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. ;:::::===========;;;;;;==--__;,--___::-__:._:.....______
:Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 11, 1995

:.::.:.:.:.:=!.:...:..:..:.,:_____:__

Social Security issues end-of-year reminders

Beat of the Bend ...

BY Ed Peterson
Social Security,
by Bob Hoeflich
manager in Athens
Do you have a child born this
year who doesn't have a Social
Security number? Have you
rs .
I know. You put in a cold week· They are Mr. and
changed your name this year
end. At lea.~t the predicted heavy Knight , accompanied by their (through
snowfall missed us. Of course, daughter , Amanda, of Mayfield, maniage, divorce, or any other rea·
you're aware that although it may Ky., and Mr. and Mrs. Terry son)? Are you receiving Social
seem like winter, it really isn't. Knight of Marion. Needless to say, Security benefits and you've
Officially wint~r stam on Dec. 23. Cllet and Annie loved having them. moved this year?
If the preview is an indication, then
If these are the kinds of situa·
I understand plans are underway tions that match your circum·
it's not gonna be like sunny Florida
here for the next few months. But to stage a public program for the stances, this is the time of year you
Christmas season in a Pomeroy should be sure to talk to Social
then, it never is.
mini-park. The presentation is to Security. It's a good time u:&gt; do a
I'm a little late in getting word feature sing in· , dancin' and instru· reality check to make sure you are
to you and I hope you can make it mental music. The program is ten· on top of your rights and responsi·
The December meeting of the tatively planned for next Monday bilities under Social Security.
Meigs County Diabetes Sup port evening. Dec. 18. I'll let you know
Do you have a child who was
Network will he held tomorrow if it materializes-and hopefully, if born this year who doesn't have a
evening, Tuesday. Dec. 12th, in the it does, t11c weather will moderate.
Social Security number? The law
cafeteria at Veteran s Memorial
requires you to list the Social Secu·
Racine 's Libby Fisher has an rity number on your tax return for
HospitaL
Judy Hennesy or Pleasant Val· interesting article on t11e origination each dependent born before
ley Hospital, a certified diabetes of the candy cane and ils place in November I, 1995, being claimed
educator. will he speaker stressing the holiday season. Libby present· on your 1995 tax return . If you
the need of being aware of the spe· ed the article at the annual Cbrjst· have a child born before November
cia! needs of diabetes and hence mas party of the Women's Auxil- I who doesn't have a Social Secumaking the best of every day. iary at Veterans Memorial Hospital
Tuesday evening's meeting is open held Friday night.
to all persons with diabetes a.' well
As usual the party was a special
as t11eir relatives and friends.
time for the Auxiliary and guestsand the food was out of sight. If
You undoubtedly noticed that you'd like to become a volunteer at
the price of gasoline at the pumps the Pomeroy hospital just pick up
was increased by about seven cents an application at the auxiliary desk
a gallon last week. overnight, at a in the hospital lobby . Additional
number of local service stations. I members are needed and are more
Dear Ana Landers: I am sending
assume everybody is too busy to than welcnme.
you one of your columns that has
complain to our elected state offiI understand that the federal yeUowcd with age, but I think It Is
cials about the discrepancy in what
we pay compared to other locations pension for Sen. Raben Packwood very timely. Would you reprint it? It
in th e state . Not that I think it who was, shall we say, forced to needs 10 be repeated over and ovet
leave office due to alleged miscon· -- RETIRED SCHOOIIEACHER
would do any good ....
duct will run about $90,000 a year IN CORPUS CHRISTI,'IEXAS
DBA!~ TEXAS: I like it beJter than
Usually at Thanksgiving time, plus some perks. And you won Chet and Annie Knight have one dered what's wrong with this coun- I did when I firSt ran iL Thanks(
Dear Ann: Because of my
son or arlothcr home for a visit. try. Well- for a starter that's one
husband's business, I am subjected 10
: This year, both sons made it home. thing. Do keep smiling.
the cockJail ciltuit more than I want
10 be. It seems the principal topic for
discussion is "our crazy, mlx~·up
kids..
Those who have no nutty offspring
10 talk about feel sttangely deprived.
:By Tll\i FRIEND
National Institute of Child Health Here is a superb recipe for creating
:USA TODAY
and Development. "What we one. After observing several nieces
Scientists have found the key found is the Ferrari of enzymes. It and nephews, as well as !he progeny
· that turns on melatonin production has tremendous acceleration, of my friends, I can attest to its
in the brain - a discovery that tremendous braking power and authenticity:
could lead to new treatments for great control."
Start with one child
When the Ferrari is revved up,
sleep disorder, jet lag, even mental
Add a lin/' hor air.-- Two hours of
high levels of melatonin are made "When I was your age" will get a rise
·disorders.
"We focused on one of the bio- in the pineal gland of the brain, out of him.
chemical machines, or enzymes, inducing sleep. Turned off, melaSrir in sorM sarcasm. -- It will
. involved in the production of mela- tonin production ceases, prompting bring out the bitter flavoc
.tonin ," says David Klein of the wakefulness.

rity number, you should malce sure
you get one before you tile your tax
return next year. Remember, the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
will not process a return without
correct Social Security numbers for
dependents.
If you've you changed your
name this year (through marriage,
divorce, or any other reason) and
haven't made sure your new name
is listed on your Social Security
card and in Social Security's
records, there may be problems
post.ing your earnings to Social
Security's files. (This could reduce
your future Social Security benefits .) Also, the Internal Revenue
Service may have problems pro·
cessing your tax return .
To get a replacement card, you
usually need one identifying document. To change the name on your
card, you need documentation
that shows your old nanie and your
new name. If you were born out.
side the United States, you general·
ly must show procf of U.S. citizenship or lawful alien status. Your

•

replacement card will have the
same number as your old card.
If you're receiving Social Secu·
rity benefits and you've moved this
year, make sure we have your new
address. (Sometimes people who
have their checks sent directly to
their bank forget to tell us
about a change in their mailing
address.)
You must notify the post office
and Social Security immediately if
you change your mailing address.
In fact, failure to report a change of
address is the leading cause of
cbecks not arriving on time. Your
report should include your claim
number, your old address, and the
new address, including ZIP code.
Give the names of all famil v mem·
bers who should receive benefits or
information at the new address.
You should report a new address
even if you have direct deposit
because important letters from
Social Security are sent to your
mailing address, even though your
benefits go directly to a bank. Your
benefits could be stopped tem porarily if Social Security cannot

Retired school teacher
prefers 'plain ,cooking'

·Enzyme could help. put
to rest sleep problems

Fill with /iad examples •• nobody has 10 suffer because there is

preferably your own. Instruct the
child how to lie about his age so you
can sneak him into the movie 8l half
price. Take "souvenirs" from
rescaurants and hotels. Towels are
nice. Pillow cases are bettet
Season wilh indifference. -- Most
families have a lot of "I don't give a
damn what you do so long as you
don't bother me"lying around.

Sift in

IOIM

indecision. -- Not

being able to decide what you stand
for will give yOW' child that subde,
no-leltture, no-substance look.
Add a dash ofalcohoL -- Drink in
front of them, behind them and all
around them. They wiD then get the
impression it's a normal and natural
part of life. And be sure they see vou
take a belt when Jhe going gels tough.
In a crisis, say, "Jeez, I need a drink!"
They will then get. the idea that the
way to· deal with a problem is by
getting !xJmbed.
Tou in afow pills. ··This will teach
your children there are chemical
solutions to all problems. They
should get the idea early in life that

a capsule or a tablet made 10 order
that can protect them against any
kind of disappoinunent, failure or
discomfort.
ur sirr~rMr JUiri/ ready to boil. ••
Ignore all sympiOms of your child's
anger, anxiety or rears. If you pretend
they don't exist, they wiD disappeat
Beat regularly. -- It's your job 10
see that the children shape up.
Reasoning takes too long, and
sometimes, they don't know what
you're Jalking abouL (lbo young or
too stupid.) Acrack across the mouth
is easily understood.

locate you because you have not
reported a change of address.
If you receive Social Security
and worked ir. 1995, you need to
report your earnings to Social
Security by April 15 , 1996. The
1995 limits were $8,160 for people
under 65 and $11,280 for people
65-69. Remember that you can earn
more money in 1995 before your
benefits are reduced. If you're
under 65, you can earn up to
$8,280 next year with no reduction
in benefits. If you're 65 to 69, you
can earn up to S II ,520 in 1996
with no reduction. If you're 70 or
older, there is no limit on your
earnings.

Holiday
programs
announced
Both Christmas and New Year
programs have been announced by
the Hillside Baptist Church, located ·
on State Route 143 just off Route 7
near Pomeroy.
Christmas performances to
include "No Greater Gift". directed
by Belinda Dean, and "A Christ·
mas Adventure" directed by Rachel
Hood will be preselllcd on Dec. 20
and 21. There will also be songs of
Christmas by the Hillside Baptist
Choir.
The New Year's Eve service
will begin at 8 p.m . and singers
will include the Partakers, the
Hood Family, Sandy King, and
others. There will also be several
speakers including U1e pastor, Dr.
James R. Acree, Rev . Henry
Hoppe , Ron Clonch, Dan Hood,
Joe Humphrey, and Charles Wil·
lett. Other guest participants will be
David Johnson from Pensacola,
Fla. and Ryan Clonch of Pontiac,
Mich. Refreshments will be served.

Bake in the h'at of your own overdo iL God is 10 be used only in
tempter. •• Being screamed at will case of an Cllle~Bency.
give achild that "fresh" qualil): It will
H you follow these instructions,
also make him a scrcamc:c, which wiD you are sure to have a Problem Child
make him very popular with his of your very own to discuss at
peers, teachers, colleagues and cock1ail parties -just like everyone
bosses.
else. •• I PREFER PLAIN
Omit God. -'ltach your kid early COOKING MYSELF
that sleeping or golf orlalnis is more DEAR COOKIE: Now that's what
important than going to a place of I call a dynamite recipe. I hope
wor1hip; On special occasions · nobody tries it because there 8lf
(severe illness or death), you may already too many
but don't maladjusted children out there.
have to mention

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Molldly . S.Udly:. Ml . 9 pm

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cloudy. Hlgl!s In mld-40s.

en tine
Vol. 46, NO. 159

35 centa
A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 12, 1995

1 Sections, 10 Pages

Pilots' release
•
eases worr1es

To have,
have not

Captivity threatened scheduled
signing of Bosnian peace accord

Experts: explain
Medicare change
1mpact to c1t1zens

By MARK J. PORUBCANSKY
As.~ociated Press Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina - Rebel Serbs today freed two
French combat pilots shot down during a NATO raid, erasing concerns
that their captivity might disrupt the signing of the Bosnian peace plan.
Tbe pilots, who bad been held for 3-112 months, were banded over in
the nortbeastem !Own of Zvornik after days of warnings from Paris and
pressure from other capitals on Presi dent Slobodan Milosevic of Serbia,
who has great leverage with the Bosnian Serbs.
The office of President Jacques Chirac of France announced that the
airmen "have been turned over in Zvornik to the French army chief of
staff." They were to arrive in FraQce tonight via the Serb capital, Bel·
grade, Chime's spokesw0111an, Catherine Colonna, said.
There were no details about the condition of Capt. Frederic Cbiffot and
Lt. Jose-Manuel Souvignet.
France, eager to win the pilots' release before the Bosnian peace agree·
ment is signed in Paris on Thursday, had demanded that the Serbs free
them or "suffer the consequences." Officials threatened unspecified
diplomatic, military or economic action.
A Bosnian Serb source said some conditions may have been attached
to the men's release.
There bas been speculation that one of those conditions is pennission
for Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic to attend the signing of the
.peace accord, despite his status as suspected war criminal subject to
arrest.
Karadzic, indicted by the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal in The Hague,
might hope that his appearance in France would lead to the dismissal of
the charges against him.
French officials have denied any link between the push to free the airmen and Paris' efforts to obtain guarantees for Serb neighborhoods in the
Bosnian capital that fear reprisal when they are disarmed under the U.S .brokered accord.
Cbiffot and his co-pilot, Souvigne~ were captured Au~. 30 after their
l)ti!J18e.2000-!VJIS. ~ doWII during punitive NATO airstrtlres against the
Serbs that led to a cease-fire and last month's initialing of a Bosnian
peace agreement in Dayton, Ohio.
Officials worked behind the scenes to obtain the release of the pilots,
after Bosnian Serbs ignored France's deadline of midnight Sunday to disclose the men's whereabouts.
Serb and Yugoslav army sources said Gen. Momcilo Perisic, the chief
of staff of the Yugoslav army, and Gen. Jean-Philippe Douin, his French
counterpan, met with Lt. Gen. Ratko Mladic, the Bosnian Serb military
chief, on releasing the pilots.
The meeting took place in Zvornik, a Bosnian Serb·held town near the
border with Serbia. The sources said the meeting ended with agreement to
free the two, but that beavy-snow initially held up the releases.
The pilots' release settled one bitter issue two days before the signing
of the peace treaty. But in Serb·held suburbs of Sarajevo, another debate
raged on.

By LARRY WHEELER
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - Congress
and President Clinton should be
telling Americans how their lives
would be affected by changes in
Medicare and Medicaid rather than
quarreling about numbers and pos·
turing for political gain, experts
warned Monday.
Medicare as we know it won't
be preserved as Republicans have
promised, the experts said. Instead,
it will likely be transfonned into a
two-tiered system of " haves" and

By TOM HUNTER
Sentin'l News Starr
The resignation Councilman Dr.
Nick Robinson was accepted by
Middleport Village Council during
its regular meeting Monday night.
Robinson, who was appointed to
council in the fall of 1993, tbanlced
the council and Mayor Dewey Horton for the opportunity lo serve the
vinage.
Horton and council accepted the
resignation, which is effective
immediately. Council bas begun
the search for a replacement for
Robinson.
The resignation of Village
Clerklfreasurer Teri Hockman was
also accepted by council, effective
Jan. I, 1996. Council approved a
motion appointing Dennis Hockman, clerk/treasurer -elect, to serve

the remainder of Teri Hocbnan' s
tenn.
Honon announced that a $1,000
donation for the Middlepon Marina
project b~s been made to the village by the Meigs County Planning ·
Commission.
Horton and council extended
thanks 10 the Planning Commission
and Chairman John Lentes for the
donation, which will pay for the
c0111pletion of the Marina project.
Council approved the third reading of the Christmas bonuses for
village employees. Council President Bob Gilmore clarified a previous statement concerning a $1,120
donation to the village by the
Feeney-Bennett American Legion
Post.
According to Gilmore, the donation by the post was not particular-

•

TESTIFYING BEFORE STUDENTS -Eastern Higl! S.:hool senior Micah Otto testlf~es during the mock trial program Monday at the Meigs County Courthouse. The prog~:am, organized by
tbe Meigs County prosecutors office, teaches students about the criminal co1&gt;rts system and provides them with experience In a courtroom environment; (Sentinel photo)

I

•

•

''have nots. ''

Medicaid, the health care safety
net for poor children, pregnant
women, the disabled and lowincome seniors also faces an uncertain future, they said. The nation
could end up with 50 Medicaid
programs - one for each state and no nationwide guarantee that
babies, needy mothers and the frail
elderly would be given a helping
hand.
Those were two of many possiasked to serve jllry duty, they will
day as nearly 100 students took
bilities presented Monday by a
part in mock trial programs at t,be
now be more familiar with the
panel of health-care industry and
entire aspects of the court and its
Meigs County Courthouse.
economics experts at a seminar
Mock trials, sponsored by the relations to the law," Powell said.
sponsored by the Kais~:r Family
According__to Meigs High govMeigs County prosecutor's
Foundation, an independent phiJan.
office ; hav·e been lit )lrogress ernment icaclier Miele Childs, the
thropy specializing in health care
since the beginning of the school students put a Jot of hard work
issues.
year. Prosecutor John Lentes, into the cases and the preparation
Republican lawmakers have prealong with assistant prosecutors they made for them.
sented "choice" as the ballmarlc of
Scott Powell and Chris Tcnoglia,
"I saw one of the kids going
their MedicarePius plan, which
have each visited the schools to over notes on the case this mom·
promises to modernize a 1965-style
leach the students about the ing. The student went on to tell
health in sumncc plan and save
aspects of criminal law.
that they had been up till 3 a.m.
$270 billion during the next seven
"The mock trial programs not preparing for the trial, and they
years.
only teach the kids about tbe were really nervous about the
However, those choices could
criminal courts system, but also whole thing. You could tell that
end up fracturing the system, which
give them experience in a coun· the kids really prepared. They did
gives more than 38 million Amcri·
room environment. With the kids a great job, and it was a great
cans access to mainstream
nearing the age where they'll he
(Continued on Page 3)
medicine, according to the panel of
experts.
According to the Kaiser panel,
the Republican McdicarePius
rcfonn plan could result in:
• An industry of "boutique"
health care providers and Medicare
voucher " bounty bunters" picking
off the healthiest and wealt~iest
senior citizens.
• Only the sickest, poorest and
medically most expensive seniors
remaining in the traditional fee-for·
service Medicare plan.
• Private health-care insurance
companies introducing premium
increases on senior enrollees once
the biggest federal spending restric·
tions kick in.
These issues really haven't been
properly explored, said Marilyn
Moon, a Senior Fellow with the
Urban Institute and an expert on
Medicare.
With Clinton and Republican
leaders of Congress under pressureto avoid a another partial federal
shutdown later this week, Moon
COUNCIL RECOGNITION - Longtime Middleport village
expressed doubt these concerns
Clerkll'reasurer Teri Hockman, left, and Coumilman Jim Clat·
will arise as negotiators debate
worthy, right, were recognized for their service to tbe village at
their budget ideas.
Monday's meeting of Middlepprt Village Council. Mayor Dewey
"By promising people we're
Horton is at center.
protecting Medicare, most people
don't know we're talking about
changing the whole structure of
Medicare," Moon said. "Let's
have an honest discussion about
sented petitions to council request- Pomeroy for his role is saving vic- what those choices are.''
ing· that all downtown parking tims of a Pomeroy apartment fire
Both political parties are guiltY.
meters be removed. Council mem· on Thanksgiving morning. Davis of disregarding the truth, observed
befs took no action, indicating they and another Pomeroy man, han- Uwe Reinhardt, a professor of
non Spaun, woke up residents of political economics at Princeton
would discuss the matter later.
Council issued a letter of com- the burning building and assisted University's Woodrow Wilson
mendation to Greg Davis of them in escaping from the struc- School.
·
ture.
Reinhardt criticized both sides
Council gave final approval to for trying to "bamboozle" the
an ordinance allowing the village~ public with talk of cuts that aren't
to hold back 5 percent of fire insur- cuts and spending increases that
ance
setUements in the village until don't add up.
·
be gtowing in popularity, the big
attraction is the candlelight walk such time as the building is razed
The GOP theme song tbat
around the track and singing carols, or repaired.
insists deep changes to the ~cdi­
Council also approved putting care system are necessary to stave
Hart explained.
outstanding
checks in an escrow off bankruptcy of the Part A trust·
"We bad 200 people last year
account
and
approved
adj~sting the
participate in the walk," he illusfund ignores the reality that the'
1995
appropriations
to
correct bal- trust fund has always been on the
trated.
"It's kind of a unique thing," be ances in some funds prior to the verge of bankruptcy, Reinhardt
end of the year.
observed.
said, referring to the walk.
Also, an ordinance raising the
He faulted Democrats for
·Hart asked people to bring a
candle, or a flashlight for young- clerk/treasurer's salary from : desaibing GOP changes as "cuts"
sters, lawn chain and warm cloth- $15,0001o $17,000 was approved.
to Medicare spending when in fact
Clerk/treasurer Kathy Hysell the Medicare budget increases from·
ing.
"Everybody is welcome; the reported the following balances for $I 92 billion in 1996 to an expected.
(Continued on Page 3) $274 billion in 2002.
·
moce the merrier."

Students meet the system
with mock trial programs
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Starr
A criminal case of felonious
assault in connection with an
altercation between two men. The
case doesn' t sound so unusual,
and is a charge heard frequently
in the state criminal courts sys·
tern.
When two juveniles are
involved in the supposed inci·
dent, which occurred at a video
arcade, and a group of juveniles
are prosecuting and defending the
case, the result is an educational
experience like none other for
senior government students at
Meigs and Eastern high schools.
Life imitated "real life" Man·

ly earmarked for the Christmas
bonuses for village employees. The
donation was a general donation to
the village by the pos~ after which
the village eannar~ed the donated
funds for the bonuses.
Council passed a third reading
accepting Rumpke Commercial
Services' bid for refuse services,
with Councilman Jim Clatworthy
voting against and Gilmore abstain·
ing. The bi-d was accepted and
adopted, with the same vote as the
third reading.
A statement of intent was
approved , stating the village's
intent to purchase water from the
Gallia County Rural Water Associ·
ation for the village water system.
The statement was deemed nee·
essary by Horton in accordance
(Continued on Page l)

Pomeroy Council gives initial OK to water rate change
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy Village Council
wrapped up business for the year
Monday night, including giving
first reading to a resolution changing water rates for village water

cu.siOmers.
For residential water service, a
monthly base charge of $11 for the
fii'St 2,000 gallons of waler, plus 46
cents for each I 00 gallons in excess
of 2,000 gallons a month.
Business and industrial cus-

tomers using larger lines, between
one and six inches in diameter, will
pay from $38.22 to $413.90 a
month. Tap fees are also being
adjusted.
Downtown business owners
Sarah Fisher and Bobbie Karr pre-

Racine readies for its third Christmas in the Park
By JIM FREEMAN
I
1
Sentinel News StaiT
Racine's third annual Cbrlstmas
in the Patt will be observed Thursday at Star MiD Parlt:.
The event will start at 6:30,
kicked off by candlelight walk with
caroling around the park's half·
"It's ki~Jd of an old-fashioned
Cllrisimas thing, combining the traditions of caroling and fellowship,"
awmling to Satt Mill Parle Board
President Dale Hart.
"It seeliiS to be growing every

year," he added. .
The event is hosted by the park
board and includes among its
auractions a miniature village, representing the various businesses,
churches and other establishments
in Racine.
"It looks like a miniature
Racine. That's what it looks like,"
Hart said.
The pint-sized village now conJains almost 20 buildings. New this
year is.a replica of the Racine F1re
House.
Follo)Ving the candlelight walk,

•

•

Low tonight In mid lOs,
cloudy . Wednesday , partly

•

mile lri!Ck.

West Virginia~ II Chevy, Olds,
Pon#icrc, Buiclc, Geo and
Cuslom Vcfn Dealer.

Pick 3:
520
Pick 4:
6870
Buckeye 5:
16-22-25-27-31

Robinson, Hockman resignations
accepted by Middleport Council

JDM PIDEN SMARRIASIIS Til WAY m GO!·

• 4&gt;4
•A&lt; Concltion
•Dnvers Side Air Bag
• 4 Wheel
AntH.ad&lt; Brakes
• Power Steering

Ohio Lottery

Dolphins
outlast
Chiefs

lir

various church choirs will perform
songs of the season, Hart said
Most activities will take place
near the village Christmas tree and
bonfire. There will be refreshments, coffee, hot chocolate, cookies and ireats for the kids supplied
by the park board, the Racine Area
Community Association, United
Methodist Women, American
Legion Auxiliary and the Fire
Department Auxiliary.
Santa Claus will give the treats
to the children, Hart said.
Wbile the whole event seems to

.. .

�'
•

Tuesday, December 12, 1995

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

.....

Page2~

r

Time out to play the
leadership card

know it."

