
W11tes H1ll Rd Rutland one bath
n ground pool, 614-992 5067

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1987 14x70 Mob1le Home 3 Bed
rooms 1 Bath, Real N1ce, SB 900
614 379 2684

440

AJ)artments
for Rent

Furn1shed Eff1c1ency 607 Second
GallipOliS Share Bath $150/Ut•l•
lies ' Pa1d 614 446 4416 Alter

Country Furniture 304-675 6820
Rt 2 N, 6m1les, Pt Pleasant WV
Tues Sat9-6, Sun 1 1 5

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers dryers refngerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vme Street Calt614 446 7398

1 BOO 499 3499

7pm

LAYNE S FURNITURE

1 and 2 bedroom apartment s lur
niShed and unfurnished secunty
depos11 requ1red no pet s 614

9g2 2218
1 bedroom apartment 1n M1ddfet
port available December 1 all
u11l1t1es pa1d $250 per montn
$100 deposit, Bam to Spm 614

Complete home lurn1sh1ngs
Hours U on Sat 9 5 614 446
0322 3 m11 es out Bulav1lle P1ke
Free Del1very

Metal Ofl1ce Desk Excellent con
d1tlon, $75 One Olf1ce Cha 1r, $50
614 446-6565 AftBf 5 30 P.M

Smnh Corona elecU IC typewnter
wtcase $50 2 Tappen stovetops
eloctr~c while new $65 yellow
used $25 304 675 2726 al ter
5P11
While 17 cu It Maytag refngera
tor With 1ce maker two months old
se ll due to mov1ng , $500 614
949 2720 alter 4pm

4336

550

Building
Supplies

Block bnck, sewer p1pes wmd
ows hnlets etc C laude Wmters
R1o Grande, OH Call 614 2&lt;15
5121
Metal Root1ng &amp; S1d1ng Geo Tex
t•le Fabnc For Dnveways &amp; Etc
Typar For House Cover Or Tem
porary Storage Cover AltiZer

Farm Supply 614 245-5193
560

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng Fea
tur1ng Hydro Bath Julie Webb
Call614 446-0231

3

AKC registered German
Shepherd pupptes, had shots &amp;

wormed, $250 61• 992 3832
AKC black male Cocker, excel
lent

lemperament

~oodline.

champiOn

$150 304 937 2733

AKC Toy Poodles , born Aug
17th black apncot chocolate
W111 delrver locally 304 576-2449
AKC Yellow Lab Pups Ready For

ChnSimas $300 614 256-6336
A1101 6 RM
B1g beaullful AKC Chow pupp1es
only one blue and one black fe
male lett, $200 614 992 7574
Chrtstmas Lay

a

way Spee~afl

55gal lank &amp; hood $99 FISh
Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 2413 Jack son
Ave Pomt Pleasant 304 6 75

$200, 614-446-3664 Aner 5 ~M
Queen S1ze Waterbed $100
Very N1ce Stereo System $75 2
End Tables $50, 1 Recl1ner Chu

PICKENS FURNITURE
New /Used

$75 614 446 7055

304 675-1450

11an pupptes shots &amp; worm ed

755 5665
350 Lots

&amp; Acreage

F 1ve acres
aerato r near
Rac•ne $16 000 can finance with
hal l down 614 949 2025
Scen1c Valley, Apple Grove,
Deaut1fu l 2ac lots pubhc water
Cl ~d e Bowen Jr 3:&gt;4 576 2336
Vacan1 Lots 5 &amp; 6 Acres Ava1f
able Cl ose To Town 614 446
8427 Alter 7 PM

368 '

Real Estate
Wanted

Home Wanted 3 Bedrooms, Clly
Schools Some Acreage Excellent
Cond 111on Only FP Basement A
Plus ! No Mobiles, 614 441 1618

Days Only

3531
Three month old Holstein/Jersey

cross heler, $185,614 949-2179

Hay &amp; Grain

Prem1um oatlalfalfa rolls $25
Morgans Farm Rt 35 Pliny 304

Q37 2018

TRANSPORTATION
710

Autos for Sale

89 Thunderbird SC IWo door 3 B

985 3362
1975 Chevy Nova w1th 1982 V-6
motor make mce work car $450

OBO. 614 985-3887
1983 Olds Della 86, 2dr, $1 000
304 675 4975
1984 Celebrity Eurospo r t, Good
Condtt1on $850 614-256 6808
1984 Cutlass Supremo $1 000
1984 Peu]Ot 505 Gl $950 1974

LTD Braun 1987 BuiCk $2,300
Harley Golf Car (Ut1ilty) $450, 614
388 9Q06
1986 Ford Tempo

Needs

Repa~rs,

5 Speed,

$500. 1973 Ply

mouth Duster $400, Call After 6

Seats All Options, Very Clean
Car, W1ll Sacrahce $2,500 614
tg87 Pont1ac Grand Am SE. 4
Door, Wrecked Fronl Passeng'er

S1de, 109 ooo Miles (4 Cylinder),
5 Speed Power locks AMIFM
Cassella, Not Ortveable 4 New
T~res 614 446 4223
1988 Ford Taurus statiOnwagon

$1800 000.614 992-5347
1989 Eag le Prem1er U&lt;. 6 cyl
auto 81 ,000+ miles pay off

AC $4 700 Alter 8 614-256
6429,614-256 1950
1990 Ford Escort, Actual 6 000

2bedroom ground floor, wid hook
up, central heat, kitchen w/stove
&amp; refngerator Private 'Storage
Depos1t &amp; re fere nces $300/mo

304-875-6902

Sporting
Goods

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upnght Ron Evans Entarpnses
Jackson, Ohto 1-800-537-9528

DarJon bow 55· 701b . 65% LO •

35 WEST - 2 BR BRICK TOWN
HOUSES - 1261 Jackson P1ke
Acrou From C 1nema $295/Mo
Dep For Renlal Applications Call

614·4·6-0g57

520

614 446-0006

614·441 Hl16 Or Wr~te PO Box

994 Gallipolis, OH 45631
4 112 M1les From Gall1pohs, Nt ce
2 Bedrooms Stove, Refngerator &amp;

Wa1er FurniShed, No Rats, $250/
Mo 614-448-8038

s1ghts, qu1ver, rest $160 304

675 7316

SUMMERFIELD s TREE FARM·
cut your own Chrtstmas tree, &amp;15

Ruger Super Blackhawk 44 Mag •
7 112", blue wi new box of shells
$250 Taurus Mod g4, 4" blue, 9
shot revolver. odJ sightS, $200
Must s1gn transfer papen 304
675-1236 after 7pm

St 7 top of Eastern School hill
turn on locust Grove, 814·985-

3435

Massey Ferguson 180 Tractor,
$5,950, Uassey Ferguson 175

$5,600, Massey Ferguson 135
Diesel $5,495. Ferguson T020
Wilh Bush Hog &amp; Blade. $2,850,
614-286-6522

POLE BUILDING SPECIAL
&amp; antique furmture, R&amp;S New &amp; 30'X40'X9' Pamled Steel S1dos,
Used Furniture, 505 N Second Galvalume Steel Roof 15'x6' Steal
St Mason, WV,' 25280, Phone Slider, 3' Man Door $6,444
ERECTED Iron Horse Builders 1304·773-5341
800 352 1045
We buy, sell, or trade,

Welder Multi-StaiiDn Homo Gym,
lncl~ts Stopper $200, e14-37g.
27•0. 614-446-4109

;'

new,

used

1986 Suzuk i quad racer good
cond $1,600 304 675 3773

shape $800 OBO 304 675 1216

1995 Wolverme 350 $4 000, 614
256-1288 or 256 1539

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

FRANK &amp; ERNEST
.. IT

SAYS

POLIC.~

tMVf

N~A~ n~e w~MF!

