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A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • December 8, 1996
Vol. 31. No. 44
,D ecade ·of newcomers
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~·mmigration to nation, .region sets record since 1986
AS
LOW
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period, 74 immigrated to
has done little to slow the increase in newcomen arriv·
Gallia County, while 21
ing each year, according to a Gannett News Service
immigrated to Meigs County
computer analysis of Immigration and Nal\lralization
during
the 10-year period.
Service records.
The
majority
of. immigrants ·
. More lhan two-thirds of immigrants coming to Amermoving
to
southeastern
Ohio
ica over lhe past I 0 yelfS were women under 30 or chit- .
are of Asian ancestry.
dren; more lhan 70 percent were unskilled or had less
.
A.cross Ohio, about 5 per,
than a high school edlication; three fourths were from
cent
of the state's population
Asian, Latin American or Caribbean countries; and two
speaks
a language other than
out of three setded in six states- California, New York,
English at home. Thiny perTexas, Florida, Illinois and New Jeriey - the GNS
cent of the foreign-born popanalysis found.
ulation in Ohio immigrated
Regional county-by-county immigrant demography Locally, hundreds
betweeen 1980 and 1994,
of
immigrants
according
to the Census
moved to
County Total Avenge Age Male Female Single Married Widowed Divorced have
Bureau.
southeastern Ohio
The 1990 census showed
over
lhe
past
3
9
318
21.1
127
247
30.1
Ath- 458
that Ohio's total foreign-born
decade. Athens
population was 259,673. The
has become the
0
47
4
23
30
• Gellle 74
33.6
largest
percentage live in just
home for the bulk
one of its 88 counties of these new
·o
0
17
18
19
20
28
: eckeon 37
southern Ohio res- Cuyahoga County is borne to 79,545 foreign born.
Ohio's Qverall foreign-born percentage is 2.4 percent.
idents- 458 have
1
"4
0
18
~6
3
23
: .: Melit• 21
Researchers have found · that those-immigrants are
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ililll)igtated to that
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less
likely than native-hom cit,izens to use public assis- ·
county since 1986.
0
0
5
2
4
27.6
3
7
• VInton
During that same tance for extended' periods, and more likely to get an
"
~nett
Newt Servlc:e, Timet-Sentinel Report•
i , WASHINGTON-More !han 12millionimmigr~nts
~~~ve been admitted to the United States, or come here
illegally, since Co~gress passed a
immigration
ground-breaking
J
reform law in 1986 -lhe most in
l
any decade in lhe nation's histo-·
:
ry.
1
, The Immigration Reform and
1\C< oe:2an a decade oflawmaking <hat has.influ. ~~ who may immigrate to the United States. But it
ALL WHEEL.DRIVE!
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advanced college degree
to start a new business.
The high levels of inunigration are projected to continue at le&St through 2003, and the potential social and
economic effects are fueling · a growing . debate on
whether those newcomers provide lhe vitality America
needs or put an unsustainable burden on the nation. ,
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EMPLOYEES of Southern Ohio
Coal Companl•• ere making
· Cltrtetmee 1 little brighter tor
Mventl underprlvUeged chll·
dren throup,hout · tile arM,
tbrough the Holkllll Qatherlng
for Need¥ Chlldl'l!l program.
The progrem, which began 11
the Wllk•vllle flclllty In 1985,
' bee provided over $174,000 In
,g!fl• to underprivileged chllilren throughout louthlaet
Ohio. Above, Nltllhl, e child ·
wllh Ollila County ·Chlldnm'e
$ervlctt, 1~cepl1 a gift from
Santa CIIUI • Stoty on pege A6
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AWan Wheels, V8 Vortec
Power Locks, lit,
Ai
Leon man killed
in ATV accident
LEON, W.Va. -A Leon man
died Friday on a Jackson County
(arm when the all-terrain vehicle
he -.tas operating ovenumed,
according to a story in Saturday's
Charleston Gazette.
. Donald Abbott, 51, of Leon
was announOOJ dead at lhCl scene
'' of. the lo a.in. accident, Jackson
. County Sheriffs Department
_spokesman reponed.
The Gazette said lhe accident
't\)Ok place off SR 87 near lhe
Mason County bne on propeny
owned by'Abbott's brother-in-law,
according t9 lhe spokesman.
' Abbott was the fourth person
· in West Virginia to die in huntingrelaied accidents during the current gun season for deer.
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Good Morning
CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE •
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. P~armacy sets .up-temporary warehouse, office facilities
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. -Temporary warehouse facilities in Oak Hill; Ohio,
are being utilized for Fruth Pharmacy
stores and accounting offices are being set
up in Gallipolis, according to Fruth Treasurer Robert Messick.
The company's 30,000 squ;u-e foot
warehouse, located on W.Va. 62 near Point
Pleasant,. was cJcstroyed by fire last Tuesday. The 7,SOO square· foot corporate
offices received only smoke 'and water
damage .due to quick efforts from firefighters .
"We are making· progress," Messick
said. "Everyone in the community has been
very helpful."
A temporary 10,000 square foot warehouse has been provided for lhe company
at J.E. Kessinger's in Oljic: Hill, ·Messick
said.
The accl)unting departmeni is packing
materials to set up temporary offices at a
Employees said they were grateful they
location owned by Ohio Valley Bank in
Gallipolis. Messick said the department wouldn't lose their jobs, espedally during
lhe holiday season.
should be up and running on Monday.
The 50 employees of lhe warehouse that bumed down have been
given temporary j.obs ·at stores in
West Virginia and Ohio, company
officials said.
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Jack Fruth, owner of the· 20store chain, said last 'week that no
employee's will be laid off because
of the fire that gutted the company's Mason c;ounty warehouse.
The adjacent front office suffered
little damage.
"We're a family operation and
we try. to take care of our employees," said company Vice President
Laddie Burdette. "'No matter how
WORKERS USE A BACKHOE laet week to clear
big we get, we.'ll treat our rople 1 palh through amolderlng debris II lhl Fruth
the same. That's .Mr. Fruth s phi- Pharmacy WltrehouH near Point Pleaunt lifter
losophy."
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tire gutted the building Tueaday e\oenlng.
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.By KEVIN KELLY
Tlm..·Sentlnel Staff I
RIO GRANDE .:... As the new staie jobs center here
nears completion, the'Ohio Bure.au ofEmpl<>yment Services is beginning to chan out how two of its area offices
will operate under one roof.
The new OBES office serving Gallia, Meigs, Jacksoil
and Vinton counties has been in the planning stage since
last year, pan of' an overall plan to consolidate services·
from individual county offices to more centrally located
sites, explained Communications Director Dave Garick.
An opening date for lhe center hasn't been set, "but
the ballpark estimate is February or March," 'he said.
Once open, the center, located next to Buckeye Hills
C,areer Center, will replace the Gallipolis and Jac~on
OBES offices.
The Gallipolis facility on Olive Street has also been
serving clients from Meigs Coun!)' for the past several
yean.
The Cllnter has been designed as a "one-stop"location
to process unemployment ctalms, help people fin\! work
and tie in with job creation progriuns in the area, Garick
said.
"The move itself is not so important, but lhe strategy
is," he said. "This is pan of the one-stop philosophy, but.
is also pan of everything taking place so that we can provide related services to the area. That's why being local~
ed next to Buckeye Hills is helpful."
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Creation of lhe cen!er is being duplicated around the
state as OBES looks for more efficient ways of serving
clients, Garick said. Last monlh, offices in East Liverpool and Salem were combined into one at Lisbon, and
a simitar ·project is planned to centralize operations at
offices in Shelby and Piqua.
.
"That's what ODES is doing and where the future is,
coordinating services with the schools, Private Industry
Cotincils and. existing employment programs," Garick
said. "It doesn't make much sense for each county to go
it alone."
Garick said that within the next week meetings with
sta.ffers will start planning for lhe placement of equipment, as well as other internal maintenance consideratipns at the Rio Grande site.
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When the cenier is liP and ·running, Garick predicted
that final staffing will be at or slightly under 20 people,
inclu~ing personnel from Gallipolis and Jackson.
"No one's going .to lose their job," he added. "I can't
tell you for sure if everyone is going to be reassigned to
Rio Grande or to one of the other offices."
The Gallipolis office currently employs nine people.
A spokesperson at Gallipolis referred all questions to
the slate OBES, but did say that a staffing plan for Rio
Grande has not yet been developed.
Meigs Museum renovations near completion
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. BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
·
. Some of the roofing has been replaced, while other parts
Tlme..a.ntlnel 8tllf
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were repaired to prevent f~rther leaking until spring when new
POMEROY - Restorauon and renovation of ~e Me~~· roofing :-viii be install~d.
Museum funded through a $79,000 Appalachian Pubh~ F~lhExterior wooden pam of the brick structure which have
tres
Improvements
Fund
grant
to
the
Me1gs
County
Htstoncal
· • are be'mg covered wtt
· h v1ny
· 1 <10r th e purpose
.
leti
requt'red pamhng
S .ety it
OCThel neii111Jhucomp heaonb;
d .
d'tl .
te.
of reducing future maintenance costs.
museum
new
ng an arr con 1 omng sys ms,
wall repairs resuldng ftom roof teaks have been repaired. and
~ginal plans called for an addition to the building for use
all of lhe rooms have been painted, the flqors and woodwork • as a library. That plan was scrapped when the grant amount was
have been sanded and refinished and lhe bathrooms-have been cut.
renovated and new flooring installed.
As explained by Margaret Parker, Historical Society presi·
The 32 windows in the building have all been replaced with dent, lhe Society has only been able to do band-aid repair for
more: epergy efrwient !)net and the airqe door removed and a yellfS because, of~ lack 0f mon~y. In ber 21 yean as a volun-'
s~ door Installed to make~ area more compatible as~ . leer Parker,sllld this IS the _r~rst t1me funds have·been awarded
·d1sptay area for antiques and antfacts.
for reatoratto!l and renovabon of the museum.
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OBES prepares .·
to occupy .,ew
regional. jqbs
center . at..
- R,io
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·She expressed appreciation' to Rep. John Carey and· lhe
Meigs County Commissioners for their suppon, along with
organizations and individuals who wrote letters urging grant
approval.
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The Soc1ety purchased the museum bulldmg m 1968 and
some renovation was done at that time The original pan of the
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structure ates ack to the late 1800's. A secuon was added in
• 1938. ( . , .
Tht fac1hty 1s supported from county funds- about 30 percent of lhe operating budget - with the remainder corni.ng ·
from memberships, programs. donations, sale of publications,
and other fun<l raising activities carried out by the volunteers;
· The museum is knowri statewide for its library and researeh
materials and annually serv~s over 3,000 patrons.
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Pomeroy • Mlddllport • GaiHpolla, 0H • Point Plllllnt, W'1
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Sunday, December •• 1111
Sunday, December 8, 1996
I
Immigration to .nation, region sets record
1986, the total is well over
TO refu1ees in the
the 10 million who went
1970s and 1980s,
through the turnstiles of Ellis
and Latin America,
Island and other entry
benefited
most from
points in the great immi·
gration period of I
officials
1914.
also why
year
Congress
moved
to
A
DECADE
OF
only
3
percent
of
Last
our nation as a result," said Universtop
the
continued
flow
of
illegal
NEWCOMERS
immigrants
in
the
sity of Maryland economist Julian
Simon. "The evidence is clear: migration with a bill signed by Pres- past 10 years have come from
Immigrants don't come here to take idenl Clinton that will double the Africa, which sent few immigrants
welfare, they come here to make size of the Border Patrol, crack to the United States in past decades.
down on smugglers and the makers
The combination of built-in famjobs."
of
counterfeit
documents,
strellfllline
ily
values and the newcomers'
"We' re bringing in mOre and
deportation
and
establish
a
volunobsession
with making a better
more people on the edge of poverty,
tary
identification
system
to
allow
future
has
been
one of the main facwho are competing for fewer and
cmploY.ers
to
ensure
they
arc
hiring
·
tors
in
the
recovet)'
of many neigh·
fewer jobs with our inner-city poor
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borhoods in New York City, Mayor
- and soon with the millions of citizens or legal immigrants.
The bill was the•third overhaul of Rudy Giuliani has said. And a simipeople on welfare who we ~xpect to
go to work," said Vanderbilt Univer- immigration law during the decade. · lar trend appears to be happening in
The second major reform, passed South-Central Los Angeles. ,
sity sociologist Virginia Abernethy.
in
1990, had perhaps the most far"South-Central has seen a kind
" At the cll(I'Cnt rate, we could see
reaching
effects
on
immigration
levof
private-sector urban renewal,
our population growth explode."
The Immigration Reform and els. It de-emphasized quotaS based where immigrants have come in and
Control Act, signed into Jaw by Pres- on nationality, and placed a priority bought a Jot of vacant homes, and
ident Reagan in November 1986, was on helping reunify families - espe- where you see a lot of new immi..
grant businesses going in," said
passed by Congress to exert control cially'those of U.S. citizens.
INS
officials,
supporters
and
critics
Harry Pacbon. executive director of
over the growing problem of illegal
all
agree
the
family
unification
policy
the Tomas Rivera Center in Clareimmigration. The Jaw for the first
time made it illegal to hire someone is the drivi~g force behind the major mont, Calif. "That. kind of renewal
who was not lawfully admitted to the trends in immigration. Sixty percent is a trend we've seen before, In the
United States: And under an . of all new immigrants are spouses. last great migration al the tum of the
"amnesty" provision, it granted legal childn:n,parentsorsiblingsofcitizens century."
But the continuing influx of so
status to immigrantS who could show or. legal permanent residents.·
The overall'total for immigration many young extended families
they had lived and worked in the
other than refugees is now supposed could lead to a population explosion,
United Statessince 1982.
About 2.7 million people have to be 675,000 a year, but has rarely as well as creating cultural ghettos
that avoid assimilation and clash
~en granted legal residence under gone below 800,000because there is
no
annual
limit
on
the
number
of
with other ethnic groups. Abernethy
amnesty. But the enforcement porimmediate
relatives
of
citizens.
and
other ~ritics warn.
·
tion has been ineffective: The INS
. The emphasis on family unificaesiimates that another 3 million have
entered the country illegally .and tion explains why an increasingly
large percentage of immigrants arc
stayed over the past I 0 years.
women
and children from Asia,
When added to tl)e 7 mi Ilion
which
sent
large numbers of
approved for legal residence since
Continued fnlm P11ee A1
"Immigration is the same good
bargain for Americans that it was
I 00 years ago - and even more so
loday because we can provide them
even more opportunities to make
their dreams come true and enrich
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.Immigration act established categorl~s of admission
GIJnnelt ..... Service
WASHINGTON~ The Inunigralion Act of I990 established the categories used 10 determine who may be
admilted to the United States.
' There is no limit on the number
of spouses, minor children and parcnu who may be sponsored by U.S.
citizens each year..This category has
ranged from 2 I 8,000 in 1987 to a
JUab of~s.ooo in 1993. It dipped to
222.254 in 199S, but officials
believe the number will jump again 10,000 visas are reserved for politi- ity is given to skilled and prOfescal asylum seekers, their spouses sional workers and their spouses and
in 1996111 more than ~0,000.
.
. children, although up to 10,000
The limit on refugees who will be and c)lildten.
67~,000
annual
immiAnother
unskilled workers are allowed.
admitted is set eath year by the pres•Family-sponsored immigrants:
ident based oil a recommendation grant slots are dividedjniO the fol480.000, minus the number of citifrom Congress. f'J1hc number of 1owing categories:
•Employment-based immigrants: zen-sponsored family members
refugees granted immigrant suuus
ranged from 81,71,9 in 1~88 to 140,000 a year (plus any unused admitted the prior year, to a mini127,343 in 1993. An additional visas from the previous year). ·Prior- mum of 226,000. This is divided
Researchers already 8110 ftndina
evidence that the influx d illlllligrants is causmg a migration d
inner-city poor people to surround·
ing suburbs, where they 8110 placipg
an increased demand for social ser·
vices on smaller cities and counties,
University of Michigan professor
William Frey reponed in the maga·
zine American Demographics.
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The high annual rate of newcom.ers and other immigration trends are
expected to continue for the n~xl
seven years as the 3 million peopl~
who gained amnesty begin to see~
citizenship and sponsor their immediate relatives.
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That trend becllflle .evident ti\B
year, when citizenship application
approvals jumped to 1.1 million
from 445,000 in 1995.
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The continuing debate over tll,e
quantity and quality of newcomers
is sure to brihg a call for renewell
hearings in Congress. But one
author of the 1986 bill said the
.' nation has been well-served by its
immigration policy.
.
. " Our purpose was to close the
back door to illegal immigration :sb
we can keep the front door open I!)
those who have the desire to make
their fonune in America," soid former RcJY. Romano Mazzoli, D-KY..
"We still have to solve the ille~dl
problem. bul is 750,000 new ·Jeglil
immigranL< a year a problell)1 ' '
"I don't lhink so. They want to
work, and we have work to do. We'll
all come out ahead."
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Need a Tux for the
Holiday Season?
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• Wedding • Party.
• Dance - Family AfTair
• Black Tie Dinner
into the following subcategories, by
order of priority:
•l)nmarried sons and daughters
of U.S. citizens and their children .
. •Spouses, children and unmarritd
sons and daughters of legal immigrants.
·
.
•Married sons and daughters of
U.S. citizens and their spouses and
children.
•Brothers and sisters of U.S. citizens and their spouses and children.
•Diversity Lottery Immigrants:
Up to 55,000 slots a year allocated
to countries that. have low levels of
immigrillion based on . the employment , and family categories. This
program has allowed immigration ·
from the African continent, for
instance, to .increase from 17,463 in
1986to 42,456 in 1995.
~ RICHARD ·BENEDmo
.Gannett News Service
,. WASHINGTON - So President
Ghn~on has named a Republican,
reunng Mame Sen. William Cohen
to be his second-term defense sccre~
-~·
'· · Beyond quick confirmation,
.iljldt.ng a new dimension of diversity
,1? hts C~bmet and winning applause
for l Ntrlg to the current Washington
buzzword - bipartisanship- what
,does the appointment gain for <:;lin'~on?
'•· Not very much .
.
. He wins a few points with hawk~~h Republicans who ·might have
,J?een worried that Clinton would ele·
~vale a liberal Democrat bent on dis:.ll)anlling the defense establishment
ofllld spending all the money on feel-food social projects.
But after that, the pluses mainly
~II ~nto the category of goo4 public
.relattons. No)" that the bitterly fought
:1996 -election is over, it's "in" for
·R.epublicnd Democrats to talk in
.100norous tones about reaching out to
\heir enemies and cooperating. We 've
ilt~ard it for a month now. Clinton's
;gesture with Cohen, 56, is a contin·
uation.
~ Hi~torically, presidents have
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·Haskins Tanner is the
place to go
Holiday Special
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Seve~.00
.
130 Years of Serving the area
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influence.
research on interracial marriages. It
The Office of Management and estimated that 86 percent of children
Budget will make the final decision of mixed race have one white parent.
because a ruling on raeial categories
"About 30 percent of the writewill have to apply to all federal ,pro- ins involved an Asian or Pacific
grams. A decision is expected some- Islander response, about 25 percent
lime next yca'r. but in the meantime the involved a black response and about
Census Bureau has been testing Sllfll- 7 percent involved an American
plc forms for the next count in 2000.
Indian rcsp(>nsc," the bureau said.
More than 80 percent of the peo·
The Census Bureau ha• allowed
pic who wrote in details on the mul- ' people to identify themselves by
tiracial category inCluded white as race, providing five categories pan of their background. The bureau white, black. American Indian,
noted' that is consistent with other Asian and other.
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Gallipolis ...
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"' Sa:ve natural resources,
"'Help conserve landfill space,
"'Keep our region clean and beautiful!
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Some of the most conciliatory
comments are coming from Repub-
Like a close but volatile family, licans who were at the forefront of
the. six men running the counJry are the 1994 consCrvativc "revolution."
After two years of coiling Clinton a
;stuck with'each other.
t. There's a president with history's liar, f~r instance, Gingrich now says
:iudgment on his miqd, a vice presi- his p~rty will seek common ground
;d.ent and a House rival both aiming · with the president.
tor the top spot in 2000, a .chastened
Democrats also are making nice.
House speaker looking to rebuild his Daschlc calls the incoming Coni:lout and reputation, a new Senate gress a "hisroric opponunity" to
jleader testing his melllc on the.. work together.
l)lational stage and a Democr~tic
The federal' .budget is an early
=.counterpart with enough troops to indicator of whether the principals
hwan him.
,
seize that opponunity. Clinto.n's blueTheSll players - President Clin- print is due by·carly February. Will he
( ori, V!ce PresidentAI Gore, House propose serious cuts? Will Senate
;Mmon(y !-ea<jer Rtcha,rd Gepha,rdt, conservatives hardc~ Loti's ncgotiat~ouse Speaker Newt Gillf!rich, Sen- ing sta~cc?· Will House liberals pay
:1'-te Maj~(ily_ Leader.JU!W~ ·•nd more th'!J' lip service to balancing the
~enate Minority Leader Tom Daschle budge!• What happens ,early next
·- will determine whether biparti- year could setlhc tone for months.
•sanship ' prevails in the next two
The conflicts of the past two
years or erupts into a geyser of argu- . years are still raw, at least for Rcpubments and recriminations. •
li cans. In the epic i;>udget standoff at
Except in crises such as war or the end of 1995, Clinton didn 't get
depression, bip'artisanship tends tO-.. j:ilamcd for holiday-season govern·
have the half-life of a snownake. On merit" shutdowns; they did. They
top of that, these men share compli- haven 't forgotten that, nor a multi·
cared -histories with each other and million-dollar ad campaign attacking
interests that don't always coincide. their Medicare plans, the one-vole
But talk of cooperation has bet~ Senate Joss of the balanced budget
rampant since voters re-elected both amendment, the·many dcaiS'lhat fell
Clinton and the opposition RepubJ). apart.
can Congress. And there's. a cqancc
The election put more conservafor results this time.
lives in the Senate, and they arc like'
The upheavals of the past few ly to press Lou to hold the line rather
years - turnovers to a Democratic than seck compromise. Funhcrmore,
White House in 1992 and a GOP potentially explosive ethics cases arc
Congress in 1994 - have left both pending 'in both parties. Gingrich is
parties spent and humbled, says Yale under investigation in the House in
political scientist David Mayhew, connection with allegations that his
author of "Divided We Govern." He political organization violated the tax
predicts "important compromises" c~dc and that he misled investigators.
rather than ideological crusades in the GOP-run commiuces arc examining
next two years.
Democratic fund-raising and White
'House handling of personnel matters
and FBI files . The Whitewater probe
continues ·in Arkansas.
At least one Republican. Sen.
Don Nickles of. Oklahoma, has mentioned the possibility of impeachment
proceedings. But most in his party are
following the sweetness'and·light
script in public.
,
Some analysts say the fate of
bipanisanship depends on how the
panics view the election. They each
have two ways to look al whal hap·
pcned.
Was Clinton re-elected because he
pledged to protcc;t Medicare, cduca·
tion spending and the envirof!mcnt
against GOP budget-cutlers, or
because he embraced conservative
causes such as a balanced budget,
welfare ;cfoirn and school unifonns?
Liberals like the first version. But
Clinton is signaling through words
and deeds - such as looking for a
GOP Cabinet member and picking a
Southern centrist. Erskine Bowle!i, as
his chief of staff- that he believes
voters endorsed moden:uion and L.:orn promise with Republicans.
On the Republican side. some say
the ·party 's aggres sive 1995 drive to
slash taxes, spending, regulation and
· federal authority was ratified by the
re-electiOn or mo st of the crusadlng
freshman class. But .in most public
statCmcnts, leading ~uhlic'ans
interpret the voters· ;t(crdict as an
cndorscnlcnl "of their endgame ~ corn- ·
promises that produced welfare
reform , health insurance rcfonn and
other popular laws.
·
The past four years have seen a
series of ambitious undertakings that
failed, among them Clinton's health
care initialive and top Republ ican priorities such as tcnn limits
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You Are What You Think•• ~
.·:·.
'lime~ieutbw
- Clinton's Cabinet President Clinton began his second-tenn Cabinet changes by naming
a woman &ecretary ol state and a Repulllican secretary of defense.
Current stalus:
Brown
ChicagO mayor
added members of the opposite party to their Cabinet for key strategic
But it's highly doubtful that Cohen
reasons or in times of crisis:
could function as an effective
• In 1940, Democrat Franklin "shield" for Clinton among the
'
Roosevelt picked two Republicans, Republicans in Congress.
For
starters.
Cohen
,
never
a
darHenry Stimson for secretary of War
and Frank Knox for secretary of the ling of the GOP, is a moderate
Navy, knowing that it was imponanl Republican far to lhc left of consertQ show the American people that the vative GOP leaders on Capitol Hill.
two parties were united as the nation He built a reputation lor political
independence rmhcr than his parti,
prepared for World War II.
sanship,
equally comfortable criti·
• Republican Dwig~t Eisenhower,
anticipating trouble with organized cizing his own party as wclf as
labor over the Taft-Hartley Act, Democrats. And now that he is joinnamed Democrat Martin Durkin , ing the Clinton cabinet, he will
head of the AFL plumbers union, his become even more on the fringes of
Janet
Bruce
the GOP than he was before.
. Labor secretary.
·!
Reno
Bobbin
"Clinton sure isn'l buying entree
• Democrat John Kennedy, elect·
Ju.tlir.:t•
Educor;o".
ln t,.,.inr
Htal!h
ed by only the thinnest of margins in into the Senate by naming Cohen,"
rtopes
to
stav
Uncertairl
Likely
10
stay
Likely
10
stay
Replaces
Hazel O'LNry
1960, named Republican investment said Stephen Hess, a Brookings lnsti·
Warren Christopher
Eu.erg;·
banker C. Douglas Dillon as Treasury tution presidential scholar.
Erskine Bowles replaces leon Panetta aa chief cf steff
Possible replacement ".
Cohen does have extensive
secretary to win the confidence of the
Rep. Bill Richardson
e•pericnce
in
defense
and
cosional
financial community. He also nained
0-N .M.
Ford Motor Cdent Robert McNama- intelligence matters. But he rtcvcr
. ---·-- - - - . ra, a Republican, his defense secre- served in the military. And he has no
' APtronia Cowan
tary to bring a no-nonsense busi- administrative experience to help
nessman 's sense of 4;fficiency Lo the him ease into the job of managing the of Congress with no administrative named another member of Congress. cabinet. But it's questionable whclhcr
Pentagon's huge quarter-trill ion-dol- experience, the late Lcs Asp in, to be Richard , Cheney. to he hi s defense Cohen can hsomcthing to the tricky
Pentagon.
Kennedy, who angered many lar budget, its 800.000 civilian .his firs t defense secretary. Aspin, secretary. Cheney's administrative job of defen se secretary that an
members of his own party with the employees and ·u million military obviously in over hls. head, was the experience was limited to serving as equally qualified Democrat could
two key appointmentS, referred to.the personnel.
first member of Clinton's cabinet to chief of ·staff in the Gerald Ford not.
two Republicans as his "shields" on
Clinion selected another member be sacked.
White House, and he, too, never ·
Retiring Sen. Sam Nunn, D-G'a.,
But in fairness, President Bush seryed in the military: .But he was · would have loved thp.)ob. So too
wtdely regarded as a successful would a lot of othcrq~~hficd Dcmoc·
defen se chief, serving during the Per· rats. Was the public relations payoff
sian Gulf War.
·
with Cohen worth.alienating fellow
In sum, Clinton gets public piau- Democrats who have served long and
di\s for adding a Republican to his well? We'll sec.
·
·
economics and defense.
l
Prices start at '45 · ·
Jawdtau 11lba.t•·~ • Page A3
.$ix men, six agendas: top players
iin
Washington
still
talk
cooperatio11_
•
TIS THE SEASON
•
'
I
=UBy AJI; LdLa/li.y
·· WRENCE
· Census finds 1 percent Qf Americans call themselves multiracial
Wf.SHINGTON (AP) - Mem-·
hers of America's growing mixedrace population may no longer have
. to settle for the category "othe[''
when they answer the next census.
A Census Bureau test of new
questionnaires found ·that about one
person in 100 picked the category.
"multiracial" when it was offered
and the extra choice seemed most
helpful to Hispani~• ·
Among Hispanics, some 6.7 percent selected multiracial in the tests.
sharply reducing ·the number who
cbilcked the category "other."
9verall, of people who called
·themselves multiracial. about half
wrote-in they were a mix of t\vo
. races and one-third reponed a mix
of one race and Hispanic origin, the
Bureau reponed Thursday.
From Jess than one-half million
· in 1970, the number of children of
interracial families grew to an estimated 2 mi Ilion as of the 1990 census. That has led to pro)iosal~for the
new category for people of mixed
race 10 be list!'() in federal statistics ..
though some minority groups fear it
would lead to a reduction in their
numbers and, as a result, politic~!
Cohen nomination may not
accomplish
much
for
Clinton
.
.,
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Robert L. WlngMt
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l.err.r. to !Ito Hit« ore we/como. Tlooy ohould be leoo thlln 3011
Sunday, ~*em~~« 8, 1ile
"'"'*·
Alllottwo ""'lub/o<ll to -ng ond mu.t be olgned lmd /nc/udo oddrno
and tei<Jph,. numw. No unoiiJI'Od I-.e win be publ!ahH. l.e!IWI
ohould be In IJOOd - · eddreul'll /uuoo, not ,.,.onlllltleo.
Million Man March's
impact on election
deserves more study
Expanding banking $ervice spurs debate
HE WAS THE MOST
·. By C~UCK RAASCH
GNS Political Writer
WASHINGTON- True or false? The Million Man March had a discernable effect on the 19% election.
The answer, based on exit polls and strong circumstantial evidence: True.
Some turnout experts are withholding conclusionson this front until the
release next year of the Census Bureau's Current Population Rtport. the most
detailed analysis of the 19% vote.
·
The Census sample of 90,000 Americans is six times larger than the exit
polls taken around the country on Election Day.
But if the Census Bureau confirms the exit poll numbers, the singular acts
of milljons of-African-American men may have collectively produced one
of the few truly notable outcomes of this yawn of an election: ·Black men
went to the.polls in significantly higher percentages this year, while the rest
of the population seemed largely turned off and tuned out.
And what other event explains this result than thehering of hundreds of
thousands of men on the Mall here in October 1995, its focus on registering
, and voting, and the massive publicity that message received across the country?
Thmout expens like Curtis Gans, chairman ofthe Commiuee for the Study
of the American Electorate, are notoriously suspicious of Election Day exit
polls.
Gans- nicknamed "Dr. Turnout" for his obsession with civic participation -likes bigger samples and longer-term analysis hefore drawing conclusions on almost anything when it comes to voter thoughts.
"Exit polls are not a()ways goOd on turnout issues," said Gans, because
"a half of a percentage point one way or anotlter can greatly affect" trends
.I • .
among voters sliced and diced and analy~ into relatively small groups along '--~-~:__:__,::_----:.,.,---------:__:__:__ _ __;_"7:'"'_ _ _ _ ____.]
age, gender and racial lines. · ,
·
·
·
j
That caveat stated, the exit polls provided an interesting dissection of the
Afri~an-American vote: While black male turnout jumped. it was down con.
.
.
siderably in almost all other age and gendatcgories. That includes, interestingly enough, Afri~an-American women.
allowed. We must get the second
rendering of policy initiatives and appetite for morley and:
, The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies- a leading think
programs that often arc alreadv in
• The dramatic incrcase in parent hack in the home in as many
tank on African-American .issues -· -eo~~clud_ed that as. many as 1.7 mi.llion
place. or in the planning stages. It is, teenage pregnancy and sexually cases as pos.-.ihlc. Let's give parents
more bi>~Ck men voted in 1996 than in 1992, while 300,000 fewer black
-~ ... ~ .18-23wasdeshowever, imperative for ·parents to transmiucd diseases.
an opportunity to give the children
women v.oted this year,
ignatcd as Edu- inform .themselves about these mat• The skyrocketing increase in the attention they deserve, and the
The exit polls showed that blacks increased their turnout from 8 percent
cation
Week. ters, because school isn't like they drug abuse by teenagers.
children and the country will profit .
.of the total vote in 1992 to IOpercent in 1996. Black men, according to the
Different com- experienced. Too often a failed pro• The crime rate increase among Many
government . prclgrums,
polls, constituted 3 percent of the total vole in 1992, but S percent this year.
munities across gram will be brought back under teen boys who join gangs as a suh- -designed to deal with the prohloms
according to the Joint Center analysis. The higher percentages of blacks carne
our country may another name, but having the same stitutc for ramify. .
mentioned, won't be needed when
partly because of a total vote decline of II percent. But there were about 1.4
· have
rcmcm ~
ideas. Education concepts that arc
• The confused sexual identity of we do tlljs. Let's make pal'\)nls relemill ion more African Americans who voted in this election than in 1992,
bered thls week unproven ·have been implemented some children who never bonded vant.
according to the Joint Center's study.
•
in
different even before most teachers had been with a. parent.
Student nintivatinn must come
Gans is not ready to declare that the Million Man March boosted higher
ways. It was a trained in this meth()d. Expcrimcnla• ·The lack of adequate training in from the home us well as the school.
turnout among black men. "It's too early to draw the conclusion." he said.
more about schools tion in reading and math have not the home regarding manners. moral- We don't necessarily need mnrc proThe Joint Center, too, was relucta to draw the conclusion.
and what is happening in the class- proven to be effective in improving ity, clhics, and right and 'wwng.
grams. but perhaps we need heucr
"While some observer. ascribe this de·velopment to the consciousnessroom.
student achicvcmc:nl.
• The 'reduced rate nf cducatiotlal execution. 11tc nllitude of !loth s~j~
raising aspects of last year's Million Man March. clearly, further research is
Today. even the mission of public
Because of illlthis, we have seen achievement of children in s<.:hool.
dcnt and tcachor should be toward
needed to explain fully what motivated the black male voters," said Joint
education is being questioned. and a marked growth in home schooling
School teachers should never he excellence. and if this happe"s,
Center president Eddie N. Williams.
student achievement. when com- and private schools. Voucher ·pro- suhjcct to ahuse hy the students or progress will be made. E>pcctatiotls
But what else would have provoked this crosscurrent trend? Cenainly not
pared 'to other industrialized coun- grams. which allow poorer families their parents. The list or major prob- need to he raised for hoth teacher
a presidential campaign that, except for Jack Kemp's modc.<t attempts to reach
tries. is not somcthin£: we arc proud the same opportunity as Wc:ll -off lems in school today, compared to a,nd student, that challonge must'be
out to blacks from the Republican Party, largely ignored inner cities, where . 10 mcn1 ion-. Why all thi s is true chn- ones, arc a hone of contention with 50 years 'ago. ought tn he of great given!
· ·
many black men reside.
. not he agreed upon. and oflcn school the public system. They sec loss of conc.:cm to every American .
This is far too serious a ~otter fnr
· The circumstantial evidcn~c is overwhelming in favor of the Million Mim
admi nistrutors and teachers arc on funding. When achievement rcchrds
, With the factors just mentioned finger pointing. There is enough
March as a galvanizing event.
opposite sides from the Parents and arc compared, the puhli~.: system above. huW can we cxrcct'"".U::hicvc- hlamc to go around. ·hut this must
Exit poll conclusions already have been set inlo stone on issues like·the
cilizcns.
·
contends thai they arc left with more mcnt when .. major distraction arc not he our olljcctivc. II' plnns for the
gender gap. Why not, then, black turnout?
Government. having raised taxes under-achieving stuc.Ji!nts.
c.:ommonplacc'? How uan we t;xpcct gc\vcrnmcnt, instead of the family, to
The Mill ion Man March was highly controversial because of the racist
t_n the pninl that nne of the parents
A very fundamental error is heing completion .o f homework assign- ra1se the children arc fully implpharangues of its primary organizer, Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan,
now has to work for the govcrnmcnl made in scripting a scenario or pur- mcrus if television viewing or ''casu- · f!l~nted, we will be very, very sorry,
and some of his advisers. Farrakhan 's actions since the march - such as
to pay those 1axcs. n·ow is consider- cot vs. schcml personnel. Parents al" sex takes up the late afternoon The k1ds today arc paying a very
cavorting wiuators like Lybia's strange strongman Moammar Gadhali- suling plans that can make parcnl..; were the original cducutors. io hear and evening hours. If there is no h1gh pncc for the situntiun we hayc
lied memories of the event.
irrelevant. Poli'-=ics arc hcing devel- a parcnl dcscrihcd as "a prohlcm" in respect for the teacher. how can any- . created. For thCir sakes, and our,;,
But the Million Man March's underlying goals of voting and organizing
oped. in the name of "helping par- .lhc teacher's lounge nr principal's thing the school anempts be consid- shouldn't we all work together t<l
in home precincts appears to have had a deeper. more lasting effect than Farents."· that wil_l. in cs~encc. replace office is ·a sham. Both groups have u ered impnn.ant enough for the stu- correct the' problems we have creal·
rakhan's controversial travels, Many panicipants interviewed during and after . them.
role to 'pluy. und the souncr t~is is dent to be responsible'' If neither cd'! .
.
the march said they were willing to separate Farrakhan from the message
In these plans. the mission of the ac~nowlcd~cd. and guidelines parent ho1s time tn monilnr the
(Bob WHdy Ia a reglaterecf pr;t.
beca~se the message it scif was so powerfuL
school IS .being c•pandcd fur u 6 implemented. the better oil' the chil- child's progress, or t• ~ aucnd rarcnt- feselonal engineer and t~ught at
Black male turnout deserves a lot more study~ at least as much as the
u.m. to 6 p.m, duy that will meet all dren will be. The fact that we .hiovc teacher conferences. will that child . Hocking Coll~ge for nina yeara. l'
cliche-ridden coverage of the so-called "soccer moms.'· who. according to
kinds of political and social goals. far too many dysfunctional families think learning is ali that important'! reai!Mnt of Logan, Weedy ha•
one post-election apalysis, comprised abo~! 6 percent of the votes la.<l month.
They will be agents of change, and is no reason that parents in general
Amcr(c;a mu.\t Uo everything pos~ Hverlll retatl\lel In Mctlga CountY
the joh of the family will be in the should not .have a viial role to play, sihlc 1<1 help ciur parents. The gov- where his mother, the late Ethel
hands of the gqvcmmcnt bureaucraAs a society we hnvc not hccn ernment ahsulutcly must lower the 'Edwards Weedy, .waa born and
cy. The family will have been effec- . willfng. as of yet, to acknowledge taxes on families with children. Had reared. He Ia chairman of the
Hocking Chrlatliln Coalition and 1
tively dismantled, No other industri- the linkagc.lhat exists hetwc~ti tak- it kept pace with the dcducticm of member of uveral communlt~
By The A..oclated Prell
·
alized country has ever done this.
ing tbe second parent out of the 1950, it would now be well over orpnlutlona.)
Today is Sunday, Dec . 8, the 343rd day of 1996. There arc 23 days left
Space docs not permit a detailed home to support the government's three times what is currently
••
in the year. .
.
Today's Highlight in History:
· On Dec. 8, 1941, the United States entered World War II a.< Congress
declared war against Japan. a day after the anack on Pearl Harbor.
·
Or is the goal l~ut of measuring
,•
'The winners:
Index to come up with one that will
On this date:
· By JOHN CUNNIFF
economic
wcll-heing,
which
would
be
precise
·to
the
decimal
p<>int''
·
•Taxpayc~
wh<i mighrpay less in
NEW YORK - We' ll never hear
In 1776, George Washington's retreating army crossed the ~Iaware RivYQu have to wonder about that. mean changing the markcthuskct taxes to .~uppon indexed government
er from New Jersey to Pennsylvania.
·
• the end of this CPI debate, now that
an advis.ory commission has con- · since. the new CPI would seck to contents to rejlcct chu0ging lifestyles. programs, including Social' Sccurily
In 18'54, Pope Pius IX proclaimed the dogma of the Immaculate Concluded that the government overstates measure more than the old market- somewhat ~imilllf tci what the newer Mcdfc~re and vct~ns hcnclilll. They
ception.
.
inflation and may have to cut the rate basket. It would, for example, allcmpt indexes provide in an evolving Slock also mtght hcncltt from lower gov.
In 1863, President Abraham Lincoln announced his plan for the Reconc_rnmcnt spending and a balanced
at which Social Security benefits rise. to measure and adjust for qpality market'.'
struction of the South.
improvements,
as
in
health
care.
·
Considering the political implica- hudgct .
Instead, .it is destined to become
In 1886, the American Federation of Labor was founded at a convention
• Consumers, who conceivably
tions of such questions, it may be a
more discombobulated and messy as That's being •ubjcctivc.
of union leaders in Columbus, Ohio.
considerable
time
before
changes
Aside
from
the
impending
discould
enjoy_ less inflation because
politicians
and
affected
parties
mar-In 1949, the Chinese Nationalist government moved from the Chinese
putes
about
the
methodology
to
he
are
legislated,
Dccimali1.cd
formulas
wugc
cost measurements (often
mainland to Frormosa. now called Taiwan, as the Communists pressed their shal their arguments,
used
in
Qoing
this,
and
the
credentials
persist
as
if
chiseled
in
stone;
an
everin~xed to. incrcas~s in the CPI)
It could even resemble a free-foranacks.
.
all in which reason and logic and of the people who will make such changing world seeks something con- mtghl not rtjC as qutckly.
In 1978, Golda Meir, prime minister of Israel from 1969 to 1974, died
• El;onomists and other aclldt:mio!1
·good government could be trampled decisions, there is the question 'of just stant . .
in Jerusalem at age 80.
index
is
supposed
to
do.
what
a
price
All
of
which
is
preamble
to
an
"who
can rewrite a lot of ltticles that
by emotions and special pleadings. It
In 1980, former Beatie John Lennon wu shot to death outside his New
Is
it
to
scientifically
measure
a
aucmpt
at
choosing
the
winners
and
were
based
on the 'flawed' measure'''
could open up more argu'ments than
York City·apartmeflt buildina by _,. apparently deranged fan.
·semi-static bundle of goods and ser- losers should the commission's rec· according to economist Willi~
it setdes.
· · In 1987, f'Rfident Ronald Reasan and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Oomachev
There is a maner of cnedibility too. vices to provide us with a pricing ommcndations, · especially thoae Dunkclberg of Temple University
signed a ~ra~y uttjler which lhe superpowers 8Jreed 10 destroy their arse• The m~ia. The debate pro~idea
C•n we rely on economists and stl·. measure from oite year to the next, which:would lower the level of gov·
nals ()f intermedillb-ranJe nuclear miiSileJ. ..
grist
for a mdlthal wu pindlng IOQ
ernment
beneflrpaylllfnts,
bccomo
to
w¥t
the
Dow
Jones
aversimilar
tistician• who eave us the orieinal,
·In 1987, lhe "inrefadeh" (Arabic fQI' uprising) by Palestinians in lhe
much
old com.
law.
age provider in the stock market?
allegedly flawed, Consumer Price
Israeli-occupied terriiOrieJ began.
·
,
r
FOR
ABATEMENT
~ ·
a
1111-Jj~r.IKII•ooll •
••
p.
AS
-
·
.· ~AX
OFFICE
are now available at the City Parks and Recreation Department, 518 Second Ave.
l"
For more informalio~. call441-6022.
~·
Three ticketed by Gallipolis officers
•
•
GALLIPOLIS-: Cited by Gallipolis City Police were Mary Lou Johnson, 48, Btdwcll, failure to control; Marlin D. Griffin, 24, 1455 Eastern
~· Ave., Gallipolis, failure to appear; and JosephA. Stanley, 19, Patriot, fall" ure to control.
Today in history
CPI free-for-all will produce winners; losers
.
f
: Deputies lodge two in county jail
••
"
GALLIPOLIS- B,Q<>ked into the Gallia County Jail following arrests
by the Gallia County Slleriff's Department were:
• Theodore H. Misner, 37, Cheshire, Saturday at4: 17 a.m. for domestic violence.
.
• Lloyd H: Stovers, 83,3007 White Road, Gallipolis, Saturday at 8:52
a.m. for drivmg under the influence.
"'
•'
'
"
... Walnut trustees change meeting date
h CADMUS- Walnut Township Trustees have announced that they are
c anging their regular meetings to to the first Monday of the month at 6
p.m. for the months of January through April. ·
,,
·•
-
1
GVFD answers call to shopping plaza ·
•
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department was dis-' patched to the Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza Friday at I :33 p.m. in
.,, .response to an electrical short in the fuse box at Rite Aid.
"
One truck and 14 firefighters responded to the scene, a GVFD
, · spokesman said.
~- Meigs deputies report deer accidents
POMEROY - Meigs County sheriffs deputies reported two deer-vehi·
cle accidents Thursday.
·
.,'.
Amy R. Ohlinger, Pomeroy, was southbound on State Route 7near Thp·• pers Plains around 5:30p.m, when she struck a deer that ran into the path
,,, of her 1995 Nissan, causing modera!C damage to the car's right-front fend~
.~
.,
.
.
'li:rry S. Pauerson, Racine, was westbound on. Bowman's Run Road
near Racine when he .struck a deer that ran into the path of his 1993 Ford
Escort, causing moderate damage to the front oiAhe car.
•'
c ~--------------------------------------------~~~
Ga~:~::~,r~clty Manager
Matthew Coppler (fifth from left with huge
cut the
bon Saturday morning for Gallipolis Foodland'a new supermarket on the 200 block of Second Avenue In Gallipolis. Dignitaries
from all the Foodland stores were on hand, along with members
which has a
the new store.
ceremonies were held Friday.
store opened for business in Its new
downtown location at 8 a.m. Satur!lay. Grand opening activities
followed the ribbon cutting ceremony. As of noon Saturday, more
than 3,000 people had toured the new facility.
of the Eastman family, and officials from the Ohio Valley Bank,
New director named for Bossard Library
GALLIPOLIS - Following a past few years, Betty has assumed the Division of the Ohio Li.brary Coun- City Schools and the son of Roben
live-month search involving 28 appli- technical respons.ibility for the ever- ciL
,
.: .and Nancy Dyer Clarkson of Galli a.
cants and eight states, the Gallia increasing automation systems, and
She is married to lames K Clark- T!1c couple and their three dog s
Cou~ty District Library Board of' most important, Belly has vowed to . son, a bus driver for the Gallipolis reside ncar Rio Grande .
Trustees selected !'lelty Clarkson as ·keep 'customer service' as the lirs1
the new director of the Dr. Samuel L. and foremost responsibility of library
Bossard Memorial Library,
staff."
Clarkson, who has worked for the
1l1e daughter of John G. and Jane
library for more than two decades, Powers Lambert, Clarkson was born
assumed the post at the board's in Ironton and graduated from IronNovember meeting. An open house ton High School before moving to
for anyone wanting to meet the new Gallia County. She is a summa cum
director has been set for Saturday, laude graduate of the University of
Cleanetl MacHilitaly
Dec. 14 from 5-7 p.m.
Rio Grande and Kem State UnivcrWhite or Scotch Pine
Previously, Clarkson had super- sity.
Up to 16ft.
. vised the library 's bookmobile serShe is a member of Alpha Mu
OPEN .
.voces, and served as head of refer- • Beta, an internationa11ibrary scic~cc
encc, head calaloger, automation pro- honorary society, and serves as state
9 em • til Dark
jccl manager and most recently as coordinator of the Small Libraries
Tuesday through
system administrator for the library's
Sunday.
new automation system.
·
~ \( 1\\ " \\
She has wriuen three grants forthe
n- ecios .. mlloble 1oo n..
library, including one that paid for the
purchase of a new bookmobile in
1983, and one that supplemented the
pludc:
·Lib, wltb
aolaoo'
r....._
building's renovation in 1991. ·
Fottrofoheoe
Clarkson has worked with ihe
. dclipo !""Friends of the Library, the Gallia
~ · ~.
to CIOIDIDCIDCII'W
Coun!Y Literary Council, the Gallia
eM aamnt yur:
County Genealogical Society and
FARM
other community groups. She wrote
the history of the library for GallipoFrom Holzer Medical Center follow signa north on Rt. 160
lis' bicentennial ce lebration, preCall
446-3405
422 Second Ave. Gallipolis
pared information and articles for a
supplement to the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune in September 1991. and has
edited Bossard Beacon, a ncwslencr
started in January 1996.
Clarkson has special interests in
outreach. literacy, genealogy and
local history, and profcssionallihrary
development.
Pam Maturo. a member of the
board of trustees, said Clarkson was
'Marquise
chosen because "she not only has
earned lhc.promotion due to herdedSolitaires
icated 20-ycar record of service , she
1/6 Ct.
$299
has also brougnl in significant grant
resources.
1/5 Ct.
$399
"As bookmobile supervisor. she
1/4 Ct.
$599
has worked tirelessly to ensure bookmobile coverage to all pans of Gal1/3 Ct.
$799
lia County," Matura added. "In the
3/8 Ct.
$999
CHOOSE AND CUT
YOUR OWN TREE
ell,.,_
.,.t'&'
dalps,--..
i
-
•
TWIN OAKS •:. ' ' I
-t·~
CHRISTMAS TREE
Tawney Jewelers
Don't bar -parents from taking part in education
of young
.
'
I
e:::.. - : : - : - - : - - - - - - - - - - . - :__
:::
. ====-~~~~-=-----:---:----------
/
l
•
GALLIPOLIS - Passes for the Gallipolis Municipal Swimming Pool
com-
IN AMERICA
.,..
sw~mm/ng pool passes now available
been debated for years. While some Board, which oversees state banks. informed about the lack of FDIC pfi,.
By JACK ANDERSON
groups still oppose modernization, it Many in Washington think that tection for these investments, and~O
and JAN MOLLER
WASHING10N- The spirit of now seems inevitable that - in what's really going on is a turfbaule percent were not advised about (he
;
cooperation that's sweeping Wash- .some form- it's going to happen. between Comptroller Eugene Ludwig lack of bank g.tarantees. .
.and Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan. · Other observers worr)t that lhe
ington could soon bring major
The Federal Reserve plan would new businesses will not have odechanges to the way banks do busiJack
Anderson
allow
banks to enter new ventures, quate regulation. The savings ll)ld
ness. Unfortunately, what's good for
but
it
would
have to be through hold· loan mess came about in paJ1 hecat~se
banks might not be good for conand
ing
companies
that arc linked to the regulators fell asleep at the switcht
.
sumers and taxpayers.
bank.
The
comptroller's
plan
would
or,
in
some
cases,
backed
offheca
Congress, with the help of reguJan Moller
compel banks to forin new sub- of political pressure. To prevent
lators and the Clinton adminis[fa(ion,
sidiaries if they ·wanted to sell insur- same fate from befalling the banking
are on the verge of allowing banks to
In the past few years, many banks ance or other, non-insured financial · in~ustry and any new ventures,
enter new businesses, such as insursources told our associate George
have
already branched out by selling products.
. ance and securities, that they 've been
mutual
funds,
stocks
and
annuities,
As
we
reported
last
spring.
the
line
.
Clifford
Ill. regulators will' nqd
largely barred from in the past.
But some consumer advocates As of the end of the third quarter last between insured and uninsured more resources to go after troubled
·
I
worry that if the new business ven- year, 2,134 banks had sold a total of investments is often blurred by banks institutions.
Finally. some activists w'orry t~at
tures fail, taxpayers and depositors $184.3 billion in mutual fund<. The wishing to auract customers 10 their
could end up paying the tab to bail new businesses are not protected by new products. Cu~tomeFS are often bank modernization will mean l~ss
them out. MiChelle Meier of the Con· deposit insurance, which guarantees lured into a false sense of security by money for community invcstmef,t.
sumers UniOn, for example, wonies all conventional bank deposits up to seeing the reassuring symbol of the · Banks are required under lljc CoJnFederal. Deposit Insurance Corp. ll)unity Reinvestment Act to m'\!'e
that a new rule proposed by the $100,000. . .
Two major proposals are being emblazoned on the door of a savings loans available to low and modcrateComptroller of the Currency could
income borrowers in their commu~iexpose taxpayers to the same kind of floated to modernize bank regula- inslilution.
One
of
the
central
lindings·in
an
tics, Some bank< have warmed to ~c
tions.
One
is
auth.orcd
by
the
comprisks that spawned the savings and
loan bailout in the late 1980s.
troller's office, which oversees FDIC rcpon issued last spring was idea in recent years, even defendi)lg
It's part of a movement called nationally chartered banks, The oth- that 28 percent of prospective bank the law before Congress. But oilier
"bank modernization," which has er comes from the Federal Reserve customers survey ed were not banks still hclievc it hurts their
, - - - - - , - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - : - - - - - -- - - - - - - _ : : __ _ _ _...:.., petitivencss [0 lend money whire
they otherwise would not.
:
Some cxpens think more mo~y
•
ANI:' BOB OOLE THOU6~T
may be available if the comptroller
gets his way. Under Ludwig's plan.
money would flow from the ' nCw
OPTINII~TIC MAN ·
businesses back to the banks. ajtd
CITIZEN L.OOKIN6
could be' used for community
. ' rctn·
.,
AT"~
vestment.
4
·~
Under the Fed plan, howev~r.
· some critics contend profits wodld
not move back to the bank and therefore there would be smaller bank
assets- and possibly less money for
communily reinvestment.
"(Ludwig) is right," sl)id John
Taylor, president of the National
Community Reinvestment Coalition,
· a non-profit group. "Having these
other businc«cs under the hank as
opposed to the holding coR~pany
wpuld make more moocy available.
Mainly because the prolit would
come to the bank and be counted as
part of the bank's prolit.' ' .
However, Joseph R. Coyne, a Fed
spokesman contended there is "really not much difference" in available
communily relnvcslmcnt 1J10ncy
between the two plans.
(Jack Andereon and Jan Moller
.
6"ft'lo
are
columnltte tor United Fellluna
O~RT.=...... ~...........~
SyndiCii~ I'
I'M AN ORPINAAV
Regional
!'. ~ •• , . .
,. ,__Tfi•COUnty Briefs:--
By
a2r
Hobart Wlleon Jr.
Executive. Edllor
haeM
,
•.
·•
'· '
'' '
.. ·
A CHEERIER CHRISTMAS- Employ- of Southern Ohio Coal
Co. are making Christmas • little brighter for uvaral underprlv·
lleged children throughout the· am, through the efforts .of the
"Holiday Gathering for Needy Children" program. The program,
which began In 1985, has provided more than $174,000 In gifts
to underprivllelled children throughout southeast Ohio. Above,
Natasha, from Gallla County Children Services, a~epted a gift
o from Santa Claua during the .Program's 1996 holiday party held
.t .. for approximately 60 children Friday at SOCCO's Wilkesville
-· offices.
'
:Miners brighten holidays
~for area's needy children
·, By TOM HUNTER
Times-Sentinel Staff
' WILKESVILLE ~ Employees
'bf Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs
1mincs' ·are lending their hands and
'!*arts to make Christmas hetter for
'underpri¥ilegcd children throughout
·the area,
.
SOCCO/Amcrican Electric Pow·cr and United Mine Workers of
·America locals 1857 and 1886 are tbe
primary sponsors of the "Holiday
Gathering for Needy Children" program, which began in al the
Wilkesville facility in 1985.
·, • ,t\ppro>imatcly Ill children, ages
t\'cwpom [0 17 ycllfS, from five SOUthCIIS[Crn Ohio counties will receive
$ifts through the program in 1996,
~cordjng to Chris Bailey, SOCCO
program coordinator. . • ,
.
,· Since the program s mcepuon,
miners have contributed and raised
more than $174,000 for the program.
More than $15,000 was raised t!tis
year for the program. through volunteer·employee payroll deductions. a
golf outing, and other special activities, according to- Bailey.
Monies raised are used to pur•fhase ite111s f~om each child's Christ;mas "wish list.'' The remamtng fu'!ds
,so to. the agencies for special pur·
fhases for the children throughout the .
r,ear, such as school Jackets and ph~
~s. according to AEP spokesman Jeff
Rennie.
, 1 Approximately 60 children were
~ted to a visit from Santa Claus,
lifts and refreshments during holiday
parties . Friday at SOCCO's
Wilkesville general offices. The chtl~n participating in the program are
. (1om Children Services agencies in
J~~eklon. Vinton, Oallia, Meiss and
Athent' CQUnties.
.
"1'hii ia lhe biggest thit18 we do
ililrina the Christmas holiday.. The
toll
. . minerl and Southern Ohio Coal
have been terri lie to help us out. This
is where the biggest ponion of Christmas for most of these children comes
from," said Tammy Richards, case
worker for Gallia County Children
Services . .
SOCCO's Bill Oiler said that miners have worked the tradition alive
even with reduced numbers at the
facility.
"Wben we started the progrnm in
1985, we had over I,800 miners
working here, Now we have 900 miners working at the facility. but we've
managed to increase the dollar
amount for the program each year."
Oiler said.
· Local merchants have also played
an important role in the success of the
program.
"Kroger and Vaughan's IGA have
heen gracious cn()ugh to provide
support to the program. In addition,
all of the shopping for the children is
handled locally at area retai lcrs," Oi 1er said,
"It's excellent. This program is
something that we're quite proud of
here at the mine site. This is just a
small thing that all of us here at
Southern Ohio Coal can do for thp
children at Christmas," said Lance
Sogan, prcsidcnllgcneral manager of
sOCCO.
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~
If
-Mis·sing chemical warfare logs raise suspicions
By JOHN HANCHETT£
and NORM BREWER
Gannett News Servlct1
WASHINGTON - More than
three-quarters of a crucial chemical
, warfare log kepi for American commanders during the Persian Gulf
War is missing, according to a Gannett News Service Sludy of Pentagon
documents.
·
The hourly, round-the-clock notation book is considered critical by
government investigators seeking to
determine reasons !hat about 95,000
troops who served in the 1991 war
wilh Iraq now complain of uncommon afflictions and myriad mystery
symptoms,
Many veterans, their dpctors, and
investigators believe at least some
symploms resull from exposure 10
, chemical ' or biological agents
released by various means from Sad' dam Hussein's arsenaL
A GNS hour-by-hour compnation
of exisling pages from lhe chemical
event log .shows 76 percent of the
1 lime covered by the document during
1 1he 43-day war and ils immediate
aflermalh is not accounted for. In facl,
only five full days of chemical logs
during the war and af1ermalh still
exist.
The enlries lhat have disappeared
creale gaps thai oflen coincide with
reported major incidents of biological or chemical rierve agent release
dnd possible exposure.
Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., who
expects to chair 1he Velerans Affairs
Commiuee, said of lhe missing 76
percent: "It looks very suspicious to
me." Specter said he would order
hearings.
After years of trying to block
access to lhe log, the Pentagon
recently has. conceded mosl of il i~
missing.
Bernard Rostker, assistant Navy
secretary coordinating a beefed-up
Pentagon search for causes and possible chemical exposures, said he will
pursue lhe missing portions during an
upcoming fact-finding trip to Florida.
He will visil Cenlral Command head·
quarters al Tampa's Maill Air Force
Base, to which the log pages supposedly were returned at war's end.
"We're still · looking 10 see if
there's any more ofthe log thai could
be recovered,"· said · Pentagon
spokesman Bryan Whitman. "There
are a lot of gaps in the log. We would
have liked to have seen enlries for
every day."
Before the gulf war, allied com·
mander Gen. Norman Schwankopf
ordered his Cenlral Command staff in
Saudi Arabia 10 keep an "NBC Desk
Log" - a 24-hour daily record of
incidents involving Nuclear, Biological or Chemical warfare. They were
compiled from intelligence reports
and communications pouring in from
U.S. combat units, allies, and satellite and elec1ronic moniloring posts.
After 1he war. seanching for causes of the mys1ery sicknesses, the Pentagon first denied 10 Congress lhe
logs existed, lhen said they were
secret, lhen said lhey were slored al
Fort Leavenworth in Kansas. Finally, in June !994, lhe Pentagon declas·
sified the ibg after Freedom of lnfor·
malion requests from rorters and
veterans advocacy groups.
. In recen1 weeks, as requests
increased, Pen~agon spokesman Ken
Bacon said no more could be found.
Scruliny of.the lhree dozen pages
thai exiSI - coupled wilh Sludy of
chronological hisloiies of lhe war and
Air Force operalions reports from
Desert Slorm - shows many gaps
immedialely follow key chemical
"incidents."
They stan the firsl day of lhe air
war- Jan. 17, 1991, when several
Iraqi biochemical produclion ·and
slorage sites were bombed by Amer·
ican jets. Allbaugh several Allied
combat unit records - kept separalely - report ·chemical alarms
were quickly lriggered, more than 13
hours of that day's log. lhe entire
aflernoon and evening. are missing.
One Jan. 17 incidenl report from the
Air Foree command - lhat a pilol
suspected he had flown through a
biological cloud of deadly anlhraxis explained lhis way: "Had no basis
in fact."
J
The next day, after Israeli police at
5 a.m. "confirm" an Iraqi SCUD
misSile nerve gas altack was I, lhe log
goes dark again for more lhan 18
hours.
On Jim. 31, after lhe U.S. intelli·
gence unit at CentCom receives. a 3
a.m. report thai "Iraq will use chem·
ical weapons" within 24 hours and
lhe threat is nolaled in the log, lhe
entire 'afternoon section of lhe document is missing.
Sometimes. entire days are miss·
ing- sometimes for several days al
a time.
On Feb. 5, intelligence officers
confirm lhallraqi corps commanders
"now have chemical rclca"c authority." The log goes dark lilf >ix days.
And eighl Slfaight day> nf log
notalions- March 4-11 - arc miss·
ing. This follows demolilion of a
Iraqi ammo bunker at Khamisiyah,
which lhe CIA and Pentagon. only last
summer conceded conlained chemi·
cal weapons afler denying for years
any Glshad been exposed 10 chcmi·
cal warfare ageniS, ei1hcr inlcntion·
ally from Iraqi anack or by accidcnl.
Now lhe Pcmagon says as many as
20,800 lroops may have bee n
exposed a1 Khamisiyah.
ChrisiOpher Shays, R-Conn .. who
chairs a House subcommice invcstigaling lhe causes of Gulf War Illnesses. lold GNS lhe Penlagon "has
very lillie credibility on !his iss uethey keep having to change their
positions. They seem Ia be pretly
blase about a lol of lhis informa1ion."