Republicans think welfare
reform is a winning issue for them.
Their new "megapoll" of 7,000
voters nationwide shows that when
voters are informed that the GOP
wants to make states responsible
for welfare and limit the time that
any recipient can receive benefits,
71 percent approve and only 13
percent
disapprove .
An
ABC/Washington Post poll shows
thai voters uust the GOP to reform
welfare more than they do Clinton,
49 percent to 42 percent.
In September, President Clinton
said he would sign the Senate ver·
sion of welfare reform, which
included increased funding for
child care and bonus grants for
states that excel in placing welfare
recipients in jobs. ·
The president's statement set off
a storm o! protest from liberals,
including Clinton friend Marian
Wright F""elman, bead of the Children's Defense Fund, wbo contend·
ed that eliminating the entitlement
status of AFDC amounted to abandoning poor children.
The administration line now is
that Clinton "prefers" the Senate
bill, but objects to the House-Senate conference repon because the
bonus grants have been eliminated,

tioW

LOoK

'}J£

. -;. :tJJt
' '

MtCH

child care was cut back from Sen- ·
ate levels, and reductions were
made from current projected spending levels for food stamps, school
lunches , AFDC, aid to disabled
children, and services for abused
children.
But Republicans now conte~d
that's just an excuse by the Wh1te
House, arguing that the Ho~se-Sen ­
ate conference bill is closer in content to the Senate welfare bill than
it is to a House bill widely attacked
- legitimately - as draconian.
Both bills insist that welfare ,
recipients take paying jobs as fas( :
as possible. President Clinton says :
that's his goal, too.
Beyond work requirements, the
GOP wants to hand as mucb ,
authority as possible over welfare ;
policy to the states through block.;;
grants and to reduce the rate of
growth of federal grants.
.::,;
As part of their publicity cam· _
paign tllis week, House Republi· .i
cans asserted that "block grant.~ are- ,
not the same as revenue sharing,"..-.
meaning that the federal govern-~ !
ment will not grant complete free· dom to states - they will have to._ l
maintain at least 75 peroent of their• ·•
current spending levels, for
instance - and that funding for .. ,,
welfare will go up, not down.
The conference repon calls for a
4 percent increase in federal out· ."'.
lays for welfare over the next seven _'::
years instead of the 5.8 percent ·~~:
hike called for under current law. Still, Democrats assert- cor· .
rectl y - that the conference:" :
trimmed S14 billion from spending '1'_:
levels passed by the Senate. And ,. ;
one expert wimess at a House hear·_ ·
ing designed to boost the GOP plan .
said that its funding levels miglit ''::'
damage chances for success in :·· :
helping recipients find and keep '
jobs.
If and when the Lugar-Goodliqg
impasse is broken and Congress ;..
passes the conference report, a like'~':,
ly scenario calls for Clinton to veto
the measure while charging that tbe ·' •
GOP bill is (in the words of one
administration official) "crQel; .-·._,
cruel, cruel." Then, look for nego- .~
tiations to produce a bill that Clin· ...
ton will sign.
. ·T
Both Republicans and Clinton· .,,,
want to pass welfare reform before
the 1996 elections. If they do, Clin· .::;
ton will be able to say that be kept ·
GOP "extremists" from doing ......
their worst
•t t
(Morton Kondracke is execu- . , ;:
tive editor of Roll Call, the news· . ~ ·r
paper of Capitol HiU.)

'Toy Story': It's only a movie! ______~· .~·.:

Berry's World

"I'm afraid you are what is called 'CLUE
CHALLENGED.'"

·n

Carrey's all green and stretchy!
Oooob!" "Crikeys, the big lizard
ate a lawyer!" "Ha ha! The silly
ghosts are barfing bagels!" "Wow,
look at the rust on that pizza van."
"Jeeze, you can almost see the lice
on that monkey's digital furl"
Millions of dollars for this?
Whatever bappencd to Gum by?
Some of the more glassy-eyed
members of today's cyber-cults
even get excited about the possibility of reanimating actors from the
past - making brand new movies
with a digitized Jobn Wayne or
Bogan.
Sure, I'd plunk down my eight
bucks to see a new Bogan movie if
it was any good. But if you spend a
decade and a billion dollars making
a convincing (logic, I' II bet the
farm there won't be ;ouch left over
for a script. So I'd be plunking
down my money for yet another
freak show - watching a zombie
go through his ~ces in an imitation
so pale you can see right through it
In addition, it'd probably be colorized before it hit cable.
What is this jones for realism,
anyway? If you want to make a
movie about a monkey, wby not
use a real monkey. unless you're
making "King Kong ." I'd rather

see "King Kong" than a cyber- ", ,.'
movie about a monkey anyway· .,;.,
(As far as that goes, I'd rather see a
Bogart movie than a "bogart.com" ,
movie_)
-·-;:

·'

Who cares if a cartoon looks ::
"real" or not? I never noticed :.:;
Bugs Bunny's fur, or the feathers ' ::
on Daffy Duck. Fur and feathers in ~ ;:
cartoons are only there when . ·•
they're necessary- to get cbatred :; ::
if our cartoqn pals get shot by .; ;;
E~ner, to puff up if they're fright· · ~ :;
ened, to vanish completely if bit by ' "
Marvin the Martian s disintegrator · • ::

ray.

cized the social spending cuts out·
lined in the Republican · 'Contiact
With America."
Nancy Kassebaum and Patricia

Sara Eckel
Schroeder are two very different
women. They have different ide·
ologies, they come from different
parties, and they serve in different
houses of Congress. They bave
voted differently oo many different
issues, such as the welfare-reform
bill and the Family and Medical
Leave Act. But does the fact that
they are both women in this still
very male domain give them a
common ground? Should women
be worried that we are losing them?
Does tbe number of women in
Congress dramatically affect the
issues thai are brought into·lhe public forum?
Yes, says tbe CA WP study,
wbicb Dodson co-authored. The
study of the women of the I 03rd
Congress found distinct differences
in the way men and women of the
same party vote .on social issues,
with the larger gap being between
Republican men and women. For

example, 58 percellt of Republican
women voted for the assault
weapons ban, while only 19 percent of Republican men did. Fifty
percent of Republican women
voted for the Family and Medical
Leave Act, while only 21 percent
of Republican men did.
Republican and Democratic
women also worked together to
keep the Violence Against Women
Act on the front burner in 1994,
when Congress was debating the
Crime Bill. "There are women sitting out there who are victims of
domestic abuse who are saying
'Why can't you change the sys~
for me? Don't you ~land it a
little better than the y you're sittmg next to?"' says
. Susan
Molinari, R-N.Y. .
'
Of course, women have not
been completely cousistent in their
de~ense of children and families.
W1mess thts year's welfare-refonn
debate. When tbe provision to dismantle the federal safety net for
poor families went to the Senate,
only one Wlllllllll senator - Carol
!-foseley·Braun, D·lll. _ opposed·
ll.

But 8emocratic and Republk:an

II

Floyd T. Avis

•

:women have succeeded in building

~ a coalition and bringing attention to

,,

•

''
I

• IColumbus l3so I

Sunny Pl Cloudy

Cloudy

0 1995 AccuWealher. Inc.

Slight warming trend set
for state before Friday
By The Associated Press
Most of Ohio got a dusting of
snow overnight, while the heavier
stuff continued to fall on lakefront
areas of the extreme nonbeast corner of the state.
Overnight accumulations from
the lake-effect snow totaled 3·6
inches. Other areas received 2 inch·
es or less, the National Weather
Service said.
A slight warming is expected,
but:Iows tonight still will be colder
than normal, ranging from the teens
in the north to low 20s in the south.
Highs on Wednesday will be

mostly in the 30s with a chance of
readings in the 40s in the extreme
soutllern portion of the state.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 64 degrees in 1949
while the record low was 2 below
zero in 1962. Sunset tonight will be
at 5:07 p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:44a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Cioudy with a chance
of light snow west and south. Lows
I 0 to 15 nonb and 15 to 25 south.
Wednesday... Snow likely ...Mill·
ing with sleet and freezing rain

Meigs announcements
Dinner planned

The Salem Township Fire
Department Christmas dinner wiU
be beld on Friday, Dec. 22, at 6
p.m. Members of the fue department, uustees and the clerk are
invited.

women currently residing at the
facility. Tbe county home is
already decorated and bas a tree.

Wildwood Garden Club
The Wildwood Garden Club
will bold its December meeting and
Christmas pany Wednesday, 12
Carleton program
. p.m., at the Redwood Restaurant in
Carleton School will bold its Belpre. All members are invited to
annual Christmas program tonigh~ attend.
beginning at 7 at the school in
Syracuse. The public is invited to Rock Springs Grange
attend.
The Rock Springs Grange will
bold a potluck dinner and meeting
In need or gifts
Thursday, 6:30 p.m., at the grange
Organizations or groups that ball. Meal will be provided. All
would like to present parties or - members are invited to attend.
gifts to residents of the Meigs
County Home should call .county Partyset .
borne matron Sharon Bailey a: 992·
US Local ~111 is sponsoring a
5469. There are eight men and five Cbrisbnas dinner from 11 a.m . to .
5:_30 p.m. on Saturday at Hartford,
W.Va., for present and past
employees of Foote Mineral and
American Alloys.
Am Ele Power .......................38 Sill
ClubiO meet
Abo .... ,..................................56 318
The Big Bend Chapter of Good
Ashland OU .....:......................36 lJ8
Sam
Club will meet Sunday from 2
AT&amp;T .....................................65 718
10 6 p.m. at Royal Oak Reson.
Bank One ...............................3!1 318
Bob Enns .............................. 15 718
Bcirg-Wamer.........................30 liZ
Party announced
Champion Ind ........................11 liZ
The Out of the Blue Christmas
Cbarmlng Shop .......................l liZ
party will be held Sunday from 2 to
City Holdlng ...........................ll3/4
9 p.m. at the old American Legion
Federal Mogul ...................... .lO liZ
building in Middleport. Those
Gonnell ...................................tl4 Ill
attending are to take a covered dish
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... A4 318
and their own table service.
K·mu1 ......................................... .8
Landi End .............................14 114
Limited Inc............................17 Sill
Lod&amp;e to meet
People'• ...........................;............23
Sliade River Lodge 453,
Oblo Volley Bank ................. .36 Ill
F&amp;AM, meeting and annual instal·
O_ne Valley ..............................31 3/4
lation of Q(ficers, 7:30 p.m. lburs·
Rockwell ................................51 718
day.
Refreshments served.
Robbl111 &amp; Mye1'11...................l!l Ill
Royal Dutcb1Sbell ............... 134 Sill

Stocks

U.S. 1-3 , 300-450 lbs. 27.00·
29.50; 450-500 lbs. 29.00-32.00;
500-650 lbs. 31.00-33.50, few
34.00.
Boars: 24.00-26.00.
J;slirnated receipts 41,000.
Prices from The Producers
Livestock Association:
Cattle: uneven, weak to 3.00
higher.
Slaughter steers: choice 62.0069.75; select 38.00-(i(i.OO.

Pomeroy Council _ _ _ _ _ __

He is survived by four daughters and two sons-in-Jaw, Barbara G. and
Jimmy Still of Blackville, S.C., Geri L. and Scott Walton of Pomeroy,
Belinda J. Johnson of Middleport, and Debra L. Jeffers of Hartford,
W.Va.; a son and daughter-in-Jaw, Brian K. and Terri Bowling of Racine;
eight grandchildren; two stepgrandchildren; several brothers and sisters;
and many nieces and nephews.
Arrangements are incomplete at this lime.

Frederick L. Williamson

Robinson, Hockman ...

Frederick L. Williamson, 65, Rutland, died Monday, Dec. II, 1995 a1
Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus.
Born Nov. I, 1930 in Rutland, son of the late Harry and Edith
Kennedy Williamson, be retired in 1990 frop~ the Kyger Creek Power
Plant as a clerk.
He served in the U.S. Air Force for four years, was a member of the
Rutland Eli Dennison Post 467 of the American Legion, was a member of
the Rutland Volunteer Fire Department, and attended the Methodist
Church in Rutland.
He is survived by his wife, Donna McCool Williamson of Rutland; a
son, Robert Williamson of Pomeroy; a son and daughter-in-law, Richard
and Darla Williamson of Pomeroy; a daughter and son-in-Jaw, Debra and
Duane Mclaughlin of Kingsland, Ga.; a daughter-in-law, Donna L. Fmk
of Rutland; seven grandchildren; two brothers and sisters-in-Jaw, Billy
and Janet Williamson of Rutland, and Tommy and Vicki Williamson of
Centerville; and several nieces and nephews.
'
Services will be I p.m. Thursday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middle·
pon. Burial will follow in the Miles Cemetery, Rutland. Friends mnay call
at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.

(Continued from Page 1)
with the use of revolving fund
monies for the project, which
expire on Dec. 31, 1995. The statement was also deemed necessary
by Honon to avoid possible fines
imposed on the village by the state
EPA for water system violations.
Council also approved a motion
to autllorize any needed repair
work mandated by EPA to the
water system. Council will meet
Wednesday at 4 p.m. with Jeff
Crisler of the Ohio EPA to discuss
the city water situation.
In other business, council:
• Authorized account transfers
for the end of the fiscal year, in
moving general fund monies to
other accounts.
• Approved the mayor's repon
of $2,989.51. Horton also
addressed council on the imposi·
lion of jail sentences on violators
who are failing to pay viUage fines.
• Appointed Steve Dunfee and

ease.
Ice

COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct bog prices at selected
buying points Tuesday by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Market
News:
,
Barrows and gilts: near steady
to weak; demand moderate.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs. 43.00·
45.00, few 42.50 and 45.50; plants
44.50-46.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 37.5042.50.
Sows: mostly steady.

(Continued from Page 1)
November: general, $110,422.20;
safety, $1,073.56; street, (·
state
highway,
$189 .38);
$11,844 .45; fire, $22,276.01;
cemetery, $12,784.15; water,
$29,520.98; sewer, $50,232.13;
guaranty meter, $18,567.89; utility,
$12,944.15; fire truck, zero balance; perpetual care, $7,228.52;
cemetery endowment, $38,118.57;
police pension, $890.01; building
fund, $119.55; recreation,
$3, 762.89; permissive tax,
$3,113 .06; law enforcement,
$2,633.66; downtown revitalization, $94,000; COPS FAST grant,
$1,155 .69; total, $1,155.69.
In other business, muncil:
• Accepted a donation of property along Sycamore ~tro.:et from Jay

Grover C. Bowling, 78, formerly of Ravenswood, W.Va. , died Sunday,
Dec. 10, 1995 in Aorida from complications related to Alzheimer's Dis·

Patrol cites driver

Mock trial programs

A Racine woman was cited for
failure to yield Monday by the GaJ.
lia-Meigs Post of the State Highwar Pauol following a two-car
accident at tbe intersectiou of State
Route 124 and Fourth Street in
Racine.
Troopers said Jennifer K.
Upton, 23, 22710 Bucktown Road,
turned left from 124 to enter Founb
at 6:45 p.m. and eritered the path of
an eastbOund car driven by Edna J.
Beegle, 58, Sixth Street, Racine.
Both cars collided, causing
slight damage to ea~:b vehicle,
troopers said.

(Continued from Page 1)
experience for them," Childs
said.
The outcome of the mock trials was not only an educational
one for the students, but also
might have sparked the beginning
of a legal career for several of the
students.
"I know of one students in
particular that is interested in
going to Jaw school as a result of
this experience, and several other
students have began to check
more into legal professions,"
Childs added.
Judge Roben Buck and Lentes
beard Monday's trials, with ver·
diets granted twice 10 prosecutioo
teams and once to the defense
team. The mock trial programs
will be continued next semester.

Meigs EMS runs
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
recorded 12 calls for assistance,
including six uansfer calls Monday. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
1:44 a.m., North Founb Avenue,
Eugene Hawkins, treated at the

Hall;
• Approved Shawn King as a
cadet firefighter in the Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Departrnen~
• Renewed the village liability
insurance with Downing-Childs·
Mullen and Musser with Council
President John Musser abstaining;
• Approved the purcbase of a
uuck for the street department.
• Set Jan. 3, 1996, as the fust
meeting of the year to be held at 1
p.m. in council chambers.
Present were Mayor John W.
Blacunar, Hysell, council members
Musser, Bill Haptonstall, William
Young, Larry Webrung and George
Wright, Councilwoman-elect Geri
Walton and Mayor-elect Frank
Vaughan. Absent was Councilman
Scott Dillon.

Beth Stivers to tbe Fireman's
Dependency Fund board.
• Received an update from the
Rev . AI Hartson on a sign projecr
for the village's churches.
• Passed an emergency motion
for a village refuse rate change
from $9 per month, per resident to
$7 per mooth, per resident. Motion
to adopt rate change passed.
• Approved omission of second
meeting date of the month because
it falls on Dec. 25.
• Councilwoman Beth Slivers
and council commended the fire
department for its help with the
placement of Christmas decorations and lights in the village. .
Council's next regular meeting
is Jan. 8, 1996 at 7:30p.m. in the
village council chambers.

Hospital news
VEfERANS MEMORIAL
Monday admissions - Mable
Brace, Racine; Katherine Plicbpa,
Racine.
Monday discharges - nooe.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Dec. 11 - Eugene
Plants, Christina McGuire, Helen
Grumbling, Carol Folmer, Mrs.
Dean Mays and son, Mrs. Frank
Houser and daughter, Grace Terry,
Sylvia Midkiff.
. (Published with permission)

Holiday Shopping...

scene;

10:25 p.m., Powell SUeet, Mary
Durst, Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal.
.
POMEROY
12:08 a.m., Kerr sueet, Edna
Slusher, HMC;
1:06 p.m., Union Avenue,
Dorothy Robens, HMC .
SYRACUSE
1:32 p.m., Peach Fork Road,
James L. Hess, VMH;
2:20 p.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Betty Bennedyke,

We can make it more appealing fbr everyone!

VMH.

Sholley'•lllc.......................... IO 1/8

IF

Weady 1111'1........................... .20 Sill

•••

Stock reports are tbe 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advut 01
GaWpolls. -

You Can Complete
You're99%

The Daily SentU,el

t

issues which had rarely, if ever, •. ,
addressed before. For eKam· '
1,been
pie, when Rep. Schroeder and then- . ,; :
Rep. (now Sen.) Olympia Snowe, • •
R-Maine, discovered tbat the . !
National Institutes of Health were· ·:~ !
excluding women and minorities
from their clinical study trials and •;':
neglecting women's diseases such. _:&lt;:
as breast and ovarian cancer the
two legislators were able to ~ake
women's health a priority.
" I didn 't really want to be ·"
stereotyped as the woman legisla- ·"'
tor, " says Republican Marge
Roukema of New Jersey. " I want· · -··
ed to deal with things like banking _ '1 ·
an~ finance : But I learned very .' "'~
qu1ckly that 1f the women like me . ...- :
_in Congress were not going to "" :
attend to some of these family con- . ..., :
cems, whether it was jobs or.chil· -..... •
' dren, pension equality or whatever,
:
then they weren't ever going 10 be
:
attended to. So I quickly shed those · · •
biases that I bad and said, 'Well ·· : :
nobody else is going to do it: I'~ · · :
going to do it.'"
.
.. ·' :
Sara Eckel Is a syndicated &gt;:: i
writer for Newspaper Enterprise · '· 'J
' Association.

You

Grover C. Bowling

Wortblllgk&gt;n lnd ................... l9 111

-. l

PA.

W.VA.

(To receive a complimentary ·; ::
Ian Shoales newsletter, call 1· :!
800-989-DUCK .or write Duck's ,,·•
B reath, 408 Broad St., Nevada ,,. ''
City, CA 95959.)
·;: ::

--·

Aoyd T. Avis, 75, of Coolville, died Sunday, Dec. 10, 1995 in Vetcr·
ans Memorial Hospital, following a lengthy illness.
Born Nov. 5, 1920 at Logan, W.Va., be was the son of the Anna Roseberry Avis of Roanoke, Va, and the late James Ott Avis.
He was an electrician and a member of the International Brotherbood
of Electrical Worken;, Local 317. A U.S. Army veteran of World War II,
be received the Silver Star and Purple Heart for battles in Nonb Africa
and Sicily. He was a founding member of the Eastern North American
Murray Gray Association, and a life memi&gt;((r of that organization.
Besides his mother, be is survived by his wife, Doris S. Avis of Alfred;
a daughter and son-in-law, Kay and Larry Spencer of Racine; a son,
Raben C. Avis of Alfred; two soos and daughters-in-law, Richard M. and
June Avis of Guysville, and Thomas P. and Judy Avis of Alfred; a brother, Richard D. Avis, and a sister, Anna Lue DeHaven, both of Roanoke,
Va.; five grandchildren and one great-grandchild; and several nieces and
nephews.
There will be no services nor visitation. Arrangements are by the
Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy.

••

Star Bank .............................61 Sill

~

•

IMansfield 132° I•

... l.
. , 01.