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

'-.... tiOT llOCICS IN

£.oc:tceP

Budget TransmiSS ions Used ~
Rebuilt All Types Access 1bte To
Over 10 000 Transm•ss1on, Also
Parts Clutches &amp; Pressu re
Plates 614 379 2935
'

go~

;· ON DO~~S
' ~ Q!l .

leonard bed l1ner short wheel
ba se full s1ze Chevy truck
Chrome front bump e r &amp; gnll
guard 304-458 1721

'lORN LOSER
-:1\Y,

New gas tanks one ton truck
wheels, radiators, floor mats, etc

~TU5

WHO WIQ IT Tf\f&lt;.T ~ID,

'' 16NORAN(£

D &amp; R Aulo Ripley WV 304 372
3933 or I BOO 273 9329
790

~E(,OVf,Eb SOM~

fTOI..~N GEMS F~OM A S~AL.ED (,ATf

/

{)ffT.

734 7 or 614 g49 2879

,

!

I Hf&lt;.V£.N 'T

A CLUE.

ISBUSS"7

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Ph1lllp Alder's book , "Get
Smarter at Bndge," IS avatlable,
autographed upon request, for
$14 95 from P 0 , Box 169, Roslyn
Hts , NY 11577-0169

I

15 Bonanza camper excellent lor
permanont deercamp slle, no
a•les or tongue, fully equ tpped
furnace\. porta JOhn etc $:350

OBO. 614-992 3016

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryplograma are crnted from quo18110fll5 by larnoos people pas! and preS8fl l

Ern :h lelle r lfl lhe cipher slanda lor another Toaaysc/ue R equals C

J XU

Ml

YMV U

F J C J U F

r

LMVCEG

LUC VC Y
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "The dew of compassion IS a tear " - Lord Byron
IS lov1ng people more than they deserve " - Joseph Joubert

~Kindness

'::~:~~' S@RdillA-l&amp;t~S..

WORD

GAM I

ldlt•d ~, CI.AY l. POUAN - - - - - - -

0 four

leners of
tcrambled words

Rearrange

low to form

four words

K L I A L A

S MU U C

I fII

-E--.1 ~~

r--B_A_L_L

l rf I I -

-

-

-

. . - - - - -------.
GHELNT

.

WN

C Z M A J

RCWU

FJLMVV.'

J M M

TV

AVTJUG

J XU

Z U R C A F U

B C F

B C LF

I MAl

ETIUJTWU

I

I borrow thtngs from my pesstmtsttc neighbor I know he
doesn't expect to get the - - - -

1

1990 Travelmaster Motor Home,
27 Ft Excellent Condition, 6 New
Tires 614-446 1211

e

SERVICES

PRINT NUMBERED
!EllERS IN SQUARES

I

810

HOW f&gt;.RE 'I'OU I GOJN(, TO
,- ···,
MAKE SURE / NO
'
YOU PIC.K t PR06· ;
J£NN'I''5 .\ LEr-1 I

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

, NAME'.)'

Unconditional l1fe11 me guaranlee
local references furnlslled C"l'

-----1

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Onent- Jwce - Wheat - Tavern- NEW CAR

'·lr-·'
STRIKE ABWW N THE WAR ON
HIGH PRICES SHOP THE CLASSF/EDS.

(614) 446-0870 Or 1614) 231.
0488 Rogers Waterproofmg Es
tabhshed 1975

Our son had been sulkmg for several days When I
asked htm why he told me he thought we were poverty
stncken because our ne1ghbors had bought a NEW CAR I

ITHURSDAY

Apphance Parts And Serv 1ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex~
pertence All Work Guaranteed.
French City Maytag, 614·446
B11t Omck s Home Improvements ~
additions remodeling, roofing !
Sldmg, pfumb1ng, etc Insured,
Bdt Omck 6 14 992·4240

6323

~R~ 'TOTALL.'t'O\l1TA t--~1

••

~,

1..

Ron s TV Serv1ce speclahztng m
Zen1th also serv1cmg most other
brands House calls , 1-800 797

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

0015 wv 304 576-2398

Roofmg and gutters- commerctal
and res1dent1al mmor repa 1rs 35
years expenence, B&amp;B ROOF -

1992 Plymouth Duster V 6 Auto,
Air, T1tle, New T1res 39 300 Miles

820

1994 Chevy Cavalier Z 24, power
everylhmg, ac cassene 5spd, 1n
1enor trunk release and pass
through tinted Windows Sui t un
der warranty $2,000 under NADA
book value Sweet Chrtstmas
present Call 304-882-2466 any

ASTRO-GRAPH

gg2 4451

ING, 614·992-5041

Plumbing
Heating

..

&amp;

Freeman's Heating And Cooling
lnstal tauon And Serv1te EPA
Certified Residenllat, Commerc~at

614 256 1611

840

Electrical and
RBfrlgeratlon

Fnday,

dme or 30H82·3431 after 5pm

~;;:;;::;:-;:::;:::;:~~.:,..:,'
RSES CERTIFIED DEALER ~

Auto Loans Dealer Will arranga fi

Heat Pumps, Air Condtl1on1ng,

nanctng even 1f you have been
turned down etsewher(J Upton

You Don I Call Us Wo ll91h Lo;el ·'
Free Estimates, 1 · 800-287·6308,' :..~~
• WV002945
"

Equipment Used Cars 304-458
1089

LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES .. ,.