Shays will explore 1he missing log
notal ions during subcommittee hearings Tuesday and Wednesday - and
:New medication combats ·little-known
but deadly infant respiratory ailment
.
'' By ELIZABETH NEUS
a child could gel the disease from a complications."
That's
where
RespiGamcomes
in.
Gannett News Service
toy touched by a sick child who had
The
Poop
and
Drug
AdminiSiration
WASHINGTON - More than just wiped his nose wilh his hand.
90,000 children are hospitalized and
Mos1 RSV infeclions are marked approved the.drug for use as a preanother 4,500 die every year in lhe by symptoms similar lo a bad cold, ventative medication in January, so
Uniled States from complications of including a low-grade fever, a very lhis is the first full RSV season it has
a common but liltle-known virus runny nose and a cough. The cough been in use .
Children on RespiGam receive
whose symploms resemble a simple may be accompanied by wheezing
.. cold.
and trouble breathing in infanls and monlhly inlfavenous doses lhal lake
between four and five hours 10
This is lhe season for respiraiO!'Y loddlers. .
.
.
adminisler,
Torok said.
·
syncytial virus, or RSV, lhe leading
"The flu has a well-deserved repII
may
nOI
prevenl
theeuing
lhC'
cause of respiralory tracl infections in utation as a bad ac1or in adulls, .but
aisease,
but
il
can
cullhe
chance
1ha1
infants and young children. And !his RSV is every bit as bad for kids,"
lhey' II be hospilalized if they do gel ·
year, for the first time, children at the Torok said.
most risk (or complicalions of lhe
Most al risk are babies born pre- il, he said. Children who conlracl
disease have a way to prevent it.
maturely, those who have developed. RSVand develop serious disease can
Bul lhe new medication, called a lung disorder called bronchopul· be given a drug called ribavirin.
Melanic Sweeney, co-founder of
RespiGam, has a few drawbacks: It's monary dysplasia (often from being
t expensive, difficult to adminisler and on a respirator because !hey were pre· Partners in Intensive Care, a·support
1 requires frequcnl visits 10 lhe doctor. mature)and 1hose with chronic heart and inforination group for pareniS of
children being treated in intensive
l
Many doctors have noc figured out disease.
care
unils, said a child wilh ~SV sets
''how lo include the use of lhe prod·
For parents, the disease is nearly
off
alarnis
in any neonalal or pedialric
ucl in their praclices," said Dr. . indislinguishable from myriad virusThomas Torok, a medical cpidemiol- · es children pass among themselves ICU because bolh the victim and his
ogiSI althe Ccnlers for Disease Con- and their families. Pedialricians or her neighbors are so fragile. she
' trol and Prevenlion ' - CDC. "For detecl it by lis1ening for the charac- said.
Bul many parcnls know little
some kids, worth it. Bul this is nol 1eris1ic wheezes and crackling noisaboU:t
RSV, even those with children
somelhing you want .10 excilc .the cs in the child's lungs.
average parenl about"
Having RSV once doesn't make at high risk. "ll's entirely possible
f
RSV is most common from you immune to future infection, and lhat no one has mentioned RSV 10
"r November to April and tends to peak- ~cinf~clion is common. Several drug you unlil you're diagnosed with it,"
r in January and February; according to companies arc working on vaccines, she said. "Average families probably
don't need to know much, but if
; an overview of lhe disease pub! ished bul none has proved elletliye.
; in this weck's· Morbidily and Mor"Atlhis point in lime. there is no you' rc at risk. you want to know
·: 1ali1y Weekly Report, a CDC .publi· inlervcntion thai parenls can do that's before the diagnosis."
The CDC published ils RSV
calion.
going lo prevenl kids from getting
l
The·disease is spread by coughing, it ," Torok said. "B ul for some high· overview hoping to raise awarcnc~s
sneezing and touching. For example, risk kids. you can prcvcn11hc serious of the 'disease among providers of
l•
j
I
health care fo.r both children and
adults.
"It's lhe 40th anniversary of lhe
discovery of RSV, ail jusl doesn't gel
the anen1ion the o1her viruses do,
even !hough il's the number one
cause of respiralory tract infection in
infanls and young children," he said.
Sweeney's group has opened a
toll-free number where parents can
gel more informalion about RSV ·\ . 1-888-RSV-4449 ' -· and offers a
few tips for.parcnls of preemies who
wanl to cui lhe risk in !heir house hold.
f.
1
1
...
during heaQngs in January to explonp
effects of low-level exposure Ia
chemical agents, which he believea
1he Penlagon has ignored: "Becausa
no one dropped dead 1hey said lhe)'
didn 'I have exposure."
·
The Pentagon's Whiunan said, "l
don 'l how what's on the pages"
missing: "We're trying to determine
whal's missing in hopes we can pul ·
1ogether a more complete picture."
Many Penlagon crilics believe the
sequence ofmi~sing pages following
chemical incideniS IS more !han com·
cidenlaL
·
One is James Tuile III, former
Senate investigalor who firS! asked
for 1he logs almost three years ago
and was told by Penlagon lawyers
1hey didn 'l exisl. 'f!le NBC Log, h~
she entire nuclear, biOlOgical and
chemical record of the war. ll's much
more important !han lhe 18 missing ,
minules iit lhe Nixon Watergate !apes.
What did they do, keep logs only
when they wanled to''"
Year-End Clearance .Everything Reduced To Sell!
5.0 liler vortec engine, CD. Player, pwr windows, Automatic w/overdrive,
aluminum wheels, buckel seats, rem01e keyless, HD rear end· LOADED
SAVE THOUSANDS!
1996 Buick Skylark
Medium Jade Stone· Beauliful
MSRP 16,853
Reduced to
*J
4 Dr, Till; Cruise, Cassette, P.
Windows, Etc.
Was $i3,900
' NOW
*II
V-6, P. Windows, Till,
MSRP 17,272
'11,888
1995 Buick £cntury
"7" In Slock - Qood Colors,
Tilt, Cruise, Cassette.
RIRNAII Al.lTilE TOO FAR.
1994 (;adlllac Sedan
DeVIlle
Beautirol Pearl Metallic with Coach Roof!
l.uadcd Induding 10 Compact Disc
Changer!
· Was $19,900
By STEPHEN SCHAEFER
USA Today
,.
LOS ANGELES - Speclacular
, bits of Hollywood history go on sale
: .pee. 15, wh~n 40 ilems from ·Ciark
·. Gable's estate, including his 1934
besl actor Oscar .for "It Happened
One Night," will be auclioned by
Christie's Los Angeles .
The sale, Chrislic's first auclion of
movie artifacts in Hollywood, also
inCludes other memorabilia, such as
lhe Rosebud sled from 1941's "Cit·
izen Kane," a sword used by Errol
Flynn in 1936's "The Charge of lhe
Lighl Brigade," a dress worn by Joan
Crawford in 1962's "Whal Ever
Happened to Baby Jane'!'' and items ·
from the cslalcs of screen siren Lana
Turner and "Honeymooners" sta~
Audrey Meadows.'
Bul it's Gable's Academy Award
that should prove lobe lhe big-lick• ·e1 item.
·
· ·
"This is in excelleril condi1ion. not
leaning, ben1, cracked or dented,"
: .says Nancy Valemino, of Christie's.'
: "'It's heavier lhan lhe warlime
: Oscars. .which were made of alloys
· because of lhe scarci1y of melal."
:
Its price may no11op 1he $510.000
: rival Solheby's got in 1993 for Vivien
: Leigh's besl aclress Oscar for "Gone
· With lhe Wind." But Chrislie's is
: convinced Gable~s staiUeUc will felch
; more than 1he $220,000 paid -for
· GWTW director Victor Aeming's in
•
·
Now'J7
'
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~
j
'
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By AARON MARSHALL
Gannett News Service
MARIEITA- Eve Inc., a local
domeslic violence sheller. was
awarded a $16,864 violence prcvenlion granl from lhe Ohio Violence
Prevenlion Cenler lhis week.
The shelter's granl was one of 15
slatewidc lo receive granls tolaling
$146,372 from lhe second round of
funding earmarked for this purpose in ·
the Slate operating budget.
The ·gran! money will be used in
several differenl capaciucs. Tlic
largeSI chunk of lhc money, approx:
imalely $10,000, will go towards
advanced training of local police in
the domcslic violence area. "This
!raining would help lhem undersland
victimization and some of the power
and control issues at work in these situations," said lhe sheller's cxccu1ivc
director Naomi Krause.
The rest of lhc money will go
10wards three diffcrenl programs tai·
Jared to address several issue s rclal·
cd 10 domcslic violence: Two of lhc
progr.ams will be weekly anger managcmenl classes with one pland for
adolcsccnl boys and one for women
in 1hc Marietta communily. The lhird
program will be a lwicc-monthly support group desi gned fo r the families
and victims of domestic violence .
Krause said all of the diffcrcnl
commrilunily-bascd programs will
star! in January
2 Dr, only 29,000 low miles,
Tlw Khn·m' 9() Plus (ias hun.ln·
. h;~~ hL'I.'n thrnugh Ihi' must
Was $8,995
StmwthinJ! !(• ~.·(msi,fn "l·~·n
NOW $7
~, ;11\l':o. an,uncltc• \11ur
1•art nfth~· wurlcl. t'.l ll .\:uur
ln1:.tl Rl'll.'\'ln dl·.:.lo.·r·tod,n .
It \.
1\ inhT
MARSHALL UNIVERSITY
·SPRING SEMESTER REGISTRATION
1
automatic, power windows, 3/c,
Casscllc, Etc.
'
'
L'll\n·nw tl.,;tin.g in tht~indust~··
l:ustom
New '97 LeSabre Trade, Ruby Red,
Sh~ws TI.C. Was $11,900
. Now'9,900
rda.
Only 12,000 low
mi'l~s.
Auto, ate, tih,
Cruise, Cassc1tc, Local I owner
MARSHAll ~IVERim
j Last hurdle cleared
for floating casino
note this IS a Mon. & Wed. Cia~}
White . Super Clean .
7 passenger
Was $9,900
LAWRENCEBURG, Ind. (AP)
- Argosy Gaming Co. and ils part·
ners cleared !heir final adminislrative
hurdle Friday lo opening a rivcrboal
casino on lhe Ohio River in lhis
southeastern Indiana cily.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which has .final say on con·
struclion projects on lhe river. issued
a pcrmil thai will allow the venture
10 · begin opera1ions. A lemporary
casi no could open as early as next
weekend.
The permit, granled by lhe Corps'
districl office in Louisville, Ky.,
includes 22 various adminiSiralive
and environmental condilions the
company musl meet
But Col. ijarry Spear, diSiricl
commander, said lhe proposed pro' ject would not have any significanl, ·
! adverse impacts on such things as
1conservation, flood hazards or shoreline erosion.
The Indiana Gaming Commission
voted
last month to award lhe license
1
1 to the Argosy partnership. The commission has set a teSI cruise for Tues·• day, and if things go well, the casino
, could open next weekend.
.
•
1 The partnership plans to mvest
[about $180 million building a hotel
and riverboat.' complex in the area,
which is across the river from norlh·
ern K.enwclcy IIJid is part of the Iuera:
j tive Cincinnati market.
Now'7,588
The boundaries used to be clear.
The living room was where you
could find couch potatoes punching
lhe ·remole control in front of an
entertainment system. CompUier
geeks were confined to the den, sit·
ling in slraight-backed chairs in front
of a keyboard.
Now morph !hose two images to
glimpse the wave of lhe future.
Yes, lhe PC is becoming more-like
a TV, and the TV is becoming more
like a PC. The firs! visible sign of 1his
digital convergence is the WebTVhilling slores jusl in time for Christ·
mas. You can find lhe WebTV at
stores that carry Sony and Philips
CONTINUES Actor
Reevee, who portrayed Supet'lllln In the 1950s
television aeries, 11 ehown In the
role In ll)le undated file photo.
Reeves, wl!o . died of a MitInflicted gunshot wouni:l to the
head, Ia the· subject of the new
book "Hollywood Kryptonite:
The Bulldog; The Lady and The
Deeth of Suptrm&n," by Sam
Kashner and Nancy Schoen·
berger. (AP)
"Hollywood Kryptonite: The
Bulldog, the Lady and the Death of
Superman." Sl. Marlin's Press.
$2h95,
1993.
All winners since 1950 have been
required by lhe Motion Piclure Academy of Arts ~nd Sciences Ia sign
releases indicating lhcy will not sell
Iheir Oscars.
Chrislic's won't divulge who is
selling Gable's lrophy. His widow is
dead; his only child is John Clark
Gable, an ac1or who was horn jusl
monlhs afterlhe slar died in 1960
after filming "The Misfits" wilh
Marilyn Monroe.
No Credit, Slow Credit
·Bad Credit, Bankruptcy?
At Dutch Miller Chevrolet,
\t'ECANHEI,p
lrYou Have At Leut $1,300
a mouth Income
(olU'Io)
529-2301
$ SAVE THOUSANDS 8
Don~
Pay Tllooe High Kentucky
end Ohio 1 - t lletllll
Many VehlciH Are Avalllble With
NO MONEY DOWN!
CALL :M HOURS A DAY •
7 DAYS
'5;200
Ali '96' Bu~k Regah & Pn.•"''.tiN•
offer.f#d at 149 over
.
.
PLUS you get '2000 ·
: A~enue artd '2,000 'Re~m~-
!
I
•
I
•'
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lhe consumer markel over the next
year - has two major components.
One is a $300 set-top box !hal's
smaller and slimmer than a VCR. It
a11aches to almost any television set.
The other ·is an lnlemel conneclion
service from WebTV Ne1works lhal
costs $19.95 a month for unlimiled
access. The system also requires a
slandard phone line.
The WebTV comes wilh a remote
control lo surf lhe World Wide Web
and yout local TV stalions. It also
features a $69 wireless keyboard so
you can lype Web addresses or send
e-mail while flopped on a couch 6
feet away.
Though not as mulfaceled as a PC,
lhese new c!lectronic ioys enable
consumers to send e-mail and browse
the Web. They'll soon come. with
printer ports.
Analysts don't see the Internet TV
cutting 'illto the PC markel, which
appeals to more sophislica1ed users.
"I'm nol sure how successful
·these devices are going Ia be, especially with the p•ice of PCs falling,"
said Kevin · Hause, an analyst for
lnlernalional Dala Corp. "You get
slower conneclion speeds. poorer
resolution through a TV monitor and
a lack of abilily lo do anylhing but
surf."
Whalever Jhe view, lhe WebTV
'wiil be a ,tesl of lhe marketing power of the lnlcrncl.
And there's room for growth.
is varied. •
Compared 10 lite 98 pencent of
Zenilh Eleclronics and Milsubishi
U.S. homes lhat have a 1elcvision set, Electric are creating sels lhat are
only 35 percent of all U.S. house- readlo connecllo 1he Nel with a sin·
holds have a PC, according to a gle cord. Price is expected to range
recem survey by Forrester Research from $995 for lhe Zenilh mQdel,
in Cambridge. Mass.
which will be available in early
Amere 'IOpercenl "lo 12percentof 1997, lo $2,500 for lhe Mitsubishi,
those consumers - an cslimated 5 expccled in slores next summer.
million 10 10 millionhouseholdsGame companies such as Sega
are somehow connec1ed 10 Ihe Imer· and Nintendo are adding Net capa·
bilily 10 their machines to allow play·
ne I.
n the eyes of the consumer elec· ers from around 1he world to com·
Ironies induslry, a void like 1hat can pele . Sega's Net Link is a $199
only be filled by making one appli- modem lhat lums a Sega Salum video
ance look and acl more like another. game into a ·low-coSI Web browser
"For 1he nexl few years, we'll be and e-mail outlet. The modem was
wa1ching consumer eleclronics and firs! shipped to Slares lhis monlh,
compuling come together," said Ed along with lhe PC-compalible key·
Koren man of the Electronics Indus.-· · board-adapler ($19.95) an(llhe mouse .
lry Associa1ion in Arlington, Va. ' ($24.95).
.
"You'll be able to watch a movie on . · The convergence ofTVs and PCs
a compuler and read e-mail on TV." was necessary 10 broaden lhe InlerBased on a consumer survey, lhe net audience, says Todd Chavez with
Eleclronics Jndumy Association Micron lnlemcl Services. "Up until
expeCIS nearly 20 pcn;ent of U.S. this poin1; one of lhc barriers ... has
households lo have a version of been lhc cosl of a PC," he said.
lnlemel TV in five years. The cyber
"The WebTV is relailing for a
tubes will auract consumers who fraction of Ihe cost of a dccenl home
mighl nol conncctlo lhc Interne! olh· PC. These devices will be very
erw 1se.
important because somehow the
Today, nearly a dozen co.mpanies lnlernel has In get ipto mainstream
are developing or selling some sort of households before we can cvcrexlruc
Ncl TV. Nclscape Communicalions lnlcrnct commerce to lake off."
Corp. formed a new company called
Poi informalion about WcbTV,
Navio to build its lnlcrnct browser
con1ac1
WchTV Nelworks Inc . al
.into lclcvisions, phones , Gars and oth- .
(800)
469-3288
or
v1a
cr consumer devices .
The public's choice of a Net tube hllp://www.wcblv.nct.
NBC executive checks
into Betty Ford Center
Was $6,995
'
M~gnavox .
Early reports suggesl an enthusiastic reception from people who are
looking for a simple, easy and rela·
lively inexpensive way 10 check oul
the Internet, wilhoul having to mess
with a lecologically daunling per·
sonal compuler.
,
"II used to be thai if you wanled
10 be on the lnlernet, you had to have
a wealth of knowledge of how to connee! , a basic understanding of Windows and select a provider, " said
Kevin Hurt, a com puler service manager al Ultimate Elcclronics in Boise,
so wild .:... almost too wild · I~ be Idaho. "Now people can gel on
wilhout buyin'g a computer."
true."
·
.
This is gripping (melo)drama, · · The Web TV -1he first in a siring
complele with shadowy , figures, · of Interne! TV devices cxpccltd in
hang-up phone calls at midnighl, mistresses, tainted evidence, a possessive
mother and gunshots in the night.
The narra1ivc. loa, is fascinaling:
It unfolds in an intricate manner
while revisiting June 17, 1959, the
night of Reeves' death , several dif·
LOS ANGELES (AP) - An NBC
fcrent limes from differing perspcc· executive who is a longlime friend of
lives. The aulhors' ability 10 shift lhe
OJ. Simpson has checked himself
lens lends credence 10 their ultimale
into 1he Beuy Ford Center for subcharge of murder.
stance abuse treatmenl, lhc network
''I really believe our conclusion,"
Schoenberger says. "You couldn'l said.
Don Ohlmeyer, president of NBC
lll.,ke lhis to court because there are no
West Coast; :'voluntarily admiued
li~Qtg wilnesses and lhe forensic
himself for treaunenl," an NBC statema(erial was so incomplele 10 begin men! said Thursday. The network
wilh. Bul we lried to make lhe most
called il a personal · decision by
compelling circumstantial case that
Ohlmeyer, 51.
we could."
·
The announcement did not dis-
Coach J1?0fand Leather ln1erior
NOW
KATY ROBINSON
The Idaho Statesman
;'
Signalure Series, Beige with
l
•
By
tr:·:r reasuretrove of movie
~:·lore headed for auction
block later this month
1993 Ford Musu.ng
· Domestic .violence shelter wins funding
. By TED ANTHONY
AP National Writer
NEW YORK- He could change
lhe course of mighty rivers and bend
steel in his bare hands. Disguised as
actor George Reeves, Superman lhe 1950s incarnation -proved both
sad and sadly mortal.
Reeves died in 1959 of a gunshol
wound to the head, a demise lhal
went down in Hollywood's annals as
self-inflicted. He'd been depressed at
being typecast, convenlional wis, dom went. A husband-wife inves-'
tigalive reporting learn have dug into .
old· files arid old jealousies and
uneartl\ed a different slory. ·
."Hollywood Kryptonite: The
Bulldog, The Lady and The Death of
•
I Superman," by Sam Kashner and
• Nancy Schoenberger, implies lhal
Reeves was the viclim of Eddie and
'•' Toni
Eddie was a hood
•; turnedMannix.
Hollywood studio enforcer;
Toni, his wife, was having an affair
· with lhe erstwhile Man of Sleet.
, , Along the \vay, lhe book provides
' illuminating glimpses into the seamy
• side of 1950s Hollywood, into whal
: il means to porlray a hero and the
: • mindsel thai ruined many movie.
• actors who did TV work.
It had always bolhered me and
: my friends, walching lhe show end: lessly on reruns," says Kashner, 42,
who most recently co-wrole a book
•• on
Oscar Levant wilh Schoenberger.
"Here was lhis guy, Slanding up 10
: . the bad guys wilh hands on his hips,
•:
· bullets·
bouncing off his torso," Kash1 '
'
, · . ner says. ' 1To know he ·was dead and
:. , had died under a cloud was disquiel·
' . ing for kids growing up."
. a wond~rfully over·' ' · EmpIoymg
: · lhe-top · Raymorid Chandler style
: · ("She was a handsome' woman wilh
: ·• a brooch where her heart should have
been"), the couple has uncovered
:· enough informalion to make Lois
t Lane proud.
'
•
"We wanled lo wrile aboul a pure
•· product of American culture; and we
, wanted 10 make it an homage to the
hardboiled deteclive genre," says
;.• Schoenberger, 45. "But they were all
, straighl out of Central Casling any~ · 'Way. The characlers in the story are
..
Cruise, Cassette
SO MAYBE WE
TOo~ THE lESnNG
OFTHE 90 PlUS" liAS
New book tackles
mystery behind TV
Superman's death
i ' ...
2 Dr, Only 2,600 Low Miles .
Factory "Brass Hat" car,
Television, PC capabilities merging
for new road to info superhighway
mortal
,
1
•
1996 Chev Ext Cab 4x4 Plck·llp
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
All too
-
1
I
Bund.y, December 1,1998
Sunday, December 8, 1998
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea18nt, WV
I
See Puizle On Page D-2
treatmenl for alcoholism and could be
at the ccnlcr for about a monlh.
·"We comt)lend Don for laking lhis
action and support him in this dcci '
sian," said Bob Wright, NBC presidenl and chief c.cculive. "Don is an
invaluable leader and we all have the
highcsl regard and respecl for him.
We look forward lo .having him back
as soon as possible."
He was an oUispoken cri1ic of the
media, including his own network,
over. their coverage of Simpson's
close the nature of the lrealment, bu1 crimina!' trial, expressing confidence
a source speaking on condition of !hal Simpson hadn 'l killed anyone
anonymity said he was undergoing
Eveready
Energizer
Batteries Long·
life alkaline
b3tteries. Choose '
2-pack of D or C
size. or single 9
volt. (8304-) AA
or AAA Size, 4P~
200 Light Value Fac~ Two I00
light sels wilh extm brighl bulbs in
multi-colored or clear. End-to-end
connectors. Lamp lock. Comes with ten
"'''"bulbs. (5828-546, 553)
�~
::
Ohio/W.Va.
I
Is this
criminal?
G. andmother
battles charges
for re-feedlng
parking meters
CINCINNATI (AP) - A judge
has put off ruling on whether to throw
out a policeman's testimony against
' a woman arrested for putting money
u on other people's parking meters.
~
The prosecution's case against
• Sylvia Stayton, a grandmother of I0
who has become a national celebrity
because of the case, rests on the officer's testimony about the Oct. 24
Slll:St.
.
:, Officer Edward Johnson arrested
l Mrs. Stayton, 63, after seeing her put
• a nickel into one parking meter and
~ a dime into another. She was handt cuffed and taken to jail, where her
family had to post 10 percent of her
$I ,900 bond.
'
. Defense auorney David Scact cheui argued Fric!ay that Johnson had
t 'no right to initiate any contact with
• Mrs. Stayton because there was no
•' reasonable suspicion she was doing
t anything criminal.
·
I· "He just made a mistake." Scaccheui said. "Based on that mistake
evidence of contact (with her) after~
•
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t
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t
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r Ill gorilla recovering at Columbus zoo
., COLUMBUS- An infant gorilla that needs a surrogate family is a
,
:
:
guest at the Columbus Zoo.
_ Akanyi, a male western lowland gorilla, is recovering from an infectton. He was born Sept. ~ at the Brookfield Zoo in Chicago and became
iJI within a few days.
He was not returned to his mother after receiving medical treatment
because he was still to sick for her to handle, said Or. Tom Meehan, head
1 of Brookfield's Depanment of Animal Health.
t
Brookfield sent Akanyi to Columbus because he must be reintroduced
: into a gorilla family. He arrived Monday and is not on public exhibit.
•
·:In Columbus, we've had a great deal of suc~ess taking gorillas and
getung them retntroduced mto a family of gorillas at a fairly young age ..
· said Jerry Borin, executive director of the Columbus Zoo.
'
_ The process could take about 10 months.
·
Borin said Akanyi is undersized but is alen and eating well. The infec'
1
tion is aone.
·
n t
f • ~·
I
'
t
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. COLUMBUS (AP)- A woman
who allegedly refused to leave a
downtown state office tower arid
.struggled with officers on Friday .was
arrested on four charges, the State
Highway Patrol said.
Debra Riley, 32, of Columbus,
told troopers she had gone to the
headquaners of the Ohio Bureau of
Workers' Co.nipensation to collect a
personal debt from an employee,
patrol spokesman Sgt. John Born
said. She allegedly made threats
agaiitsi the -employee.
r'S TO mB~t.8S 8TTeS In rTaU
"She was very irate and causing
COLUMBUS -Tile State Highway Patrol arrested a nonheast Ohio
a scene in the lobby," Bom said.
man Friday in its investigation of allegedly fraudulent !elephone solici· Ms. Riley was stopped at a lobby
tallons.
·
•:
checkpoint- that was instituted last
Peopl~ claiming to be affiliated with the patrol have solicited money.
month after a man upset about a
from busmesses and mdtvtduals, patrol spokesman Sgt. John Born said.
workers' compensation claim
The telephone callers claim that the money will be used for publications
allegedly held three people hostage
or to help children in hospitals.
on the 12th floor of the building. No
• Friday's arrest is the first in the )!tvestigation.
one was injured in the seven-hour
Richard A. Grant, 37, of Massillon, was charged with two felony counts · standoff on Nov. 13.
'
of forgery, Born said. He was taken to the Stark Cqunty jail in ~anton .
Five troopers also are temporariGrant is_accused of soliciting an undetermined amount of money from
ly posted at the building as part of the
bus messes m·Mass1llon, Canton and other northea.'\1 Ohio cities; Born said.
increased security.
Grant said the mo~ey wo~Jd be used for a book, "The Ohio Troopers Drug
Ms. Riley was charged with
and Alcohol Pubhcallon, ' but the book does not extSt, Born satd. ·
assaulting a police officer, a felony,
Grant fraudulently claimed he was affiliated with the patrol or a
and aggravated trespassing, disorderly conduct and failure to comply
statewide troopers" organization, the Ohio Troopers Coalition, Born said.
Troopers searched Grant's home on Friday and recovered hundreds of
wtth a lawful order, all misdecarbon copies of receipts for -donations, Born said. Investigators had not
mca~ors, Born said. She was taken to
yet dctennmed how much money Grant had received.
.
the Franklin County jail:
t
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,
1
l
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ir
.,
d
probe
A II'
Hemp•ed
pol"sonl"ng go
· es to court
' .
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1
ELYRIA -
A man accused of poisoning a co-worker's coffee has
pl~ded guilty in Lorain County Common Pleas Court to attempted fclo-
ntous assault.
Ed Ault, 46, of Wellington. could be sentenced to as much as 10 years
in prison. He entered the plea Friday before Common Pleas Judge Kosrna J. Glavas.
Ault denied he tried to hurt Dan Wirth, 41, of Elyria. Defense attarney Ken Lieu• said Ault realized prosecutors had a strong circumstantial
1 case against him.
;
Assistant Prosecutor Lisa Locke Graves said the poison was
1 dichlorobenU>nc, which is found in pesticides, herbicides and flea baths.
, For three weeks, Ault would secretly wring the chemical from a'Cioth into
Winh's coffee, she said.
Graves could not say what Au It's motivation might have been.
•
Wirth, who has worked at LTV Steel Tubular Products Co. for 23 years.
l also had no explanation. He said the two w9rked amicably together for
~ ~-
!
f
1
Winh would not discuss how the chemical affected him.
Graves said the company 11rcd Ault, but he filed a union grievance.
·
-The Associated Press
'--------------------..;_.;.;~;,J
.~Ohio, W.Va. lottery picks
i By The Associated Press
The .following numbers were
: selected in Friday's Ohio and West
1
: Virginia lotteries:
omo
Pick 3: 3-4-3
Pick 4: 3-5-2-S
BuckeyeS: 4-15-16-26-31
'Three tickets, including two sold
: at the Sjlllle Store, matched all five
numbers drawn in Friday's Buckeye
' S drawing. the Ohio Lottery said.
• Each ticket is worth $I 00,000.
. l'wo of the winning tickets were
, sold at Dairy Deli in Parma and the
-, other was sold at Rick's Beveragtsin
'. Columbus. the louery said. Sal~s for
i the Buckeye S game totaled
' $407,941.
J. Tltere .were 163 tickets with folfr
·l of the numhm for a $250 prize:, 111e
i 4,848 tickets with throe of•the num: bers are worth $10 each.
t 111e louery wm pay $473,130 to
I winners in Friday's Pick 3 Numben
ldaily pme. Sales for the game
totaled $1,606.138.
·
1n the other daity pmc, Pick 4
Numhm playen w.,~ $-4(!0,150
1
t
laad wiU .,_, S~53.JOO:
• The jackpot for Satwday's Super ·;
drawing was $4 million.
•
•
·iLolto
•
after incident
at BWC Iobby
,
.
Born said troopers became suspicious when, upon reaching the checkpoint. Ms. Riley asked to leave her
coat in a s~ction of the lobby thaf is
closed to the public.
"Obviously the trooper became
suspicious that she might have something in her coat," Born said. Nothing was found in the coat.
Ms. Riley refused to leave the
huilding after threatening to assault
the bureau employ~. Born sajd. She
·scratched a trooper.on the hand a.• the .
trooper tried to arrest her. he said.
She handcuffed and taken to a
room but slipped out of the restraint
and tried to assault the trooper again
as officers tried to restraint ·her Born
s~d.
'
The name of the trooper "and the
bureau employee who allegedly was
threatened were not immediately
available.
said such a system would help case
workers slice the amoynt of time
spent on paperwork enabling more
time to meet with families. On the
county level, Meek said some of the
forms are computerized . but said
more computers would be helpful.
"However, I cenainly don' t think
that's the panacea for public children
services/' she said .
The impact of one new program
that doesn't show up in the statistics
is the Family Stability incentive Program administered by .the state's
department of Mental Health. Meek
said. Meek said the progr3!11 which
features a team approach between
children services, the county mental
health system' and other agencies
involved in removing children from
homes has been a " new and positive
improvement" to the stability of·the
iargetcd families.
Meek said the public doesn't get
the whole picture behind scnil incidents this year which focused atten·
tion on the agency. "You can't defend
yourself in a system bound by confidentiality. And that is how it"s setup,"
she said.
Proponents believe Underground
Railroad museum could be profitable
CINCINNATI (AP) - A pro- -.nd Hamilton County complete rec- of h0111es and buildings where slaves
posed National Underground Rail- ommendations for riverfront devel- could hide while escaping northward
to the free states before the Civil War.
road Freedom Center would cost opment early next year.
Site availability would depend on Supporters say that makes the city an
about $70 million to build and could
attract at least I million visitors per locations chosen for two new sporls appropriate location for the museum.
They have proposed interactive
stadiums.
·
year, officials said.
and other vi~ual tools for
computers
"We'd be happy with most any of
A feasibility report also recommends a $10 million -endowment and . those spots along the river," Rigaud the museum. hoping to make it
aurnctivc to younger visitors.
annual operating costs of $3 million said.
The report leaves no doubt in the . . Although the final feasibility
to $4 mi Ilion per year, said Ed
minds of backers that the center is a . report is not c•pected until mid-J,anRigaud, the center's director.
"We are absolutely committed to feasible project that can be sclf-silp· uary. Rigaud said planners believe the
museum would draw about 400,000
not operating at a deficit," Rigaud paning, he said.
annually
for the ·base ·museum
Cincinnati
wa!i
a
prominent
stop
Friday.
·
·
said
exhibits
and
about 600,000 more for
The capital cost figures. do not on the Underground Railroad, a series
special
attractions
and events.
include land acquisition. Planners
hope to garner a prime riverfront site,
but will not know specifics until planners hired by the city' of Cincinnati
CRRISTMAS AUCTION
·-----·
I
I
I
LOSE :: 10 LIS.
IN 3 DAYS
Al-rol c.". 21101 ·
With Ch"'""um Plcollnlla
.202 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport, Oh,
Phone 949-2192
.
'
I
TIME: 6:00P.M. DEC. 9, 1996
1 •imNr.Ucv 1
•
----Our 92nd Anniversary·
o.tllpollo, OH
,.~~================================================~;~
Gift to Yon. .
:'
..
==C=as=·h=2=5=:=4=-8=·=11=·=12=·~1~=·~19=============!:!!==;~
ROBERT M~, HOLLEY, M.D.
PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL
is an 18-Month CD!
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
2511 & 'lfFIUOI AIIIUI
POIIT Plllll.JIII
(304) 671•1675
~======:::;;;:;;;;.::::;::;;:::=.======;;;
. B.orn Dec. 4, 1996, he was the infant son ofllmothy K. and Patricia Hali
Htglioy.
·
~: Surviving in addition to his parents ;ue two brothers, Joshua Ryan Hall·
,·' aoo Dylan Alexander Htgley, both of t~e home; a sisler. Hannah Elizabeth
Htgley, of the home; maternal graooparents, Keith and Carol Hall of Oak
RUTLAND - A Rutland man
~· Hill; and J)aternal _grandparents, Denver and Betty "Higley of Gallipolis.
was injured in a: one-car accident ear•.
Gravestde serv1ces ~ere held at I :30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 5, 1996 in the · ly Saturday .on County Road 16
.. C._M. Cemetery. Arrangements were by the Kuhner-Lewis Funeral Home Oak (Beech· Grove), the Gallia-Meigs
Htll.
'
'
Post of the State Highway Patrol
'
re~~td w. Simpkins, 40, 140 N.
: ·Ray·L.
Jacobs
wV:
·
Mll..TON
·-" ·
.
: ·. a. - Rar Lloyd Jacobs, 69, Milton, died Friday, Dec. 6,
1996 m the M\liTIS Memonal Convalescent and Nursing Home Milton folc lowing a brief illness.
.
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.,
Born May '1:1, 1927 in Huntington, W.Va., son of the late H~rshel R. aoo
'• Anna M. Vickers Jacobs, he was a retired blacksmith and a retired employ, . ee of BASF-Wyandotte, Huntington. He was a U.S. Army veteran of World
" War II.
.
·
.
Surviving are two daughters, Elizabeth Nickels of Pomeroy, and Donna
_Nonhup of Mason, W.Va.; two sons, Ray L.Jacobs Jr. of Pickerington , and
, S~ven D. Jacob~ of Sugar Grove; 1l grandchildren and seven great-grand' children; three ststers, Opal Fletcher and Phyllis Glenn, both of Milton, arid
' Betty Evans of Huntington; and two brothers, Hershel R. Jacobs of Col urn•· bus, and Charles Nelson of Hurricane, WVa.
,
'"
Serv1ces ~til be ~I a.m. ~o~day in the H~ck Fu~eral Home, Milton, with
the Rev. Ju~10r S~tth o_ffictaun~. Bunal wtll be. to the Gravel f:lill Cemetery, Cheshtre.'Fnends may call at the funeral home from 5-8 p.m. Sunday.
·
·
Sh, oney's foun·der· Alex
nb&Um .d· l·es'at _8-1
__SChOe-
Main St., W!IS ti-ansponed to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Meigs
EMS, troopers said. Furthtr infor-
::;,~~~at~~ hospital Wti ":'"vail-
1
~ -
-~~
Troopers said · Simpkins was
southbound, 1.5 miles nonh of State
Route 124 in R~tland Township at
12:20 a.m. when he failed to navigate
a curve. His car went off the right
side of ·the road and struck a ditch,
according to the report.
The car was moderately damaged.
Simpkins was cited for driving under
the influence, driving under suspension, failure to control and no seatbelt.
_
·
The patrol reponed that a Centervilleyouthwasinjuredinaone-vehicle accident Friday on Gallia Coun-
-171-J
,. ...-1.Jr1ll
tyRoad43(GreenvalleyDri~•>·
Zackary B. Ruff, 16, refused treat-
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ment at the scene, lfl'Opers said.
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) -Alex Schoenbaull!, whose restaurant empire
Ruff was eastbound, JOfeetsouth
, spreads _throughout the South and M_idwest, died Friday of lung disease and of Springfield Township Ro11d 461
,,. heart fatlure. He was 81.
(Hemlock) at 8 p.m. when he
,.
S.choenbeum, who founded Shoney'• restaurants more than four decades attempted t!). slow down the pickup
, , ago, resided in Sarasota, Fla. during the winter months. He was born and truck he drove and the brakes f~led .
, raised in Charleston, W. Va.
The pickup then struck a ditch,
,
He died at Sarasota Memorial Hospital, a hospital spokeswoman said,
according to the repon. 111e ~ehicle '
,:
Schoenbeum and his wife, Betty, have given millions of dollars to Ohio was moderately damaged.
., State and West Virginia universities, to synagogues in Charleston and SaraIn another accident investigated
sota, Fla., and to the Salvation Army.
Friday, the patrol cited Jo Anne
,,
Schoenbaurn's $10,000 Parkeltc drive-in restaurant on Kanawha Boule- Johnso·n, 43,'4623 SR 160, Bidwell,
:".yard, in Charleston, W.Va., is now long gone. It became the first Shoney's for failure to yield following a c~ash ·
,. tn I95 I. ·
·
·
on County Road 35 (Jackson Pike) in
.: ~ Gallia County court news
their~;:rs~~~)o~~~npulledfrom
a private driveway, one-tenth of a
Common Pleas
W.Va., charged with DUI. was fined mile east of Magnolia Drive, at 6;40
GALLIPOLIS - The following . $450, three days jail, one year pro- · p.m.and crossed Jackson Pike in a
southbound direction.
actiO~s were recently filed. in the Galbation and 180 days license suspenHet car was struck by another car
lia County Common Pleas Coun:
sion; open container, $100.
driven by Bonnie L. Stevens, 61, I 14
~
DivOf!'e filed - Raymond A.
John E. O'Dell_, 30, Springfield,
Honyesuckle Drive, . Cheshire, that
f Wheeler, 1530 Kemper Holklw charged with DUI, was fined $450,
; Road, Gallipolis, from Rachel three clays jail, .one year probation, was eastbound on Jackson Pike,
according to the report. .
" Wheeler, 520 Jackson Pike, Gallipo- 180 days license suspension: charged
Both cars were moderately damlis; Lisa L. Gilmore, Gallip9ijs, fro!JI with left of center, he was fined $25. · aged.
Larry L. Gilmore, Cheshire.
The following bench warrants
. The annual Christmas
11
Troopers also cited Jeremy M.
:
Mun.lclpal
have been issued for those failing to
parade through downtown GaJ..
Euton, I 7, 87 York Drive, Gallipolis,
Jlpolls, co-aponsored by the
•
GALLIPOLIS - The following llppear at recerit show-cause hearings:
for assured clear distance in a two-car · Gallipolis Retail Merchants
~ actions were recently resolved in the
Charles McGuire, Shawn McCaraccident Thursday on SR 160 near
Aesoclatlon and the Gallipolis
Gallipolis Municipal Coun:
. iy," Hazel Boston, Rosa McGhee,
Gallipolis. .
.
Kiwanis Club, drew nearly 80
-.. , Dennis Mitchell, 22. Bidwell, Charles Lintz, George Kelley, Billy l
According to the repon, Euton
unlta
and a healthy•slzed
charged with assault, was fined$ I50, - Row!Tian, Forrest Russell II, James
was nonhbound at 3:48p.m. when he
crowd to the city Saturday.
one year probation and I 20 hours Jones, Roger McPherson, Vicki Mellwas t>Oablc to stop in time and struck
Among the parade participants
community service.
wraith. Sieven James; Belinda the rear of.a car driven by Anthony
-.1996
Gallla County Junior
Kathryn Mooney, 38, I 1.9 Founh Meeks, Jennifer Truance, Rebecca W. Rcmy. 35. I605 SR I60, GallipoFair Quean Amy Toler, ·a ccom·
Ave., Gallipolis, charged with disor- Jones, JCff Moss, Amy Cottrell and lis.
panted by _two young frtends
derly conduct, was fined "$ 100.
Nathaniel Johnson.
· Rcmy had stopped for a vehicle
(top photo), and a holiday·
Randy D. Randolph, 19, Leon,
· Probate-Juvenile
ahead that wa.< making a left turn into
·!harned float populated by the
W.Va., charged with disorderly conGALLIPOLIS - The following a private ~rivcway, lroopcrs said.
All My Children 4-H Club (mldduct. was fined $150, one year pro- couples recently filed for marriage Damage to the car Euton drove was
l!la photo). A visitor to the
bation and 80 hours community scr- li_censes in Gallia County Probate- moderate und slight to the Rcmy
parade Was U.S. Rep.-elect Ted
vice .
Juvenile Co~rt:
Strickland, right, who was cer·
vehicle.
·
Marcus E. Click, 18, Leon, W.Va.,
-Della Leola Peck, Gallipolis. and
emonlously sworn In as concharged with underage alcohol con- Billy Gene B.edwcll . Dugger, Ind .;
gressman In the city park fol·
sumption. was fined $I 50, one year Cynthia Diane Duty and Troy Painter suffocates
lowing the parade. (T-S photos
by Jill Williams) ·
·
probation and 80 hours community Dwayne Carpenter, hoth of Gallipolis; Judi Ann Siders and William accidentally on job
service.
Dennis L.
Marcum.
44, Michael Harvey, both of Gallipolis;
MIDDLETOWN CAP) · - A
Wilkesville, charged with driving Rochelle Dawn Browning, Bidwell, painter was suffocated when part of
under the influence, was fined $450. and Jeffery l..cc Finley. Gallipolis; his safety harness became tangled in
_three days jail, one year probation Amanda Brooke Phillips. Gallipolis, a screw conveyor at AKStcel Corp.'s
and 180 days license suspension.
and Joseph Eugene Higgs, Point Middletown Works, the Butler CounDavid J. Beegle, 34, Sandyville, Pleasant. W.Va.
ty coroner has ruled.
The death Thursday of Richard
Felton, a contracted employee at the
plant, was the ninth worker fatality at
WILBERFORCE CAP) _ The
the steel mill since April 1994.
The coroner, Dr. Richard financial problems and future ol
Burkhardt, said l'riday that an autop- Central State University sO<m will
sy revealed Felton suffocated when a .. enter a new arena when they land
tag line from the harness become tan- squarely in the laps of stale lawmakglcd·in tile conveyor, which drew in crs and budget ollicials.
the line .and pulled the harness around
Gov. George Voinovich has said
Felton 'sncck so he could not breathe. he will include~ plan to case the cash
The official cause of the death was crisis at the hi storicall y black school
listed as traumatic asphy•iation, in his budget for fiscal 1997-98,
Burkhardt said.
~hich hegins July I.
Felton, 40, of Middletown, was
Greg Browning, the state's top
standing on a stepladder. under an . budget officer, said Cen tral State is
open shelter where the conveyor had facing an "$11.5 million prohlcm ."
been operating. Burkhardt said. He
"What would it take to halancc
had been working alone when the the books'' On the operating siilc it
accident occurred.
would take $10 million and a forgiveness of thC' stale loan tolaling
$I .5 million," Browning said recent- .
ly.
He said the university will need
,~·-.'1;:·· -11. ~,.
POMEROY- Units of the Meigs more state aid long hcforc the current
County Emergency Me11ical Service budget year ends in July.
·
r
·
answered six calls for assislance Fri- · :·we will have to come back in
'
day. Units responding included:
January and have a very deliberative
MIDDLEPORT
discussion about what needs to hap6:38 p.m., volunteer fire depart.ment and squad to _Bradbury Road
and State Route 7, motor vehicle
accident, no injuries reponed. ,
.
POMEROY
3:25 a.m .. SR 143, Alice Chapman, treated at lhe scene;
_3:08p.m., Johnson ,Road, Gloria
Wolfe, Holzer Medical Center.
RUTLAND
3:19 p.m., SR 143, Lee Bing.
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
5:26 p.m., volunteer fire department and squad to Leading Creek
Road, gti leak, Columbia Gas noti- ·
· HOLIDAY CHI!I!R -Against the Olllpolll City P1rk bMdltancl
fied;
decad out In· ~olldly trimmings, Donna Blndere 1111'111 a Christ·
6:46 p.m., RocksprinJS Rehabilimatllhlnild tune prior to the lighting of the Ohrlstmaa trae In tilt
tation
Center, Rbeda Bing, O'Bieness
446-2206
plrk Frldly, one of • number of llctlvltles In !he • • this
Hospital.
·
Memorial
end.
.
r
Fa
Farmers
Bank
&,Sovlngs Company 211WSII:orw;llhlt
, ,0 .10118
~.CIU51tl0
-~D.i .C.
Meigs EMS runs
,,
·.
fnli(e ...
'\bur
TO ICCOUODIU IHOSE WOIIIHI NOPU,
WE liE OPEl 'TIL 7 P.M. 01 tUESDAYS
WHEELB~BURG -.Senjamen Tyler Higley, newborn, of 1863 Hay·
State beginning to assess
Central State financial needs
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 2-0-4
Daily 4: 2-3-9-4
FAMILY PUCnCE
_,
.. port Road. Wheelersburg, dted Wednesday, Dec. 4, 1996 in Huntington, W Va
l
Not Responsible for Accidents
448 8820.
Benjamen Tyler Higley
One-car
accident
injures
area man
i
JIM REEDY, AUCTIONEER
.
LICENSED & BONDED BY STATE OF OHIO .
MONEYIACIC IWAIIANrEE
Pomeroy • Middleport • O.Hipolls, OH • Point Pleasant, wv
.Sunday, December a, 1996
Ohio's foster care placement
rate triples over 5-year period
ple•ity of cases that Washington
By AARON MARSHALL
County
Children Services deals with,
Gannett News Service
said
the
agency's Protective SerCOLUMBUS- While reports of
vices
Unit
manager, Anita Meek.
child abuse have leveled off recent·
"In
general,
cases are getting
Jy in Ol)io, a new hig~ of 3 I,000 kids .
were placed in home care in 1995, much more complex ... it's not just
according to a fact book released by simple neglect but a number of difthe Public Children Services Associ- ferent issues in different areas." she
said.
·
ation of Ohio.
The
repon
also
showed
that
the
While the 30,863 children placed
in foster care in Ohio in 1995 is more state of Ohio contributed only 9 per. . than 3,000 more than 1991, it repre- cent of the total cost of child protecsents a near -tripling from the I987 tion, a lower percentage than any
_level of 11.500, said the association's state other than Mississippi.
The report showed that 105,910
executive director Dan Schneider at
-a Columbus news conference on Fri- reports of child abuse and neglect
~ay. •
were reported in I995, roughly the
"Tile number of kids coming in _same amount of incidepts as reporthas far e•ceeded our placement rate," ed in the three previous years.
Locally, . the trend was sharply
said Schneider. "We can't recruit fosdown
as repons of child abuse dipped
ter parents fast enougli to keep up
to 703 from the over 900 reponed in
with demands," he said.
The report, which included coun- · 1994. However, Meek said that is not
. GOOD DEED BACKFIRES - Sylvia Stayton left 1he Hamlhon
ty by county breakdowns, showed in · significent. "It's a change in how we
County Courthouse Friday with two of her granddaughters, EUz·
Washington County an appreciable screened our calls. It's not a signifiabelh,.10, and Aimee Pickens, 14, right, after a hearing to auprise in the number ren placed in out ccnt decrease oincreasc," she said.
preaa evldance. Stayton Is charged with disorderly conduct and
of home care rising from 50 to 62
Among the recommendations
obatrucUng official business for feeding a parking meter for othbetween 1991 and 1995.
·
offered by the association in the
er peopla as she walked down a Cincinnati street Oct. 24. (AP)
Along with the rise in the number repon is one for a statewide computhas been a rise in the com- erized information system. Schneider
of
cases
workers from . hogging storefront
ward needs to be suppressed."
Mrs. Stayton was accused of vio- spaces.
'She was charged with disorderly
lating an obscure 1958 ordinance
against. re-fecding expired merers, conduot and obstructing official busiwhich is designed to keep office ness , both misdemeanors.
hio News in Brief:---. woman held
!
December •• , ...
6141f92.2U6
.I,
pen. " Browning said.
State Auditor Jim Petro st~id he ·
h~pcs to complete an ~1udit of the
mcnts hy early next" year.
''The General Asscmhly will
he gin looking at the huJgct in midFchruary ... Petro said. ""And the
General Asscmhly is going to he rcul
upset if we don't have audited financial statements fi" 1996."
Central State is one of the nalion 's
34 public, four-year historically hluck
colleges and universities. Ahout
2,000 students attend the school,
which is in Wilberforce. ahout 15
mile s ·cat-il of Dayton .
Central State grew out of Wilber:
force University. a private hlack college just across the highway.
In I ~~7, the state li>Unde<l the
Combined Normal and Industrial
Department 31 Wilbcrt<>rcc. The university cut the dcpanmcnt loose in
1947, hui it contmued to ~ci state
funding .
·
SHOES
THAT FIT CORRECTlY?
CALL
TROUBLE
THE MEDICAL SHOPPE
-k·
.
POMEROY
Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
. 992·2588
VINTON
Gallla County Display Yard
155 Main St. ·
388-8603
school's li s~.:al 1996 llnanci ul stutc ~
1·800·445·2206
I...----~-------,
LIGHT A CANDLE I
1 FOR CHRISTMAS l
II Ohio Valley Memo,Y Gardens II ·
announces our 3rd annual Christmas
observance dedicated to the memory I
I ol our loved ones w«h a candle
I
1 placed on their grave on December B 1.
a rain date of December 15.
I
I Please come by Ohio Valley Memory I
I Gardens or fill out tho form below and I
I send to us with your donation for the I
I candle. All donatio~s rece,i ved will be I
I given to local charities.
I
I
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I
I
<;. 9>1-,0f
I.
I
Name or f!ecee•"'
I
I
I
I
Dale or Death
I
I
I
I
Dott1tet1 11y
I
1 with
I
I
I
I
I
Arldl<ll
Pbcme
Make checkS payable to Olllo
I Valley Memory Gardens
1 Candleltahting.
I OHIO VALLEY
I1 t-229
MEMORY GARDENS
Neighborhood Rd.
I Gal&polis, Obio ~5631
L_-!'.!.4) 446-9228
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�•
AccuWellhcr• forecast for
MICH.
• IColumbus las• I
••
•
•
,.
•
•
W.VA.
•
••
••
•• • ••
POMEROY - The Morgan's significant to Meigs County's role in
Raid/Battle of Buffington Island the Civil War.
Buildings featured on the coverlet
commemorative coverlets commis·
sioned earlier this fall by the Meigs include:
• The mill at Langsville where
County Historical Society have been
Union
soldiers were involved in the
delivered to the museum.
Those who have already pur· pursuit of Morgan as he made his
chased the SO-by-67 fringed cotton way through that area. From there
heirloom jn cranbeny and cream may Morgan's men went into the Bradbury
pick up their coverlets at the muse- area where they shot two local residents, the only private citizens of
um.
Besides those already purchased, record as having been killed by Morthe museum has I0 which have not gan's Raiders.
• The Meigs County Counhouse at
been sold. They'will be sold at $50
each on a first come, first served basis Pomeroy (copied from an actual phosaid Margaret Parker, Historical tograph of the era) as it would have
looked in 1863.
Society president.
• The log cabin, now owned by the
An additional order has been
placed but delivery is not expected Meigs County Agricultural Society
until after Christmas, according to and located on the Meigs County
·Fairgrounds.
Parker.
• The Chester mill and bridge as
The coverlet center features a
hallie scene portrayal in an oval sur- it was after being rebuilt following its
rou~_ded by buildings _!II.~ anifacts
burning when Morgan's Raiders went
••
•
through the village.
• A picture of Meigs County's first
counhouse, built in 1823 at Chester.
• The William Middleswan house
where Morgan, upOn arriving in Ponland, set up his headquaners.
• The JlllllCS Williamson house on
State Route 124, which was Uled u
a field hospital for the wounded.
Finishing out the ponrayal of the
raid and balllelii'C a gunboll, cannon,
sword, gun, bugle, drum both Confederate and Union flt~~s.
Now
Acceptin~
New Clients In All Areas of Practice
Includjn~:
•
•
Chance
of snow in area
.
~o _ increase on Sunday
.
:By The Auoclated Pre..
.
; . There is a growing chance for snow across Ohio on Sunday-and Sunday
~~
.
: -.A large area of low pressure centered over the Upper.Great Lakes on .SatLrday will move slowly east the remainder of the weekend. The circulation .
~und this low pressure will air flowing from the west over Ohio. Another '
. :weak _cold front "'ill swing into the lower Great Lakes on Sunday, and thi<
combtned wtth an upper-level disturbance movilig into the area will increas<
lhe chances for some light snow.
; Cold<r air will follow this front on Sunday and into Monday. Mu.:h of
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~ip into the middle 20s.
·
.
•
Weather forecast:
~ Sunday... Becoming cloudy with occasional light snow.. Highs 30 to 3~.
: Sunday ntght...A chance iof light snow nonh ...Occasionallight snow cenyal and.nonhwest with snow showers and squalls nonheast. Lows 20 to 25.
• Monday... Occasional snow showers and squalls' tapering to flurries n<inhl:ast. Scattered flurries elsewhere. Highs 30 to 35.
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·
Pearl Herbor survivors
recall fa.llen comrades
' l
By BRUCE DUNFORD
Asaoclated Prell Writer
PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii
Doris "Dorie" Miller became the first
black sailor I? .be awarded the NavyCross because he disobeyed orders
.during the Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor.
Ordered to save himself from the
blazing USS West Virginia on Dec. 7,
1941. the mess attendant instead
ign<ired bulle~ from allac~jng divebombers and torpedo planes to carry
his wounded commander to safety.
Then, in violation of orders prohibiting blacks from firing weapons,
Miller used an anti-aircraft ballcry to
fire at the planes.
It was one of several stories rccited Saturday by Adm. Archie
Ciemins, the Pacific Fleet commandcr, during an hour-long service at the
USS Arizona Memorial on the 55th
anniversary of the Japancse attack
that ushered the United States into
World War II.
''Through his name,' we arc
reminded that heroism and valor
transcend racial and ethnic bounds
and that, as Americans, our st~cngth
· lies in our ability to help one another in time of need." Clemins .said.
Miller, of Waco. Texas, was
awarded the Navy's highest honor
personally by Adm. Chester W
Nimitz after the attack. Two years Iater, Miller was dead, lost at sea when
the USS Liscomc Bay was torpedoed
off the Gil ben Islands. A -new Navy
housing area here now . bears• his
name.
Several hundred military officials,
survivo.rs of the ~~~a~k and members
oheterans organtzauons gathered on
the stark white memorial: which lies
over the sunken Arizona.
Flowers were dropped onto ·the
harbor's choppy water. Gusty winds
forced the cancellation of a traditional
flyo,ver by Hawaii Air National
Guard planes.
The attack sank 21 Navy ships,
destroyed 185 military planes and
killed 2,290 military personnel at
bases throughout Hawaii, along with
48 civilians. Japan lost 29 planes and
five midget submarines.
The greatest toll was on the 'Arizona, where 1,177 crewmenibers
were killed. Ten survivors of the
auack have been interred in the Arizona since 1988, joining- about 900
crew members entombed in the
sunken hulk.
In Boston, John Handley Jr., 83,
was awarded the Navy Commendation Medal on Saturday for leading
10 to 12 men aboard the USS Wasp
to safety after it was bombed off the
coast of Japan in 1945. Eighty-seven
men were killed and 200 wounded.
"What it boils down to ·is the fact
that I'm a lucky guy;" Handley said.
"I'm still around ... and I hope that
some of the guys who were trapped
and got out arc still around, too."
·Cleveland veteran .makes
trek to Hawaiian battle site
I
CLEVELAND (AP)- Fifty-five
years ago, when Japan launched a
surprise attack on the huge U.S. Navy
base at Hawaii's Pearl Harbor, hundreds of Marines lay unprotected on
the ground, firing bolt-action rines at
low-flying planes armed with
· machine guns.
"Nobody thought of cover," said
Clarence Eland, then a young Marine
who was firing with the rest. "You .
didn't givea damn:·
..
The attaCk began at8 a.m. on Dec.
7, 1941. In less than two hours, the
Japanese had killed 2,338 military
personnel and civilians, and crippled
· the Navy's Pacific Fleet.
Eland, 76, of Bedford, was back in
Hawaii on Saturday to mark the
anniversary of the attack. He is secretary ef the Pearl Harbor Survivors
Association, Lake Erie Chapter 6,
and the only member to make the trip
this year. . ·
Although it occurred long ago;
Eland remembers the attaCk vividly.
Whea the bombing started, be and his
fellow Marines broke into their
ammunition lockers. grabbed bandoliers of conridges and opened lire.
"It was shoot. shool, shoot.''
Eland said. "Everyone had a ~inc and
. everyone was shooting and cuKsing ~".
Only a lew moments earlier, Eland
had been sitting on a curb. hoping to
avoid a tough first sergeant who
might put him to work .
As he and o buddy sat there. the
two Marines could se.: planes diving
on Baulcship Row. where the big
ships were riding at anchor. They
thought it was the N:avy 's ' divebombing practice.
They knew they were wrong,when
the explosions started.
Two years earlier, Eland had
dropped out of John Adams High
School and joined the Marines at 19.
By sp<ing of 1940. he was with the
3rd Defense Battalion, responsible
for coastal anillery' and anti-aircraft
weapons.
The national surviv,OI'S association
commemorates the Pearl Harbor
anack every five years in Hawaii.
Eland's first trip was in I~8 I.
I'
•
.
•
~~elivers
LAST IN LINE- Plaln11ff's attorney Daniel Petrocelli, left, end
Fred Gok11111n, fllthar of slain Ron Goldman, left Los Angelita
County Superior Court Frldly. Fred Goldman will testily as the
final whneee for the .plaintiffs Monday In the wrongful death suit
agaln,s t O.J. Simpson. (API
: Attorney Rohen Baker suggested
'"He was angry,' she said. "I
$he had dropped the word '"No" to looked back at one time. He had
omit Simpson's denial that he killed Justin on his lap and he was very
his ex-wife.
angry."
: . In the most emotional testimony
As she spoke, Mrs. Brown glared
(>fthe civil wrongful death trial, Mrs. across the counroom at Simpson, ·
jlrown frequently burst into tears and who occasionally shook his head at
wiped her eyes with tissues. In the her descriptions.
audience, her husband . Lou and
She was asked if Simpson ever
~~aughter Denise dabbed at their eyes.
laughed or iled that evening. She
I, Her testimony ended the coun ses- ·said he did n t.
~ion Fri¢1y, leaving one final witness
"He see ed nervous and angry.
,tor ·a potentially emotional finale H~ seemed .Opset," she said .
Monday- Fred Goldman, father of
When it came his turn, Baker
~onald Goldman, who was slain
showed a videotape of Simpson out)Vith Ms. Simpson June 12, 1994. ' side the recital re~civing a kiss from
'• Acquitted of murder chai'J!eS, Mrs. Brown and laughing with his
,Simpson is being sued by the victims' former father-in-law.
•fafllilies, who seek vindication and
"That's you there kissing OJ.?"
'jlotentially millions cif dollars in asked Baker.
~amages. '
· "Yes," said Mrs. Brown, and
, Under questioning by attorney acknowledged Simpson was laugh)olm Q. Kelly, Mrs,,Brown recalled mg.
. .
~phone co!tversation with Simpson
"And is it your testimony Simpjhree weeks before his ••·wife was son was angry?" asked Baker.
slain.
"Mr. Simpson was angry, yes, he
"He said, 'She may _not love me was very angry,:' .she said.
~lly, who represents the estate of
. imymore,' and I said, 'Well, then go
pn with .your life.' He said, 'I'll tell Ms. Simpson in the wrongful death
you, the first time when she left me ·action, also showed Mrs. Brown a
I took the blame- it was my fault. now-famous picture of Simpson with
llut "the second time, it's goi~g 'to his daughter smiling broadly after the
hun.'"
recital.
: She said site didn't speak to him
"Do you see Mr. Simpson smiling
or see him again until his daughter's_ in that photo?'.' asked Kelly.
dance recital on the day of the - "Yeah, there's a camera," Mrs.
~illings. ·
Brown said derisively. .
· ; That evening, Mrs. Brown said, · She was moved to tears when she
her fomier son-in-law was in a foul related her last moments with her
mood.
daughter, and the aftermath of the
x·
Extended forecast:
!
CAPE CANAVERAL, Aa. (AP) one little, sticky doorknob on iL We
. ter." .. •
Jackson Office: 239 Main Street
6141286-6408 or 11888·796-3779 (Toll Free)
.
shuttle mission yet ends with safe landing
·By LINDA DEUTSCH
Marshall B. Douthett and Donald A. Cox
: Vl41 Msoc,.~ Prtu G~t
Nicole's
mother
AP.Special Correspondent
SANTA MONICA, Calif: ~icole Brown Simpson's weeping
mother testified Friday that O.J .
Stmpson leaned over his ••·wife's
~offin at her wake, kissed her oo the
'ips and munnured, "I'm so ·sorry
Nicki: I'm so sorry."
'
Juditha Brown said she followed
~er former son-in-law and confront~ him: "Did you have anything to
~o with this7"
, "He sjlid, 'I loved your daughter,"' she testified.
:. On cro_ss-examination, Simpsoil's
lawyer qutcldy showed a videotape·of
Mrs. Brown in a 1994 TV interview
In which she gave the same account
~ut quoted Simpson as answering the
,uestiori: "No, I loved your daugh-
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· Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
killing.
She said the family went to Mez•
zaluna restaurant in trendy Brentwood for 'dinner, that Simpson was
not invited for the first time to such
a gathering, and she bid farewell to
her daughter as she went across the
street with her children for ice cream.