Women in Washington: It ·helps
When Debra Dodson began
interviewing female members of
Congress for a study at the Center
for the American Woman and Politics, she noticed among the very
different voices a similar chord:
immense respect for Sen. Napcy
Kassebaum, R·Kan. "Among both
people who agree and disagree
wilb her there is an incredible
amount of respect for the thought·
fulness and the care that sbe puts
into making her decisions," says
Dodson.
Kassebaum, the ftrst woman to
chair a major Senate committee
(she is currently the bead of Senale
Labor and Human Resources Committee), bas recently announced her
retirement.
So have three congresswomen
- Cardiss Collins, D-111., Jan Mey·
ers, R-Kan., and Patricia Scbroed·
er, D-Colo., wbo is ending a 23year tenure.
Schroeder, who is presently the
most senior woman in Congress,
bas been a tireless advocate for
women's rights. She bas fought fa
reproductive choice and the rigbts
of women in the military. More
·recently she has vigorously criti·

.,,.
...
.,,

•

In my opinion, today's anima- · 1•
tors are spen d .mg way too much i...I'
time trying to obey the laws or: ' ::
physics. Anybody can do that. I can . ; ::
obey the laws of physics in my , "
sleep and I don't need a Modeling . , ::
Environment to do it. So where the · . ::
hell's my movie deal,? Don't ask. · · ::
Ian Shoales is a syndicated -" ,,
writer ror Newspaper Enterprise · ·.;:
. t'JOn.
A SSOCID

,__._ _ Livestock report----

WednfSdaJ, Dec. 13
• Accu Weather• forecast for

'

Lu-g.ar can't swallow school lunch reform

Republicans bad planned a pub- ing bard limes.
111 Court Street
lic relations offensive designed 10
Refusing to sign off on the wei·
Pomeroy, Ohio
show tbey've become kind as well fare conference report, Lugar and
as tough on welfare reform, but liberal Republican Sen. Jim Jef.
they've been flununoxed by ooe of
Gannett Co. Newspaper
their own, Sen. Ricllard Lugar of
Morton Kondracke
Indiana
Lugar, whose conservative ere· fords of Vermont upset the GOP
ROBERT L. WINGETT
dentials aren't open to question, welfare schedule, which called for
refuses to permit passage of a final congressional passage by next
Publisher
House-Senate conference repon on week and a high-pressure publicity
welfare, and his reasons will help campaign to force President Clin·
President Clinton challenge the ton into signing it.
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MARGARET LEHEW
entire
GOP block-grant strategy on
It's conceivable that the GOP
General Manager
Controller
welfare reform.
deadlock could be broken if House
The chairman of the Senate Republican leaders can persuade
Agriculture
Committee and a mem- Rep. Bill Goodling, R-Pa., the
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
ber
of
the
welfare
conference com- chairman of the House Economic
words long . All letters arc subject to editing and must be signed wi th name.
mittee,
Lugar
contends
that remov· ami Educational Opportunities
address and telepho ne number No unsigned letters wi ll be publi shed. Letters
ing automatic entitlement status Commillcc, to back off from his
should be in good taste. addressing issues, not personalities.
. from the school lunch program insistence that the conference
would damage the social safety net, report include block-granting of
especially when another recession school nutrition programs.
hits and states find themselves
Once the report is passed,
unable to feed children whose fam· though, it faces a cenain Clinton
ilies have lost jobs.
veto. The GOP publicity campaign
Lugar's arguments apply just as is designed to portray Clintmv as
forcefully to block grants that will reneging on lli s oft-repeated
replace Aid to Families witb promise to "reform welfare as we
Dependent Children, Medicaid and know it."
By JILL LAWRENCE
food stamps. In each case, the GOP
In one briefing this week, House
Associated Press Writer
plans to cut the rate of growth in Ways and Means Chairman Bill
WASHINGTON - Bob Dole is taking a break from the hell-raiser federal assistance, making states Archer, R- Texas, charged that a
competition that has dominated both Capitol Hill and the Republican responsible for meeting growing Clinton veto will show he now
presidential contest. The race to out -Gingrich and out-Gramm his rivals is needs with reduced resources dur- wants to "perpetuate welfare as we
off.
In the past couple of weeks the Senate majority leader has diverged
from the party's bard-liners by offering qualified suppon for the U.S.
peaoekeeping mission in Bosnia and reassuring federal worke{S their boli·
days woulu not be disrupted by another government shutdown.
QUai~T!
Dole chalked up his decision on President Clinton's Bosnia mission to
WHaT C~Me
the need for responsible governing. With GOP budget negotiators and
presidential candidates still threatening a government shutdown, the
WiT~ T~ CP-RoM.
Kansas Republican backed away from his Dec. 2 promise that "it's not
going to happen." But the remark revealed his personal and political
instincts.
For months Dole and the Senate operated in the shadow of House
Speaker Newt Gingrich and his aggressive new Republican majority.
Within the Senate itself, Texas Sen. Phil Granun positioned himself as a
Gingrich clone and challenged Dole to match his conservative zeal on
issues from abortion to affurnative action to tax cuts.
But Gingrich -once a potential presidential rival - now is so controversial t11at he can'tlower his profile fast enough for some fellow Repub·
licans. His negative ratings are in the 50 to 60 percent range. When an
NBC-Wall Street Journal poll asked this month who came to mind as the
Republican Party's most imponant leader or spokesperson, 33 percent
volunteered Dole; 22 percent named Gingrich.
·
Meanwhile Gramm, whom Dole recently compared to a bug that won't
be squashed, dropped from 18 percent to 9 percent suppon early Ibis
month in Iowa, site of the first caucuses. In New Hampshire he is
clumped with other contenders in or near the single digits. Dole is well
ahead of the field nationally and in both kickoff states.
The majority leader is using the breathing room to set himself apart.
His approach may not endear him to conservative GOP primary voters,
but it could broaden his appeal to moderates in both parties. His own performance ratings are less than stellar, and polls routinely show llim losing
to Clinton in a general election.
"The most serious threat to his nomination is the perception that he
can't beat the president," said Steve Wayne, a government professor at
Georgetown University. "Why ap~l to middle ~erica? To close .the
gap with the pres1dent and make 11 look ltke you re electable agamst
him."'
Perhaps with that in mind, Doleis already running agains( Clinton. He
declared it a two-man race Friday and went on the air in New Hampshire
Just as "The Great Train Robwith an ad that auacks Clinton and doesn't mention his prill:lary oppoMost of " Toy S·tory" takes
bery''
gave birth to narrative in place in a boy' s bedroom . It's
nents.
Dole went soft ~n the government shutdown during a visit to film, and "The Jazz Singer" gave about ~; cowboy action figure who
Greenville, S.C. " Arountllhe holiyays isn't the time to be closing down movies a voice, the new movie gets j~ljlls of an astronaut action
"Toy Story," the first all-comput·
the federal government," he said.
Rich Bond. a senior adviser to the Dole campaign, said Dole is not the er-generated feature-length carfan Shoales
type of person or politician ''who wants to spread fear and be divisive .... toon, is supposed to usher in a new
epoch
in
the
history
of
movies.
figure. To make this possible,
It is not his style •o go out there and scream about shutdowns and make
I don't know if this new epoch Steve Jobs told "Wired" that there
people feel afraid or uncomfonable before Chrisunas.'' .
.
Nor is Dole unaware of the pohllcal consequences if Clmton and the is really going to occur, or whether were more "Ph.D.s working on
Republ ican Congress can't agree by Friday, their next deadline, on a it's just another pipe dream for this film that any other in movie
seven-year balanced budget or a temrorary plan to keep the government people who spend too mucb lime history .'' Making the movie
Web-surfing. But many movie pro- required the services of something
running .
_
.
ducers,
newspaper feature writers called Menv (for Modeling EnviCl inton's job approval raung was 51 percent m the NBC-Wall Street
and
computer
programmers seem ronment), which was nine years in
Journal poll last week; Congress' was only 32 percent Last month, the
to
agree:
Cultural
elites everywhere the making; more than 100 people
Republican Congress got most of the blame for the parUal shutdown that
are
enthusiastically
predicting that worked on the project for four
idled up to 800,000 people.
.
"Toy
Story"
means
the beginning years - all of tl1is to make a movie
Americans are divided on the troop deployment to Bosma and Repubof
the
end
for
live
actors
in movies. about deluded macho puppets.
licans are mostly against it But Dole has many reasons for backing Clin·
Hooray!
Now don't.get me wrong. I
ton, if gruuging ly.
..
Yep, as soon as computer ani· enjoyed "Toy Story" pretty much,
Presidents have a right to make these deciSions and Congress needs to
be a responsible parmer, be bas said, no doubt picturing himself in Clin- mators can figure out how to make and the kid I was with liked it a lot.
ton's shoes some day. Dole also bas talked about the imponance of sup- hair look like hair (not a bell)lel), I just dido' t experience the insane
polling the troops. And his sympathies have long been with the Bosnian . flesh look like flesh (not Barbie delight I was supposed to feel in its
epidermis), and gravity seem like presence. This is not the movie's
govemrnen~ which IS eagerly awru~n~ the U.S. troops.
gravity, say goodbye to the Screen fault, of course- it's the innocent
The noisiest opposition to the nuss1on IS commg from the scrappy field
of GOP presidential wannabes and the party's ncar-isolationists in the Actors Guild, the insane demands (and now very rich) bystander at
of egocentric movie stars, their yet another pile-up on the informaHouse.
Dole's stand, by contrast, puts him in the company of Clinton and agents and power lunches. Say tion superhighway.
bello to Digital Graphics Guild, the
I guess I've real Iy grown weary
three fomJer presidents, two of them Republicans. For a candidate uying
insane demands of egocentric pixel of the hyperbolic drool that accomto convey leadership, that's not a bad place to be.
pushers, their agents and power panies movie special effects these
pizza delivery (animators don ' t days. ''Oh look, Forrest Gump is
EDITOR'S NOTE- Jill Lawrence covers Congress for The Assohave time to do lunch).·
chatting up John Lennon!" "Jim
ciated Press.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

OHIO Weather

Tuesday, December 12, 1995 :

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�Tuesday, December 12, 1995

Sports

·

The Daily Sentinel

;. Drive-stoppi~g defense helps Dolphins defeat Chiefs 13-6

Page4
·Tuesday, December ~2, 1995

seemed more intense.
By STEVEN WINE
MIAMI (AP) -Fans are show·
"I seem more intense?" Sbula
ering Don Sbula with confetti said. "Are you depicting me as
instead of criticism, and be's mov- being more intense? Why don't we
ing toward tbe playoffs rather than take a poll on it?"
retirement
No one questioned the intensity
Sbula' s Miami Dolphins made of Sbula's defense , which stopped
three defensive stands and forced Kansas City on downs three times,
three turnovers Monday night to once in the final moments after
Tamarick Vanover dropped a
beat tbe Kansas City Chiefs 13·6.
The Dolphins (8·6) posted their potential touchdown pass. The Dol·
· second consecutive victory, muting pbins also carne up with their first
Sbula's detractors and setting up a three turnovers in the past five
·
showdown Sunday at snowy Buffa· games.
"Our defense held them when
· to. Miami trails tbe AFC East-lead·
ing Bills by one game with two to we bad to bold them," Shula said.
play.
"It was.. ~ great effort." ·
The Chiefs (11-3) , who have
A vast majority of those
responding to recent unscientific already won tbe AFC West, missed
newspaper polls wanted Sbula a chance to clinch a rust-round bye
replaced. But as be left tbe field in the playoffs, but still have the
after beating Kansas City. be NR.' s best record.
"You can't turn the bali over
waved to fans who !brew confetti
on him, Uten walked through a tun· and win," Chiefs coach Marty
nel and under a sign reading, Schottenheimer said. "That's bow
you get beat. And if you can't
"Sbula Is God."
Tbe 65-year-old coach turned make fourth down and a foot, the
feisty at the postgame news confer· other guy should win."
Scbottenbeimer lost to good
ence when it was suggested that be

-Defensive efforts help Eastern girls defeat Miller 77-42
, By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
The bigb-Oying Eastern Eagles
soared to a 41-23 halftime lead,
then forged abead to a 77-42 Tri·
Valley Conference road win over
- tbc Miller Falcons Monday night in
girls' varsity basketball action.
. Senidr point guard Jessica Karr
. and junior post Patsy Aeiker led the
, Eastern scoring machine witb 22
. and 21 points respectively .. while
Jessica Brannon added 13, as East·
e111 (5·1 overall &amp; 4-1 in the Hock·
. ing Division) placed five other peo. pie in the scoring colllDin.

Miller (0-5) was led by Steph
Merckle and Darcy Cook with 10
each. The biggest chapter of the
game came as a result of Rebecca
Evans holding Miller's star scorer
Haley Berry to just two points in a
great defen sive effort Likewise,
Brannon did a good job on Merck·
le.
Eastern broke an early 7-7 tie,
!ben blitzed to a 21-11 rust quaner
score. Aeiker bad seven in the
onslaught, while Karr added five
and Nelson four. Eastern per·
fonned like a well-oiled machine in

the second period, again getting
good efforts from Karr and Aeiker
with a couple clutch steals and
buckets by Brannon. Addirtionally,
Nelson was having another great
floor game. Eastern led at the half
41 -24.
Eastern sputtered somewhat in
the third period, staggering to a 5534 tally, but then awakened for a
great finale. In that stretch, Eastern
outscored Miller 22-8, led by Cald·
well, Brannon and White.
"Overall, we played a great
game. We gave away some scoring

Kansas remains No. 1 in AP
Top 25 college basketball poll
three wins over ranked teams,
:; By JIM O'CONNELL
including Ibis week' s victory over
•: AP Basketball Writer
Few teams have made as many Wake f'orest , were 43 points
:
; : trips to the top of the college bas- behind the Wildcats, who have one
ketball poll in tbe 1990s as Kansas. win over a ranked team.
Arizona (7 -0), which got the
It's just that none of the Jaybawks'
only
other first-place vote, held
visits have lasted \iery long.
No one holds No. I for any fourth with 1,418 points and Ken·
length of time once conference tucky, the pre-season No. I , stayed
play begins, and teams that play fifth .
tough non-conference schedules
Memphis and Georgetown
(like Kansas) don't get too many swapped sillth and seventh places
walkovers.
from last week, and Connecticut
But the Jaybawks have neyer moved up one spot to No. 8. Both
been able to be around long enough Iowa and North Carolina jumped
to have mail forwarded up top.
three places to close out the Top
Easy road wins over Rice and Ten.
San Diego last week kept the Jay·
Wake Forest dropped one spot
hawks (5·0) the runaway choice of to start the Second Ten and was
a national media panel Monday as followed by Cincinnati, Utah, Mis·
souri, Mississippi State, Illinois,
the top-ranked team.
In each of the last two seasons, Virginia Tech, Michigan, Georgia
Kansas lost the night it took over Tech and Louisville.
lhc No. I spot. The season before
The last five were Duke, Santa
that, the Jaybawks bad a two-week Clara, Virginia, UCLA and Syra. reign at .the top. In the '90s, the cuse.
Jaybawks have reached No. I
The week' s biggest jumps were
: seven different times.
by Cincinnati, l7tb to 12th after
. Four times the run lasted one wins over North Carolina Wilming· week, the others, including this ton, Wagner and Arkansas by an
: stretch, a week longer. In order for average of almost 30 points, and
: this to be its longest stint at the top Illinois, 21st to 16th after wins over
· in the '90s, Kansas will have to Kansas State, Southwest Missouri
: beat Indiana on Saturday.
State and Ball State by an average
The Jaybawks received 55 first- of almost 30 points.
. place votes .and 1,637 votes to easily outdistance Villanova (7 -0), -----Sports
which held second with three No. I
Hockey
votes and 1,545 points.
IRVING, Texas (AP) - Dallas
The race for No. 2 got a lot clos- businessman Thomas Hicks bas
:er as Massachusetts (5-0) was No. agreed
to buy the Dallas Stars for
:t on seven ballots and closed with· $84 million.
oin one point of Villanova. Last
The agreement in principle to
:week the Minutemen, who have buy the team from Norm Green

The biggest drop was Virginia's
fall from 15th to 23rd after splitting
two games last week, a home loss
to Vanderbilt followed by a road
win over Richmond . Mississippi
State fell from eighth to 15th after
its f11st loss of the season, 70-68 at
home to Arkansas· Little Rock.
UCLA, the defending national
champions, were fourth in the pre·
season poll, fell to 23rd in the second regular-season poll and were
out the next week. The Bruins (3·3)
got back in off their 73-63 win over
then-No. 20 Maryland.
Syracuse (6-0) is the other newcomer to the rankings. The Orangemen were ranked for all of the last
two seasons and they become the
fourth Big East school in tbe Top
25 along with Villanova, Georgetown and Connecticut.
Even with the loss of Maryland
(3-3), the Atlantic Coast Conference still leads the way with five
ranked schools - North Carolina,
Wake Forest, Georgia Tech, Duke
and Virginia. Conference USA and
the Big Ten each have three ranked
teams.
Stanford (3·2) was the other
school to fall from the rankings.
The Cardinal were 24th and
dropped out despite having the
week off.

opportunities and gave up a couple
easy buckets off tbe press, but still
we forced 29 turnovers and scored
well beyond our average. Rebecca
(Evans) has played super defense
in the post all season long. We felt
stopping Berry was a big factor in
picking up a win and Rebecca did a
fine job there. We had another .
good effort from our starters, plus
our bench really came to life," said
Eagle -mentor Scott Wolfe.
For the silltll straight game ,
Eastern shot near the 50% mark,
bitting 33-69 for 47 percent and
was 0-1 on threes, while connect·
ing on 11 -22 at tbe line. Miller hit
15-48 for 31.2 percent. was 3·5 on
threes and hit 3-5 at the line.
Eastern collected 31 rebounds,

led by Brannon' s nine (Karr and
Evans 5 each); bad 22 steals (Karr
7, Brannon 5); bad only six
turnovers, 12 assists (Karr 5); and
12 fouls. Miller bad 21 rebounds,
led by Bcrr with six and Darcy
Cook with seven. Miller bad four
steals (Merckle 2); three assists: 29
turnovers and 21 fouls.
Reserve notes: Eastern won the
reserve game to remain undefeated
at 6-0. Paul Brannon's club rolled
to a 35-18 romp led !by Valerie
Karr with 12, Juli Hayman with
seven, six from Amanda Milhoan,
four from Stephanie Evans and
three each from Kim Mayle and
Crystal Holsinger.
Jaime Brunton led Miller with
10 points.

-·-·Eastern

(ll -20.14-22=77)
Rebecca Evans 2..().():4; Jessica
Karr 9-0-415=22; Nicole Nelson 30-012=6, Patsy Aeiker 10·0·
1/2=21: Crystal Holsinger 0-0·
112= I ; Tracy White 3·0·0=6 •.
Michelle Caldw 'I 1-0-213=4; Jessica Brannon 5-v-317=13. Totals.
33·0-11122=77
Miller
(11-13-10-11=42)
Haley Berry 1-0-0=2, Steph
Merclde 2-2-011,.10; Conic Cook
3-0-1/2=7: Darcy Cook 5.()-0=10,
Angie Lucas 2-1 -2/2=7, Christy
Halasz 1·0-0=2, Kasey Snyder J.().
0=2. Totals 15·3-3/5=42

Alexander girls top Southern 55-53
Tbe Alexander Spartans
squeezed out a bard-fought 55-53
Tri-Valley Conference triumph
over the Southern Tornadoes in
Albany Monday night during girls'
high school varsity action.
·
Alexander (3·3 overall &amp; 2-2 in
the Hocking Division ) bad a hot
shooting night, bitting 18-35 for 51
percent and was 3-10 from three
point range for 30 percent. South·
em (3·3 &amp; 3-2) shot 18-52 for 35
percent and was 5-15 on threes for
33 percent.
Jenni Grubb led Alellander with
17 points, including a perfect 4-4
night at the line, while Misty
Markins added 13 and Angela Jewen bad 12.
Southern was led by Renee Turley's 25 points

Alexander, the defending TVC
champs, took a 14-11 lead in the
first quarter and never really
looked back, although Southern
was always right there. Soutebrn
cut the gap to 27-25 at the half.
Alellander took a 41 -371ead
after three rounds, then held off a
late Southern rally to win.
Sou tbern had 37 rebounds to
Alex's 39. Manuel bad 11 and Tur·
Icy eight. Markins bad 14 for Alell.
Southern had 13 steals (Manuel
five, Turley 4); 7 assists (Turley 2,
Manuel 2); 13 turnovers, and 13
team fouls. Alexander bad seven
steals ( Grubb 2, Markins 2); 14
assist~ (Grubb 8): 21 turnovers, and
13 fouls.
Reserve notes: Alellander won
the reserve game 41·26,1cd by Jes·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

sica Robinson with nine, while
Kristy King bad nien rebounds.
Kim Sayre abd II for Southern and
Jenny Roush nine. Sayre also had
seven rebounds.
The future: Southern hosts Nelsonville· York Thursday, while
Alellander hosts Wellston.

friend Shula for the fourth consecu,
live time in the past three seasons.
"I feel awful right now personally because of the result," Schot·
tenheimer said. "But I think everyone knows bow I feel about Don
Shula."
Kansas qty, 3-0 in overtime
this season, bad a chance to tie or
win the game when George Jami·
son recovered Bernie Parmalee' s
fllDible at the Miami 36 with 3:30
left But Vanover dropped a potential nine-yard touchdown pass on
third down, and Bono's fourthdown pass was broken up by Terrell Buckley with 1:31 to go.
"We didn't make the plays,"
Bono said.
·
Bucldey said the Dolphins wanted to win for Sbula.
"He's our leader, our general,"
Buckley said. "Any time you mess
with our general, you're messing
with us. We have to stand up and
fight for our general."
Dan Marino threw for just 156
yards and one touchdown, but the
Dolphins' defense shut out tbe

Chiefs for nearly 55 minutes. Miami forced three in the first capped by Marino ' s three-yard
Miami's first takeaways in five quarter. Each takeaway gave the touchdown pass to OJ. McDuffie
weeks set up two first-quarter field Dolphins possession in Kansas City on third and goal for a 13·0 lead at
goals, and the Chiefs were stopped territory, but they converted tbe halftime.
" We're not giving up, even
on fourth-and-one situations in the chances into just six points on a
!bough
a lot of people have given
third quarter at the Miami four- and pair of 33-yard field goals by Pete
up
on
us,"
Miami receiver Irving
27-yard lines.
Stoyanovich.
Fryar
said.
"We'
ve got tbe talent.
Tackle Tim Bowens led the
It took the Dolphins six posses·
We'
ve
just
got
to
keep on truck·
charge. He was in on both fourth· sions to get their offense untracked.
down tackles, forced two fumbles Then they mounted a 63-yard drive in g."
and recovered one for the Dol·
ph ins.
"People have to learn not to run ------Sports briefs-----at Tim," defensive end Jeff Cross
Basketball
an appeaf witb the New Mellico
said.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M . (AP) Court of Appeals. Tbe NCAA
Going into tbe game, the Chiefs - Freshman Kenny Thomas a declared Thomas ineligible in
had been 14-for-17 on fourth down. major force in New Mellico' s 6-0 August, saying be was a half-credit
Bono, playing with a bruised start, won another round in his short on core curriculum courses.
throwing hand injured in 'the legal battle with the NCAA, which
Baseball
Chiefs' previous game, completed contends the 6-foot-9 forward is
LOS
A:
lGELES
(AP) - Darryl
just 15 of 37 passes for 180 yards. ineligible.
Strawberry,
recently
let go by the
He threw a five-yard touchdown
State District Judge Daniel
New
York
Yankees,
was charged
pass to Webster Slaughter with five Schneider rejected an NCAA
with
failing
to
make
child
suppOrt
minutes left to cap a 75-yard drive.
motion that he lift a preliminary
"We started terrible and it took injunction allowing Thomas to payments.
Strawberry, who has two chil·
us three quarters to get going,"
play.
dren
by former wife Lisa Strawber·
Bono said.
NCAA attorney Paul Bardacke
After failing to come up with a said be expects the NCAA to file ry, is due in court for arraignment
· Jan. 23.
turnover in the past four games,

Scoreboard
Denver 10-4, Philadelphia 91
Utah 110, Olar!olle 100

NBA standings

-*- *-

Tonight's games

Allan lie DI.Ulon

:It: L lsi.
Orlando .. ................ l 6 4 .800

Iuao

Alexander
(14-13-14-14=55)
Jewell 6-0·0=12, Grubb 2-3·
4=17, Davis 2-0· 1=5, Rolston 4-0·
1=8, Markins 4-0·5=13 . Totals:
18-3-10/13=55
.

lilt

NewYork ........ ...... IS

.S

.7.50

I

Miami ... ... ... ........ ... 12

6

.667

3

New Jersey ..............9

9

.SOO

6

B01ton ...................... 8 10
Washiogton ..............&amp; 10
flliladclphia ..... ........ 3 16

.444

1
7

.#4
.l SI

12.:1

Central Dlvbton
Chicago.................. l 6 2 .889
AUant.a ... ................ IO 10 ..500
Jndian11 ..................... 8 9 .471
Charlotte .............. .... 9 12 .429
CLEVELAND ....... ! II .421
Detroit. ..................... &amp; 11 .421

Milw011kee ...............6 II

.Jl3

Tonnto ., ................. .7

.)33

14

7
7.S
8.S

8.!
8.S

9.!
10.5

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midw•l Dldlion

Ium

:It: L lsi.

Houaton ................. 15

S .7SO

Utah ..................... 14
Sao Antonio ........... ! I

6

I

6 .647
Denver ......
.. ..... 9 9 JOO
Danu ........... ... ..... ..6 L .333

2.5
S

.294
.100

Paclnc 01.-l.lon
Sacramenlo
..... IJ
l .722
Seattle .......... ...... ... l l
6 .6U
LA. Lakm ............ ll
9 .llQ
Panlalld ........ ......... 10 9 .!26
Phoenil .... ..... ...... .... .l 10 .444
LA.
7 13 .3SQ
Golden tate .. .......... 6 13 .3t6

C!iGl:' ...........

briefs------

lilt

.700

Mi11nesot.a ................ s 12
Vancouver ............. ..2 18

13. Utah .......... ........ .l·l

Bo~ton

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Southern
(11·14·12·16=53)
Lisle 4.().():8, Manuel 4-0·0=8,
Turley 7-3-2=25, Proffitt 3.()·0=6.
Totals: 18-5-2111::53

I 0. Nonh Carolina ........ 6·1
II. Wake Forest ... .......4-1
12. CINCINNATI ....... ..4-()

Monday's scores

Basketball

1

&amp;.s
13

.s
3

J.l

s

7
7.!

at Toronto, 1 p.m.
Orlando lll New Jmcy, 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee at Washington. 7:30p.m.
Minneaota at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.
L.A. Clippl:l'"s at CLEVELAND, 7:30
p.m.