If •

1 I or commercial Wtrmg

·

•

CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can new
or repatrs. Master l1~ '
Help, Easy Bank Financing For cenaed electriC ian R1denout 11
Used Vehtctes, No Turn Downa Electrical. WV000306 304 675 .
1786
•
Call Rult1, 614 ••&amp;2007

0,
0

\'I

~~ .u:~;~- ~~

!
'

Condtllon,

'

1

"If '•cJ ~
9\r !'o'··.... " ~(o,o1·- ., -o'
uo
~
;:o.,
ci
'"
,. "#,,: •
''

Earl's Home Ma intenance v1ny~
&amp;ldmg roofmg, extenor and' 1nten •
or painting, power washmg, room
additions Free Estimates, 614

Sli.595 614 388-0060

I

~
~ ;;. ;
!,./, ~

'

DRYWALL

-(p'\~J:'MQ!ri

~llER'&lt;.IC: W.lltlli.IS t.\EMBR~NE S '\~J.,v;,.&lt;.,;:'i • E;l/{

C&amp;C Genera! Home Mam '
tenence Pa1nt1ng, v1nyt stdmg. ~
carpentry, doors, Windows, balhs, r
mob•le home repatr and more For '
free estimate call Chet, 614-992 :

Call Tom 304-675- 4188 20 years '

6, Aulomallc. 4 Door. AMIFM Ra
d1o, AC. PS, ABS Brakes, low
Excellent

~S&lt;li~\l,lli~ YJO L~H ~'fAA~ C~i
IN OR SOM€.1HING 7 ~'I \IVP€.R·

can;

exper•ence

1992 Chevy Cors1ca 1 Owner, V

DECEMBER 71

7795

1990 Pontiac Grand Am, $2 900

$5.800, OBO. 614·256-8340 614
256-1539

2bedroom turmshed, utilities ~Jiitd

You've TAUGI-IT VS WELL
WE'RE ALL BETTER FOR
J.IAVING BEEN IN 'IOU!{
PRESENCE ..'f'OU'VE 6ROIJ6J.IT
HONOR TO '{OUR PROFESSION

Motorcycles

Hang, llntsh, repatr
,., :
Cethngs textured plaster repa1~ ~

M1t's

Mason, WV 304 773-9009

740

Miles. 2 Door, 614-379-2720 AF

2879, 614-g49-2045 or 614-992
6193

6t0 Farm Equipment

instrument

245-9248

1gg1 Rocket Chass1s race car, aU
tn '91, W1twood, best of eve
J Ythlng , weld three wheels ures,
Neat pedals fuel cell, on board
Hre system, rolling chassis $5800
neg Call Scou Wolfe, 614·949

G1een APis #49 or call 614 9g2.
3711 EOH

675-4212 anyume

For Sale Or Parttat Trade 1987
Chrys ler 5th Avenue, V- 8, Au
toma!Jc, 73,000 Miles, Full Power.

new

2bdrm apts, total electric, appliances lurn1ahed, laundry room
fac11ft1es close to school m town
Applications available a t V1Uags

IT'S LUNCJ.I TIME, MtJ:AM!
WE'VE ACCOMPLISJ.IED A
LOT Ti-115 MORN IN&amp;.

1994 Jeep Grand Cherokee l 1m
1ted, VB CO player, leather tnter1
or all opuons extra clean 304

bags. Blaupunkl slereo 150 mph

304-675-5091

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Package 614-446-0350

760

1989 Olds Cutlass Calais, E•cel
lent Condition, Runs Great l Auto,

361 7

PEANUTS

1994 Astro Convers•on VanEK
cellent Condition, Wllh T1ara

94 Thunderb•rd black loaded
30 000 m•les ask1ng $13,000 call
6 14 992 6991

Stud Serv1ce AKC Registered
Male M1mature Pmcher Blac&lt; I

Musical
Instruments

2153

f-lfAl&gt;l.INf

$2439 52 614 949-2982

570

s

1993
10 Blazer 4X4 52 oqo
m1les while/gray lnteffor autom:.t
fC Reese hllch $16,500 614 741!

1993 20 1 Pro Xl, 20 Stru tos
bass boat, 200 XPHP, 614 667

304 675 7740

Rus11 Year Old, 614 446--6861

M1les. 614-245-5288

There IS somethmg espeCially pleas
mg about taking a safety play and find
mg that tt was necessary to make your
contract Then, usually th e declarer
will show that Kin Hubbard was nght
when he wrote, 'There's no sec ret
about success D1d you ever know a
successful man who didn't tell you all
about1t'"
How should you play the heart sutt
for only two losers m today's deal'
North had an awkward r ebtd He
d1dn 't like to contmue wtth two no
trump as he had no dtamond stopper,
but every other chotce was an under
btd, an overbtd or a d1storbon Probably
South should have ratsed to three notrump, on easy contract to make, but
he chose to rebtd hiS SIX-card sutt
After a diamond lead, South thought
everythmg was easy He won wtlh the
diamond ace, cashed the heart ace and
played a second trump However, when
West won wtth the queen and East dts
carded, suddenly the contract had dted
West had three trump tncks, and East
didn't duck hiS spade ace
Wtth only one stde-sutt loser. South
could afford two trump losers If the
hearts are breakmg 3-2. there 1s no
problem But what If they are 4-1' If
East has a smgleton honor, startmg
wtth the ace works Yet East Will have a
low smgleton one-and a half limes
more often than a smgleton honor
Begmnmg With a low trump toward
dummy's 10 &lt;and planmng to finesse
the Jack neKtl works whenever etther
opponent holds K-Q-9-8, K-Q-9 3 or KQ,S-3 It IS the best play

neadles
21 Draw In (by
suction)
23 Percuulon
24 Secret
wedding
participant
25 Davenport
26 TV' a talking
horae (2
Wdl)
27 Small bit
28 Twofold
31 High cards
32 Entertainer Anderson
33 Companion ,
ofodda
44 Spooky
45 More crafty
46 Light source
47 Ha had an
Irish Rose
48 Raise
50 Bluish-green
51 Irritating
smoke
52 Barks shriUy
55 Double curve
56 Superlative
suffix
57 Owing

By Phillip Alder

Galltpotls
•

g4 Cad11tac DeV1IIe mocha color
11 000 m1les, catl614 667 3226

198 7 Otds 98 Regency Braum
Top Of The line, All Leather

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

825 Thud Avenue
Qh 1o

OA't..Y Niw,&gt;.

tomallc
&amp;ll power
smoky
amettyst 10,500 miles, w111 sell or
ca n lake ov&amp;r payments 614

(equal)
10 Aglle
11 Engrave
19 rype of

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250

72 ooo Mrles $6 ooo. Can ~e
Seen At Gatf1pol1s Dally Tnbulle

$125 614 388-8183

95 Bu1ck Regal Custom V-6 au

8 Suppress
9 On- -with

The pleasing result

I'M A GONER I I

44.6-2019

12 Ft Jon Boat With L1ve Well
$160 10 Ft Sears Jon Boat,

Full Blooded Chow Pupp1es , 6

Just m lime tor Chrlsllllasf Beagle
puppies Make great pets Great
hunters S50ea 304 675 3406

$3,ooo, 614

litre V 6 , elite model turbo. PS
PB AC 5 speed, power seats
and locks, $6800 neg 614 992
7478 or 614 949 2879

614-256-6867 Afiar 5 RM

Weeks Old, $50, 6I 4-446-6772

1985 Ford Ranger lots Of New
Par1st

1993 Honda ZSO, low hours, great

TER6~M

WV 304-755-5BB5

Free delivery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes, Nnro WV 304

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
Spec 1at Fall Feeder Calf Sale Sat
urday December 9th At 1 P:M
Spec•al Cons 1gnrnent 0 1 13 Cross
Bred Sprmgers From 1 Farm
Cattle Accepte d Starting AI 4
PM Fnday Also Hau ling Ava1l
able 614 592 2322 614 698