"For some reason I turned and
looked back at her. And I saw her
walking and I was thinking, 'What a
gorgeous girl with great legs.' .. . That
was the last time I saw her alive,'' she
sobbed.
On the way. home, Mrs. Brown
said, she realized sHe- had lost ~er
glasses and felt a "terrible depression"- which she feels was a premonition.
''My whole body got heavy. I've
never had it before or after. I shook
myself and I said, 'I can buy a pair
of new glasses. What 's wrong with
meT"
From home, she said, she called
her daughter and asked her to retrieve
the gi'ISSCs the next day. She said her
daughter suggested that a friend at the
restaurant could bring ·them'to her.
"And then she said. 'Good night'
and ·1 love you.' And I said, 'I love
you.' and those were the last words,"'
Mrs. Brown said weeping.
The next morning the call came
from Simpson's adult daughter,
Amelle, who was sobbing and put
Los Angeles Police Detective Tom
Lange on, the phone .
"He said, 'Your ~aughter ts
dead,'" M,rs. Brown said.
- Space shuttle Columbia and its
crew glided to a gneeful dawn landing Saturday, ending a record-long
mission of nearly 18 days that was
marred by a jammed hatch.
"One little, Sticky doorknob," a
weary commander Kenneth Cockrell
said afterward about the door problem that scuttled t\vo planned spacewalks.
Engineers will begin inspecting
the hatch early this week and should
know fairly quickly what caused it to
jam.
The last thing NASA wants, or
needs, is a stuck hatch on Atlantis'
docking mission next month with the
Russian space station Mir, where
astronaut John Blaha will need an
open hatch to leave Mir after a fourmonth visit.
Atlantis 1\as five hatches and "we
want to make sure all of tbem are
operable," shuttle program manager
Tommy Holloway said.
A jammed hatch also would. be a
nightmare and a huge embarrassment
on the Hubble Space Telescope servicing mission in February. No spacewalks would mean no Hubble repairs.
. The jammed hatch forced NASA
to cancel the spacewalks planned as
practice for space station construction. The National Aeronaqtics and
·Space Administration hopes to
squeeze some of the (ests into a shuttle flight late next year.
Among the possible culprits: .
debris or a broken gear. Regardless,
Holloway has ordered additional
checks of shuttle hatches in the
future.
The mission ended on an upbeat
note.
After low clouds and fog delayed
Columbia's homecoming two mornings in a row, the weath.ef finally
cooperated. Mission Control broke
the good news tQ the five orbi!ing
astronauts with a recording of the
Navy song "Anchors Aweigh.''
About an hour later, Columbia
swooped through a slightly hazy sky
and touched down on the noodlit ninway.
Length ofthe science mission : 17
days, I~ hours. 54 minutes and 20
seconds, 18 hours longer than the pre·
vious longest shuttle flight. Distance
traveled: 7,043,950 miles.
·
"We had a fine machine that had
didn't let that get in the way of us
feeling very accomplished over this
flight,' ' Cockrell said.
"Yes. we were quite disappointed
when we couldn 't get the. doggone
door open .... But on the other hand,
it was a rich spaceflight full of great
successes."
The successes included the release
and retrieval of an ultraviolet telescope that peered at stars and a sate I·
lite that produced semiconductor film
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and the first to ride in all live shuttles when Columbia blasted off Nov.
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A smiling. vigorous-looking Mus·
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Sunday, December 8, 1991
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point PleaSint, WV ·
I
'
~trike threat heighten.s pressure on Serbian president
I
•
•
Economic sanctions imposed after be instigated wan in Bosnia and Croa- vanovic's association also said they would be on the stm:ts Monday. .
"We will go in
of the Serbian government building," Radisa Ris: A..aoiJ I d PrMa Wrk
tia hurt badly. So has mismanagement and inefficiency. Milosevic has shown
, _BELORADE, Yugoslavia - Trade unions threatened Saturday to go on little inten:st in bn:aking up the state-run economy and privatizing the fac- tic, a vice.president of the local union, told the Nasa 'Borba newspaper. "If
stnke, escalating the three-week proteat against Serbian President Slobodan tories. Average wages ·an: often no mon: than the equivalent of $100 per no one talb to us there, and as long as our demands are not met, we plan to
protest daily in the same manner."
l Milosevic that brou&ht lSO,OOO people onto the streeta of Belgrade in the month.
Ristie said that in addition to economic demands, "we will express our
! biggest demonsti'ation so far.
.
Milosevie has tried to outlast the protests. But if workers join in an orgasupport
for students and citizens ... because our votes were stolen in the local
Leaders of two indepenilent unions said their members were letldy to strike nized fashion, be may find it hard to stay in power without cracking down
elections."
~ next week ifMilosevic did not teinstatA; the 9pposition's Nov. 17local elec- or giving in.
All sides awaited a ruling by the Serbian Supreme Court on an appeal that
In
the
past,
Serbia's
labor
movement
has
been
disinclined
to
mount
seri~ tion victories. 'They·also demanded that the aovemment ensure decent stancou,
ld n:instate the opposition's victor)"in Belgrade.
ous strikes. But some union leaders indica~ Saturday they were finding com·
: dards of living.
,
·
. It seemed likely Milosevic would try !O ~ the court to tak~ ,the s~
.
.
~
"'Their demands could potential!• be more dangerous for Milosevic than mon cause with opposition coalition.
"Workers are awan: that without a state of law no economic reform is out of the protests before the workers jomed tn. But the oppos.uon S81d ot
' ours," said Zoran Djindjic, leader : the opposition Democratic Party.
:; Individual workers have taken part in the street marches, but organized possible," Milan Nikolic, one of the leaders .of the Independents union fed· wanted to make sure their victories in other cities are returned.
In the stree~ of Belgrade, demonstrators aimed paper ~!anes and f~
eration, told the daily Nasa Borba.
I' labor has not so-far.
works
at state lV. One banner read "Better Doad than Red. Another por··
Federation officials sai.d six factories were ready to strike next Wednes:.' 'The unions' grievances over unemployment, poor living conditions and
ttayed Milosevic as a pig. Residents of the capital watched the.procession
·
~
WIIFS may be as damtiging to Milosevic as complaints about civic fre!l· day, including machinery and aluminum works.
: doms.
'
~
·
· Dragan Milovanovic, president of the Association of Free and Indepen· from their Iindows and w'ved. ,
. .
. . .
Some
120
members
of
an
independent
bus
dnvers'
umon
JOined the protest
dent
Trade
Unions,
said
it
also
planned
to
start
organiZed
·protests,
probably
~ . Many of Serbia's factories an: idle, and hundreds of thousands of workin
Belgrade
far
the
fll'St
time
Saturday,
carrying
their
flags.
·
·' ,
ij~~ are on paid leave because of lack of raw materials and other failures of on Monday. 'The association claims 600,000 members throughout Serbia.
In
Novi
Slid,
to
the
northwest,
10,000
students
protested
for
the
fifth
day.
Local officials·of a Belgrade engine and tractor factory that belong to Milo,..ilosevil:'s economy.
, By JULIJANA IIOJIILOVIC
rn;.,,
:bad
.
·}Mother .
.Teresa
Additional
cabinet vacancies still .await ·acti,on
.
.
I
Deutch was listed by many as the
Recently, Cuomo hinted that he retary, but her name cqntinues to international trade, is viewed as a
front-runner
until Thursday, wben
serious nominee, especially for the
WASHINGTON - 'Now that he might leave HUD to return to New appear on Washington tip sheCts.
As public liaison, Herman is continllity be would bring to the trou- word came from the White Hohat he
·
has filled vacancies in his national Yorlc:
might not land any cabinet job.
largel-between
for the president and bled agency. ,
Labor
security team, President Clinton must
'The new secretary will have plen,Dark horse names include John
Labor official Maria Echaveste, influential groups that want his ear.
make fi'"e more nominations to rouod
ty
of challenges, as issues such as
California·Rep. Esteban Torres, and As one of the highest-ranking blacks Young, 'former head of Hewlett·
out his second-term cabinet.
deregulation
of the electric utility
0n Thursday, Clinton named U.N. · White House public liaison Alexis in the White House, she is particu- Packard Co., and Edward McCrackAtnbassador Madeleine Albright to Herman an: rumored to be in the run- larly effective in maintaining tbe con- en, chief executive of Silicon'Graph- industry and the controversial use of
bead the State Department and retir- ning, but former Pennsylvania Sen. nection between Clinton and African- ics Inc. Both men are Republicans, weapons-grade plutonium to fuel
1
ing Mai~ Sen. William Coben as Harris Wofford is considered the American groups such as the and their names surfaced as possible commercial reactors come to the
NAACP and the black clergy.
candidates for Clinton to fill his fore. Also unresolved is a permanent
defense secretary-designate. Nation- favorite.
j • By CHANDRA BANERJEE
Herman has experience at · the pledge of a GOP member in the.cab- storage site for nuclear wastes from
A Democrat, Wofford is cut from
l .AIIICICIIMd Pnt11 Writer
al security adviser Anthony Lake is\
Labor
Dl'partment. In. the Carter · inet. With Thursday's appointment of commercial reactors.
the
same
liberal,
intellectual
bolt
as
-.
. CALCUTTA, fndia- Mother Clinton's chl»ce for CIA director, and
Transportation
administration,
she was director of Cohen, a ' Rep~blic;llld Defense, the
departing
Labor
Secretary
Robert
·I·'Teresa resuined worldngfroln bet · Lake will be succeeded by his depoty,
_ , Reich, who wants more time for his the Women 's Bureau. But some labor odds for McCracken and Young . ·· Bill Daley, the Democratic oper.
, hospital ward Saturday, still suf· saniuel "Sandy" Berger.
alive from Chicago, and federal high;f fering ftom a lung infection that
The remaining openings, the result family in Massachusetts. Currently, employees and managers have pri· probably have diminished.
way administrator Rodney Slater are
Energy
1
has complicated efforts to !fea1 ber. of resignations, are for domestic· Wofford directs AtneriCorps. where vately complained of personality
emerging
as the top contenders to
with
Herman,
claiming
she
Who
will
replace
Energy
Secre•
conflicts
person~
may
earn
money
for
college
. · irregular be,anbeat.
posts: Commerce, Labor, Transreplace
outgoing
Transportation Sect
in
exchange
for
community
service.
would
be
an
unpopular
choice.
tary
Hazel
R
..
O'Leary
is
another
of
.
The 86-year-old Catholic nun
portation; Energy, and Housing and
retary
Federico
Pena.
,
During Clinton's failed healthCommemo ·
the big mysteries in the cabinet-selec: met with a group of nuns and gave Urban Development.
·
Both
Daley
and
Slater
are
well·
. The . Commerce Department lion process.
: them InstruCtions on running her
In selecting a cabinet, the presi- care reform effort, Wofford was a
close
ally
of
first
lady
Hillary
Rodvacancy
is the most bedeviling to
Among the, most oft-mentioned connected in Democratic circles. '
r Missionaries of Charity order, doc·
dent faces often competing pn:sham
Clinton
and
a
major
booster
on
cabinet
handicappers
as
an
ethics
candidates
for the job are Rep .
sures from across the political land. I· ton said.
cloud
ongoing
questions
over
the
Richardson;
retiring Sen. J. Bennett
Capitol
Hill.
His
advocacy
for
nation
'
"Mother Teresa seems to be
scape. 'There are entreaties to name
. , gradually stabilizing. Today; she party loyalists, policy and legislative health can: probably contributed to role of former deputy commerce Johnston of Louisiana, senior Demosecretary and Democratic fund-rais- crat . on the Energy and Natural
: appeared to ·be stronger," said a veterans. academicians, women, his Senate loss in 1994.
Echaveste,
a
lawyer,
runs
the
er John J-!uang - dogs the agency. Resources Committee; Deputy Ener; •Statemeni from the B.M. Birl11 blaclls, Latinos, and political pr his
Department's
Wage
and
Hour
,
Whoever takes the job can expect to . gy Secretary·. Charles ·Curtis; · and
Labor
' ; Heart Reseafch Center.
,
top administrative team.
,
Aside from qualifications and Division. She was national Latino be answering Justice Department, . Energy Undersecretary Thomas
; : . 'The statement ~aid doctors will
.
political
indebtedness, another con- ·coordinator for Clinton's 1992 cam- internal and congressional queries for Grumbly.
· •pvc lxf drugs to treat her heartbeat
Others mentioned include White
;OI)!Ce her condition siabilizes fur. sidenllion is "confll'lllability"- the paign. Her familiarity with core labor months.
. · !her.
The le!lding candidate appears to House counselor Thomas F. "Mack"
likelihood of winning Senate issues like overtime pay, migrant
• Mother Teresa's kidney lillie· approval, which can be a grueling workers, and family and medical be Bill Richardson, the globe-trotting McLarty, the former head of a natur• tioning' has stabilized but her lung process.
.
, leave makes ·Echaveste a premium Democratic congressman New Mex- al ·gas utility in' Arkansas; Elizabeth
l: illfllction, while slightly better, per·
Conventional wisdom ~ suscep- candidate. Her , prospects are only ico who has handled such .sensitive Moler, chairwoman of the Federal
• sisu, · the statement saicl, Her tible to presidential foil - lists· ihe enHanced by tier connections to and chores for Clinton as chatting up the Energy Regulatory Commission;
appetite is improving.
following front-runners for open cab- high profile in the Latino communi- North Koreans on matters ,...ging Chang-Lin Tien, chancellor of the
"Her overall condition loob inet posts:
from nuclear arms to captive U.S. cit· University of California at Berkeley;
ty.
' • bright," said Dr. Patricia Aubanel,
Torres, also Latina-American, izens. Richardson, however, is on' John Bryson, chief executive of
Housin& lind
' :~ a • ~!ill hlld not !teen set
, . Urt.m ~velop~· ,
offers a bonus that Clinton must find lists.for severaJ ,other jobs, including Southern California Edison; former
.' •for ~ discharge. ·. , · • • •
·.
Two big city';mayors - Norm especially appealing! strong union energy secretary and United Nations Texas Gov. Ann Richards; and John
Doctors have' said they would Rice of Sellltle and Dennis Archer of . ties. Before he came to Congress .in envoy, so the Commerce post [leutch, who is leaving as CIA dlrec-.discharge Mathe{ Tmsa after treatDetroit- appear to be the front-run- 1982, Torres represented the United remains very much open:
. tor.
·
ing her irregular heart rhythm. If ners, but HUD assistant secretary Auto Workers, one of the country's
Other candidates include Bill
Andrew Cuomo has also been men- largest and most powerful · unions. Daley, brother of Chicago Mayor
drug treatment does not work, as is
the· case in half the patients who tioned as a candidate.
Although organized labor will smile Richard Daley. He, however, is genreceive it, doctors would adminisBoth Rice and Archer are highly on Torn:s' designation, big business erally viewed as a more likely nomter a mild electric shock. .
regarded Democratic mayors and is likely to press Senate Republicans inee to head the Tran~portation
Seven days 'a week, the
. Shock treatment was ·a last have close political ties to Clinton. to reject th~ nomination.
Department.
resort, because Mother Teresa 'They an: also African Americans,
Hennan reportedly ba& told ClinStuart Eizenstat, .the Commerce Kaw:asaki Bayou• 220 is .on the
found it uncomfortable. A shocli which may be a key consid~ration for ton she does not want to be labor sec- Department's undersecreiary for job, bringing you hard-working
was adjninistered to her heart two
Clinton in the quest to keep his cabfun and the dependability you
months ago to correct a similar
inet stocked 'with minorities and
need for all kinds of chores. Put
problem.
women.
Let
us ·copy your old tamHy photoa.
Mother Teresa was hospital·
Cuomo has been oM of the top
it to work for you.
Special 2-5x7'a tor $14.95. Reg.
ized after a mild heart attal:k on
lieutenants-to current HUP secretary
Take one out for a test ride
$19.95. .SAVE 15.00. We also do
Nov: 22. An angioplasty removed .Henry Cisneros. The son of former
today.
'
paaport photos, Identification photos
• 5 S)IMCI Tranaml..lon Plua Raveraa
blockages in two arteries, hut her
New York Gov. Mario Cuomo,
• Dapandabla Kawaukl Shift Drive
recovery has been held up by lung
and photo finishing. Bring In by uec. 1
Andrew Cuomo also is close to Vice
KAWASAKI
• Air-Cooled, 4-Strokt 215cc Powerplant
and kidney problems linked to the
President Al Gore. his mark early in
15 and have your1 phota copied
• Tough Quad-Link Raar Suapanalon
poor fullctioning of her heart.
Clinton's first term by coordinating
Chrlatmaa
'The Nobel Peace Prize-laureate
the administration's attack on homeheads a Catholic Ol'dei .that operates · lessneu. But be's one of several New
517 orphanages, homes for the
York Democrats being D\Cntioned as
poor, AIDS hospices and other a possible opponent for New York
424 SECOND AYE.- GALUPOU8
charity centers around the world.
Sen. Alfonse D' Atnato in 1998.
!
Gannett News SefVlc:e
~ resumes
";her work
'in sickbed ·.
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No Hill Too Big. No Trail Too Small
TAWNEY STUDIO
....
Sports
Section
free~for ·
6montlis!
0~000 off-peale minule.J per month.)
(Some restrictions apply.)
From
Chiliicothe to
Logan, &om
Ashland to
Parkersburg,
and all points'in
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) touchdown run, and Chapman both
Eric Thomas rushed for 178 yards reached the I ,QOO.yard rushing mark
and Marshall's def~nse recorded for tbe season.
seven sacks in a 54-0 win over FurThomas has 1,0 II on the year:
'· man in an NCAA Division 1-AA Chapman had 72 yards on II carries
playoff game 'Saturday.
and has I,009 overall.
'The win puts the Marshall (13-0)
Furman quarterback Braniff
in the Division 1-AA semifinals for Bonaventure completed eight of 25
the sixth straight year.
passes for 145 yards. Furman (9-4)
Marshall's Doug Chapman had its only scoring chance in the
opened the scoring with a two-yard first half, but Jason Wells missed a
touohdown run early in the first quar- 4~-yard field goal.
Marshall held Furman to just
ter and the Thundering Herd never
· looked back.
two first downs and 32 total yards
Marshall , freshman receiver through the first three quarters and
Randy Moss caught two touchdown held tbe Paladins to minus-9 yards
passes. He has at least one touch- · rushing for the game.
The game was a rematch of Mardown in every game this season.
Quarterback Eric Kresser completed shall's 42-17 win on Nov. 16-when
II of 22 passes for 196 yards and Furman had a 17-14 halftime lead.
Saturday's loss was the worst in
three touchdowns, tbe third a 16Furman
history. The previous worst
yard toss to Tim Martin.
Thomas, who had a 52-yard defeat was 57-7to Carson-Newman
in 1972.
,, '
· ~ Redwomen
beat
Malone 92-81
CANTON- Rio Grande's Red·
women downed host Malone 92-81
· Saturday afternoon to post tbeir first
Mid-Ohio Conference victory of the
1996-97 campaign.
The Redwomen controlled the
pace throwghout most of the game,
leading the Lady Pioneers 51-40 at
the half. Despite foul trouble on all
fi vc starters, Rio Grande held on to
up its record to 7-2 overall and 1-1
in the MOC.
'
Senior Megan Winters turned in
, a strong performance, leading Rio's
. pffensive attack with a season-high
·· 36 points. Meghan Kolcun was
another big contributor with I 5.
: Carrie Carson came in off the bene~
, so add IS points. Stacy Rlley, besides
, playing her usual tough game, ·
; chippe~ in with , I0 poi~~·· seven
• assosts and three steals:
1;
Rio Grande committed '12' '
1
l: 1 turnovers and forced 16 miscues.
Fourteen Pioneer turnover.; came off
Rio Grande steals. Misti Hnlley led
tbe winnerS in steals with four.
, Kristen Bro)Vn led the Lady Pio- • neers. with 22 points. Tonya Miller
, :, contributed 17 and Megan O'Fiana·
; " gan added II. O'Fianagan also
brought down seven offensive
rebounds. Malone dropped to 2-6
overall and 0' I in league play.
,
"We really turned in a great performance,' said Rio head coach
David Smalley. " We outrcboundcd
them nnd kept our turnovers to a
minimum. We now have to look
ahead to the week and take one game
at a time. This is a great start after
Tuesday's defeat We needed to get
back on track."
The Redwomen return home
Tuesdny to host Ohio Dominican in
an MOC game.
HaUmllll
Rio Grande
Malone
·-·-
51'41=92
40-41=81
LOSES BALL - Navy quartarback Chris McCoy loses the ball
after landing on hi~ shoulder pads and helmet because ·ot the hit
In the 97th renewal of the inter-service series,
Army Cadets outlast Navy
Rio.Grande: Winters 11\122-010- By JOHN F. BONFAnl
4/4=36, 6/8-010-3/5= 15, Koleun 4/9PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Army
1/1-4/4=15, Riley 3/1)-0/2-4/4=10< is the country's top-ranked 'rushing
Halley 2/8-112-2/6=9, Tabor · 214' team, averaging 347.2 yards per
l/2-0/0=7 . · Totals: 33/64-317- game. Navy is the country's fifth-rat·
17123=92
cd rushing te@m, at 296.7 yards a
Total FG: 36-71 (50.7%)
game.
Rebounds: 39 (H~llcy 10, Kol·
Despi)c these potent offenses,
coach Bob Sutton of No. 24 Army
cun 8) ·
Assists: 17 (Riley 7)
· said the best defense . will prevail
Steals: 14 (Halley 4)
today in the 97th renewal of the scr- .
Turnovers: 12
vice academy showdown.
Fouls: 23
" In an emotional game .. . defensFotiled out: Winters
cs tend to elevate." Sutton said.
-•" When you get two option teams
- Malone:.Brown 5110-2/4-6/S= , , that understand each mhcr - and
22
Miller 0/4-4n-5/6=17, O'Fianagan they happen·~ be scrvocc academics
3i9-010-5/6=11 Evans-Kno 3/3- - y_ou ro po1011ng t~watd defense
.'
P _
play10g a maJor role.
010-4/6= 10, W10gatc 3/9-0/3~2/2-8,
Army's ·defensc played a major
Warner 2/4-0/0-012=4, Cashm 010• 14-1 • ·
1
1 · 1
112 _011 =1 Bond 0/0-0/l- 2/2= 2, Erb ro c 10 ast year s . ·' _voctory asl
·"'· /l-2/2
· '=2 .., ._. s 112.(Jil-0/0= 2. year. the fourth slraoghl vtctory 10 the
Otv 0 ,
• ,e,.oa.
scncs for the Cadets.
Totals: 17141-7119-26135=111
Anny slopped Navy .on fourth
down at the Army one. and the
Cadets took the ball 99 yards the oth·
cr way to score the @arne-winning
touchdown with a little bit more llian
a minute -left to play.
That victory gives the Cadets (9·
I) confidence that if it comes down
lo a close game - the last four
games have been decided by a total
of six points - .t~cy will have the
edge over Navy (8-2 ).
"Nobody out here is planning on
it heing a close game:' said Army
full hack Joe Hcwill ... But if it is. we
know how 10 pcrfohn in those situations. ' 1
There's a lot at stake in this game
even when the teams aren't very
good. This year 's winner, however,
S~y.~Uinhas
gets two bOnuses: the Commander in
Chief's Trophy, which President rock .''
Navy runs ail option oiTcnsc simClinton will award after the game,
ilar
to Army's, and, like the Cadets,
and a trip to the Independence Bowl.
'
the
Midshipmen
have had no trnuhlc
"That's heen one of our goals this
t·.~-7~'~ -~,-- ~
We're the One.TM
.
'
'
'
lighting up the scoreboard. After
scoring 29 points in its lir.;t two
games, Navy has averaged 37.1 over
thc.lasl eight.
The Midshipmen also like to run
the ball: with an average of lifth in
the country.
Navy coach Charlie Weatherbic
credits M~'Coy, the junior who has
run fhr 15 .touchdowns this season,
lying a si:hool record set by Joe
Bellino when he won ihe Heisman
Trophy in 1960.
"He' has improved every week,"
Wcathcrhie said. "He's continued to
hccomc a heltcr leader. The team
really I<K>ks up to him h>r what he
~ocs for them."
Anny also has a standout quar,
tcrhack. senior Ronnie McAda, whi>
ha.< ~ompleted 65 pen:cnt of his pa.<scs and also run for 399 yards.
"McCoy runs the l>all a lot more
than Ronnie docs," Army coach
Bob Sulton said.
Texas upsets No.3 Nebraska 37-27 in_Big·1·2 title game
ST. LOUIS (AP) - James Brown
is a man of his word. His bold vic·
1 tory prediction, plus a daring foullh·
' , down, 61-yard completion led Texas
to a 37-27 upset of No. 3 Nebraska
in the Big I i titJc game Saturday and
ended the Cornhuskers' bid for an
unprcce~cntcd third straight national title.
Nebraska (10-2), in losing its first
conference game in five years, was
knocked out of a Sugar Bowl
matchup with No: I Florida State.
Instead, the Cornhuskers will likely
":ind up in the Fiesta, Orange or Hoi-
iday bowls.
The Longhorns (8-4), meanwhile,
moved up into an alliance howl.
either the Fiesta or Omngc.
Brown, who 'predicted llis three-
.ii'
touchdown underdog Longhorns
would heat the Huskers by three
touchdowns, outsmarted coach Tom
Osborne's vauntcd ·defcnsc at every
turn. He threw a 66-yard touchdown
pass to Wane Mcgarity with 8:23 left
that gave the Longhorns a 27-23
lead.
· The Huskers' defense had one last
chance to redeem itself.
In Top 25 college basketball,
..
Kansas, Wake Forest
and Villanova win ,
~··'>'i·
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Another road game. unuthcr victory for No. I
Kansas.
The Jayhawks rolled to their sixth road win and seventh consecutive overall with a 96-83 defeat of 17th-ranked UCLA on,Saturday.
.
·Raef LaFrcnlz scored a career-high 31 points for Kansas, which led hy
28 points late in the first half despite the foul trouble of Paul Pierce and .
Scot Pollard . ·
•
The Bruins (I-I), playinga No. Iteam for the first-'timc since losing to •
Duke at Pauley Pav1hon 10 1992, sell-destructed with IH first-hall' ·.
turnovers and a lack of defense .
UCLA trailed by li>ur points midway through the lirst hall' when Kansa.<
look over for good. The )ayhawks (7-0) closed the half with a 31 - 15 run 10
take a 54-33 halftime lead. LaFrent" had 14 points and Jcrod Haase added
II in the spurt that demorali,ed the Bruins. Haa.<e linishcd with 22 points,
LaFrentz repeatedly hurned UCLA for easy baskets in the lane, while
mlnUICS,
today!
•
season." Navy quarterback Chris
McCoy said. "That. in itself, is
important. but we' re not looking forward to a bowl game. We have to
win this game first.."
To do that, they have to stop
Army 's run-oriented ·wishhonc
offense. Only twice this season - ·
their last two games - have the
Cadets been held under 300, yards.
Army's la.<t game was its only loss,
42-17.10 Syracuse on Nov. 16.
Still, Hewitt, who leads the
Cadets· with 137 rushes and 821
yards. lhinks Army will do just line
against a Navy defense that has
allowed .127.3 yards und 24.3 points
per game this scasop.
"We're ready lo go. We're all
healed up, " he said. "It's lime lo
'
,
No. 2 Wake Forest 53, N.C. State 45 - AI Raleigh, N.C .. Tony Rut· :
land led Wake Forcst:s otherwise weak 1>fl'cnsivc showing Saturday, 'hilling :
'· thrce-pomlers down the stretch as the second-ranked Demon Deacons
escaped with a 53'-45 victory over North Camlina State.
Wake Forcsf(6-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference), with its highest ranking in school history, was in danger of being upset by pesky N.C. State (51, _0-1) before wearing down tbe foul-troubled Wolfpack over the final 10
CelluhuOnet>
.!
he took from Army's C.W. &tea In the first half of Saturday's Inter·
service rivalry in Philadelphia, where the Cadets won 14-13. (AP)
the Bruins were caught standing around.
between, the
you covered I
Call the nearest
CellularOnec
B
Marshall blanks·
Furman 54-0
in _1-AA playoffs
Now, for a lim.iteiJ t:ime1
6,000
..
The Demon Deacons led on only two first-half possessions heforc Rut·
lund's thrcc:pointer with 9:19 left gave them the lead for g<K>d and helped
· ognne a 20-1 run over a nine-minute span.
Rutland started the run with a three-pointer and he ended it with one
nailing a long shot b!:hind the arc with 3;35 remaining for a 47·32 lead. '
Rutland fidished with 16 points, while Tim Duncan, quiet most of the
game, finished with 13 points and 20 rebounds to extend his double-double streak to 15 .straight.
. C.C. Harrison led the Wolfpack with 17 points.
No. S Vlllaoova 8l, St. John's 70- At Nc.w York, Alvin Williams S<ored
IS of his 2l .points in the second half when Ja.<on Lawson scored all of his
II as No. 5 Villanova heat St. John's 82-70 Saturday at Madison Square
Garden.
,
The Wildctits (5-0, 2-0 Big East) were finally able to take control in the
second half with .Williams hilling from the outside, Lawson dominatina
inside and some solid defense that beld the Red Storm (2·2, 1-1) withou~a
field goal for a stretch of 5:45.
·
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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, wv
II
Sunday, December8,199S ;.
In Top 25 college basketball, .
Zwokker's pertormance carne on a night when the
Trojans (2-1) spent much of the time double- and tripleteaming North Carolina sophomore Antawn Jamison,
who wound up with 26 points and 12 rebounds.
"Serge was JUSt right there in position all night Just
incredible," Jamison said. "He just played relaxed. hke
there was no pressure and he was just having fun.
That's what we need of Serge all year."
Staos Boseman led Southern Cal with a career-high
26 points. The Trojans, 0-5 against North Carohna, also
got a career-high 24 poonts from Jaha Wilson .
Zwikker and the 6-8 Jamison helped North Carolina to a 52-37 rebounding advantage.
"We just didn't have the bodies to match up wllh
them," Southern Cal coach Henry Bibby said.
Zwokker, whose prevoous career bests were 19 points
and 12 rebounds, had 16 points and II boards by halftime. All eight of his baskets were from 10 feet or closer, and six came after Zwikker had gotten an offensove
rebound.
"I hadn't been playing up to the level I'm capable
of reachmg," Zwikker saod. "It was important for 11ft
to come outtonoghtJnd show I can contribute to thos
team."
In Friday mght's second game, South Carolina's
Larry Davis and BJ McKie fueled a I5-0 run in the second half that sent the Gamecocks lo victory.
McKoe finished wuh 24 poonts and Davis had 18 as
South Carolina won its fourth In a row afler a seasonopening loss to Virgima on the Maui Invitational.
"!thought our second h•lf was easily the best half
of the year so far," South Carohna coach Eddie Fogler
saod. "We've been Jack)uSier, we've been on-enthused,
we've played with a lack of emotion."
DeMarco Johnson Jed North Carolina Charloue (22) w'ith 20 points and 16 rebounds.
The outcome set up a championship game fe'nlurong Fogler against his fanner coach and mentor, Dean
~nday, December 8,1996
•
North ·carolina beats USC 99-84; Iowa State also·wins
By JOE IIACENKA
CHARLOTIE, N.C. (AP)- Scoring a grand total
of27 points in four games wu not how Sc:rzc Zwikkcr
pllllned to begin his senior season a1 North Carolina.
"I'd be lying if I told you it didn't bother me a little bit," Zwikkcr saod Friday night W.. he snapped out
of his slump in the opening game of the Harris TeeterPepsi Challenge.
The 7-foot-3, 273-pound Zwikker had career highs
of22 poonts and 20 rebounds to lead No. 14 North Car·
olina to a 99-84 victory over So~them Cal.
His outburst set up the Tilt Heels (4-1 ) to go after
their sixth consecutive tournament championshop
tomght against South Carolina, a 75-60 winner over
North Carolina Charlotte.
Zwikker, the lone senior on a staning lineup that features one freshman and three sophomores, made hos
biggest impact on the offensive end, where he had II
rebounds and 16 points off second chances.
•
\
South Gallia girlsvbeat Hannan s4-42 ·to get first-ever victory
•
Smith. Fogler, a 1970 graduate of North C"'?lin~ w_ho .
later served as an assistant under Smolh, S81d hos ucs,
lo the Tar Heels won't necessarily give him an advantage tonight.
·
"They're on 1V so much," Fogler said. "Everybody •'
kind of knows what they can do."
.
·
In the only other game vf the night mvolvmg a
ranked team, No.9 Iowa State beat Sicn~ 64-54.
No. 91owa State 64, Siena 54 - Iowa State overcame the absence of Jead•ng scorer Dedroc \'411ough·. by to won us Cyclone Challenge m Ames, Iowa.
Willoughby, averaging 22 pomts a game, sat out
because of a slramed hamstring sustaoned in practice 'I
on Wednesday. ·
Kelvin Cato and Shawn Bankhead led Iowa Stale
(4-0) with 10 pomts. Brad Johnson, who started on
Willoughby's place, added nine.
1
Siena (2-2) shot only 28.6 percent m the' first hall
and 33 percent for the game.
1
...
MERCERVILLE- A 17-poont
sconna effon 'by senior guard Laura Queen and teammate Sabrina
Mooney:S 12·point effon pushed
South Gallia's varsity gorls' baskctb~l! .team to an 84-42 victory over
vtsoung Hannan Friday night,
The VIet()!)', the Rebels' fir.st: cver
triumph, came after four seasonopening losses.
more.
While Mills was making his run
at Brent Price's NBA record of hitting 13 Slraight three-pointers,,Curry was just trying to make any kind
In other NBA action,
converted a four-point play in the
second period.
"On the four-point play, I didn't
even see the ball go on," he said.
"When I heard the crowd roar, I told
myself that it might,be another one
of those mghls."
Curry gol on the scoreboard lao-
•
Shaq helps Lakers beat injured Magic
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
a..
AP
ketball Writer
To put it in Hollywood lenns, the
sequel didn't love up to its advance
billing. The leading man did his part,
but the absence of his co-stars left the
plot too thin.
A dud? No.
A four-star thriller? Hardly.
It was something in between, a
show the critics would call a hehummer.
Shaquille O'Neal faced his
injury-riddled fanner team Fnday
mghl and led the Los Angeles Lakers to a 92-81 home voctory over the
Orlando Magic.
But the matchup lost much of its
llliter due to the sorry state of Orlando's health.
O'Neal hugged Horace Grant and
chaned with Brian Shaw, but he
couldn't fraternize with Penny Hardaway, Nick Anderson or Dennis
Scott - at least not on the coun.
Grant was the only meml1er of
last season's' starting five to be in
Orlando's lineup for the opening lap.
Grant and O'Neal joked and hugged
during wannups, and O'Neal had a
f~w friendly words with Shaw in the
center circle. right before lhe game
began.
·
'
After that, the inJured Har.daway,
Anderson and Scott sat side-by-side
on Orlando's bench and watched a
mostly dull game that turned the
Lakers' way late on the thord quarter.
O.' Neal had 25 poonts, 18
rebounds and a career high-lying five
steals. He also went 7-of-10 from the
free-throw line before leaving with
42 seconds remaming and the outcome already assured.
"You can't keep the big guy
down," Orlando's Horace Grant said.
"He's gmng to gel hos shots and he's
goong to block some shots, but we
· can take a moral victory from this
because we didn't have all our guys
and we still hung ~ough."
Los Angeles began its comeback .
from an 11-poont second-quarter
deficit in the third poriod. Nock Van '
Ex~l's basket gave the Lakcrs lhcor
first lead, 56-54, since midway
through the opening quarter.
That sparked an 11-0 run that
gave the Lakers a 65-54 advantage
heading into the final 12 minutes.
Orlando never got clbser than six
points on the final period.
"Shaq on spired everybody to play
hard," Van Exel said. "He wanted to
win this game real badly because tl
was against hos old learn. Guys really took it to hean."
In other games, Utah beat Minnesota I06-95, New York beat Moamo 103-85. Phocmx beat Sacramento 101-95, Vancouver beat SanAntonoo 105-89, lndoana heat Golden
State 86-71 . Port land beat Ch'arlollc
97-93 and New Jersey beat Boston
110-108 m overlomc. ,
·
Jazz 106, Timberwolves 95
At Salt Lake City, the Jazz moved
within one victory of lying the
longest wmnmg streak an franc.::hJsc
hostory.
Karl Malone led all scorer< wolh
34 points, 14 in the fourth quarter.
but he played 43 mmutes on the hrst
night of a back-to-bock, home-away
set.
JeJT Hornacek added 23 pomts
and John Stockton handed out 16
assosts as the Jazz won thcor 13th in
a row. They'll try to uc the team
record of 14 straoghl victories tonight
al Denver.
Knieks 103, Heat 85
At. Moami , the Knicks avenged a
Hendrick vows to win court case
after Feds charge him with conspiracy
week.
NEW YORK (AP) -Rick Hen- 1 of support has ea'cd his mond.
drick made his first 1111bhc appear"I've had an unbehevahle amount
Matters not concluded in the linal
ance since being hu wuh Jederal con- . of mail, telephone calls, faxos .. scss1nn muSt he presented to a new
spiracy charges and , surrounded by from people who arc foghung mad grand JUry the ncxl,ycar.
friends and stock-car industry asso- about the timing," Hendnck saod.
At a hluck-lie hanquct Friday
ciatcs, vowed victory m the court- "I'm not going to let it ruin it for my night, Hcndnck and his wife, Londa.
rcccJvcd a standing ovat1on as they
room.
team that worked hard for this."
Friends quickly gathered, supHendnck's indoctmenl followed a strode to the hallroom's head tahle
plying hugs and pals on the hack. as Jen~thy investigation and came dur·
Hendrick's wmmng driver, Terry
a subdued and hesitant Hcndnck ing a rc~ularly scheduled grand jury Latxmlc. ret:cavcd the largest amount
look his scat at u NASCAR awards scssonn. The federal grand JUry that of money on NASCAR hostnry lor
breakfast Friday in the Waldorf- returned the indictment m Asheville wmnin~ the 1996 Wonston Cur
Astoria's Sturlight Room.
meets the Jirsl week nf every other champmnshop.
· Hendrick told The Charlotte month; 11s 1996 term ex pores lhos
Obstrvtr he could not discuss the
government's case against him, but ------Sports briefs-----hopod to explain his view of the
charges as soon as next week.
Tennis
nal clash againSt Russmn Ycvgcny
"There's nothong more I would
MUNiCH. G~rmany (APJ Kalclnokov at the Grand Slam Cup.
like to do than Jay oul my side of the Defending champt<m Goran JvamKafcln1knv oullastcd Jnn Cnuricase , .. about how unjust and selec- scvic of Croatia hlastcd 16 aces In er 2-6, 6-4. H-6 in two hours. lwo
tive and untrue all of this is," Hen- heal Australian Mark Wnodl(>rdc 6- mmutcs. lvuniscv1c sci an ATPTour
drick said. "I promise you when you 4, 6-4 and set up a lucrative scmili- record with 1,51 ·I aces J'nr the year.
sec it, you'll he amazed."
HQndrock wa• charged Tuesday
with bribing corrupt executives nf
American Honda Motor Co. in return
for fpvorablc treatment in gettm~
dealerships and hot-sclhng cars.
The Charlotte auto dealer os nne
~" of 1h9 nation's largl!st uuto rclailcrs
·- and owns the racmg teams that hu~c
won 1he Winston Cup Series champiolllihip in each of the past two
I I
years.
Hendrick's attorney, Harold Bender, Sllid in a prepared sta.temcntthal
Hendrick had coopcrdtcd m the gov'
Blaek & Deckel'
VereoPok Starter
ernment's investigation of cotruploon
Tool Kit -withi~ the Honda org~nizaloon.
tnoludc• 3.6 volt cordi':""
Hendrick was m extremely sup.-Ndrivtr •rnl Snake htehL ....baUer)' ,:ha•r t~yate~
por\ive territory Friday.
and :t6 vOlt batt.ery
--.
l'hlltographc111 took douns of
publicity photos of him with his
award, and friends rcperucdly offered
warm wiah!:ll.
He wa& shielded by Charlotte
oports-marketing cpnsuhanl Max
Muhleman. another public relations
specialist and an attorney. who counseled Hendrick on questions he
should not answer.
"There's an old saying that when
you're under auack, you wanlto go
home." Hendrick said. "Well,.! feel
like I am home w1th the NASCAR
family."
Hendrick said he's dismayed
about the ~UIOI'I' dec ilion 10
11«k a pod jury indielm4!DI rig.hl
before he was to receive the llporl's
hiJhesl honors. But a broad display
I
-~~"""~"""~"''*·
~
What a Great Christmas GtftJII
24-point home Joss from Tuesday
night with perhaps theor most
inspired game of the young season
"They kocked our butts royally on
New York, and we came oul and
kocked the or butts tonoght," said
Palrock Ewong, who had 26 points
and seven rebounds "The other
night they did anything lhey wanted.
Tomghl we dod a good JOb slopping
them."
John Starks had 21 points. Allan
Houston added 19 and Larry Johnson
had 13 before being ejected for his
>Ccond technical foul.
Suns I 0 I, Kings 95
At Sacramento, the Suns won on
the road lor the lirst time lhos season.
Danny Mannmg had 19 points,
Michael Finley and Wesley Person
scored 13 pomls each and ·Kevin
Johnson had 12 assists for Phoenix,
whose bench outscored the Kmgs'
reserves 51-22.
Grizzlies 105, Spurs 89
AI San Antomo, the Grizzlies also
got thcor forst road 'won of the season.
Bryant Reeves scored 29 pomls
and Vancouver. wh1ch sn~pped a
five-game Josmg streak.
er m the second quarter wnh a dunk,
starting a run where he scored seven points in SIX mmutcs.
"That dunk really helped,
because it got me into the Jlow or the
game agaon," Curry saod. "It was
mostly a mental thing, bull dod make
a couple adjustments to my shot that
I think woll help me stay more consoslcnt. The thing that made 11 caster was that we arc 14·3. so 1 wasn't
really hurting I he ~cam' too much."
Curry smd he enjoy,, watching
Molls lire away, espccoally since he
has seen 11 helorc.
.. 1 was m Wa.t.ihmgton la.'i\ year
when Brent set the record, •• Curry
said "It's hcen the sume lhmg
Evcrythmg that hath or them take
looks like 11 1s going to go 111 ."
Terrell Brandon, who led the
Cavs woth 17 pomls, d1dn 't enjoy
watching Mills nearly as much
"There's nothing you can do
when a guy IS even falhng down and
l
i
647
8
2
.7
.7
4
9
10
10
4\8
412
286
1\
80iilon: ." "' " .''"""·4
]]
215
CLEVELAND
Atlanm
lrl(llana
Mtrwauk~
Ch1111oue
Toronto
'
~5:\
»:
16
I. f<t.
2
2
889
882
1J
11
14
14
lK9
16
,,
T~Xil!i
8
8
8~
Perkins Classic-ftr~ round
Cenmtl St "12. MJs~oun-Rull.l 'i"i
10' ..
Friday's action ·
\
261
ll h
9
<2
12 h
13'1.
"
Annn "15 Botkins ~6
Anthony Wttync T!., Sy l~~ru a
Southv1ew 67
Arcanum 66, 8e1hcl ~"'
A.rkon Cent -Hower 74 A'ron E 64
Ashtabula Edgewood 82, H:~tv~y 65
Ashtabula HIIJ'bor 97, Ashtabu],, 64
Athens 61. Munell:. 58
Avon 74. Luke Ridae 60
Aycr.'mlle ,~, Otutwn H1Jis 46
Badger 8:\. Muplcwood 76
Barberton 84 Ravenna 50
BW'flelivilh: 71.1. Shady.mk 51
8e;u;hwooJ 6~ Brooklyn~~
Beaver Eltstern 79, Frnnkhn f-urmt~e
Green 4K
Beaverm.'Ck 41! W.tym: 46
Bedturd 79, Enlltlake N 66
Bellevue 67. Guhon 42
~
Oelflle 56. Wdlstun 4111,
Berlin H1lnnd n Strnshurg ~I
Bexley lYJ, London~
81g Walnul 1 I. Lakewood 44
IJI,k.:k Rtver ()K, W Holmes 4b
Bloom-C •.rrull74, Harml1m1 Twp ~~~
Br.1dfonl66 AnsnnUJ'i4
Brookv1lk 71, Nonhndge Sb
Drush 6'\. Willoughby S 411
Bucb:ye Tr-.ul H~. Fori Fry~ MJ I~ OTl
CaJdwdl H:i, B~ull~v•lle 11,1 (OT)
Campbell M~ma rt ,\ 1 70 Yuu, 0Mncy
67(0fl
C.mal Fulton NW ~6. Akrvn Spnnp.
'
7
8'•,
8'!
10 '~
Friday'! stores
New Jen;ey I JO Boston 108 (OT)
New York 10), Mtaml 8~
Denol1 93. CLEVELAND AI
Pboenb. 101, SDCrnmento 9!'i
Vnncouver 10~ . San An!omo 89
Ulnh 106, Mmnesolu 9:'i
Port lund 97. Charloue 9:\
1.. A U!ken 92, Orlando I! I
lndmna 86, Golden Srare 71
LA Chppeu 111 New York, 7 :\0 p m
Mrlwaukce :11 Washmg1on. "' 30 p m
Toronto lll Ad:mm, 7 30 p 1n
Dtlroit 111 New Jeney, 8 p m
M1um1 al Ch1cugo, 8,)0 p m
V®~Ouver al Dallas, 8 :fOp m
Philadelphm a1 Hous1on I! lOp m
Uulh a11'lenver, 9 p m
ChnrltMtc at Seattle, I 0 p.m
•
••
•
'•
•
Tonight's games
•
•
••
''
Gallipolis, OH.
.
1.. A Chppers 111 CLEVELAND. 6 J" m
Boston IU Milw11uk.ee, 7 p m
SQn Antoni~ al Golden Slate, 8 p m
Clucago 111 Toronto. R 30 p m.
lndiuna at ~mx. 9 p m
Orlando ar Sw:mmcnlo, 9 p m
Minnesota nr LA Laker.;, 9 30 p m
t
regular-st!ason action
h ..
Boston U 81, Tow~onSI 61
• Cenl Cunnecttcut St 61. MJ ·B.IItl• more Comuy ~2
Delaware ?4. Northc,tslcrn ~~
Dre~el 80, NeW' Hampshtre ~~
Mante Ill. Hubtru 7J
Sewn Hall RO. Fordhum M
REMINGTON 11-87 SEM-AUTO 12GA
-
$179.99
r:.~te M. Cm 1 uq•m b2
Cm NunHlllll 62 Gn~IJCn r.u
Cm Oak H1ll s :i~ , Ctn l\1k1:n 4~
Cm Rn~er B.twn 72 Cln L.t S.d le (.,<)
Ctu Sc\ICII Hills 511. Cm l..artLinMrk 49
Ctn St X.1v1er I>" U,ty Ch.tnun,,,lc·
Jultcnnc 44
Ctn 'f,,ylor 44. Cm M Hlcnwnt .tO
lOll
Cin Wnhrnw !Jl Cin ('nlcr;nn "'
Ctn W11o.xlw.ud K7 Cin Ameh,t n
('\!) Wynmm)! 60 Cm Mmlctr,l ~7
Clc C.tthohl M. l.lyn,t CtUh 4K
l'le Cullmwumt 90. Cle East ~()
Ck (ilcnvrlll' ?2 (')c l tllltoln-W.·st
10
(h: H e1~hl ~ (,1 C.mhon M ~;Kmlcy ".7
Cle lm!epcndcrm: H6 Clc Ci1hmn11 67
Cle Jnhn M ,lf ~h.tll (1() Cll' John H.ty
Clault:·ftnt raund
Bowltng Green 87, Colgnrc 7~
NebraskaK8, COPflln 51 72
•
Sunk One·Jo"u.thill~
Dodge R1n11 ClaMtr·Hnt round
C1ll11rlltkt S1 K9, Sacmmento St 45
Gonzaga R7, ruas-S.111 Antonto 61
.,
•
MOOEL 60 SB.t 1\IITO
'
"NEW" BROWNING GOLD HUNTER
!
~
12 OR 20 GA
.22·RIFLE
$99.99
Bollcnnakrr lnviiMtional·nnll ruund
Long Beu~h S1 76 Mt..'ft't:r 4:'i
1\Jrdue 69 Cumdl ~~~
.
_.
••
$599.99
"
•
••
MOSSBERG 500
12.2D.~10GA VENT RIB
•
•
llAAAEL
:
••
$79.99
,
~
"
C7dane Chalh:n~ch'amptomhip
h.twn S1 64, Stc:n.t ~4
Third pia~
Tcnn.-Martm8J. Stephen F Ausun 68
Dr Pepprr lnvilatiun.ll-nrst round
Baylor 67, NE Lou1suwu16~
Tex,,s Southern 67 Mt unu Otuo.l6 ~
'
'
$239.99
-
-
--
'
.
I
• I
'.~
$26999
!
I
'
first Bank Cla:i.m·fir.-:t ruund
Marttuctte 1()-l Pr.u ne V1~·w -IY
Prin..:o..:tQn 59 RILl.~ ~4
!.
~
Co.1l l .,t~l H.J Col l\•ntLillll.tl ~ 4
C11l H.lfllcy 7J Ncw.trk Ctth ~~
Cui Hl.'T!t .t~c 66 Elyn.tl·usl ll.tpl fil
C11 l lml~!pcntlo.•n u• KO Cui M.tnon· .
l'r:lllkltll ~r.
Coi ' Mtrtltn 1(1 Cttl l.rndcn·M~Ktulcy
"
lllim-Pcp~l Cla~:>~u:-nl'llt round
llhnms H4, Columh1.1 ~9
Tcnllt!s~ S! 79 C~.:nl Mldll!(,ll1 76
Mnntanu77. Amertt:an U 611
Or.tl Robcrtli 51J, S Ut.th 5~
'
~ 1 R1chrtM.llk.l His 49
G'uluml'l1.m.t Xl'l. U111fet.l M
c(liKmun v.•, 'i' t'.•d•l .;()
Ctlltuuen~o~l f1"1 LmM lcnl(tll' Chr ~:!
(',~y·R,IW~Illl Cto V,mlul' ~1
l.!.'r•'tW•h•uJ f•1 WmJiwn J'.l
Crnt•l.s\tllc ?0, W Muskmj!UIIl ~'i
l'uy.ilu •(.:·• Hts 5.1. l .uthct.ut W ;;~
Ctt y.lh nJ:·' V:tl Chr (17 l.ruuHtll e
Ptp~I-Martst Clussk-nrst round
Lnfayenc "1{1 Mansi ttl
Y.tie 61. Chnrlt!,Ulll Southern ~~
••
•
•
••
li.
711
Powtrhar lnl'llatlonal-nr!;r round
Hawaii HO A.lnh,m\01 St "4
: ohio men's
l college scores
Friday's tournaments
~
•
ror
• 64
•
11
'
~
A.-;An72, Wlhmna1on 48
! Berea"·Trevecco NIWIICne 79
•
•
Soo _ _ K.,.od<J
..
111\'MMIIniWirtl,.....
•
·:
•
.
~tond!l . RIOO~ND£6)
11.-Cind.)
Twa
'.ftrlt rounll
\Jftlllftll1, Jnd..!)oulh Bend .52
E:.tCiri 7~. Oouc 60
Eudld 16. Nurd11111n ~K
Fnfr1icld ~Y. Hunnhm1 3~
F11tr~n 74, Snndy V11l 46
Fnlrmnnt 72 SprinJ. North M
Fn~u~ 90. Edaft 70
F~rul Hockin[l 67. Rat:me Soulhcrn
l'ln=Witlls M . Cullins Western Re!lel'\le
.
•
•
Fon JtnninJ119, Antv.ctp .~ .\ (0T)
Furt Lonunit 71. Hou•ton ~J
Foslomt St. Wcndelln 6of...~nmkHll S1
~-~
Jfmnklln Hts
~8 . Delaw~n:~ 46
Ftllnklin-Monroe 81, Twl• VaUcy S.
1• cun
('IAhanna ~8, Thc:tmu Wonhinpon ·~
GAraway 66, Lalt.ellllld 4S
Gr:oo11 ~. Etmwnnd 47
Geurptnwn 73, New lbchmond ;19
SAN JOSE, Calof. (AP)- Dave
Baldwin, the Cal State Northridge
football coach the last two seasons,
was hored to head San Jose State's
program
Livcr~r~-en60
L..u~.tsvJIIe
Waync ~ f1ch.l Gn~h~n
V.tn~tJ\Iv~r
Val ~2
67 Rtdgcm~nt
W.tyttcsvllk 69, M1Jdlcll•wn Chr ~0
WcsiL-rvlllc S 6\, Upper Arhngtun .JK
WcMI.11l 46 Hunti ngton 1lJ
Wcstl.1ke 49, Amhcr~l4~
Wht.."Cicrsbur!!-11.2 McDernum NW V1
W1Klllmnrc 62. Otsego ~6
•
Wuo~1cr \7, N Cuntnn Horner ~2
IOTJ
WIJrld Harvesl 80, M.tunatha Chr 69
Wllllhmglon Chr 109, Ccmcrburg ~l
Wynford 60 Lr~m~lun ~'i
You Ltberly ,J, Ausumown-Fitch -+4
You Rn)'cn 56 You U rsuh~M; 1~
Zane Tra~e 67. Adena 4!1
An<~heun .
6
2
I
61
72
117
6~
69
Nurthl'lilst D1~1s1un
H,mlorJ
12 7 6 '1 0
Buflalo."'""""'lll::! 2 2S
Momreal
II 14 4 26
Buslon
10 II 4 N
Pittsburgh
lO 11 '
21
O!t,twn
7 12 6 20
-·-
64
They played Salurday
7 p nt
C,t!p.tr y n Boswn "'p m
llull.•ln .n HarthtrJ "'p111
ChlloiJ:!Il a1 M,ll\tl\',11 "' •o p 111
N 'Y l(,mgo.;-r~ ut Tumnltt, 7 1() I'm
Anahcun .11 Plll~bur gh K p 111
Ott.lw.t .11 V.mo.;uu~er lO l() p m
T.tmp.t Bay m S,tn JtJSl'. l 0 l() I' m
CultorruJn 111 L,.v.; Ant:clc~ . I() 'O p 111
Tonight's gymes
O.dlas m FlonJ.1 6 p m
St l..iKUS .11 Edlll!lltlnn II p nt
6!
71
ii6
7').
Ill
1· l'ran'sactlons ::.: j
Bas• hall
Amorrican Lca.ur
ANAHUM ANGI.I.S A~ re~; tl '"
lerms w11h INI Cr,y~ <itched 1111 .1 unv
ye.tnumtlkt lk~tj!tt.ttc•LI C s~nu VnllnJCr
fur oiS~tgllll\ent
BALIIMORE ORIOII:S Named
U,\Ye .. hlh.Jn IIM!l.tj:Cf l•l lrt.•.krtck \II lhc
C.tmhn,l l .c,•~uo;
NI.W YOI{K YANKII.S N.uued
D..•rck SdtdiL·r vtr.:e Jlrl'~tdem of hu-.•tt.·~s
di:\L'fllJI!llo.:lll
,
Sl'l\ ITLL MhRINI RS Aj!rt:t'tl tn
tcrnt• wuh I.HP Grt:l!. Htl'lho~rtl <~n . 1 uu·
lll.lt IC.I!!(Ue 1,;!11\lf,lll
''~
77
•
Ct'nlr:.tl Dn1siun
»: t.
Detrou ."''" '· ,,.1 ~
I 1'1>. !if lid
4
l~
D:tllus
Itt 10 I
S1 L..ou1~
Ch~r.:ago
14 14 0
12 l~ l
II 16 0
IJ lJ 4
1i
21{
Toronto .
Phocmx .
I)
27
22
22
~'
Kl
"1"1
()(o
K2
~~~
72
Ill
61
70
IJ:'i
14
j()()
h(l
Nutionul L~u~uc
i\1 LAN f!\ "~1\V~S At~rccd tu
!erms wtlh SS R,ll,tcl lklli.trd un .t llllt:•"
ye.tr ~o.tntr.t~l
Pa~ lnc I>IYI~iun
17 7 4
Colomdc.l
1~
f):'i
l'ht~l.'llll'i ,11 N~w J..:r'l')'. IJ' tn
W .t~ lnn!!lllll ,u NY bl.mllcn
WF.STERN CONFERENCE
I<llm
22
~ulllracl
Munlre,tll.Cim.t~ol
77 7(1
7K 77
99 H»
7" !' ~
lib
10 16 2
lH
M.,
M7
17
Philatlci(Jhta 6 D.1llas 1
S1 lout~ .I Columdu 1
Edmnnton "i Ounwu 2
1'1>. !if lid
.tO ~~~ q
n ii i 71'
2'.!
1 27
~
21
K 22
2 Iii
N bLJ
21 74
CHICAGO CUB« Agreed 10 1erms
With RHP Frank c.•sttll u on·' 1\liC·yeur
Friday's scores
Allunl1cDivision
»: t. I
,
2!i 72
1011 4
I} 14 ~
Baldwm, who replaces the retired
John Ralston, was the receivers
coach al S~r. Jose Slate between
1980-83 under Jack Elway.
II'
I.JO
An.lhctm I, Butfillo I (Itt)
N Y Rangr:rs 6, Torunlo ~
Pillsburgh !'i, Washml!lon :l
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Floridn
17 .t
Phdaddplu a
I~ 12
NewJcf':!ey
14 10
W.tshtngton . 13 ll
NY Kangers , 111 1
NY lslanda:: rs 1 II
Tampal3,!y
Kl~
II I' '
Calgary .
NHL standings
Irlun
14 II . 1 29 ~~
1.114 I 29 9LJ
Edmon ron
Los Angeles
San Jose
"
Mo{!.adore F1eld 84 Ravenna South
ea!l 6:\
Mnhttw ll 74 Ttffin Cal\letl 72
Monroe Cenlral71, Wolerford 66
Mou nt 'h'fnon 48, Wht !ehalllK
N Ad.tm~ 94 W Umon ~7
N Centml64. Htlltup ~S
N Olnl~teJ ~2 Bay 16
N RtJge.,.lllc 66 , Clearvtew 40
New Albany 81, Uberty Umon :n
New Maanu 62 St Bernard~~
'New Re!&d 59, Bensvtlle 46
Ncwnrk 6"1, Wes1crv•llc N ~7
Nurtlunur ~~ R1o.lgcilaJe "i1
Nnrthmlge 92 , loh~»! own 70
Nurwulk :'i I 8 u9rus 4S
O,tk H11l "18· Mmford 69
Ohcrlm 72, Lormn C.illh 56
Old Foo 7~ Carey 69
Olent.lllgy 62, Uck1ng V,tl 47
Olm~ted Falls (JI.J, f.ur\IJew 47
Ont.tml 79 Buclo.e{.e Cenlrnl ~4
Omnge Chr "10, C e Hcnmge fol
Oregon Clay ~6 F1ndlay 42
Ormlle 89 Ashland ~I
P.trma Padua 73. ClH&r~on ND-CL64
P:tlllckH~:nry61,Dt.!lta H
P~.-cbk~ 72 : Wc~•ern Lmhmn 60
l)crrysburg 64, Maumee :\K
Pe ttt ~v!l le ~6. Stnk.:r ~4
i't~kcnn~lun 72. Oulltcolhc 62
Ptkemn 6K P:.Jm Val 111,1\
Plymouth 7K, M.t ndicld S1 Pctcr·~ 40
Pm1~mnuth Clay 91 Por1 smnuth NOll'!!
o.unc 57
•
P«.:blc Sb.twn~'l.! 74, l>o~y Oakwuut.l M
Rt"Cdsvdle Eas1crn ~H , Tnmhlc ~~
Revere 70, Nonon S~
R1vo..'fstoJc 69. Gcncv.1 'iO
Rtkky R•vcr 64. A.,.on Lake 6 1
Roulscnwn ~b. G,Jrrcu~v•llc 66
Ru~slord M. Syl~:mm NorthYICW 41.J
Russt.t 61.J. S1dney F.nrl.twn ~4
S Ccmra1 76 Man~1i~IJ Chr ~2
S l'umt62, lrunloJII "\.1
S. R.1nge 71, Mtner.tl R1d~ ~K
S Wcb~lcr 7b. PurtsnM.tuth W 64
Salem 7l You E:l'it ~2
Sundusky Pcrk1ns 71 O.tk H.trhor 'i()
S,1ndu~k) St M.tr)'s Kl Mtmrocv11Jc
S r LOU IS CARDINALS Agn.-cd tn
tt-rm~
wuh C Tnm Pagnoz.zt un .tlwo..year
cuntroct
' SAN DIEGO PADRES Ao.;qum.~d
LHP Sli!rhng Hno.;h~o..:k Irom II~ Sc.tlllc
Manners lor RHP Su111 San1ka
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS A~rced
10 1crms wuh C Rtck Wilktns un a onl! year o.:1m1m~1
Baskelhall
N11Uon~l
Doskelhall A!i!loctation
Dl:.IRO IT PIS rDNS A~lt'O,tlcll G l.u
lert,ll Gro.."CII frum the mjurt-d list Placed F
JL'mnlt! W!lltam~ on rhe lllJU~d lt~ l
I1HILADELPH1A "16ERS 1\clw.ttctl t
M:trk HL'tldrkksnn !rom the tnjuro.:LIIt~l
I'HOI'NIX SUNS 1\..tlv:ttco.l l · C
M.trk Jlry.ml lwm lhc tnJllred h~t PI~~;~ ~
Gr[)arnn H .tnLt~t;k u111 h..: IIIJur~'\1 11~1
Ht..:kcy
Nullonal Huckr)' IAuj:;ur
NHI. Snslklndi'J VllH~tiUVCr Caum k~
fuN.,trJ l'.w..-1 Bur,• h1r ur11: !!•IIlii.." wnhtl\tt
p.t y .tno.l lineo.l hrn t $1 (X)() l1tr ,1 f,rc.trm
hl11w tp.unsl Duft,du S.wrcs Llclc!IM:tll.lu
(i..rry o,,llo:y Ill •• Dec 4 j!IIIIJI:
f..'At(JAH. Y 1'1~ 1\MES lh·c .II1L·d C
M.trty Murr.ty 1111111 S:um Jnh11 ul the
AHI.