Denver at Indiana, 7:30p.m.
LA. LU.cn at New Y1Xk, 8 p.m.
Seattle at Dallas. 8:30 p.m
Cllarlotte at Phoenil, 9 p.m
Miami atGokic:n Stitc,l0:30 p.m.
Houroton at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.

Wednesday's games

The top 25 team&amp; in The A11ociate(!
Preas' men's collqe bukctball poll, with
first-place votes in pare111beses, records
thtoogh Dec. 10, total points bas-ed on 25
poinl5 for a fint·pklce vote through one
point ror a 2!!th· place vote, and pre,ious
ranking:

:!U:I l'JJ,

t,637
1,54.5
1.544
1,418

86l

!4

673

11

671

8

642
637
!24

21
19
22

359

16

3o4S
290
212
280

23
18
:2.5
15

24. UCLA

J. J

124

25. SyraC\lse

6-0

116

Far West
Cal Paly-SLO 82, E. WuhiDgtOD 66
Nevada &amp;6, Montana St. 84

Ohio men's
college scores
Non-conference play
Jndiana,Pa.7l,La.keflie60
Thoma&amp; More II 0, Ci.-einnat.i BibleS I
Urbana 96, Wilberf'aroe 6-4
Wittenbeq, 84, Otterbein 63

Ohio women's
college scores
Noa-confereac:e play

Tu lsa 33,_ Arkansas 21 , MIAMI (OKJO)
2~. WB!lhmgton St. 25, Auburn 18, Gear·
gm 18: Ark.· Little Rock. 14, New Mexico
14, Mtnnesota 10 , Tulane 10, Purdue 9,
Penn St. 7, Iowa St 6, Oemson S, Okla.
homa St. 4, SW Missouri St. 3, Seton Hall
3, Miami (Fla.) 2, Nebraska 1. Pihlbutgll
I . Towwn St. I.

AP Top 25 college poll

L KaniU(l l ) ....... ......... l -0
2. Villa1t0va (3) ........... ...7·0
l. Massactlll setu CJJ ...... .S·O
4.Arizona(1) ................ 7-0
S. Kentucky ..... ............ ..4· 1
6. Memphil .......... ......... .4·0
7. Georaetown ............... 7-1
8. Connocticut ......... .......6· 1
9. 1owa ........................... 7·1

13
10
17

Othtn retelvina 'Oitt: Stanrord 11!i
California 104 , Maryland 64, 801ton Col~
lege 42, Texas Tech 36, Vanderbi lt 3S

Philadc lphla atBoaon,7 :30 p.m.
LA. Laken at Detroit, 7:30p.m
Orlando al Olicago, 8 p.m.
Seattle at San Alionio, 8:30p.m.
Houston 11.1 Vancouver, 10 p.m.

I1llm

14. Miu ouri ................. S-1
15. Miwiuippi St
..4·1
16. Illinois ...
... ... 6·0
11. Virginia Tech .... .....3-0
18. Michig;m ...............7·2
IIJ. Georiia Te&lt;:h ......... 5-2
20. Loui1ville ................ S-2
21. Duke ...... .. ...... ...l-2
22. San Ia Clara ... ......... S-1
23. Virginia
...... 3·2

98:5
94:2
934

.....
:!full

1
2
J
4
S

1,)90
I .239

1

1.2JS
1,131
1.004

6
9
12

Toledo 88, Orveland St. 62

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

NCAA Division I
men's scores
East
Boston College 78, Md .· Baltimore
County 56
Duquene n, Coppin SL 76
Providence S8, Wisconsio S7

South
Miu.. Valley St. 93, Ark.-Pine Bluff62
South Aorida 92 , Cent. Aorida 82

Midwest

40

Miami (Ohio) 99,11inunCol.l8
St. l..ouU 63, Alcorn St. 60

Akron EJ~ 44, Covcotry -42
Alexander .S.S, Rtcine Soolhent .B
Antho11y Wayne 64, Tol. Rogm 61
Ayenville 64, Fayette Sl
Barneaville 6S, SL Oainville H
Beavercreek 7i, Vandali..Butler 35
Bellaire St. John' I S5, Cadiz +t
Belpre 71, Nellonville· Yot'k 37
Boardman 64, Cbampioa 43
Cambr1dae 62, Buckeye Trail 42
cannekl 44, Salem 41
Carey 66, Tol. Woodward 23
C~atetvillc 4S, Ketteriaa Alter -43
Can. Ulvei&amp;Dd Sj, New Richmond 24
Crt&amp;twood 76, Windham 70
Day. Carroll 49, Trenton EdJCW(IOd 36
Delpbol St. Joho'a.SI,St. Mary' s 41
E. Clinton 61, Carrol11on 22
E. Uverpool Chr. 49, You. Chri•tian
Eaitwood 64, Millbury Late 42
Elyria Calh. .Sa, Lorain Midview 40

To.scarawu Val. 51, TuJcaraWu Cath.

Evc:rpn .57~ EDlla~IBapt. 41
Federal Hoctina 43. Tritmle 40
Franklin Furnace Green 53 , New
8 01iton 26
A. Fryt lB. Shmndoah 27
GaJiipolis72, Rock Hill 44
Garret:Uville 61, Rootltown 46
Georaetowll 43. Blaocheaer 34

21
Vanlue 52. Bettsville 9
Warren Kc:nnCdy S2, BriAtol SO
Warren Local 69. Poiut Pleannt,
W.Va . 68
Washiogtoo CH 61 , Lynchbura: Clay

ll

G"nd v• . 66, Mop!""""" 16

Waterfcx-d 70, Bealkville 44
Waterloo S7, Maaodore 50:
Watkins Memorial 68. Col. Briua 39
Wauseon S6 , De lta 26
Weinoo (W.Va.) Mado!llla 72 , Bridleport 71 (2 &lt;1TI
Wellston SJ, Meigll4
Welllville 36, Edi1on 33
Wheelersbura 60, Portamol1h W. 49
Woodridi!e 54, Strceaboro -40

Hannibal River 53, New Matamoras
Frontier 50
Holland Spring. ~3. Ottawa Hi lls 43
Hud&amp;on Wcatcm Reaerve 39, Atro11 E.
38
Kalida 12, Pt. Jenninp 36
lima Cllh. 91, Columbw Grove 33
lutheranW. Si,Avon 19
McDermott Northwc:11 60, Lucasville
Valley47
McMec:hen (W.Va. ) Donahue 65 ,
Shadflidc41
Miunilb~~r&amp;S.S, Talawaocla 19
Minrord 72, Waverly 60
New Bremen 63, Houlton 31
New Miami 4.S, Cin. Landnwk 29
Orr:goo Stritch 49 , N. Ballirmre 34
Pccblet 49, Portsmouth 39
PilteloD 67, Utham W....... l8
Proctorville Fairland Sl, Ot.esh ire Riv.
u Val. 45
Ravenna SE 52, field 37
Reedsville Eastern S7 , Porl1mouth
N(l lre Dame 31
Rouford .53, Port Clinton .52
Ruuell, Ky. S6, Chesapeake 41
Ry!e, Ky. 65, Cin. Seven Hilll44
S. Poinl. $7, Cere.do-Kenova, W.Va. )9
SandyVa1. 67,CaotonS. 39
Springfield S. 78, Dayton Bdmont -40
Steubenvi lle 63, Ullion Local47
Sylvania Northview 40, Mllllft)M 31
Sylvania Southview 16, Swanton 34
Tef111le Ctl". 46, FiodlayTerrt~le 39
Tol. Bowsher SS, Tol. Waite ll
Tol. Oiri1tian 57, ~ville 49
Tol. Scott 13, Maumee Val. !!il
Toronto 58, Steubenville Cath . .SS
Tree of Life 44, Col. Academy 36

Football
NFL standings
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eutern Dhllion

li:LIEII.fEU

Will

Buffalo ....... ........ 9
Indianapolis ........ 8
Miami .. ...... ........ &amp;
New England .....6

.S
6
6
8

0 .643
0 .571
0 .571
0 .429
N.Y . Jeu .... ........ 1 11 0.214

310 287

291 282
337 217
260 326
227 )49

Central Dhillon

x-l'illiburgh .......I O 4 0 .714 347 276
CINC!NNATI.... .. 6 8 0 .429 312 324

Howtan ............. .J 9 0 .JS7 297 101
CLEVELAND ... ..4 tO 0 .286 242 322
Jacbonville .........JII 0 .214 251 339
Wntern Dlritkln
l · KamuCily .... ll 3 0 .786
OakJODd ............... 8 6 0 l71
Denver .................7 1 0 . ~
SB.D DieitJ ............7 7 0 .XIO
Sealtle ............. .....7 7 0 .lOO

312 221

3!0 257
340 297
267 282

316 330

also marks the beginning of the end
of Reunion Arena's days as the
city's NBA and NHL venue. Hiclcs
said a new facility is needed to
make the team profitable.
The sides have until Dec. 22 to
finalize the deal.
·

:After two sports arid 10 years,

~Jackson

finally gets degree

:By KENDAL WEAVER
· AUBURN, Ala. (AP) - Bo
:Jackson could add a new twist to
:his "Bo Knows" commercials.
· Forget the helmet and pads, tbe
:bat and glove, the tennis racket or
:hockey stick. Instead, Bo could
:JIOSe with books, a pen, leaning
.over a desk. His new uniform: a
'Oiortarboard and black gown on
:graduation day at Auburn Universi·
:ty.
· Jackson wore the graduate ' s
:garb Monday and beard loud
:applause once more as his name ·Vincent Jackson - was called. He
~eceived his bachelor of sciences
:degree in family and child develop·
ment from the university he first
entered in 1982.
. There were no high fives . But
be shook hands with president
William Muse. waved the diploma
)Uid received pats on tbe back from
others as he made his point: An
athlete from a poor borne Who
gains wealth and fame in sports can
still find satisfaction, at 33, in tbe
field of academics.
"It's the last pie.:e of the puzzle,
to where I feel like I'm a complete
person,' ' Jackson said.
"I hope this en courages not
only young black students but all
students to pursue and complete a
degree no matter what obstacles lie
in from of you," he said.
Jackson was only six courses
short of a degree when he left
Auburn in 1985 with a Heisman
Tmpby in tow and a brilliant future
ahead in baseball , football and
sports marketing for Nike. When a
bip injury cut short his pro career
and be retired from baseball last
spring, he arranged for correspondence work to finish his degree.
"Ironically I bad 10 take all my
correspondence courses through
the University of Alabama," Jack·
son said with a laugh.
Jackson said be said be was the
fmt of the 10 children in his family
to graduate from a four-year university. He said that in the final
weeks of his mother' s life, as he
awaited hip surgery, be promised
her that he would get tbe degree.
"I know she's looking down on
me and smiling," be said.
Jackson also credited his wife,
Linda, who has a doctorate from
Auburn. with motivating him to get
to the fit1ish line. It wasn't always
easy. He didn't admit to breaking
bats over his knee. But, be said, "I
lit!'ri!l!y !~ad to be:lt myself to make

myself smdy."
The degree adds a dimension to
!:is new work as a spokcsm:m for
llea!thSouth, a llirmingham sports
medicine and rchabiliL1tion compa·
ny. With Ute diploma, be said, he
can now talk to young people
everyll'berc and s:•y: " I c:m do it.
You can do it."
But being a role model bas its
limits. Jackson, with an interest in a
movie career, was asked if be could
·step away from his " you can do
it" image and play the bad guy in a
film.
"I really don't think I'll have a
problem with it if I'm making the
kind of money Jim Carey's male·
ing. l'll dress in drag," be said.
Jackson , while the center of.
media attention, paid tribute to the
1,058 other students getting
degrees from Auburn on Monday.
"There are a whole lot of students
here who have worked twice as
hard as I have," he said.
Other students dido 't begrudge
Jackson the limelight.
"People have the stereotype of
the athlete where all they care
about is money, but be came back
to earn a degree to show tbey can
do i~" said Maggie Prugh of Birm·
ingh:un , who also was graduating

Monday.
"It sets and example for people," said Lila Paig, a senior from
\1emphis, Tenn. "He promised his
mother .... I think it's admirable."
At Toomer's Comer, the rally
site for Auburn celebrations after
victories, Mike Bumgardner Jr.
posed in his cap and gown for pic·
tures. He was happy to have Jack·
son in his graduating class.
"It's definitely a·contrast to the
Eric Ramsey graduation," be said.
Ramsey, a former Auburn foot·
ball player who came back to get
his degree in 1992, secretly tape·
recorded his requests for money as
a player in violation of NCAA
rules. When he exposed the tapes
and payments, Auburn was placed
on NCAA probation.
His conunencement was tn:uiced
by loud boos - and an obscene
~and gesture to the audience by
Ramsey's wife.
It was all upbeat for Jackson,
whose coach, Pat Dye, turned out
for the events.
Dye said Jackson, from tbe start,
had shown he not only was plenty
smart but had a solid cb:uacter.
" It's not something we instilled
in bim here," he said. "This is
someU1ing be did himself."

New bo.o k details exploits
of Rio Grande's 'Bevo' era
Newt Oliver, who coached the
University of Rio Grande basket·
ball team that featured star player
Clarence "Bevo" Francis in the
early 1950s, bas issued a revised
version of his book detailing the
team's exploits.

Basketball and.the Rio Grande
College ugend, co-authored witb
Danny Fulks, Ph.D., is currently on
sale at several locations in Gallia
and Meigs counties.
Oliver, who now resides in
Springfield, issued the new volume
in conjunction with the sale of his
and Francis' stories to Hollywood
Pictures. a division of Walt Disney
PictureS, as a feature film project.
. The book is 138 pages long and
includes never-before published
photos from the 1952-54 Redmen
era in which Francis established a
one-game record for scoring that
bas never been matched.
Oliver, a 1949 Rio Grande grad·

,uate, previously told the story in a
1969 book, One Basketball and
Glory, co-written with Dan Hoyt, a
Springfield sportswriter. Oliver is a
retired educator and businessman,
and a former Clark County com·
missioner.
Gallia County native Fulks, coauthor of the Basketball and the
Rio Grande College Legtnd, is the
author of n~rous historical arti·
cles, including a study ofthe Fran·
cis era for Tillll!line, the publication
of the Ohio Historical Society. A
1960 graduate of Rio Grande,
FulkS serves on the faculty at Mar·
sball University.
The new book can be obtained
at Arnold's Food Mart, Crown
Cit~ ; Alcove Books, Ohio River
Plaza, Gallipolis; the University of
Rio Grande bookstore; the Bob
Evans Country Store, Rio Grande;
and Mill Street Books, Middleport.

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�Tuesday, December 12, 1995

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Tuesday, December12, 1995

Meigs County Department of Human Services.
From the left, Myca Haynes, Tricia Davis and
Libby King wrap some of the gifts purchased
earlier by Tonya Pbalin and Suzanna Henderson with the several hundred dollars collected.
Each child will receive items of clothing in addition to toys.

Racine UMW has
November me~ting
: Marjorie West was leader for
the world th:p~k offering service,
"Stop, Look and Listen" at the
N9vember meeting of the Racine
Uaited Methodist women.
:Offering boxes were arranged
oq a worship table along with candies, basket, flowers and a cross.
Ai explained by Mrs. West, lhe
offering provides an opponunity
for' United Methodist Women to
sb4re with others the abundance
~y bave been given.
·Saipture was taken from Psalm
and music was played ty Lee Lee
as .members placed !heir offerings
in · the basket. Empty boxes for
offerings were distributed for 19%.
The funds collected will be used
for missions around the world.
Prayer closed lhe service.
·Mrs. Lee welcomed those
attending and all joined in giving
the Lord's Prayer and the UMW
Pwpose.
Officers reports were given by
Chris Hill, secretary, and Clara
Mae Sargent, ueasurer. The penny
fund was collecred and sick calls
were reported.
Mrs. Lee presented a United
Methodist logo lapel pin to Gladys
Shields in memory of mission
work. Margie West noted !hat an
offering tak~n at a Sunday morning
chu_rch semce w1ll be sent. to ~e
Me~gs County Human Servtces m
lieu of the Angel Tree project.
Monetary donations and gifts were
sent to various organizations and
plaCes.
~na Mae Hill, Lucille Cardone,

and Mrs. Lee reported on the New
Lexington UMW installation of
officers, Nov. 12. Sue Grace reorganized lhe unit and is acting president.
The Christmas party was
announced for 6:30 p.m. on Dec.
18 at lhe Racine Country Kitchen
restaurant. It was reported lhatlhe
Christmas bazaar beld Dec. 3 was a
success.
,
Mrs . Cardone and Mrs. Lee
anended lhe Athens District Christ·
mas meeting and pany. Mrs. Lee is
district publicity and news director,
and Mrs. Cardone will hold the
office of Christian social involvement for 1996.
At an earlier meeting, Syracuse
and Forest Run United Methodist
Women were invited to join Racine
members to bear a program presented by Wanda Willis of Gallipo·
lis. She showed part of her Santa
Claus collection and related the
story of each one.
Ruth Wolfe and Frances Roberts
- served refreshments. ,
Attending were Opal Diddle,
Mrs. Cardone, Martha Dudding,
Mrs. Hill, Clara Mae Sargent,
Margery Roush, Mrs . Roberts,
Margie West. Karen Walker, Jennifer Walker Ena Mae Hill Marllyn Bogard,' Mrs. Wolfe. Gladys
Shields, and Mrs. Lee. Next meeting will be Jan. 22 at tbe church.
Members voted to sponsor lhe .
Rev. and Mrs. Brian Harkness to
attend the clergy-spouse reUeat ar
Hocking Valley Quality Inn at NelsonviUe, Jan. 26 and 27.

-Community calendar__,;,The Community Calendar Is
pul)lisbed as a free service to
non.- profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
speCific number of days.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections, 9 a.m. Tuesday
at lhe office, for regular monthly
meeting.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at lhe home
of Mrs. Wendell Hoover. A Christmas program will be presented by
lhe music commiucc.
POM EROY Narcotics
Anonymous, 7 p.m. Wednesday,
Sac red Heart Ca th oli c Church
basement. No fees. Helpline 1-800766-4442.

Violin returned
LOS ANG ELES (AP) - In
1%7, a college musician borrowed
an $800,000 Suadivarius violin and
lost it from hi s car while riding
between a liquor store and a restau-

THURSDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
Building Commiuee meeting
Thursday, 7 p.m. in lhe high school
cafeteria. All district residents ·
urged to auend.

Announce birth
of daughter
John mul Angela Spires of Rutland announce lhe birth of a daughter, Samantha Lynn, on Oct : 21.
She wei ghed eight pounds, two
ounces.
Grand(larents are Pat Harmon of
Rutland and Gary and Ramona
Davis of Alb any. Mr. and Mrs.
Spires have a son, Joshua.

Michael E. Phillips
Navy Seaman recruit Michael E.
Phillips, a 1~93 graduale of Meigs
High School of Pomeroy, recently
completed a goodwill deployment
to several Japanese ports while
serving aboard lhe U.S. Seventh
Aeet flagship USS Blue Ridge.
Phillips is one of 750 servicemen who work aboard the command ship, based in Yokosuka,
Japan.
During lhe deployment, PhiUips
and fellow servicemen visited !he
Japanese ports of Kagoshima,
Nagasaki, and Sasebo as part of a
program that stresses friendship
between the United States and
Japan.
Phillips joined the Navy in
February, 1994.

RACINE - Star Mill Park
Board will sponsor Christmas in
the Park Thursday, 6:30 p.m. Santa
will arrive with Ueats for lhe children. Refreshments will be served
Joseph W. Cubbison
following the candlelight walk
Joseph W. Cubbison, son of
around lhe park path.
Wayne and Marie Cubbison of
Coolville, bas joined the United
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW States Army under the Delayed
Post 9053 meeting, Thursday, Enlistment Program at the U.S.
refreshments 6:30 p.m.; meeting Army Recruiting Station in Mariet7:30p.m.
ta.
Cubbison, a senior at Federal
CH ESTER - Shade River Hocking High School in Stewart
Lodge 453 F&amp;AM regular meeting will report to Fort Leonard Wood:
and annual installation of officers, Mo., for military basic training
7:30p.m Thursday. Refreslunents. June 18, 1996.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, Thursday, 6:30p.m. home
of Charlotte Elberfeld. Members to
take irems for Serenity House.
RlJILAND - Senior Saints' of
Rutland Church of God will meet
at tbe churcjl, Thursday, 2 p.m. The .
group will take a bus to Jackson for
a Christmas dinner.

rant.

It was found last year, but it
wasn' t until Mooday !hat the question of who owned lhe 2!)3-yearold instrument - named the Duke
of Alcantara after an obscure Spanish nobleman - was settled.
The University of California,
Los Angeles, agreed to pay Teresa
Salvato S11 ,500 for the famed violin, one of I ,200 handcrafted by
Antooio Stradivar.
Ms. Salvato said a relative wbo
bad found tbe violin near a freeway
off-ramp 28 years ago passed it one
to her.

SAMANTHA SPIRES

Military
news

Now Open For
Chrntmaa Seaaon
Poilllettim (5 Colora)
Poimettia Bmkets
Gmve Blnnkers
Cut Chrntnuu Treea
$11 to $16
Open Daily 9-5, Sun. 12-5
HUBBARDS

GREENHOUSE
Syracwe 992-5776

7

Page&amp;

PhilsonAiexander

:MAKING CHRISTMAS BRIGHT- Meigs
High School students have taken on a project of
making Christmas bright for those less fortu mite than themsehes. Every mor ning for the
JliiSt couple of weeks students have contributed
to- a fund used to purchase gifts for 25 boys and
alrls as a part of the Angel Tree program of the

The Dally Sentinel • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Mr. and Mrs. John Philson of
Syracuse announce tbe marriage of
their daughter , Sarah Jean , to
Alexander James Piazza, son of
Elena Piazza, Lake Park. Aa., and
the late James Piazza.
The candlelight ceremony took
place at 5:30p.m. on July IS at !he .
Heath United Methodist Church in
Middleport. Rev. Vemagaye Sulli·
van performed the double-ring ceremony and delivered the homily
based on the wedding at Canna.
Music was provided by Donna
Jenkins, organist, and included
classical and favorite selections.
The altar was decorated with
golden urns of salmon, pink and
white roses, ivy and grapes and two
seven-light candelabra. Garland&lt; of
decorated grapevine adorned the
altar and choir railings and double
wedding ring wreaths were placed
in each of lhe three stained-glass
vindows.
Escorted to the altar by her
father , the bride wore a sheath
gown of ivory dupioni silk with a
butterfly bustle and a detachable
chapel length train . Her floor
length veil was held in place by a
tiara of gold and rhinestones
matchin g her necklace and ear·
rings. She carried an ann bouquet
of salmon and pink roses, ivy and
sheer lilac·ribbon.
Maid of honor was Rebecca
Winebrenner of Syracuse. Bridesmaids were Shannon Slavin of
Memrhis, Tenn; Mary Slavin of
Jupiter, Aa.; and Melanie Quillen
of Racine. The bridal attendants
wore two-piece sheath gowns of
lilac taffeta. Their amethyst and
pearl jewelry was handcrafted by
lhe bride as her gift to them. They
carried arm bouquets of roses and
ivy on twig bases.
Brittany Philson, niece of lhe
bride was the flower girl. She wore
a dress of ivory dupioni silk with a
gathered skirt and a halo headpiece
of roses. She carried a grapevine
basket decorated with roses.
The groom was in a black tuxedo with a brocade vest in muted
metallic shades of rose and lilac on
black, and a boutonniere of pink
roses and ivy.