$150ea 304 773 9122

L1m11ed Offer• 1996 doublew•de,
3br 2bath $1799 down $275/
month Free deltvory &amp; setup
Only ar Oakwood Ho mes Nitro

3br Only $995 down, $1 95/monlh

Livestock

(plus) sports car, very clean con
d1tion, $5000, 614·949·2311 days
Of 614 949-2844 """"\!'!~'

For Sale 1983 2 Bedroom Mobile
Home Very Clean Will Consider
Ren11ng Also 304 675·4831

Pnce Busterl New T4x70 , 2 or

630

CFA Registered Pers1an IH 1ma
lyan K111ens W1ll Be Ready Fo r
Chnstmas Takmg Deposits Now l
614-446 1104

Champ1onsh1p AKC Reg Dalma

IF MAW EVER
CLEANS UP THIS YARD,

1990 Ford 250 4x4 51 000 Actu,al

1987 944 Turbo , red wtth black
1ntenor 52k m1 les, ngh l s1de
tender/quarter damage, dual at r

Reg1stered We1maraner pupp1es

New Woodburnmg Stove Cast
!ron Bnck Lined So ld By Sears

992-3016

BHds Baby Blue crown very
tame , starting to talk Proven
breedmg palt 304-675-5043

Cheshlfe

8129 SA 7 N

12x55 trailer frame tongue
wheels and axles excellent fo r
Dwldmg lowboy $300 080 614

P.M 614-446-7282.

Registered Sheltle (m1n1ature col
119 pups $250)
reg1stered
S1amese blue point cat $150, call
614·992· 2607

Swap Shop

510 Farm Equipment

WHITES METAL DETECTOR S 640

Ron A lh son , 1210 Second Ave
nue Ga lhpo l1s Oh10 ti14 ·446

$59 lots of n1ce home made crah
•terns, toy, guns, 20ga pump gun
w1tll 2 barrels $159 do you r
Chnstmas shopping now, Daves

Needs

1 Bedroom Unlurmshed Apart
ment No Pets, $1 951Mo lnclud1ng
Wat er Depos1t, $100 614 446

Tra1n $300, 30 Volume Encylope
d.a Amer~cana 1961 Ed,on, $50
Roadmaster Statfona ru Btcucle
1
'
W1th Spedometer JMtleage,
$50
614 446 76~

New 120 piece Craftsman socket Poodle pupptes teacup, toys
set $79 95 new Craftsman gas
or whne also mtmalure
weldtng &amp; cutting torch set !Sch r~a uzors. AKC, shots and
Cra ftsman roll away tool chesl wormed, 614-667·3404

Mollohan Carpets Rt 7 N 614
446 7444 For Carpet &amp; Vmyt

gg2 7806

S1ze 12 Whne Weddmg Gown

Floor length Wilh Chapel Lenglh

2063

Ladre s green suede coat, west
ern style wlfnnges stze 16 never
worn Excellent Chnstmas pres
ent 304 937 4091

3878 after 5:30pm

REAL ESTATE

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Poplar, oak h1ckoty, asn maple,
walnul, cherry, co lon1al grade

Two bedroom apartment 1n M1d
dleport, two baths, equ1pped
kitchen, HUD approved referenc
es and deposit reqUired 614 985
4448 after 5 OOpm

420

540

Vans &amp; 4-WDs

730

9 8 7 4

•7 6 5 2

421n .,.....nt
condition
1 Roman dOzen
(2 wda.)
4 Hunter's
43 tlo...t
ahe iter
46 Big
9 Fruity drink
49 Full of folloge
12 Radiation
53 Honeotmeasure
54 Long and
13 In trouble
olendar
•14 Caress
56 Sine -non
15 Long59 Ma Farrow
16 Singer Page
60 Edition
17 Football dlv.
61 Refs kin
18 Egg parts
62 - capita
20- Vadar
63 Fragrant
22 Archenemies
compound
26 Between maxi 64 Roman bronze
and mini
29 Frothy brew
DOWN
JO Not brlgh1
34 Defeat soundly t Madlcal picture
2 Shakeapearean
35 Decay
villain
361mage
3 Heathan dally
37 Coup d' 4 Slight error
38 F1Hong
5 One- - kind
39 Tear
6 Polka40 Artist
7 Rackat string
Salvador material
41 Fair grade
ACROSS

Vulnerable Netther
Dealer South
West North East
Pass 1 •
Pass
Pass 2 NT
Pass
Pass 4 •
All pass
Opening lead •3

BARNEY

C INS by NEA.Inc

•H
•Q

• AK
•K Q 8 3

992 2306

~1

•A I 0 7

•AJ76 54

/l -7

concrete &amp; Plaslfc Sepnc Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Eva ns Enterpnses Jackson OH

EAST

• 9 6 5 3
•K Q 9 3
•J 5 3
410 4

•2

72 Ford Explorer p1ck up body tn
good cond111on $700 abo, 614

Computer IPnnter Several E• trasl
Trea(lmlll , P1ano. Camper Au
ConditiOner New Relngerator, All
Good Concfluonf 614-682· 7830

WEST

SOUTH

1991 S 10 P1ck Up Exce ll ent
Cond1t10n 1988 Volkswagon foil
Trade In s Welcome Assistance
Wllh Bank, F1nancmg II Request
ed Cook Motors 614 446-0103

675 4Q75

FINANCIAL

A~

304 675-3324

4000wau generator, Craftsman
sull under warramy $475 304

Stonewood Apartments now ac
cept•ng applic at• ons for apart
ments all elecu1c, lor elderly and
d1 sa b1hly FMHA subs1d1zed ba
s•c ren t $260 per mon th EOH

MV liJI~ 1l11f.JK.S
1 a...GHTA HAVe

1978 Chevy 4WD p1ckup good
t~res and dme hne runs great
two new lenders $1550 neg 614

16Cu H chest freezer S1OD 304
675 49 75

Beech St M•ddl e pon 2br !ur
n1shed apt utlli!fes pa1d dep &amp;
ref Xl4 882 2566

922-0294

EEK&amp;MEEK

614 742 3513

·Dp· ·Rower· "A1rC1ser" Exerc1se
B1ke, Very Good Cond•t•onl $150
Each, 614 245 9448

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

NORTH
12 07 95
•KQJB4
•to 2
• 10 6 2
•A J 9

1976 GMC Truck Good Wor k
Truck, $700,614-446 2714

1977 Toyota p1ck up,
speed
body rough runs good $700

The Dally Sentinel• Page 15

Dec

8, 1995

Fun 11mes will be possible 1n the year
ahead 1f you malnla1n a sense of ordar
and balance 1n your IHe Try not to worl&lt;
or'ptay roo hard
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec, 21) Do nol
discount your 1udgrnent In flnanc1al matters toda~ Letting someone elsa call al
the shots for you could end up costing
you money Know where 10 look for