HARTl OK I) WHI\U:RS A~'l)l.no,;LI tJ
Nul,m 1....111 h i Spn n~lido.l ul rh~ 1\HL
NLW YOKK ISLANDEKS Rer.:,tllcd
I> L11rcy h1slcr Irum Clcvd:md ul the
!HL
NLW YORK R!\NGI:RS AsSij!nco.l
I.W Sylv,un Bluumto BIII}!IWilll<lll ul the
Alii.
l'ITISBURGH I'ENGUlNS Alii'J,llt-...1 [)Net I Wtll.tnstlll fmm 1hc mjur.:d h~l
,,mi,,~MJ:Ill'LI hun In C'levcl.nul nllhc 1111.
Pl.tccJ I) Chm l amo.:r 1111 the miured Its!
'II LOUIS Bl Ul:.'i AsMI!.Ol.'ll D Rur)
f lll p. tlrt~k lrl W\'fcC~Ier nl the AHI .
SAN JOSI SH!\KKS A~~t}!IIC!II.W
Vtllc l'chon~;n In Kl'ntlllky llllhc !\HI
VANCOUVI.H. CANUCKS Rl•o.:.•lleJ
I) h :tnlt ~ek Ku~er.t lrom Syu~use uf th~
AHI..
5·4-S
ALL SEASON RADIAL
SD,OOO IIILE WARRANTY
NW .... $ 32
P235/75 R15 ... NW ..... $ 39.65
NOVA
EURO -METRIC SIZING
BLACK
$ 33.20
P155/80 R13 .....
$ 50.45
155 R13... ....... BL ..
Pt75180 R13
165 R15 ..... .. BL ..... $ 36.50
P195175 R14 .
' .. $ 55 .85
' $ 67 .17
BL
$ 41 .20
P205/75 R15
'' $ 74.34
20517.0 R14 ...... BL
. .... $ 45.40
P115/70 R13 ....... $
185170 R14
OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE.
PREMIUM ALL SEASON AQUA
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75.77
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RADIAL RVT
WINTER TRACTION RADIAL
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$ 65.80
P1B5/70 R14 .
" $ 6340
P235n5 R15 "C" .......... $ 75 70
P205/70 A15 .
P215170 A15
. ' $ 98.20
.. $10118
30-950 R15 "C" .......... $ 94.50
OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE
F·32
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YOU USE IT YOU WILL
ALWAYS WANT THIS TIRE I
P155/80 R13 ......
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-otHER SIZES AVAILABLE.
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SNOW TIRES
QUALITY AT AN
AFFORDABLE PRICE
P165/80R13 ..... ... $
41.90
.. . .... $ 47.20
PIBS/70 A14 .......... $ 80 .82
P185/75 R14 .
Pt95/75 R14 . . . . . $ 82 50
P205n5 R15 . . .... $ 53 .30
. ... $ 90 74
P235n5 R15 ........ ... $ 61 40
P205/75 RtS ..
Tnway 77 Metlina Buckeye 40
Tmtwood Mndlslln 94 Sidney 117
Tmy 69. W Cnrrol hon 67
Twtnsburg 75. Kc1111ton 6\
Unmnluwn Lakc19. New Plnl:.dclphia
P195/75 R14 .
'26.70
OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE .
n
01)
Wlllhiqtoa C.H f,1, W. hllmiHIM
P1B5/75 R14 . NW ..... $ 31
OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE
Teo..:umsch q Dclldonl,unc 51
I cntple Chr ~IJ Tree of l.1le :'i:'i (0 f)
l1llin Cuhm •b1 ,111 ~C) Wtll,!fd 49
ful Dnwsher ~~ 1411 Wnollw:trd 4M
Tu! Cmhnhe 7to Tnl LIIIN:.y ~ -'
Tul t11mt1.tn 76, L1bt.:rly Chr 27
1\ll &:oil K4, T(1J Watle 70
Tol Sl. Fntncu 76. Tol Rttp:rs :'1\.1
Tnl S1 John5 71, Tul Srnn 1~ (2 OTJ
Tn-Valley 82, Morgnn "16
Tri•Vtllr~ge 81. Na!lonnl Tn •• l71 (2
•• 110
$ 43.64
ALL SEASON TOURING RADIIALI
110,000 MILE \!ARRANTY
(OT)
.en
P16S/60 R13 . .
REGATrA
~4
Uruoto .~9 Rt ~ hnk'lnJ Duk_o. S\MJfi)C~L,t•
ern :'i:l
Urban.J69. Spnn[l . Shawn~.'\: W
Vall~y Forge 77. W:wreruv1lle .'H
Vttndnlt~ Buder 4H. Greenville
Vktory Chr SJI, Yuu Chrhtian ~?
tOT)
Vmcc:nl Wnrrcu 91, Chc5htre Rtvcr
Val :\6
W Brandl ,J, Miner.,~ \2
W Geaugn 72, Chardon ,2
W. Uber1)1 Sall!m 40. Falrbanlu J?
Wadsworth 1~. Medmo HiJhiWMJ 47
Walnut Rld,e, 90, Col Sooth 6'J
Wnpakoneta 82, Marion H.ardina70
WWTtn Kcftned)' 89, Wa!M1 Ouunpi·
P155/80 R13 .. NW .. $
OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE.
71
I)
37.57
$ 52 00
P195/75 R14 ........ $ 54 75
Schnn~ 4tl, Suulhern Ux:,tl ~li.
Shclhy 64 Upper S.tndusky, I
Shl!ndan ~4 New Lcxmi!IUn 'i2
So lon 61 Omnge 112
Spon~~rvtllt! 67. P.tuldtng 56
Spm1~ L1x:ai6J. Md)nnald 61
Sprtng Northcnsrcrn 'i1 , Spnng
NuC1hwcstl'rn 4K
Sprm~ South :'ii.J Xcn1.1 46
Spnn!!l!'lHJiil, Ltlllc Mi.mu 40
Steubenville 71, Rn.:hmuml Et.h!>On 67
Sr.:uhen\l llc Cn1h 711,-L tn~ l y, W V.t
St0w M4 Ken! Rovscvch 5'
StrccMx'>lo ~ 2 Woodmlgc ~0
T.tllmao.lge M Gruen tlO
Teny~ V.d C,K. Etlrlteld Unwn
P155/80 R13 ........ $
P165/75 R14 .. .
'"
~· E:utern PtL.e 79. Franklin Furn111.'1'
Green 4H.
. 61
Rllak Clalkollrtl round
Muplt: Hili Tl, Muy field 46
MunonCath 97, Wdhngmn 111,7
Mnnon Elgtn S2, Buckeye Val ~0
Mnrllng1on 4~, Carrollton 35
Mnrysv1lle 53, Watkms Memonal 32
Mason 60. Kmgs Mtl ls 57
Muss1llon Jack son 56, M:ts sillon Perry
47
'
Mays«Jtllc 81, R1ver View M
McComt. ~I. Arhngcon 46
Meadowbrook 52. Claymont 42
M~o.-c hamcsbura. 68, Rtvers•de 6'i
Medma F1rs1 8apt 104, Mogadore
Chr 6R
Mc1g5 46. Vtnron Co 41
Mentor 80 l'nm1.1 'i7
•
Mentor Lake Calh 61, Garfield His
Tnmty 46
M1:~m1 Val, 67 Locklund 49
Mmnnsburg HS. Edsewood 5~
M1ddle1own 77 Milford M
Middletown Fenwrck 74.1..cmon-Mon.
l)ay. 01nsll.t1t 70 Yclluw Sllflllj!S 'i:!
Day Dunlw I I"... D.1y M~.to.hiWII.IIc
D:1y Nrlflltmnnl71 l1tqu.t(ll)
U.ty Plmersun HU. D.ty l'ulnnd whltl'
M
,
l)uy Stetll'l11u 67 Mt.l\l\1 fr1~<:1: 'it{
Ddaw:tn: Chr 117, IJu~ynt~ Wol )'•nlc
l'hr Kl
O...I(IIM.ts Jcfl"cnun tH Uluffhm fJI)
IA•lplm• Sl John71 P.~rkw,t)' ~I
l)ul'llm Sdtll\1 l'l4 Keynold ~tl ur~ .56
~ (';mlun 112. Akrun M.m~; h..:~M ~()
E Chmnn ~i) S Ch.trl!!sum SE 57
E Knnx 7.1 Lu~.t57l
E LIVL'I'floollt I. BenH•r i.All.:.tl .) I
E P,tl..:~tltkl 114, Columhnutt (n;si\Jt:w
.. CJat..Cola Kr'CIIt'r CIIUSk·Rnt roa.nd
" FIIM\IIn 90. Hlulfton 6l
Foud
tht HIIIIFJ
lavlttdoui-Rnt round
DeliiUICC 76. Lake Ette 1\
Mount Vernon NAUreO( 104. Asbury
<on
Aqul"a~ ~1
Pizza Hut Cla!Air·nnt ropnd
SW Mlsmun S1 99. M•trcbl!,td St 1'1 I
Tmy S~> 106. Mtu Valley St tJO
: ppd.
Cnl Wancrsmt 70 Col lknly .n
Cnl W.·sJI,ttl~ M Duhlm C'nf1m;m ~K
C11l Whcrsh•ne 02 (\tl No.lflhl ,md ~li
l'uldW,IIl'r (tl. Nrw Ur~·nu.u.J7
Cnlmll.· l Cr.twfnnl f1" J ll'til'nekmwn
•• Cnhtml'lt.t
New Orlt:,uJS 72. San Frallt'tM:D ~
Tom RolttBOR ClaMh.:·nlllt hlund
8ap11~1 Chmu ,rn .11 J.u.:knmv1llc St.
'
Clc Kcnn.·o.Jy 7i Clc Rhno.lc~
64
Clc So1u1h 61J Cit: L~~~ Tedt 6b
Clc St lgnatms 70 S!nlllp~•llc.MI
l'lc VA-SJ 711. Perry ~2
Ckar lnrk "fo Lnmlnn'Jtlle ~~I Of)
t'lcrmunl Nunlk,,~tern ~7 WtJh ,,m, .
N
HarrlH Trdtr Ptp.~l
ChllllrnRe-nnt round
Norlh Cnrullnlt 99. Snuchem Call'l4
South Canthn.l 7~ N C L1Mrlnlll' 60
'Suptr Chti'J Shoutoul·first ruund
low r~ 91. Grambhn1= St 71
La S.tll~ 62. Suull~~:m M1~' ~
4
( lyo.lc M. P•lrl Cllntnn :'i7
01.11 Grmc H7 lrnntun Sr Ju'L'(lh 7.t
Cui lht g)!~ ?1 Col Eotslmnm 70 (0T)
Cn l Bromkl1 tWll 1J.J Cnl llL'I..'l' h ~rnft
MetLWt Clauic-nnt ro~~nd
l
Lisbon "'I leelon1a 111,1
Log~n ~0 Galhpolii 48
Lowdl.,.lllt 46, Bcrlm Center W~:~;tern
Rc:st.'fY(' 29
MadtsCJn 79, Conneaut 49
Mnd1gon P1utns B<l, Clinton·Milutc 49
Mnl~o" e m 77. R1dgewood 54
Man sfield Sr. S2, LornJn Southview 42
M11ndield Temple ~9. Tree of L1le 'i:'i
Wmtscun 6LJ
W.tverly 64
-----Sports b r i e f s - - - - -
\4
tttlrt-: 46
•• 'KYLT-CtKa-Cola Cla!15lr·fint round
:
"
-·-
South Gallia: Queen 8-0-112= 17,
Mooney 3-0-6n:l2, O'Dell 5-01/2:11, Clary 3-1-1/4:10, Waugh 40-0/0:8, Snodgrass · 2-0-3/4:7.
Osborne 2-0-010"'4, Davis 1-0·
J/4:3, Clark 1-0-0/5.,2. Totals: 331-15/30:84
Rebounds: 62 (O'Dell 16)
Turnovers: 24
Fouls: 24
Mlflcr Cuy M, Holgbte 50
Mmster 47 Fori RL'\:ove ry )J
Mumnnnwa Val Sl, Tn ·County N
On Glen
Friday's tournaments
...
Kn11and 62, l..edgcmulll "7
l:!Br.~e 64 Niles ~0
Lukcwood 67 Normandy 50
L1kcwnod S1 Edwurd HO Cle Rene·
dldlllt!61
Lcb:mDnl02, Fninklm til
Letpslo,; 59. P:.mdl>ra·GIIboa 49
l..tbcrty Bcnlou 5~ An:ad~.t4 1
Ltbcrty Cemer 4~ A1~hbold 16
Ltdang Ht § Iii. F1sherC:nh 48
l..in~u Bath 61, Allen E 39
Luna Perry 52, Convoy Creslvtew 38
Ltmu Shawnee 64, NapOleon 61 (OTJ
Lmculnvu~w I 00. Upper S~ml o Val
Assists: 8 (Mooney & Queen 3
each)
Steals: 41 (Money 12)
()1{}.:2. Totals: 16-0-l0119--42
roc~6
,.
Amerita~
,.. '
5K Cm.:Jev1lk 69
C:mum GlcnO.tk :'i2 A.IJI.IttL'C ~()
C:mtom S 62 Loulsv•llc 44
Curdm:d 4'J Newbury ~6
Cltrdtn!!IOII 112 Mnnun ~tv~rV.d (W
Curh~le ~\ M•Jdlcwwn M ,JJt~on 4b
Ccd~trvtllc CJI, G~nc~ tcw l7
Ccnlcmlle 69. Fa1rboru 6l
Ch.mcl 71 Holy Name 41
·C m CtJunny l)ay ~0 IJ,t~.tvin 47
Ctn Deer Park M Cm Rc••~m~ ~7
CHI Elo.Jer 6~ C111 Purp!lt M:man ~J
Cm Fmncylown H~ Cu1 lno.l1an Hdl
Friday's
SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH 12/24/96
C.u~o~l Wlll~hcs tcr
•
(01)
; NCAA Division I
· men's scores
1·5
Adn S2 Columbth Grove )6
Aleron Covcn1ry ~H Tu~law ~6
Alo:ron flri!Uonc 80. Akron Kenmore:
Akron GarfieiJ 84, Akrvn Bllo,;hlcl 74
Akron Huban lU C.mtuu 'I tmk,c:n ~4
AkrunN 57,AkronEllcl ~6
Akron St V-S1 M M Cuy.thUJ!a l".tlls
,,
••
64
Ohio Ji.s. boys' scores
Gil
.,
176
51
Heidtlberl Tipoft Clau•t·fint round
Defian~;e IO:'i. Kansas Wcsk:yan 61
Kenyon 7'\, l-l e•Oelberg 47
7
Wl
.1!'iH
Hnnnth,ll River-6'l Umon l..~lc:t15~
lknth 78. ikrnc Umun n
H1lhard 66, Groveporr ~~
Hollund Spnn1, 76 Uowhllf!. Gr.-.:n 61
Hupewdl-LouJun 59. N B:dltnmrc 4:'i
Howland 61 Warren H:udm!! 56
Hubbnrd 60 Struthers. 44
Hudson 54i Copky ~2
Huroo12. Mll.1n Edison ~M
lnd1an Creek ~7 Uuckcye Loe.11%
lndmn Lake 74. BcnJamtn Lu~an 69
lndwn Val 111, Tus.rtrawru. Vul 4R
J~cUon Milton 49 Mathews~
J.tnlltltu~~on, Pa 62, lliOQmfidd46
Jcth:rson 8:'i. Ashtabula S! Julin 62
Jewen·Scw 74 Tus~arawas Catlt "i"
John Glenn 59 Ph•lo ~~
Kcnrun R1dge 86 Greenan 79
Kettcnng Fmrmonl 72, Spr1ng Nurth
Central Texas Clusac-fint round
Baldwtn·Wallacc 65. Sout h wc~tem.
11tey played Saturdoy
THE SHOE CAFE
AUGiiA" tlll!lilll AUJOIII4tiC .22 CAHetM£
II
Houston , ,
' U1ah ..
15
7
Mtnnesota
•
DaJ1111. ...
. ..... 6
Denver "'" '" ,, ... ,"".,5
San An1oruo
1
Vancouver
.)
•
•All Men's NIKE<~~>, REEBOK<~~> & FILA<~~>.......... I0·50% Off
•All EASTLANDS ....- ........................... 510 Off Reg. Prke
•All AIGNER, AMERICA" ANGEL &
.
MARLO HANDBAGS .....- ...........- ........... 15% Off
•All MINNETONKA MOCS..- •• - ......................- ..55 Off
•All DEXTIR......- ......_ ......- .................~-..••510 Off
1l1)~
6
lam
• HOUDAY SAI,I -·
:RlJGER~
IDO
471
•
•
Bethany Cullt&e Holiday
ln•llatiunal-lim round •
Ouer~m 78, Ohm We1ler.m 76
Midwest IMwl!iion
!
aiC 1!$1
Mon.·Sat. 9:30-8; Sunday
500
8
9
*1.-iday's tournaments '
2\
.~SO
8
4
7\
647
. .8
... 8
.. 8
"'
ffllnoun .'i:'i, CuH:mnatJ 49
Ohm St 90, Xavtcr 70
~~)
II · 6
.. 10 8
-·-
Gtbsmtburg ?6 Millbury l...;.tke 61J
Glenwood ~ 1J. Pom;moulh 1: ~7
Gmhnm 116 TntiLI ~I
Grund R1wr 44, Ment~Jr Chr 19
Grandw1cw ill, Jun.ath,ln Allier 60
Gruuv tllc "il Ml lh:n;ppu 39
Grove Cit)' K4. Wunlnn~tun K1lbournc
Non-conference pla)l
Emory S4, CASt Watern 5~
Kent 64, SW Massoun St .'iS
WESTERN CONFERENCE
\I
,'49.97
111
Dn•i!lloo
Chtt<~JO
.. 17
I 944 •
Detrotl: " '" '"" '" '" .. 14
1 R26
point totals in then '
1wo wins over Clcvchmd i.trc the
most the Cavaliers have govcn up this
season
.,
"We pl.1ycd a t'crrilic game for 40
or 43 rmnutc s, hut Dc1ro11 sh<'t the •
hall extremely well, and 1hey cxc- l
cutcd," Ckvdand couch Mike
Fratcllo sauJ. "We had some h1g
dclcnsove hrcakdown s, and they t<Xok
adv.onougc ol them. They played a
wcll-cx.cc utcd , tremendous ball
game "
-
Gil
:'i
6
7
•
Lafayette Mall
L· E<L
Ctr~lrll
''T\!rry was spectacular Hmightl"
Collins smd. "Six threes arc great.
hut I loved the none assists Agamst
Clevel;md. you have to always make
the extm pass. and that's what Terry
P1sl<mS:'
II
Wnshington
Ptuladdphta
New Jersey .
aSSIStS.
The
New York
OJlllRdo
tosso ng them m." he said. "It's like
he was shooting into an ocean ....
Mills linishcd with23 pomts, hut
P1stons coach Doug Collins was just
as excite-d ahoul hos career-high nine
was domg tonight "
Mtamt . ..
»:
14
-·-
Hannan: Cupp 7-0-5/9=19,
Pruett4-0-3/5: I j, Wiley 3-0-0/0:6,
Cremeans 1-0-215:4, Shepard 1-0-
Friday's action
Atlantic Dholsion
Jam
The future: The Rebels will host
Rose Hill Christian Thursday al 7
p.m.
Ouarter l!llall
Hannan
8-23-7-4=42
South Gallia
29-18-23-14:84
Ohio women's
college scores
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Mills and Curry help Pistons get 93-81 ·w in over _Cavaliers
of shot at all.
record. Curry scored 12 pomts on 4Luckily for the Detroot Pistons, for-6 shooting after a mghtmarish
only Curry's streak came loan end stretch that saw him score JUSt lwo
during Friday night's 93-81 victory points in 60 mmutes of playmg time.
over the Cleveland Cavahers.
Mills didn't think much of it
Mills went 6-for-6 from behind when he e'l,lended the streak 10 sevthe three-point arc and is now JUSt en during the first quarter. But he
one trey short of Price's year-old , knew things might be right when he
Hannan's Tomi Cupp led all scorers with 19 points. Teammate Crystal Pruett had II.
•
Reserve bOles: South Galha won
36-9 in pan because because ofBrid·
gel O'Dell's 10 poonl$ and Jessica
Clary's nine.
Crystal Niday led the Wildcats
wllh four.
·
NBA ~landings
'
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP)
- Michael Curry and Terry Mills
have both been on shooting streaks
this week. Mills is enjoying his a lot
•bwl • Page 83
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
TREAD D!.SIGN MAV VARY.
OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE.
'·
USED TIRES
saoo
AT
REMEMBER TO ASK
1 3
ABOUT RGAD HAZZARD uy ' Get
WARRANTY_..
4th
FREE
�..•
Page84·~
) . t - -...
•
ec:,.lded by third-quarter spurt,
In the teams' SEOAL openet;
I
('
I
j'
earned on 10-for-13 field-goal shooting. Spence (5-11 FGs) nailed three
of his four three-pointers en route to
a 17-point night. Greenwalt's 12·
pOint effort was built mainly on 5for-6 field· goal shooting, while most
of Mike Warden's 10 points came
from 4-for-6 field-goal shooting.
James' nine points came from 4for-12 field-goal shooting.
Reserve nota: Warren Local,
after withstanding a. River Valley
challenge that cut the Warriors ' lead
to three points early in the fourtH
quarter, won the preceding junior
varsity contest by a 71-52 margm.
Bubby Richards paced the War·
ri'Ors with 22 points. Teammate
Aaron Chidester had 12.
The Raiders (I: I) were led by
Ryan Fowble's 19 points and Trevor
Kern's 10.
·
The future: This week's agenda
has the Raiders, who took on
Alexander in the Kroger Hoops
Invitational· Saturday, playing Fairland a( Proctorville Tuesday and
returning home Friday to face Marietta.
.
' Ouirter .I!WIIa
River Valley
I 0-1 0-1 0-6=36
Warren Local
33-20-13-25=91
-·-
River Valley: James 3·1-011=9,
Justice 1-2-010=8, Adams 2-0-213=6,
Fitch 1-1-0/0=5, Rocchi 1·1 -0/0=5,
McCleese 1·0-010=2, Sullivan 0·0·
112= I. Totals: 9126-S/18-316=36
Total FG: 14-44 (31.8%)
Rebounds: 15 (James 3)
Assists: 6 (Justice 3)
(22·32).
Steals: not kept
Only twice in the contest did the
Thrnovers: 23
Raiders score consecutive baskets. ·
Fouls: 16
\ The · first was a seven-point rally
,coming during a 86·second stretch in
the second quarter. James and Joe
Justice ·sank baskets inside the sixfoot range before Justice connected
on a three-spot from the"left wing :it
the 4:40 mark. The rally reduced
Warren's lead to 39-17.
The last was in lhe third quarter,
when backup guard/forward Chris
Fitch sank a three-pointer from the
· ( 1:45) before scormg
· on a
le ft wmg
layup 17 seconds later. Those baskets
uimmed Warren"s lead to 64-27.
'The shooters: All but one ofT~y·
lor's game-high 21 points .were
Warre~
L;;;:j;'" Taylor · IO·O-
113=21, Spi:nce 2-3-4/4=17, Greenwalt 4-1 " Ill= 12, Warden 4·0212= I0, Covey 1-0-4/4=6, Lee 2·0·
212=6, Thomas 2-0·212=6, Chidester
1-0-3/4;.5, . Craddolph 2-0-0/0=4,
Spencer 1-0-010=2, Tidd 0-0-212=2.
Totals: 29/43-4/10-21124=91
Total FG: _ ( .3%)
33 53 62
Rebounds: 29 (Taylor 8)
~ists: 17
Steals:
12
TUrnovers:
8
Fouls: II
.
Symmes Valley · .
beats OV_CS 92-69
AID - Aided by doublc·digit
offense from Chris Hunt. Joe Inscoe.
Eric Simpson, Ryan Wilson and
Jeremy Holland, the Symmes Valley
Vikings recorded a 92-69 victory ·
over Ohio Valley Christian Friday
'light.
.
Such prbduction wns ·necessary.to
counter the 26·point clinic put on hy
the Defenders' Bo Pollard and
Daniel Sizemore's 21 -point effon.
These players were responsible for at
least40% of the De lenders' points in
each quarter. Why'! Only two other
players scored more than one baske1
' in any quarter. Micah Lanier and
Jeremy Wolfe accomplished that
deed in the fourth quarter.
Reserve notes: Symmes Valley
won the preceding reserve game 5520. Symmes Valley 's Jeff Ralph and
OVC's Chris Burnell led their cluhs
with cight·point effort.,,
The future: The Defenders will
host South Galli a Tuesday.
Symmes Val.
••
,; <l1.LLlPOus -
11·16-23- 19=69
20·26-23·23=92
-·-
Ohio Valley: Pollard 11 -0·
4/8=26, Sizemore . 2-5-212=21 ,
Lanier 3-0-212=8. Wolfe 2·0-2/6=6,
Mcyn 1-0-2/6=4, Newbold ().
· 04n=4.
Totals:
19/53-5/14·
15/32=69
Total FG: 24-67 (:\5.X'i0
Rebounds: 34 (Sizemore 12
Assists: not kept
Steals: II (Newbold 3)
Thmovers: 17
Fouls: 15
.m
,. '
ANYONE OPEN?- River Valley's Aaron .Adams (right) looks ~o
the middle of the court for an open teammate while Warren Local s
Mike Warden rides his hlp during the third quarter of Friday night's
game In VIncent. The Warriors won 91·36 to ramaln unbeaten after
two games. (Times-Sentinel photo.by G. Spencer Osborne)
•
II
,
LAYUP 11ME cornea for River Valley guard ~Ojl Justtc. (right). whO
gets resistance from Warren .Local's Shawn Taylor (40) aa Warrlot:a ·
Dan Greenwalt and Mike Warden (32) watch In the third qu.rtar of
Friday night'a SEOAL contest on the Warriors' planks. The hosl4
· handed the.Raiclers their first loss of the' season. (Times-Santin,l
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
.: .
Lyne Center slate
.
{?QAt
461 SOUTH THIRD
f!J
PHONE 992·21 96
!i.v ODIE O'DONNELL
:T.-s Correspondent
1993 LINCOLN TOWN CAR SIGNATURE SERIES
'•
4.6 VB engine, power steering, power\
brakes, auto, air, tilt, cruise, dual air bags,
cloth interior, power window;> and locks, · · .
· rear defroster, cast aluminum wheels, keyless entry, low miles, local one owner.
Junior high Biue
Angels win twice
GALLIPOLIS - Gall ia Acade·
my's seventh-grade- girls' basketball
start the 1996·97 season Ia." week.
The Blue Angels (2-0). who beat
Logan 34-22 in their opener on Mon·
day, handed Meigs a 28-13 setback .
Thursday night behind . arianna
Johnson's 16-,pnint effort. Teammates Jcssica .Bm.limcr nnd Mcghan
Motlncy chipped in with foui-point
efforts.
No information was made ~vail
able on the Marauders:
1994 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL 4 DR
.•.
3.8 VB engine, auto, air, power steering,
power brakes, AM/FM stereo cassette,
power windows and locks, lilt, cruise, dual
air bags, feather interior, . rear window
defroster, cast aluminum wheels, 19,000
miles, one owner vehicle. Extra clean.
5
4 cyl, auto, power steering, power brakes,
air, electric mirrors, power windows and
locks, rear window defrosler, dual air·
bags, AM!f'M stereo cass.
,,.
I'
1r
ADDRESS·- - _ _ , - . . , - , . . . - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Breed
- if Known
Fees
Paid
••
upset with a 61-58 triumph at Marietta. Two other league members,
Jackson and Point Pleasant, had an ·
open date and did not play.
Athens 61, Marietta 58
At Mariella, the Bulldogs scored
only four points in the third quarter
and trailed the Tigers 40·33 .entering
the final eight minutes ofplay. But
'they notched the first 10 points of the·
fourth periOd to go up 43-40 before
theJjgers woke up.
Shamel Maxwell scored. I0 points
to lead the 28 point Athens comeback. The AHS lead reached six
points, 59-53, with just 22 seconds .
remaining. As the final seconds
keep
~agnozzi;
jump right into our starting · rotaRONALD.BLUM
tion,'" said San Diego general man• .Ni:i\'1 YO!l.K (AP) -.Sixty-one
~ger Kevin Towers.
including Roger
~me11S, John Wettel'and, Alex Ferand Moises Alou, faced a - c
""'KI" EST deadline to re-sign
former teams unless they
offered salary arbitration.
All games
Through Saturday, just .six play- Team
W L TP OP
er5 had been offered arbitration: Warren Local... ...... 2 0 164 65
Jimmy Key by the Y~nkees, David . ~~~~;eaki;:::::::: J
Wells by the Onoles; . Mark Wheelersburg ........ ! o 62 : 56
McLemore by the Rangers, and Logan .................... 2 1 196 196
Q!'eg Vaughn, Fernando Valenzuela River Valley ........... ! 1 107 144
lli1d Craig Shipley by the .Padres. Athens. .................... ! 1 103 103
2~~
!\evera\' m·ore offers were expected . Greenlield ......... ..... 1 1
2c rd
Portsmouth ............ ! 2
S81U ay.
S h'
0 1 66 67
t;· !lay~r_s not offered arbitratio~ G~m~~::::::::::::::::o 1 46 50
c~. ' rers•gn Wlth ·therr formerteams Fairland .................0 1 1~ ' ~~~
u~ttl May 1. Player.; offered .arb•traMe1gs ....... :.............o 2
tig)l have until Jan. 8 to re-s1gn.
. Sou!Jl Galha ...........O 2 32 104
''· Chris Bosio Steve Avery and Mel Manetta .................0 3 159 239
' ..
'
Th
SEOAL Varsity
R:oJas also are among the group. e Team
w L p OP
. d~line does not apply to !hose who Warren l,.ocal ......... 1 0 91 36
!J#:ame free agents last month after Athens ................... 1 0 61 56
i~. waived the restriction against L'?QBn .............,...... 1 0 50 . 48
~at free agency m a five-year
R1ver Valley ........... 0 1 36. 91
sJ18n. a provision 'that·disappears in Gallipolis ................ o 1 46 50
thl& new labor agreement.
Manella ................. 0 1 58 61
';JI'
f . th d dt,·ne PI Pleasant... ........ o 0
0
0
1
•':Four payers acmg e ca.
Jtickson ................. 0 o
0 · o
a&reed to new contracts Fnday. TOTALS
·
3 3 344 344
C.itcher Tom Pagnozzi got a $4 mi 1SEOAL Reserves
li~. twp-year de~l to re-sign with
Team
W L P OP
t~ St. Louis Cardmals; !"fielder
Warren Lacal. ........ t 0 71 52
Craig Grebeck lefllhe Flor1da Mar- Man.elta ................ .1 0 59 ~
li '•• and' a reed to a $450,000; one- Galhpohs ................ 1 0 52 52
~.
g
. h he A h .
Logan ....................0 1 51
y~r contraCt wtt t B ~arde•m Athens ...................0 1 53 59
Aligels; infielder Rafael e 11 •a re- River Valley ...........0 1 52 71
~iiined with the Atlanta Braves for a Pt. Pleasani... ........ O 0
0
0
$2~0,000, one-year' contract an<!
Jackson ................. 0 0
0
0
p~her Greg Hibbard a~reed !O a• TOTALS
3 3 338 33 8
minor-league contract w1th Seallle.
Friday's games:
·;,trhe 12 new free ageqts, 0 group · Logan 50 Gallipolis 48
th~t inclUdes Fernandez, Key and Athens 61 Manetta 58
Al~u, w~.re scheduled to begm nego• Warren Local91 River Valley 36
ti~tjng·w1th all teams Saturday after- ·Portsmouth at Lancaster
n according to an agreement · Whaell!rsburg 82 Northwest 56 .
n h' d F ·day by the plaiers' asso· Federal-Hocking 67 Southam 66
re e n
, PI
. .Meigs 46 Vinton County 43
ci~ion and management s ayer SEOAL reurve ac:oru:
R~ations Commllteo.
. .
Gallipolis 52 Logan 51
: l!bes<l players became ehg•ble Marietta 59 Athens 53
111l.rsday when the union's execu- Warren Local 71 River Valley 52
tii:board ratified the new labor s.turday'a games:
'
nt which restores service Nels-Yoli< at Athens
~ , forme ' h' 7•
tar-season days River Valley va. Alexander at 9onvo
It
I c J regu . .
'Warren Local at Belpre
d ng t1je 1994-95 ~tnke.
Vinton County at Jackson . .
::Any players m thiS gro~p offered Marietta 'vs. lima Sr. at Convo
••ltry atbitmtion by the1r former Greenfield vs. ~rysv•lle at Convo
leipts have until Jan. 2 to accept or . Chesapeake et Trimble
· ·t 1~ offers rather than the usu- Southam vs. Log~~n Elm at Convo
~~adli'
~• ofliec 19.
Tunday's games:
8
""
•. ·
S D'
Mfliga at Eastern
~~ ll!ttde Fnday, the . an ·~co L.ancutar at Athans
p~ llil!Uired left·hander Sterhng River Valley at Fairland
Hiii:hcolll·from the Seanle for n&ht- Cllllllcolha at Portamouth
hiller SCott Sanders.
We1181on at Southam
Jfi~hco<:k 2S was the ace of the South Galll. .t OVC
after Randy Johnson Dao. 13 garnas:
ilh'
Jacltson at Athene
I 11ack IUIJOry, fiIn , lftl Loglrl at Warren Local
~'!!
:J-9 record but .-'so wtth a Manatta at Rlvel' V~llv
S.:Q BJlA.
1
• •
•
••
Miami Tr- II Gr~
' 11•\ve•re OXGilcd about the trade Waverly II Wheelalll!utg
. . we ~lave added a quality, Trimble II Southam
~~ ltfl-blnded pi~her who can South Galli 11 World )olarvell
'
4 cyl, auto, air, power steering and power brakes, power locks, tilt, cruise;
AM/FM stereo cass, rear window
defroster, local one owner, low miles.
P.O. Box 551
PomerOy, Oh. 451H
I
•
·'
ltG
cage stand 'lngs
· •staff
NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL
Cou,.ay Auditor
•
13 effort from three-point range.
They donverted I I. of 26 charity
tosses, and pulled down 27 rebounds.
The Tigers connected on 20 of 37
from the field (5 of 16threes), hit 13
of 24 at the line, and claimed 20 ·
rebounds. Marietta turned . the ball
over 21 times and Athens had 20
miscues.
LINDSEY ON HOWELL - Logan's top-flight playmaker Coy
Quarter .I!WIIa
Lindsey
(22) keeps a close eye on Gallipolis' Andray Howell (44)
Athens
15·14·4-28=61
during
first
half action of Frid•y's GAHS Logan gam~. the Blue
9-15-16-18=58
Mariena
nuon opener, 50-48 before a capacity crowd.
Devils
lost
their
Reserve score: Mariena 59,
Athens 53.
Athens: Brendan Weiglcy 0-0· Roach 1·1-2=7: Brcnr Horst 0-0· Adam Trautner 2· 1·4- 11 ; Todd
4=4; Sha~el Maxwell 8·0-2= 18; 2=2; Nathan Meyer 5-0· 2= 12. Woodrich 2·1 -0=7: Joe Vukovic 4·0·
0=8; Chuck Easley 2-0-0=4; Jared
John Stickel 0·1-0=3; Joe-S parhawk Totals: 16-6-Jl-61
0-1-0=3: Chad Etheridge 1·0·0=2: · Marietta: Scull Strahler 4·0· Edgar 0-1·0=3. Totals: 15·5-13-58
Chad Thomas 1·3-1=12; Chris 8=16; Jeremy Albrecht 2-1-2=9:
Hitchcock
a
- muat be obtalnacl no Jatar than Janu.y 20, 1117, to 8Yold paylnt penalty. Altar IIIII
. NOTJCI!: LloertM
n
and ao 00 for KanMillcanaa.
.
.
ticked off. Mariena's Scon Strahler
canned a pair of free throws and
Jeremy Albrecht drained a three
point shot with 7.3 seconds left lo
make it 59-58. Chris Roach then hit
both ends of a two-shot foul, and
Athens had a61-58 lead at live seconds. Mariena's Jared Edgar fired a
long ' three-point auempl . at l~e
buzzer, but it missed. ,
Maxwell led a trio of Athens dou·
ble digit scorers with 18 points with
Chad Thomas and Nathan Meyer
each adding .12 points. Scon Strahler
topped the Mariena offense with 16
markers and Adam Trautner added
II pOints.
·
Final slats show Athens shooting
5 I% on 22 of 43, including a six for
m·m
Its Class.
"f
~
.,
" ~
XR'"250R
XR'"lOOR
XII 4Cli)R
&
.'
Z60R"
I.
1989 FORD TEMPO 4 DR GL
TOWNSHIP
(18.0) Thauumcd outlo be the winLopa: Jon Ogg, I 0-0-2; Coy
ning Logan point. Rucker's layup cut Lindsey. I 2-3-10, Chad Slack, 1-1Logan's lead to 49·45 with .ll.lleft. 2-3; Jeff Maibach, 7-1-3-15: Aaron
Kline made it S0-45 with 8.7 seconds Pennington, 0-2-2-2; Ed Ogle, 2-0-0to go, then Howell (unguarded) hit a 4; Lucas Kline, 3-2·3-14. Totals: 1!·
three-pointer making the final score 8-13-50 .
50-48.
Non-scoflnc players: Covert
Gallipolis is idle until Dec. 14
Gallipolis: Heath McKinniss, 2-5wben the Blue Devils travel to Chesa- 0·0·7; Dave Rucker, 3-6-3-4·15; ·
pe•ke for a non-league game. Lqgan Greg. Lloyd, 2-5-1-3-5; Isaac Saun·
will play at Warren Local Friday.
ders, 2-4-2-2-9; Andmy Howell, 3-5·
Reserve notes: Gallipolis edged 0-0-12. Totals: 12-27-6-9-48.
Logan 52-51 after trailing most <1flhe
Non-scoring players: Beaver,
game.
• Smith, Woodward & Rice
The Papooses led 12·6 after one
Reserve score: Gallipolis 52
period. 25-21 at halftime and 37-31 Logan 51.
going into the (inal quarter.
Team statistics
In the final period, Jeremy PayLocan- Field goalsl9-46
ton's three pointer with 5:40 remain· (41%); 2-poinl FGs (IS); 3-point
ing tied the score at 38-38.
FGs (4); Free throws, (8·13) ;
. Logan led 46-40 with 2:44 left,
Rebounds, 19; Assists n/a;·btocks,
butlhe Imps kept coming back until nla; steals, nla; turnovers, I0; team
RUCKER LOOKS INSIDE - Gallipolis point guard Dava Ruck·
finally, with 30.4 seconds left, Pay, fouls, 16. 3-poinl field goals ·Lind·
ar,
right, looks In aide for a taammate during first half action of
•
ton popped in a three-pointer to put sey, 2; Kline. 2.
Friday'a
GAHS·Logan basketball game. Chieftain defender Is
GAHS on top 52-SO.
Gulipolis • Field goals, 18-44
Chad
Slack,
.left, who scored the game's winning point with 18
. Logan had a chance lO tie it, but (40 %); 2-point FGs, 12-27; 3-point
seconds left to play. Logan won, 50-48.
missed a short jumper with 13 sec- . goals, 6-17; Free throws, 6·9;
onds left, with Brian Sims picking off Rebounds, 24; Assists, 13; Steals,
the rebound. GAHS missed two foul
5; Blocked shots, 3; Turnovers, 10;
shots in the final seconds of play.
Team fouls, 20.
.
Payton led the winners with 18
·Jndividuu leaders - Rebound$,
points. Chad Frazier added eight Logan- Slack, 8, Kline, 7; Gallipowhile Chris Lewis and Steve Roder- lis, Lloyd 7. Saunders 5; Blacks,
ick added six each. Sims finished
Lloyd 2; Steals, Saunders, 2;
with five markers. Shawn Faulkner· Assists, Rucker, 4, Howell, 4,
led Logan with 21 points
. each, Lloyd 3; Three-point goalsQuarter ll!.tl!b
McKinnis. 1-5; Rucker, 2-5; Saun·
Logan ·
4-12-18·16=50 '. ders, 1-1 ;'Howell, 2-3. Totals 6-17.
·. Gallipolis
3·8-17-20=48
1g1
~=========::::=::::=:=:::~:::::==~:======i .
4.6 VB engine, auto, air~ power steering,
power brakes, leather interior, climC~te
control, AM/FM stereo cass, power wind·
ows and locks, anti·lock brakes, traction
lock, power . mirrors, dual power seats:
dual air bags, tilt, cruise, rear defroster, air
ride, low miles, extr11 sharp!!
The Blue Devils led three times
during the 3~-minute contest, 3-2. 54 and 9-8 and 16-11
Afler Heath McKinniss knotted the
count at I l·.Jl with 2:46 left in the
half, Lucas Kline's three pointer
with 2:24 left in the half put the
Chiefs to stay.
'The Chiefs never led more than
nine points (23·14, 25-16, 27·,18, 2920 and 37-28) during their third
period' spurt. Kline's driving layup
with 3:59left in the third made it 2920. GAHS cut the visitors lead to
three, 29-26 on a three·pointer by
Dave Rucker and a free throw and
bucket by Greg Lloyd at the 2:34
mark. But two GAHS turnovers
resulted in a layup by Logan's Jeff
Maibach, and a bucket and ~bie by
Kline with 30 seconds to go, making
it 34-26. Rucker canned a short
jumper at the buzzer. Logan led 34·
28 going into the final quarter.
, Lindsey .hit one from downtown to
give the Chiefs • 37-28. advantage.
Andray Howell popped '" a pair on
a short jumpei and a three-pointer
(6:00) to cut Logan"s lead to 37-33.
Logan led 46·38 with I:44
remaining in the game after Jon
Ogg's layup fOllowing a J:i4..HS
turnover. Howell 's short"'jumjllor
(! :33) and a three-pointer by Isaac
Saunders (41.9) cut Logan's lead to
46-43. ·
·
.
Lindsey canned two charily sh~ts
with 37.7 remaining to make it48-43.
Chad Slack's freebie made it 49-43
g
1995 FORD CONTOUR GL 4 DR
OWNER OF DOG--------~--------~--~------~----~~~--~
', GALLIPOLIS - Basketball
pmes on Friday night throughout
~ area marked the opening of the
il'iZnd Southeastern 'Ohio Athletic
,;.ague hardwood season featuring
!!)ree. games.
Pre-seJson hvorites Warren
~al and Logan opened with victori,es while anolher pre-season choice
win it all, defending champipn
·
was up$et 'at home by the
f!tllen! Bulldogs.
Warren swamped River Valley
v•-~n,. Logan edged Gallipolis 50and Athens pulled off lhe first
·t ·
-·-
•
•
••u '
1994 FORD CROWN VICTORIA 4 DR LX
t~~~a,p~~Ntltywtllbel4.00torelrSJietl!ll
1 c-....adblal • Page 85
~Athens tallies 61-58 win over Marietta
AfiODLEPORT; 0"'
Pool
Through Jan. 1, 1991- closed
because of renovation
Home athletic events
Thesday - Women's basketball
vs. Ohio Dominican at 7 p.m,
WedJ!esday- Men's JV basket·
ball vs. OU-Chillicothc at 7:30p.m.
. Saturday-:- Women's basket bail
vs. Cedarville at I p.m.; men 's bas·
ketball vs. Malone at 3 p.m. (Bob
Evans Farm Booster Day)
Sunday, Dec, IS- Men's bas·
keibaJI·vs. Walsh at 3 p.m. (Oak Hill
Banks Booster Day) ·
team
~
'tt\-CO·Unt
RIO GRANDE - Here is the
schedule for th~ week of Dec. 8-15
at the University of Rio Grande's
Lyne Center.
Fitness center, gymnasium.
. and racquetbul courts
Today- 1-3 p.m. and 6-10 p.m.
Monday- 6 a.m.·IOp.m.
Thesday ~ 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
Wednesday - 6 a.m.-1 0 p.m.
Thursday - 6 a.m.- I0 p.m.
Friday- 6 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1·6 p.m.
Sunday, Dec:. IS- 1-3 p.m. and
6-10 p.m.
'Symmes Vailey: Hunt 6·0212=14, lnsct>e 5·0-3/4=13, Simpson
3·2-0/0=12. R. Wilson 5·0·212=12,
Holland 1-3·01!=11. Camphcll3'03/3=9, Ferguson 3-!J-315=9, Sharp 30· 1/1=7, Myers ·2-0-(l/(l=4, Ro,s 1().Q/0=2, M. Wilsnn 1-0-0/0=2.
Totals: 33-5·14/18=92
Fouls: 21
TELEPHONE
VISiting Logan
~ Iii< hoa:btJ on ils first ~ven
in the third period Friday
tkive the Chieftains past G.J.
$0-48 in the 1996-97 Southjstera Ohio Athletic ~ hard~ opener for bolh teams. It was
t.llipblia' !ltiSOn opener.
I' ' CIMic:h Osborne's
was well/or us," Sllid LHS coach
'¥1Dehan: as the Hacking
,ounty <:rew improved its overnl
i(w1( to 2-2. "We were able to get it
~ ilrly in the third period. That
)¥as J*obably the turning point,"
Swineliut said.
; • All of Logan's fJI'St six goals in the
IIICond h.Jf were within 10 feet of the
~et.
.
• Throughout most of the game, the
Jllue Devils were able to conlain the
~ller and veteran Chieftains. In fact,
Coy Lindsey, a four-year starter, was
held scoreless during first half play.
Lin~y wound up with 10 .points,
' ifive·in' the third slanza.
.
l ' "I was disappointed in the way we
j;layed offensively at home," Osborne
\;hld. "Wilh the exception of Logan's
third period spurt, we did what we
t"anted to do, Osborne said. "Hower, we can 'I shoot poorly at home
'expect to win," he added. In the
li'st quarter, GAHS was one for 12
~m the field. Gallipolis scored only
· kl!ree points durihg its first I 5 pos~ssions. Defensively, the B.·lue Devheld Logan to four points during
~eChiefs first 14 possessions. ·
E
team dciCatcd Logan and Meigs In
Quarter .I!WIIa
ovcs
·
•
·J_ogan tallies 50-48 win over
Gallipolis
..
Warren Local boys
pound RVHS 91-36
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
nmes-s.nttnet Staff
VINCENT- Fueled by doubledigit scoring runs in the first quarter,
Warren Local's varsity boys' basketball team got the start it needed to
post a 91-36 victory over River Valley Friday ni)!ht in the clubs' Southeastern Ohio Athletic League opener at Warren Local High School.
The Warriors (2-0 & 1-0) scored
the garne"s first 10 points in less than
three minutes. All but three came
from baskets in the paint.
The Raiders (1-1 & 0-1 ) struggled
with their field-goal shooting and
keeping possession of the ball. More
than a few Warren baskets resulted
on tap-away steals and a fast·break
offense thai on seveml occasions left
the Raiders at least a step behind the
play.
· Warren's transition offense also
tumed out dunks by Jeremy Thomas
(3:04) and Mike Warden (:46) as·
well as a myriad of lay ups and other shots made within six fe,et of the
· basket. The results: the Warriors,
who also had a 12·0 run in the last
two minutes before River Valley's
Joey J~~JT~CS'ended it with a buzzerbeating three-pointer, led 33-10 at
the first quarter's end.
By halftime, the Warriors' lead
had grown to a 33·point gulf in part
because of the following:
• Of the 46 points gained from
field goals, Warren got ·32 in the
paint.
• River Valley's .8-for-22 fieldgoal shooting was outpaced by Warren's 50%-plus field-goal shooting
~4
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaaant, WV
S1,1nday, Dltcember I, 1918
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galli pol Ia, OH • Point Pleaaant, WV
lh• I
Bundey, o.c.mber 8, 1898
Last Call
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Come ride with. us.
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THE ENVIRONMENT. Obey the llw, and rud 'fOOl o.!!er's manual ~"r' 'Sue dealer lor detail& XR ll1d
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IT CAME FROM RIVER FRONT HONDA!
433 Pike St.
GALLI POLIS, OH 10
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\ Page B6 • ~ ~ 1 ~JI n •
.
J Meigs tallies 46-43
~ victory over VC
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By SAM WILSON
_ UP TO THE GLASS - Meigs guard Brad Whitlatch (right) putt:
the ba.s ketball up to the backboard while an unidentified VintonCounty players defends from behind during Friday night's TVd.l
game at Rock Springs, where the Marauders 46-453 victory wu thelf.
first of the season.
:
Motor Trend's Car
Of The Year!!
Easte
· .rn. boy·s· hand
:. -Tr .I mbl e 58-55 loss
~ . Ill season· opener
r
b
I
I
•
•
outlast Leafs 6-5; Pengujns win·
two assists for the Blues, who avoid·
ed ~ing what would have been a
team-first ihree consecutive games.
· Avalanche goaltender Patrick Roy
lost for just the second lime in 16
games (I 2-2·2), spoiling the one·
year anniversary . of the trade that
brought him and Mike Keane from
Montreal to Colorado.
. Mighty Ducks I, Sabres I
Steve Rucchin 's potential gamewinning goal was disallowed in the
final minute of regulation at Buffalo.
Rucchin thought he ·had beaten
Dominik Hasek with a backhandcr
through the legs with 46 seconds
remai'ning; but the goal was cal.led
off because Ducks forward Paul
•'
Kariya was in the crease.
Hasek kepi the Sabres in the game
most of the night after allowing J.F.
Jomphe's goal I2:30 into the' first
period.
Derek Plante scored for Buffalo
with 2:07 left in the first period.
Oilers !5, Senators 2
Doug Weight scored. twice as
Edmonton beat visiting Ottawa and
stopped a two-game losing streak.
Mariusz Czerkawski, Rem Murray and Ryan ·smyth also scored for
Edmonton.
Alexan<' o Daigle and Andreas
Dackell '-· goals for the Senators, 1
who dido • have a shot for the first
14:31.
"
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vengeance in the final round and
• • • GLOUSTER _ Placing three recaptured the lead, Dillard had
~ :·: llf~n:·ln~dou~le figl!r~s. coAch Thny eight in the tray. whil~ Otto had four
; . : Deem's Eastern Eilgles (1-0) opened · and Rickie Hollon contributed three
•; · Jhe 1996-97 campaign with a big Tri- as the EUgles won 58-55. .
.
: ,. Valley Conference victory over the
Deem said, "This was a good wm
Trimble Tomcats Friday night
on the road . Trimble had been nd, Trimble (1--1) had previously- ing a wave of momentum and once
; upset Division II Athens ~nd was they took the lead, our kids had W
ranked as one of the top teams in the dig down deep to pull out the wm.
Hocking Division this season.
We played a good overall game:_"
Afleranextensivesummerwork- · Eastern hit 21 -48 from the held
outto prep forlhe 1996-97 cage sea- for 43.8%, including 7-.19 on threes
, spn, senior point guard Eric Dillard and going 9-15 atlhc ltnc lor 58%.
• led by example Friday night. .Oillard Tiimble hit25-521or 48. I% fr?m the
! canned 7-12 from the field and hus- field, but hitjust4-18 at the ltne lor
: tied his way to a game-high 25 22.2%.
poi'nts. Forward Daniel Otto canned
Eastcfi\ collected 33 rebounds
a couple early threes and ended the (Otto 1~ ~· Ymiker 7, Casto 5): had no
night with 13 points, Steve Durst had blocks, one steal, I0 turnovers_. sev·
I I, Josh Casto four, Rick Hollon en assists (Dillard 4); and 21 louis.
Trimble had 26 rebounds (Guthne
three and Andy Vance two.
: Trimble was Jed by David 10, Trace 8); three steals. I I
, ' Guthrie, who had a career-high 21 turnovers, seven assists and 21 fouls .
: ·: points, followed by Brady Trace with
Trimble won the reserve ?arne .
• 14. Josh Limo with eight, Josh 57-40 led by Robb•c Cooper wtth 29
McClelland seven, Todd Wisor three points. For Eastern Adam Sanders
aod Zach Miller two.
had 16, Jeremy Casto had II and
:
Eastern took an early 5·0 lead on Jeremy Coleman had sio: .
• a Dillard drive and Otto three-point- · Eastern hosts Meigs :ruesday.
er. The Eagles maintained a three- Quarter t!U15
. to-five point lead J'or most of the lirst ·Eastern
14- I I- I7- I6=58
half. Olio conned another long trey Trimble
, I0-'14·19· I2=55
to boost Eastern to 14-IOatthe end
Eastern: Eric Dillard 7-2-5=25,
Josh Casto 1-0-2=4, Rick Hollon 1of the first period.
,
In the second period, the tempo 0-1=3. Daniel Otto 3-2-1=13, Andy
• remained about the same deadpan Vance 1-0-0=2. Steve Durst 1-3~. paee, but Tomcat David Guthrie 0=11. Totals: 14·7-9/16,.58
:·. took the cat by the tail and erupted
Trimble: Josh Limo 4-0-0=8 ,
: ' for 10 points in the canto. Mean- Zach Miller t-0-0=2. Josh McCJcl• while, Eastern was very,patient and land 3-0-1=7. Brady Trace 5-1: . conlinuedtocontrolthegame. The
J,.J4, David Guthrie 10-0- 1=21 ,
; Eagles had a five -point lead with 24 Todd Wisor 1-0-1,.3. ,Totals: 24·1·
• • seconds to go hefore half and was 4117=5S .
; planning hold ?n to the ball for a
: possible seven poml hallhme adva~- •
1 tilge. Eastern, however, turned the
'ball over and Trimble nailed a shot ·
to trim the lead to 25-24 at the half.
'
In the third round, Trimble came
; back to lead by as much as five and
'• Jed by 43-42 al the period's. end.
Brady ·Trace had eleven of hts 14
~ points in the frame.
Eastern came back with a
Your
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'TJmee.4lentlnet ton.pondent
The good news is thai there is finally an AFC
team good enough lo win the Super Bowl. The bad
news is that team is the Denver Broncos.
Yes, theAFC hasn't won the big one since 1984,
but does anyone like John Elway and the Broncos
to be that team? Not this side of Cleveland.
A 12-1 record is imprmive. They lost their first
game by three to 'Kansas City and have dominated the league since. The
Broncos
home field advantage throughout the AFC playoffs. This
is bad news for the rest of the
conference because they are
virtually impossible to beat at
home.
;•r;,:..,_.• I Of course, l!llit year the Coils
found a way to defeat both San
Diego jllld Kansas City on the
· road. The Chiefs only lost three
games; however, their victories
were not as impressive as the
Broncos have been this season.
.Frankly, Den.ver is the best
learn th« AFC has had in years!
Look for the Broncos to be
•· .-"' -the AFC 'representative in the
Super Bowl unless there is a
total collapse or miracle.
~ • • Unfortunately for the Steelers, Franco Harris has retired, so that virtually
-': rules out any miracles.
~
I have a great deal of ambivalence toward Denver. I have never liked
~ · Elway because of his attitude toward the Baltimore Coils after they drafted
~ him oot of Stanford. Yes, he's one of the best in the business. But he repre~
sents what I despise: the pampered image of the spoiled child. .
I'
The quarterbacks I love exemplify the game. They are JUSt thnlled to be
~ playing in the NFL. They consider themselves fortunate to he fulfilliqg their
~ childhood dreams. You find these qualities in Bart Starr, John Umtas, Terry
. . ~ Bradshaw, Ken Stabler, Joe Montana and. Brett Favre. . . .
.
. 'l
If Green Bay makes it to Super Bowl XXXI the ·chmce wtll be stmple for
-~
me. Favre·is ·a gutsy player giving his all for his team . He does that every
:: time he plays the game. He doesn't care about statistics or fame. He just
,.£
· .
wants to·wtn.
:0.
Favre and Elway will play against each other today. It may be a prelude
-;: to the big game in January. I just hope it e~ds with a last-second comeback
~
by Green Bay. Thai would be something that would even sattsfy former
~
Browns fans.
.•
Elway is no longer thai spoiled kid, but you only have one chance to
~
make a first impression. Elway's has lasted me a lifetime. _
·
•
'
•.
Sltm Wilton, Ph.D. 11 an aaaoclrtta prolefoor of history atlht University of
•
Rlo Grande. An ovid trrn otelloporta- and a near meniiiCallollowor of baaket•
111111- hela 1 native of Gary, Ind., and 1 graduate of Indiana Univeralty- which
~ ahould tell r•adara aomelhfng about where rita haod (and t!Qoaler heort) Ia. .
'
·
·
~.'
~ In the NHL,
f:
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OWl ·• Point Pleasant, WV
:Good news, bad
news for Super Bowl
_,
Pittsburgh .. tended its unbeaten
1:( Wayne Gretzky makes things streak 10 six games.
easy for the New York Rangers.
The Penguins trailed 2-0 after the
•
The Greiu One scored twice and
first period before rallying to win
. ~ assisted on the winning goal with 27
their third straight away game folseconds left in the third period ,Frilowing an 0-11-1 road start. Pitts~~ day night, leading the New York
burgh is 4-0-2 ove'rall since Nov. 21.
·t~ Rangers to a. 6·5 , vicl.,ory over the
Lemieu• scored on a backhander
~ Toronto Maple Leafs.
.
from the slot with 16:47 left to put
':
"We want to win and they look to
the Penguins up 3-2. His 57 4th goal
~ the big guy .to score," Gretzky said. over 12 seasons moved him ahead of
1:; "Whether it's Mark (Messier) or I, Mike Bossy into sole possession of
that's the' way it goc;s. I was lucky. It - ·eighlh place on the NHL career list.
h was my tum this time."
Canadiens 3, Blackhawks 1
•
Gretzky tied the game at 5 with
Marc Bureau scored the go-ahead
" 3:03 left, beating Toronto goaltender goal off a two-on-one break with
= Marcel Cousineau through a maze of 6: I7 remaining for visiting Montre·: bodies in front of the net.
al.
'
Then·he fed Bill Berg for the winBureau's goal, which rolled in off
ncr.
the pad of goaltender Ed Belfour,
"Wayne Gretzky beats four guys helped the Canadicns snap a four:
behind their net aQd feeds it out to game winless streak (0-3-1 ). Valeri
me with an open n.et. It's hafd to miss
Bure tipped in the puck .with 2:24
, in that circumstance," Berg said. rc.maining for a two-goal lead.
,'
:. "That's Grctzky for you ."
· Scoll Thornton scored in the first
'
Cousineau tried to clear the puck period for the Canadiens, while
; but couldn't.
.
Chris Chclios had Chicago's lone .
" I couldn 't get it aside."
goal.
lilyers 6, Stan 3
CousinCau said. "'He made a nice
~
Dale
Hawcrehuk
broke a 3-3 tie
1: shot and put it right hetwccn my
with 8:25 to play. and Mikael Rcn·
legs."
,
Toronto trailed 4-2 before scoring berg added two goals . for visiting
: three straight goals, capped by Todd Philadelphia.
Dallas overcame a 3· I deficit in
Warriner's shot at 3:07 of the final
the third when Mike Modano and
r
were three mi1:1utcs close lO Dcrian Hatcher scored in a 27-sccond span.
~; a win,·· Cousineau said aftcrTo"ron ~
But Ha werchu k scored off a
r to's winless streak on the road
rebound
, hrs sixth goal of the season,
- ~ increased to nine.
for
a
4-3
lead. Renbcrg then con'
New York~ unbeaten in its last
nected off John LeClair's goalmouth
five games.
•
In other games, Pittsburgh beat pass at 12: 17 and got another on a
: Washington S-3, Montreal beat breakaway with 48 seconds to go.
Blues 4, Avalanche 3
' Chicago 3-1, Philadelphia beat DalPlaying
without leading scorer
la, 6-3, St. Louis beat Colorado 4-3,
Anaheim played a 1-1 tic with Buf- Brett Hull, who was henched by
falo and Edmonton beat Ottawa 5-2 . coach Mike Keenan, visiting St.
Louis broke a 132-minute scoreless
Penguins 5, Capitals 3
Jaromir Jagr scored twice and s'reak with three lirst-period goals.
Geoff Courtnall scored two goals
,; Mario Lemieu• got the go-ahead
goaJ .in the third period as visiting and AI Macinnis added ·a goal and
'<
·sunday, December a, 1996
·
By SCOTT WOLFE
The score was tied four more
It was a great team effort, but times in the torrid banle as Williams
three stars shone brightly on the and VCs Braden had 811 aggressive
Meigs County horizon Friday night tug-of-war under the bucket for
as the Meigs Marauders ni•ed the defen~iveloffensive position. When
V.inton County Vikings 46-43 in an the smoke had settled on the first
e.ci ting but physical Tri·Valley Con- quaner cu~in call, VC led 14-12.
ference Ohio Division basketball
HDn&ll paced the second quarter
contest at Larry R. Morrison gym- Meigs' fireworks, scoring six early
nasium.
points to lejld Meigs to a 21-18
Brad Whi!latch paved the way to advan13ge. Meigs biggest lead came
the Marauder win with four steals at the 2:12 mark when Williams
and a 7-12 night from the floor, canned a follow-up off the glass for
while 6-2 sophomore Daniel Hannan a 23-18 advantage. WhiUatch canned
tossed in 17 points, hitting 6-9 from one of two free throws with :50 left
the floor, and cleared the boards of in lhe half and Jason Kruger canned
a game-high II rebounds.
a pair for lhe Vikes to close the half
Vinton County was led by a well- at24-20.
balanced auack that saw 6-2 junior
Even after halftime adjustments,
'
Nate Henderson come out on top the closeness ofthe game remained. '
.. ,.
with nine points.
,The physical nature of the game . WHO'S OPEN?- An unidentified Meigs player looks for an open
The viCtory was a tremendous· accounted for a lo.t of hard-earned teammate while VInton County's Matt Bethel (20) defends on the
win for a young Meigs team over a · fireworks as Hannan and Whitlatch play durlf!g Friday night's Ohio Division contest at Meigs High
veteran Vinton County club. The low took turns eating up the nels for the Sehool. The Marauders won 46-43.
.
score· was ·a reflection of the great Marauders. Whitlatch had a followdefensive game that developed, a up jumper and then a steal and Jaychess match between the opposing in to break a 26-26tie and propel his
offenses.