20% to 50%
Storewide
for your Holiday
Shopping
Shop M-S 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Sun. 1-5 p.m.
Free Holiday Gift Wrap

Mi~.~teport

Auto

(Specllize In driveway
spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
614-992-3470

3rd St. Racine, OH

REPINE
992·2549
11NI

mo.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Local Crafttrs
American Madt
992·2549

112Aln

. -

"I HAD NO IDEA IT
WAS JHIS MUCH

Tim Coolican of West Palm
Beach, Fhi., was be st man .
Groomsmen were Doug Peters of
Norcross, Ga.; Linley Albretch of
Jupiter, Fla., and Erich Philson,
Syracuse, brother of the bride .
They wore black tuxedos and boo·
tonnieres of rose.~ and ivy.
. Andrew Philson, nephew of the
b ride was lhe ring bearer. He wore
a black tuxedo and a rose boutonniere and carried a white ring pillow with ivy and satin ribbon.
Ushers were David Horton,
Middleport, and Erich Philson.
The mother of lhe bride wore an
ivory c,biffon dress with ivory brocade jacket and a corsage of pink
roses.
The groom's mother was in a
chiffon dress and matching jacket
in a muted print of pinks lavenders
and mauve m1d had a pink rose cor-

Meet new people the
fun way today.
Call1-900-255-5454,
ext. 6694
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.,
Touch-Tone phone
required.
Serv·U (619) 645-8434

sage.
Guests were registered by Sandra Philson, sister-in-law of the
bride. A reception dinner was held
following the ceremony at the Holiday Inn in Gallipolis. The tiered
cake in pale pink featured a domed
top on pillars and was decorated
with pink and white roses and
metallic gold leaves.
The couple visited Jamaica for
!heir honeymoon and now reside in
Palm Beach Ganlens, Aa.
The bride is a 199 5 graduate of
Ohio University with a bachelor's
degree in speech and hearing sciences.
The groom received his bachelor' s degree in mapring and surveying from the University of
Florida in 1992. He is employed
w1th Mock Roos and Associates as
a survey/CADD technician.

For Love And
Affection Dial
1-900-255-5454
Ext 8417
Must be 18 yrs
$2.99 per min

Touch Tone
Phone Required
Serv ·U (619)
645-8434

Will PHOTOGRAPH
ANY SPECIAL
OCCASION
including weddings,
receptions;
anniversaries,
reunions. Special rales
for individuals,
couples, family groups
in the privacy of your
own home.
Reasonable rates.
Call 992-7747.

11/1411 mo.

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL
Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped
and Removed
Misc. Jobs.

Touch -tone
phone required

_.Ill Slack
992·2269

Serv -U

(619) 645 -8434

RACINE
GUN CLUB

'~~~~t

Good Cheer.

Wrecker Service

Gun Shoots
Sun 1 pm

Car /Heavy Truck
Repair

12 gauge

(614)992~

9.99%

23 Cottage Drive
Mlddlepon, Oh. 45760

Fatlory Choke Only

GUYS &amp; DOLLS.
FIND YOUR
LOVE!!!

A Holiday Loan Special
• Op To $5,000

• Up To 24 Months Financing•

1-900-484-2600

Ext. 9765

!lfil Peoples
~

$2.99 per min.

llclnk

• Muon n3·S5t4 • New Hawn 882·2135 • Pt. Pleu.nt 675·1 121
• Or Call Miul On The Peaplea Bank Loan Hotline 675-ASAP

'

Must be 18 yrs.
Touch-tone Phone
Required
Serve-u (614 645-8434

END YOUR
LONELINESS NOW!!!
There is someone for
everyone. Whatever
your preference
Nationwide or Righi Next
Door. Don't Waste
Another Minute
Call Nowlll
1-900-255-5454
Ext. 4375
$2.99 per mln. Must be 18 yrs.

Touch-lone Phone ReQuired
Se.v.U (619) 645-1!434

The following r•I utete
alluatecl In the Townahlp of
Sal11bury, County of Melge
,and atate of Ohio: Bllng in
'Section 31i, Town 2, Range

Cuolom Building &amp; Remodeling
• New Homes
• Additions
• New Garages
• Remodeling
• Siding
• Roofing
• Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
l~1 !l992-5535
614 992-2753

HOO

Rt. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742-3051

650-1234

OPEN NOV. 23 - 1 0 to 9:00

1112419511 mo.

~r~~~~:~::r~~ M~~E~~~ :~:LE
I
;4~~hans 6M Sale i
TODAY!
i
Shop Early For Best
d I-90D-388·0500
tt'·•
Selection Of Patterns, ·ll
EXT. 3754
i
S1zes &amp; Country Colors ,JZJ
$2.99 Per min.

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

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

992-5756

~

·.

-:1-. e~.l.ect
.,._...
/J

...·.

·~
· ·
C h~ i strnas CJitts ,·· ·..·

·.

Licensed
OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
While Pine 4' &amp; Up with
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call 742-2 143 or
742·2979

&amp;

losured

Free Estimates
SttJmp grinding
Gallipolis, OH
~14-441-1191

P.O. Box .587

1 -900-484-2500

Ext. 1525 ·
$3.99 per min.
Must be 18 yrs.
Touch·tone Phone
Required
Serve-U (614) 645-8434

Racine, Oh. 45n1
James E. Diddle
TrackhDe, Dozer, Backhoe, Dump Truck,
Jackhall)mer, Available 24 Hrs.
We dig basements, put in septic
systems, lay lines, underground bores.
For Free estimate call949·2512

REASONABI.I RATES

PRODUCTS;~

Umestone &amp; Grave~ ·
Seplit Systems,
Trailer &amp; House Sites.

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING

(Stock

supplies)

614·949·3027: ~
1112'W9511

FIRE DEPT.
GUN SHOOTS
SAT., 6:30 P.M~ ·-~

RACINE HYDRAULIC REPAIR
&amp; MACHINE SHOP, IN C.
Cheaper Rates

WELDING &amp; FABRICATION
$20.00/HR

12 &amp;uage
~
Factory Choke Only .~.~
Bashan Bull.ing .•.. '·t'

28563 BASH~N RO.
Racine, Ohio 4577t
(614) 949-3013 Phone
(614) 949-20t8 FAX
(614) 594·2008 NIGHT

8/3/lln

9127195 1f0

'"

Public Notice
13 of the Ohio Company's
Purch81e, bo.unded and
described as follows: ·
Beginning at the southwest
corner of a lot formally
owned by D.W. Archer in
aald Section 35, thence
eouth 53-113 degraea weet
11 rod a and 10 llnka; thence
.north 23 dagraeo weal 27
rode 3 links to a stake;
thence lOuth 87-112 degreut 20 rode and 18 IInke to
the weot line of the 11id
D.W. Archer lot; thence
lOuth 2·112 degrwl -~ 18
·rodo to the place of
beginning.
Excepting . therefrom a
parcel of land heretofore
coveyed to Charley Day
Smith and Naomi Smith by
John F. Hunall and Mary E.
Huoull by deed racorded In
Vol. 180, Page 7 of the
Meigo County Dead
Recorda, aald excepted

Public Notice
parcel being r;laocrlbed as
followa; Beginning at the
southeast corner of a two
acre lot formerly owned by
George Woodard, which ts
the above deecrlbed lot;
thence north 3·112 degrees
eaet 2 rod• and 20 llnka
along the David Archer Una
to the center of the roed;
thence aouth 75 degrees
weol12 rodo 12 IInke along
the county road; thence
oouth 23 degree• •••t 6
rpde and 24 Hnkl down Wolf
Pen C"'"'k to 1M IChoot lot;
thence north 53 dagreaa
ea11 11 rodo and 10 IInke
down the creek along the
ochool tot to the place of
beginning, containing 7120
of an acre, more or lao.
Reference Deed: Volume
~29, Page 459; VoiU!III 300,
Page 233; Volume 224, Page
&amp;71; Volume 203, Page 653,
Melg~
County Deed

Public Notice
Recorda.
. EXCEPTING from the .,
above described real eatete
.96 of an acre conveyed 1 ~
Charita D. and Naomi G
Smith by warranty Deed
dated May 12, 1989 end · ',
more particularly described
In Volume 314, Page 273 of '
the Meigs County Dead ,,
Records.
Auditor's Parcel No. 14·
01016
Said rea.l eatate waa
apprailed at 22,000.00.
Sale of sold re~l ntJte to
ba for not 1111 · than twO.';
thirda (213) the aforeoatd
.appralaed value. Caah In
.hand on date of ule.
.,
Said sale Ia aublect to
opproval by the Common
.Pleao Court, Melga County, ...
Ohio.
· ,
.,
jamea M. Souiaby, Sheriff
Melgo County, Ohio
.'
(12) 12, 19, 28, 3 tc

On Site Dry Cleaning
Now Available

PENING NOVEMBER 25th

Premier Cleaners
and Coin Laundry

HA ~ TWELL HOIJ$E

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

All Hardwood
Pick-up or Delivery
Available.
Ball Logging &amp;
Sawmill

102 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH.45769
614-992-7696

992-9923

Holiday Hours: M·S 9:30 · 4:30p.m.
Sun. 12:00 · 5:00 p.m.

10.% Discount w/Ad

OILER'S

992-6142
Call Evenin s , , ,,,.

POMEROY, OHIO
Trash removal- Commercial or residential.
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.

Langsville, Ohio
. SR325
Skin- Cut - Wrap
&amp; Freeze
YH Kll'em &amp; we dill'em

NOW OFFER ING GENERAL HAULIN G
Limestone, Sand, Gravel, Coal &amp; Water
WE HAVE A· t TOP SOIL FOR SALE

742-2076

DOZER
DUMP TRUCK
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•Licensed
•Bonded
•Insured
Jim Hawthorne
985-4386 111311 mo.

FREE

Pick-Up discarded
washers, dryers, hot • •
water tanks, stoves, . :.•
furnaces, and any . ''.,
metal material. · '
Call 992-4025
between 8 am - 8 pm · ;
Mon thru Sat.

t...------...J.·...

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
SERVICE
'
House Repair &amp; ' . • New Homes
Remodeling
Bulldozing, Backhoe,
• Garages
Kitchen &amp; Bath
Services.
Remodeling
• Complete
Home Sites, Land
Room Additions
Remodeling
Siding, Roofing, Patios
Clearing, Septic
Reasonable
Stop &amp; Compare
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Insurers· E•perienced
FREE ESTIMATES
Trucking· Limestone,
Call Wayne Neff 9924405
985-4473
Top Soil, Fill Dirt
For Free Estimates I
. 7122/94

110\\ \Jill
E\C \\ \'l'li\C;

MODERN SANITATION

DEER SHOP

FOR SALE
Cut &amp; split

Firewood

Antiques - Gifts - Folk Art

992-3954 or 985-3418

ANNOUNCEMENTS

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

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New At King Hardware

;J~ame
· Co~tte~

&lt;The

.l

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTlAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Picture Frame, Mats
&amp; Framing Accessories.
405 North Second Ave., Middleport 992·5020

614-992-7643

Repairs/Additions
Craig 614-367-0567

Giveaway

..' ,l
. · ·•

7•~BI~
ac-=-k~Fe-m~ale~~~me~ra~n-ian-.-N~·t
GOOd Wtth Kid s. 614·446-0 770

9

·:

•

· ' .,)

~~~-=--=-~--~--r•

112 Beagle ~ ale Pu ppy, 6 14-388- " ·

• ~ ~~

! 1100.

2 Pu ppi es Female To G i veawa~ - .. J
To Good Home Only I 61 4-44 6- .. .,.l
0420.

7 Puppi es, 7 Weeks Old
· ,. ' .J:
Hu sky 614 -441 -0725
' Pan. i=-.

.tered, declawed, to good home
Water
only .
or 304 -895- '
1
~ ,:U
1.JJ- Tre!lmenl : : -a: -:-:k~&amp;w::-h,,,.--Fem-al- eK-itte-ns_:
A~: j
4
~'LZ_~
Equipment ~·7~~onale Playful 6 144 6' , :~
304 - 895-30, 7

&amp;

Chri stmas Puppi es, Chow &amp; Bor,. ~~~~~
der
Collie Mi• . 1 Female, 1 Male. ·
614·446-1052.

DUtributed by

The water treatment

Riggs Christm·as Trees

':

Serial

•
-

'
"
)
r.0cpv

2112192/ttn

TRI-STATE WATER SYSTEMS, INC.

.

~:;.z:.

CHRISTMAS. TREES.

BUDFOID'S
Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut/Live

Located on Cherry Ridge: From At. 33, turn East at
Darwin onto AI. 681 . Go 4 miles to Cherry Ridge Rd., t

1/2 miles to tree farm. Walch for Signs. tO:OO a.m. HI dark
Nov. 24 thru Dec. 24
Wagon Rides/Craft Shop . Weokends

company cordially invites you to

participate in a free, no obligation, comprehensive water

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

YOUR MESSAGE
11G2JIII48XR7578734
1817 Ford Bronco II Serial
CAN BE SEEN HERE
11 FMCU14TSHUA3S72t
410D
Farmall FOR A TOTAL OF
tnternalfonal Fann TI'IICIOr
'Ole tenna of the aala are
$7.00 PER DAY.
c11h. Homa National lank
raiiii'VH the right IO bid at ·
the tale or to remove any or· :i i iii iii i i i i i i iii i i i i ii ii iiI ii ii Ii ii i i Ii i ii iii i iii ii ii iii i i ii ii::

· :·!
:~
.: ,

,.--~:=:~---~~------....., s1an milt, boou tiful blue eyes, nou-

Choose and cut your tree. We will
mechanically cl~an your tree for you so
no more needles i~ the carpet. We will
also bale it if you like.

Serial

.'.

L---------------------~~ ~ ~~~~
· ~--~-~
Appro ~~: . 1yr old Hi ni
al ayan/ Per - • --

Portable
Handsaw Mill

Serial

.

3 Yea r Old Fe male Registerect
Cocker Spantel, 614·367-7313.
·

( No Sunday Calls)

Home or
Trailer

11PXG24K3LG419118
1H4 Pontiac Sunblrd

40

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

H&amp;H
SAWMILL

IKMHLF22J1JU431841
1tt0 Dodge Doytona

;
· ..:
•"

NEFF REMODELING

4/13/95

RIGGS T~EE FARM

-

.,,

r------. ~

614-742-2193

I'UIUC NOTICE
s.turdly, December 30,
1tt5, at 10:00 a.m. the
Home National lank will
onar lor aata at public
auction on the Bank
Partdng lot the following:
1817 Ktnworth Modal 204
sertal12040112
111• Plymouth Reliant
Serial
11P31P21CIEG175214
1811 Marcury Lynx Sorlol
11MEIP8424FWI31471
1118 Hyundlo Exeat GL

mo. pel.

RACINE

949-2512

HYDRAULIC REPAIR
$32.00/HR.

up on your.

holiday baking •

614-742-2138

J.E. DIDDLE OWNER

J.D. Drilling Company

WATKINS : ·~

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION

1012119411fn

LIVE GIRLS
CALL NOW

Must ·TOM
Be 18phOM
yrs.
TotKh
Rt1J11lred
• •
Serv·U (619)·645·8434 " ~

~ .. · .Sh.aron L.ouks . (614) 985-4
. 114
·. ~
~~~~U~~~.a. i==='=
"2019=
"~
mo

,...,,...,Tree
Service

32124 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Danny &amp; Peggy Brickles

992·3148

·-:

BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

12NI5tma&gt;.

On the T Middleport .

GARY A. JONES, ET AL.,
Delendante
cau No. 93-CV 280
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE O.F
REAL ESTATE
Ao Sheriff of Meig1'
County, Ohio, I hereby offer
lor 1111 at 10:00 a.m. on
Friday, Jan. 28, 11196 A.D.,
on the front IIepa of the
Melga County Courthouoe,
Pomeroy,
Ohio, the
following deacrtbed real

Wreaths ~ Swags &amp; Grave Blankets

lessons on
Plano,
Guitar &amp; Drums
69 N. Locusl St.
Cheshlre,Oh.
614-367-0302
Roger Walker

lntenat Rata

$tore

vs.

$10 &amp; Up

$300&amp; up

t t 139511 mo

12111'111-.

Peft.

Public Notice
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
THE FARMERS BANK &amp;
SAVINGS
COMPANY,Piatntlff,

Snow tires now in
stock
Check out our
prices.
- ..

GUITARS

.

Sal~.
Call
614-949-2512

Call your date now
1-900-255-1515
Ext. 1471
2.99/min.
Must be 18 yrs.

Be Of

.

Round
Bales of
Hay for

FUNn

SARA PIAZZA

mo.

111111

949·2882

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

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION

TROLLY
STATION
HANDMADE
CRAFTS

• Room Additions
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing
• Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

on the
front lines in battle
over tort reform

SAVE

GLASS

HAULING

CHRISTMAS TREES

STAR 'GUITAR

WICKS

&amp;WIN~OW

La~yer

By ANDREA STONE
USA TODAY
As lawmakers push for tort
reform to stem the spiraling growth
of personal-injury judgments; the
man responsible for some of tbe
biggest awards is pushing back.
Phil Corboy brags he first
ac.bieved " real tort reform" when
be challenged an !Uinois law that
capped pain and suffering damages
at $10,000. That 1968 case - be
sued on behalf of a student injured
at school-led to the state's damages cap being declared unconstitutional. He also helped lift a $30,000
limit in wrongful death cases.
Since then the numbers have
climbed, as have efforts to slow
them. Illinois was one of 30 stales
that passed tort reform this year.
Similar bills are moving through
Congress.

K.&amp;W.

·(Lime Slone low Rates)

..

Four 11 2 Bea gle Pupp ies, 11. :. :\

analysis. WE WILL TEST FOR THE FOLLOWING:

W_eek_s-:-O_Id;_,6_1.,._4_46-00:....:.::::
~
52::.._

TDS, Mineral Hardness, Iron, PH.
Please call RrrinSojl at 992-4472 or 1-80()-6()6-3313

Free Chri st mas Present: Goo•

to set u

our free water anal sis.

1111Mfn

Solid Vinyl
Replacement
'
Windows

1

-6

; . ...

Full bloo ded Bo •e r, male . 304 ~
6 75-2074
:

-· "" "