- ~·

---'llies,
romance and y II
1
_ HriHI
Graph Matchma er 1nslanlly revea ls .; GEMINI (May 21-Juna 20) Do not be
which s1gns are romantically perlect for s11ngy when dealing w1th others today In
you Mail $2 75 to Matchmaker, c/o this addition, take measures to see lhat the
newspaper, P 0 Box 1758. Murray Hill lion's share ol responSibl illies and
Station New Vorl&lt;, NY 10156
expenses don't fall on you
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) II Will nol CANCER (June 21·July 22) If you are
be wiSe 10 acl lndapendljnlly today on a overly concerned about proJecung your
cnhcal development lhal concerns bolh 1n1erests today. you may fa1i to recogmze
you and your mate Gel his or her con- the needs of your assoc1a1es Broaden
sent 111s1
your perspec11ve
AQUARIUS (Jan , 20·Feb. 19) You will LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A recumng probnot perlorrn too well today If somfl(lne 1s lem m19hl worsen loday because ol a duty
lookmg over your shoulder and Jelling you you've been negi6CI1ng Th1s cannot be
what to do. Do not let anyone push you • taken care of by anyone else, so get lo rtl
'
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) Si11ve lo be
1nto a comer •
PISCES (Fell. :zo.M•rch 20) Try lo avoid mdependent and lndlvlduahstiC today If
fnends and acquaintances who are undu- you don't, you m1ght y1eld to peer presly demandmg at thiS lima Usually you sure and do something aga1nst your belcan tolerate lhalr behav1or. bul today tar JUdgment
m1ght be an excepl1on
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Beware of the
ARIES (Mitch 21-Aprll 111) Challang1ng tarnplatiOII to lake an unyl81dlng posrt1on
developments usually awaken your on an unpopular Issue Even fnends who
stronger quaht1es, but this might not be are usually supportiVe might sid&lt;l wrth the
Jha case today Do not Involve yoursell 1n oppoart1on
an uphil battle
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov, 22) Today,
TAURUS (April 20.May 20) Subdue the keep m mind lhat everyone Ia entitled to
temptation Jo contradict olhars merely h1s or har opinion, evan H II conflicts wllh
tor tha sake of argument today Instead yours Harsh cntlclsm could cause a serl·
of mak1ng po1n~. you mlg~l 1us1 make ous conlronta11on

D'

• Otristmas

('

"

(CC)

'•

�•

~age 16 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ohio News in Brief:
Police wound gun-wielding suspect
COLUMBUS - Police .shot and wounded a man who allegedly
pointed a gun at three offiCers outside a nightclub.
Damon D. Gaiter. 21. was in critical condition Wednesday ~t
Ohio State University Medical Center, hospital spokesman Davtd
Crawford said.
Gaiter. of the suburb of Reynold~burg, was hit in the arms,_ legs,
chest, neck and shouldeJ:S. Crawford said it could not unmedtately
be detennined how many tim•s Gaiter was shot.
.
Tbe shooting occurred about 2:30a.m. Wednesday m ~rom of a
nightclub near Ohio State University. Police had been dtspatched
there on a report of a disturbance involving a man woth a handgun.
Police had no details about the disturbance.
Police Lt. Ralph Casto said Gaiter drew a small-caliber handgun
from his pocket and pointed it at three officers. He srud at least two
officers shot at Gaiter.
Officers charged Gaiter with three counts of aggrdvated menacing attd one count of carrying a concealed weapon .

Former jailer returns to work
BOWLING GREEN - A Wood County jail guard has returned
to work after being !ired earlier this year for allegedly trying to
extort a sexual favor from an irunate' s girlfriend.
Willirun Blooml1eld, 39, returned to his former position Monday
following an arbitrator's decision, Wood County sheriffs Deputy
Brenda Brcnnaman said. Sheriff John Kohl receoved confirmatiOn
Friday that Bloomticld was to return. .
Toledo police arrested Bloom!ield m December 1994 a_fter he
allegedly called an inmate's girlfriend and told her the mmate
would benefit if she performed a sexual act on btm ..
A few weeks later, the sheriffs department ftred Bloomfield
after an internal investigation found "discrepancies in procedure"
in his work.
But a sex ual battery charge against Bloomfield· wa~ dismissed in
Luc;t, County Common Pleas Court in September after DNA evidence proved inconclusive.
. ..
.
Bloomfield immediately appealed hts ftrmg to the Ohm Labor
Council, and 'trbitraior John Weisheit decided to send him back to
work.
Kohl said the i"ue of whether Bloomlield should receive hack
pay should be seuled within the next two weeks.

Commissioners propose new jail
VAN WERT - Fifteen years after the aging and overcrowded
Van Wert County jail was condemned, county commissioners have
developed plans for a new lockup.
The two-building complex is to be built downtown on land now
occupied by a closed restaurant and a parking lot. Conunissioners
hope to build it for between $2 million and $2.5 million, Chairman
Gary Ad,uns said.
Since the old jail closed, commissioners have spent hundreds of
thousands of dollars housing prisoners in Allen, Paulding and
Seneca counties while trying to plan a new jail.
The board has initiated eminent domain proceedings against the
owners of the former Traditions Restaurant. near the county counhouse.
The ,t,king price for the property is $400,000, but three appraisers were to tour the building Wednesday to determine its market
value. Ad:uns said. A judge or jury will then decide how much the
county will pay.
Adruns said the county plans to convert the restaurant into a dormitory to house misdemeanor offenders and build a full-service jail
in ~te P'trking lot. Together, the two buildings would hold up to 80
prisoners.
Van Wert is 76 miles southwest of Toledo.

Shift in plan affects stern wheeler
ZANESVILLE - An Ohio Deparnnent of Transponation edict
could lower the boom on moving the Lorena stem wheeler down the
Muskingum River.
.
OOOT has told city Service Director Gene Jesse that a change m
Anny Corps of Engineers regulations bas eliminated ~e need for
putting lift spans in either the Y Bridge or Sixth Street bndge.
That means the agency will not replace the spans, which must be
lifted out with cranes to accommodate the Lorena and other tall
boats navigating the river.
Jess said if the lift spans are not installed and the Lorena is not
moved. the historic stemwbeeler wiU be trapped in the river's upper

-·

poo6DoT is starting the process of replacing the Sixth Street bridge.
In recent years, the state has repaired lift spans on both bridges.
The Y Bridge was noted in the edict because the agency has
scheduled it for maintenance in five to six years and watlled to notify the city about the regulati9ns.
Julie Gwinn, a planning administrator at the agency's Jacksontown oftice, said she was not certain whether the state planned to
build a bridge with enough clcamnce to accommodate tall boats.

Commission fines ex-candidate
ZANESVILLE - The Ohio Elections Commission has lined a
man who unsuccessfully ran for city treasurer.
The commission fined Bob Hutcheson $100 for failing to put his
campaign conuniuee's address on a_cam~aign card he handedout
and for failing to file papers tdenttfymg hts camprugn treasurer m a
timely manner.
.
Pendin" before the commission is a charge that Hutcheson, a
Republica~!, falsely assumed the treasurer's title on the campaign
cards he passed out last summer.
The cards read "Hutcheson Treasurer," violating election laws
which require words such as "for" or "elect" on literature distributed by candidates challenging for an oflice. The commts.~oon ts
awaiting a U.S. District Coon ruling on the law before it acts.
If the commission rules against him, Hutcheson could be fined
up to $1.000 or the panel could refer the mauer to Muskingum
County Prosecutor Mark Aeegle for legal action.