VC's Murphy stole the ball, but Mall turnovers. and 16 fouls. VC had 32
club to a 30-26 advantage.
·
In pre-season polls, Vinton CounStill, Meigs could not shake the Williams saved the day and took a rebounds, 15 turnovers, and I?fouls .
ty was ranked as one of the top two Vikes. Matt Bethel tossed in a pair of charge along the baseline to return
Reserve notes: Meigs won the
teams in the TVC Ohio Division, All free throws to again _knot the score, the possession to Meigs. Meigs then
reserve game 50-42 led by Waylon
but one Viking stands 5-foot- IO·or 30-30. AI the end of the third frame , turned the ball over on the inbounds McKinney with 18 points. Vinton,
beuer, with four taller than six feet Meigs led 35-34.
pass as VC tried to work it 'in for the County was led by Jessie Reynolds
Additionally, most oft!te Vikings are
In the founh quaner, Meigs tie. Again the VC free throw shoot·
·
with 19.
bulked up from the football season,• pulled away from a 40-40 lied at the ing led to its demise as Caudill went
Meigs goes to Ea~tem Tuesday.
ail auribute thai made for a very
2: II mark ~¥hen Whitlatch canned a to the line 'with just 10 seconds left,
Quarter t!UI5 ·' · .
'physical game, especially in the pair of safeties for a 42-40 lead. One
hitti_ng the second of two for a 44·43 Meigs
12-12-11-11=46
paint
~
score. VC fouled immediately. but Vinton County
of Whitlatch's fOur steals came at an
14-6-14-9=43
"II just doesn't get any be!ler than opportune time at the I:55 mark after
Whitlatch canned both-free throws to
Meigs: Robert Qualls 1-0-0=2,
this!" said one Meigs fan filing out he grabbed a theft and drove il in for
secure the Meigs win.
Brad Whitlatch 6-1 -3=1 8, Matt
of Morrison gymnasium. How true the 44·40 score.
Meigs fans breathed one final
Williams 3-0-l=9;Daniel Hannan 6thai statement was. The closeness of
sigh of relief when Murphy's three 0-5=17. Totals lfi-J.ll/20--46
A defensive struggle ran 55 sec·
the game was described by the run- onds off the clock and sent Caudill
pointer fell off the mark at the
Vinton County: Matt Bethel 0-0·
ning score which reveale<l twelve . lo the line, where he missed. Meigs
buzzer.
2=2, Rob Murphy 3-0-0=6, Casey
ties and eight lead changes.
Meigs hit 16-44 for 36%, hitl -8 Nice 3-0-1 =7, Todd Braden 4-0-0=8,
lost possession and VC had another
Meigs went up 1-0 on a Daniel shot with 38 seconds left. This time
threes, and was 11-20 aJ the line. VC Ryan Caudill 1-0-3=5, Nate HenHannan free throw, then after acou- Casey Nice trimmed the lead to 44was I7-52 from the floor for 33%.
derson 4-0-1=9, Jason Kruger 0-0ple Todd Braden scores for VC, 42 on a pair of safeties.
Meigs had 25 rebounds led by 2=2, Gabe Ward 2-0-0=4. Totals 17Williams tied the score again at 4-4
Just ten seconds later a dark
Hannan' II, while collecting 7 steals. 0.9/14=43
with a free throw.
, shadow "'as cast in Marauderland as
six a<Sists (Roush 2, \Vhillatch 2). IS
. '
~, Rangers
~
t. By 'The Associated Press
.
Sunday, December 8, 1998
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, 0H • Point PleaAnt, WV
I
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" .
PASSES TO TEAMMATE- Sputhem's Je88e Majnard (left) passes to an out-of·vlew teammate while Federal Hocking's VIrgil Rec·
· tor move• In to defend on the play during th.e Tornadoes' aeason
· opener Friday night In Racine.
Federal Hocking
rallies to get 67~66
win over South~rn
the end of the first round. Three
By SCOTT WOLFE
T·S Correspondent
· Maynard free throws on athree point .
RACINE-Backedhardagainst shot attempt and another Evans' trey
the wall aod into the corner, dthef Fed-- accounted for the scoring.
Although Southern seemed comera) Hocking Lancers roare rom a
fortable
in attempting to control the
13-point third quaner deficit to post
tempo,
Federal
struggled to break the
a dramatic come~from- behind win
over the Southern Tornadoes Friday Tornado pressure . Chapman. hownight at Charles W. Hayman gym- ever, and at times triple teamed,
spear!>eaded the Lancer march to the
nasium in Racine.
The Lancers ( l-1) were led in front court and allowed the Lancers
their charge by senior point guard to keep pace hetween a three and five
and ball • handler Josh Chapman, point deticil much of the second canwho notched 17 points as well as to.
At the 4: I I mark, Chapman hit.becoming a dtiving fbrce in the
follow-up lay-in to cut the SHS lead
Lancer comeback bid. Virgil Rector to 26-2 I, but Southern got a couple
ha<l a great second half to notch IS
points, while Neil Nelson added 13 steals off the press to take a 31-21
advantage . An Evans steal and
andDerekHillhadiO.
·great
assist lo Roush pushed the SHS
The Tornadoes (0- I) were led by
a game-high effort from three-year lead to 33-2 I and Jorccd a Lancer
letterman Jamie Evans, who notched time out, where coach Paul Pettit
tuned up his troops.
Teammate Ryan Norris
Southern then squandered its
and the healthy advanmomentum
Federal took a 4-0 lead when
Chapman swished two free throws, tage as Beha pocketed a break-away
then Beha hit a baseline jumper for Jay-up, Hill canned a l'rce throw,
a 4-0 tally. Southern then stormed Beha added a follow-up off the
back behind a'pair of treys from Nor- . rebound and Chapmao went <Oast to
rfs and Evans, and another Evans coast off a ~leal and the third straight
goal to take the lead 8-4- at the 2:59 Southern turnover.
A charge took away another Beha ·
mark. Tenacious full court pressure
field
goal as Federal cut the Southfrom both clubs gave the game a
ern
advantage
to 33-28.
sloppy appearance, however, pure
Southern
reeovered
to pad its lead
adrenalili fueled both teams amhi37-28,
but
Federal
had
made
its pres·
tions.
At the 1:37 mark Federal took a ence none. Southern's biggest lead
9-8 lead, after Nelson followed up a was 44-31. Southern's inability to
Chapman 'drive with a pair of free bury the Athens Cmintians proved lo
throws. That was Federal's last lead be fatal . ·
, In the final round Federal pi<ked
tintil the Iauer stages of the ball
up
the pace and rattled off eight
game.
· k h
straight
before Southern called time
, . Southern slowly began to ta e t e
out
al
46-42
with I;55 left in the ..
momentum and command of _the
.(See
T(jRNADOES
on B-8)
game as they drove to a 14-9 lead at
;!d~i~~s
PRICE
1991 CHEVY CAVAUER 18318, Blue, A/C, AM/FM cassette,
sport wheels .........................................................................$3995
1992 MERCURY TOPAZ #6246, Black, A/C, A/T, AMJFM csss.,
tltt, cruise, P. wlndows .................. :....................................... $5995
1992 NISSAN NX 18183, Red, 2Dr., AM/FM cassette, cfolh
Interior .................................................................................. $7495
1993 PONTIAC SUNBIRD 18199, Blue, 2Dr., AM/FM canelle,
custom
·
1993 PONTIAC GRANO AM SE 16205, White, AJT, AIC< AM/FM
cusette, tltt, cruise .............................................................
1991 GEO STORM 18268, A!C, AMJFM, rear defroster,dual
.
1993 FORD MUSTANG 16278, Green, A/C, AM/FII cassette,
cruise, sunroof, sport wheels.............................................$7675
1992 FORO PROBE GL 16304, Green, Aff, A/C, AIIIFM
.
cassette, cloth lntetlor, sport whll!ls ..... ~..........................$6100
1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM LE 116301, White, A/C,Atf, AM/FM,
tilt, cruise..............................:."..............:;..........................:.•$6495
1994 MERCURY SABLE GS #6282, AIC, A/T, AM/FII ensette,
tilt, cruise, P. windows llocks ..........~ .................·............... $9605
1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE #6255, BliCk, A/C, Atf, .
AM/FM canette, tilt, cruin, P. windows, sport wheels
1995 CHEVY CORSICA 18316, White, A/C, A/T, AM/FII
casltltt, tilt, tit big, cloth lntetlor ..................................... t~MJU
1995 CHEVY CORSICA 18317, White, A/C, A/T, AM/FM
cauette, tilt, ali bag, cloth lntetlor....................................$9950
1994 CHEVY CAMARO 16225, White, Aff, A/C, AM/FII
csssette, tilt, cruise, dual mirrors ................................... $10,947
1994 FORD TAURUS GL 182~, 35,000 mll11, A/C, A{f, AMJFM
cassatte, tilt,
P. windows, saata
l ilport
1995 FORO PROBE #6261,
A/C, Atf, AM/FII C8118lle,
45,000 miles, cust. wheell, PS,
1994 PONTIAC GRAND AM #6275,
cassette, tilt, crulse ..............................i................................. ~ilU~IW
1995 OLDS ACHIEVA 16274, Red, Atf, A/C, cas.-tte, tilt,
cruise, P. wlndowsllocks .............................................. $10,995
1995 OLDS CUTLASS
#6204, V-6 eng., AIC, A/T,
crulsa, cas,.tte, custom wht~els ...;..,.............................. $
1992 HONDA ACCORD EX 18245, A/C, A/T, cassette, tilt, .
crulsa, P. sunroof, cust. wheels, PL, PW, PM................. $11,700
1994 CHRYSLER NEWYORKER #6261, lled, A/C, A/T,
casiette,tllt, cruise; sport wheels, antl·lhell system,
P. windows, locks I aunroof....................... ;................... $11,700
1995 FORD CONTOUR GL 18315, Burgundy, A/C, Aff, AM!fM
cass., dual air bags, dual mirrors.................................... $11,995
1995 HYUNDAI ELANTRA 18320, 4 Dr., Aff, AIC< AM/FM
casselle,13,000 miles, bal. of factory warranty.................$9875
!BDCD I 414'1
11993 NISSAN HARDBODY 18307, A/C, cassette, P. stlflrlino
rear slidet ....................................................................................11'1:
1993 FORD RANGER SPLASH 18309, Red; caueae, rear
slider, tonneau cover, sport wheels, 49,000 miles, ·
.
DELINQUENT PERSONAL
PROPERTY TAXPAYER'S NOTICE
In complianc~ with ·provisions of Section
5719.04 O,R.C. there will be published during
the next few weeks, in the newspaper, a list of
.delinquent personal_'·.property taxpayer's in
Gal.lia Cot.!nty, Ohio. Delinquent taxpayers may
avoid additional interest ch·arges that will acrue
on all unpaid ampunts on the lal?t day of each
month following the ·closing date. The interest
rate equals one-twelfth of the annual rate as
determined by the Tax Commission on the
preceding October 15.
All persons, partnerships, .companies and
cq.rporations .curre11tly listed on delinquent
classified and/or general persona property tax
d.uplicates . may· ·avoid . publication of such
delinquency and subsequent property tax liens
by paying said taxes in full within the next few
weeks. Collection of the delinquency · lists
publicized will be enforced as prescribed under
Section 5519.08 O.R.C . .
Ronald
K. Canaday
'
.
. Gallia County Auditor
.
~~--~--------------~~--~~~
· ----------~
.,
CHEVY BLAZER LS 4X4 16259, 4Dr., LS Pkg., AJC; A/T,
cassette, lilt, cnilse, sportwheels, P. windows,
power locks, luggage rack ...............................................$18,995
1994 TOYOTA TRUCK 16310, 5spd., bed liner, cloth irit.,
custom whttla ..................................................""'""'"'"'"'$8495
1992 NISSAN HARDBODY 16303, 5 speed, canelle, cloth
interior, custom wheels.......................................................$7295
IllS
1993 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER SE 16297, Green, V~ eng., 7
pass., A/C, A/T, tiH, cruise, PW, PL, custom wheels ...:.. $10,995
1989 FORD CONVERSION VAN #6280, Cust. stripes, 4captain
chairs, re1r bench ull, A/C, Aff, PW, PL, tiH, crulle ....... $~495
1992 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER #6240, White, 7 pess., AIC, A/T, V·
6eng., tilt, cruise, PW, PL, custom wheels ....................... $7995
1992 DODGE CARAVAN 18195, V-6 eng., A/C, Aff, air
rear defroster .........."...........................................................
1993 DODGe GRAND CARAVAN 18214, Blue, V-6 eng., 7
pass., A/C, A/T, enltltt, tilt, et'Uisa, power IOCtiS ............. ~I:Illi
1993 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER 16302, Blue, V-6 eng., 7pan.,
tilt, crulsa, power locka, AM/FM Cllltlte.........,...............$7995
1994 MERCURY VILLAGER GS 18312, Maroon, V-6 eng., 7
pus., A/C, A/T, tilt, cruise, 44,000 miles, cassette, P. uals,
wir\di)~ &locka ..............................................""'"'""''""$13,995
1~lliEV. LUMINA APV 16321, 7 peas., V-6 eng., A.'C,
A.~ ma., tilt, Ct'llill, PW, PL, 'f!Orl wheels ................$3495
�.
'
Page 88 • , .•
w-...- " '
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pteaunt. wv
u
Sunday, Dticember 8, 1t88
• Sundl!y, December 8, 1996
:Taylor gets past Redmen 65-63 in ·Kentucky tQurnament
RIO GRANDE - A mere two
points was all that separated the University of Rio Grande from victory
in the opening round of •'-u"' South'eastern Kentucky Hoops Invitational.
Redmen droJlPCcl a 65-63
d~tston to Taylor University (Ind.)
Fnday at Cumberland College's 0.
Wayne Rollins Arena in Williams·
burg, Ky.
The Sll!lle's outcome was determined in the ·final minutes, as Tay-
J'!te
I
to play. Wit sunk two more floe
throws to give Taylor a 65-61 lead
heading into the final minute.
· SheITOR Wilkerson's field 11oal
with 56 seconds left brought Rio
Grande back to within a basket, but
th.e Redmen couldn't find another
before the buzzer sounded. ·
The Redmen (4·2) fell despite
shooting 56.3 percent from the field
and forcing 16 miscues. Rio Grande
scored 18 points off turnovers
lor outscored the Redmen 7-4 to
erase a. 59·58 deficit. Rio Grande's
Jason Cruse gave the Redm~n the
one·pot' nt edge wt'th a basket at •'-u"'
7:24 mark, but Steve Wit hit two free
throws for Taylor wtth 2:03 left to
give the Trojans a lead. Cruse came
back with another field goal to
regain the lead for the Redmen (61·
60). with I :32 to play.
Mis;hael Delp stepped up for the
Trojans and drilled a trey with 1:13
,In the Grand Slam Cup
However, the Trojans hit six
I
three-poiltters, while the Redmen
c.ould manage just two long-range
liuclcets. Taylor (7·3) also got the J.ob
done at the foul line, hitting 15-of·
19 attempts The Redrnen were 7-for8 at the line .
Wilkerson finished with 23 points
for the Redmen on 10-of-19 shoot·
ing from the field. He added three
assists and three steals.
Cruse hit 6-of-9 field goal
attempts on his way to a .15- pomt,
seven-rebound
performance~
Center Eric Burris had a good
outing, scoringg 14 points and get·
ling four rebounds Burris hit 6-of-8
shots from the field.
Taylor was led by Wit's 25 points
and nine resounds. Both were game
highs for the 6-8 senior Wit was
good on 9-of-13 field goal attempts.
The only·other Trojan in double
figures was Delp With 14 points.
Delp finished 4-for-8 from beyond
the three-point arc.
Rio Grande faced either host
By NESHA STARCEVIC •
MUNICH, Germany (AP)- Is it
the aces? Or is it the hair?
Whatever it is, it's . w~rking for
Goran lvanisevic . ·
lvanisevie has been the king of
for the past two years, and h~
~~•Nns a record that will be tough to
His next ·goal? Perhaps serve
ucwcr aces. but finally win a Grand
tide.
In a 6-4, 6-4 victory Friday over
oMlan: Woodforde th~t put him into
the semifinals of the Grand Slam
Cup, lvanisevic blasted 16 aces.
That took his total for the year to a
staggering· I ,511, by far a historic
high.
'
"It's nice. 1\vo years in a row I
make two records, so I can say that
I have the best serve in the game for
sure," Ivanisevic said. "It was my
goal, to try to serve more than I ,500
aces. Now it's going to be very tough
to break this record, even for me.
And if the big serve abandons
him ~
Play the Field. ·
Interior, AC, stereo CB88, power-·
windows-locks, remote mirrors. tilt,
crulas, rear defrost clean car. WAS
.1989 FORD
MUSTANG LX
4 cyl, auto, Blue wlblue
interior, AC, AMIFM cass, power
mirrors-windows-locks, liij, cruise,
nice firsl car.
$4500 NOW $3500
,
1....
TAKES SHOT- Southem'a JeaM lhynard (left) takea the shot
lhet'1111ch of F~ Hocltlng'a VIrgil Rector (32) and two othFrlilliy nlgld'a Hoelting blvlalon and 181180n ope""
-' Southe,m
School. The Lllncere won 67-416.
..
from B· 7)
.(Continued
. '
frame. Chapman further cut the
Federal Hocking 9-12-25-2 1=67
to 46-44, Adam Roush con- - · Southern: Adam Roush 4-0-0=8,
i;tril~ut<:d a break-away for Southern
Ryan Norris 4-3-0= 17, G_reg McK·
Rectoradded a steal and lay-in
onney 1-00-=2, Jamie Evans 4-5·
end the frame 48-46.
0=23, Jesse Maynard 2-0-3=7, Pete
Chapman (six points) and Hill · Sisson 2-0-Q--.4, Billy Shepp~rd Q.J.
rtto,urJ launched a 12-2 scoring spurt
0=3 , Tyson Buckley 1-0-0=2.
visitors, that pushed the
Totals: 111-9·315=66
to . 58-52. Ryan Noms then
Federal Hocking: Josh Chapman
to regroup his Tornadoes as he
7-0.3=17, Ben Beha4-0.1=9, Chuck
Vogt 0-1·0=3.. Neil Nelson 4-0kcc•red the next seven points around
Rector three pointer to make the
5=1 ·3, Virgil Rector 6-1·0=15, Dci'Ck
61~59.
·
Hi113-0.3=10. Totals24-2-l:lJ23=67
Nels~n
:2o mark,
hitgot
botha
Atthe
· of a 1bonus
and Southern
lliv<l·sec:ond call on the inbounds folwing an FH time out . . Nelson
ored on the in bounds play (65-59),
en Evans drove baseline and hit
othing but riel
• It looked as though the Lancer
iiownfall might be at the foul line a.•
if,evisitorsmis<edfourofsixinal9
$econd span. With 32 seconds left,
' elson missed from the line, the
ith 20 seconds left. Chapman
~nned the first of a two shot foul (
result of 10 fouls in the hall). Fed·
'ral pulled its rcboundcrs off the .
ane, and Evans drove hard to the
l>erimeter where he •unk a thrce jiointer to pull the score to 66-64.
Chapman then hit the cvcr·imp<>r·
~nt second of a two-shot foul with
3 seconds left. Federal again pulled
's troops off the lane, allowing
outhem to·get the outlet pass off to
te Sisson on the right wing. Sisson
e ever so close to draining u
ree pointer with two seconds left,
wever, his toes were on the line
Southern's hopes ended in' a 67disappointment.
Federal hit 7·22the first half ant'
!\1·32 the :;econd half for a 24·54
ght, a 2-4three point tally. and 12·
night at the line. Southern hit 27·
, including 18-49 the first hlllf, hittilg 9·26 on threes and 3-5 on the
. Federal had 45 rebounds, led by
son and Beha with eight each,
. . Hill with II; 17 steals (Chapman
6J; IS turnovers and 23 fouls.
' One of the keys in the game was
~uthern's inability to rebound espeCially at crunch time when Federal
t tally dominated. S!-lS had 25
rlbounds (Evans 6, Roush 5, Norris
$i; seven steals, and 24 turnovers.
R-rn DOtes: Federal won the
e game 58-35 led by Gavin
with 9, Shane Akers 8, and
081TCtt eight. Jason Allen led
them with ten and Jerrod Mills
1¥14.
.Slluthem played Logan Elm Sat·
~
t
- - S p o r t s briefs-Figure skating
.
KAOOMA,Japan (AP)-Russian Ilia Kulik took the lead in the
short program of the NHK Trophy,
with former world champion Elvis
Stojko of Canada second.
American Scott Davis was third
and .Ukraine 's Dmitry Dmitrcnko
fourth. ·
1
In the women's event. American
Tonia Kwiatkowski led the shOrt pri>·over Russian ' Maria
fi.m;;t;~~D;i;r,;;u;;~t;.~;;~~~1;~5;:i:;~n
t])airyette at 'lUVV1erS
b
.1\!- to itt; onn its customers of the dosing if the .
.C.- ,~
sfw1'fior .d
w.. :.. rnontm
ojJanuary aru{ 1e6rt1fry,
• •
·
fi .
,_.f
1997• nt:.
·J.niS IS necessary or matntenance ana
•
~
rir.·c..
[o
fi
repatrS.
~ UIOUw £!~ to apo ',gize .Or any'
•
•
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}
tnconVentence
tnat
IS mag C(fUSe OUr CiistOffltrS.
C
' !7Wiz rfi
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1995 BUICK
CORSICA'S
SKYLARK
•6,99.5.
•9,549
·c
1995 OLDS
CUTLASS
su
191 per 110nt• •
.Or S
.
·$12,·959
nt~3,9%APR
511 995
.I
Alto, aart.Jftrto,
· Yo &11ore
.
5•fltii·Air l•ter111ttent Air, Auto, Cassette, nit,
Wipers. Was '13,295
Crtise, Mlch More.
$11,696 $17I 359
NONW[Y.
O
Pre·Owned·Cars & Trucks
ALL NEW
1994 Oltls Achleva ·l'lltltltt .. ·A, Alii. cn-.I'W, PL. t1t ~'"'""""'"""'"·"-··"·'-""'"' s6,999
1.991 Caclllac ~an DtYIIIe · ~ · .._.., · btn a....m; •"-"·:--.-·~"""ONLY 511,495
1992 Fonl Thuuerllird- Alii. .... • ~PL. 111, Croht. ¥6. ceu, 11r :...""""-"'"'"""--·...s7,400
1993 Chevy Cavalier· Alit, Air, s...., i!S 4 Dr 46.000 Mils. S~t.p .."""-""'"'"""""-""-"""s7,500
1919 U.c Stela Deville •~ LNtMr. va ___:...- ................._..__,_.,,_,57,995
1995 POIIflac ~elllrd • VI, Alii. Air, 5ttnt, lew Mlln, 51:1MP·------"""'""""'-"-"·--SJ) ,500
1991 Qevy S·IO -4IJI, s~Air_""-·"~""""""···-··-.........- ......- .."··--· s4,9SO
1994 Chevy S-1 0 • s...... ~c.-. S~t.p..""-·-~-.....""""""":-·..··~-"""'""""""~59,239
1994 Chtvy APV YH·7,., ~":""".;.........~"-"_"_____"'"'"'"-"-··"--$) 0,690
'97 FULL SIZE
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..
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Fully Equipped, HJ-Top, Leather, 1V
All Used Cars &Trucks Must Go.
0. .......y for y . .r vlewlag today at-
· Taxes and title tee not included.
All payments subject to cred~ awrova11 ·
'
SUNDAY
1-5
11
..'
c.
-'•
86, '' and name "Dante."
· And the Ohio license plate of the
owner re..,s "Mr. Glue.'' the nickno~ ti&ht end Dante Lnvclli
1rabbed while catching all . those
pas.c!s for the original Cleveland
14-17-17-18-66
I
The stadium, ringed hy a high
security fence. is nnw the NFL's
answer to Denley Plaza in Oallas
People drive hy. mayhe parking
for an illegal moment to snap a pic·
ture. Or put orange and white flowen; on the fence. Or just linger for a
few moments to remember.
Quarterback Bernie Kosar's
'-',19," cut from orange strips of ·
paper. snapthc bn:c~c as it hangs on
the fence next to Lee Ann Melbars
poem that begins: "This one is for
you dear lady on the lake
, Our feelings fnr you arc no mis· ·
take
We hllvc no team. our Browns arc
. gone
, But it's nothing that we or you
liave done wrong ."
On Tuesday, Dwight Hill. 36.
speQt his lunch hour at the stadium
with co-workers in Cleveland's U.S.
Attontey's office. Renee Mackey aqd
Anne· Shugrue.
Mackey is taking pictures. ol; the
demolition in stages.
"For the first time last week. I
vo!Cd for the Ravens." said Hill. who
had tickets fqr the past 12 seasons.
"I don't want them to get that good
of a draft pick.'"
Shugrue, who once went to the
airport with her hushand wcaripg
Brian Sipe's jcrscy after the Kardiac
Kids' stopped heans on the rond , says
Sundays just arcn 't the some .
"You planned your day around
the Ja~e," she said.
Hill figures his ""will tc II me to
go 0~ a kite," when he suggests they
buy 1161ts jn the new stadium. complote;\llitlt a seatliceri!IC. "but at least '
there':ll he a team I can follow 'and
that's'what counts."
·It's easy to find Lovclli's Furniture hi a west side neighborhood. A
Browns' helmet is painted on the side
of the building with the number
All prices ilclude
rebates to dealer.
DON ·TATE MOTORS, Inc.
f
At Power Play in the Orand Slam
Grille, manager Joe Hall, a friend of
many of the Ravens. makes a con·
fession. He still roots for them.
· "Hey, they arc my friends. It's no(
the players' fault. Let's face it. By
'99. there probably won't he a former Brown on the Ravens. Time to
stan over...
I..ama
Boots
20o/o
nTTI
"Siciliano"
Coffee/Bik.
WE BUY SELL & TRADE
SPEED EQUIPMENT
'lhe Shoe Ca~e
RACE CARS fOR SAif
-
Lafayette Mall •' Gallipolis
a
1996'CHEV NEW 1996 CHEY NEW 19961/2
·CAVALIER
·BEREnA TON- CHEV PICKUP
1i •
Ravens'!'"
All
'1\my
DELINQUENT PERSONAL
PROPERTY TAXPAYER'S NOTICE
NEW
SEE IT TODAY •••
i
Ftaflll ·
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Clark Reed
Pomeroy, Oh.
614-9112·2114
1995 CHEV
s139 ,.r••••
. .
Or ·
See
748 E. Main St,
"The Baule of Ohio'" on Sunday. It
will be San Diego-Piusburgh. .
"We're still winning the lime
period with between a 15 and 20 percent rating," O'Dell said. "That's not
ncar Browns' numbers. They were
between 25 and 30 percent. I'm stili
in the middle of answering all e-mail
saying. 'How dare you show lhe
stay silent as to
.whether Hearst gets to stay
CAVILlER
4 Dr, 2.0 !Her, aulo. while wlblue
interior, AC, stereo cass,
defrost, 71 K miles
$4500 NOW $3500
·. KAWASAKI
Motor Sport• C1ntar
from Tennessee and Illinois and the town 's entertainment center,
where ever else the world-wide ' "The Flats," is off 62 percent in
Browns' Backers hllilepile up in
sales.
front of his door.
"I see more fathers and husbands
And bow the football players doing family things,'' said Ihrig, the
were different from the baseball grille's general manager. "They're
pla.yers. Big and intimidating with finding other things t" do. Who
game faces already plastered on the
knows if they ' ll come back in '99?"
day before.
They certainly haven' t been
·. Broncos quarterback John Elway,
around enough thi s fall to inllucncc
who broke Rivera's heart with "The Rich O'Dell, program director of
Drive," nodded when he said. WKYCTV. NBC's Cleveaffiliate.
"Good luck. "
Early this season. he put the
. "I miss the people, the fan s, the Ravens on hccausc of the curiosity
players," he said.
factor and all those "Come Hale Th.c
Now people from Baltimore · Ravens" parties.
sometimes arrive at his doorstep and
But it's December, and he 's
when asked say, ''I'm from B-B . I shooting for the best game. So
mean, Washingt,on. "
Clevelan.d won' t see what 's left of
The MaiTiou, a Oy pattern from
the stadium, figures to have lost
$600,(}(}(} this season. The Grand
Slam Grille, the biggcs1 sports bar in
~eng~ls
1987 CHEVROLET
halftim~.
the Browns.
chairs.
"I'd like to have him cross by my
"The town won't support SCC·
CLEVELAND - Underneath path some day; I have a few words ondary talent, it will take 10 years to
his barslool, the cement crumbles off I have to tell him," Lavelli said of get an expansion team on its feet,"
Ken Ewing's work boots as he Modell. ·
l)e said. "Look at it already. Between
watches the
live on the lV in the
"My feeling is he took the origi· Tampa, the Falcons and New York
comer of Fuzzy's half-empty bar nal Browns' players and used them Jets, you couldn't field one goal
Tuesday afternoon.
and promoted them to advance his team:• .
A cardboard poster of Paul Brown
"Look at that," he said to his two own situation. He rode on Paul
presenting Lavelli to the Hall of
bUddies who help him pour for Dis· Brown's coattails for 30 years."
coUDT"Cemcnt, Ed Kepler and Jerry
Ed Lavelli, his son, can't even say Fame in 1975 dominates the store.
"The original Browns are more
Gaughan. "It just tears the heart right Modell's name .
out of you."
popular
than ever since they left
"I refer to him either as the man
With t¥ irony of Shakespeare who was here before or the current town," he said. "Anybody after
and the foreboding of Poe, a fire hit owner of the Baltimore Ravens," he 1965 is hard to remember because
they never won anything. I played in
Cleveland Stadium a few days ago to said.
serve as an eerie salute to the
Dante Lavelli, 73, last played in 26 (golf) scrambles this year. It
Browns' return Sunday to Ohio. . Eisenhower's first term and Mickey shows the people of noiihern Ohio
A welding torch ignited the 40- M~ntle's only Triple Crown season. are still loyal ... Loyal and support·
minute blaze in the west end of the .That was 40' years ago. But he is as ive as long as you win, that 'will be
upper deck, a minor incident that modern as "The Maqrena," blaring the·m.ain thing with the new team."
merely illuminated the rubble of the from the dalass he leases space to ·
next door, His neighborhood-corner
Richard Rivera, doorman of the .
building's demolition.
Marriott
Society ·Center Hotel,
business
.is
cluttered
with
Browns'
But the ghostly glow of the
jagged metal in the December dusk mementos amid the she I ves and remembers how the chaner buses
is a metaphor for all the Ewings and
Keplers and Gaughans who once .
shered in the Dawg Pound.
This is tile weekend their old
team, now· owner Art Modell's purple marketing concept known as the
CINCINNATI (AP) - Garrison . eration and he fits our system. ·The
Baltimore Ravens, play the Bcngals
in Cincinnati while they sit home and Hearst has given the Cincinnati Ben· longer he's here, the more comfort·
continue to rage against the dying of gals a semhlunce of a running game. able he.gets and the more productive
This season, he has been the team's he becomes. I can see where he
the light.
''I brought my II Jyear-old and most productive running back four would be a goOd player for us on in
years.
the future."
~ine~year-old to the last game," said
But Hearst's one-year, $2.06 mil·
Gaughan, 45, who went to his first . But the team tsn 't sayi.ng whqthcr
it
will
try
to
keep
Hearst
from
leav'lion
contract expires Feb. I. The
Browns' game at age six.
as
a
free
agent
after
this
sea~on.
ing
'
Bengals
could keep him by desig"When my wife's not around,
With three games remaining. nating him a franchise player, meanthey even call Modell the bad names,
On Sundays, I would either go to the Hearst has rushed for 680 yards. the ing they would tender him a one,
game or go to a bar. I watched foot- most by a Cincinnati back si nce year contract paying the average
hall. Everyone was at a bar. Now Harold Green ran for 1,170 in his salary of the top five NA.. running
hacks.
they're empty. I wake up and I flip 1992 Prq Bowl year.
Hearst has four of the top five.
That would pay him 53 million to
the channels. I might watch part of
and
five
of
the
top
eight
rushing
$3.3
million.
a game, but I've watched a lot of
games
by
a
Bengals
back
since
"We
haven't made a' decision.
movies.
Green
ran
for
190
yards
on
Dec.
20.
about
tendering
him (a new contract),
· "The l)engals? I might watch it,
1992.
or
pulling
a
franchise
tag on him."
.
but I won't drive down ."
"He's
a
fine
running
back,''
said
Brown said.
Fuzzy's sits hard on the county
The Bcngals (5-8) play at home
iine ' of Cuyahoga and Lorain in Bengal• president Mike Brown.
"He's
·got
good
quickness
and
acccltoday
against the Bahimorc Ravens.
North Ridgeville. a pleasant brick
neighborhood hangout where a sign
asks, "Do You Want To Talk to the
Man Who Runs The Business 'Qr
The Woman who Knows What's
Goin,g On?" and where workers on
Interstate can grab a pop after their
shifts.
. .
In compliance with provisions of Section
The place got fined a few seasons
5719.04 O.R.C. there will be published during
back for plucking blacked-put
Brow{!(gtimes o({ tJte,s~tclliiC dish. , the next few weeks, in .t he newapap·~
list of
' Ewing, 29, said it was standingroom only for games. Now they say
delinquent personal property taxpayer's In
·a Sunday afternoon is like a Tuesday.
Gallia County, Ohio. Qelinquent taxpayers
Fuzzy's team of choice appears to
be the Pittsburgh Stcclcrs. Or anyone
may avoid additional interest Charges that
else playmg the Ravens .•
., They hate the Ravens and they - .will accrue on aiLunpald amounts on the last
aren't so sure they can suppon the
·
I
~
new Browns in 1999. Dawg Pound
day Of each month fOllOW ng tm, ClOSing
tickets. $181ast season, could he as
date. The interest rate equals one-twelfth of
much as $30.
· ...
. "Tomorrow, let's go over to the
the annual rate as determined by the Tax
~tadium." Gaughnnsaid . " We'll be
I •
·
h·
·
dl
0 b 15•.
· in our work clothes. Maybe we can
omm SSIOn On t
prece ng CtO er
get in there and get a hrick."
· All persons, partnerships, companies and
nrc
.
.
Ohio State (4-1) led by as many
• Dual-Range 5·Speed Transmiss~
· Plus
Reverse
.
as 31 points. Tara Mitchem made a
free throw to give the Buckeyes a 73• Transistor-Controlled Breakerless I nition.
42 lead with I0:05 to 'go.
• Full-llme 4-Wheel Drive
Xavier (2-3) got within 18 points
• Air· Cooled, 4-Stroke 290cc Engine
on Nikki Kremer's two free throws
with 6.8 ·seconds to go.
The Musketeers were led by Kim
Hotz with 23. Sheila Flint and Raub
each had II and Con~ie HambCrg
had 10.
. ,
·
Michaela Moua had 14 for Ohio
State, Marcie Alberts
had
.
. l 0.
By GEOFF HOBSON
Cincinnati Enquirer
SABRE LIMITED
OSUwomen
hand Xavier
90-70 loss
.
Clevelanders remember Browns· and jeer Modell's ·deeds
4 Or, 3800 V6, auto, gray wlgray ctqlh
"Is impossible. It can disappear twice been a Wimbledon finalist showed up in Moscow with his hair
for one or two points, but not for the 1992 and 1994), but despite his big . tied in a knot in the front, somewhat
whole match," the 25-year-old Cruet se~e-and-volley game he has never like a Samurai. It worked in
said. " It's going to stay, I think, for won a ·Grand Slam event.
Moscow; where he won the tourna· '
a long time."
In 1995, he won only one title, the ment.
Asked if he would like to break Orand Slam Cup, the most lucrative
"I've. lost one match ·Since I've
the 1,600 mark next year, lvanisevic tournament in the world with prize put my hair up," lvanisevic said.
said he had a different goal.
money of $6 million. The touma·
That was to No: I Pete Sampras
"I would like to serve one ace and ment brings together the 16 players at the ATP Tour World Champiwin a Orand Slam. I don't need to · with the best records in the four onship semilinals two weeks ago in
serve so many aces. It's nice to serve Grand Slams of the year - the Aus- Hanover.
aces, but if I am playing well I don't tralian, French and U.S. opens and
"I think young people like it, "
need to serve so many aces."
Wimbledon.
lvanisevic said of his hair. "Old peo·
lvanisevic, No. 4 in the world, has
The victory here relaunched pie, you know, arc not so happy with
lvanisevic's career, and he went on this hair. lt:s tough to please old peo·
to win five titles in 1996. Now, he is pie. They complain too much,"
in the semifinals of the Grand Slam lvanisevic said as his father, Srdjan,
Cup for the fourth time.
looked on with a smirk on his face.
"I am much more confident this
By collecting $431 ,250 fi>r reach·
year," he said. "Jltis has been my ing the last four, lvanisevic brought
best year. If I'm confident, I play my his total Grand Slam C,up income to .
best tennis and .then I can beat any- more than $3.2 million. more than a
quancr of his career earnings..'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ body."
But
there
is
another
factor.
His
In Saturday's semilinals,lvaniscLarecha Jones had 20 points as Ohio
State beat Xavier of Ohio 90-70 on hair. In November, lvanisevic vic played Ycvgeny Kafclnikov.
Friday.
Ohio State jumped out to a 7-2
lead, but the Musketeers came back
with seven unanswered points to go
ahead 9-7. Jenny Raub scored five of
Whether you' re heading a dozen
those points. It was the only time
Xavier led dpring the game.
miles from anywhere, or tackling the
toughest
chores, 1hC Kawasaki
Jones contributed nine points durIng a 29-6'run that put the Buckeyes
Bay~u• J00·4x4 is in 11 for the long
up 40-17 with 6:02 left in the first
haul. Load it up and move it out!
half. Ohi9 State was ah~ad 55-30 at
Take one out for a test ride today..
• Page 89
As the Ravens play In ·Cincinnati today,
Cumberland or King Collep: (Tenn.)
Saturday afternoon. Cumberland and
King played in Friday's nightcap.
After this weekend's actions, the
Red men will have a week off to pre·
pare for the Canton invasion next
weekend. Rio Graode will face Mal·
on~ College on Saturday at 3 p.m.
and then squares off against Walsh
University on Sunday, Dec. 15 at 3
p.m . ·
l.v anisevic and Kafelnikov head .into semifinals
~ ti~mn-,mttml
Pomeroy • Middleport • O.Uipolla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
B"""''·
· He played for Bengals founder
~ I
~~I Brown ~t both Ohio State and
e
corporations currently listed on delinquent
I If" d
d/
1
1
rty
C ass Ie an Or genera persona prope
taX duplicates may avoid publication of SUCh
delinquency and subsequent property tax
liens by paying said taxes in full within the
next fiw weeks. Collection of the delinquency
lists publicized will be enforced as prescribed'
· d
S
tl
5519 08 O R C
un er ec on ·
•
' ' '
Ronald K. CanadayGallla County Au~ ltor
'"'
. 1996 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO
1996 CHRYSLER
CIRRUS
Z-34. auto, power seats, all-jpo~rerl LX, V-6, Auto, Air, All-Power,
equip, 1-owner, only 6,000
Factory Warranty, 12,000 miles.
Like neo,y.
ONLY
1989 MAZDA
626 LX
Touring sedan. air, all-power,
power.sunrool.
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Au1o, dual doors. all-power, factory
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ONLY-.J.
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AM/FM cassette, 1·
3.5 Liter, VS, auto, air, all-power,
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1993 HONDA
ACCORD
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air, cassette, all-power, 1.
OX, 5 speed, air, AM/FM cassette,
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Sport; 4 Dr, auto, all-power: low
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there are 5 in stock for your eeleetion-
w·
N
1994 TOYOTA
4·RUNNER
SRS V6, atuo, air, all-power, low
miles, 1·01'/ner trade in. Fa~tory
warranty
1992 OLDS
CUTLASS
4 Dr. V6, auto, air, all-power, tilt, ,.
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Auto. air, casse1te, all-power,
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4X4 .
Leather, V6 , all-power, 1-owner,
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1993 JEEP GRAND
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VG, auto, air, al-power, powe
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1993 PONTIAC
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Clean
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4 Dr, 5 speed, 4x4, air, AM/FM
cassette. local trade.
1994 NISSAN
PATHFINDER
SE-V6, auto, air, tilt, cruise, allpower, factory warranty.
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1993 GEO
TRACKER
4x4, auto, air, low miles, cassette,
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�•
•
Page 810. ................
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea~nt, WV
lbaal
.•
Sunday, December 8, 1998
•
Outdoors
Hunt stands among those
recalling Rozelle's deeds
Brain cancer kills
'Pete' Rozelle at 70
..
THA.NKSGIVING
Keith Veith of GaiHpolls shows the
eight-point buck he killed on Thanksgiving Day In West VIrginia. This
male whitetail has a 24.25-inch outside antler spread and a 23·1nch
·
Inside spread.
Bo6
.
~&vaw;
R!:STAURMJT
~estau'lant
'Z)tllf· ..
University of
Rio Grande
vs.
·Malone Coll~ge
BySIOBHAN
McDONOUGH
KEENE VALLEY, N.Y. (AP)-
Carefully w'ading .through a sun-dappled river, Jane Gibbs tries not to
spook the brown trout she senses
('I'
DRAGONs ·
ons finished the 0.0. Mclntvlre Park
Soccer League seaaon
a !HI record that
earned them the OOMPD Kindergarten Division
title. The standing players are (L·R) Zachary
·Miller, Justin McCoy, Adam Blazer, Clint Suan•
'
G.BAMt PBIZE • 19" .C olor TV
• I
84111 Plnecreet Dr.
· O.Hipolll
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l!etwMn GllllpoH• a Rio Qmldt on old At. 31 ·
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· '
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V6, Auto trans, air
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Auto tr~ns, air
conditioning, tilt,
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windows, power
locks, sharp car
Pwr steering, pwr
brakes, air
condilioning,
AM/FM stereo,
nice·car
.
'
.
Auto trans, air
conditioning, tilt,
cruise, pwr
. windows, pwr
locks and much
more
For a great deal on any~.,
one of these cars see...
-~ ~··
Jim Walker
A HOLIDAY LOAN SPECIAL
'
A ..
[h]~
•
•
~
....:
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D1te Lear
Shawn Turley Trevor Peaytt
Louie Bush
Bob Turner
CHEVROLET • GEO . • OLDSMOBILE
GENEJoliNsoN
• Muon 773-5514 • New Haven 882·2135 • Point Plw111t 675-1121
• Or Call Miui On The Pe'Oples Bank Loan Hotline 675-ASAP
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~
"
1996 CHEVROLET CAVALIER LS 4 DR
9.99%_
t f 'iwuwinjl :"'IJ''I'/ ''! ~/J/m JJ,.,:, , l .'to.,fil "J'1HIIm{ 11111/ fA 111"11,"/1//Jr flh/r fr.,, JHIIf/l•~ll//l'llflt
./:··11•·1• 1.. ,,.:,.~··111: .,, ' ·"1111,. 1/rl•(.. Ind., lr.1 .. Wr1hw. 41.1.. Um~.. ,tf,,./,. (IIJII'f'r /ll'fliluuf11 J, N.U.,
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Rt. 2 By PIA
Phqne 875-7870
P~nt Pleaut'lt, WV
·Monday-aturdaY, N; Sunday 1.,
Bids Due by December 13, 1996
Have Yourself A Mer.r.Y
Little Christmas•.
.
Silverado Pkg "3rd
DOOR" 350 Vortec
VS Engine, Auto .
trans. and totally
. loaded
' 1996
.
sey DrumfiiOnd, Jenny Slayton and Christy
Watts. Standing are coach Joe Cain, Eric Cain,
Heath Patrick, Jesse Patrick, Crystal Chapman,
Amanda Lewis, Jessica Slayton and, coach Eric
Saunders.
DIVISION 11 CHAMPS ...: The Green Dragon
Slayers finished the 0.0. Mcintyre Park District's
Fall Soccer League ·season with an 8..() record
that earned them the OOMPD Division 11 title. In
front are (L·R) Justin Saunders, Tyler Clagg, Tommy Saunders, Mason Smith, Nathan Clagg, Lind-
!\d fusl! C)www from :1long: li~t of ~··1•·•·1 Joftn IJm~r..huy f·quipnu•nl ... i11dnt~ing ~'I;Hln· hul, •rs~ n'Jutullmlt~r~;
MoCo"s. mulmon· .. . and puy IIIJ inlf•rn~l unlilthu y~·~ur
l!IXKJ!' l'lw<, yuu'll !'iud i11o·n·dihl~: l'iXJ:d· ruto• l'inanr:i11g
"l"'o·ials "'' juhu IJ,.,.,... !iiXMJ
Truo:turs purr:hus"rl
witlr so·J..o·h'd lruy '''ll!ipm.,nl! It 's tlr~: dt<ul ol'tht< ""lltury •..
hut it worr'l lust fur.,v~:r! s,,., us li~r rl~:tuils, to•luy!
'
.
•
Gallipolis Land
54-62 Locust
December 2 through
December l,'j, 1996
·CO.
this birch-lined stretch of !he Au
Sable River.
Alas, on this day neither a wool•
ly bugger nor an olive caddis fools
the trout pri1.cd by fly -fishing devo.tees . All Ms. Gibbs has to show for
her efforts arc snags in ~orne lowhanging trees and debris.
Surrounded hy exquisite Adirondack mounmin scenery and, sounds.
she's hardly dejected.
:·1nsh and fish ,",snys Ms. Gihhs,
· 37. of Boston. ·'Even wiihout much
to show for iL I'm glad ,t9 be outdoors:· ·
Five centuries :tfter an English
nun wrote the lirst known hook.
about fly -fishing, women arc wading
into rivers, streams and brooks in
growing numbers. They're becoming
passionate ahout a srort traditionally enjoyed by a tweedy. elitist male
Sealed Bid
s,,.;,'"
• 2 Bicycles - Boys & Girls
• Bulk Quantity Gift Certificates
of Sausage Packs
• Kids Free ~ow Shoot at
Halftime to win Free Meals!!! .
.~
" Fly-fishing was a forhiddcn
realm: it was a man·s world ... ret: :ills
Pat\Y Reilly. 45. a free-lance guide
...... . ' ,,.
based in Jackson Hole. Wyo. "You
.should
have seen thr expressions on
. ders, Chelsea.Lemley, Jarrod Wray, Zan Whaley
:mJnc
men
's faces when they'd sc~ I
and Beau Whaley. Behind thern are coaches Eric
· Saunders (left) and assistant coach Chris Wha- . was their guide.··.
ley. Assistant coach Jeff Whaley and player
Although women have always
Jacob Robinson weren't able to make the photo
lishcd. they were few in numhcr.
session.
Many were taught hy their gra'ndfa.
thcrs, hoy friends or other rcla1ivcs.
"For many years I didn't have
. anyone to fish with c.cert men."
says Ms. Reilly. who like other
guides and outdoor uutfiucrs note the
growing number of women anglers.
"I have ~ushands calling me to
sign their wives up for lessons, Bu1
once the woman gets oul 'ln the
strcain, the fascinaliorl with i'ishing
. hccom<'s comple!ely her own ."
Joan Wulff. 69. who owns The
Wulff Fly Fishing School on the
Beaverkill River in New York's
Catskills region. suys. ··women
(See WOMEN on B-12)
f
Saturday, Dec. 14, 2:00p.m.
..
eritecli.
,'
f
nearby.
She knows they 're there. She's
seen them and caught them before in
crowd.
.....
........
.....
' .
,.
Winters, 22, was held by police
rootball
for
20 hours nftcr Horace Davis w""
DETROIT CAP)- University of
attacked
outside his ex-wife's home
Michigan football player Charles
Winters was arraigned on felony on Nov. 12.
Davis sustained head and facial
charges of assault with intent to do
injuries,
required surgery aild w~s in•
great bodily harm and malicious
a
cortla,
hut
has been released !rom
destruction of property in connection
with an alleged ha.<eball bat heating Grace Hosrital.
Hockey
of his mother's ex-husband.
NEW
YORK
(APJ - Vancouve•
The assault charge carries a maxforward
Pavel
B.urc
was suspended
imum lO-ycur prison sentence. while
one
game
and
nncd
$ 1,000 hy th~
the maximum sentence f()r the
NHL
for
a
l'prcarm
blow
agmnst Bul;
destruction of propeny charge is four
falo·dcfenseman Garry Galley in tho
years.
first period of Wednesday's game. '
Coll~ge
'
'
CBRISTMAS
At1fi.ITIC SAI.I
th\W1•"
Page 811
WILL IT QUALIFY?- Delores Dalton, who by day lathe chle~ dis- .
patcher for the Southeast Ohio Emergency Medical Services, har·
vested this 1()-polnt buck on Dec. 3 near her home. She and her hus·
band Chuck will be waiting until February to find out If her prize
will gilt an Ohio Big Buck green score of 142.
.
D~lW!! P~1unJ.
KIPLING SHOE CO.'S
2fltthS
I•
Women flock to fishing in growing numbers
.
ing the week). They've got to come
into our place now...
Ask_cd aboul the Ravens, running:
·hack ~rk Bi,cniemy said, " I know
they ldt they hlew the game more
than we won it last time.' '
Yc;, egos stilll\ruisc easily when
thc:-;c tw~l teams :.m~ involved. Thnl
migh1 hl• th~ only a~ct of1hc riVal:
r~ th.11 hasn ., gone the way uf the
Nobody Does Hay Better
than 'John Deere • .•
and there's no better time
to buy hay
'
an....~ "
I'm your neighborhood State Farm
Agent. You can trust me with
all your insurance needs.
Ravens-Bengals g~me getting 'who cares' attitude from ·fans
used
·-
•·l'
--
'
....
.
On today's AFC Central agenda,
Browns), it was the Battle of Ohio. ·
They aren't coming. They don't and we've got a hunch of pros on this away. We haq it won. ·We should
Baltimore and Cincinnati don't have care.
team.·! expect them to show up and have easily won that game."
too much in common."
True:! Of .course. But the Bcngals
"We don't want to sec 'em," John play hard."
Even if it's no longer special for "Big Dawg" Thompson said from
Oh, they'll do that much. Even have turned fhat interpretation into a
the cities or the fans, it's still a little his home in greater Cleveland. "As though the fans don't seem to care. gct·cvcn mt:cnuvc. They think the
special for players who were ran of · soon as we have a tcarn hack, we're . the players h:trhor little gru~ges that Ra~·cns ;,m: riot giving them cnnugh
the Battle of Ohio years.
going to have a chance to bpo him have nut disarpe:tred :~long with tho · credit.
·•t d~1 r~mcrnh..:r BultinH'r..: ~aying
"I still sec them as Cleveland," (Modell).
Browns.
Bcngals linebacker Ricardo McDonthat
thcy just g~1vc us th~;" ~am~o.· nmJ
"The city rivalry is not there.
When the Bcngals rl:tyed their
ald said. "They have the same play- When you hear Baltimore - who first gumc in Baltimore on Nov. 3. tiK·v had us hi." at." C\1skt sai ..l. "l
ers, the same owner, just a different cares'!"
they pulled nO' the higgcst nmd hn{ught 'that up tn the players ldurcoaching staff. They're always going
That'could he the lag line for the comchack in franchise hisltlry. Tmilto be Cleveland in my mind. I think game itself. With the Bengals (5-K) ing 21-3 at h:tlftinic. they touk
the fans arc going to approach it and Ravens (4-9) holding down the advantage ur turnovers ant! rallied
about the same."
bottom two S(lOL' in the AFC Central, ftlr "· 24-21 win that hcc:uno just
He couldn't be more wrong about it's essentially degenerated into a
anot he~ sore point.
the last part.
Battle for the Basement.
"Our team gol uhcatl 21 ~ :l and
The Bengals advertised the game
No bragging rights. No playofl
thought they would win ~2-Cl."
in hopes of drawing ian's from north- hopes. Few fans . Coaching cliches
R.1vcns C(mch Ted Man:hihn,K.Ia sai..t.
ern Ohio, who might get a little sat- Oying.
"T~at's <:.actly what harpens when
isfaction out oT booing Modell's
you think that way."
'
. "They know we're not going to
team. But the game wasn't even the playoffs," Cincinnati's Bruce
· "They slnlc lhi.ll nne from us l;tst
close to a sellout by midweek.
Cosletsaid. ''But the pros·will show,
time,·· Jones said. ··we gave that ,,111,;
•
•
.Davie sees 1980s.expense report i
incident at ASU haunt him again '
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI CAP) - The Battle of Ohio has crumbled into a heap,
much like the bricks that tumble
from CleYeland Stadium these days
. every time the wrecking ball swings.
The state's premier pro game for
the last quarter-century has lost all of
its luster and most or its appeal.
When Art Modell moved his team
from Cleveland to Baltimore after
last season •. he consigned the Browns
and the state's fiercest nvalry to the
scrap heap. for now.
That reality settled in this week.
There was hardly more than a yawn
9u1 of fans on the eve of the lir>t visIt by Modell's reinvented team, the
Baltimore1Ravens.
"It has lost some of the intensity
ft' used to. have," Ravens offensive
tackle Tony Jones said. "When we
to play those guys (as the
t ;
-----Sports briefs-----
Rozelle •s death was not unex- out a resolution.
By DAVE GOLDBERG
force that we know today," he said.
By BERNIE WILSON
Mara noted Friday night that
pected - he had been ill since
AP Football.Writer
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Pete
Rozelle built the NFL by linking
Lamar Hunt has a good deal of undergoing surgery for a brain tumor Rozelle paid him back in 1979 when
Rozelle, who turned the NFL into a the game with television. He creatperspective on Pete Rozelle's skills in 1993 and had bt1en in failing he stepped in to ensure George
Sunday · obsession and a Monday ed the Super Bowl, which blossomed
Young's hirin~ as the Giants'generas NFL commissloner- he 's one of health in recent months.
night showcase, has died. at age 70.
into America's most-watched sport
.
al
manager by persuading Tim Mara.
But it still shocked the close-knit
!he few NFL owners who has been
The father of the Super Bowl, event, and Monday Night Football,
Wellington's
estranged nephew and
world of the NFL, particularly the
tnvolved with other sports.
Rozelle changed the nation's leisure now the nation 's longest-running
"I think his greatest achievement · "Old Guard" that worked with him co-owner, ~o accept Wellington's
habits and, through TV, imprinted spans series.
so closely through all or most of his · choice of Young. Young then built a
was to supervise and organize
pro football on the nation's lifestyle.
The Mond~y night game, and
growth at a time when other sports · tenure- Hunt, Wellington Mara of team that won Super Bowlsj_n 1986
In leading the National Football
Rozelle's idea to televise every
were battling and fighting among the New York Giants. Art Modell of and 1990.
league for 29 years, he created a game, created "football widows"
"The fact that he was able to
themselves," Hunt said of Rozelle, B·altimore and Tex Schramm, the
PETE ROZELLE
legacy as perhaps the greatest com- throughout the nation two days a
who served as NFL commissioner
former president of the Dallas Cow- mediate the situation was a tribute to
missioner in sports history.
week.
the respect he had eamed, and the
from 1960-1989 and died Friday boys.
"It's the end of a great era," BalRozelle helped the NFL survive of the wealthiest sports entities in the
evening at age 70.
Schramm hired Rozelle as public kind of ability was what first attracttimore Ravens owner Art Modell
bidding wars with three rival leagues world. He brought sporis into 10 fig"He•had the ability to create 'com- relations director of the Los Angeles .ed attention to Pete," Mara said.
said. "What we enjoy every Sunday
and three player strikes, shepherding ures when he hegotiated a landmark
But perhaps the most telling tribpromise aod make things work," said Rams , his first full time NFL job, in
can be attributed to Pete's vision and it from 12 teams to 28.
tive-year, ·~2.1 bill.ion contract with • Hunt, who in addition to owning the
1952. On Thursday night, Schramm ute was related by Ed McCaskey,
talents."
"He will always be the gold stan• television's three major networks in
Kansas City Chiefs is a minority . made a quick plane trip from his Dal- chairman of the board of the ChicaRozelle died of brain cancer at his dard against which sports commis- 1982.
.
.
' owner of the NBA's Chicago Bulls las home to Rancho Santa Fe, CaliF., go Bears and the son-in-law of the
home in Rancho Santa Fe, a suburb sioners are measured,!' Tagliabue
Then he expanded the NFL's TV
late George Halas, one of the NFL's
and was involved in 'failed ventures for a final visit with his protege,
of San D.iego, Friday afternoon. He said.
exposure to cable, selling a Sunday
in th~ · North , American Soc.cer
But he even found time to chuck- founders. When Rozelle became
had undergone surgery for brain can"Now that I look back, Pete had night series to ESPN as part of the
League and World Team Tennis.
le when it -was suggested that he was commissioner, 40 years af1er the · •
cer in December 1993.
always seemed to have destiny on next contract in 1986.
league began, Halas was still coach" He saw how to get ~o a solution
Rozelle's mentor:
·The teague has recommended a his shoulder," said Schramm, who as
The current television contract,
rather than linger on intenninablc
"Me his mentor?" Schramm said. ing the Bears ar\d was the NFL's
moment of silence at Sunday's general manager of the Los Angeles for which Rozelle set the groundmost revered figure .
problems. I don't mean to pick on
"I think he was mine."
games. There will also be a special Rams hired Rozelle in 1952 as the wor.k, gets .$1.58 billion for four
Yet Rozelle..still treated him like
other sports, but you see the probMara, at 80 the NFL's senior
tribute to Rozelle neKt month at the
team 's public relations director. his years from Fox alone, more than
lems they have had that linger and owner, was one of three owners who any other owner. fining him $1.000
Super Bowl in New Orleans.
2,000 times what Rozelle got in his
first full-time job.
linger and linger. Pete was able to get selected the 33-ycar-old Rozelle as a early in his tenure as•commission~r
"No one was more responsible
Rozelle was elected the league's first contract with CBS in 1962.
a
consensus and persuade people to compromise candidate for commis- and, as McCaskey put it "lel him
for the success of the National Foot- sixth commissioner on Jan. 26, 1960,
His biggest contribution, howevwork things out for the good of all."
sioner in 1960 after 22 ballots wi!h- know he was the hoss."
ball League and public passion of the a compromise choice on the 23rd er, may have been introduc-ing revNFL game than Pete Rozelle," said
ballot as the NFL sought a successor enue-sharing in pro football 30 years On the Notre Dame football scene,
commissioner Paul Tagliabue, wlm for Bell.
before it created h~vcx: in other
succee<!ed Rozelle.
In an effort to end the acrimo• . sports. Doing so allowed teams ' in
"Though h~ would credit others, nious deadlock, New York Giants minor markets like Green Bay to
Pete was the dri\jllg force in chang- owner.Wellirlgton Mara. tbe late Paul equally share TV revenuc.s - the
'.
ing the face of professional sports in Brown of the Cleveland B?owns and btggest part of \he NFL p1e - wtth
this countr:y. His vision,lntegrity and Dan Reeves of the Rams put fonh teams in New York, Chicago and Los
·
commitment made him the ideal Rozelle's practically unknown name Angeles.
"This is very unfair and an
Hansen wrote that Davie said Arileader during a period of tremendous as a candidate for commissioner.
Rozelle's impact was so great that By NANCY ARMOUR
unscrupulous
thing ,"
BEND,
Ind.
(AP)If
SOUTII
zona head coach Tony Mason, who
Mara acknowledged that the own- he was elected to the Pro Football
growth for the NFL."
Davie wa.< a 25-year-uld graduate
Baseball was king in 1960 when · ers approached Rozelle ''out of desHall of Fame in 1985, a unique hon- Bob Davie was head coach any- also was indicted, ~new what was
assistant
when he was charged with
where
else,
few
would
care
that
he
going
on
and
"sotid
it
wus
OK."
peration."
·
Rozelle, a one-time public relations
or since such selections almost
fraud
and
conspiracy in July 1980 as
was
indicted
nearly
17
years
ago
for
"Let's
hope
no
one
at
Notre
"I think in the last analysis, Dan always arc made after a candidate's
fllan, was picked as a compromise
filing
phony
eKpense
reports.
He
was
Dame
tells
Davie
it's
OK
to
give
part
of
a
widespread investigation
choice by NFL owners to replace and Paul and I aod maybe one or two
retirement.
into
the
Arizona
football program-;never
tried
and
the
charges
were
each
star
recruit
a
hew
Mustang
(.:00·
Bert BtU, who had died in office. By others said, 'Well, how about Pete'!'
Rozelle got the idea for Monday
a
probe
sparked
hy Daily Star artidropped.
vcrtit>~.:;;. " Hansen wrote.
the time Rozelle retired unexpected- He was the next guy on the list night football in 1970.
,But Davie is the ·new coach at ·
· Within 'a few days, portions of the cles. Mason and his assistants.were ·
ly in 1989, he had guided it to the maybe the last one," Mara said.
· , Because the NFL had an agreeNotre
Dame,
and
everything
he's
.
article
had been . faxed · to N~>trc accused ol' filing phony airline ·
preeminent positibn it still holds
Rozelle arrived at ~bout the same
ment not to.'telcvisc on Friday ,night
ever
done
is
suddenly
taking
on
new
Dame
athletic
officials, as well as to receipts' for trips.
today - the nation's No. I specta- time as the rival American Football or Saturday in competition with
"Somehow, Tony h.ad his guys ·
.meaning.
·
the
Soutlr
Bend
Tribune. It also
·
League, a development that created
tor sport.
high school ·and college football,
"It's
never
surfaced
any.
where
for
might have been sent to other news- juggle airline tickets," said Corky
"I think the National Football a war for players and television ratRozelle decided Monday night
Simpson. a sports writer at the TucLeilgue in 1960, when he took over ings. In 1962, Rozelle negotiated a would he the obvious time to show- any reason despite all of his accom- papers, Wadsworth said.
plishmenls."
Mike
Wadsworth,
son
(:itizen in 1980 and now a
Wadsworth
said
he
discussed
the
as commissioner, 33 years old, was $9.3 million TV contract with CBS, case a single game nationally.
·
Notre
Dame's
athletic
director,
said
columnist
there.
matter
with
Davie,
and
was
satisfied
facing one of the most energetic, a deal that earned him re-election as
. In 1963, Rozelle ba.nned Alex
Friday.