~[

Beagle Puppies, 6 14·446-3823.

~~~~-~~=-- .~&amp;

Three month old par t Husky/ part
Beagle pu ps to giveaway, 6 14 -

, •)
,,

98!&gt;4225.

..-,

' ' . ""

Y~Uow Angora 2mos old kitten, 1o :· .. ~
niCe home only. 304-675-4650.
'

60

We have the
best window
and the best
price

;:2

Companion
For Elderly Person., ·.\
Wh1te Male B1chon Frise Puppy ~
10 Month s Old, To Good Home . f
614-379·9061 .

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

_.:• ,

Lost and Found

&gt; ,..,

;:::-:::-~-:::--:::---.:.,.:..::._ . lu

Found : l ost Or · oum ped" K rau~ ' .~~
Bec k Road , Ga lli po li s, Young , ~
Male White Dog Resembles Bi rd, ,, ,
Dog Qr Bri tlany Sp aniel Type . ; .!.
Tan Palch Over Right Eye, Gentle-

z

Natured, Call 614-•46-471 3 lf Not , ..J ~
Claitred Will Giveaway.
, \

Found : two weeks a~. sma ll wen-• .t::
ma n~ ~r ed Beagle, po ssibly has' , ""~.b
arthrHIS, Rockspring s Rd., Pomer- ,
oy, 614·992·2791 .
'

:-'--:--~=---:·

. ·II

Lost: Blue Leather Jacket. 3 Pins.. . ;:
On -Front Return Pi ns To : Par - ' L()
!IOns, 905 SR 2 18, Galli po li ~
• • 'JP

�Pom!'~oy

. Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

_Tuesday, December 12, 1995

• Middleport, Ohio

' Tuesday, December 12, 1995

Pomeroy • Middle

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

i:ALLEY OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP

1 Off - watt
4 Doff's House

ALDER
440

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartments
for Rent

Lost Wi:il~er coon hound white/
black brown last seen 1215195
Welte Pen area call 614 742

1 bedroom apartment m Middle
port, ava ilable Dec ember 1 all
utilities paid $250 pe r month
$tOO depo s11, Sam 10 5pm 614
992 7806

3409
70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis

&amp;

2 Bedroom Apanment Downtown
Gallipolis Central Heat A~r Very
Reasonable Ut1hty B• lls l 1ke New
614 866-7174

VICinity

All (a ra Sales Must Be Pard In
Advance DEADLI N E 2 00 p m
tt1e day before the ad rs to run

2 Bedroom Garage Apartment
W1th WatiH Include d
$200 Security Deposit Requ1red
Located second Avenue Gall1
pohs 614 25619n
$300 / ~o

Sundtl~ edrtron

2 00 p m Fr~da~
MO"'day edrtron tO 00 am Sat
e~ rday

Pomeroy,

2 Bedrooms All Elec tnc, Galhpo
115 Plea 614·386 9267

Middleport

&amp; VICinity

2bd rm apts total electric, ap
pliances fu rnished, laundry room
faclhlles close to schoo l m town
Apphcat1ons ava table at V1llage
Green Apts #49 or call 614 992
3711 EOH

Al l Yaro Sates Must Be Pard In
Ad vance Deadlrne 1 OOpm the
day oelore the ad rs to run Sun

oay ea !!on

1

OOpm Fnday Man

day edttron 10 OOa m Saturday

2bedroom furnl!!ihed utilities pa1d
Mason, WV 304 773-9009

Public Sale

80

and Auct1on

Hrck Pearson Auctron Company
lull rrme auc troneer

complete

auct on

l rccns ed

sep;rce

RQ 6 Oh c A We st Vrrgrnra 304
773 5785 Or 304 773 544 7

90

Wanted to Buy

Antrques co llec tables esta tes
Rrver ne A '1!1Ques flL s~ Moore
owner 614 992 2526

Cle an Late Model Cars Or
l r~,; ~..ks 1987 Models Or New er
Smrth Burck Pontrac 1900 East

ern

Avenu~

Gall1pohs

J &amp; l) s Auto Pans 8uy1ng sal
vage veh cles Sell ng pans 304
773 5.J33
fop Pr1ces Pa1d Old US Co1ns
S1l~e r Gold Diamonds All Old
Collet:tlb es Paperwe1ghts Etc
M T S Co1n Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gall iPOliS 614 446 2842
U sed ! urn ture

ant1ques one
p1ece or complet e estates Osby
Martin 614 992 7441
Wanted To Buy L1!11e T1kes Toys
6 14 245-5887

Homes for Sale
N ne room house- lour bedrooms,
Babys ttler For Age s 7 12 Yea rs ne wly remodeled k.Jtchen and
Old From 4 11 P M 3 To 4 bath new carpettng large corner
Ntghts A Week 514 446-7376
lot $28000 6149926173or
6 14 992 20 t 5a!ter 5pm
Home Typ1sts PC users needed
$45 000 mcome potont1al Cal l t Three bedroom home 1n coumry
800 513 434 3 Ext B 9368
Whites Ht ll Rd Ru~and one t&gt;alh
1n ground pool 614-992-5067

Recept10n1st for med1cal off1ce
preferred Send wnt
ten resumes only to Ofhce Man
ager PO Box 779, N ow Haven
wv 252!l5
Exper~ence

Secretary 1Recepuon1st Needed
Send Resumes To Blackburn Re
a11y PO Box 783 Galllpohs OH
45631 All Resumes Stnctly Con
lldennal
ABSOLUTELY NO PHONE
CALLS PLEASE'
Small Local F1rm Seekmg Parr
T1me On Call Cleamng Persons
Send Resume To SCCS PO Box
538 Kerr OH 45643
Sw1m Coach For New Satell 1te
USS Swm1 Team Call Jane 614
441 0445 Leave Message

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale

t4x70
2bedroom
12x30
screened m porc h l ocated 1n
southe rn Mason Co Shown by
appo1ntment Xl4 453- 2244
1986 Grandv1lle 14x70 2 Bed
rooms, 1 Bath Total Gas Under
pmmng t 6x 12 Deck &amp; Fireplace
$12000 6143670429
1987 t4x70 Mob1le Home, 3 Bed
rooms 1 Bath Real N1ce $8 900
614 379 2884
L1m1te d Offer' 1996 doubl ew1de
3br 2bath $1 799 down $ 2751
month Free del ivery &amp; se tup
Only at Oakwood Homes N1tro
wv 304-755 5865

__
an_t_ed_li
_ o__
oo
__
Lots &amp; Acreage
WAN TED Book Waterloo Won _1s_o_w
1350
ders Contact S A Lee 662 Mo Babysnung
In My Hom e
F1ve acres,
aerator ne ar
ha wk Street Colum bus OH Cheshlfe Area 614 367 7849
Rac1ne $16 000 can fmance With
43206 614 444 3861
Ch1ld Care In My Galhpohs Area half down 614 949 2025
Wi ll Buy Good Clean Cl oth1ng Home All Ages Welcome Hot
Pt Pleasant 1212 OhiO lot 12ac
01 shes Gospel Book s, M1sc Mer Meals Please Call 614 441-0439
lnd Oh10 Rtve r tac San dhtll,
chand1se Wed Fn Sat 1 1 A M
4 P M 1699 McCormiCk Ro ad Exp e r~ e n ced Child Care G1 ver comm 205 7th St lot &amp; ho use
Now Acceptmg Tod dlers &amp; lnf Gallipolis 12 ac , v1ew 304 675
Gallipolis 614 446 1511
ants Located In Gallipolis 614 5104
441--0108
Scemc Valley Apple Grove
EMPLOYMENT
Gene ral Mainten ance Pam11ng beau tiful 2ac lot s publiC waler,
SERVICES
Yard Work Window s Washed Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336
Gutters Cleaned l tght Hauhn9
Real Estate
Commencal Res•dent1 al Steve 360
614 446 6861
wanted
11 o
Help wanted
Georges Portable Sawmill don 1
$1 000 Week ly Stullmg Envel
haul your logs to the mtll JUSt call
opes Free Info Send Sel l A.d
dressed Stamped Enve lope To 304 6f5-1957
Explorer Dept 91 6069 Old Can Professional Tree Serv1ce Com
ton Ro ad Box 51 0 Jackson MS plete Tree Care Bucket Truck
39211
Serv1ce 50 Ft Rea ch, Stump Re
Free Est1matesl In
$?.00 $900 week ly Year rou nd moval
oosJ!IOns H1nng men, women surance 24 Hr Emergency Serv
l=ree room board W11t tra1n Call 1ce Ca ll And Savel No Tree Too
B1g Or leo Small' Bidwell Oh10
24hrs
407 8 75 2022
ext
614 388-11Bol3 614 367 7010
0505C49
Respons 1ble College Student
AGENT AVON SALE S
Earn $8 $15 /Hr At Work Home W1111ng To Babysit Any Ho urs
t3enellts ' 0 1sc otmtsl Flexible Start1 ng Dec 14th Through Jan
6th, Reasonable Rates 614 446
Hou rs I No Inventory Requ~red
7538
1 800 742 4738

Home Wanted 3 Bedrooms C1ty
:::ichools, Some Acreage E~e.cellent
Cond itiOn Only FP Basement A
Plusl No Mob1le s 614 441 1616
Days Only
RENTALS

IN RUTLAND house for rent four
bedrooms one bath large rooms
14X14 !rom room 1411.12 kitchen,
new ca rpet recenlly remodeled
central a1r HUD accep ted $3651
mo plus deposit, 614 992 2817

Rub &amp; Sc rub Cleanmg Serv 1ce New 3 Or 4 Bedroom s 2 112
du sting moppmg, Window s and Balh s, large K1tchen Ut1hty
more Complete servtce or touch Room Hea t Pump, 2 Car Garage,
ups Relerences on requ est, call Large Lot C!ly Schools 4 M1les
11 Yo u Are We Hav e A Un1que Terry at 614 99 2 4232 or 614 From GallipOliS, $550/Mo -+ De
pos1t, References No Pets 614
Oooortunl! y For You In Route 992 4451
446 0038
Sales Schwan s Sales Enterpns
Sun Valley Nur sery Sch ool 1 - - - - - - - -- - es A Nat onal Frozen Food Com
Chtldcare M F Sam 5 30pm Ages N1ce Clean 3 Bedroom Hom e,
pany Can Olfer Excellent Opper
2 K Young Sc hool Age Dur~ng HU D Approved Wtll land Con
tum! es lo Sell Benefi ts Include
Summer 3 Days per Week M1n1 tra cl Mercervill e Area 61 4 256
Pa1d lra1ntng Prof! Shanng In
mum 614 446 3657
6574
surance lncenttves And E xcet
tent Advancement Oppot1um1 1es Will Clea n By Appomtment Only Sma ll Unfurn1shed 1 Bed room
No Inves tment Requited You Restdenual 1Commerc 1al Fo1 Hou se Near K Mart Air Condl
Must Be At Least 21 Years Old More Inform atiOn Call Kn s Or uoned Gas Heat M1ctowave,
And Have A Good Dnvmg /Em leave Message 614 446 4400
New Pa m t, &amp; Car pet, Up sta irs
ploymen t Record lnterv 1ewrng
Storage Av aila ble $3251Mo +
Dec t8 19 For Appomtmen t Call
Gas Electnc, Call Between 8 &amp; 10
FINANCIAL
1 BOD 336 7569 EOE
PM Or Before 9 AM 614 4461622
ATTt~
PT PLE ASANT Postal
Pos1t ons available Permanent full 21 0
Business
Unfurnished rwo bedroom house
11me lo r clerks/so rters Fu ll Bene
n1ce and clean depos1t requ1red,
Opportunity
lrts For exam date applt cat1on
no 1ns1de pets, 614 992·3090
and sillary mfo 708 264 1839 ex!
INDTICEI
3070 Bam Spm
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO Welzgal Sn ee1 Pomeroy Wi D
recommends that you do bus1 $350/Mo Deposit, 513-922 0294
AVON
All Are as I Shul ey
ness Wl1h people you know and 420 Mobile Homes
Spears 304 675 1429
NOT 10 send money through the
for Rent
AVON EAR N $$$ at nom e at ma il un til yo u ha\e mvest1gated
work All areas 304 882 26 45 1 the olfenng
2 Bedroom Mob1le Home Mercer
800 992 6356 INDIREP
Investment Property In Gall1pohs v1lle Area Reference &amp; Deposit,
ONner May Be Able To Help W1th 614 446 1158
HVAC INSTALLER
Some Fmanc 1ng Call 614 797
Grow ng Sou !hensrern Oh o 4345 Aller 6 PM
2 Bedroom S2501Mo Deposl! &amp;
References Requ~red, 614 367H'IAC
CoiTlpany
Look1ng
Ex
pe11encN1
Sell Mo11
vated ror
Install
AHE YOU AN AMBITIOUS
SE LF MOT IVATED
INDIVIDUAL'

t•----·--·-·iii·ii i

e•s
Good Pay
Good Benelns
Retirement Plan
Be A Leader And Jom Our Team
fodayl Send Resune To
HVAC tnstaller
PO Box 806
Jackson OH 45640
II you are iOOJ.. ng lor a career m
rhe healrhcare l1eld are hard
Norkmg canng and haye a deslfe
10 ca1e for people We w1U prov1de
yov With the cduca110n yo u need
10 be a Sl NA CornpeH!IVe salary
Jenell!s health nsurance and tw
on 191moursemen1 tor lutl t me
employees Please ca ll Penny or
Suzanne at 6t4 667 3156 or ap
plv 1n person at Arcad1a Nursmg
Cenler Coolvill Oh1o
Need someore to repatr upngh t
Hoove swoop&amp;r 61 4 992 2021
No Expenenc&amp; Necessa ry I $500
To 900 Weekly /Pot enti al Pro
cessng Mortga{le Refunds Own
Hours Call (909 ) 715 2300 Ext

s

0632

2 Bedroom Mob1le Home At Ever
green 614 379-2678 No Sunday
Calls Please
2 Bedroom Tra1ler For Rent, 6 14
446-4110
All real estate advertising In
thiS newspaper IS subJect to
the Federal Fa1r Hous1ng Act
of t968 which makes 11111ega1
to adver11se "any preference
limitation or discrimination
based on race color religiOn,
sex lam11tal sta tus or national
ongm or any mtent1on to
make any such preference
l1m1lali0n or d1SCflm1nahon •
Th1s newspaper Wilt not
kno.-lrgo/ accepl
aavert1sements for real estate
which Is 1n v1otauon of the law
Our readers are nereby
1nlormed that all dwellings
advertised In this newspaper
areavallableon anequal
opportunity basts

2 Bed room Country Setting, No
Pets, References 1\nd Deposit
Aequu ed , 614 446 6890 l eave
Name And Number

AC Ma son no pets 304 773
5751
3bedroom all electric Galhpolls
Ferry 304 675 4088
N1ce 2 bedroom mobile nome 1n
Middleport Oh 614-992 5858
R1ver Front Property Remodeled
1211.60 Mob1le Home 2 Bedrooms
Was her /Dryer Hook Up Small
Storage Bu 1ld1ng low UtilitieS,
N1c e Neighbor hood Chesh~re,

-·~ $28&amp;~0 614 367-Q415

Two and three bedroom mobi le
homes, starting at $240 $300 ,
sewer, water and trash mcluded
614·992·2167

~~ .,u

440

PART TIME TlfJCK DRIVER
Gallipolis Area Must Ha...e
1 Year Expenence (M1nmum)

COl
GoodMVR

No

owrs

Pass Dol Physical &amp; Drug Screen
Yearly
Pay
Appro•umately
$30 000 Send Resurre To
~Q Box 769
Galhpohs, OH 45631

Homes for Sale
WHY RENT??

Remodeled raflCh tn Bashan New
s1drng wmdows, kitchen, bath,
carpet Located on approJ: one
acre Approx $1-400 down, pay
ments under $"'00 per moetth
wh1ch tncludes taxea and msurance Realtor owned Call Ron
or Sue Ron Hibbard Realty, toll
free 1 800 886-51 28

4 112 Miles From Galhpoi1s N1ce
2 Bedrooms Stove Relngerator &amp;
Water Furr11shed No Pets S250/
Mo 614 446 8038

Apartments
for Rent

New !Used
304 675 1450

Maytag Washe r /Dryer Set Was
$410 Now $375 W11h 90 Day
Warranty Whirlpool Washer
Wa s S I SO Now $125, Whirlpool
Washer Was $125 Now $95, 3
To Choose From Whitlpool Dryer
Was $125 Now $95, Maylag Dry·
or Was $150 Now $125, Whirl ·
pool Portable Washer Fam1ly Sbe
$150, Wh~r l pool Dryer Sg5, Etec:
tr1c Range 30• Harvest Gold Was
$150 Now $125 Chest Freezer
19 Cu F1 $150, Skaggs Appliances, 76 Vme Street, Galllpo·
l1 s Ohto, 614 446 7398, 1 800
499·3499
VI'RA FURNITURE
614·446-3158
Quality Household Furmture And
Appliances. Great Deals On
Cash And Carryl RENT-2 OWN
And Layaway Also Avwlable
Free Delwery W1th1n 25 M1 les

Ruger 10122 rifle &amp; 4 power scope
$165 20 gauge s s shotgun $60
22 ca l s s ni le $7S 304 675
1564

Furnished EffiCiency $225/Mo
Ulllttles Paid , 920 Fourth Avenue
Gallipolis 614 446 4416 After 7
PM
Grac1ous liVIng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V1llage Manor and
R1vers1de Apartments m M1ddle
port From $232·$355 Call 614
992 5064 Equal Hou s1ng Opper
tun1t1es.
N1 ce one bedroom apartmen t m
Mtddleport lor smgle person only
Jun or H1gh area, 614-QQ2 4140
N1ce one bedroom apartment lor
rent m\ Pt Pleasant 614 992
5858
N1co two bedroom apartment 1n
Pomeroy, 614 992 5856
One bedroom $225/mo plus ut1l1
t1 es and deposit No pets 304
675-4975
One bedroom furmsh ed apart
ment 1n Middleport, 614-446-3091
or 614 · 992 5304 or 614 992
2178
Twtn RIVers Tower now accepting
apphcauom fo• 1br HUD su bs1d
I Zed apt lor el derly and handl
capped EOH 304 675-6679
Two bedroom apartment 1n Mtd
dl eport, two bath s equipped
kitchen HUO approved referenc
es and deposit requ.red, 614 985
4448 aher 5 OOpm
450

Furnished
Rooms

C1rcle Motet Gall1pohs, OH 614·
446· 2501 Eflectency Rooms, Ca
ble A1r Phone M1 crowave &amp; Be
fr~ gerator

Rooms lor rem week or momh
Startn o at $120/mo Ga111a Hotel
6 1&lt;'1 446-9580
Sleeping room s w1th co ok1ng
Also tra ile r spa ce on nver All
hook up s Ca ll alter 2 00 p m
304 773 5651, Mason WV
470 Wanted to Rent
STORAGE SpACE NEFQED
2 500 To 3 000 Sq Fl, Chesh1re,
Middleport Pomeroy Area Call
Galha Me1g s C~A . Weathenza
110n, 6t4 992·6629 Or 614 367
7341
MERCHANDISE

Household

Goods

Appliances
Recondltton ed
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Refr1
orator s 90 Day Guarantee!
French C1ty Maytag , 614 446
7795
Couch &amp; Chair Good Cond111on
Light Blue l t.Aauye Type Color,
$100 814·387-7115
Couch, good cond bough t at
Topes 304 675·4210 leave mes
sage
Country Furnnure 304·675-6820
Rt 2 N, 6m1las Pt Pleasant, WV
Tues Sat9-e, Sun 11 5
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers dr yers refrigerators,
Skaggs Appliances, 76
Street, Call 614 446 7398,
1 800·499-3499

Furn1shed Efficiency, 607 Second
Galhpol1 s Share Bath $1 85/Utih·
t1es Pa1d 614 446 H 16 Alter
7pm

Large !lex-steel sofa $100 Queen
box spr~ng &amp; bed fra me $25
K11Chen IB~e$ 1 5 304-675-7929

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur111Shed and unfurnished, secrurlty
deposit requ1red, no pels, 6 14·
992·221 6

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home furn~ahtngl
Hours Mon Sal, 9-5 614· 446·
0322. 3 m1les oul Bul avllle P1ke
ljC&gt;e Oehvery

Crate B X 25 bass amp, $130,
614 742 3018
D1 amond engagement r~ng, 14K
white gold can be s1zed appra1
sal pap ers to r .$1350, se ll lor
$750 304·675-7541
D1 sney area 5 day s/ 4 hotel
nights Uso anyt1me Pa1d $310
sell $100 304 353-91 31
OJ system complete speakers
power amp m1xmg board 5dtsc
CO player , dual casse ue, turn
labia cor ds $1 BOO 304 675
209 1 6 7pm
Electnc Wheelchair S /Scooters
New fUsed Scooter /Wheelchair
L1lts S1a1rway Elevators, l1ft
Cha~rs Bowman s Hom ecare
614·446 7263
Excerc1se B1ke Very Good Cond•
tlon S35 614 441 - 1416
Fender Squ tre Stat And Fe nder
S1de K1ck Amp Good Co nd1110n
Schw1nn Mill 81ke L•ke New, 614
446 0070
F ~r ewood For Sale Seasoned
Oak H1ckory &amp; Wal nut, $35 De
h\'eted, 614 379 9889

Great Chnstmas G11ts Boo ts By
Redw1ng Chippewa, Tony lama
Guaranteed lowest Pn ces 1\t
Shoe Gale
HARDWOOD FLOORING
Poplar, oak htekory, ash, maple,
walnut cherry, colonial grade
$1 20 $1 SObd It Premtum grade
$1 44 $2 61bd f1 Alllloonng sold
314" thick Random Width &amp; ran
dom lengths 304 586 3821
Wh1le quaniiMs last
H1·Eitec1ency l P Or Natural Gas
92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU I
800 287 63Q8, 6 14·4 46· 630B
Duct Systems And Atr Condttlon
ers Free Estimates
Hom e keg system $80 Homellte
240 chamsaw $175 4 full -atze
Chevy truck rally s $100 14 1/2"
x 19p1t cl'l SS boat prop $250
Ptoneer 80wa u rece tver $175
P1oneer turntable $30 25• color
console TV $100 814- 441 1084
after 6pm
Large quantity of double kntt rna
tenal,61 4 843 5112
L1ke New, Bust1 lme Sola And
Cha1r 614-446-2871
Metal Off1ce Desk, Excellent Condillon, $75, One Office Cha~r $50,
614 446--6585, Aller 5 30 I'M
!New Woodbu rn1ng Stove Cast
ltron Bnck L1ned Sold By Sears
~200 , 614 446-3664 Aller 51'M
Ref ngera tors Stov es, Washers
And Dryers All Reco nditioned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up,
W1ll DeliVer 614-669-6441
Santas Christmas TreeG, State
Route 650 Between Rt 35 and
Rodney We W111 Cui 614·245·

5595
Stze 12 While Weddmg Gown,
Floor Lenglh W11h Chapel Lenglh
Tram $300, 30 Volume Encylopedia Americana, 1961 EditiOn, $50,
Roadmasler Slallonary Bicycle
Wllh Spedometer !Mileage $50,
614·446-7630
STORAGE TAN~S 3,000 Gallon
lupnght, Ron Evans Enterpnses,
Jackson, Dh10, 1 600-537 9528
SUMMERFIELD's TREE FARM·
cut ~ur own Chnstmas tree. S15,
Sr 7 top of Eastern School hill,
turn on Locust Grove, 814· 985·
3435
SUNOUEST WOLFF TANNING
BECS
CommarCUll· Home unlta from
$199 Buy laciOry direct and
SAVEl Call TODAV k:&gt;r NEW
FREE ColO&lt; calllog 1-8110-482·
~1g7

9
Auto Loans Dealer w111 arrange 11
nancmg even 1! you have been
turned down elsewhere Up ton
Equipment Used Cars 304 458
1069

12
13

720

Trucks for Sale

78 Chevy tlx4 3/4 ton 350 en gme, auloma!IC transmiSSIOn
614 742 2124

6A 7 5 2

6A B 5

I'MGml~

lllilfJI&lt;:.I'M

TIRED Of
DAitklG .. _lN,_

AClt.J~U."1' 1
WAS 1HI"l!OkX:&gt;

READY FOR

Pt~"ltRM

OF

LEASIIJG

f&lt;6lA1100:SHIP

WEST
64

•Q J

EAST

• 5 3 2

• Q 10 7 2

•J

8 4
&lt;loJ 10 9

&lt;ioQ 7 6 2

LIVESTOCK

South
INT

Kill RATS AND MICE I
ENFOACER&lt;II rat and mouse ~II
ers are GUARANTEED! Ava1 l
able at
CENTRAL SUPPLY
O'DELL TRUE VALUE LUMBER
K1ng Size, Waterbed $100, 614
251Hl723
Used fuel furnace, 2 large fuel
tanks Fuel lor sa le cheap Arc
we lder, while Westmghouse 3
phase $100000 304 576·2802
We buy, sell, or trade, new, used
&amp; ant1que furniture, R&amp;S New &amp;
Used Furn1t1.Jre, 505 N Second
S1 Mason,
25260, Phone
304·n3 5341

61 0 Farm Equipment
Allis Chalmers 190XT 2WO 95HP
turbo d1esel with AC519 end
load er
bucket, separate bale
spear 4665 hours 90% rubber
on 18 411.34 tire s excellent cond1
uon, $6900 tractor only, $6500
614-698-6226

so·

Mas se y Ferguson 180 Tra ctor
$5,950 Massey Fergus on 175
$5,800 Mas sey Fer gu son 135
D1esel $5,495 Fergu so n T0 20
W1th Bush Hog &amp; Blad e $2,650
614 266--6522
1:...:...:::.:..::;.::.:._ _ _ _ __
POLE BUILDING SPEClAl
30'X40'X9 Pa1nted Steel Sides
Galvalume Steel Rool 15x8 Sleel
Slider 3 Man Door $6 444
ERECTED Iron Horse Builders 1
800 352 1045

wv.

WHITES METAL lilETECTORS
Ron Alt1son 1210 Second Ave
nue Gallipolis Oh1o 614· 446

4336
Wreaths, swags, grave blankets,
ropmg artlfictal Po1nsett1as 99e
Sues Greenhouse Rac1n e, Oh
614 949 2115
550

630

Livestock

2 Quarter Hqrse Mares 2 Walk
ers614·4464 110
Baby Calves 8 Started Calves
On Food 614 379- 2924
640

Hay

&amp; Grain

Grass Hay 4'k5 Round Bales $12
No Sunday Calls 614-386-8524

Bu lldlng
Supplies

TRANSPORTATION

Block, bnck sewer pipes, wmd
ow s lintels, etc Claude Wmters,
R10 Grande OH Ca l l 614 245
5121

71 0

Year End Sate I Save B1g Bucks!
A.ll Steal Bu1ldmgs Limited Ttme
Only Call While Suppl1es Lastl
Saunders Contracting 614·441·
0219

69 Thund erbird SC two door, 3-8
lnre Y·6, ehte model turbo PS
PB AC , 5 speed, power seats
and locks, •Grea t Car· $6500
neg, 6 L4 992· 7478 or 614· 949
2879

1- - - - - - - - - - -

560

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop Pet Groom1ng Featunn g Hyd ro Bath Juhe Webb
Call614 446-0231
AKC black male Cocker, excel
lent temperament, champ1on
l&gt;oodl1ne, $150 304 937-2733
AKC
Oalmat1an
pupp1es
21emales. shots &amp; wormed
$100ea 304 675 55sa
AKC Pomeranrans, Also Shelue,
shots &amp; wormed 304-675 2193
AKC Registered black and tan
m1nla1Ure Pinscher pupp!es three
females ready lor Chnstmas,
$300,614 965-3579
AKC Registered Cocker Spamels
lour black and while, one chocolate, born 12/4/95, ca ll614·
742·2124
A KC Reg1stered m1n1ature Po mer~an s 1 female, 1male, red
orange, 1st &amp; 2nd shots, Bern 9·
5 95 Also 1female. 3male
orange Ready Dec 23rd Uake
great Chnstmas presents 304
458-2228

Autos for Sale

1966 Ford Fa~rlane sedan.
t ubbe~ center lme whee ls, roll
cage, MSO 9• Ford rear end, B&amp;
M pro a•r shifter, trans &amp; convert
er $4 500 614 992-6407
19 73 Camaro race car tubbed,
roll cage, weld wheels, MSD b1g
block motor trans brake all elec
tron1cs, turn key $6,500 , rolhng
$5,500,614 992 6407
1980 Maltbu Classic good frame
good 1nt&amp;r1or 355 c u engme l1ke
new $2500 614 992 6026
1962 Otds Toronado, all pow er,
$900 080, 614 992 2559

AKC

1986 Chrysl er La ser Turbo AutomatiC, 2 2 4 Cyl1nder AJr Cond1
!loner, $1,500 614 446·4269

AKC Toy Poodles, born Aug
17th. black, apncot, chocolate
Will dehver loca.ly 304 576-2449

1966 Ford Tempo 5 Sp ee d
Needs Repa11s, $500, 1973 Ply
mouth Dus ter, $400 Call Alter 6
P.M 614 446-7262

Reg1stered Pomenans,
shots &amp; wormed 304--675·5460

AKC Yellow lab Pups, Ready For
Chnslmas, $300 814 256--6336
Mer6~M

81g beautiful AKC Chow pupptes
only one blue and one black le
malelell. $200,614-992 7574
Chr~stmas lay a way Spec1all

55gal tank &amp; hood, $99 Ftsh
Tank &amp; Per Shop 24 13 Jackson
Ave Po1nt Pleasant 304 675
2063

Mtnl lop Ear Rabb1U For Sale
$5 00 Each Or Take Al l $2 50
Eacl\ 614·386-6577

1986 Bomb er Bass Boat 11 5
Manner Outboard Manner Troll
1ng Motor, LowRange DepthFmd
er Sk1 Tow Bar, $5 500 Excellent
Condmon, 614-446 0229

A " DOLLAR

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

Accessories
Budget Tr ansm iSSIOns Use d ~
Rebu ilt All Types Accessible To
Over 10 000 TransmiSSIOn AI set
Parts Clut che s &amp; Pr ess ur~
Plates, 614 379 2935
•
New gas tan k s one ton tr ue'
wheels radiators floor mats etc
D &amp; R Au1o R1pley WV 304 372
3933 or 1 000 273-9329
770

BORN LOSER

Auto Repair

Campers

,

~

j.Jf\Po-T Klt-IDOF f., R£~\c.M:D
I:'&gt; WIS 7' F"it-~ AA.I1l\M£TIC.,

Due to health &amp; ltnanctal reasons
Cherokee ClassiC T1nt1ng wa s
closed October 23 1995 Persons
hav1ng que suon s on warrant1es
please call304- 743 1100
790

-~"'~

&amp;

r-...' 1•

Motor Homes

RDJ)!Nl. ' F" IN
'
.., '-'=-, 5PELLING 1

$14 95 from P 0 Box 169, Roslyn
Hts, NY 11577-0169

,

6.-l- + -

""'r+--+-L.....I........I.-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty C1pher &lt;:fYplograms are crealed !rom QllO!a l ~s by famous people oast and present
Each letter lfllhe c pher stands 101 another Today s clue E eqUBis P

Home

TO

Q Rearrange

C.ENUINE
C.UBIC:

1

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D[ P NU W

sAc I
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.._.,Ar;-N-r-M-.O_D.,-~1-:::::,'
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.

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1-fGH PRICES

840

SHOP M CLASSIFIEDS.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

e)~
Wednesday,

Refrigeration
RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps, A1r Cond1t1onmg If
You Oon'l Call Us We Both LoSe!
Free Es timates, 1·800 287-6308 ,
614 446-6308, wv 002945
•
Aes1denua1 or commercial w1nng,
new servtce or repairs Ma ater ll· 1
censed elec tnc1an Ridenour ,,
Eleculcal, WV000306 304 -8751786

.,

II
I

s

I' I I

I GOES 1 I I I I
ANSWERS

DECEMBER12I

lARI'£ BECI'I~~E.
l'M CO\JI.lTIN&amp; Olo.l

b1nhday g1H Send tor your Aslro·Graph
pred1cl1ons tor lhe year ahead by ma1hng
$2 and SASE I~ Astro-Gra ph , c/o lh1s
newspaper, P 0 Box 1758, Murray H1ll
S1a11on, New Vorl&lt; , NV 10156 Make sure
lo slale your zodiac s1gn
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -Piaymg
second hddle w1ll nol SU11 you Ieday
Anyone who atlempts 10 .usurp your
aUihOrll)' wilt d1scover lhis very qu1ckly
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2CI-Fttb. 18) Bold tacI1CS m1ghl be reqU1red today
commerC1al or hnanc1af deahngs 11 you thmk
someone 1s deUberalely tak1ng advanlage

m

Electrical and

Comple1e 1he chuckle quo1od

Shroud · Musty · Ruddy · Agency· THEY DO
One cut1e to another "I know a really tactful guy He
1s an eKpert at conv1nc1ng everyone he talks to that he
knows more than THEY DO "

l OOT ~1-l 1: X'TRA

&amp;

Freeman s Heating And Coohng
lns ta llatto n And Serv1ce EPA '
Cerhfied Residential Commercial
614 256·1611

e

FORI

ITUESDAY

Roofmg and gutterS commerci al
and res1dent1al, mmor repa~r s 35
years expenen ce, B&amp;B ROOF
lNG, 614 992 5041

Heating

I

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THE SE SQUARE S

~

1\lE WAS~

DRYWALL
Hang fin1sh, repair
)
Ce1hngs textured, plaster repair•
Call Tom 304-675· 4186 20 yeard
81tP9f'l9nC9
•

Plumbing

·Have you ever not 1ced ."
granny asked, "that the people
who are as honest as the day
IS long may have lo be watched
after the · · · goes . · . . ?"

SCRAM-LETS

BLOWN 1l-E ~R ON

1\ SHRIIJKING

820

N

letters of
four scrambled words below fo form four words

UNSCRAMBLE
~ AN~WER

15
TH15

liT1l¥ IIJ

Ron's TV Servtce, specializing 1n
Zenith also serVICing most other
brand s Hou se calfs, 1 800· 797·
0015, wv 304-576 2396

SCKU

Z.1RC:Ofol lA 7

BASE MENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond1t1onat l1le!lme gu ara nte~~
Loc al rolercnc es furni she d Call
(614) 446 0870 Or (614) 237•
0488 Rogers Waterproohng Es~
1abl1shed 1975
'

1990 Ponuac Grand Am 2 Doors
A1r AutomatiC, T1lt Cru1se Steroo
Cassette, New Ba ttery 63,000
Mtles, Excellent Condition !
$4,450, 614·379-2967

0,

WOlD
GAM I

A

Me.

~UY

JENNY 5 LOVE

Improvements

AU

TXEEAZWNMCO .
TNKU
PREVIOUS SOLUTION "My w1fe m a de me a m1ll1ona1re I use!l lo have three
m11t1on • - Bobby Hull (Hockey playe r on h1s d1vorce)

8

EKC:U~E

TO

SPEND EVER'I' PENNY
HAVE.

P

MTC

DVM

.
•
.
.
_
.
by f1ll ng 1n the mtumg words
L.-l--L-..L.....JL.......L--J you develop from step No 3 below

~

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P A AU ,

TXGOCSI

OTAVSU

GNK

t--,~--~-"T~-6-,I'"'TI7::-i

ou.L_..l..-_...l_ ___._

I'l"\ GOING

N

X0

AK

ZNSSXKP

C EANN 0

J;

'I'E5,

H T X S C

.----....,------,

g

SERVICES

XKUC C U

'EWNLCW

4

l

30 Ft Pace Arrow Motor Home
Generato'r Du al Roo! AC Good
Condttt on, $16,500 080 614
949 3021

Earl's Home Maintenance, v1nyt
sidmg, roofing, extenor and 1nten:
or pa inting, power WB1ih1ng room
addtt10ns Free Estimates, 614
992-4451

ome or 304 882 3431 after 5pm

Phtlhp Alder's book , "Get
Smarter at Brtdge," 1s available,
autographed upon request , for

l

j.if\Po-TS YOOR.

1990 Ford Escort, Actual 6 000
M1les 2 Door 614 3 79- 2720 AF
TERH M

Musical
11194 Chevy Cavaher Z-24, power
Instruments
everylhlng, ac, cassette, 5spd, 1n·
-----::7:'':"'"':"'::::-----llerlor lrunk release and pass
Marti· &amp; Glblon
through , tinted w.ndows Stilt unGulwa 6 More
der warran1)' $2,000 under NAOA
HOLIDAY SALE
book value Swoo1 Chrls1mas
HUMMNGBIAD MUSIC
preaenl Call 304-862-2466 any-

""r (;IJE'.:'&gt;~ r ~~ Too IA.LJCI-\.,
TIME 0~ R.Ef\0\ I{G!

'

' F"IN /'o$..T, .D. IN

1990 Travelma ster Motor Home
27 Ft Excellent Cond1bon 6 New
T~r es 6 14 446·12t 1

810

East
All pass

North guessed w e ll not to u se
Stayman as four spad es would lose a
tr1ck m each su1t !Some authont1e'
recommend never u smg Stayman when
you have 4·3 3 3 or 3-4 3 3 dlstnbut1on
However , they are not always nght The
opener may have a double ton and tha t
su1t prove to be a fatal w eakness m no
trump)
Smce you need to brmg m three
spade tncks, t he key pomt IS not to lead
the queen or Jack (rom hand for a f1
n esse Startmg With an honor 1s fatal 1f
West has the smgleton king or you run
up agamst the gtven d1St nbut10n
You should lead a low spade to dum
my's ace, followed by a spade back to
ward hand When your queen Win s the
second t r1ck m t he su1t and Wes t discards, you return to dummy WJth, say, a
club and play another spade towa rd
your hand
When a finesse 1s unproductive, lead
up to honors

&amp;

Auto Parts

North
3NT

queen"~

For Sale Or Par !lal Trade 1967
Chrysler 5th Avenue V-8 Au
tomat1c 73,000 t.A1tes, Full Power,
614 256~867, Alter 5 P.M

1992 C hevro let Z24 , load ed,
27,000 mles, very clean car, 614·
::99::.2·.:.:3798.::::.,_ _ _ __

•

1993 201 Pro XL 20' Struto $
ba ss bo a t, 200 XP HP 614 66 7,
7347 or 614·949·2679

8111 Omck's Home lmprovement go..
add11tons , remodeling, roof1n q,
S1 d1ng, plumbing, etc. Insured, caU
Bill Orr ~k. 814·992-4240
•

570

==

I JUST SAVED

for Sale

1986 Pontiac Grand Am SE Ex
cellent Cond tt lon, Has All Op
uon s, Low Mtleage $4 300, 614
446 8320