Man cited for abusing corpse
CLEVELAND - A man who police say helped bury the body
of a murdered teenager has been charged with abuse of a corpse,
poliCe said.
The name of the IS-year-old Euclid man was not released
because he was charged as a juvenile. He was 17 when Meghan
Norman. 14, of Euclid, was killed.
If convicted, he could be sentenced to a juvenile detention center
until the age of 21.
.
Meghan was beaten to death Dec: 17, 1994, by her boyfnend,
Wayne Snitzky, 18, of Euclid. Snitzky pleaded guilty to murder in
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court on Sept 22 and was sentenced to 15 years to life in prison.
.
Police said the man who was charged Monday tn Cuyahoga
County Juvenile Court led them to the girl's body Ian. 20. She was
buried on his family's vacant Ashtabula land.
-The Assoc:iated Press

Single jackpot
winner awaited

Labor, AK
Steel spar
over blast
at plant
MIDDLETOWN (AP) - Union
leaders at AK Steel's Middletown
Works accuse the steelmaker of
ignoring their warnings about
unsafe conditions. But tl)e company said it hal made unprecedented
efforts to promote a safe workplace.
The Occupational Safety and
. Health Administration is expected
today to shed some light on Tuesday's explosions in which 14 workers were injured.
The explosion was the fifth
major explosion or ftre at the Middletown Works in the past 20
months . Six workers have died
since Aprill994.
The Dayton Daily News reported today that the explosion
occurred after two valves, including one connected to a gas line near
the blast furnace, were left in the
wrong position.
Fire investigators also found
that workers ignored safety procedures for the valves to be padlocked in the 'on' or 'off position
and purged of any explosive contents, the newspaper said.
Middletown Fire Chief John
Sauter told The Middletown Journal that initial explosion occurred
while maintenance workers were
purging pipes in the blast furnace

OSU's George,
Glenn receive
football honors

Appeal filed
in mother's
conviction
COLUMBUS (AP) - An attorney has told the Ohio Supreme
Court it should overturn the conviction s of a Fairfield County
woman in the scalding death of her
4-year-old son because she bad
inadequate legal counsel.
Edna Engle, 49, is serving 341/2 years to life for murdering her
son, Christopher, and for 13 other
felonies that include child endan- .
gering, forgery, theft, perjury and
obstruction of justice.
Her husband, John, is serving 15
years to life for the murder plus 37
years for additiQnal felonies.
Mrs. Engle pleaded no contest
to a variety of charges and, in
exchange, prosecutors agreed to
drop some of the 26 charges
against her.
Her anorney, assistant public
defender Kort Ganerdam, argued
during her appeal hearing on
Wednesday that when Mrs. Engle
approved a plea agreement ending
her September 1992 trial, she did
not understand the effect pleading
no contest would have on appeals.
Gatterdam, who did not represent Mrs. Engle in her trial, said
sbe learned later that she could not
appeal rulings by the court that prevented her attorney from presenting
evidence that she was under duress
and suffered from battered-woman
syndrome.

We sell clothing on consignment.
Check with us on selling your used clothing.
We need all sizes, small to extra large.
We can pick 'up your conslg~ment.

CLEVELAND (AP)- A single
Super Louo game ticket is wor1h
$Hi million from !be Ohio Lottery,
becaUSe it shows the six numbers in
Wednesday night's drawing.
The winning ticket was sold at
SPECIAL NEED FOR MEN AND WOMEN'S LARGE SIZES.
Park Avery Carryout in Mil·an .
When validated, it will result in
Clothing for the entire family
$615,384 a year for 26 years,
before taxes.
The Super Lotto jackpot drops
back to $4 million for Saturday's
drawing .
Sales in Super Lotto totaled
99 Mill St. on the ''T
$4,699,081. Sales in the Kicker
Middleport, Oh.
totaled $669,655.
992-6684
There were 116 Super Lotto
Hrs.: Mon.•Sal 9-7 p.m_ Closed Sunday
tickets with five of the numbers, .._ _ _ _ioiiiiiilliiiiiiiioiiilii-iiiillioolliiioiioiiioiii--iiiioiiii•----•

NEW &amp; USED CLOTHING!

We Are Now Doing Alterations

GEM CLOTHING &amp; CONSIGNMENT

Pick 3:
5-9·9
Pick 4:
2-3-4-7
Buckeye 5:
11-14-29·32-36

Sports, Page 4

•
Vol. 46, NO. 157
2 Sections, 12 Pages

BLAST SITE- Rescue workers and AK
Steel employees congregated In an area at the
area with nitrogen and steam. He
said there could have been a pocket
of gas normally used in the pipes
during production.
Tom Chandler, spokesman for
the Annen Employees Independent
Federation, said in a statement
Wednesday that management ha~
''total disregard lor safety.
"Over the past years, management has ignored the AEIF's
repeated safety complaints and
requests lor additional safety training," he said.
AK Steel disputes that con-

steel mill shortly after an explosion at the Mid·
dletown facility. Five workers were hospitalized
after the blast and 14 people were treated. (AP)

tcntion.
"People would like to think
there arc one or two common
threads and we c;m eliminate (the
accidents),'' said company
spokesman Alan McCoy. "What
we do a~ management is take a reasoned and logical approach and
investigate each accident and determine the root cause. There may be
scores of factors involved.'·
OSHA investigators were in the
union hall when the explosions
occurred. looking into an October

anthrax bacterium.
"It takes such a large dose ... to
get one that will infect you," he
said. "It's a great myth about
anthrax. Its effect on humans is
lower than you would think."
Wright-Patterson officials said
Tuesday that the 1950s-era
bomblets unearthed at the base
might contain anthrax, a bacterial
lung disease that afnicl~ catde but
can spread to humans.
·
Lt. Gen. Richard Scofield said
there are no known pathogens that
could have been used in the
bomblets and survived 40 years
underground except anthrax.
Although there are no records
that show antlrrax was ever used in
the bomblets, the possibility has to

be considered, he said.
Several of the bomblets were
sent to the Fon Detrick institute to
determine their contents. The
bomblets will be ~'lken to the nearby Aberdeen Proving Grounds to
be dismantled under controlled
conditions. Results are expected liy
Friday.
The bomblets are about 21 inches long and 1-112 inch in diameter
and resemble pipes. They were
designed to be dropped from plane.~
inside a large container, which
would break open and scatter. Officials believe they were made in the .
1950s.
The bombs were discovered
about 13 feet underground during
installation of a sewer line for a

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Phone (304) 773·5721 or {304) 773·5900
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lion' s auention.'' He added. however. that ··i f there's significant progress
tloc White House 'Uld ~terc arc serious negotiations, I cer~tinly hope we
don't shut the government down."
The \VIlitc House budge t proposal included a call for legislation to
restore spending authority through Jan . 26. 19'll\. hut Hou se Speaker
Newt Giugrich hns sa.itl he won't pennil an extension unlc~s there is serious bargaining over a balanced budget.
While the White House and congressinn'd negotiawrs are expected to
mee t today. lillie serio us progress is e&lt;pectcd until next week, when ~oc
Congressional Butlge t Office will unveil an updated economic forecast.
The report is cxpcrtcd to show that between $'i0 billion to $100 billion is
111

availahlc f{Jr ~ pe nding .