"Now
it
surfaces
in
this
way?
with
his
explanation:
What
docs
"It
was
just a bookkeeping thing,
vol.ule periods that we've ever seen commissioner and a $10,000 bonus
Karras and Paul Hornung, two of the
in sports - in television and all the that pushed his salary to $60,000.
league's top stars,. for gambling. It I think that kind of puts it all in per- bother him _is why someone is bring- there was no theft or any grand
. ing the incident up now.
scheme to rob the university," Simpother things," said Tex Schramm, the
By 1966, the two warring was a bold act of~discipline that speclive.'t
Davie
had
forgo\ten
about
the
Davie
was
made
head
coach
Nov.
son said. "If any assistant did anyleagues, weary of the battle for .secured Rozelle's power base.
fanner Dallas Cowboys president.
until
Greg
Hansen,
a
sports
24,
five
days
after
Lou
Holtz
matter
thing, it was under.(Mason's) order.
"He was able to bring a young player talent. merged, creating a sinEd McCaskey, chainnan of the
columnist
announced
at The Arizona Daily Star.
he would step dclWn after ... Was B~b Davie guilty of anyman's vision, a young man's back- gle professional football league with
board of the Chicago Bears and sonmentioned
it
in
his
Nov
..
27
column.
his
II
thseason
at Notre Dame.
thing'/ Hell no."
ground into the role and produce a Rozelle as commissioner. The mergin-law 0 f. the' late George' Halas,
While
an
assistant
at
Arizona,
Davie
·
"I
have
to
wonder
ahout
the
motiDavie turned in $904 worth of
league that surpassed ,major league er produced a world championship
recalled when Rozelle fined Halas,
and
six
other
coaches
were
indicted
,'
vation
of
a
person
who
is
sending
airline
coupons for two trirs to
game~
the
Super
Bowl.
baseball a!ld everything else to
one ofthe league's founding fathers.
for
filing
phony
expense
reports.
around
this
article,"
Wadsworth
said.
Pittsburgh
and Philadelphia
become the greatest entertainment
Rozelle helped make the NFL one
f
~
,,
.
Ollr ........... 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ , , . . . 11_... ._..i;.tto....il.,....r.RIIo ....... of
IJnMf. . M(otliO ...... A. . . . . . ~dtlflowiU _ _ tllt _ _,..._ o\.1'.1.-IJ-ona:M--to.cl ..lll
. . . . . . . . -·lolll-hMM_,II>~-IIciSZII ..;Iobl_cha,..ofSH4Aia"'lolal_.ciiS.st4.41.1ho
...,. - . . . , 1o llaiol far tho tom <I !(It toao. Cunoiiii'Ooptoo tllnk tow nlllllt~ far thll alftr. Othtr _ . , - - - ·
~~----~~~--~7~------~-------~---------~
1616 Eastern Ave.
·Gallipolis, OH
(614) 446!.3672
.
•I
.
•
.
�..
•
~A/on
the
River
··----......;::
Sunday, December 8, 1 •
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point PIMunt, WY
r ,
Marathon debate over same-day airborne hunting continues
By Spo.-u Afield
A lin._
Alllka is · I trying 10 find a way
10 baiiiiiCC prey and predators - and
one of the areas of controversy is
same-day airllomchunting of wolves
and ocher animals.
The argument, Ted Kerasote
wrote in an article in the current issue
of Sports Afield, has been going on
for decades.
Until 1972, flying over wolves
and sbooting at them was legal. Then
the Federal. Airborne Hunting Act
outlawed not only shooting from the
air but also using a pliii)C 10 harass
wildlife. An Alaskan state law
designed to protect big game, and
wolves are not classified as big
game, was alSo prohibiting hunting
on the same day one was airborne.
'The stat<: law was !leOn as an
exlension of fair chase, but the fed·
• era! resulation did not sit well with
•1 some Alaskans, who believed it
hampered the state's ability to control wolves when the predator was
preventing the growth of moose and
caribou herds, already depleted
through winterkill or overbunting.
A modified form of airborne
wolf-hunting was consequently continued under an Alaska state tnopping .
· regulation, which allowed people to
spot wolves from the air, land close
by them, then shoo!.
This method,. called "land-and·
shoot trapping," was difficult to do
legally, because a hunter's flying and
landing near wolves .almost always
put them to tlighl. Some ·Alaskans
believed the practice helped control
the predator, while others believed
wolves should be accorded the same
status as other big game and pursued
only by faiHhase I'IICIUI$.
In 1992. faced with impassioned
commentary from bOih sides, the
Alaska Boanl of Game prohibited
land·and-shoot.lrapping of wolves
. in
l"l{"ne
I
some ~?f. the state, while in Olh· snaring, uapping aild shooting proer reiJOIIS ot lldop~ an _ext<:nso~e . gram. A video of a slat<: biologist try·
wolf~! plan, oncluding acnal ing to dispatch a trapped wolf was
gunmng, to boost numbers of ungu· aired across the country. Gov. Tony
Illes for hunt<:rs.
Knowles ended the program and
The subsequent public outcry asked the National Academy of Sci·
was enonnoos, including the threat ences to evaluate the state's predator·
of a tour)st boycoo of Alaska, and the control programs for their scientific
program was halted. But not the wolf validity, economic feasibilitr. and
ossue.
.
public acceptance. The academy's
In 1993, the Board of Game resulls will be o.ut this winter.
adopted a short-lived ground-based
An initiative appeared on t~ bal·
lot in November that would prohib-it same-day airborne hunting of
wolves, wolverines, foxes, coyotes
and lynx. An exception to the ban
could be made in case of biological
emergency.
Eddie Gracer, director of govern·
men! affairs for the Alaska Outdoor
Council, said the ioii1ia1ive would
"prohlbil the Depaii!tiCnt ofFish and
Game from doing any meaningful
predator-prey managemenl, since
there would ltave to be almost no
animals left before it was a biologi·
cal emergency."
The slate's attorney general dis·
agreed, saying that "the department
could probably initiate a wolf-control
program if trend information antici·
paled that a prey population would
reach the level of 'irreversible
decline.' " · ·
Neither side in the wolf debaoe
has discussed an aspect of canid bioi·
OBY thlll would help Voten make .,
informed decision. When Gilly 10a1e
members of a wolf pack n killed,
the surviving members incrau their
breedinJ. Airborne-assisted wolf·
control therefore often CI'CIIel man:
predators, not fewer.
If the goal i~ to rec!uce predation,
the entire pack should be killed, and
the stale - using helicopt<:rs - is
better equipped to do that job than
the private citizen . . ·
A lot of you entertained Thanksgiving weekend and relatives and
friends from a distance came to be
with you.
However, Mr. and Mrs. TQm
Ables of Pomeroy really had comPany and from "fur'' away, Their guests
il'cluded Mr. and Mrs. Agustin Montanez. Arecibo, Puerto Rico; Mr. and
Mrs. Agustin Montanez. Jr.; from
San Juan, Puerto Rico; Todd Mon·
tanez. Milwaukee, Wise.; Shawn
Montanez, Cincinnati, and Carolcc
Montanez und Wolfgang Stendl of
Frankfort, Germany.
Wow, Talk about weary travelers.
Yuletide recip~s tempt the
tastebuds, liven up holiday decor
By DEBBIE SALOMON
The Burlington Fr" Prn1
and Gannett Newe Service
~
111'
.,.
' .
~
"
Women
and fishing ... .
(Continued from B-Ill
always thought the sport was closed
to them.
' , "Now. 25 years after the women's
movement, they're independent and
realize they can do anything they
want to."
Her late husband, Lee Wulff, was
a fly-fishing legetod who pioneered
; catch·an~·release fishing and
designed flies that bear his name.
:
Loo:i·Ann Murphy, owner-open·
· tor of Reel ·Women Expeditions in
1 Victor, Wyo., says women enjoy
: fishing as an escape ftom their dai·
ly routine.
; , "Women will spend their days on
the stream and their evenings con·. greJited around a campfue, smoking
cigars and ·swapping fish stories,"
~she says.
Orvis, the ouldoor outfitters,
reports that the enrollment of women
!in its Oy-fishing schools has swelled
•• in the last two years, Women now
: coiJlprise 38 percent of the students.
says Gwcnn Perkins, director of
., .Orvis Wome'n's Outdoor Program
.und a nationally recognized fly-fish·
" ing instructor.
,
The Reel Women mailing list has
" grown from 250 name~ to 2,500 over
~ ,the last few. years, Ms. Murphy
~ says.
·
• . Last year more than 80 attended
~. Orvis' two women-only clinics in
: Manchester, Vt. Programs now arc
~· being offered in four other states,.
~ ,There ar~ also Orvis-hosted women·
'• only fly-fishing · trips to 1hc
'' ·Caribbean,
Alaska and the American
'
•
In early December, when
the baking commenced,
each child received a tin for
his personal hoard, says
hristmas is for cookies: baking, buying, sell· Karin
Kristiansson of
ing, swapping.. Decorate cookies - or deco- Burlington; Vt.
1
rate with cookies. Then eat them.
Then. after Christmas
You might never Iiave thought about Eve di~ner, the .table was
cookies as fashion, but self-proclaimed spread with a cookie-buffet.
"Cookie Goddess" Holly Garrison says it's
Before you wail "No
true. "-.
time!"·and head for the bak·
Garrisool,. author of the ne~ly released "The Cookie cry, consider that most
Book" (Macmillan, $34.95), says cookies are at an all· Christmas cookies keep or
time crest in popularity and you can blame it on coffee. freeze well, either in dough
The hottest trend in cookies this_yeariNo debate! It's or baked form. Make them
biscotti, says Garrison:
now - one recipe at a time
.Wh?
y.
- on weekends or long,
Because of the proliferation of gourmet coffee shops, dark winter evenings.
where biscotti is the trelldy accompaniment. to· custom ·
Holiday cookie recipes .__ _ _ _ _ _ _.__ _ _ _..,.._ _ _ _.__ _;_;...,._ _ _ _ _.J
espresso brews, she says. .
are without number, from
Begin optional trim
simple snowmen to compli·
CHRISTMAS IS a great time for cookie• and they're good·for decorating as
. well aa •ling. (GNS Photo)
"It's one of those food evolution anachronisms that cated · layered bars. Year·
went from West to·East' in the United States" she says.
round recipes can also be
"Th'ey had to go to Seattle, where tho ·whole coffee adapted: dried cranberries,
thing began before they came here," says Garrison from chopped dried apricots, vanilla chips and toasted pecans . . Cream buncr and sugar on high speed of electric
cllange Toll House drop cookie dough into a holiday moxer lor I mmute. Gradually. add maple syrup, egg and
her Manhattan home.
Garrison. who has taste-tested 400 cookies this year, delight.
vanilla. Sift Oours, baking powder and salt into a howl,
says the whole cookie phenomenon can be directly
If the cookie-cutter route seems too labor-intensive, then gradually add this to creamed mixture. Divide
attributed to coffee shop fans.
roll plain cookie dough tinted green into 6-inch circles, . dough in half, dust with Oour, Oattcn into disks. wrap in
· "We're finished with that w~ole high-fat; l<:i'l!ofat ~t circles into pie wedges, press .a small dab-of·dbukh on plastic wrap and chill a~. hO!Jr or, mQr~. _
_
•cook,ie flm~," s\te ~ays.' "~ow w~·r:c coming back t.o . ~~~J"i~ enc;l ,for a lfurik•. an4,spri!)kle ~n colored sugar.
t W"en rcll(ly ,to roll cookies, po:¢h~at oven. to 350
JUSt eaung .nch cookoes on moderato on. Now we know a ~. When baked, the wedges become Christmas trees. · .
degrees. Workmg wuh one hatch ol dough at a tome. roll
coup.le of.rich cookies a day is not about to ruin our idea
For gift-giving, pack cookies in miniature Christmas slightly less than one-fourth-inch thick on floured work
of living a healthy lifestyle."
shopping bags or plastic shoeboxes (lined with colored surface. Cut wioh gingerbread hoy and girl cuners. Place.
What is modcration?·Garrison says about two cookies tissue) from the dollar stores.
on lightly greased cookie sheets, l-inch apan. Qccorate
per day qualifies, unless you indulge in what'she says arc
And do remember this! The holiday cookies made with raisins. nuts. dried cr:itberrics, holiday sprinkles. if
"saintly" cookies- vanilla 'wafers and graham cracker with your children arc remembered long after the last desired. Bake 10-12 minuoes unoil edges begin lo hrown.
cookies which arc lower in fat than others.
bu'.'ery crumb is gone.
but no longer. Cool on sheets for 12 minutes. transfer tn
End optionalorim
rocks lo complete cooling. For frosting: Whisk together
Along with just aboul e~erything else, the Romans
MAPLE FOLKS COOKIES
sugar and maple syrup. then milk. Spread onto cookies.
invented cookies- his coctum they were called, meanI .cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature
or pipe through pastry tube.
ing "twice baked." Th~sc Oat, dry, unsweetened wafers
I cup packed light brown sugar
Makes about ,36
traveled well- and far. By the Middle Ages,, Brits w.erc
one-half cup pure maple syrup: ,;,.armed 10 about 100 Nutrilional analysis per cookie (including opoionall'rosl·
eating crackcn- but riot until the-Dutch added sugar did degrees
ingl: 129.6 calories:. 5.5 grams total fat;
grams sat·
\hey become kockje.
!large egg, at room temperature
urated fao): 1.0 grams prooein; 19.7 grams carbohydraoes: ·
Early settlers brought these "liulc cakes" 10 America
1 teaspoon vanilla ~xtraCt
20 milligrams cholesterol; 91 milligrams sodium.
where, several centuries later, gQOham crackers became
~ cups unbleached Oour
EASY ORNAMENT COOKIES
the first commcrcia!'cookie.
2 cups whole wheat pastry flour
I cup (2 sticks) huller or margarine, softened
Europeans elevate Chrisomas cookies to an art.
2 teaspoons baking powder
I cup sugar
ASwedish woman's culinary rcpuoation rested on her
one-fourth teaspoon salt
I
tca•poon vanilla exlracl
Christmas cookie skills, .especially ginger wafers cut in Frosting (optional):
2 cups all-purpose nour
t)lc shape of hearts and pigs. spritz shortbreads, check·
2 cups sifted confectioners' sugar
I cup quick or old·fa•hioncd oatmeal, uncooked
cred squared and Lucia saffron buns which remain the
2 tablespoons maple syrup
Continued on ,page C·S
l·to-2 tablespoons milk or cream
essence of Swedish Christmas.
1n
Once upon a time in the early
1.930's, there was a group known as
"The Flapperettcs" who danced
together in a Middleport High 111
School show.
'
Well, I'm delighted to tell you the .
Oapperettcs arc still around and
doi~g great. ,They have regular
reunions, I suppose, to discuss lhcit
days in sho'w biz and other stuff.
The group includes Rowena .
Vaughan. Teddy Yost, Edna Ma~inc
Gaskill, Dorothy Morris and Eliza·
beoh Lohse.
Racine American Legion Post
602 is hoping that you'll be on hand
at the Southern High School come
next Saturday at 6:30 p.m.
The post is going to present an
evening ·or Bluegrass gospel music
'and featured will be the Blanton·
Family of S~elby, ·Ohio, and the
Clark Family of Racine.
,
Admission will be $5 and'·
advance tickets can be purchased at
Ebers Citgo Station. If you don't get .
advance tickets, admission can be
handled at the door. Into the barg~n.
the post will award a "big" turkey OS •·
· a door pri1.c.
·
Carolyn Thomas and Pai Thoma,
fogncrl.y members of Big 'Bimd
Minstrel A~~ociation clt.~ts, were on
hand for.. last weekend's musical at
the Meigs Junior High School in '
Middleport.
Carolyn has been a member of a ·
group known as "The Committee"
for years but couldn't be on hand this
year because she had company coming from all over for Thanksgiving.
Pat has haf some health prohlcms •
·and couldn't perform her usual tasks '
hack stage and lighting. Bmh were .
missed hul 'l'ere a welcome sight to •
uthcr cast members on show night .
The Gentlemen Four barbershop
quartet musl have been exhausted
Sunday evening. Ni~ only did the
quancl make two appearances in the
Big Bend shc>w but they were riding
high un u very anractive noat in the
Pomeroy Christmas parade on Sun·
day. To top that off they strolled ohc
strccos of Pomeroy following, the
parade and sang hoth on sidewalks
and inside husiness estal>lishments.
Talk ahoul having "Music Man" on
the sc.enc. Making up the group arc
Continued on
page C·S
.
West.
~ . "You can no longer say to a
~ , woman when she arrives into a ny-
' .
the
nd
'
..
C
Dn111 hr I, 1 •
"
"
"'
.
'1
Section
..
., fishing shop, 'Are you looking for
something for your husband?' "Ms.
', Perkins says.
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She notes a 150 percent growth in
~ women's sales in 1995-96.
!; "Women are the fastest-growing
~ aspect of the Oy-fishing industry."
• Ms. Perkins says.
~ ' One of the reasons for that growth
;: is an improvement in equipment for
iJ women.
"If a woman is comfortable out·
~ doors - able to endure the cold,
• wind, biting insects and rain with
: J;gnity -then shc' lllovc fly-fish·
~ ing," says Ms. Wulff, whose long list
: of achievements include · winning
: best distance cast In the fishenncn 's
~ distanfe Oy-fishing tournament in
' I9Sl when she cast hcrlinc 161 feet,
.:
The key word is 'comfortable,'
• according to Ms. Wulff. She used to
; fish with ..a fiberglass and bamboo
~ rod and wear men's hooos and
wade~ that on her were "like death
~ traps.
Manufacturers now
make
.: Jfllllhite rods and design hoots and
• waden to fit a women 's shape.
; " WOIIICn tend to excel al fly·fi.sh·
: ing because it's a sport of finesse
; rather than strength. says Ms. Mur·
' phy of Reel Women Expeditions,
j whose Sllldents have included Metyl
Streep, Kevin Bacon and Martha
; St<:Wirt.
'
Rhythm and timing are the by.
; Women n fut learners and are
: nore J*ieftt thin men. who tend to
: use 100 much power when thq're
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The transfer of great fortunes in the Galli a of 1880 to '9.0s
51 OFF
Ladies
scr·
J,
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REE
!
J ma.lrlled. sbe says.
<
w---------~ from 1860 to 1883.
known to most Gallipoli·
ElY JAMES SANDS
He sold out in 1883
tans, however, as "HalSpecial Correspondent
in order to retire in
· The I 880s and 1890s were lelujah Charley." He had
Gallipolis. For the
&cades of great wcal.th in Gallia the habit of shouoing at
last eighl years or his
County history, ·but they were also the top of his lungs as
lite Samuel suffered
decades of great poverty.
vices were held on vari·
locomotor
from
: The resources of ohc county were ous street corners and
alaxia
(inability
t<i
gNally taxed in helping the poor in money collected to help
walk). From 1891 to
at least four of the 20 years in that feed the poor.
1913 Lucinda lived
period
1884,
"Hallelujah Charley"
in the house alone. II
1887,1893 and 1895. ran into some difficulty in
was her habit to keep
In 1887 all the the summer of 1886 when
large sums of money
Gallipolis ncwspa· he wa, caught in bed with
. in her home, some of
pers (Tribune, Jour· · a J;'rcston, who was a
which she freely disnal and Bulletin) r~ccnt convert to the · ..
tributed to those in
tried 10 organize cause. What came to be
need.
relief efforts for fear called "A war meeting"
that people would was held in the Aleshire
In 1898 · Lucinda
actually starve to death in the oown.· building by district leadThe 20-ycar period was noted for its ers. There was a lot of
almost became the
boom and bust cycles. Many people shouting . which turned
victim of a horrible
in Oallipolis were factory or day into shoving. "Hallelujah
plot. The Lewis' had
no children, hut nne
workers. When the economy went Charley" had been a5ked
of Lucinda's nieces
into· a down cycle these · workers to resign but he refused,
· . were laid off. There was ·no public opting instead for a fist
became a ·ravome.
l$sistance to speak of then, All relief fight on the sidewalk with
This niece was later
activities were directed by the vari· the district leaders. "Hal·
GENEROUS FAMQUS • Thll hou.. on Fourlll Avenue In Glllllpol11 wa1 built In 1183 by adopted hy Lucinda.
ous churches. It was with some lclujah Charley" was Slmuelend Lucinda L-1•. The .._. w• 1 !Mil (IIMl'OUI lady who kept c11h In hlr home In fact the niece,
relief that about 1885 a chapocr <If replaced by a croup lhllt to help the tllldy. SIMI wa1 llao 1 big lupportlr of varlou1 local million •genclll 1nd pro- Ella Pratt, was
the Salvation Anny was organized in was not much betler as ~~~- In town.
named as the sole
Oallipolis. Meetings were held in they ~ere accused of
during the era.
and Samuel Lewis. The latter was
beneficiary of the
the Aleshire buildin@ on Court · skommong ot_T money for themselves
One of the great boosters of char- born in New York state in 1830. He Lewis estate, estimated at nearly
Street. The OIJanization also owned l.hut ~as dcKoJftcd for the poor.
ity work in Gallipolis was I,Jucinda came to Porter with his parents in $100,000. In today's world that
a home on Third Avenue ncar Coun.
Fonally by the 1890s the Salva· Lewis who lived from 1883 to 1913 1840, Lewis started as a school· amount would be the equivalent of
, The leader of . ohe Gallipolis lion Army in Oallipolls had in the house on Founh Avenue. The 1eacher but later turned to business, about 2 million dollars. Ella bud
bi'anch of the Salvation Army was n:sfli.'Ctahlc leadership, lllld supplied house was built in 1883 by Lucinda owoina the largest st~re in Pnr,er been married to the keeper or the
Captain Charles Branch. He was much needed assi~ce to the poor
·
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railroad dcpm in Gallipolis, but the
....GIFT WUPPING
L
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~~~~·~-~I'UJr~;a~rNt~uuf~#~~~~~~~~-~utlwtdS~ofd(~@-WJ.1 ';
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two had divorced. She then moved
to Toledo and opened up a dress
shnp. In Toledo Ella hcgan seeing
Melvin Ladd. a married man. On a
couple of ucca.•ions Ella had invil.ed
.Lucinda to Tolcd<J fur u visit, and
every time Lucinda became ill..Her
· doctor hack in Gallipolis told her
. she had been ingcsti~g poison, but
Lucinda rcf~sed 'to believe anyone
would dchberutcly poison her.
Ahc>Ut one week after the last poi·
soning episode Pratt and ladd
hatched a pint to kill Lucinda at her ·
Gallipolis hnme, Ella would then
inherit the Lewis estate. and she and
Melvin wnuld then leave the country
with the eslatc muncy.
Gallipolis police were liPJ!Cd nil
of the plot ~y an unknown . source
' and caught Mcl.vin at Lucinda's win·
dow. On him ·were l<>und gas pipes
and a gun. Both Ella and Melvin
were sent to jail; It wus ironic how in
lhc same family extreme kindness
and extreme greed could both he •
found, hut perhaps thai prcny well •
describes the whole country in the
18Mils and I K90s.
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James S.nda 11 • epecilll cor· :
rt•portdlnt of . the Sunday •
Tim• S•ntlntl. Hie lldclnlla II: :
65 WHiow Dr., Springboro, Ohio •
45066.
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�· sunay, December e. 1tll
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Ple••nt. WV
Iunday, December 8, 1998
Angels step in to provide
miracle for little girl in Michigan
Missing data about fathers produce distorted picture of today's families
By CRAIG GARRETT
The Dell all News
The 0.. Moines Regltar
cost about $500,000 to treat. Since
the treatment is experimental, insurDETROIT- A little girl , who ance wouldn 't cover it.
uys the ansels of three deceased rei·
Enter another host of angels.
llives have cared for her during a Dozens of ne,ighbors, friends IJid
severe ·illness. is gains to get the people who never met Stephanie
treatment ber parents hope will save orsanized a campaign to raise
her life.
money for the rare transplant. This
Stephanie Smith, 8, of Belleville, week, they miraculously went over
Mich., traveled this week to a New the top.
York hospital, where she expects io
" People emptied their piggy
, undergo a risky stem-cell transplant. banks, arranged pancake breakfasts
. She sulfers from a rare blood dis- and did about · everything they
order that causes antibodies to attack could." said Kathy Hammons, one
her joints. It was discovered when of several major fund·raisers and a
Stephanie was 2. Because of it, doc- former neighbor. "The little town of ·
tors amputated a leg below the knee Belleville drew itself together ... it'S
four years ago. And twice, the dis- been fabulous ."
Said Jessica Camby, IS, "People
ease has left her in a fetal position,
unable to straishlen her limbs.
figured that if she was their little
During the ordeal, Stephanie said girl, (they) would help out.' '
·
the angels of her deceased grandfa.
ther a cousin and a half-brother
Although Stephante and her parhav~ taken care of her while she • ents, Paul and Debbie' Smith, are in
sleeps, travels in.the car and stays in New York, the town is havin~ a
the hospital.
parade downtown Saturday. morntng
'There is no cure, and doctors to celebrate havmg ratsed the
eated s.cven weeks ago that it would money.
By BETSY RUBINER
What ~ut the fathers?
. As pubhc debate rages on f~ly
'~sues from teen P':Pancy to smgle
parenthood and child poverty, why
IS ,the. talk always about mothers the b1nh control mothers use, the
number of children mothers have,
the percentage of mothers who don't
marry?
.
. .
. ·The answer .tS surpnsmgly simpie ..There J~St tsn't as much in formabO? s~1fically about fathers or
fathenn~ , mfonnatwn that would be
4seful 1n addr.es~'?8 many family
tssues, say stattsll~Ians,. public policy makers and sociologiSts.
"I get so many questions about
men , and I know more about
women," says Amara Bachu, who
tracks marriage and. fenility statisucs f~ the U.S. Census Bun)au.
, Th1smay change soon. The fed- .
oral government has launched a
maJor campaign to improve and
expand the data collected " from and
about men and fathers ." .
Kicked off last spring with a conterence led by Vice President AI
~ore at the National Institutes of
J;!ealth , the "Fatherhood Initiative"
is supposed to result in a plan in the
>ipring.
The effort comes in the wake of a
resurgent fathers movement that has,
among other things, spawned the
Million Man March in Washington ·
. D.C. and the Christian father's
group known as Promi~e Keepers,
; 'Among researcherS and policy
makers, there is panicularly keen
i!'terest in learning more about the
men most on the firing line, and not
coincidentally, hardest to find : sin-
CLAUDmE REITMIRE AND BRAD HAGGY
Reitmire-Haggy
JUDY SIDERS AND MIKE HARVEY
Siders-Harvey
GALLIPOLIS • Judy Siders and
Mike Harvey announce their
engagement and iiPProaching mar·
riage.
Siders is the daughter of Mary
and the late James Siders of Galllpo1is. She is a licensed practical nurse
at Lakin Hospital.
Harvey is the son of Lillie and the
late Henry Harvey of Gallipolis. He
is an over the road truck driver for
Foster Sales.
The wedding will be 5 p.m., Saturday, Dec. 21 at Centenary United
Christian Church.
. POMEROY ·-- Paul and Mary
Reitmire of Minersville announce
the engagement of their daughter,
Claudeue, to Brad f!~ggy, son of
Steve and Brenda Haggy of
Pomeroy.
'
Reitmire is a 1995 graduate of
Southern High School and is
employed at Pamida of Pomeroy.
Haggy is a 1994 graduate of Meigs
High ·School and is employed at
United VanLines of Athens.
Wedding plans ""7 incomplete.
Weaver-Musser
The Sunday · Times-Sentinel
regards the weddings of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason counties as news
and publishes wedding stories and
photographs without charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeli ness . The newspaper prefers to publish accounts of weddings as soon as
~ possible after t~e event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
· 600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received by
the editorial depanment by Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date of pub'
licati<m.
LEAH GARRISON AND PliJLIP MOLLOHAN
Garrison-Mollohan
.
.
GALLIPOLIS - Leah Ruth Garri- uate of The Ohio State University.
son of Heath and Philip Anthony
Mollolian is the son of John and
Mollohan of Gallipolis announce Helen Mollohan of Gallipolis. He is
their engagement and upcoming a 1993 graduate of Gallia Academy
marriage.
High School and attends the UniverGarrison. is the daughter of sity of Rio Grande.
Howard and Nancy Garrison of
The wedding will be Aug. 16.
Heath. She is a . 1989 graduate of · 1997 at First Baptist Church in
Heath High School and a 1997 grad- Heath.
Those not making the 60-day
deadline will be pulllished during
the daily paper as space allows.
·Photographs of either the bride· or
the bride and groom may be pu~
lished with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
· black and white or . good quality
color, billfold size or larger.. ·
. Poor quality photographs will not
be accepted. Generally, snapshots or
instant-developing 'photos are nol o(
acceptable quality:
·
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.
Questions may be directed to the
editorial department from I to 5
p.m. Monday through Friday at 4462342.
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Ott 5•. 10 AM lor store .,. ln1o II flter)-6 PM lor ston dtslag, li..S...l
GAlliPOUS
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Rappaport
stethoeco
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'
-._All: BATH
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955 2ND,GAL:UPQUS
SMITH'S GMC TRUCK CENTER, INC .
HERB SMITH
'
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•
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THE FOLLOWING ITEMS:
•Stethoscopes
•Bioocl Pressure Cuffs
•Patient Gowns
•Digital Blood Pressure Ullits
eCervkal Plows
.•
GALLIPOLIS - Oallia County
District Lihrary Bnard nf TRistecs ·
meetingS p.m. at the lihmry.
•••
70 Pine St.
G1lllpolla, Oh
446-7283
llon•..frl. tOQ.S::!IJ
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10%oFF
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Homemakers FCE Cluh mcctins
10:30 a.m . C.H. McKenzie Asricultural Center with a Christmas
bazaar, wrapping ideas and holiday
entenainnrent. ,
GENE JOHNSON CHEV.·OLDS.-GEO, INC.
GENE JOHNSON
TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOUS
JOHN SANG
••
••"'
*Largest Selection In the Area
•Attractive Stytn & Colora.·In Stoek
.Push Button Comfort
tLoolia And Feels Great
·•FREE Delivery
.
'
ENO - Eno Grange #2080 Christmas Dinner 7:30p.m. Bring .covcred
dish and canned goods for needy.
1997 dues will be accepted.
•
Startlnt At
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Spra~ue
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Monday, Dec. 9
• The open church wedding will be
3 p.m., Dec. 14 at Faith Baptist
Church in Rodney with a. reception
following at the University of Rio
Grande.
•••
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·~ ·
GALLIPOLIS - Lucky W. Shepard, evangelist and chalk, anist, with
wife Helen, to speak 6 p.m. Faith
'
Baptist Church _.
••• •
•••
Swing
Rockers
Accent
Mirrors
,,,, IIX Ill VIII ,, ''"'" , , , , ,
activity, and their offenses are of a
more serious nature..
,.:-.;~",
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. 20%0FF
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l!Jtsllay, Dec. 10
95 ••
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Tt ,,,, In
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$329
'"It #611 lne/11i~1 Bt6
Er1111 llllllfl, Ctlonl.t '""'"' 1nl B11111ll
Mix ltr $9.$D " 111111 lll-11111111 '"It
c.ommitandbeconvictedof.ill~gal
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CROWN CITY - Christian Messengers to sing 7 p.m. Bell Chapel.
Grande wi.th ari accociate's degree in
business management. He is
employed at Western Southern Life
Insurance Company in Jackson .
GrandpareniS of the couple ar~
Alfred and Zelmalee Valance,
Wilber and Louise Dennis, Helen
Myers and Faye Corvin.
Sl9
.Gun
Cabinet
C/J1111 • tlflt#y
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CROWN 'CITY - Marvin Turner
to speak 7 p.m. Crown City
Methodist Church .
GALLIPOLIS - Kevin and Sandy
Dennis of Gallipolis announce tbe
upcoming marriage oftheir daugl),·
ter, Batina Kay Dennis to Richard
Daniel Corvin son of Rich and Jean
Corvi n
of ·
Wellston.
Dennis is a 1994 graduate ofGaiIJ a Academy High School. She
atte nds the University of Rio
Grande, majoring in elementary
·
education.
Corvin Is a 1990 sraduate of
Wellston Hish School and a 1993
sradUate of the University of Rio
$299
HILL
TREES
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Dennis-Corvin
RECLINERS
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MERCERVILLE - Mark Sanders
to speak in evening and Ralph
Workman to speak Cannan Missionary Baptist Church, SR 218.
BATINA DENNIS AND RICHARD CORVIN
~
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8
·~· ·
about
GREAT GIFT IDEAS
. ltltohlng ''' 1 unlqut
Chtlll11111 gill th/1 ys11?
t11k no lurth11, pu11h111 1
Btb Et1n1 Sill P11k.
children pay child suppon, but the
figure drops to 43 percent with
fathers who have no visitation
rights .
-Of children living with their
mothers, 35 percent never see
their fathers, and 24 percent see
their fathers ·Jess than once a
month.
·
.About 20 percent of
preschool children in 1991 were
cared for by their fathers, married
or unmarried, while their mothers
worked .
· - Teen-age fathers are more
likely than their childless pe~rs to
But women can't answer every.
thing, especially questions
men's attitudes- such as whethe(
men wanted the children thelt
fathered and how men view theia
role as fathers .
~
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'
reportillg family infonnation. As a
Mothers not only provide most of
result, after the 1980 census, the the data about their children but
U.S. Census Bureau stopped collect· often about their children's father.
ing infonnati.on from men on topics " Women can report with prel!y high
such as fenthty.
reliability even the contraceptive
"Sov1f111 people who used the behaviors of their panners," says
data said there was no point in col- Chandra.
lecting data on '!'en because they
underreport, so we should concen"'
trate on women and get good data,"
says 'Bachu, of the census bureau.
Now some researchers are leaning toward once again asking men
fenility questions. But to generate
more accurate information, they say,
Startlaglt
. the questions need to be asked differently and to a broader cross-seclion of men .
Currently, women provide most
o£ the data about family matters
because they are most accessible, by
vinue of biology if nothing else.
Because women give birth, they .
mosi often fill out binh cenificate
information. They' re also a captive
audience for surv~ys . distributed
through .,hospitals.
Women most often have custody
of a child and are the parents most
likely ' to seek help from government
social service agencies - another
spot where family data may be colJected.
·
Also, women are considered
· most knowledgeable about topics . ._ _ _ __
such as fel'lility and family planning,
says Anjani Chandra, a demograph· er with the National Survey of Farnily Growth, the federal government's major survey on issues relating to childbinh and infertility.
..•• .
. POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Narcotics Anonymous Tri County
Group 7:30p.m. 611 Viand St.
'
and involvement with their children.
"The problem is not just locating
the fathers ," uys Hearn, of the
National Institute of Child Health
and Development. " We don't really
know what to ask the fathers . We
don' t really have a good idea about
what fathering is all ahout, what the
dilfcrence is between fathering and
mothering." •
Some argue that a good father
doesn't do the same things as a sond
mother, and some fathers' definition
·of "child support" differs from the
government's emphasis on cash payments. Hearn notes some studies
sugges.ting that " deadbeat dads" are
not as "deadbeat" or absent as com·
monly tho~ght. They don't pay child
support, but they may show up to
help children with their homework.
They may .pay for diapers or sneak·
ers out-of-pocket,
·
· This suggests "the fathers are
there, somewhere in the neighbor-,
hood . They may even takt care of
the kids through infonnal suppon,
child care," says Hearn.
For some re·searchers, this raises
questions about whether some pOlicies in areas from welfare refonn to
. workplace issues are wrongheaded
because they are based on incorrect
or incomplete information.
"It' s hard to make national
assumptions when you ' re lacking a
big piece Of the data," says Joyce
Manin , of the National Center for
Health Statistics.
Men, especially unmarried men,
have. a reputation for not reliably
H • h(J l illlfl
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~, ;fa;t;he;rs;·;w;ith;;jo;in;t;c;·u;stod;;y;o;f;the;;ir;.iiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;=U·it::-=-=================::;:~::::::::446-::1:1:7:1-:1:-8:CI0-664-:
· ::5:46:2:::::~:;:
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All STUDIOS OPEN EVERY DAY Mon.·Sat. 10 AM·7 PM
The Community Calendar Is
published as a .free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and ape- ·
clal events. The calendar.is not
deaigned to promote sales or
fund·raiaera of any type. Items
are printed as apace permits
and cannot be guaranteed to
run. a specific number of days.
•••
By BETSY RUBINER
The Des Moines Register
Here are some facts we do
' know about fathers, from "the
. National Fatherhood Initiative:
. ·-:· Nearly one-founh of Ameri· ca's children lived in families in
· which fathers were not present in
1994.
- · An estimated 778,761
• fathers with children under age 18
were in prison in 1994.
- Fifty percent of all white
'children and 75 percent of all
: black children born in the last two
deoa:des are likely to live for some
pari .of their childhood without
their fathers.
1 -~c!\o1ore than 90 percent of
policy---
Galli a
community
calendar
Sunday,~.
gle fathers who <k>n •t pay child suppon.
"It's not just that we' re missing
information o? f~, " sa~s Gesine
Hearn, a SOCiologist working With
the ,National Institute of Child
Health and Development.
"We really have a distorted pic·
ture because we' re missing a cenain
group of men - the low-income
man, the non-custodial, very mobile,
hard-to-locate man . The point is you
don't know much about these .men
ortheirabilitytopaychildsupport."
This missing da\a about fathers is
also " imponant for the subsequent.
health and evaluation of the child,"
notes StephaAie Ventura, a demographer at the National Center for
Health Statistics.
To find out more about fathers,
.especially
unmarried
fathers,
researchers first have to find them.
In many cases, fathers are not
listed ·on birth certificates when
babies.are born out of wedlock. But
unwed mothers across the country
are under more pressure to name a
father, as a result of child suppon
enforcement efforts. One way is
through a paternity affidavit signed
voluntarily by both the father and
mother after binh.
A door-to-door household survey
like the census won't pick up details
about these men because many
aren't pan of a household.
And even. if the men ~an be
found, they may not .know they've .
fathered a child, says Bachu, of the
census bureau. ,
·
Researchers are. trying to come
up with new questions to ask fathers
that uneanh more information about
their fenility, use of contraception
Facts about fathers
MIDDLEPORT -- Mr. and Mrs. 2 p.m., Dec. 22 at the United Faith
William Weaver, Sr., of Middlepon, Church, SR 7, Pomeroy. The cereannounce the approaching marriage mony will be performed by the
of their daughter, Christina Gail groom's uncl'l. Rev. Gene Musser.
Weaver, to Kevin Paul Musser, son · A receptiolt will be held followof Mr. and·Mrs. Paul Musser of Vic- ing the wedding at the American
toria, Texas.
Legion Annex, Feeney-Bennett Post
The open church wedding will be 128, Mill Street, Middlepon.
--~·Wedding
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, lwv
BOWMAN'S
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HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY
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To our.local new car dealers for their annual do.n. ation; ·to provide new
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lighted .displays in the~Gallipolis City Park for the conimunities' enjoyment•
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Your continued support is greatly appre~iated year after year..
Just another community service provided.by your local dealerships and the
Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association
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785 E. Main St. ··
JICkton, Oh.
a.7484
llon...frt.
NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE-JEEP·EAGLE
MIKE NORTHUP
SMITH BUICK PONTIAC INC.
GREG SMITH
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Sundly, December 8,1996
Sunday, December I, 1881. •
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Plea..nt, WY
Is this Indian Summer?
A frigh~ening look at cigarette.warning
'
By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I hope you
will print this article by Joan Beck.
It appeared in the Chicago Tribune.
This article is scarier than any warnini I have ever read. -- Craig in
Chicago
· ·•
Dear Craig: I have obtained Joan·
Beck's pennission to run it I should
tell .you that cigarettes were a major
factor in her husband's death. Here's
the article:
"The terse 'surgeon general's
warnings' on cigarette packs don't
begin to tell .the full dangers or
tobacco. The infamous loll is documented in a carefully researched
new book published by the American Council on Science and Health.
It is called 'Cigareues: What the
Warning Label Doesn't Tell You.'·
Here's a sampling: , ·
"Cigarelle smoking is the leading
preventable cause of death and of
early ill health and disability. It is
responsible for about 500,000 deaths
every year. No system of a smoker's
body is spared its harmful effects.
"Smoking not only causes lung
cancer, emphysema and chronic
bronchitis .. it also makes pneumonia,
The verdict on the long
cruise .has ·returned
RONALD AND CINDY ZERKLE
Zerkles to observe 25th
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Aowers. Ron is the son of Ronald
Ronald and Cindy zerkle will cele- Zerkle, Sr. and the late Jessetla ·
brate their 25th wedding anniversary Zerkle. They are the parents of two
, Dec. 10. They were married in Point children, Jodie Craft and Kevin
' Pleasant, W.Va. by Rev. Norvelle.
Zerkle. They reside in Poinl Pleas· Cindy is the daughter of Harry ant.
M. Flowers and the late Annagene
1
.·
tuberculosis, influenza and the com- more anesthesia. are more likely 10
mon cold worse and aggravates develop respiratory complications
asthma. Smokers have twice the and are more apt to need extra oxydeath rates from cancer as non- gen. Their wounds are slower 10
smokers, and almost one-third of all held.
"People who smoke have higher.
cancer deaths are caused by using
lobacco. Cigarettes are associated rates of osteoporosis and broken
with cancer of the mouth, pharynx, bones. Their fraciures take longer to
larynx, esophagus, pancreas, cervix, heal. And they are more Iikely to
kidneys, bladder, colon and bone have back pain .
"Women who smoke are more
marrow as well as lungs.
"One-fifth of all deaths from likely to have problems of infertility,
heart disease are due to smoking. tubal pregnancies and miscarriages.
Smokers are more likely lh1111 non- They have more complications dursmokers to have repealed heart ing pregnancy and at childbirth.
attacks and are at higher risk for Their babies are at ttigher risk of
angina, aortic aneurysms and other · being born premature and, on the
average. weigh less than those of
cardiovascular diseases.
"Not only does smoking do harm non-smoking mothers. A woman's
to the blood vessels of the heart, it smoking also increases the 1•isk her
also injures those throughout the baby will be stillborn or have a cleft
body. leading to stroke and poor cir- palate. Risks are also higher for sud.culation in the legs.and feet. Smok- den infant death syndrome, infant,
ing cigareues is one of two main risk allergies and unexplained . mental
re\ardalion and behavioral problems.
factors for stroke.
.
"Smokers usually look older than
non-smokers because damage to the
"Living with a smoker accounts
skin produces wrinkles. Smoking for hundreds of thousands of cases
increases the risk of psoriasis. The of bronchitis, pneumonia, ear infecrisks of surgery are higber in smokr tions and worsened asthma in young
ers than non-smokers. They require children. The 20th century will be
DALE AND JOANN KAUTZ
Kautzes to celebrate 40th
By .DOROTHY SAYRE
Our longer cruise was recently
completed... N~w York City to
Bermuda... Saturday to Saturday in
Oclober.
We flew to New York City and
arrived at the Garden for the Blind.
It was a walled gasden with a lovely
fountain for lbe sound of water, pebbles on the walkway for the sound of
walking, and many fragrant herbs
. ihroughout the garden for smell.
The guide was a very knowledgeable, gradous lady. We later found
out she was the Premier's wife,
Christine Saul; After our guided
lour. we spent lime in the greenhouses for cacti, ferns, and exotic
plants, including orchids. We caught
a bus back to the ship. The bus ride
cost $2.50 each and the route it took
couldn't have taken more than five
minutes! Our walking route to the
gardens took an hour.
Other outings included .a British
lea ala Hamillon ll'Staurant, and visits to Barr's Bay Park and Par-1~
Ville Park. The Iauer is a most spectacular walled retreat in the middle
of Hamilton.
Our Denver friends visited other
allraclions including 'forts, and the
Royal Navy Dockyard. In Sl.
·George's they visit~d the Ducking
Stool, where in . the past nagging
wives, gossips, and unruly people
had been publicly dunked for punishment.
The lower of The Bermuda
Cathedral, or called Cathedr~l of the
Most ~oly Trinity Church, .domi· '
nates· the skyline in Hamilton.
Stones to build the huge ·gothic
architectural church came from
Scotland, ·Nova Scotia, . Indiana,
France and Bermuda. ·
The church lectern and pulpit 'are
replicas of St. Giles' Church in Edin·
burgh, Scotland,
which we had
seen two years
previously. The
large sanctuary
was
beautiful
with elaborate'
stained glass win- .
dows and ilfll'orl·
ed,
polished
wood.
· ·
Climbing tl)e over 150 steps to
the top of the tower revealed a 360
degree view of Bermuda. Whether
from lack of breath after the climb or
the lovely, spirituill experience, the
view was dazzling. Even the cruise
ship looked tiny from the lower.
ou11.
remembered for the tobacco pla8Jie
that has killed more than 100 million
people worldwide.
''
"During the 1980s. toba~o
killed S million Americans, compared to 350,000 deaths from other
addictive substances. Worldwi<le,
more than 3 million people die everY
year from what the book calls
'tobaccosis' --all the diseases caused.
by tobacco use.
;·
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pushC4
· "And those who have
tobacco products for profit and prb·
moted them with enticing skill have
yet to be held accountable."
:
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Send questloas to ADD ~I);
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 W. Cell+
tury Blv<J., Suite 700, Los Anples~
Calif. 90045
.''
If you have ever dreamed of owning a
log home, now is the timei
~
Let Dream Catcher Log Homes show you just how affon!"ble a finely crafted:·
. Alta Log Home can be. Take advantage of today's low tnteresl rates. For
maximum savings, you may ChoOse lo construct your home wilh On~slte .
supervisliln, or we will make arrangements to build your home to. any degree·
of completion. An Alta home is a model of precision craftsmanship, easily :
assembled using our diSiinctive interlocking cQ111er s)'Siern, and beautifully·
finished w'ith smoothly planed White pine logs adding an air of sophistication
to traditional country chann. li's 'sturdy, efficient, and practically maintenance
free.
AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR ALTA INDUSTRIES LTD
Located 2 miles North of Chester, Ohio
.
onRt. 7
.
a.J.'r...,deo.anw,
hor hualllind Ooorge,
torm_.y of •
back
(614) 985-3910
Tues., Th~rs. & Sat. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. ,
~veld
•bout thrW YM,. ago ..d,naw rwldl In 1
hoUM r.lng the Ohkli River lu•t beiO'IW
' Also By Appointment ·
Nutritional analysis per cookie:
Continued from page c-1
•149.7
calories; 7.9 grams total fat:
one:fourth teaspoon salt
These homey cookie ornaments' (4.7 grams saturalcd fat); 1.7 grams
arc good for the small tree some , protein; 18.5 grams carbohydrates;
families keep in the kitchen. Beat 20:milligrams cholesterol; 134 mil. ·· ·~.
; butter, :'Sugar ''and vanilla until ligr~~s sodium.
creamy. Add combined flour. oats
and salt and mix well. Divide dough CHRISTMAS OR HANNUKAH
SUGAR COOKIES
in half. Shape each half into ~ roll,
one-half
cup shortening
al)out 2 inches in diameter. Wrap in
plastic wrap. Chill al least 3 hours. - · one-fourth' cup margarine
hnc·half cup granulate~ sugar
Unwrap rolls and slice into one-half<:up packed hrown sugar
one-half
inch rounds. Place I inch apart on
2 eggs
~ngrcascd cookie sheets. Poke a
2 tcaspoops vanilla extract
bole 'ncar the edge of each cookie
2 and three-fourths cupsllour
·with n dr.inking straw. Bake · at 350
three-fourths tc•ISpoon salt
4cgrecs for 11-lo-13 minutes until
I teaspoon baking powder
4dges arc · Iight · brown. Cool I
1 teaspoon dnnamon
lhinutc on cookie sheet. repeal hole- ··
Addiiionalllour l<>r rolling ··
punching if holes have closed. transCream
shortening. margarine and
fer to racks to linish> cooling. Insert
(andy licorice string through holes. sugars wgethcr until light and llulfy.
{)ccoralc wilh icing purchased in Add eggs and vanilla extract. mixing
thoroughly. Sift together llour. salt.
i)lhcs.
Cookies can be decoralcd with haking powder and cinnamon. Add
colored sugar crystals. small candies to shortening mixture and mix \Jntil
(like M-and-Ms), sprinkles or sliced smooth. funning a soft dough. Chill
for at least I hour nr until linn
~lmonds before bakiqg.
• Makes about 2 dozen
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. CHESTER -- Dale and Joann Bill (Crystal) Kautz of Racine; four
iKautz will observe their 40th . grandsons; and a granddaughter.
.anniversary with an open house
Joann is the daughter of the late
from 2 to 4 :30 p.m., Sunday, Dec. Bill and Lucille Baurell. Dale is the
15 a1 the Meigs Senior Cilizens Cen- son of the late Elmer and Ina Kautz.
1er, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.
They are semi-retired from farm. They were married Dec . 15, 1956 ing and retired from Chester Agri
'al the First · Christian Church in Service.
They request that guests not bring
:Athens by Rev. Joe. B. Moffat. They
have a daughter, Pamela Sue (Tiino- gifts.
:thy) Massie of Gallipolis, and a son,
- Santa says
Sleeping on
!backs reduces
SIDS rate
'Remember To Shop
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Mason Furniture For .
Christmas
'
8y NICOLE BONDI
The Detroit News
' If your baby -sleeps on his or her
~ide. you'd beller break thai habit
in ow.
l;atrics
· Therecommends
American Academy of Pedi•.
babies sleep on
:open house
:scheduled
I
FREE!
~h~ir
backs, not the sides or stomachs to reduce the risk of sudden
infa~l death syndrome (StbS):-·An
~arlier policy said placing babies on
Jbeir sides was also safe. Now it's
believed !hal infants can roll over
pnto their stomachs too easily.
· When the custom was to place
·babies on their stomachs, 6,000 ·to
$.000 infants died from SIDS each
yeaf. said Herman Gray. vice-chief
for pediatric education at Children's
Hospital. Since pediatricians recommended infants sleep on 1he1r backs.
the rate has decreased by about 20
percent, In Michigan, SIDS rates are
down 30 ,percent.
.
Thi~ is the tirst substanuvc
deere- in SIDS cases.
Placing babies on their backs
goes a~ainst uadilional c hild·r~aring
practioes, when tt was beheved
babies would choke if they slept on
their ~b. But Gray said there has
been '¥' increase in choking deaths
since ltle new practice was adopted.
1VeA"o HOHA to,...
Selediola Of Floor to,..!
("Qnfon
Sluntr - * t l l l r
ycM'I of COiabi.
Accent
MAPLI•OAil
.aanery
GUDBBI
ROOU!BS
Sf;LECTED
VpTo50% ON SUITES
Pricetl'Froa f}~9~9;J.::====--~-~
Ten Ba!atifal
Styles To
Prieed .
IllS
lAYAWAY llm'l fDR CHRISTMAS"' J1MQAI.UIS SAME A$ CASH
Sat.ts
•
c.ws
2ND STREET
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Y'uil ••.,,r
Curio
11111 Clll .... tniD.
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From
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You're s!ill young if you can sing
Berlin's "White Christmas" with
Well, 1 didn't know that.
gusto-- you know -- like you. mean
Thanksgiving time brought some it. The tune's preuy and the Iynes are
. h' hi
great but fran'kly, my dear, my .gusto
problems for Pomeroy s tg Y has gone out of it. 1can live w 1tho~t
regarded Tom Bowen. He had to be · the Christmas while. Do keep smd·
taken to University Hospital immc- .
tng.
·
How does your firewood
·stack up? Here's a primer ·
By FIONA SOLTES
The Nashville Tennessean
Before you put another log on the
fire, take a closer look at that log. Is
it the right kind 10 be burning?
There 's a lillie more to firewood
than stopping by the side of the toad
on the way home from work. Here's
more from John Hazel, a forester
with U.S..Dcpartmcnl of Agriculture
Forest' ServiCe. Northeastern Area:
-When 10 buy. Unless you look
for seasoned wood, your best bet is
to buy wood now for burning next
year, so it's completely dry. If the
wood you buy is very heavy and has
sap oozing oul of it. it's way too
carly to bum . In the 'midpoint in dry ing. however. il can he difficult to
tell , so you ' ll have 10 r~ly on the
d.
· .
sccrswor
11 ·•
· - Storage. Some people slack
lirewood right up next tn lhc house .
but that's not a good idea, Hat.cl
said. If it contains any wood -eating
insects. they 'II move on lu your
house for dessert . Be sure the wood
will nol get wet, or it will rot. And
assume that you ' II lose the houom
row of your firewood stack just from
the moisture on the ground.
- What's a cord'' Chances arc.
wood. fot sale · will he a prit:c pc~
cord. A cord is 128 cubic feel of .
· ·wood. or a stack 4 feet wide. 4 feel
1~11. and 8 l'cet long. tightly packed .
In o1hcr words. if someone ·tries to
tell you his half-ton truck holds a
cord of wood. don't believe it . Even
if )t's pikd prcny high, Hazel says,
i!'s only about half.
-Species. Yqu'll get more· b~m
for your money if yo~ , choose woods .
like hickory, black locust, or red and
wh.ilc oak. Puss on the yellow poplar .
and while pine.
- EITicicncy. If you 're burning
your wood in the lireplnce and not m
a closed wood stove. realize that it's
prohahly not very efficient. Because
of drafts. tireplnccs uclually can
draw heat away from the house
rather than the tllher way around.
But nothing quite hc•lls thai umbtencc. ·
- Cutting your own . Sure. it's a
·romantic idea. hut consider the
cos1s: Is there u ·place you ~.:.·an '-'Ut it'?
Do you have n chninsaw·•
Gold Coins
For
Investment
or
Jewelry
. WHOOPIE PIES
2 l:urs sugar
I cup shortening
2 eggs
4 cups flour
.
I cup baking cocoa
I teaspoon sail
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
I· cup of sour ;.,ilk (stir about 3
tablespoons while vinegar into milk
until it sour.;)
2 teaspoons haking soda
I cup hot water
For liliing:
2 egg whites. beaten slightly
4 tablespoons milk
2 tcasptx>ns vanilla extract
4 cups powdered sugar
I and one-hall' cups shortening
Cream sugar and shortening. Add
eggs. Sifi together llour. cot:oa and
suit. Add In creamed mixture ullcrnalcly wilh sour milk. Add vani II a. .
Dissolve soda in hot waicr und add it ·
la.'t. Mix well. brop hy . rnundcd
----News policy---In an effort 10 provide ourreadellihip .with cuircnt news. the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days
from the date of t,he event. .
All club meetings and other news anicles in lhe society section must be
submitted within 30 days of occurrence.
·
All birthdays must be submilled within 42 days of the occurrence .
. --·- ----,
We really are as
close as your phone
HEAlTH
tah1cspoonfuls onto greased cookie
sheets. Bake 'at 400 degrees for 8-to·
10 minutes. Makes ah1>Ut 2 dot.en
sandwich pies . Cool completely,
then till with Whoopic Pic liling.
Filling: Mix egg whiles. milk. vanilla and 2 cups powdered sugar. Then
beat in shnrtcnin~ ilnd remaining
powdered sugar. Spread a dah of liling on nm side of cookie and put it
together with ~mothcr ~me . Wrap
tightly in foil or in a s;mdwich hag.
Nulritional . analysis per cookie:
ZN7..5 calories ; !53 grams tolal fat ;
(4.0 grams saturated fat): 2.1 grams
protein : .16.K grams carhohydratcs:
13 milligrams cholesterol: 141 mil·
Jigrmns sntlium.
Acqul~l~lons has a
wonderful selection of
-Gold Coins
•14 Kt. Gold Chains
'~~ib-.]
5f.cquisitions
'.FI'J(J; J'E!WliJi(')'
AND
. MTS RATE COIN COMPANY
Corner Sec. II Grape St.
Galllpollo, Oh.
H..S. Mon.-Frl.11-8; 9-6 Sat; 1-4 Sun
• • ill
MEDICAL
·SERVING PATIENT & PHYSICIAN
Our dedicated professional staff has been serving
patients in the home, hospital, nursing homes, extended
care facilities and resident care facilities for the past 35
years. .Our staff includes a physical therapist, certified
fitters, a licensed athletic trainer, SOC-certified orthotist,
a registered nurse, and respiratory therapist to help you
with your needs. ·
When your physician recommends · physicl!ll therapy,
treatment for sports injuries, oxygen or home medical
equipment, let us provide this se~ice to you.
· Family Medicine
••' '
530 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH
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Accepting Appointments
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(614) 441-0757
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Preheat oven to 350 dcgrc'cs. On
lightly floured surface. roll dough to
one-fourth-inch thickness. Cut with
Hannukah cookie cutters into
desired shapes. (For best results, dip
" 10 prevent
cookie cuucr in llour
sticking) . Place on ungrcascd baking
sheet and bake for 6 10 R minutes or
until golden brown around the
edges: When cool. decorate with
colored frosting. colored sugar or
sprinkles. Makes 4 dozen.
Nutrilional analysis per cookie: 70.6
calories: 3.4 grams total fat: (O.R
grams saturated fat): 1.0 grams protein: 9.1 gram"arbohydratcs: 911)il·
ligrams cholesterol : 55 milli~rums
·sodium.
A.J. Rush, M.D.
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RODNEY - A open house rcccp• tion for Lillie Fanning's 90th birth-.
day will be held from 2 lo 4 p.m .
Sunday. Dec. IS al Rodney United
Methodist Church, SR 588. It is
requested thai gilts hcnmincd.
Buy One
Table_Lamp At
==~Regular Price And
.Get The Second
Matchinfl Lamp .
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'U·
diatcly and there a pacemaker was
installed. He's doing very well now,
however. In fact, he and Mary were
out on the town a bit on Friday. lsn~
that great.
.Holiday treats ... ~-.~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~
Dream catcher 1.o1 Homes
I found it easy to leave my heart
in places other than San Francisco.
llotolllr
Anldc•
IIMS~.
I
Continued from page c:-1
Gerald Powell, John Anderson. and
Denver Rice of Meigs County and
Hugh Graham of Gallipolis. I think
Graham is going to have 10 move to
Meigs County if the present sched~ ·
uling of the quartet continues.
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and in medieval art they indicated nwriage. Used in foods they add a spice
GAlliPOLIS - II is the first week in December 1111d I picked a light- taste to soups, sauces, syrups, cordials and wine.
colored pansy f!um my garden. Freshly opened and a perfect bloom.
I! also is famous for its crystallized flowers.
. To my questron: "Is this no~ the lndi1111 Summer?" I
If you remove a petal from the flower notice thai it has a white heel.
was told by my knowledgeable friends that "you can't lii!ii!HIW
Snip this off, it is bitter. Add petal to salads, fruit pies and sandwiches.
have lndtan Summer when you haven't had a Squaw ,, . •·
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, ·
.
...
Good to use in jams and to flavor sugar.
1
Winter yet!"
\\
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As dried flowers and in tussie-mussies, Pinks have a
Tha!. me~ns a killin~. frost. has to precede the period ·~..
.
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. : .·.·.'.~ . :. : . .. speciill message - it bonds affection and it says "She is
called Ind1an Summer ; wh1ch IS a spell of unseason - \.111 1. · . ·
•.. . .• · .
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fair"
ably mild weather during the late autumn • along late
·'• ..· ·+ · · '. •c> :,:· .';.~;.~"·· ... ·
I! Sl1111ds for fascination for always lovely and pure
Oclober or early November. And it is December and my
"'
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love. In the proper time ·ask for more informalion for
herbs. are doi~g just ~ne. Pariley is lu~h and bushy and garlic is green and planting and care of the plant
·
my d1an1hus IS growmg all over the place.
---•---···
The poet Emily Dickinson had this to say about autumn:
. I( you get ahold of the book:
"Besides rhe aurumn poers sing.
"Whatchagot Stew" by Patrick F. McMarnus and Patricia "The Troll"
A[~· prosaic days •
McManus Gass
.
A lirrltrhis sidt ofrhe snow
Read it! It's lots of fun and recipes- you wouldn't believe!
A11d rhar side .of rhe haze... "
Here is one of them:
fn the eighteenth century it was noted lhat there was a tranquil time
Skookum Minestrone Soup
while the hazy, warm airflow seemed to linger over United States 11nd it
This soup is 't'Onderfulto serve to.a crowd of ~ungry people -especially
was also noted that the American Indians utilized thai time to gel ready for on a cold, 'wei day.
lhe approaching winter. Thus the name: Indian Summer.
I pound ground venison or beef
. I take heed of the Indians' example an~ winter. proof my herbs·~ Squaw
3 T. vegetable shortening
Wmter or not.
I ,qullrt water
I can (28 oz.) tomaloes
Bob Shaver uses pine needles in his day lily beds, but I don' t have pine
nec:ctles, so I use cut straw around my lavender buslies and on the roots and
I large onion chopped.
stems of the thyme plants. h leaves some air ,round the plants and I can
2 large carrots, pe01cd and sliced
close the protective circle if needed or open. when spring days call for it.
2 (8 oz.} cans tomato sauce
...........
2 cups beef broth
I learned from an old herbalist to plant three of a kind in a group. That
I T. drive parsley, crushed
is what she said: "One for the father. one for the son and one for the Holy
1/2 1. dried basil. crushed
Ghost then say a prayer. This then is mediation time in your herb garden I 1. dried oregano, crushed
1/2 teaspoon pepper
healing for your soul as the herbs are to help your body. The grouping in
threes helps with wintering and it is more pronounced during the growing
1-.112 t. salt
.
season. In bloom the group of simi!.ar flowers makes a stalcmcnl. .
·
I can (15 oz.) garbanzo beans,'drained
On both sides of my front patio the beds arc filled with herbs and flowI can ( 16 ounces) green beans, d.rained
I can (15 ounces) kid 0ey beans, drained
ers of all kind. One of these flowers, dianthus; was known during the
1300s as gilly flower and was used to make mead . h was also known as
1-1/4 cups uncooked macaroni
clove pink and dianthus pink, bul named Dianthus Caryophyllus- this herb
Parmesan cheese (optional)
was a flower of divinity 10 the ancient Greeks. who dedicated it to the "Sky
Brown veni.son or beef in shortening.' Combine all ingredients except :
cheese and bring to boil. Cover all simmer over low hca.t about40 minutes.
Father" and called il "dianthus."