~~~~~~~~1:61~~~-----------­
two Mtntature Collies {Shelt1e1)
:::::-~=:-:---:--:---1

YOUR ADVICE

DO '1'0U THINK [ SHOULD
SPEND THE ONL'f' DOLLAR
I HAVE ON A CHRISTMAS
PRESENT FOR A 61RL WHO
IDOESN'T KNOW I EVEN EXIST.

Motors

Apphance Parts And Serv1ce AU
Name Brands Over 25 Years EK~
peuen ce Al l Work Guaranteed:
French C1ty Maytag 614 446 ·
7795

Poodle pupp1es- teacup, toys, 1
black or whue also m1n1atu re
Schnauzers, AKC, shots and
1990 Sedan Dev1tle, extra clean,
wormed, 614-667·3404
loaded, $9,000 neg 304-675
Registered Coon Hound Pups, 3 3324 allot 5pm
Engl1sh Redttck Females, 4
Moruhs Old, F1rs1 Shols, Wormed, 19111 Geo Slorm $1 000 304 875 3526
•
$75 Each Aher8, 614·441-0731
1991 Rocket Chass1s race car, an
Registered Sh&amp;ltie (mmiature col·
new 10 '91. Wllwood , best of evehe pups $250), regl&amp;lered
rything, weld , three wheels, ares,
Siameselllue po1n1 cal $150. call
NeJI pedals, fuel cell , on board
614·992-2807
f1re system, rolling chass1s S5800
Registered Wttmaraner pupptes nag Call Scott Wolfe, 614-949 ·
304-675-77.0
2679, 614·949· 2045 or 61 4· 992·
AKC Aegtllered Pupptes, $200,
61...,38Nl2U.

YES. MA'AM .. I
SORT OF NEED

1986 Suzu k1 quad race r good
'
cond $1,600 304·675-3773

760

West
Pass

Every two month s you w1H rece1ve a
large 84 page 1Ssue packed full of mate
nal for everyone, thoug h the e mphaS1s
IS on the tourname nt player To su b
scr~be, send a c h eck for $34 to Th e
Bndge World. 39 West 94th Street, N ew
York, NY 10025 7124 Iadd $9 for a1r
mall&gt;
In th1s deal from the Apnl1ssue. how
would you plan the pl ay m three no
trump after West h as led th e h eart

PEANUTS

1986 Honda 125 utility 4 wheel er1
good cond. $1, 400 304 675r
2074

&amp;

favorite Initials
7 Sixth sense
(abbr.)
8 Requires

Australian Bndge magazme has been
gomg more than a quarter of a ce ntury
Th e prese nt m ca rnat10n , ed1ted by
Stephen Lester and publt s h e d by
R1chard Br~ghthn g 1s r eco mmended

Motorcycles

1986 Ford Taurus Exce llen t
Cond1t1on, $3,000 OBO, Franklin
Woodbu rner, Wn h Grate Blower
$100 614 256 1516

1987 Dodge Daytona Pacifica,
CFA Regtstered Pers1an 1H 1ma
turbo, a/c
lyan K111ens W1ll Be Ready For automatic 4 cyl
cru1se, llh, arrv!m cassette, 1 tops
Chnstmas Taktng Deposits Now I
and more, black, mce, $1795,
614-446-1104
614·247 4292
Copper nose pupptes, pure bred,
1988 Ford Taurus stat1onwagon,
no papers 6rno old $SOea , 18mo
$1600 080 814-992-5347
old $100'"' 304-675-2075
Full Blooded Rottwe1ler Pupptes
Call 614·J88.8043

1994 Chevy Astra all wh eel
dnve very n1co ca ll 6t4 992:
7077

750 Boats

1 Oak or elm

2 Contain
3 Writer Bagnold
4 Bury

By Phillip Alder

1990 Dodge Ram Van B 250
72 ooo M1 1es. $8 ooo Can Be
Seen At Gallipolis Da1!y Tn~une
825 Thud Avonuo Gallipol i S
OhiO

1983 Ods Della 86, 2dr $1 000
304-675-4975
1986 BMW 325 Beaut1tul Car
Sunroof Cell Phone And All 614
446 4991, 614·441 0354

&amp; 4-WDs

t988 Ford F 250 01esel 4x4
Sllar pl $6 500 B&amp;D Aulo Sales,
614 446-6665

740

6 Angels

Value·and variety
from Australia

1966 Ford Bronco, lull SIZe Ed die
Bauer edmon loaded black 304
675 1643

87 Chrysler New Yorker loaded,
runsgood $1500,614992-7841

95 Bu1ck Regal Custom , V 6 au
tomahc , all power, smoky
ametll;sl, 10,500 m1tes. Will sell or
ca n 1ake over payments 614
965 3362

Vans

I

5 Prickly seed

DOWN

Openmg lead • Q

good cond111on $700 obo, 6 14
992 2300
730

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebll111 In SIOCk
Call Ron Evans, 1 8110-537-9528

6 3
6
3
3

geous
Deaf (with/
Escape (a .)
Bacon and Native of
U.S.A .
Vital statistic
Wander
Indian attire

Vulnerable East. west
Dealer South

72 Ford Explorer ptck up body In

&amp;

J
9
K
4

26
, 29
30
I 34
I
35
36
37

Anawer to Previous PUZZle

41 Beer barrel
42 -fixe
(obaeaslon)
43 Cloaest
46 I.e., In luff
49 Actreas
Clcely 53 Old boat
54 Port-auPrince's
location
58 - · by-four
59 Also
60 Ocular
61 Urge
62 Gravel ridge
63 T-bone, eg
64 Ending for
Slam or Japan

author
Loveneighbor
Aclor Silver
Hospilal
worker
Positive vote
Inventor
Whitney
Figure of
speech
Zest
Comedian Murphy
Acls

22 Most coura-

• K 10 9 B
10 B

• Q
•K
•A
&lt;1oK

1994 Ford Ranger XlT, 38 ,000
M1 les loaded PS PB W11h E•
trasl After 5 00 PM 614 367
7657
FARM SUPPLIES

1
' 20

SOUTH

1984 S 10 4cyl 4spd good
cond , $1 ,600 304-675 2074

Merchandise

17
18

• 9 6 5

EEK&amp;MEEK

1976 Chev y 4WO pic kup good
ures and dr rve lme runs great
two new fenders must sell, $1550
neg, 61&lt;4·992 7478 or 614 949
2679

Miscellaneous

16

.() •A 7 4

1976 GMC Tru ck Good Wor k
Truck, $700,614-446 27 14

540

14
15

12 12 95

CRED IT PROBLEMS' We Can
Help, Easy Bank Fmancrng For
Used Vehicl es No Turn Down s
Call Ruth, 614-446 2897
Four 15" C hevy Wh eels With
Beau ty R1ngs $150 614 24 5
9419 After 6 PM

SKAGGS SPECIAL SEASON
SALE

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENT S AT We1der Multi Slahon Home Gym
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSO N Incl udes S1epper $200 614 379
ESTATES, 52 We stwoo d Dnvo 2740, 614-44&amp;4 109
trom $226 lo $29t Walk to shop l ::;..;.:::c.::__c.::_-'-'-;;_---&amp; mOV10 S Call 614 446 2566
530
Antiques
Equal Hous1ng Opporblnlly
Buy or sell R1ver1ne Antiqu es,
Beech St Middl epo rt, 2br fur
1124 E Mam Srreet, on At 124
mshed apt utilities pa1d dep &amp; Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
ref 304 882 2566
am to 600 pm, Sunday 100 to
600 pm 614·9922526
Country Stde Apartment Larg e 1
Bedroom $290tMo Oeposn 513
540 Miscellaneous
922 0294
Merchandise
Extra N1c e 2 BR All Elec Furn,
Baseball &amp; football se ts, m se n
K11 Close To Spnng Valley Area
sets, 1nsert Singles &amp; many star
No Pets $3551Mo • 0 D ... Ref
smgles 1000 s of m1nor stars &amp;
614 446-6157, Aller 5 PM
conmons Call304 675 2473
Furntsh ed 2 Bedroom Garage
Apartment Centrally l ocated Computer tPnmer Severa l Extras!
Treadmill P1ano Camper A1r
$2751Mo Plus Ulll111es 61 4 446
Cond1t1oner New Refngeralo r, All
0001 6 t4 446·2404
Good Condl!lonl614 682 7630
Fu rn ts hed 2 Rooms &amp; Ba th
Concrete &amp; Plasuc Septic Tanks
Downs ta~rs, U11 ht1es Furnished
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Clean No Pe ts Reference De
Evans Enterprises Jackson OH
pos11 Requ1red 614 446- 1519
1 800 537-9528
Furnished Apartmen t 920 Fourth
Avenu e 1 Bedroom, $2851Mo
920 Fourth Avenue Galhpohs
Oh1o 614 446-4416 Alter 7 PM

w

PICKENS FURNITURE

35 WEST 2 BR BRICK TOWN
HOUSES 1261 Ja ckso n P1ke
520
Sporting
Acro ss From Cmema $295/Mo
Goods
Dep Fo r Ren tal Applications Call 1 - - - - - - - - - - 614 446 0957 614 446 0006
Darton bow, 55 701b, 65% LO
614 441 1616 Or Write PO Box s1ghts qutver re st $160 304·
994 Galhpolls OH 45631
675 7316

2 Bedrooms Wall To Wall Carpet,
Natural Gas Furnace, Very N1ce,
510
614-446-2003 614-446-1409
::-2b-r-.-w-a-,h-.-,-&amp;-d-ry_e_r-.~~~-.-~.-c-"-"·· 1

782 (2&lt;'1 Hours)
' " - -. .- ...- -. .
P_:.:ar:.:l:.:T-,m-e-$9-'--/H
- rA
-n_s_w_e_r -Te_l_
e
- • -pho nes Flexible Hou rs /Lo cal
Area No Experience Necessary
Call 1 609 474 6&amp;&lt;9 EX1 681 1n1 1 = = = = = = = = = ==
31 o

2bedroom ground floor, Wi d hook
up central heat kitchen w/stove
&amp; relngerator Prtvat e stor age
Depos it &amp; referen ces S3001mo
304 675-6902

• s1'11-1- 1.-1~ lo KNow
10
1-\0 '/oil c)d /IJE J:; A
t.oNI'l-'( CATS CI-VB.

Mollohan Carpets Rt 7 N 614
4415 7444 For Carpet &amp; Vtnyt
Needs

38 Over (pre! )

39 Church part
40 TYpe of code

Dec. 13,1995

Expenence hes sharpened your affnbul·
as as a leader The year ahead coold be
extremely successful ff you can apply the
knowledge you've acqwred
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Condl·
lions appear to be forlunate for you
today The grealesl amount of succass
can be found 1n your career •"II f1nanc1at
arenas Sag1ttartus. lreat yourself to a

••

of you
PISCES (Feb . 20· March 20) You can
contnbule to everyone's good hme loday
~ you 1nd1cate a Willingness 10 go along
w11h lhe maJOn!y Olhers w111 follow your
eX&amp;11!Pie
ARIES (March 21·Aprll18) Even lhougli
fnends m •ght wasle lhen 11me loday on
th1ngs thai are 1na1gmf1cant and unproductive. they wilt nol 1nttuence you or
your amb1t1ona
T AURlJS (April ~y 20) This will be a
good day to get In shape ff you havenl had
proper exerct88 lh1s week Chmb oul of the

I•

easy c ha1r and do someth1ng phys1cal
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) If your efforts
are properly gU1ded lhe end results w111
be deS1rable II would be w1se lo ~eave a
small margm of error
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your sense
of log1c and reason w1ll be qu1te sharp
loday Your snap Judgmenl s may be
supenor lo the dec1s1ons carelully
we1ghed and balar1ced by olhers
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today, lwo comphmentary elements will enhance the
probab1fHy of material ga1n One faclor
w1ll be amb111on, lhe olher W111 be luck
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your orgam·
Z8110nal sk111S may be unequalled loday,
espec1ally ff you're promoting a complex,
tun aciiVily 1n wh1ch tasks have 10 be del·
egaled
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Th1s will be
one ot those unusual days when lhe
more you do tor others, the more you w1ll
get back In relum Whal you rece1ve w1ll
be unsotienad
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your best
asset today W111 be your ablllly to make
your companions feet significant and
1mportan1 Slncen!y will prove essen11af

Rescue 911 (CC)

�Page 10 • ~he Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Official sets record straight at UNC·
· Dear Ann Landen: A while back,
you printed a letter about a
University of North Carolina
associate professor who had sell with
some of his students and paid one of
them $2,400 out of a departmental
trust fund . At the time this
information was sent to you, the
professor had only received a
reprimand and "research leave."You
said, "I wiU waiCh with interest for
future developments and hope there
are some."
Approximately two months prior
to publication of your column,
Chancellor Michael Hooker initiated
discharge proceedings against this
associate professor on the basis
of newly discovered evidence.
Subsequently, the associate professor
resigned from the university.
I realize that your column is
prepared many weeks in advance and
you did not have the opportunity to
caiCh up on the latest developments.
My concern is that your readers may
have drawn an inaccurate conclusion
as to the university's response to the

Ann
Landers
... t 995, Los Angelee
Tlm" SyndiCaltlncl

Cr•afofs Syndlca...

case.
The university's official response,
which escalated as the continuing
invest.igation turned up new
information, is clear evidence that the
university will not tolerate such
relationships. The faculty issued its
own statement, reaff'uming that it
holds itself to the highest standards
of personal and professional conducL
There is no doubt in anyone's mind
here about where the university
stands on such behaviot With the
complete information before you,
Ann, we believe you also will
conclude that appropriate action has
been taken in this case. For the
benefit of your readers and in
fairness to the University, we hope

you will act the record straight.
- CLIFION B. METCALF, ASSOCIATE VICE CHANCELLOR
FOR UNIVERSilY RELATIONS,
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH
CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL
DEAR CLIFION METCALF: I
appreciate your taking the time to
inform my readers about what happened.
The manner in which the
University of North Carolina dealt
with the testosterone· laden associate
professor left no doubt that your fmc
institution does not tolerate such
ka-noodling on the part of faculty
members. Thank you for making this
abundantly cleat
Dear Ann Landers: You recently
printed several letters dealing with
roos1ers crowing at sunrise. I thought
your 'readers might be interested in a
story I heard a number of years ago.
A new p:ut-timc poultry farmer
called his county agricullilr81 agent
with a simple queslion. He wanted to
know how long a rooster must be
with his 20 hens in order for them to

produce fertile eggs.
The agent dido~ have the answer
immediatelyandneededtoloolcitup,
so he said to the new 'poulay man,
"Justa minute." The caller rcplil:d,
"Thank you," and hung up.
Maybe that t:Jtplains why a roost.ec
crows. •• WILLIAM J. SAN OK,
CORNELL
COOPERATIVE
EXTENSION, RIVERHEAD, N.'l
DEAR RIVERHEAD: Translated
into human terms, this is nothing to
crow about, if you get my drifL
Gem of the Day: Don't worry about
a job you don\ like. Someone else
will have it soon.