Republicans. speakin g on condition of anonymity, said GOP leaders
were diScussing revising tloeir balanced budget pbn. which Clinton vetoed
on Wcdnesd;1y. to take the money into account.

New Syracuse mayor, other
officials sworn in at meeting

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Law enforcement officials are
continuing their investigation into
local burglaries, including the Oct.
I breaking rmd entering of the Forest Run Block Plant ncar Pomeroy.
In the block plant burglary,
thieves used a fork truck to lwist
the compr111y sale through an oflice
window . The safe was then taken
into a large, open g&lt;trage at the site,
where it was loaded onto a truck,
according to owner Don Grueser.
The two-ton safe was recovered
last week from a farm in Athem
County where it had been buried,
according 10 Meigs County Sheriff
.lames M. Soulsby
.
Subjects used
and cutting
torch to gain access to sale's contents, whicli included business and
personal rce'ords in addition to an
undisclosed :unount of cash.
Soulsby said his department
received information recently con(Continued nn l'age 3)

-#~
·~ ·- .
'

'' ' .

.
J

.
:&lt;-

~

-

'

'•

~';.-

SAFE RECOVERED - Area lawmen
recovered a safe
stolen Oct. I from the Forest Run Block Plant near Pomeroy. The
safe was found buried on an Athens County farm. Business owner
Don Grueser and Sheriff James M. Soul~hy
examine the two-ton
,,
safe. (Sentinel photo)

By KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
The presenting of plaques and
swearing in of elected officials
highlighted Thursday night' s meeting of Syracuse Village Council.
Mayor James Pape, who served
on council from I 9')0 to 1991 and
as mayor from 1992 to 1995, and
Dennis Wolfe , councilman from
1991 to 1995, were presented
plaques. llte plaques were presented by Councilman Larry Lavender
on behalf of council for their dedication and service to the village of
Syracuse.
Sworn in by Pape was George
Connolly, newly-elected mayor.
Pape did not run for a second term.
This is Conn oily's first experience
in public office.
Also sworn in were Jani ce
Zwilling, re-elected clerk -treasurer;
Bill Roush, re-elected councilman;
and Mony Wood , newly-elected
councilman. .
Zwilling was elected for her first
term in I 'J77 .
Refreshm ent s were served during tl1e social hour.
In o~1er business, an alley next
to the Butch Lisle and the Dennis
Moore residence ., came under

SWEARS IN NEW MAYOR - James Pape, left, outgoing
mayor of the village of Syracuse, swore in newly-elected Mayor
George Connolly at Thursday's meeting of Syracuse Village Council. Pape did not seek re-election. This is Connolly's first experience in public office. (Sentinel photo)
scrullny. Lisle want s the alley to
remain open while Moore wishe s it
closed, it was notc&lt;.l .
It was also noted ~tal Moore h't'
placed a harricauc across a portion

of the alley. The area has been used
as an alley for man y yeiu·s and ha~
been maintain ed hy the village.
oflicials noted.
1
(Contit~ued nn l'age 3)

'

deposits.
Brian Gheen. Pearl Street,
Racine, appeared before council
with tax statements regarding riverbank property that Qheen states he
owns. He advised council that it is
his feeling that the village boat
levee rrunp is on his property.
After discussion , council
advised that it wa~ in no position to
make comments or take action on

the matter at this time, and that
Gheen should contact an attorney.
It was noted tlmt the principle of
adverse possession might rule since
the levee has been used for over 21
years.
Robert Wingett , Syracuse.
administrator of the Wingett estate,
reported that when a surveyor was
surveying the property and putting
it into tmcts, it was discovered the

village's water tank is not on the
property ~mt ~tc village has a deed
for.
Council agreed that Meigs
County Prosecuting Auomey John
Lentes prepare new deeds. ·thus
switching Ote properties.
Council also &lt;urlendc&lt;l the annual appropriations ordinance and
expended $4,763. w·hich was
received from Ute village's insur-

ancc carrier for damages which
occurred to a polkc cruiser.
In other action, council opened
the only scaled tiid for the drunage&lt;l
1991 police cruiser, which came
lrom Car·J Hysell in the runount of
$1,054. The bid met the council
minimum bid of $1.000, and the
vehicle was sold to Hysell.
Clifford Ashley representing the
Ken Amsbary Chapter of the Issac

DEP plans public comment
period on m iII perm it draft

Beautiful Poinsettias

$6.98

Lawmen
get break
in probe
of B&amp;Es

Racine Village Council
approved a resolution authorizing
the village clerk to make transfers
in the benefits items in appropriations.
It was noted U1at when the funds
were orig inaH y appropriated, the
federal withholding tax was paid
quarterly. Right after the appropriations were made, the clerk -treasur,
er was required to make monthly

LIVE FRAZIER FIR WREATHS

6 1/2" Pot. ..
or

35 cents
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Racine Village Council approves fund transfers for benefit items

FRAZIER FIR

For All Your Home Decorating Needs:

·. ~

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 8, 1995

Jiit

AND CHOOSE A BEAUTIFUL
CHRISTMAS TREE!
Select from beautifully sheared Frazier Fir,
White Pine, Scotch Pine, or Douglas Fir--All
trees are perfectly shaped &amp; reasonably
priced. Sizes range from 6ft. to 10ft.
Good Selection Still Available!

•

By DA VJD ESPO
jeopardize medical coverage to 8 million needy Americans.
Associated Press Writer
"1l1at would violate our values. It is not necessary ," Clinton said at
WASHINGTON - Despite a fresh offer from President Clinton, con- the top of a meeting with Dcmonatic governors. " II it continues tn be a
gressional Republic:ms and the White House seem no closer to agreement part of Ute budget, if necessary, I will veto it again. " lie planned continon balancing the budget as a pre-Christrna• shutdown of some federal · ued attacks on the Medicaid provision throughout the weekend.
agencies looms over Ute horizon .
The two sides 'tre working against a deadline of ne xt Friday, when
"We are ounning out of time," Ohio Rep. John Kasich. chairman of spending authority for some federal agencies employing hundreds of
the House Budget Commiuec, told reporter. Thursday after a 90-minute thousands of workers is scheduled to expire.
bargaining session. In comments echoed by other Republicans, he said
Leon Panella. the White House chief of staff. said this morning on
Clinton's new plan would leave the budget "a mimmum $400 billion in
NBC's
7(,Ja r that ~tc Dec. 15 date should not be viewed it' a deadline.
the hole'' over seven years, despite White House claims.
"We should. not hold innocent victims of ~tis country hostage 10 ~ocsc
At the White Hou se, Clinton rebuued: "I've made a proposal. Now I'd negotiations ...
like 10 see v;hat Utcirs is. '·
Asked on the s:une program ahout the deadline, Sen. Don Nickles. RRevealing his strategy tn undennine t11e GOP budget, Clinton warned
Okla. , a member of the Senate Budget Committee, said Republicans
today that Republican plans to eliminate the guarantee of Medicaid would
"don't want the govenuncnt status quo. We have to get thi s administra-