For the Romans it was "flos Jovis'. Jove 's flower and was used in Garnish each bowl of soup with Parmesan cheese. if desired. Serves 12.
making coronets and swags used in ceremonies. Well-known in ·ancienl
Indian Fried Bread
Chinese medical books it was widely used as medicine. A favorite percnWhen while bread dough is ready for shaping 'into loaves pinch off
nial garden flower it is in Britain Europe and the USA much used as bar· small pieces and flaucn in your hand. Heat 3-inch salad oil to 375 degree
der plant.
and drop in pieces of dough. Fry until puffed and golden. turning once. Try
Bluish-gray leaves with slcms two feet long, it is blooming in midsum- with huckleberry jam. And don't countlh~ calories.
mer purplish-red pink or white flowers thai have a spicy clove scent. II was
P.S. This book was .Published by Henry Halt and Company. New York
especially used in the drinks, thus the name gilly flowers suggesting the in 1990. The subtitle is "A Memoir of an .Idaho Childhood, with Recipes
connection wilh Gill House, the old name Jor an old house.
and Comments. .
.
.
"·
.
The petals, with their biller while "heels" snipped off will scent and fla-. '
VIlma Plkkojals a III•Iong gardener and a founding member of the
vor food and drinks.
Gallla Araa Herbal Guild.
As flower of love, pinks wero floated ' in the drinks·of engaged c~uples,
'n.c. S,.tinlc IIIII Cte-
.
Beat of bend ...._ __
By VILMA PIKKOJii
Ann
Landers
1¥95, l..ol
""'** c-..-~laa1• Page C5
I
Pomeroy • Middleport • Ga1Upo118, 0H • Point Plee..nt, WY
. •.",.'
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·Office Hours
Monday through Friday
9' a.m. - 5 p.m.-
1·800-462·5255
Don't hestitate .to call with your
healthcare corichns. A specially
trained registered nurse is ~n duty
Left to right: Harman L. Dillon, MS, PT; Michael
Hemphill, MS, AT; Ron Pitchford, AS, Sales; Mark
Dlllc1n, AS, ROF, Sales
7 days a week from 6 am until 2 am
• Please ~ to your ciol:tor .
m~dications
•
'
�SUnday, December8,1111
Sunday, Dec:ember 8, 1996
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolll, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
Newly recognized brain disorder often diagnosed as Alzheimer's
"!Y JAMES TOBIN
World War U and his college days at Notre Daine.
And until the day he died in 1995, Kathy Wasen said, Kean's face still
lighled up whenever family entered his room. Thai alertness was another dif·ference from the final, coma-like state that many end-stage Alzheimer's
patients suffer.
.
Despite the oddities of Kcan's case, doctors from Michigan to the Mayo
Clinic had no alternative but to diagnose his illness as Alzheimer's.
Their uncenainty was part of the mystery that has always shrouded the
intellectual declines among old people. Even today, Alzheimer 's and other
neurological problems of the elderly are diagnosed with dismaying inaccuracy - or not at all.
Recent surveys·show that some two-thirds of nursing-home residents suffer from some form of dementia (a decline in mental abilities i!Jlpairing
everyday activities), and about 50 peu:ent from Alzheimer's.
.
Yet in Michigan , for example, dementia is listed on the admission forms
of only IS percent of all those residents , and Alzheimc"r's in only 1.5 percent.
Over the same period as Jack Kean's illness, Foster and other researchers
. noticed similar cases scattered around the world.
Foster's c1.1riosity was aroused when he saw brain scans of patients presumed to have died with Alzheimer's, yet whose brains were damaged in
areas Alzheimer's does not touch.
•
Autopsies showed deteriorated brains without the plaques and tangled
nerve cells characteristic of Alzheimer's. Others who saw patterns of nonAizheimer's dementia in families investigated genetic causes. ··
Some thought memory problems predominated. Others saw muscular
stiffness and slowness of movement and thought it. was a form of Parkin-
Differing damage
~ Detroit New•
, for years, the doctors scratched their heads over the odd case of Jack
~and pronounced an uncertain verdict: "probable Alzheimer's." ·
tlis family didn'c think so. It turned out they were right.
In a conference room at the University of Michigan, brain researchers
l'tom around the worl4 decided that what killed Jack Kean is not
Alzheimer's, but a brain disor,.r never before recognized by medical sci·ence.
A~d researchers believe it may account for up to I0 percent of cases Ira"
'dilionally diagnosed under the name "Alzheimer's."
.
: They have given it a forbidding name: frontal-temporal dementia with
' Parklhsonism linked to chromosome 17, or FrDP-17.
: Alid it is deadly and cruel - crueler even than Alzheimer's, which at
:least has given up some ofi!S secrets and partially yielded to new drug treat: ments. So far, the neurological process underlying FrDP remains untreat·able.
Still, the discovery gives doctors new ways of handling the disease to sig: nificantly ease the burdens of patients and their families .
.
: "As we learn more, we're going to be able to direct better therapies," said
:Dr. Norman Foster, the University of Michigan neurologist who organized
·the conference.
·
,
·
: The first signs of illness are rc;cognized earlier in the ·FrDP victim than
:in most Alzheimer's patients, Foster said. So far, onset always has begun in
•patients under 65, and sometimes as early. as the late 40s.
Memory loss is the tipoff to Alzheimer's, whereas the FTDP sufferer
son's.
~xhibits bizarre behavior. That behavior worsens until the patient's life
Recently, geneticists traced the inherited form of the disease to defects in
becomes acontinuing exercise in frustration for himself and his family.
Jack Kean was a successful executive who served the town of Fenton, .chromosome 17. That is a long way from isolating the gene or genes responsible, but the search soon may yield a more definitive answer.
~ich .. for many years in community organizations and on boards of direcFoster and other researchers have shown FTDP strikes the forward areas
·
tors. He became ill in the'mid-1980s, at age 58.
• He began to act inappropriately in social situations. He spoke with unac- of the brain, while Alzheimer's more typically strikes middle and rear customed harshness to loved ones. He developed an obsession with collect- thus the difference in the two diseases' trademark effects.
Even in the absence of an effectjve treatment, the ability to distinguish
ing stray objects like tissue, rubbe.r bands, quarters.
FTDP
from Alzheimer's will pay many dividends as word spreads through
"He knew he was losing it," recalled his daughter, Kathy Wasen, of
the medic~! community.
Farmington, Mich., "and it was very frustrating for him ." .
Patients classified as Alzheimer's or Parkinson's cases- or even as psyLike many with FrDP, he developed "hyper-orality," an uncontrollable
~hotics- no longer will be given inappropriate medications . Relatives who
habit of putting objelitS in his mouth and chewing, them . ·
Gradually he lost the power of speech, and parts of his memory were may feel perple.ed about a loved one's decline, or disagree apout the cause,
affected, though he could still remember his years in the Pacific. during . will gain understanding.
Brail rasearthcn have ageed t11a1 acilea88 ~to be aform d Alzheimer's
is in lad a distinct disorder. Proal was found partly 111 1M dillering Ww:fS i1 which
Alzheime(s and 1he ~tis ease, caled FTDP·17, typically damage lhe brain.
!!
'
'
' I
~
. .
• • ':.-· J
(
'"-' /
"-l•ltllnl
IIUpllior
.
ltilljKH II Iobei
FHll'-17
Key 1YJ11llloml Clllll!ed
by .damage to this
ll.llimO!y lo~. .
I Difficulty naming objects,
I Difficulty with spatial relations.
Source: Or. Noonan Foster, University
ot Michigan, TM Detroit News
Key symptoms caused
by damage to cor~ex:
I Impaired judgmeilt _and social conduct.
. J Mutism (increasing ii\abifity to S(leak).
Key symptoma caused by
damage to anterior temporal lobe:
I Hyper-orality (compulsion lo put things
in mouth).
Gannett News Serv·
And families who lose relative s to the disease may feel encouraged lC>
donate the brain for research- a contribution that could spell the difference.
between life and death l'or future victims of the (iisease.
'
"That made all the difference fo~ me," Kathy Wasen, whose family con·
tributed Jack Kean's brain for research. " It made me feel some thing·positivc.'·
could come from . this.''
'
A look at the healing power of animals on humans
By BARBARA NACHMAN
~nnelt Suburban Newspapers
' See Samantha run. See Samantha
jump. See Samantha beal.
she said. "Now you have to think
"People in nursing homes are too do it well.
about the dog. It keeps you going."
lonely, '' said Thomas, former direcThe JAMA article cites a study at
Marilyn Duff and Meg Millar tor of a nursing home in upstate New a treatment center near Philadelphia
don't think of themselves as pio- York. "They need companionship, in which children with attentionneers in a growing health-care and animal companionship is a won- deficit disorder and behavior probAt the Ramapo Manor Nursin-g
B h
derful balm for loneliness."
1
h
Home in Suffern, N.Y., 35 men and movement. utl ey are.
ems were taug t ~~ care, for and
women sat in wheelchairs arranged
Health. professionals and their
The curative nature of animals handle animals. After three months . .
·
· 1 was understood long before modem the children were calmer and less
.
h
be
t
· in a large circle. Samantha, a'4-year- pa Ients ave
come mcreasmg y
old black Labrador retriever, was aware of, and willing . to use, the health-care facilities. In 18th-centu- . aggressive "than schoolmates not in
making her rounds.
healing power of animals. The ven- ry England, one Quaker retreat the program.
erable Journal of the American Med- encouraged patients to spend time
And in a study done at the UniJ .~~~':::'~~~[,~cl~e~a~:~t!~ ical Association even gave a nod to with farm animals that roamed the versity of Maryland Medical Center,
Dr. James Lynch found that pet own- ·
curative canines in a December grounds.
t her.
1995 article titled "Puppy Love Can
A similar program is in effect at ers were five times less likely than
"I'm a lover of animals," resi- Be Therapeutic, Too."
Green Chimneys Children's Ser- others to die in the first year after a
nt Marilyn Duff said as she ran
The Delta Society is a non-profit vices in Brewster. N .Y. The residen- heart attack.
r hand along Samantha's glossy group b.a sed in Washington state that tial treatment center for children
Some researchers say that posi1
"f~·kco;~· ·~wtcen they:~• here,
~remotes animals helping people with emotional problems_ is located live contact with animals releases
1 e m orne agrun.
1mprove their health, independence m a farm-hke settmg. It ts home to endorphins in the brain in the same
· Duff, 65, 1ived with five dogs and , and quality of life. The group's Pet . _100 ~hlldren and 350 ammals, . way as exercise docs. The result is
•ght cats until she had a stroke in Partners program, introduced in mcludmg cows, rabblls, donkeys, uplifted spirits and a feeling of well·
2. Now she looks forwilrd to v1s- 1991, now has 2.000 teams 'that visit dogs and cats. .
being.
·
'
"It's no secret that the animals
from Samantha and other pets 350,oiJo hospital patients and resifrom the Hudson Valley Humane dents of nursipg homes.
heat ·thc children in our care," said
At Ramapo Manor Nursing
~iety in Spring V'!lley, N.-Y. . ·_
And the last few years have also Samuel B. Ross Jr., director of Home, nurse Marilyn Carlough
• AI her ho":'e m Who": Plams, seen the rapid growth of a philoso· Green Chimneys, which he founded ·doesn't talk about brain chemistry,
N.Y., centenanan Meg M1llar has phy called the Eden Alternative, 49 years ·ago. "They learn how to but rather of the concrete improve~r very own resident pet therapy which seeks to transform-the atmos- give love, even though they might menls she sees in residents when
dog. He's Remy Martin, a 3-year-old phere in nursing homes by adding not have received it in their earlier pets come to visit.
mahogany red poodle who's been plants, pets- even children.
lives."
approved for serv1ce by the Soc1et1
Since 1990 , 150 nursing homes
TOday, animals can contribute to
·"With some patients we can't get
for the Preventoon of Cruelty toAno- have adopted the -philosophy devcl- the healing process for people who
mats ofWestchest~r.
, · oped by Dr. Bill Thomas, a physi - are young an~ old; emotionally a reaction any other time. But they'll
Millar, who has ' poor eyesight · cian and author of "Life Worth Liv- scarred and physically qr mentally reach our for the animals," she said.
and arthritis, said it was quieter in ing ... How SomeoneYou Love Can disabled. But no one is quite sure "People who. have· contact with the
her house before Remy moved in. Still EnJOY Life in a Nursing Home" how and why they do what they do animals just come .alive. It triggers
"But it 's much more healthy now, " (VanderWyk & Burnham, $17.95).
-although some studies hint they something."
f
*t
r
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FURNI.T URE
rti/E
OPEN TODAY!!
SUNDAY 1-4:30 P.M.
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A Story By Holly Epling, Moliy Roush & Ashlelgh Greene
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lion children will eventually die
from heart and blood vessel disease," Costanza said.
"Several of the risk factors that
may lead to heart disease and stroke
come from lifestyle habits, many of
which are fonmed early in life," he
said. "Heart disease begins in childhood and manifests itself in adulthood. We can do something to help
prevent heart disease by learning
with 11 HeartPower!" themes, hands- from the earliest years to make
on investigations, videos (K-2, 3-S, heart-healthy choices: eat a bealthy
6-8 kits), and more, all geared to diet, get enough physical activity,
make teaching heart-healthy beha~ and live tobacco-free."
iors easy and enjoyable for today's
Cardiovascular disease is also a
Nickelodeon generation of students. costly disease to treat. According to
John Costanza, program chair- AHA figures and statistics, it costs
man of the Meigs County American about $2,500 per person every year
Heart Association and curriculum to treat cardiovascular disease director for Meigs County Office of more ·than $151 billion annually in
Education, indicated that the AHA's the u.s.
"We made sure the program lends
school program about heart health is
itself to the variety of ways teachers
very much .neec!ed in area schools.
"Cardiovascular disease . is still may wish to teach ~bout 'heart
,t\nlerica's number one killer. More health, nutrition , fitness, and living
than 42 percent all deaths every tobacco-free," said Costanza. "The
year are from it. And more than 60· components can stand alone or work
million Americans (about one-fourth together. Each component supports
of our total population) have some the others, allowing the kit to be easform of cardiovascular disease. If ily tailored to any teaching style."
. This year in Meigs County
present trends cvntinue, approxi ·
"HeartPower!"
kindergarten and
mately 31 million of today's 76 mil-
of
~ond grade kits arc
going into Rutland,
Salem Center, Middleport, Harrisonville, Salisbury,
Pomeroy,
Riverview,
Tuppers
Plains. Chester, Letart,
Portland, and Syracuse
elementary
schools,
while the third and fifth
grade level kits are
scheduled for Bradbury.
"Eventually every
teacher in Meigs County
who wants a kit will ~et
one," explained Costanza. "Presently 64 teachers throughout the county are now using the old
AHA educational kits . It
will take us several
years to get replacement
kits to everyone, and in
the meantime our' volunteers and staff will service both sets of kits . To
help this process along,
our program commillee
is soliciting foundations
and - service organlzations to help us fund this
project. "
·
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•
CLOCKS
40%.
OFF ·
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.
HEART EDI,JCATION KITS DISTRIBUTED • The American Heart A88ociation'a
new preschool-middle school supplementary kits, "Heartpowert•, have
distributed to local educat11rs for use In Meigs County schools. Left, Syracuse
Elementary teacher Do!lna Sayre and letart Elementary teacher Joyce Ritchie
were among the teachers presented the klta by Dr. Wilmtl Mansfield, Preslden'
of the Meigs County AHA. The program provides teachers kits with materials
geared to make teaching heart-healthy behaviors easy for students.
.
been
Rabbi by day comedian by night; teachings double in Synagogue and stand-up
By SHIELA SCHIMPF
Lansing State JOI!mal
If by some miracle, Jewish or
otherwise, Steve Martin and Alan
Aida could produce a child, he
· would look and talk just like Bob
Alper.
·
Alper, with perfect timing, ·pauses before he gels to the end of the
line. The audience gets it and the
laugh builds until even those listenlog to the routine alone on car tape
player can feel the club atmosphere.
'' "I am the world's only practicing
eJergyJilan doing Stand-up COmmedy
;,. intentionally," Alpert says,
,. Alper is an Qrdained rabbi who ·
·does between 80 and 100 stand-up
comedy shows a year.
·
He's not your ordinary rabbi. No
holier-than-thou morals. No pretense at trying to reach the masses
through humor.
He's not your ordinary stand-up
either. Who else has flash cards to
help gentiles (the Judaically challenged) with Jewish vocabulary? He
thinks they should know that Tishri
. i~ a month so they get the joke ..
(llshri 7 57'57 .is a date, not a tete-
phone number) . So he flashes a card
with "Tishri" on one "side and
"t.{ONTH" on the other.
"In a sense, doing an hour of
stand-up comedy and having people
laugh in a healthy way is bringing
spiritual benefit to the .people,"
Alper says. "When I give a sermon,
I hope I move people spiritually.
When I make them laugh I know I
move them spiritually.'
But the real reason Alper does
stand-up is because he loves it.
"The audience-laughed and I ,was
hooked," he says of his appearance
at a Philadelphia comedy club in
1986. .
About 50 percent of his material
is general, based on his life in Ver·
mont and his two kids.
Sample: His is the all-American
family - a boy, a girl and a vasectomy: "I know you're not supposed
to favor one over the other but ever
since my kids became teenagers.•
I've become partial 10 the vasectomy."
The rest comes from hisexperience as a Reform rabbi, leaditlg con·
gregations in Buffalo and Philadel-
MIDDLEPORT -- Waid Hayman
The Community Calendar is to speo,k at Hobson Christian Felpublished as a free Hnice to DOll· lowship, Sunday, 7 p.m.
profit groups wlshllla to aiiiiOUace
meeting and speclsl ••eats. The MONI)AY
MIDDLEPORT -· DAY Chapter
calendar is not dealped to promote salea or fund raison ol. any 53, Christmas dinner and gift
type. Items are printed as apace exchange, 7 p.m.
pennlts and cannot lie guaranteed
-- Meigs I County
.
to run a specific num~r ohlaya.
Rig)lt to Life. 7:30 p.m .. Monday at
SUNDAY
.
· REEDSVILLE -- Community , the Meigs County Public Library,
youth meeting, Sunday, 3 to ~ p.m.. Pomeroy.
at the Reedsville United Methodist
CHESTER •• Chester CourtChurch. All youth welcome.
house Restoration Committee, 6:30
TUPPERS PLAINS ·- Annual p.m., Monday at the Chester Fire:
Christmas party, VFW Post 9053, 6 Department. All interested parties
are invited to auend.
p.m. Sunday. Thke covered dish.
RACINE-- Racine Board of PubRACINE -- RACO collection of
lic
Affairs; 7:30 p.m., at the Racine
canned food and non-perishables,
Saturday, ll a.m. ,to noon, comer of · Star Mi II Park Annex.
old Home Bank Building, or David ·
CHESTER •- Chester Township
Zirkle residence. Food to go to local
Trustees,
Monday, 7 p.m at the town
church food pantries,.
hall. .
phia.
.
talks about a fantasy
he has that starts with walking up to
the pulpit on Friday nights. He welcomes the congrega1ion, announces
the hymn and says, "Please rise."
After everyone rises, he says. "I did·
n't say, 'Simon says.' Everyone sit
down."
Alper has taken his comedy act to
"Good Morning America" and
"America's Funniest People" but he
still is waiting for Jay Leno or David
Lettertnan to call. He admits watching bther comedians on those shows
is painful. "I think I can do better,"
·Alper says. "Stand,up is risky.
You're out there all by yourself.
When .you're all by yourself. you
sink or swim. That's the thrill of
doing stand-up comedy, too."
In September his first serious
book was published by Triumph
llooks, an imprint of Liguori Publications, "Life Doesn't Get Any Bet·
ter than This."
"As a comic, people applaud and
laugh," Alper says. "I took a look at
my life and realized what was missing- rejection . I thought maybe I'd
S~mple: ' He
Holiday Housewarming
.
"
·In an effon to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days
from the date of the event.
All club meetings and other news articles in the society section must be
·submitted within 30 days of occurrence.
All birthdays must be submitted within.42 days ofthe occurrence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing . .
•
•
•
•
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POMEROY ·• Meigs County
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THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Democratic Party, Christma~ party,
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write a book."
Family Circle is rcpnnung the Their children arc now grown. - .
, A little more of the rabbi comes . title chapter in its January issue - a Zack, 24. and Jessie, 20.
out in the book. Alper has degrees story about a. summer several years
·As a rabbi, Alper still docs .wed~
from Lehigli University, Hebrew ago when Alper and his wife went to ·dings and funerals and High Holy- '
' 't
Union College and Princeton Theo- camp to visit their children.
day services. After all, hi ~ material
logical Seminary.
When it was time to go, his is based on his keen sense of obscr+.
The book, a collection of stories daughter burst into tears but hi s son vation.
the publisher ~ails charming put his arm around her and said,
Did you hear the one ahoul the.
'vignettes, has a serious subtitle: " I'll take care of her."
rabbi who gave a se rmon at an elder:•
"The Holiness of Little Daily Dra" This was not something that ly woman's funeral? A man came up·
mas."
was simply cute or nice," Alper after the funeral and complimented
" It's a wake up and smell the says. "It was holy."
the rabbi on the eulogy.
·,
roses kind of book, " Alper says .
Alper hopes readers will look at
" 'Rabbi,' he said, 'your eulogy
· He ·describes it. as crossover moments in their lives and recognize for my aunt was wonderful , she
· ,"
sprituality - a book written by a the holi~ess. "That will. enhance · would have loved it!
rabbi published by a Catholic pub- their. life," Alper says,
" 'And to"think ... what a sham, . .
lishing house to reach a very wide
Alper, 51. and his · wife, Sherri, ... she missed it by just two days.' " . .
I
m~rke!in_.~iritual i.:oss:;;:u:;;es;;;·_ _ _ _..;h;:a:..:.v::.e...:be=.:en .married for 27 y~ars:.._.
T,
'
TUESDAY
SYRACUSE ·· Carleton School
will present "The Many Scenes of
Christmas" at 7 p.m. Tuesday at. the
school. Refreshments will be served.
----News policy---- The ·OhkJ
• FINE FURNITlJRE
•CARPET
• WINDOW TREATMENTS
FURNITURE
I~ GALLERIES
L&J GROCERY
.
beginning each day with a short
Heart Sllrter activity to investications and full theme units based on
hishly motivatilig literature.
Kits come in five levels from
preschool through middle school:
PreK, PreK-Gnde I Spani~h edition,
Kindergarten-Grade 2, Grades 3-5,
and Grades 6-8.
In eoch kit is a teacher resource
book., colorful posters, literature
I
.
WINDSOR CHERRY
WESTMINSTER CHIME
84"TALL
ILL IH STOCK
Our DELl ·
.
Created and classroom-tesled. by
more than 100 educators, "HeartPower!" aligns with . common
presebool, elementary, and middle
school curriculum goals in four key
areas: learning how the heart works,
nutrition, fitness, and resisting
tobacco.
The program is building on the
success of the AHA's previous
Schoolsite Program, which has
reache4 more than 78 million stu·
dents since its launch in 1985, said
Mansfield. 'fhese older kits are in
every school throughout the county
and . will be _gradually replaced by
the new versiOn, the AHA president
explained.
"HeartPower!" provides teachers
with multiple teaching options, from
REG. $1845
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POMEROY- "HeartPower!", the
American Hect Association's new
prescbool-.mi~clle sche>?l supplementary kill, 1s now beons distribuled in Mei&s County sc:bools.
"The Meigs County American
Hean Association has been very visible lately with its fund raising
efforts, but now we want to show the
community what. we give ~k.,"
commented Dr. Wilma Mansfield
President of the Meigs County
~~ER~X
.
•
AHA•s HeartPower! makes teaching heart-health easy
.,. :. . .--Meigs .-community calendar--
.
PllESENTS
~· t 1 tn....Jhutbwl• Page C7
Pomeroy • Middleport • O.lllpolls, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV
lOUIS DAILY
9105
-FREE PARKiNG
-FREE DIEUVERY
Alllteme Subject To
FRIDAY 9-1:00
Prior Sale
w.s•S.•k•
.Vlu, Masterc.nl
DIKover or UN Our
&ay'Creclh Terms
Tl::tiRD 6 OUYE
448-3045
"·
• Low, Low Prices.
I
I
�•
Farm/Business
Entertainment
,
------------------------~--------------------~--------------~------ - - -- - - - - -- - -People in the news-------_:__ _ __ .
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GALLIPOLIS - French Town
Veterinary Clinic, (formerly the
practice of Dr. Dan Notter) will
stage a ribbon cutting ceremony on
Thursday, December 12, at 10, a.m.,
!lftd plans to follow that up with
grand opening activities from 9 a.m, ·
until 5 p.m., on Saturday, December
14.
New. owners of the facilicy are
Doctors Angie Shelton. and Angela
Dahse.
The two veterinarians will be
practicing at the clinic with the
assistance of three full-time and
--' ,.,..... part-time staff members.
Dr. Shelton attended Miami Uni. venity, graduating with a BA degree
NEW OWNERS • l..tuTy and
OWD•I ·in 1989. She grnduated from the
':~~~::::1 'Ohio State University College of
olSbacly Ceve Mallile B.- Park In .
lt.inl. Tr.U.er Park. The 35-lot, eadt
5011
VeJerinary Medicine in 1995.
' features 18 river-'* SIDce IICqlllriJII the pull,
While studying at Ohio State, Dr.
revamped the area. IDdudlnc • paftll1'0811, aDd piM Ill do more
Shelton concentrated ber attention
Kaplq, fealurbaa rd feDCIDI, • well ~. IDICd dlllk Ill dawn
on small animal medicine and •
·• 1"- wantlna Ill IIDd out more lbout the mobile ..,._ pam
surgeey. She began practicing with
I
theRDpesatiJ8l..3926.Pic:luiedbal'rolltoltheDeWiipiU'e,
.the late Dr. Dan Notter in June of
JlmmyLayaundJuetBIIJIIPI'Ml'ol~Peopi•Bak,Beverly
199S, and has remained at the pracLuryRape.
·
'
Trisha Yearwood finds the laughter in life, music ·
giving her the sclf-conridencc to
persevere.
"They always told me I was
capable of . doing anything and I
grew up believing it.'' she says. She
also determined that she did not
want to reach 50 · and looR hack.
wondering if she could have become
a successful singer. .
.
So Yearwood moved to Nashville ·
at .age 20; at 26 she had her first
recording contract. She also had
earned a BBA (in music business)
from Bclmo College in Nashville.
Operation of tobacco
OFB's Bell
: program misunderstood points out
COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHTTHRU THURSDAY
ROMEO & JUUET PG13
ON!' EVENifolG SHOW 7:30
', By diM HERRELL
GALLIPOLIS - The operation of
the U. S. tobacco program and its •
, com are often misunderstood.
, The program guarantees U. S.
• tobacco farmers minimum prices in
exchange for restricting production.
· , By law, the tobacco program operates
at a zero cost to ,U.S. taxpayers.
In years of abundant production,
· the Commodity Credit Corporation
'' (CCC) - a funding agency of the federal government- makes loans to
·, grow~r cooperatives to purchase
tobacco passed ovet al auction by
tobacco buyers. But law requires that
the principle and interest on these
loans be.fully guaranteed b~ market. •;ng assessm.ents paid by U.S. tobac. _co producers and purchasers.
446-0923
p,-~~~~"~~~~"~"~"~~~~~""~~""11
ONLY 16 DAYS LEt"l'f
flcqu isltions Y.ine
eJ;LJeltzl(
· MIDDLEPORT • GALLIPOLIS
C
STMAS
DIAMOND
SALE%
-..
.,......,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Figure skaters featured
Channel's
in
The Family
'Christm~~i!c~c!?cr.~~~~~costumcs.
VIRGINIA BEACH. Va.,
December 6. 1996 -- World Champion and five time National Pair
Champions Tai Babilonia and Randy
Gardner, as well as 1995 U.S.
National Champion Nicole Bobek.
star in "Christmas in Toyland," an
· original, one-hour Icc, Capades SJ!C·
cial premiering on The Famtly
Channel Tuesday, Dec . 10 at 7 p.m.
ET/PT. Host Dennis Cole ("The
Young and The RcsJicss") presents
world-class skaters performing to
holida~ favorites. ~ musical revue
will rcair a• ·'Tyson s Chnstma' m
Toyland'' on Friday. Dec. 20 at 5
p.m.
.
This' variety-style jJohda~ show
colorful sets and world-cia-. skating
trademark of the Icc Capades. Hcanwarming sca,onal music offers a .
h~::kl~;;~~~:~~c~
· · h
h
a
for an;~~~ c orcograp y
~
__..
~. -~
Before you ,buy a diamond anyw~e:,.e at
any pn'ce - shop Acqu:
..:,:ons 1~or
.....,. "' "'
•
nd
l
'
U
b
ble
outsta ing qua ity. n ' eata
p.lrice.s.'
HUGE SELECTION!
'I"
...
..
..,'
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,,"''"'
·~
..
'
I
tice.
Dr. Dahse spent two years studying
Originally from Greenville, equine artificial insemination and
(Darke County) Dr. Dahse complet- comparative ultrasound.
ed her BS degree in animal science
She has since attended the Equine
in 1991. She graduated in 1995 from , Breeder's Shon Course (January,
the Ohio State College of Veterinary 1996) and 'will be attending. the
Medicine.
'·
American Association of Equine
While et. Ohio State, Dr. Dahse Practitioners Conference in Dcpver
concentrated her attention on equine Col., hiler this month.
medicine. She completed two indeThe Gallipolis practice offers
pendent' . studies oil equine nerve ·both small animal office hoW'S and
blocks and join injections.
large animal farm calls by appointPrior to attend veterinary school,
·
Cross Pens
For All Your
VW.oN••dsf
Wed.ngs, l1surace,
Special EvHts.
Ltt n pit tlliu•
video tape.
446~939or
446·1370
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wv
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TUNSFERS
•
"-*ad 30% OF
OFF
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project by Garber end Mulleni Conlltnlctlon
bagel! around the flrllt of November and Ia
expected to be cornplllted eometlme In March.
John1011'1 Mertcat, 85 VIne StrHL Galllpolle,
(Store . No. ·1) Ia being expended. The 5,000
1qua1'11 toot llddhlon will double current floor
· 1peca .ln the VIne. SIJ:_~ 18cll!tY. Work on the
stock farm in, Mus~n~wil ·County,.
said farmland preservauon and complaints against livestock farms are
among the most divisive agriculture
issues in Ohio.
With increasing urbon sprawl,
some farmers have found themselves
surrounded by residential developments that can be hostile to pesticide
spraying and slow-moving faim
equipment on
Odor and noise
complaints against livestock fanners
roads.
By JENNIFER L BYRNES .
demanding. It is imponantto under: for the growing animal and less total
• Bob Auxier, eliot eupervleor,
GALLIPOLIS • The condition of stand how easily these traits are feed required to reach market weight.
Montgomlry Mach1M Shop, Jackson, wu guellt lf*llaw lit Buck··
the·cattle market has prompted the ·passed from parents to offspri~g. This This should also res111t in a better feed
eye lfllle Career Center when he vlelted the echool'l egrlcultur-::question over and over, what can we will give producers an idea of how collversioll. In tenns of Mutability,
~~~ recreational 'a nd dlenl mechllnlce progl'ln\.. The · epe~~ker
do as producers 10 get better prices . effective their selection process will ··market animals that deposit excess fat
aii'IIIHCI Importance of being punctulll to work each day end glvour cattle?
·be.
are expensive and wasteful, thus it is
lng the empl~yer 100 percent llftort whl~ lit work.
Even though the caule market runs
Some traits such as growth and economically imponant to select for
. ..._
- 1 ,-'-...
in cycles and affects all types and weights at different developmental an.imals which are likely to conven
qualicy of cattle, it will still help pro- stages are more highly heritable than 1 more feed to muscle.
I" I I
l
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ducers to select superior animals for other traits, such as · reproductive Reproductive traits are lowly heritaseed stuck. It is both natural and log- characteristics. Producers who select ble, however, they should not be
;:f,'
ical for producers to select animals for traits that are highly heritable overlooked in. the selection process
based on desirable traits. Funher- have chosen characteristics which because of their large economic valGALLIPOLIS - Patrick Wolf, trol the majority ·of die nation's for- more, genetic selection was practiced offspring can easily inherit from ue.
, state conservationist for USDA's Nat- est lands. FIP is designed to share by farmers long before we even had their parents. Highly heritable traits
Selection and genetic improve, ; ~ Conservation Service (NRCS) these expenses with eli$ible, private an understanding of genetics.
deserve more attention in the selec- ment of beef cattle can certainly ben;..• itnd Ronald Abraham, state forester landowners," Wolf said.
When producers prepare 10 select . lion process, because changes occur efit producers in terms of profit, profor ODNR's Division of F<irestry,
To be eligible for cost-share .Ssis- and buy bulls or replacement females, much quicker. Producers will natu- duction costs, and overall herd
;.) announced Thursday that the signup tance under FIP, a landowner must they are·most often limited hy a com- rally see 111ore results from these . improvement. To learn more about .
• for the Forestry Incentives Program have land that is suitable for foresta- bination of finances and lack of effons, than from traits which are not ·highly heritable and economically
.' ',1beganonDcc. l,andwillendbythe
tionor·reforestationandbeapn'vate long-term goals. But it is important to east'Iy m
· hen'ted. 1iralts
· which order "'aluable traits as well as selection for
rclose of business on Dec. 31 .
landowner of a non industrialized for- rem!)mber that a costly, high quality buyers and feeders are likely' to look herd improvement, call 'the OSU
.: Authorized by Congress in 1978, est, owning no more than 1,000 bull that produces high quality, high at first, such as frame size and Extensiofl'office at 614-446-7007.
,,, FIP is a program designed to iilcreasc acres of eligible forestland.
selling calves, may in the long run be muscling arc very highly heritable.
'Those producers interested in
.. :, timber production.
· At least I 0 acres of eligible forest cheaper than a poor quality bull Producers who take the time to visu- learning mon: about the ups and
·, Demand for saw timber, plywood land are required for FIP. U., maxi" whose calves consistently bring low- ally appraise possible breeding stock 4owns of the cattle market are invit'.'.~ logs, and quality hardwood logs is mum cost share is 50 percent with 8n . er prices. At this point in the cattle as well as con~ult any available data ed to attend an educational meeting
:-;~ expected to exceed the nation's sup- annual payment limit to $10,000 per cycle, there is a much larger price gap on them or their parents are more . on Monday, January 13, 1997, at 7
:·;, pi~ in the future. ''To prevent shon· person for the December signup.
between high quality and poor qual- likely to have better qualit~ calves, PM. OSU EJtlension Specialist, Dave
• 4ages of these products, more trees
Technical assistat)ce will be pro- ity calves, compared 10 when the cat- and thus possibly ob!ain a higher Mangione will speak about the cycles
'1 must be planted and more forestland vided by ODNR's Division of 11emarketts
· hi ghe r. At thispom
· 1m
·
pn'ce . .
.
of the cattle market and key produc.,) 1placed under good forest manage- Forestry land the program will be the cycle, producers looking to make
All traits which ~ffcct the eco- ers to some things they can do in their
·ment." said Abraham.
administered by NRCS.
that leap in the market pri~e ~ould nomic value of an am mal should be personal management of all parts of
• ; "Planting an~ maintainina a suffiFor an application or more infor- look more closely at berd tmprove- . rconstdered. Some o~ these mclu~e: the cycle. Also, for producers inter. • cient amount of trees to meet the _million, contact the local ODNR ment. Selection based on IOUnd da\a , female rcproducuon, weanmg ested in spreading their economic risk
r·demand is expensive, especially for · forester at (614) 286-5900 or NRCS- and visual appraisal should be a ~eg- weight, or. mothering abilit~. gain in the cattle market, Mike Bumgar;::small, private landowners who con- office at446-'8687.
·
ular practice for producers, regardless after weanmg, yearling wetght, feed. ner, Producers Livestock Association
of the state of the cattle market.
conversion, carcass cutability, quali- Marketing Director, will speak to any
In selecting high quality bulls, ty grnde, and mature weight. A trait in~sted cattle pro4ucers on Tuesproducers must first set their goals for such as weaning weight has ceo- day, January"28, 19§7 at 7 p m. Mr.
:: WASHINGTON (AP) - The
the traits the~ want to select. It is nomic value because the gains made Bumgarner will address the possibili' government overstates infiati011, an
complex and usually unproductive to during the nursing_ period are usual- ities•of the ·futures market and hedg:; ndvisoey panel concluded, proposing
selectfor too many traits at one time. ly cheap compared to the costs dur- ing opportunities for the commercial
'II changes that could shave billions
Therefore,
it is advisilble to select for ins the feeding period. Post-weaning producer. In addition, there has been
[ from the deficit but raise taXeS for
a
small
number
of traits and to base weight is · imponant because rapid coitsiderable interest by producers, in
:, millions ofAmericans and cost Social
those decisions on what the market is gains mean less maintenance costs
Security. recipients a chunk of their
.:, St"gnU'" #.or rt:!lP p ...ogr.-am
•und erway throug
· h Dec. 31
From Mfg. Sugg.
A.tlll PriCe
2 'Ia £arat Emerald ~nd Diamond
· Braeele't
IM earal e1 N•gral E.erllllb A .41 eart el D........
..........
ONLY *875°0
ONLY ONE!
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!:----.Busine-ss ·briefs·- - - -
Two Locations:
151 Second Ave., Gallipolis 446-2842
j}
,.
/
The practice is currently able to
offer ultrasound services to determine pregnancy for both small ani~
mal and equine patients.
·
. By the first of the year, lllfliC ani-.
mal ponable x-ray services will also .
be available.
·
The public is invited to attend.
open house activities. Refresluitents
and special offers for small animals
will be provided.
•
have caused· friction in some rural;
areas.
Bell is a m~ber of the governor'S:
task force working on the farmlanct
preservation issue.
·
Genetic selection of economic importance
Set •• 14K Gold
25%
mcnl
disputes .
Then: are some relatively small
administrative and other non-operatCLEVELAND (AP)- The presing costs associated with the pro- ideo! of the Ohio Farm Bureau Fedgram. However, these costs arc par- eration cited li hometown dispute to
.tially offset by an additional assess- illustrate conflicts between agriculment levied on tobacco producers and aire and development demands.
ipurchasers. This infonnation was
Officials in Muskingum County, a
taken from a handout written -by largely rural county in eastern Ohio,
William M. Snell, Associate Exton- are considering rerouting a winding
sion Professor for the University of highway to improve safety and
Kentuc~. Colle*e of Agriculture. We accommodate a major employer.
have copies of this bandoot in the
"We're not saying, 'Don't build
office.
.
the higbway, "' Irv Bell said Wednc:sPiease contact the · Gallia- day at the farm byreau's first. conLawrence county office at. 446-8686 . vtntion in Cleveland.
or 1-888-211-1626 (toll free) for · "We're saying, 'Let's just look
additio.nal information.
and be 'sure all the options have been
Jim Herrdl is the County Exec· looked at before we arbitrarily cu~ a
utlve Diredor or tbe Gallla· half dozen farms in two when there
,Lawrence Farm Service Agmcy.
may be other options."'
That kind of constructive attitude
can be used to try to resolve various
divisive issues facing Ohio agriculture, Bell said.
Kirby Thompson, Muskingum
County surveyor, said today the idea
behind rerouting state Route 60 is to
reduce hazards at many intersections
and driveways, while straigha:ning
the highway to improve travel time.
He said some propeny of four or five ·
farms could he involved.
"But it's just in the study stage
right now in where to take the road
and to get a cost estimate," he said.
Bell, who has a grain and live-
~
Family Night Ia
•P.&..fP.&OILY
.
__..Expansion project underway
.. !
Famous
..
11 echeduled I a.m. to 5 p.m. on s.turdtlv, Dec.
14. Ribbon cutting actlvltlee will be lleld thul'llday, Dec. 12, lit 10..f11._
.. _.
GRAND OPENING DEC. 14 • Gl'llnde openIng ceremonla tor the French Town Veterinary
Clinic (formerly the practiQe of Dr. Den NOtter}
"1·
miY IIISDAY IIGIIT
,,
•
.Just Received .. Big Set~ction Of Half Carat
And One Carat Diamonds!
·
Make This A Christmas She Will Never F
Back... Only Better!.
D.
•
.
body Knows" and all have added
hits to her impressive list.
Yearwood begins a ·new alhum in
late fall of 1997. In the meantime,
she's looking for new songs for that
album.
She's grnfl!ful, she ys. that she
can make a living doing. whal she
loves.
·•t never had a back-up plan." she
says. "I always -knew I'd go to
Nashville and give it a shot. But I
didn't tell anybody that. The~ would
either think I had a cog missing or
they'd tell me all the reasons it
wouldn't work.
"Some kids come to Nashville
and say the~'ll give it a ~car. In a
year they go home. I always felt this
\va• something I'm supposed to do.
"So. I know I'd be singing. ,If I
wercn 't touring and recording. I'd
be singing somewhere in ~orne little
club somewhere.." ' ·
Yearwood credits her parents for
Section
'Veterinary clinic schedules ribbon cutting
ceremony Dec..12, grand opening Dec. 14
LAS VEGAS (AI') - Some big stars traded their limos for a piece of
The weekly paean to romance, rescue and rock n' roll is due to begin u earthly battle over his plans for an $87 million production cenlef in rural
'heavy construction equipment for the groundbrealdng of Planet Holly- shooting its next season soon aner she gives binh.
Marin County.
'
.
wood 's entry into the hotel-casino business.
A lawsuit filed Monday b~ Save Our Countywide Plan Committee asks
Planet Hollywood stockholders S~lvestcr Stallone, Arnold SchwarzenegNEW YORK (AP) - Woody Allen still doesn't understand how he's the coun to set aside the Board of Supervisors' recent vote to approve the
ger. Dcmi Moore and Bruce Willis rode to the site Thursday in the giant made his children suffer, said a judge who denied
project.
.
.
:scoop of a front loader, then tossed T-shirts and commemorative coins to the filmmaker 's request for more liberal visitation
The lawsuit contends that the project would alter the rural, qncullural
thousands of cheering fans.
.
and low-density residential character of many pans of ru~l Mann Count~.
with two of his children.
The 3.000-room, $800 million resort is scheduled to open in earl~ 1999.
Lucasfilm officials said they will continue drafting detatled bluepnnts for
Allen was granted weekly one hour visits with
"All the big players are going to gamble hen:," Schwarzenegget told the Satchel, 9, his biological son with Mia Farrow.
the project, which i! still at least two yean away.
_
crowd.
· But he wa• denied visits with their 11 -year-old
1
Stallone said, "It's been an amazing ride," referring to the five years that adopted daughter. Dylan. whom Ms. Farrow had
, HOUSTON (AP) - The purple pantsuit worn by Tejano singer Selena at
has seen Planet Hollywood grow from a single celebrity-focused restaurant accused Allen of molesting.
an Astrodome show one month before her 1995 murder will he added to the
ro a chain of 50 around the world.
State Supreme Court Justice Ell iou Wilk on
Smithsonian Institution's traveling exhibit.
·
The exhibit, "America's Smithsonian," opens today in Houston but ~he
Thursday said the girl is still emotionally fragile .
LONDON (AP) -Talk about Babcwatch.
costume will not go on public display until the day after a~· 12 showmg
Allen denied the claims and wa' never charged.
for members of the Hispanic Chamber of Co~merce and tbetr.~uem . .
Five months after Pamela Anderson Lee gave birth to a baby boy, anoth" Mr. Allen continues in his inability to
, "It's a great honor for the Mexican-Amcncan communtty, satd Sylvta
er "Baywatch" star announced her pregnancy.
acknowledge his role in contributing to the suf· Gena Lee Nolin, who plays lifegunrd Neely Kapshaw. said Thursday she fering experienced hy his children," Wilk said.
Cavazos. a board member of the chainber.
is due to give binh in mid-June.
·
Allen and Ms. Farrow 's 12-year relationship
Woody Allen
The Grammy-winning Selena Quintanilla Perez was shot to death M:m:.h
31,
1995, at a motel in her hometown of Corpus Chnsu. Yolanda Saldtvar,
She said the sYndicated show's relaxed atmosphere made the option of ended in 1992 atier she teamed that Allen and another of her adopte<l chilmotherhood easy for her and Anderson Lee.
·
the former president of her fan club, was sentenced to life in prison for the
dren. Soon-Yi Prcvin. were lovers.
Allen. 60, had asked to be allowed to see Dylan and Satchel on alternate ~~~~
"You can work on ·the most popular show in the world and still-have a
. .
.
·Smithsonian spokeswoman Dais~ Ridgway said a Selena ·ttem for perlife and be a mom," she said.
weekends, without supervision and i~ the presence of Ms. Previn, 25.
manent displa~ would bC housed at the I:'lational Museum of American HisThe 25-year.oold former "The Price is Right" model is in London with her
SAN RAFAEL. Calif. (AP) - Star Wars creator George T:.ucas is facing '<>?'•one of the Smithsonian's 16museums in Washington.
liusband, Canadian video producer Greg Fahlman, to promote the show.
.
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adventure go in Yearwood, now marBy GAVE DELAPLANE
ried to Reynolds for over two ~ears.
Reno Gazette-Journal
Trisha Yearwood always consid- says they both have a sense of
ered herself a cynic' - 'until she met humor and that's probably the most
Roben Reynolds.
important ingredient in their happ~
From that mom~nl on, life marriage.
became an adventure, she said in a
"My parents have been married
telephone call from a tour stop in 36 years and they always have fun
Canada.
together,"
"i was cynical. ... I prided myself
she says. "Robert and I have fun ·
on that. But I have fun with Robert. together. We value our time together
He's a funny ,guy and we laugh a lot and we don 't take it for granted."
together."
Both Yearwood and Reynolds arc
Reynolds is a bass player with the concentrating on their careers right
Mavericks . The Mavericks have now, Yearwood says, but they do
racked up 3 milli.on in record sales plan to have children. "When we
and, like Yearwood, the band main- decide to have a family, we' ll devote
tains a heavy touring schedule . ·
all our energies lo thai."
"We often feel like two tour
Speaking of careers, Yearwood's
buses passing in the night," Year- couldn't be hotter. Since her debut
wood says with a chuckle. "But single, "She's in Love With the
when he hll$ several days off, he Boy," went to No. I in 1991. she has
tours with me. If I can, !.travel with released four albums: "Trisha Year- .
him. We spend as much time togeth- · wood," "Hearts in Armor,"
er as we can. We want to keep the ''Thinkin' About You" and "Every-
•
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"..
:: .·g
"
the constrUction of stabilized fcediag
areas for cattle. The Extension off'JCC
is planning an educatioft!ll meeting in .
the county about the consttuction
process and benefits of the ·structure.
P)ease watch the paper for a confinned date. For questions abou~
these educational opportunities pi~
call the OSU Extension off'ICC at the ·
above num!Jer. Finally, with the
emphasis 011 intensive grazing, forage
and grass management should be of
interest to all canle prnducers. Plan to
attend The Second Annual Forage ·
and Grass Management Review to he
held on Thursday, December 12,
from ~ p.m. to 8 p.m. at the South
District Extension Center in Jackson.
This program is pllll!lled and coordinated by Gr:azing Leader, Ed Voltborn. The program offen tours of the
forage work being done at the Jackson OARDC Branch. Topics include
establishing alfalfa in sOd, hay storage losses, potato leafhopper resistant
alfalfa, fescue variety trial, economics of turnips fot; grazing, hay equipment cost for southern Ohio farmers,
and establishment of warm season
grasses. After dinner topics will
include, soil health and fertility. The
keynote speaker is Jim!Dy· Henning,
Ph.D., University of Kentucky Forage Speci!llist. He will address the
issue of why it pays to manage an
intensive grazing system; The regutration cost is $8 and the registration
deudline is December 6. For more
information please call Ed Vollborn
at 614-286-2177 or the OSU Extension office in Gallia county to obtain
a registration fonn.
Jetudfer L By~ Ia G.Uia
Clluty's exteasloa
Ia lllricultun tmd nataraii'I!IOUrca.
••t
I
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�Sunct.y, December 8, 1191
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
- Sanding determines final
Downsize of best seller appearan·ce·of home work
Sanding is one of the most common COfiSiruction and repair !asks
you have to do around your home. II
is lhe final step that detennines the
final appearance of your work. ~
right, it makes your pain I jOb perfecl
and done badly, it shows throush 11ie
most skillfully applied finish. Sanding is also one of the .easiesl joj)s to
do righ1, if you selec1 the correct
abrasives. Use them properly and it's
almost impossible to do a bad jOb.
However, the wrong abrasives
can make it almosl impossible 10 get
goOd ·resulls no mauer. how hard you
work with lhem.
Sandpaf1Cr can be identified by
three things: the type of abrasive parlicles on its surface, the gril (or
coarseness) of each panicle, and the
actual amount of abrasive s on each
sheet
The two mosl common types of
sandpaper are coated wilh abrasives
made from flint and garnet Flint is
cheaper and this makes it a logical
choice when working on surfaces like
pai~l and sofl, gummy woods lhat
clog the paper quickly. Gamel grits
FRONT PORCH features regal columns and decorative dormer windows.
By BRUCE A. NATHAN
AP Newsfeatures
Plan G-S2, by HomeStyles
ues1gne1rs Network, Is a downlsizl~•g of a larger version of a
be st-selling_ plan. And, now, .
this appealing 2,360 squarefoot home is emminenlly
affordable.
The exterior features a covered front porch with decora·tive columns, triple dormers
and rail-topped ·corner windows.
The floor plan has t'OIIIhined
the livinfl room and family
room of the IAr11er version of
WJ
- -
.., - -
this home into ri spacious family room with a corner fireplace and a 17-foot-high vaulted ceiling. The area nows Into
the dining room by way of a
columned gallery.
The kitchen serves thE breakfasl room bv means of an
angled snack bar, and has a
huge pantry.
The main-floor .master suite
. offers a privale sillinfl atea, a
walk-in dosel . and a dramali<",
angled balh .
There are t•vo large bellrooms upslalrs, introduced by
, a curved staircase Wilh a.
bridge balcony.
Gannett News servlc;e
WASHINGTON - The Con- ·
sumer Price ltidex is a monthly measuremenl of the change in the average retail price of a fixed market baskel of goods and services.
It is computed by comparing lhe
current price of the goods and services wilh what it would have been
esign G-l2 h118 a ramlly
room, dining room,
IR!i:YflriDTUE FRONT PORCH, an Ol>•n r..,.• r now• Into thr formal
~~~!~~~::'~':'~ 1(8Uf'ry ami romu,: room. Column• ..'l•aratt'the gallrr,·
II
dining room and lhr kltchrn. which has an eating noo'k. ·
utility room i• ju•t •t•l•• rrom th.- kitrhrn. and t>rovidrs accru
a r.o',·erf'tl df'ck and thE' dplachrd. lwo-car gara~t" .. Thr ma!ltrr
h•>llf' I~ on thr OI>J>o•ll• •ldf' or lhr homr. !n·ynnd a holr-halh and an
:~~= 10 a pord1 and drck. A vlrw halrony, hvo srcondary hrdBIId anolh"'r rnll hath •omplf'lr lhf' lll>t>rr noo,.
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By POPULAR MECHANICS .
For AP Special Features
Q: The slairs leading from my
deck to the ground have become
shaky. Wl\at causes lhis, and whal
can you suggest to make them more
1
secure?
·
A: A common cause for loosening
deck stairs is frosl heaving or sculing,
in that the eanh or pad which supports. lhe bottom of the stairs can
move. This loosens lhe anachmenl of
1he stair to the deck. The firsl course
of aclion is 10 readjust the bouom
suppon of the stair. If your steps sil
directly on lhe earth, shim -lhe
slringers wilh flal rocks or shovel
new eanh in place. If your steps rest
on a masonry pad, you 'II have 10 li fl
and shim the pad. lbcn, reinforce the
attachments at the top of the stairs by
.
driving locnails lhrough tfie Slringcr
into the rim joist
Through use, Ihe nail> which hold ·
the Slringers to the sJair treads can
become loose. Use a long clamp lo
draw the slringers light lo the tread
and drive new nails to hold 1he
assembly logclhcr.
Q: Our house sweats inside when
it's cold outside. The windows steam
up lcrribly on winter day s. Wa1cr runs
down lhc sill to the wails and all the
way to the baseboard. The house is
framed with R-30 insulalion in lhe
auic. Other homes in .the area have
the same problem. They were all buill
in 1954. I know slorm windows
would help bulthey' rc expensive. Do
you have a cheaper solution?
A : We ' ve run into excessive
humidity in the house for years now,
ACROSS
1 ·-. I'm Adam" 0
6-Carpentry item
10 Flowing garments
15 Farm animal
18 Wriuir Jong
19 Colorful bird
21 Avoid
22 Cleveland's lake
24 Canvas shellers
25 Drug
. 26 TemporaOJ slop
27 Sell
. 28 Opp. of W.S.W.
29 Take place
31 Kingdom
33 From that place
(f;w a "''''~ drllliltd• .~tt'tllrtl f)llltr
thi., lwlut', iruludin~£ ~uidrtc 1o
r~ 1i mali "I-f rtu ' ·"' .mrd.,/J" tm f'inl{.
,\'t'lltf $4 to 1/tm.vr 'lf'lhr II t't'll, !1.0 .
,,r
llr~.1· /f~l.
Nru·
lm·~· .
i\'.1.
111/1~ -
1 rIll. llr .~urt' ltJ iudrulr lhr plan
trllm/Jrr.
"
35 - avis
37 Zoo denizens
38 Accumulale
39 Abbreviate
40 Drilled
42 Kick out
43 Secret agents
44 Three-legged stand
46 Soup
47 By lhe - of one's
leelh
48 Lab burner
52 Stitt
53 Liable
54 Objects
56 Snaky fish
57 Woody or Gracie
58 Null and 59 N1ce Nelly
60 Insect stage
62 Becomes mare solid
63 Pul on, as weight
65 Farm blfd
66 Commandment
breaker
67 Work by Plndar
68 Respiralory organ
69 John ol "Good
-Times·
71 Glide over ice
73 Wriler Ephron
75 Tiny colonisl
76 Smiles
77 Cooking vessel
and it appears 1~a1 yours is a classic
case. To cut down on humidily, an
exhausl fan in Ihe balhroom and
kitchen venting damp air lo lhe oulside is a must
Although storm windows may
appear as an unwanled expense to
you now, Slack their cost against lhe
value of your house. _This makes
lhem appear relatively inexpensive
and 1hey should save their cost in fuel
bills in a few years.
Condensalion is caused by wann
moist air coming in contact with lhe
cold glass in your windows. Slonn
windows shculd help 10 keep the window glass from becoming so cold that
condensation forms. This can prevent
serious damage to lhe walls by slaining, piasler damage and wood rot
over a long period of time.
Basic guidelines ease. furniture repairs
By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS
For AP Special Feeturell
Whelher you're fixing a chair or
a chest, many techniques are common to all wooden furniture repairs.
Here are some basic guidelines
and hints:
- Fix it belbre il breaks. Mosl
breaks, unless from a serious accident
or abuse. are caused by lhc pressures
of ordinary use. If you conlinuc lo Ufo
a piece with a l.oosenedjoinl, a simple fix will tum inlo a big one.
..:.. Don't use nails or screws to·P"l
broken fumi1ure back togclhcr unless •
lhey were part of the original con'
struetion. Similarly, a mending plate
or L-bracket PfOVides only a lemporary reprieve ~fore the lotal failure
of a joint l,lse glue and, 1f necessary,
dowels or thin wooden splines.
- Use lhe right glue - while.
yellow or hide wood glue. Yellow
glue. gives a bil more slrength and
moiSiure resistance bul begins to set
in only eightto 10 minu1es vs. the 15minute working time for while glu~ .
Hide glue, the traditiOnal glue for furniture, is available in ready-mi•ed
form iA hardware slores and home
centers. It has grea1 strength and
doesn 't begin setting for al leasl 30
minutes, so it's icleal for furniture
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during a similar period· in 1982-84.
The index, issued' by lhe _Bureau of
Labor Slalislics, is the basis for compuling cos1-of-living raises for Social
Security benefits, federal pensions,
velerans' bene fils and union contracts.ll also is used to set tax brack-·
ets and is the most common measure
of lhe annual inOalion ra1e.
r
Crilics of 1he way the CPI is calculated say' it overslales inflation by 1.1
percenl each year. They said_lhe CJT?" i
resuhs primarily from the mdc. fa1l- ~
ing to accounl for:
'
- Consumers substituting lower- ,
priced goods when prices rise on oth- .. ,
er goods. such ' as buying chicken
when the price of hcef goes up.
..
Homes: Questions
and Answers
-
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pieces lh~ttakc a long lime 10 a.•scm - the pressure musl he sufficient 10
ble and clamp. Don't usc epoxy · bring the IWO pieces Of Wood COmhccause il makes taking it apan n~ar- pletely logelher and aligned and
matched the way lhey were originally impossible. ·
.
- Before you take a piece apan ly. There should be no gaps because
for regluing, put on masking-tape the glue ilself has almost no Slrenglh
labels with numbers or lcncrs. and to bridge gaps.
- Always clamp lhe pans of a
align marks on each joint . Then simglued
joinl logether unlil the glue
ply match nAirkings when pulling the
item back together. You can peel the dries. You also can hold gl•ed pans
tape offwi1hou1 damaging the finish. logether with eiao;lic .-lie-downs· or
- Scrape off all lhc old glue so wilh wcighls, such as books or bricks.
1hat the new glue can auach to the For smaller pieces, usc large rubber
wood fibers . ' (Be .careful riot 10 bands. To secure chair ltgs while the
remove wood or lhere will be gaps gl~e is dryilig, wrap lwo turns of rope
around the legs. Tie 1he rope, Then
when you reglue).
·
- Or use lhe old cabinetmaker's insen a slick between the turns and
trick of dabbing on hOI vinegar 10 lighten the rope like a tourniquet
- 'If a furniture joint on a chair is
loosen and remove old glue. Tile
lOose
and wobbly, try- coating the
vinegar won't hann any finish, leaving only a white film thai you can Ienon wit~ glue and wrap it tightly
with collon lhread. After lhe thread
easily wipe off.
dries,
glue lhe Ienon into the mortise.
- You can make a simple device
You can also repair a loose
for opening stubborn chair joinls by
joinl
by
gluing.and wrappin,g strips of
putting a threaded rod with lwo nuts
and 1wo washers lhrough two blocks thin porous or absorbenl fabric
of wood padded wilh carpel. Place (cheeseclolh, panlyhose or couon
the padded surfaces snugly againsl sh.eeting) around a loose Ienon. Use
both chair legs. Apply OUIWard pres- as many . layers as you need. Soak
sure slowly and evenly by ·alternate· each with glue: Let the glue harden ;
ly lightening the nuts on lhe inside of , then sand the ienon to fit and glue it
in . :rrim off excess malerial wilh a
eilher block a lillie bit a1 a time.
utility
knife.
- When ·clamping a glued join I,
'
78 Cal-o'-nine-lails
82 Components
DOWN
1 Rhythm
2 Place of contest
3 Reslaurant of a kind
4 Perlorm
5 Make pulpy
6 Gol some shul-eye
7 Ram constellation
8 Persia, nowadays
9 Oesliny
10 Food and drink .
11 Racelracks
12 "Wonderful Wizard
of Oz" aulhor
13 Asner and Sullivan
14 Aboil .
84 Baxter or Bancroft
85 Female horse
86 Uniled
87 TV dog
90 Had a meal
91 Makes poinls
93 Funclion
94 Weasel's cousin
95 Used a s1opwatch
97 - .Major
98 Crowbar
99 Female deer
· 100 Uses wilh olhers
102 Pucker
104 Cui gem surlaces
105 Entertainment
award.
.
15 Gearshift position
'
16 Common
contraction
107"Bovine animals
108 - Anloinene
~ 09 Wearers of wet
17 Chop finely
19 Exploded
20 Wood-eating insect
23 'East of - ·
30 Hank ot baseball
32 Every
suits
110 Was sick
112 Tropicallruit
113 Lubbock's stale
114 Singer Connie - .
117 Rich cake
118 Beasl ol burden
119 Old saying$
123 Defeated
i 24 Make dry from heal
125 Amusing play
127 Untrulh
t28 Fever
t29 Bouquet
131 Gel with difficul!y:
2wds.
133 In flames
135 Moulhtul
136 Rube
137 Conundrum
136 Name tor a hound
139 - Mo~nes
140 Pod conlenls .
t41 Bird haMal
142 Clolhing
.
34 Garden implement
36 Tolerales
38 SlraUord-upon- 39 Backbone
4t Ajar ·
42 Destroy by degrees
AJ Slide
44 Cily in Ohio
45 - coasler
46 - forth (diSClose)
47 Avoid
• 49 Ctlastal bird
- 50 Snow field
51 Wing-shaped
52 Prairie schooner
53 Sharp lips
54 ~octc ol hair
55 Long CUI
·58 Brag
59 Calls
61 Freshly
63 Fierce look
. 64 Mended with
''
71 Not dense
72 Where Seoul is
74 VauHed church part .
76 Tumstiles
79 President afterCoolidge
80 Creeks
81 Looks searchingly
83 Affected manners
85 Code name
87 Ore depos1t
88 Unseen panicle
89 Plant pan
90 Prayer ending ·
92 Unusuallhing
"
93 Alcove
95 Dulies
96 Made angry
••
98 Molten rock.
•
tOt Thanksgiving.
Christmas, etc.
T02 Black leopard
t03 Press
104 Repaired
106 New Vorl< learn
108 Painter- Chagall
109 Take out
111 Frozen _dessert
112 Fab!es'lessons
113 Uprosr
114 Flaccid tissue .
115 Firm
116 Sharp
117 Oomeslicated
118 Slalas of mind
120 - and kicking
121 Sends by lelgraph •
122 ProplleiS
1_24 P.roo
'"II
125 Yield by lrealy
126 London's Scotland
DARLING
....
0
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"'
...
..._,. '
strtches
66 Satiaties
...
70 Hr. part
oh
'"
'"
,.,
"'
. ·~
.,,
' ill
'"
~
, oj
tilt
I ' ll
""
""--I
..t
:tt
.