Is alcolw/ ruining your life or the
lift of a loved ont? "Alcoholism:
How to Recognizt It, How to Deal
With It, How to Conquu It" can tur11
things around. Send a se/f-oddlrmd.
long, business-size tnvtlope and a
checlcor moneyonkr for $3.75 (this
includts posrage and handling) ro:
Alcohol, c/o AM I...anders, P.O. Box.
11562. Chicago.111. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, send $455.)

Tuesday, December 12, 1995

.· &lt;. PICTURE.YOUR CHILD

·.·.·

AMONG THE ...

years of personal contact and sensitive listening by the author makes it
clear that even in the lives of successful women, self·doubt and conflicts between work and family are
very strong.
As an introduction to her
review, Thomas asked members to
recall their first work experience.
From there she moved to the nonfiction work and examples of the
three career women who struggled
to find happiness and affumation in
a difficult balance between their
professional and persona lives.
Vieira's dilemma dealt with her
desire to have children and a fancily
as well as success as a news corresponden~ the promises of maternity
leave and part-lime work which

-Names in the newsAUBURN, Ala. (AP) - At last,
Bo really does know - and be's
got a diploma to prove it.
After 13 years, two sports, a
Heisman Trophy and one fake hip,
Bo Jackson graduQted Monday
from Auburn University.
Applause erupted with the
announcement of his name - Vincent Jackson - as be received a
degree in family and child development from the university he first
entered in 1982.
''It's the last piece of the puzzk:. .
to where I feel like I'm a complete
person,'' Jackson said.
Jackson, 33, was only six courses short of a degree when he left
Auburn in 1985 with a trophy as
the best college football player and
a brilliant future in baseball, football , and in those "Bo Knows"
commercials for Nike.
A hip injury cut short his football career , and when he retired
from baseball last spring, he began
correspondence work to finish college.
Jackson is the first of the 10
children in his family to graduate
from a four-year university. It fulfilled a promise he made to his
mother in the final weeks of her
life.
" l know she' s looking down on
me and smiling," he said .
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Jean
Claude Van Damme is kicking ice.
Tbe Bclgian·bom actor's latest
movie. " Sudden Death," casts him
as a hockey fan who battles terrorists at th e Stanley Cup hockey
final s.
The Van Damme character is a
divorced firem an who is demoted
after failing to save a child. He
meets the had guys when he takes
his children to a hockey game.
"Because my kids will be in
danger, slowly I will come back as
a hero to them and to my self,
which is a great way 10 start," the
martial arts expert said Monday at
a promotional appearance. "It is
more real than the more action,
macho type of guy who is going to
kick butt."
The movie' s supporting cast

includes Pittsburgh Penguins players Mario Lemieux and Jaromir
Jagr. It opens Dec. 22.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Kim
Basinger has agreed to pay up to
$3 .8 million to resolve a dispute
over her refusal to star in "Boxing
Helena."
The deal came Monday as the
actress and the film's producer,
Main Line Pictures, were to relry
their case after an appeals court
overturned a 1993 judgment of
$8.1 million against Basinger.
The parties declined to specify
the exact amount of the settlement.
The law suit began when
Basinger walked out of the film on
the eve of production, citing concerns about the script, her character
and nudity.
The film about a surgeon who
amputates the limbs of a woman he
loves was made later with Sherilyn
Fenn.
NEW YORK (AP) - In her
first U.S. visit since her tell-all TV
interview, Princess Diana was bono red for her work for sick and
underprivileged children.
''Let us demonstrate our
humanity," said the princess, who
received the United Cerebral
Palsy' s Humanitarian Award on
Monday night. "Let us not wait to
be asked."
At a dinner that raised $2. 1 mil- .
lion for the group, the princess was
greeted by a standing ovation from
a star-studded crowd that included
media magnate Rupert Murdoch,
Barbara Walters, Donald Trump
and Henry Kissinger. Colin Powell
received an achievement award
from the group.
There were no allusions to her
marital woes with Prince Charles in
an evening ' that included jokes
from master of ceremonies Art
Buchwald and a rendition of
"Somewhere Over The Rainbow"
from Tony Benneu.
In her TV interview last month,
Diana discussed her depression,
bouts with bulimia and an affair
with riding instructor James
Hewitt.

were broken, and her independence
and ambivalence about her work
which led her to leave CBS for a
more balanced life elsewhere.
Worby's situation was different
in that she took over the Wheeling
Symphony, saw it improve, mar·
ried Gov. Caperton and expected
her transition to politics to be
smooth because of her life on a
public stage. That. however did not
follow because her efforts to cultivate the arts and reduce illiteracy
were viewed as arrogance. Her professional goals clashed with political and social demands, Thomas
said.
Dr. Estabrook's challenge lay in
fighting discrimination in the lllale
dominated field of surgery, according to the author. She noted that ,

We Give Mature
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'

'

·Vol. 46, NO. 160

Our special page(s)
"For Children Only"

Health risk
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Felony charges have been filed
against the owner of a former tire
shredding plant in Scipio Township, in connection with the iUegal
dumping of 8,000 to 10,000 tires at
tl!e Vance Road facility near Pagetown.
Howard Whited of Amesville
faces possible fines of at least
$10,000 and up to $25,000, and
two to four years of jail time on the
unclassified felony charges of megal dwnping, filed this week by the
Meigs County prosecutor's office.
Whiled Tire Recycling Inc .
began business at the site during
March 1994 and ceased operations
in April 1995, according to Jon
Jacobs of the Meigs County Health
Department.
After an inspection revealed
several health code violations, a
cease-and-desist order was issued
April 27 against the business and
.operations were ceased, Jacobs

Dispatch promotes editors
COLUMBUS (AP) - Robert
B. Smith became editor in chief of
The Columbus Dispatch and
Michael F. Curtin became editor
today.
Smith, 66, has served as editor
since 1989. Curtin bas been execu·
tive managing editor since I 994.
"I'm pleased to have the opportunity 10 promote Bob to the position of senior editorial executive
and Michael to the position of editor, said Publisher John F. Wolfe.
' 'Tbesifo~s of two longtime DispaiCh news executives will
provide management stability and
continuity for our editorial depart·
ment''
Smith began his journalism
career in 1944 as a copy boy for the
former Ohio State JournaL The
Ohio State University graduate
later covered a variety of beats

from police 10 politics before joining the Air Force when the Korean
War broke ou~ and becoming a jet
fighter pilot.
Smith returned 10 the Journal in
1955 and rose to assistant news
editor. He joined the Dispatch in
1959 as an assistant city editor, and
was promoted to news editor in
1959 and managing editor in 1968.
He became editor in chief of Ohio
Magazine in 1980 and returned to
the Dispatch as editor in 1989.
Curtin, 44, joined the newspaper
in 1973 as an intera. For much of
his career, he specialized in coverage of state and local government
and JlOiitics.
·
Curtin, an Ohio State University
graduate, was promoted to public
affairs editor in 1985 and executive
managing editor in 1994.

By

Dave
Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture L--------~
If the meek inherit the earth,
. the government will find a way
to make them pay inheritance
tax.

•• •

Nothing is impossible for th!l
person who doesn't have to do
it.

***

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Despite a longer gun season. the number of deer killed in Meigs County was
down from 1994's harvest. according to the Ohio Division of Wildlife.
Division of wi ldlife fi gures show a deer count of 3626 for this year. down
166 from 1994's number
of
3.792 .
Regional deer kill: '94 &amp; '95
The number of deer killed
in neighbo rmg Gallia
0 '94 kill
County also declined from4 360in 1994to3 708
• " 95 kUt
this year.
VintonCounty, another traditional deer hunting
county in the region. also
reported a decline - from
2.703 in 1994 to 2,511 in
1995.
,·
The deer harvest increased
in most other regions of
southeastern Ohio. The
number of deer killed this
year ('94 figures in parenthesis) in local counties
were: Athens . 4.119
(3.455): Jackson. 3,599
(3.412); and, Lawrence,
2.552 (2,173).
Though the deer gun season was doubled to 12days
in mostofOhio.acrossthe
state, hunters missed the target of 150,000 deer projected by the Division of
Wildlife.
Sportsmen shot 137.811 deer in the state' s gun season, up6 percent from last
year's 130.011. It is the fifth consecutive deer-kill record. The gun season.
ended at sunset Saturday in 67 counties. The finale was a week earlier in 21
nflrthwcstern counties.
In effect. hunters accomplished in two weeks this year about what they did
last time with six days. It suggests that the way to get add1lional deer into
freezers is to offer more hunting on the weekends.
"We still had an excellent deer seamn.'' said Mike Budzik. chief of the
Division of Wildlife."This (the 1995 gun kill) indicates that the deer population in rural areas has not grown significantly over the past year.
Meanwhile. six fata l shootings during the 1995 shotgun deer hunting season
gave Ohio its worst record ever. said Dave Wilson of the Division of Wildlife.
The sixth death occurred about I p.m. Saturday. the final day of the season .
when William Davis. 74, of Cortland. shot himself while hunting in Trumbull
County .

-

The Light
Toach

Heard about the chef who put
popcorn in the pancake batter
so they'd flip themselves?

said.
After operations were ceased, all
equipment on the site was repossessed by United National Bank of
Charleston, W.Va., according to
Prosecuting Auomey Jobn Lentes.
The property is still in the process
of being repossessed by United
National, he added.
Whited unexpectedly appeared
at the dumping site Tuesday morning, speaking with Lentes, Jacobs,
and Joe Holland of the Obio EPA,
who were continuing their investigation of the site.
When questioned by authorities,
Whited indicated that he bas an
agreement with a commercial
hauler to dispose of the tires from
the site.
Later in the conversation with
authorities, Whited stated to Lenles
that although he Iiad an agreement,
he had no money to pay for the
removal of the tires.
Whited also told authorities,ihat
he is "in the process of making

r..:.~·

.Mall or bring the entry form :

~

2~4 EAST

MAIN
. POMEROY
992-8687

. .Aute-t.~~~~s... ..,,._ .
Life Home Gar BIAifleu

TM'NoPro6&amp;.r.'~•

.~------------------~

7 SHOWIOOMS

II WAREHOUSES

. By LARRY wm:ELER
and ELLYN FERGUSON
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON
Nine
Rejlublican governors, including
Ohto Gov . George Voinovich,
tossed the Medicaid ball back to
President Clinton Tuesday. saying
he could end the balanced bud get
impasse by agreeing to remake the
program.
Voinovicb Sllid the escalating
costs of the federal -state health
insurance program for the poor, the
VIOLATIONS INVESTIGATED- Meigs
ated Whited Tire Recycling on tbe site, has been
disabled and the low· income elder.
charged with Illegal dumping and faces several
County Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes and
ly need to be controlled.
other charges concerning health and safety vioOhio EPA oflldal Joe Holland examine the llle·
The GOP proposal to cap costs,
lations at the site. (Sentinel photo)
gal storage site of nearly 10,000 tires In Scipio
give states block grants or lump
Township. Howard Whited, wbo formerly opersum payments and end federal
guidelines for Medicaid is the best
arrangements with a Tennessee
No concrete proof of this stopped, nearly 7,000 tires were in approach. Voinovich said at a press
company to take over the facility arrangement has been provided to the building on site, with over 500 conference.
stacked outside. Since that time.
"What we want is the tlexibility
and set up a production line for authorities, according 10 Lentes.
to
get
the job done. We think for
bias tires."
"At the time operations were
(Continued on Page 3)
less money we can do a better job
of guaranteeing services to women
..
in nursing

'95 deer harvest
Piketon
down in Meigs Co. officials

By DAVID J. LYNCH
USA TODAY
WASHINGTON - House and
Senate negotiators apparently have
reached· agreement on maintaining
subsidies for rural phone service,
removing a major obstacle to passage this year of telecommunications legislation.

' ***

Medicare
revamp
sought by
Voinovich

Athens County mari faces charges
in connection with illegal dump~site

Rural phone service
accord could lead to
passage of law

If it's such a small world , why
does it take so much of our
money to run It?

35 cents
A Ganm!tt Co. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 13, 1995

2 Sections, 14 Pages

a gift.
Auending besides those named
were Sandy Haning, Sharon Prat~
Mary Woods, Jackie ·Hoover, Kay
Adkins, Charlotte Hanning, Mari·
lyn Poulin, Barbara Black, Margie
Blake, Debbie Finlaw, Barbara
Welsh, Kelly Tobin, and Maurisha
Nelson.

II isn't what we don't know
that gives us trouble. It's what
we think we know thai isn't so.

en tine

I

de-spite Dr. Estabrook's competence, she was paid only sixty percent of the salary of men surgeons
with the same training and experience. An offer from another Medical Cenrer was the issue that forced
others sbe worked with to reevaluation her position, the reviewer sai(J.
Attaining balance in life does
not mean "having it all," the author
emphasized. She noted that compromise is necessary but that
women have to become more
aggressive in taking responsibility
for their own happiness.
To conclude the program, Mrs.
Thomas had each member name a
women she knows who is successful in mer~ing her career with her
tiunily life.

***

I

Low tonight In 40s, cloudy.
Thursday, show e r s. Highs In
mld-SOs.

•

Sorority holds Christmas
party recently at Holiday Inn
Members of Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
met at the Holiday Inn, Gallipolis,
recently for their annual Christmas
party and dinner.
Pat Arnold gave the blessing for
the dinner served at tables decorated with red poinsettias and candles.
There was a decorated tree and holiday music throughout the evening.
Each member was presented a
handmade crocheted angel ornament. Door prizes were awarded to
Kay Logan, Lynn Wright, Beth
Stivers, Linda Bates, and Sheila
Harris.
A report was given on sponsorship of four children for the Meigs
County Department of Hwnan Services angel tree . The gifts have
been purchases.
Kay Logan announced the next
meeting for Dec. 19 at the borne of
Debbie Miller. A recipe auction
will be held at that time. Plans were
also made to visit A. R. Knight,
chapter envoy and present him with

Pick 3:
123
Pick 4:
2605
Buckeye 5:
1-8-15-16-33

Sports, Page 4

Middleport Literary Club reviews 'Divided Lives'
"Divided Lives: The Public and
Privale Struggles of Three Accom·
plished Women" by Elsa Walsh
was reviewed by Jeanette Thomas
at a recent meeting of the Middle·
pon Lirerary Club held at the home
of Bernice Carpenter.
Published in 1995. the book
consists of interviews with Mened·
ith Vieira. former correspondent for
CBS television' s "60 Minutes",
now working at ABC; Rachel
Worby, conductor of the Wheeling
Symphony, and the first lady of
West Virginia, and Dr. Alison
Estabrook, chief of breast surgery
at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical
Center in New York City, second
largest hospital in the counlry.
The ~eviewer pointed out that
information gathered over two

..Ohio Lottery

_Meigs
edges
Eastern

p;~.!}f4f&gt;,!}f~~4'~~·~~";11

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
PomeFoy, Ohio 45769

Rutland Furniture :lliH. •
· ' . .•••. .;
. Rt. 124, Rltlutl, Oh. 742·2211
~fli~U~tib:~~tid~~~~

TROOP UPDATE- Using a map of southern Europe and the
Balkans, I,.t. Gen. Howell Estel of the Joint Chiefs of Staff - t
reporters at the Pentagon Tuesday to provide an update on U.S.
troops In Bosnia. Meanwhile, Congnu and the Whlte HOUle are
·negotiating on a resolution supporting the deployment of troopL
:(AP)

.

probing
chemical
release
PIKETON (AP) - A small
amount of a nonradioacli ve
chemical gas was released at a
uranium-processing plant, forcing
plant officials to close part of a
road as a precaution.
The chlorine triflouride gas
was released from the Porstmouth
Gaseous Diffusion Plant on Tuesa plant official said.
Workers were repackaging a
100-pound cylinder containing
the chemical, which is poisonous
and potentially fatal, using
remote-controlled manipulators.
No one was injured and no
evacuation was ordered, said
Dave Taylor, site manager for
Lockheed Martin, which operates
the uranium processing plant for
the U.S. Enrichment Corp.
Chlorine trifluoride is used 10
clean equipment contaminated
with uranium hexafluoride, a
radioactive material.
A small amount of the gas was
released on the west side of the
plant but it immediately dissipated. Taylor said.
Plant officials blocked a portion of the perimeter road to traf·
fie. About one-quarter mile of the
perimeter road was to remain
closed until later today as a precaution, he said.
The release was under investigation, Taylor said. Piketon is
about 60 miles south of Columbus.

day,

.

M.0 rn .I ng sn0 W 81 .I cks
U P C0 U nty road W ay S

tion . A number of vehicles also
From AP, Staff Reports
off roads when conditions
slipped
Slick roads plagued motori sts
became
slick. a spokesperson at the
beading to work this morning as a
thin sheet of snow blanketed patrol' s Gallipolis headquarters
already·chilled local byways, creal· said.
Meanwhile, a furious storm that
ing extra-slippery conditions.
lashed
the West Coast with winds
Deputies and police officers
of
more
than 100 mph let up today
were busy taking accident reports
after
kokcing
out power to l .8 milwhile state, county and village road
lion
re
sidents
and blowing over
and street crews were out in force
spreading salt and cinders, attempt· trees that killed at least five people.
ing to lessen the situation. In
Th e frightening winds overPomeroy, police officers attempted turned trucks, made skyscrapers
to restrict traffic on the hillier creak and churned the ocean.
About 1. 3 million people
streets.
remained
without electricity early
Sheriff James M. Soulsby
in
California.
Washington
today
advised motorists to use extreme
and
Oregon.
Rain
continued
to fall
caution.
in
Oregon
and
Washington,
but
the
The snow resulted in few cancellations. All county schools were worst part of the storm _ the damaging winds _ had subsided.
in session.
The skies cleared and winds fell
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol reported that in Northern California. and only
by mid-morning five accidents in intermittent rain was expected
both counties were under investiga- through T hursday, the National
Weather Service said.

Meigs Board discontinues
contract, OKs resignation
The Meigs Local Board of Education took care of a handful of
personnel matters Tuesday night
during a brief meeting at the
board's central office in Pomeroy.
Following the recommendation
of Superintendent Bill Buckley, the
board did not renew the contract
assistant band director Billy Bruce
due to other employment contlicts.
In addition, the board accepted
the resignation of Beth A. Ferris as
a substitute teacher effective immediately due to moving from the
anea. Kelly K. Kisner was hired as
a substirute teacher for the remainder of the school year to be used on

an as-needed basis.
In other business, the board
approved a VICA field trip for
Rich Wamsley to Washington,
D.C., for leadership training on
Jan. 14·20. ·
Before adjourning, the board
also held an executive session to
consider the discipline and possible
dismissal of an employee. No
action followed.
Present were Buckley, interim
Clerk Cindy Rhooemus, Board
President Larry Rupe, Vice President Randy Humphreys and board
members Roger Abbot~ Scott Walton and Jobn Hood.

Reluctant backing seen for deployment
WASHINGTON (AP) - As
thousands of U.S. soldiers packed
for a winter in Bosnia, the Senate
debated President Clinton's plan to
send those troops to enforce peace
berween ancient enemies.
Clinton appeared likely to win
grudging Senate s~pporl for the
Bosnia mission today. The vote
was to come shortly before the
president's departure for Paris and
the signing of the Bosnian peace
agreement Thursday.
House backing appeared less
certain as a dozen Republicans just
back from the former Yugoslavia
said indelible images of devastation
in Sarajevo only hardened their
vlew that the United States should
stay out.
Both the White House and
Congress adalowledged the debate
would have little impact on the
deployment of 60,000 NATO
. troops, one-third of them American.
"This debate ultimately has no
practical consequence in terms of
preventinl! the troops fran going,"

. r

"l have to be able to say to ... (a
said Sen. William Cohen, R-Maine.
"They're there, more will be going constituent), 'Your son, your
daughter, your brother, your sister,
next week."
Many who support Clinton's . whatever, died for a good rea ·
policy are demanding that the U.S. son," ' said Sen. Bob Smith, R·
troops not engage in nonmilitary N.H. "Can we really say that? I
activities, and that before they are couldn't."
The Senate debated three
withdrawn, the United States will
ensure Bosnians arc sufficiently options: Cut off funding, a proposal
armed to defend themselves.
given little chance of passing;
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz .. who oppose Clinton's decision to send
supports U.S. deployment, told Fox troops but support the soldiers
News today: "I get assurance after themselves, expected to gain
assurance from our military leader- Republican support; or pennit Clinship that they will be there simply ton to send troops but impose
to provide a ntilitary role .... I have restrictions on the mission, also
to accept the word of the president considered likely to pass.
... that be would make sure BosniThe White House sent lastans are equipped and armed to minute assurances to lawmakers
defend themselves."
that the United States will support
But the deliberations unfolded the arming and training of the outin solemn tones Tuesday as law- ~unned Bosnian ~ovemment - as
makers of both parties struggled long as the NATO implementation
with one of the most difficult for- force, known as IFOR. is not drawn
· eign policy votes they have cast ir·o the efforL
since the 1991 decision to support
"I want to assure the imparti:ili·
the Persian Gulf War. Overriding ty of IFOR," Clinton said m a letall other issues was the possibility ter Tuesday evening· to Senate
of U.S. casualties.
Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan .

••

.;,

..
.

'·

~~~~h;:en ~~e~~~e

"The president holds in his
bands the ability to end this," said
Michigan Gov. John Engler, who
along with Voinovich met with
Republican leaders on Capitol Hill.
After a closed-door meeting
with Senate Majority Leader
Robert Dole, !iouse Speaker Newt
Gingrich and other top lawmakers,
Engler said Republicans and
Democrats are closer to an agreement than the political rhetoric
might indicate.
New economic ;c;sumptions calculatcd by the Congressional Budget Office give budget negotiators
an additional $135 billion to spend
within Ule Republican seven ·year
. balanced budget plan. That sum,
combined with good-faith negotialions, could bring Ote sides together
quickly, Engler predicted.
"Forty-eight hours ought to be
enough to ge t thi s job done ,' • he
said.
But the White House gave little
indication it was ready for a quick
budget deal late Tue sday. Clinton
plans to leave Was hi ng ton on
Wednesday for Paris to attend the
signing of the Bos nian peace
accords.
Medicaid has emerged as a
linchpin issue in the acr imonious
negotiations over how to eliminate
the federal deficit by 2002.
Approximately 33 million poor,
disabled and low-income elderly
Americans receive healtb care benefits through Medicaid, a program
that costs lhe states and federal
government almost $140 billion in
fiscall995 .
For many governors, Medicaid
is 01c cash-starved monster that is
eating an ever-increasing portion of
their state budgets.
"Me&lt;J!caid represented 18 percent of our budget back in 1982. In
1985, 20 percent. Today, it's 30
percent," Voinovich said, offering
Ohio as an example of Medicaid
creep .
Clinton and congressional
Democrats say the GOP proposal
to block grant Medicaid and end
federal guarantee of coverage to
people who qu alify for help is
CXCCSSIVe.
The GOP governors di sputed
that characterization.
Tennessee has already shown it
can be done, Gov. Don Sundquist
said . "We're doing more with
less."
After receiving a special waiver
from some federal Medicaid rules.
Tennessee was able to create its
own health care system, called
TennCare, for needy residents.
The program reduced costs by
about a third and increased enrollment by about 50 percent
Sundquist said.
'
Earlier in the day, a group of
House and Senate Democrats held
their ·own Medicaid press conference in which they blasted the
Republican plan.
"We don't need to do this.
There is a better way," said Sen .
Bob Graham, D·Aa
Graham is a leading proponent
of what is described as a per-capita-style funding formula

•

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