new lire station last week. Seven
small buildings wiU1in 300 meters
of the site were evacuated while an
Anny ordnance squad investigated.
Base spokesman Marc Martens
said there is no danger to the public
or base workers even if tbe
homblets contain anthrax. The only
people who could have been
exposed were the workers who
were in the excavation trench, he
said.
"The danger beyond that is
zero," he said.
Martens said anthrax can be
fatal, but is curable with early
detection and prevention. As a precaution, about 35 workers who
were at the site have been given
pet.icillin tablets.

COME ON OVER
TO BOB'S •••

Low tonight In the 20s, snow.
Highs
In the 30s.

Saturday, partly cloudy .

Clinton budget plan gets cool response

fire.
Six ·workers have died in three
major accidenl' at the Middletown
plant since April 20. 19')4, according to OSHA records.
OSHA found no violations in
the deaths of two other workers one who was found unconscious in
July 1992 and another who died
five weeks after being burned in a
June 9, 1995, ftre at a boiler house.
. About 3,500 people work at the
mill, which produces low-carbon,
nat-rolled steel. mosUy for making
cars and appliances.

Army downplays concerns over small bombs
By JAMES HANNAH
Associated Press Writer
DA YfON - Chances are slim
that 60 small bombs discovered
buried at Wright-Patterson Air
Force Base contain potentially fatal
anthrax or other biological agents,
an Anny official said.
The Anny did not do munitions
testing with biological agents at
Wright-Patterson, said Norm
Covert, spokesman for the U.S.
Anny Medical Institute of Infectious Diseases in Fort Detrick, Md.
The testing only occurred at
Fort Detrick, Pine Bluff Arsenal in
Arkansas, and the Dugway Proving
Grounds in Utah, he said Wednesday. It is unlikely that live organ-'
isms would get outside those areas,
he said.
"It's very unlikely that the
munitions would have any organisms in tloem," he said. "There's
no reason for us to believe there are
any biological agents in them."
Covert said the only test conducted for the Anny at Wright-Patterson was in 1955, when harmless
simulants were used in spray
devices.
He also said it is hard for
humans to become infected with an

Ohio Lottery

·'

CHARlESTON, W.Va. -The lene chloride, carbon tetrachloride,
Division of Environmental Protec- bezcne, polychlorinated dibenzo-ption is seeking public conunent on dlozins ru1d polychlorinated dibendraft air pollution control permit zofurans.
Built into the pennit are conclicovering emissions from a proposed Mason County pulp and tions requiring Ute company to conpaper mill, DEP Director Eli duct a pre-construction, I 2-month
study to uetennine background levMcCoy announced Thursday.
·
DEP's Office of Air Quality will eLs of dioxin in the air surroundmg
accept comments for 60 days on the community of Apple Grove.
Parsons and Whittemore's plan to Sampling is to continue for 12
build the mill in Apple Grove. The months after lite st&lt;trt up for each of
comment period will end on Tues- the two proposed kral.t paper mills.
The draft pennit also imposes sevday, Feb. 6, 1996.
Office of Air Quality represen- eral requirements for monitoring
tatives will hold an infonnational emissions on and otT site. The commeeting to discuss the penni~ Sat- pany also is required to inst~ll
urday Dec. 16 at Hannan High backup systems to ensure emtsSchool near the community of Ash- sions remain in compliance in th~
,
ton in Mason County. Citizens will · case of equipmeJI( failure.
In addition to Ute Dec. 16 inforhave an opportunity to ask questions about the 25-page draft per- . mational meeting, Office of Air
mit. The meeting will run from Quality representatives will be at
noon to 4 p.m.
Hannan High School on Monday.
The draft covers emissions gen- Jan. 22. between noon and 8 p.m.
erated during wood handling, pulp to accept written comments and
making, bleaching, recovery of record oral comments for the offipulping chemicals, electricity gen- cial permit record. The high schQOI
eration and waste water treatment is located at 6770 Ashton-Upland
processes. Emissions covered Road.
Written CQmmenLs also may be
under the pennit include particulate
matter, carbon monoxide, nitrogen sent to: G . Dale Farley, Chief.
oxides, sulfur dioxide and volatile Office of Air Quality, 1588 Wa~h,
'NEW' LOADER- The Meigs County
organic compounds. Other emis- ington Street, East, Charleston, Highway Department recently acquired this milsions covered are total reduced sul- WV 25311-2599. The deadline to Itary surplus Case MW24C front-end loader as
fur. sulfuric avid, chlorform, submit written comments is 4:30 one of the latest additions to Its construction
bydrochlofic acid,. chlorine, chlo- · p.m.\ Tuesday, Feb. 6
arsenal. The department purchased the 1,073rine dioxide, fonnaldehyde, methyhour;z 1/2-cubic-yard loader for $19,000 and

Walton League presented the village wiOo a S200 check 'L' a donation lor ~1c work on improving Ole
boat ramp. It was noted the ~illagc
had enlarged the parking lot for
trailers. kept the roadway clc,med,
and did work to repair the holes
between tloc slabs m ~1c rrunp.
A bill for damages which
occurred to street signs on Fourth
(Continued on l'aRe 3)

Caperton
will co-chair
commission

also bought a live-ton hoist for $3,000. Engineer
Bob Eason, left, and Highway Department
Superintendent Manning Roush examine the
new purchase. Eason said the loader represented a tremendou~ bargain for the highway
department. (Sentinel photo)

Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - Gov. Gaston Caperton will become the new
co-chairman of the Appalachian
Regional Commission. effective
Ian. I.
Caperton will succeed Kentucky
Gov . llrcreton Jones, according to
commiss ion spokeswo man Ann
Anderson . The other co-chairman
is Jesse White Jr., a federal official.
" West Virginia has benefited
more than any other state from
ARC (c ommiss ion) funding,"
Caperton said . " My goal for next
year is to make the ARC work
more eiTcctivelv ."
Last year, the Huntington area
received more than $1 million' in
funding from the commission out
of $14 ,9 million in grants for 33
projects that were earmarked for'
West Virginia .
Almost since its inception in
1965, the co mmi ssion has been a
lighming rod tor controversy .
This year, Rep . Sco u Klug, RWis., proposed legislation to kill
the commission. but his measure
wa' defeated on a vote of 108-319.
Klug said the commission "was a
well-intentioned program that has
ouUived its usefulness."
The commission has spent about
$6.5 bilhon in impoverished areas
in 12 states .

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