( \o l
om
•
I' I
e
!Hi
,.••.,,
ATT at;elving for present pagers capable of longer messages
AT&T is 1e01pj)I'Arily shelving
plans for a two-way paging technology INt would have pennitted longer
messaps.
"We 're slowing down from 1he
perceplion · of how fasl we were
goi ng to build It out," said AT&T
Wireless. spokesman Todd Wolfenbarger. "We' re being very cautious."
In recent --:eeks, AT&T has alert-
'~ · ·
ed o1her companies planning to use
Pacl - Personal AIR Communications Technology - of the change.
AT&T, which once expected to introduce the technology in lhe first 'quar·
·
ter of 1997. ·
IHI
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it It
See Aoswer
On Page A-7
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ebbed enough to contain inflaJion. meet again Dec. 17. The prospect of
wilhout the central bank's interven- higher inOation or interest rates
tion. The Fed's policy makers are to makes fi<ed-income investments
such as bonds less altractive.
LANCASTER -- Ron L.
Young, managing director-transportalion, Thursday announced a
management realignment al AEP's
River Transportation Division.
The realignmenl will beuer
posilion the division to serve the
company in -a competitive electric
utility industry, Young said . Gale R.
Rhodes, division manager, ha.O: been
named to the newly crcalcd position
of manager-adminislralion and industry ,reialions. Keith M. Darling has
heen named general manager of the
division.
"In the last few years, we
have e•perienced an increasing need
to become more heavily involved in
maritime towing induslry relations on
a regional and national basis," said
Young.
"This rca!ignmenl provides
l'or tbe conlinucd cxcellentl.cadership
· of 1hC division while directing more ..
resources to this expanding and very '
important role;"
Rhodes has served as manager of the AEP River Transportation .
Division in Lakin, W.Va.• since 1986.
He joined the AEP System in 1973
when the company look over 1he
barging operalions of O.F. Shearer
and Sons, Inc. He had begun work
with lhe Shearer finn in 1964 and
progressed through . a number of
posts before. being named chief engineer in 1973.
He Hecame AEP's ass islam ·
pon engineer in 1974 and was promoted to port engineer In 1977. In
1986, he was named division manager.,
Rhodes has served two
1enns on lhe Board of Directors of 1he
National . Waterways Conference
(NWC) and serves as the organizalion's vice president and membership
chairman.' He also serves on 1he
Board of Directors, Execu1ive Committee and Inland Dry Cargo Sector
of 1he American Waterways Operalors (AWO). He is second vice president of the HunlinJIOn Propeller,
Club, and a member of the U.S.
,j
POUND RIDGE. N.Y. (AP) Holiday shoppers looking for some·
lhing different 10 give a gardener
might choose a weatherproof no1epad
or a bird-feeder wilh microphqne that
brings the chirping into your living
. room.
New books to suit any pocketbook
are also av8ilable, from a lovely Iiitie volume on lhe White House Garden to a massive revised edilion of
"America's Garden Book." This
draws on lhe expertise of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden to answer every
conceivable question.
The Viclorian looking radio birdfeeder comes at S100 from Brookstone, 1655 Bassford Drive, Mexico,
Mo. 65265- i 382, lelephone 800351-7222. A built-in microphone
monilors bird calls and sends them to
Middleport firm receives
loan fo_
r expansion purposes
•
a wireless receiver inside your house
up to 100 feet away. The equipmenl also slraddle a sinsle bed. II moves on
has on/off, volume control and auto- casters lhat lock iniO position with
matic night shut-off to conserve the friction brakes. The cost is $399, with
four C balteries, which are included. four lubes an extra $74.95.
The weatherproof field notebook
You can't go wrong wilh gifts of
and pen is offered ;u $19.95 by the trowels, watering cans or pruners.
Gardeners Supply Company, 128 Among many types of pruners avail. lnlervale Road, . Burlington , VI. able, lhe newest are power-driven
05401 , lelephone 800-863-1700. The ones lhal activate tiny chain saws.
156-page, hardbound pad sheds water They come in bolh cord and cordless
and is advertised as remaining crisp and in hand-held and pole models
and legible under the most difficult thai can cui branches up 10 three inchconditions. The pen uses a gas-filled es in diameter.
Langenbach, Dept L63100, p,o.
canridge that propels a black cemenlBox 1420, Lawndale, Calif. 9026().
like ink lhal's non-smudging.
As a holiday surprise for people 6320, 1elephone 800-362-1991. offer.;
who use wheelchairs, Gardeners Sup- models ranging in price from $89,
ply Company also offers a specially hand-held wilh cord, to $159, corddesigned fluorescent light sland for , less _pole. The pole models ex1end to
growing plants indoors. The single- II feet for pruning to a height of 1415 feet
t
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Some retirees are dealing with .
·unexpected insurance problems;
CINCINNATI
(AP)
MIDDLEPORT -- A Middlepon
The Ohio River Bear Co. manubusiness was among six companies to . faciUres and sells hand-made col- Deductibles and co-payments for
receive low-interest loans for expan- lectible Ieddy bears. The $85 ,000 health insurance are laking an une.sion purposes from the Developmenl project is expecled to.crea1e live jobs peeled bile out. o~ 1he fixed incomes
of thousands of General Mo10rs
Financing Advisory Board of the and retain six.
Ohio Depanmenl of Development.
Olhers receiving loans were Corp. retirees who never expected to
The Ohio River Bear Company Advanced Produclion Center, Inc. of · bear the financial burden.
Lawyers for 84,000 GM relirees
received a $34,000 loan at an inler- Columbus, $300,000; JnnoPias
are
arguing in coun that the automakest rale of 5 percent for a I0-year Corp., Kenlan, $274,500; Ure1ech
·
er
broke
its promise to pay lifelime
1enn 10 acquire a 5,537 square fool International, Inc ., Wood County,
building. The originating agency for $193 ,800; Columbus Coated Fabrics, heallhcareexpenses al no cost to lhe
lhe loan is the Buckeye Hills-Hock- Columbus, $350,000; and Smilh retirees and lheirspouses. Their 1989
ing Valley Regional Developmenl Foundry and Machine Co., Inc ., lawsuit is pending before a federal
appeals coun in Cincinnali while GM
District
Wood County, $217,245.
appeals the coun's Aug. 14 ruling in
favor of 1he retirees.
The case has drawn lhe interest.of
Pepper;
Under
Plaslic",
"New
Aller.
'
olhe.
r companies lhal have made
ByHALKNEEN
native
Vegelable
Crops",
"How
lhc
changes
in health benefits for lheir
POMEROY - Have you con ~id
ered growing vegelables utilizing Minimum Wage Law Changes are retirees.
GM arg4es lhal it told lhe 84,000
piaslic mulch? Commercial growers Goi.ng loAffeclthe Vegelable Grower";
"Pest
&
Production
UpdaJes"
and
salaried
retirees that it always mainlhroughoul · 1he world have ~een
increased yields, especially when
program
is sponsored
by Tile
accompanied with trickle irrigation. The
"Basics
of Hiring
Migrant Labor".
Tom Wall, Extension Associaie Ohio State Universily E<lension.
Registration starts a1 9 a.m .. The
fGr Ohio State Universily E•tension
-- Piketon Center, will be giving a regislration fee is $5 payable al lhe
session on "Piasticulture - Is It Right door. Reserve your seal by calling lhe
For You?" at lhe annual Meigs/Wash- Meigs County Extension office at
ington Counlies' Winter Vegetable 992-6696.
Hal Kneen is Meigs County's
School being held on December 13 at ,
the Pomeroy Gun Club.
· agricultural·extension ageni.
lopics include "Growing
· Other
'
.
osu official to address area farmers
lained the righl to change, suspend or
end provisions of its heahh benefits
plan . The coverage for lhe retirees
slill ranks among thc.besl available,
GM say s.
While the litigation drags on , fo.rmer GM employees and surviving
spouses arc slruggling lo pay lhe ·
une•pected expenses.
·
'Tmnowpayingoutofmypocket, so far $1,300 (lhis year) for my
wife and ·1. And I don 't think it's
right," ·said Alfred DeLalla, 79, of
Fraser, Mich. , who worked 22 years
for GM before reliring in 1982 from
its Warren, Mich., plant.
"When I retired,lhey said I would
have this insurance, and I would pay
nothing. And they said when you
died. she . would have it," DeLalla
said . "A promise is a promise."
GM defends its heallh care pro-
-
1
gram for retirees. In a slalcment, the ,
company said it told employees that
ilalways reserved lhe right to change ·
provisions of the coverage.
·
GM spokesman Ray Deibel l
declined to make any additional com--;
menl, citing lhe coun case.
'
William Wooldridge worked 10 :
years for GM at its Lordstown plant ;
beforehediedofleukemiain i979at :
age 44. His wife, Barbara •
Wooidndgc, now has $30 deducled :
by GM .each nionlh from her $94 ;
monthly widow's pension check..
;
'"It's not going to buy very much.
That's my co-payment to them, and :
.then . you gel another . co-payment :
when you go to the doctor," Mrs. •
Wooldridge. 60, said from her home ;
in Warren, Ohio.
:
Her three child.ren arc grown. She i·
works pan-lime three days a week. ;
.
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NEW SHENNIU 4/25
-cat 1·3 pt.
.
Rhodes, Da~l_ing
·named
to
AEP
posts
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By DAVID J. LYNCH
USA TODAY
. NEW YORK (AP) - Chided for
their "irrational exuberance" by Alan
Greenspan, investors Oed lhe stock
markel early Friday only to rush back
in and snap up lhe marked-down
merchandise, cushioning a steep
decline.
The Dow Jones industrial average
tumbled 145 points in lhe first half
hour of ITading !>efore recovering to
close at 6,381.94, down 55.16 for 11>e
day and down 139.76 on the week.
· Broader measures also erased a
big chunk of the early slide, which
was .preceded by a sharp selloff on
foreign markets and a big jump in
bond market interest rates, aU precipilated by jiuers from a Thursday
night speech by Greenspan, lhe Federal Reserve chairman.
Greenspan hypothesized about the
consequences of " a collapsing financial assel bubble," triggering fears the
Fed may soon raise interest rates to.
slow inflationary pressures in the
economy and lhe financial markets.
Cooler heads prevailed, however,
with the help of another -repon suggesting moderate economic .growth.
Band markel yields quickly fell and
. bargain hunters swooped in to grab
depressed shares.
"The market came 10 1he conclusion thai thi s was nothing but an
effort by Greenspan to keep the
speculalion under control, not a harbinger of some Draconian monew-y
policy in the ·works," said John
Shaughnessy, research director at
Advest Inc. of Hanford; Conn.
Stocks and bonds have been rallying ' •ince late summer ami!! optimism thai economic growth has
........-.••...,.
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130 Caviar
132 Blood relatives
134 Not againsl
Hill, Bidwell; Champion Farms, Gallipolis and
Steven Schmelenberger, VIncent, Iowa. Pictured It lha award presentation from lett are
·Mise American Angus, Moriah Olaon; Neenah
and Sarah Hill, Bidwell and Ralph Brldgea,
American Angus Association praaldent.
Stocks take dive aifter-Greenspan comments ·
.
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month. Owners of the sire Include Champion
SUN DAY- PUZZLE 'R
two l'ull baths and a half-bl\lh,
and a utility room; totatrns
2,.160 square rrel of llvin8 •l•aee.
This plan Includes a standard
hasemrnl, crawls1>ace or st~'b
roundall~n. and 2x6 exterior
walll'raming. Its lwo-car gara11e
. l>rovldes .84 &quare .r~et · of
SJ•a.ce.
· ----~--------~
ewerdedtoCenturyTouchltOne 1311tlhe1996
North American International Uvntoc:k Exposhion· annual meeting In LoulsvHie, Ky., lalt
sallery. kitchen, a casu-
al ealing nook, lhree bedroohlll,
G-32
HONORED • The 18116 Angus Roll of VIctory get-of-eire champion of the ywar honors_,.
.,
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11 hPageD3
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tier stand, with a waist-high shelf, can :
I
How It's figured, what critics say is wrong with it
G-'S2 STATISTICS
D
form a IaUgher, longer-lasting surface a heavy paint buildup from line inteand are a bener choice when worl:- rior panelins or furnilure.
ing on hardwoods like walnut and
Medium grits remove light stock
oak.
from wood and prepare walls for
Silicone carbide is 1he. hardest painting inside lhe house as well as
abrasive grit generally available for smoothing-rougher. sanding fpr line•
consumer use. lbcse abrasive sheets finishing. Fine and very fine grits car,
are ideal for sanding nonferrous mel- ry lhis process the rest of the way for
als, composition boards and plastics. a perfect finish , removmg sandmg
When applied 10 waterproof papers or scratches to make a surface ready for
cloth backing materials, silicone car- · primer or sealer. 1
bide can also be used for wet sandWith-most sandpapers you have a
ing wilh waler or mineral oil for rub- . choice of dpen or closed costings. A
bing down varnish, polyurelhane and closed coal covers the entire sheel
lacquer finishes. ·
. wilh abrasive particles while a more
The closestlhin' to an all· purpose open coat may give no more than 50
paper is aluminum oxide paper. It can percent or 70 percent coverage. Spacbe used on wood, metal, plaslics and ing lhe griult.ir apan makes the sand~
paper cut more slowly because lhere
fiberglass.
The grit size of the abrasive on a are fewer grits to do lhe job, but the
sheet of sandpaper is identified by a paper d0esn 't .load up wilh paint or ~
number. on t~ backing material. The. gummy \Yood. .
•
higher the. number the finer 1he grit · As fat. as sanding ,techniques, to
Exlremely coarse pt~p<rs with rela- finish wood smoothly, ~and with lhe ,
lively opencostsof.abrasives - each grain. Plaslics have no grain; ,but ,
granule spaced ou~ frotn lhe others some of lhem melt when healed by
remove heavy layers 'lf paint, enam- friction so lhe surface smears ralber '
1
el or varnish from relalively rough lhan smoolhes. Fiberglass sands well,
1
surfaces. they 're fine for preparing but lhe dust contains tiny glass liber.1,
the surface of a houSe for painting, so you should wear a dusl mask .(or "
bul would be wrong for taking even protectioq.
Consumer Price Index: .
,
Some new and different
Chri~tmas garden gifts
House of the Week
By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Specilll Feetui'H
t ...
Coast Guard's Quality Action Team.
Rhodes also serves on the-West Virginia Governor's Task Force on the
School to Work ~rogram .
Darling mosl recently
served as the Fuel Supply Huma~
Resources liaison in lhe Human
Rc~ourtcs Service Delivery Center,
Lanca.,ler, ·ohio. Ue joined the AEP
System in I ?75 as a stores clerk for
Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs No, I mine. Laler thai same
year, he worked as a personnel representative for AEP in Albany, Ohio,
·and for Soulhern Ohio Coal Company's general office.
·
In 1977, he transferred lo
Southern Ollio Coal's Meigs No. 2
mine as personnel supcrvi~or, and in
·o
1980, he went to Southern Appalachian Coal Company in Julian , W Vn.,
as personnel manager. In 1984, he
was appoi nled personnel manager at
AEP's River Transponalion Divi- .
sion. He subsequenliy.transferred to
the Fuel . Supply General Office as
labor relations manager, and was pro-.\
motcd 10 labor relations, compensalion and benefils manager for Fuel
Supply in 1994.
He graduated from West
Virginia University wilh a bachelor's
degree in economics in 1973, and in
1974 he received a master's degree in
economics froin Ohio . University.
He also compieled the AEP Man- '
agemcnt Development Program at
The Ohio Stale University in 1986.
0/ointerest
For 36 months
IT'S EASY TO
.
OWN THE BEST.
hltdt
•2 or 4 wheel
drive
•8 spd. trans.
•2 5 hp diesel
•water cooled
•wet sieves
*Live PTO*
New4/25
56995
*livePTO*
New4/25
w/L~•
usa 'I'IIC'NBS
59495
AC 6060 4X4 CAB DUAL REMOTES ...............................................................................$12,500.00
MF 135 GAS 19()0 HRS ........................................... ~ •..••••••~ ....................................... ~...........4,500.(J()
FORD 5000 IND. PTO, WET BRAKES, NEW PAINT ..................,........................................ 7,500.00
M.F. 1085 CAB, 3000 HRS., GOOD RUBBER......................................................................9,000.0o
FORD 2600, 1200 HRS., ORIGINAL PAINT, EXCELLENT .............................;.................... 7,000.00
N.F.135 DIESEL, 8 SPEED DIFF. LOCK, P.S. MUST SEE! ;............................................... 6,500.00
J.D. 4230 QUAD RANGE, CAB, A.C., 4500 HRS.............................................................. 16,000.00
DEUTZ OX 140, 140 HP, 4X4, CAB, A.C., GOODI ............................................................. 16,500.00
J.D. 4030, CAB, AC, QUAD RANGE, 95% RADIALS .............;.......................................... 17,000.00
FORD 555, TLB, CAB, NEW MOTOR ........................................~····..········~········ .. ··············17,000.00
M.F. 175, DIESEL, SPIN OUT WHEELS ••••.•••••.. ~••..••. :.....................................................~ •••• 6,500.00
,.
t
I
-.
FORD 600, GOOD RUBBER ................................................................................................. 3,900.00
M.F. 20,1NDUSTRIAL LOADER, DSL, MANUAL SHUTTLE ...............................................B,OOO.OO
FORD 3000 DSL, LIVE PTO .........................................................,........................................ 6,50(1.00
M.F. 245 DSL., 8 SPEED, LOW HOURS ..............................................:................................7,000.00
A.C. 190 XT, SERIES 13, 3000 tfOURS................................... ~ .............................................6,500.00
M.F. 135 W'S, PS, LIVE PTO, 1440 HRS., ORIGINAL PAINT.............................................6,350.00
4- M.F. 255 ...........................................................................~-········ .......................... FROM 6,800.00
MISC£LLA.IEOUS
PRENTICE LQG LOADER ON 1975 DODGE TRUCK, TANDEM, AIR BRAKES ............ $5,000,00
HONDA 300, 4X4i VERV: GOOp ........................................ ~.................~ .......~....................·.... 3,500.C)O
KAW., KODIAK, 350, SAME AS NEW.~ ......................................................................~......... 4,900.00
. t
9'1 GEO, 55,000 MILES ..................................·...............................................~ ....................... 4,500:.00
92 FORD EXPLORER 4X4, VERY CLEAN, NEW TIRES, 100,000 MILES ..........................9,000.CIO'i
PENTAL HITCH TRAILER, RAMPS, BEAVER TAIL .........._. ..;.............................................. 1,250.00
DIED IQDIPMDT
PLOWS, 1 BOTTOM TO 5 BOnOM ......................................................................... FR~M $100.00
.
DISC 3/PT. AND PULL TVPE ..................................................................................... FROM 175.00
NEW IDEA 323 CORN PICKER ..................................,......................................................... 1,100.00
LITTLE GIANT ELEVATOR, SAME AS NEW, 20 FT.......:.......................................................975.00
8 ROUND B~L,.:RS, NEW HOLLAND, J.D..........................................................;.................... CALL
·M.F. SICKLE MbWERS, SHARP, 7 F1: ...................................................................................995.00
'
HOLLAND ·TOBACCO
SETTER, NICE.....................................................................................47S.OO
GEHL FEEO GRINDER, SHARPI ........................................~ ................................................. 1,850.00
'
uw
OFFER GOOD THRU 12/13196
Hay Equipment & Forage Equipment
Also "tractor (selected models)
REAR BLADES, LIGHT AND HEAVY DUTY .................................................:......... FROM $175.00 .
KING KUn'ER FINISHING .MOWER .................................................................... WINTER SPECIAL
KOKYER LOADERS, FOR 20 TO 200 HP, TRACTORS ...............................TRUCKLOAD PRICES
KOKYER UTILITY VEHICLES, DIJMP BED, 14 HP .............................................................4,5CKt.OO
CROSS & SONS' FARM EQUIPMENT
JACKSON, 'OHIO ·
614-~86-1966 -- 6451
~·
COMB Ill TBJS .IQIIJPMBNT AT
JIM'S FARM EQU
~ FORO NEW HOLLAND
-~ ~'
'·
-
"
,.iJ:3•1ii
NT CENTER, INC. ·
1467 JACISOIIPIIE, OLD U.S. 35 WESt
PIIOIIE 446-9777 01 446-GII3
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Bundly, December I. 1181
..
L..
Work
, By CLIFF EDWARDS
AP Buslnen Writer
;
Copper futures pnces fell sharply Fnday after the London Metal E<ehange reported
r a surpnsmgly large mventory bUild and armd volanltty on world stockmarkets prompt
r ed by US Federal Reserve Chatrman Alan Greenspan's comments
t On other commoduy markets, natural gas futures pnces plunged on revtsed weath
er foreca sts while wheat futures rose sharply
Copper futures fell after the London Metal Exchange reported tts warehouse mven·
1 tones had nscn by 6 400 tons smce Tuesday to 99 775 tons It was the thtrd nse m a
week amtd expectattons of an mcrease of no more than 5 000 tons
'
Many analysts have predtcted copper mventones would be on the nse this month after
falling for 12 consecuttve weeks because there wtll be less demand for the mdustnal
metal Many rod and copper tube plants shut down arouod thts It me for the holiday sea
son or mamtenance
The large tncrease reported Fnday 1took most by surpnse although much of the met·
al hkcly was transferted from warehouses owned by the Comex dtvtston of the New
York Mercanttle Exchange mto the London exchanges, srud analyst Fred Demler at
E D &F Man lntemattOnallnc That would mdtcate supphes remam ttght m non futures
exchange warehouses, he srud
The dechnes also were caused by the Fed s Greenspan comments late Thursday m
whoch he menuoned the posstbtltty that trrauonal exuberance has unduly escalated asset
values 'Traders mterpreted hts comme nts to mean that stock pnces and other holdings
such as copper may he overvalued
Copper traders also were rattled by dechnes 10 stock markets as onvestors dumped
thctr holdmgs on concern that Greenspan s comments could stgnal hogher tnterest rates
• from the Fed to slow the economy The market later recovered some of tts losses
The market was hun by the LME stock numbers but the sharp break on the glob
al stock market also had an tmpact satd Wtlltam 0 Netll senoor futures strategtst at
Merrtll Lynch Inc
Htgh·grade copper for March dehvery fell! 10 cents to $ 1 00 a pound on the Comex
dtviSion of the New York Mercanttle Exchange
Natural gas futures pnces fell sharply after foreca~ters satd temperatures over the next
' few days m key Mtdwest and Northeast heatmg regiOns wtll be wanner than ongmal
, ly thought
•
The updated forecasts calmed fears a major cold snap cou ld force natural gas sup
' phers to dtp mto stockptles already 8 I percent below level< of a year ago Futures pnces
• have c hmhed sharply m the past week 10 part on womes a colder than normal wtnter
would dram supphes m storage
Of parttcular note Fnday were forecasts now calltng for ra m along the Atlanttc C oast
mstead of snow whtch could have boosted heau ng demand as more people stayed mstde,
satd Jeff Foos dtrector of tradtng at KCS Energy Inc
The fact of the maner os we haven t even snowed yettn the Northeast Foos sat<l.-1
•.. We rc sllll wa1tmg to see an actual wtnter to substantmte our pnccs
Pnces were hkely to fall further next week Temperatures across most of the coun
try, parttcularly m the Mtdwest and Northeast, ltke ly wtll be above normal through next
week the Nattonal Weather Servtce prcdtc ted after trad10g had ended
January natural gas fell 29 7 cents to $3 487 for each I 000 c ubtc feet
f Wheat futures pnces rose strongly on the C htcago Board of Trade amod hopes for
1 wee kend export bustness
! Egypt Pakistan and several other countnes thts weekend are tendenng c\ffers for wheat
I whtch prompted buymg from large commerc tal finns that hope some of the busmess
wtll come thetr way satd analyst Doug Hj ort at Hjort & AssocJate< m Adel Iowa
I ' Producers are not selhng wheat much nght now so the commerctals are buymg to
l make sure they retatn ownershtp of deh verabl e supplies, HJort satd
M arch wheat rose 4 1/4 cent s to $3 79 3/4 a bushel
i
t
f
i
No WHktndl
Exp N•c Stnd Name
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wlth-"" etodiL 1 -~ 420 Mobile Homes
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11117 Dou-tdo 8 bod"'om 2 liiii7ii'2ii0Ci;o;;ftiiiijj;;,'iiiijjii
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Will jOin I DfOQriiiiVI hll lfh
care team prov1d1ng atrvlcea in
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cart Til• candlc:latt must be a
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tH7 14x80 wfOtamour balh
$17Dimo FrM <Sehvery 1 Hl up
onlyal Oak Wood Homes Nlero
WV.3M75~M15
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!117
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IUY IN DECEIIIIR No pay
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FINANCIAL
Tak1ng 4ppHcabona On Mo1orcy
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Honda Sand Resume To 436
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45831
The University Of Rto Grande ts
Accepting Apphc1110nt For
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Doetorale Degrees Preferred
Maa11r a Plus Accepted Senc:l
ln11r11t letter Reaume And
Narnet Of Three Reftttencea Berare Tt'te Dead line of December
13 To Phyllis Mason PHR Oirec
IDr Or Humaa Resourea. Unlversi
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R1o Grande OH 4567" AA 1EEO
EfTI)IayO<
The Un1V8n ty Of Rlo Grande Is
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Bachelors Degree Required
Master 1 Preferred Poulble
Winter Quaner AppolntrrMnrs
Send lnttresl letter Resume
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D~rector Of Human Resources
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GaiMpolis OH 45631 All lnqu nes
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114 446 7612
Two 1 bedroom apar1men11 lor
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sell on land contract 614 992
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320 Mobile Homes
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1982 14x70 Mob le Home Of11 6
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574 2539
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614 44fi 2377
I
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PUBUCNOnCE
Tho Joint Commtoolon on
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on acoredllltlon ourver of
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o.comber 18, 1196 The
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00
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BOOTS
All Leather Western Boots
Reg $149 00
Sale Proce $59 00
Large Stock
Engoneer ........... ... .. ...... $49 00
Welltngton
$49 00
Loggers
$50 55
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$59 00
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1 Bedroom Haute In M11on No
Poll S200 Dopoall 1350/Mo. Jn.
Cludol Utflltlol, G1 ..2!1G 1481
1 Badtoom HoUIO In Rio Orondo
1235 monll1 plua dopoolt wiM IJa
lVII_. Oie 10 ti•3M-11
2 Bedraom Furnllhtd House No
Inside Pell Countr W1ttr Fur
nllho<l 14150/Mo Dopolllt I .,.,. Asqui'ld. orr SaUt Route
150 114 448 4t 11 Evonlngo
614:-2,5-031)J1
2 lledtoam 11ouoe 2123 Lincoln
Avo •350/mo. Ptuo roltroncoa &
dopolil30+1l'!i-2741
Male Stnger Wanted
Rock Bank ".Co1ma11ose1"l
Call for tnfo
614-992-2191
2 Bed"""" In Pt Ploaaont, 12101
ma References I ucunty de
pooll .......... -.2221
2 Bedrooms. lurnlshed located
ill Mlddltpoft Rtfertnees ra
qulrecl dopoall 1200 U7S
Month no ln~do poll 304·713
51G5.
2 Baofroomo. Upotol"' Duple• 15
112 VIne Neer Flrtt AYtnUt
$340/Mo WotO< Plll<l Clarogt,
Oopoalt Rtfettncoa 114 448
2411
2 Ho<Jitl for rent 30+175-8731
worth $1 00 when you lrade·
tn your old mstruments on a
new one
fiiMIIIII
Thle nOIIoe II pooled In
ICCCH'IIo- Willi the Joint
EXPLORER MEETING
Bruntcardt Mustc New Bana
tnstruments Th1s coupon
oddrwud
10:• 1c odlbttlon
Dfvlolon ol
Con.....lon.
rtqUII•I ..IItl.
Call For Maps & Owner F1nanc
1ng Info 10'% [1own ... We Downtown One Bedroom Carpel
Finance Balance I0% Off Cash ed Compltll t<ltchtn All Etec1nc
Purchases!
6t• 4411~
Cabm generator powered two Furnlatted 3 Rooms & Bath No
wooded acres secluded but ac Poll Aetoronce And Doposl) R•
ceu1blt good hunung and flsll quirotl 61H46 1519
1mg 111500 Senoua mqu~r~e•
GraCIOUS liVIng 1 and 2 bedroom
only 614 992 3016 eventngs
apertmtrttl It V1IIIQt! ManDr and
One acre lot In Middleport. 481 RN•rllde Apactmenta 1n Middle
port From $232 $355 Call 814
f l - Slr1101, 114-882-3015.
992 5064 Equal Housing Oppor
Parcell on Rayburn Ad Wattr IUnTOII
paved rOad ,..aonabla rtllriC:
Iiono 30H75-525S jno lllngl• In Galipol11 1 BR $205/Mo 1 BR
$2851MO 2 BR $2e01Mo 6 U
-lnqlllltl p!IMo)
388-1708 For Appointment
RENTAL S
Modern 2 Bedroom APf,rtment
6111i 446.()390
PVH
Tuesday, Dec
o
«611585.
At
Ad
INC
Opelellol•
Me1gs Co last Two left Each 5
Acres N1ce Home Sites 16 500
Athena Co SchOola
Potnsett1as for Chnstmasl
Savel Th1s Chnstmas
One lie,...._
Boulev81'd
Ootlcbrooll T...-,L 80181
The Joint Commloolon wHI
ockn-lotlgo ouoh raqueebt
In wrlllnt or by telephone
ond will Inform the
orgenlzllllon of the raquelt
for •ny lntorvl"
The
or~nlzotlon will, In tum,
1tOIIfy lite lnllt vlotuu of the
liMe, tlmt, end pleco of the
OtgoniUIIon u.teon
up & delnrery Irae cen1ral a r
Oakwood Homes N1tro WV 304755-&885
Galha Co Frtenc:lly R1dge E11tra
large Doubte Wide Nice Senlng
W1th Large Porch t•7 500 Also
In Same Area N1ce 21 Acres
Woth Barn $20 000 Or L..., 10 +
Acres It• 000 T""' Run Thtee
1o Acre Parcell Side By Slc:le
Pr c:ed Separate Or Together In
Galllpolla Ne~gllborhood Rei 22
Acres Wnh Pond S25 900 Or tO
kresS17000
Come see us for your
Follow German Hollow Bakery
on State Route n5
SHOP AND $AVE NOWI
Serta Mattress
$5900
Bed Frames
$19 95
Recliners
$9900
4 Drawer Chest
$4995
La-Z-Boy Recliners
$29900
4 pe Bedroom
Suhe
$49900
FLAIR FURNITURE
flequeat for o public
lnformotlon tntorwlow muot
be modo In writing and
ahould be aent to 1111 Joint
Commlaalon no fetor then
live woYklng dar,• before
tho ourver beg no
Tho
raquoot muot 1110 lndloote
!he noture of the
nformatlon to be provkled
ol lhe lntervlow.
Suoh
requulo ohould bo
preeenled It the
wiN be carefully
far r•levonce to
accrodltollon proceu.
Must 1111 5 dlaplay modtl Dou
blow dn ISSSAVE$11 Free set
BRUNERLANO
114-TTS.I173
$250·$450
FREE DELIVERY
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Mon thru Sat 9 5 Ph 446-0322
3 Moles
German Hollow
Green House
atandordo deal with
organlzolionot quollly ol
core loouu ond the 11fety
of the environment in Which
care to provided Anyone
believing lhlt he or ohl heo
ertlnent ud volld
nformotlon about ouch
mattaro mer requeot o
public
lnlllrvlew
with
tfte
Joint
Commlulon'o
f let d
j
Soetlffco
1178
HUGGERS, CHAISE
LOUNGE RECLINERS
Call9 am lo 5 p ,m 446·9416
6 to 1 o p m 446·3887
BRUNICARDI MUSIC
repr-nbttlvu~ot~the~l~lme:
of
the ourvey.
.
Vaughan's IGA
Public Notice
'""'"""lion
NEWf Bank Atpo't, Owner II
nencmg ava1ablel 1171/mo Free
dti!VefY & &el'i1Jl304 755-71111
3 8• Acres On Graham School
" Road tex~" sam With w,re'
And Electric Avatlable SH 446
OVER 100 IN STOCK!
ROCKERS, WALL
PROJECT, chocolatelwhlte
Public Notice
r.
New 1 ·h80 Only make 2 pay
men11 I mov•Jn no peymtnt If
tttf' 4 yean free set up I c:lahv
err 304 755-5885
for Mike
Rutland Offtce,
Public Notice
Notice
rent Only
sees-. c.11
Lots & Acreage
'1 Acre loll For Sale Cora Mil
Rold 814 245 5788 Call Even
-6P.M -II~M
GRUBBS PIANO
TUNING & REPAIR SERVICE
Holiday Spaetall 10% dtscount on
Tuning lhru Dec 23 woth thos ad
Call Bob Grubb 614 446 4525
Gallipolis, OH
3 IIOdroom On t<o" Road Ro4lr
one" Ootoool~ 11.._... 2!1GS.
3 BHroom on New Haven
Holgttll. -2717
3 IIOdroomo Oalllpollo City
8chool ora"'•~ tn K t - 114..,. ?~73.
330 Second Ave
Gallipolis, Oh1o
Call446-2342 or
992-2156
~·d-- oil otoclric
Gttt.. lot.. 101 Homt
aJHd - · &;okar :104 171·
Fof -Two
~mo
FOR MORE INFORMATION
1140
F'out ltodroom hOmO In Middle
.._ '""*
port, -
Deoonth ' · ' " '
SIHping rooms w th cooking
Alto ltlller tpace on nver AU
tlook ups Call afle' 2 00 p m
30+ 713-5851 lloian wv
NICe 2 BHrooms U26/Mo a 51
Udat Down 218 Nece Referenc
$185 57 per month With 11 ~po-llt Requ1red e1• ue
2 Tan
1.J00.837 3238.
0112. a14 2!iH25t
1Q97 14x70 ttlrH bed
350
Class to prepare for Flag or
Majorette tryouts Ci!ISS for Teen
Dance Technique,
. , ..... Ha)
S067 ..... Sjtm.
plul
tlopoll~
-
no- 11"-1112
N 3rc:l Ave Middleport OH 2
Bcldfoom furmsnltd apt Deposit
& reference• reqUited. 304 882
2!IGI
Nice two bedroom apartment In
Fl>""'"'"' no pets, 814 ~2 5858
One bedfOOm apawf(AI 1n Mtd
dleport, an utllmes paid $2701rm
I tOO dopo~~ caH 614 882 78015
One bed,oom apartmen t '" P1
PINoen~ 814 Q92 51158
FAU.IP£CIAL
IJ2% High Errtclency Furnlct
tlO 000 BTU 1715 80.000 BTU
$885 100 000 BTU $915 Tho
Above Pr~ct1 A:re For Furnace
Only Free Estimate To lnllall
Furnact Duct Work Etc 5 Yea,
Warranty All Parts l1la11me War
tanty On Heat Eactlan~er eu
446-1)308 1 800 2111-0098
F < - Fot Solo Ook 135. Pld<
Up Load Delivered 614 258
1!502
For sate • p11ee wooden bid
room suite Yery niee cond1tion
cal anytime &1•9D2 ae
GOOD Barbe Furntture 8arbie
Van Sw mm1ng Paol Etc 814
U6 74118 After 4 ~M
Grubbs P1ano tun1ng & repaua
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
~aoo Dr 614 4441 4525
H1gh elf,coencr 55 ooo BTU clr
culatorw g11 heater ••c cond
lad~altllher
coat. llzt 10
67~382!.
3 Pc White Poster Bedroom Su
lte Chesl M1rr0r Dresser CanoPr
Bad 814 388 9878
3 Piece wood beige & brown li\l
ong room IU!L 175, 304-87~2534
40 Inch Snow Thrower For 18
Horse Crartman T,aclor W1th
Wheel Wttghls !Chains F111 8
Whttls Usec:l Tw1ce 1750 614
:118-11579
488 SX2 Packard Boll Computer
Fully Loodoct Wllh 12 Ctro $750
814-441-927~ Al1oor4 00
ArchtVI Eternity Ring APPfll..d
At 11 500 Alkintl St 000 II lnl4f
esE<J Can 114-44& 8&91
BOOII Br Rodwlnl Chlppowl
Rocky Tony lama GuarantHd
Lo-t Pnc" AI SI]Go Colo Go>
lipoU~
Brand new 28" ladles bike 10
One Bedroom Apartment Ftrtt speec:l Huffy Expedit1on $75 call
Avenue S250tt.la Oepotil Ret 814IIIU531
--.014 44Hl400
Check ou1 our new G rt Dept at
One bedroom futnlahtd apan Pamta Plut ·Pattr 1 tort• Cake
rnem ln Middlepan call 81" «8 decora ting suppllts Candlel
30111 B141U 2!71 or 814 992 Chocotare Candy Mtlll Molds
530-4 or 114 9D2 6ZJ1
Bulk Chnatmaa Candy Radto
Flyer Wagons Pockll ICnlves
Three bedroom bath larg& hvlno Bears and Mort IWE 1110 havt
room and kitchen Th.rd Slf'eet GultOf Cllpa tor Chnstmao Lltlhlll
Alcina OH $28Simo plus u1111 RIIINT PLUS HARDWARE
.... 01 .. 247..292.
304-875-401-1
We wtsh to thank
everyone who sent
cards, flowers and
gifts for our 50th
Wedd1ng
Anmversary It
made our day
spec tal
Norma and
Leonard Jewell
Sldo In c . _ Ring And Pinion
Gura /AIIIt Houllinoa E•lfcln
Mochlno (I Stollonsl. 1177
Chov"'n 112 Ton Pick Up Stnglo
Width Trallot Lat Roqulring Somo
Wotk Fot Roadln011 !Will Con
oldO< Lltu 01 Rent Ofldan) Call
Fot Doooil' 6!4 446 Ml&.
In
In LDvlng rnemOty of
llf1 Cha1ra Ele<:tnc Wheelchairs
Sta11 Lilli Van Lilts Scooters
New /Used Bowman s Homecare
814..46-7283
Uanren and box sprmga lull
~•• S50 614 742-2153
Moving Uutt S.U:2 Piece bt~
MCtiONI aofa wllh hldt-l·l»>d 2
LIYing room gila lOp Olk table&
I lamps Llkl Nawl 3 Piece ent•rtainment center FlbarBia81
ra1aed truck tDpper with a ding
back glasa. 4 Searl IUPif' QUII'd
QT radial tlttl Silt P205 75
R14 Coll304.e75-Z!51
NEW "411 COMPUTEJt wltlt
Monitor! Loodoel Full'fector~
Warranty ORE AT .CHRIITIIA
GIFT! $850. JD4..77J.I112.
~ • eon..UnMLtloOdod.
- -··.. · - ull Fectory Wlffl~ 11n11a
g:t"~?~~~~~":.:
11
J!I04)77Utl2.
::.;", :,_ra,:::
1!;::::!:.:.:;:.:;:;::~:-:-:--:::-
Nice Microwave CatHntt. Ollll
1l
1i
a:wn~~n~~o~'!; ~:~
., 81 •-"6-3257
NICe weddtng nnu Ill 8111i 742
2192
Comfort. convenience,
cner1y
crfic•cncy,
duraloihty on~ n...Io.hty
ID dea1p lrtl I ft.>W o( the
rciiODS
why 2,000
fam1hc11 w1ll hu•hl • los
home thu1 year'
AJ•palach•an
Lu1
Structures hu hcen a
leader 1n the lug hume
industry Cor over 15
year" Choottc r...,m over
70 llandarcl mnd1l11 nr
we 'll cuatom de111n one
(or you
Call or wnte for more
Card Df Thanks
To all our fnends
We wish to thank
Home Health and
Hospice tor the
wonderful
carrng
personnellhat helped
during tha final stages
of matdte Mora s
rllness Also Rev
Roland Wtldman and
Rav
Sharon
Hausman for the
rnsplnng
funeral
sarvtce,
Ewrngs
Funeral Home and
Gerald
Powell
organist
Thank
you
to
paople who made
donattons for brain
cancer research or
sant lovely flowers
and planters, thanks
to those who came to
pay last respects,
many also attended
the funeral, and
pallbearers Paul
Hayes,
James
Thomas, Rerd Young,
Woodrow Mora, Roy
Holter, Kellh Utile and
Honorary pallbearers
Jack Carsey and
Howard Frank
We wish to thanks
sororiety preceptor
Beta Beta Meala
Service organized by
Eleanor Thomas and
Trrnlty
Church
orgamzad by Joan
Wrldmen and the
many others who
brought food on their
own This anabled us
to have more ltme for
the IDving care Matdle
racalved .
Thanks to all for
prayers, cards, phone
calls, flowers and
AI the yeare 1lowlyk
pea• by, we ml88 you
more with each piiSSing
dey, you are forever In
our heart$ and on our
mind&
Sedly missed by wile,
Dorothy, children and
grandchildren
I·I~====='====
The famtly of
Leona
Eblin
acknowledges with
deep appreclatiDn
your
kind
expressions
of
Sympathy Thanks
to Pomeroy Squad,
Holzer
E A
Physician & staff
4th floor nursing
stall, CCU nursing
staff, Or. Brubaker,
Or Alonzo, thanks
to our friends for all
the flowers, cards,
food, calls & gifts of
money Thanks to
Rev
Theron
Durham & Rev
Essie Lae for tha
wonderful words of
comfort during the
'graal' loss of our
loved ona Also
!hanks to Henry &
Hasler Eblin for lha
beautiful songs & to
Fisher
Funeral
Home,
Bruce,
James, Tony & Jeff
Mosl tmportant of
all, thanks for the
prayers of hundreds
of people who care,
wtth out prayer we
could not go on
Your kindness will
"nevar•
ba
caqng
Our
famtly
appreciated thase
blessings from the
bottom of our hearts
Don Maye,
Sally, David, Rhea,
Marl<, Mary
forgotten
Mom we love you &
miss you
Fred Ziegler
Bob & (Nancy)
Manley
Ray Eblin
Appalallhian Log
Structure~~, Inc.
Dept. COT,
P.O. Box 614
Ripley, WV 25271
of Owen C McKtnney WOIJid ltke
to lhank those who sent flowers, cards, food,
The family
phone c;alls or assisted 1n anyway
We would especially hke to lhank Dr
FOf a ftvlr, rbuntee bldl or lurthtr lnformlllion call
1814) 173-4321 We accept llbelntH bids for any
, lltm, call for lnlormltllan. Cuh, Ck, MC, VISA ana
Dllc accepllld, buyer prem • food llYIIIIblo We wll
. . , h a v e - t.gged lteml for . .
WNGABl:IIGl:lla ond IM oilier. ""'"'' _, c.U..:Iilm
- Tloio•ro
""P~T of'l'lw ...,...!-tP.r c-ar
,..,.,_ u "' no - r - i H Mill, nor r. it
•pprowd or·~~. ·r"' Lolllabtrpr c_,.,.y
II.E. PllTNAM CO.
___,_...._.. __
lllohoelllt. ....... C.U, oURE, lll.A
Nlchultltll Rltb:llfle~tlon..t
78 E Sec:oltd Stlwl, Ct
te, Ohlo45801
-.
(814)773-4321
mtlq-,
dealer weleome,
IMuruee work
Rebulldo,
1162 Rear
2nd Ave.
Gallipolla, Ohio
614441-ll95
j
Roglltered
Nuree
Cont...ct P0111ton • 14
hours per week. lllllt
be CUI'TIIntly llcenMCI
In Stele of Ohio •
en
RN. Send
to · wlc 01rwc:tor, Galli• County
He•lth Pept., 18
Locuat StrHt, Room
1253, Ollllpotle, OH
45831. Phone: 814448·8851. Deedlln•:
December 18, 1898.
LD or
reoumo
E.O.E.
LOAN PROFESSIONALS
If you hiNe I!!Cpl!rience In the field ol lending or
collecl!ans and an! looldng for the opportunity to
advanCe your Can!el, we would like to speak with
you reptdlng employment opportunides within our
loan department.
The Peoples Bank, an affihale ol Oty Holding
Company, Is a $130 mollon flnanclallnstltullon with
lhree full sr.ice ollk:l51n Mason, New IWtwt and
Point l'lellsant, West: Vlrlfnla.
Please COt IIlia:
M'evl L l..lftfna
Executhe VJce..Ptelldent
(304) 675·11:11
We' re seeking enterpnstng men and women wito ore really
looking toward ownmg their own buSiness In the near future
We ore offenng time hmotetl (approximately one year)
employment selhng the leadtnl products tn the profesSional
tool 8nd equipment tn(lusuy from a state-of-lhe·art
showroom van During thts tes1 drive' you wtll ~etve a
salary commtsston 1nd health benefits And, he gtvcn full,
comprehenSive, company prud ln!Jntng
Successful performance as a Sales Rep may lead to
acceptance tnto the Snap-on franchise program and earn you
attractive financtng tenns toward be<:omtng a Franchtaed
Dealer
If you are Interested 1n thts un1que career opportumty,
please wnte, call or fax Bob De Laurentia, SnaJHln 'Tholl
Company, 61 Mel.- Avo., Berxenfleld, NJ 07621;
Pboae: (800) 376-0165; Fu: (800) 37~7.
CHRISTMAS SALE !AUCTION!
Friday, December 13th at 7:00 p.m.
AMVETS POST 123
IN GALLIPOLIS
Come and Join us for some great
bargains to put undemeath your
Christmas Tree such as Pentium
Computers, Camcorders, Collector
dolls, quilts, toys, stereos,
telephones, VCRs, and 100's of
Items as seen as on the
national shop at home channels.
All major credit cards accepted.
For more Info call Crowder Wholesale
(304-975-8107)
Auctioneer Carl Crowder 11243
ES'I'Aft IUC'riOI
Sat. •c.l4,
I:• a.m.
Oak Stant front duk 3 pc LR suite sofa·love seet & chair
big mans recllnet, zenith 25" color Tv w/remote tlka new,
marble top end table, quality end tables early 2 drawer
walnut drop leaf night etan4, 3pe walnut BR suite maple twin
bed chests, trunk, beautiful "Hartford Hoosa· Hard rock
maple wlndaor &lyle OR 8Uited • tatrl • 6 chalno & china hard
roclt maple corner cuoboard tea cart, eamsung microwava
oven whlrlpool18 2 CF refrigerator toke new wltlripool gas
range, like new, whirlpool waslier & dryer Md more
01 •IIWAIIE & MISC
Milk gt- plaller w/emboaed lions & geese Btenko Glass
Goebel (sore thumb), otag glen owlt, red roosters peppy trail
dllhuleCI - . 1 cUll & aaucers, steins, homo Interior vases
col
Jon ol belltt coo coo cloclt & others ott tamps wooden
atephanll piutlc wind up santa old quths hnens small
khchen appliance• revere ware pots & pans & others
oncyciopodlu old books hoover eweeper yellow crock
corn plenter cow bell & more
TOOLS & IIISC
Craftsman lll!nder. Crelllman router B & D Circular saw B &
D 1/2"k Drill. drlllo, oak machinist tool box carpente11 tool
box, antique tool box grind wheel blnclt grinder - k bench,
boll & nut bins tun, quallly hend tools some old tools
tool boxes, cordi llltop vac, gerden tools wheel bartow step
lodder It ft Ext Lltdder, 3·5 lawn mower like new plus more
AuCtion Conducted B~
Addtson Community
'
A spec1al thanks to everyone who helped
and prayers, 1n any way 1n our loss of a
loved one
Wlfa, Donna
& daughter, Darlene
Delivery
•tartlnt •• f225
LicenMcl DletHien or
and Cremeens Funeral Home, and the
Free atinuatew
Complete paint Jollo
Po•Hion Open: WIC
HMith Pror.alon•l:
Located atlhll Auction Center on Fit 33 '" Mason wv due to
pooelbte weethttr condotlons we heve moved lhe Estate o1
David Wnahl from Point Pleasant wv to 1111 auction <enter
In Malon. WI
Hall's
Auto Body
Plekup 4
Http Wanted
& Summer, Holzer
and Judy Davis, Rav Larry Lemley,
Verman1, and staff Mary
Sale & Auction
Sat., Dtc. 14 ·11:00 a.m.
St. Peters Eplacopal Church
541 2nd Ave., Galllpolla, OH
ALictlonHr'a Note/Terma/Dirtetlona
110
Card ot Thana
1-800-458-9990
Public
I:=::;::=-::-==::::w.:,::.:_:
Public Sale lo Auction
Hospice,
and s1ngers Sharon Elbtn and her molher
mformauon
, . ...., . .
card of Thanks
Shelmen l Roberts,
whO puaed ftl!j
December 7 1982
oo",r,:::, .J;;..;C.;:rcl:;:of:=Than:;;::0:;:;.1
Irregular n.W Joana 11
us•d work panll and sl I
$1 00 Quodo 132 Bullornut Pa
""'""Cillo
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Flepa11id New & Rebuilt In Stock
Call Attn Evana, 1-800 537 0521.
••
•
304
LOG HOMES
Miscellaneous
Merchandise
Slab Wood CT.tt To Preferred
leng1h '31 Truck LGad Dlfiw
-.114 211-1102.
or :JJ•-875-5053
Firewood lor ule l30flold you
pick UP, 614 1411-3027
lltn:ha'ldl..
Surplus Army CamDUftage Cloth
Sunquoat Pro 11 S WOII Sy11om 1ng (Insulated cov ...alls brown
Tanning Bed Used 2 Summttl (luck Dlbs $35) Slm Somtr
Elctlltnt Condition 1!114 448 VIlle I by sandyvtlle Post Office
4112
Fr~day.Sundey Noon 5 OOpm
Other dar• call 304 273 "55
WOlFF TANNING BEDS
(.ill ..... Slz"l
Tan AIHoml
Bur DIRECT and SAVE I
Cotm'ltfdDtiome L.lrlts From
Zenllh 27 Inch Stereo Console
StQ9 00
TV
1270 D5 Sylvania 211 Inch
Low llontliv ParmontJ FREE
Slereo
Conaolt TV 1289 95
Calor Caooloa Co~ TODAY
Small Ktnmort Microwave
1 1100-&02 1305
14& iS Large Ktnmore Ml
Ventlaaa gil htatara starting at crowave 179 95 Quasar t.tl
$129 ~5 I up Sldora Equipment crOMve MD 05 HoiTMi C 0 Play
er $54 05 Kicker Box lSD 95 A
304 675-7421
Mlllmettr RCA Camcorder
WHITE B METAL OETECTORI 1215 g5 200 Channol Scanner
Ron Allison 1210 Second Ave 50 Channel Scanner 2 Hand
Held Scanners Caller I D 2 Car
nue Gallipolis Oh io 814 4A.8
Stereo Amps J&B Technology
43311
372 Sta• Route 180 GallpoRe.
Cerd of Thang
F'lra waod ttr ule 304 875-7837
Buy or sell R1venne Antiques O.k Unden Clock Doll FurniiUft
1124 E Mam Street on At 124 OoM' 8t4oUI5 •
Pomeroy Hours M T w 10 oo
a m to 6 00 p m Sunday 1 00 to
6 00 P m eu 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner
540
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gollon
Upright Ron Evano Entt<ptlaol
-Ohio, 1 -537.asa.
"A Thank You"
Room• tor rent week or monEtt
Stlitllng 01 $1 20/mo Gotha Hotol
Household
Goods
Sw vet Rock&ra And Otro
man Ellcellent Cond lt1on 1150
Tralter lor Rent Beautllul River F1sher GrandPa Woodburnlng
View Kaneuga Foster's Mob1le Stove With Accessor ies $250
Home Park, 814-441 0181
01, 44G 1168
Two 2 Badlooms $150 $240 Plus Appliances
Recondi11oned
O.poalt Near NGHS Stove Rtt Wuhera Dryers Ra ngn Refn
trloer'aiOt Wltlt' Tra&h PI d New graton 90 Day Guarantee!
Palnt, Newly Aernodltd 81A. 388- French C ly Maytag 614 4411
7795
8371
440
Apartments
Coumry Furn lure 304 675 8820
Rt 2 N Bmlle! Pt Pleasant WV
lOr Rent
Tues.Sat 9-8 Sun 1 1 5
1 and 2 bectfoom apartmentt, fur
USED APPLIANCES
nlthed and untutnlahecf HCUflty GOOD
Wastten
dryers relngeratora
dtpDIIt requued no pets 614 range• Skagg!
Appliances 78
1192 2218
V1ne Street Calleu 44&.7398
2 Bedrooms Bath L1V1ng Room 1 800-499-3499
Kitchen Dining Area All Electrtc
larQ& Selecbon 01 CarPI( Rem In
Carport $425/Uc 0eFXJSII 614 Slack
Carpet & Vmyl $8.00 Vtf &
245-5053
Up Mollohan Carpets eu 4411
2bdrm apts total electric ap 7444
pl11nces furntslled laundry room New Q'ueen s 1ze g01 Spnng &
t.cllitiea. don to tcllooltn town Manress 1200 614 256..4$593.
AppUCitiOM avalllble II 1/lllagt
GrHn Aplt 14g or call 814 892 Used Furniture 130 Butavdla P1ke
3711 EOH
Christmas G Its Old M 1 l~ Caps
Sweepers Hand and Eleclflc
3 Room. furntlhed apt ntce loca Clockt t.hcrowa 111 • Carts ar
11on no children raferencts & Bookcaa•t Good Couchea
depolltteqUired 304-675- 1090
Ch11r1 Sofa Tables. Mcrowaves
Gl •••war. Cook'. J.r. H. ur.
Furnl. •td
E-·-cy
"20
Four•
•
u• 10 4 81 • .....-..
.lvtnul" GIM1pol11....,,*._.._IMo
Ulll
-~ r!K
,._...
ltlll Paid 81A. 446 3844 After 7 Whirlpool Orytf' $7S Wturlpool
P.M
Dryer $95 G E Washer 1115 G E
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT Electric Range 30 Inch 195 30
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON lneh Electr c Range While $95
ESTATES 52 Weatwooc:l Or ve Ralngera1or Apartment S1zt At
from 12•• ro 1315 Walk to shop monu~ $95 Refngerator Wh 1te 2
& movlll Call 814 4<46 2568 Door 195 G E Frost Free Refng
Equal Ho&.iJing0pporiUn1ry
era tor S 150 G E S1de By S de
N1ce $,95 G E Rtlrlgerator New
8Hch SL Middleport, 2 bec:lroom Model 1 Year Warrna 1y 1350 30
turnllhed apt utdttte& pad De Inch Gas Range Whue $150
poilt & rererences 30A. 882 Gas Range 36 Inch Almond Nce
:25::51!6:::.._ _:.._ _ _ _ _ _ 1$175 Wathe1 Whlflpoct Heavy
Duty Was S225 Now $205 1 Year
Oon"t let This One SUp Byll SmaM Warran1y Dryer Wh~rlpool Heavy
0'1• Bedroom Wnh lots Of Er Duty 1 Year Warranty 1205
tras Wnhtr Otyet Stove Fng Skaggs ~ppltances 76 V1ne
lncludlc:l We Pay Waler ~nd Street Galhpoha 6U 446 7398
Garb1ge Very Clean No 1 800 499 3A99
Smokers No PEI!I 1300 DepOSit,
I3501Mo 614 u6 no5 614 530
Antiques
sell
Very nlct 1&85 14x70 wllh 2
baths Large Island kttchen with
poliO door Call 81~ 305-11821 olio
Personals
2 Bedroom Trailer Eleclrlc: Hat
Cl<r School DlatrlcJ Dot>o~t fie.
qulrec:l Rtfttencet No Ptts. 114
Furnished
Rooms
~ MUll
Pt'une 814 448 35A7
Expenenced OTR Onvers & Own
er 'Operalon Lease Purchase
~atlable 800 457 2349
enceo Aoquorod 81...aaa.i1G2
450
,270
Sectional Home 60x2• 3 BR 2
Bath 2 LA 1 On Aenllc:l lot
BULLETIN BOARD
2 Bac:lroom 1 ,2 Bath Uobllt
Homo, lbu Por lldlliol, & Dopo•
It In l'oriOt ArM 3275/llo Ro4lr
... -.
~e1•1l49-2~7
SchUll 12X65 falf cond 2br re
fngerator stove & 2 w ndow ac
$2 800 firm 304-875-3000
0rNet'S
ta lsi ECKMI Ier 800.611 6636
Ta,a TownhOuse Apartments
Very Specious .2 BedrDOms 2
Floooa, CA 1 112 loll Futly Cor
potod Adult Pool & Bolly Pool
Patio Slart t340JMo No Pata
L - Pllll -~ Dopotot lie
quJrotl, 114-317
446 3807
Fl'll dtWtfy & IMUp.
2 Bedroom tr111ler tor rent Galli
l1m1ted Offetl 19Q7 doubfew1d1 pol11 Fetty ....._-304-175-7552
460 Space for Rent
3bt 2batn I 1 7H down 12781 2 Bedroom Trailer In Smlll Tta.ilar
month Fret delivery I aetup Park Oeposlr & References All Mobltt Home Space On 141
1981 Toyolll Cellca A.utomattc
~~ ~~=d Homes Nitro quw.d Phone 81 ""448-1104
Excellent Condition 6U 446
MelQI COt,fnty approxlmatetr, z1 2 Bedroom ttall8f you PITY ut1h· 1810
acrea with view OhiO Rver ties 1100 deposit references
470 Wanted to Rent
Woodec:l with po111blt logging nc pets. 304-875-2535.
gas TPC Wllter 1893 t<tntLICklan 2 bedroom elactnc heat, 2 m!l&l Bu1ldlng Basement Or Garage
mobllo 11omt 80X14 2 bedroom out of RuUand on Now Lima Ad Phone 61,...441.Q835
.belh I 112 Ctnlral IMr range r• e 14 74 2 2103 or61.( 742 2421
fnger&.tOf & other adds one own
MERCHANDISE
'er ITIJII aee cal lor appointment, Mobile Home For Rent 614 -«6
room. Includes 6 monlt'ls FREE lot
lltn:handiM
COIIflji,RI ANO IAVI IUIIII· a.... ltaa llattro11 • Box
Ill IUPIII 11100111 141, Sprif1p HI c..._ . . Com.
IANYO CANIITIIII Ill Tlltt -$100,11.....,1
ITAIIII Rocon4 from Utt
logo lltlto Rtt>ll< lt<Yice For Cltloen ltH W . - With All
All Wodell u..d V.CI GrHI Acctaurl•s
114 441 2741
Amttlcan Floot Care 417 lee· E..._
tn Bolltpollo Coli 114 RCA zr St«oo Color T¥ NOll
Twin RNera Towtr now accepting ond a..
4553 10 5 Open Saturday Entertllinment Cenltr Cabinet
appltcooona tor tilt HUD aubokf. 448
lztd apt for elderly and ha.ndl 10 2
171, E-110 IIIIa IIIlO T-n
Conct9t8 & Aal~ IIPfiC Tanks
lea Turntable t21 All Excellent
EOH 304-1175-8171
300 Thru 2 000 Gallon• Ron Condllton, .,......_11115.
Verr .,.. ground floor opanmont
In qultt autroundln!' located Event Ent..-prlau. Jackson OH AttriOifiiOrt 810¥11 Wllhlfl
lhrtt mites !rom lhl RIMtlluuood ~aoo 537-8528
And Drr••a. All Rocondltlonod
Altc111o Bri<lp '" Ohio CooqJ!ollly Cullom Wadt As~ Cabtntt And GauranaaMt 1100 And Up
Dooro Solid Aah Crown Docor WIIDolvotet . .IIIIU1
lwolhor
u t -lind
- latgo
-"""'wtll1
dlah
ltl1chon
all Golcton Oak .~ooo-.
2 & 3 bedroom mobUt homtt OI>PHancoa Nlc. lloll1 WJII1Io'f0 85" TOll,~ 0oop, En-.... -. Sonta 1 Chrlotmao TrHa 11101
attowtr tara• ma11er bedroom Kltchon. Don, LO¥Oir Any Room AooloiiO. 8 1 +~5-5!16.
atartlng at S2eO 1300 MWtr •
t• and tr111h lncludH. 814-892 wllh 1 workfno tlrepiiiCe Living - 1 NICo Fof Clwlllm01111.. Sotra Aolrlgorator t100 114
ar~a hu Iota of raom At lllt80
~
.....172.11+-1
1:2~1~~~-------------- por ,.., utlltloo 1 - A
2 Bodtoom Moblla Homo Clou deposit ot $400 It t~qutred For
To GOihpolla $275/Mo lncludea mo'• tntormalion call e 1" 843W.ter $200 DopoJI!t Aolot...,.. 5343ond-81o4-~.8e()S
Buy In Dtctmber No Paymant
Until March or t917 E z Fl,.nc
lng call tho Finan.. line 1 800
251 5070 AI Homoa on SolO frH
DoiYoty and Set Ut>
llllciiMd...
lll4in:lwldlll
-81103
Babyainer naeded starling Jan
1&r 2 or 3 days a week mull be
a non smoker relere nces re
qulred cau Xl4-67&-..,.6
LOST Black lab brown & while J & 0 s Auto Pans Buy1ng sal
Enghsh Setter Pia n Valley Ad vage veh1ctes Sell ng parts 304 HOME COMPUTER USERS
REWARD For the convict1on REWARD! 304 895-3333 or 30 4 773 5033
NEEDED $45 000 mcame po
leading to who slOie lomaie Dal 522 1077
tent1al
1 800 513 4343 ElU B
Top do llar ant1ques furnl!ure
mat an pup'" Clifton 304l 77 3 lcJSt black! wt}ile male Australian glass ch na cloc~s gold Sliver 9368 Call For Dela Is
~5~291:....--------1 Shepherd Jound full blooded fe co ns warcnes es1a1es old stone Immediate open"'oa br Plrl nrne
male Cell & Ror Jones VICIOIIY J&rs old blue & wn te d1shes old RN Must bt available for all
3D Announcements
514 992 2800
wood boxes m k bottles Me1gs ahllts. benefll package ava1lable
No tlunung or trespaumg on lost three year old fermle Collte County Advert se men! Osby lncludmg msuranca 401 K plan
Delmar and Deanna Oav s lands ~ Fancy~ lost 1212196 good tem Martin 614 992 7441
vacatiOn and more Please conUmgk Galha V1n10n Co No mw perament Rae neJ Syracuse v
Wanted To Buy l tile Tykes tact lisa let AOON at Pint
slon of alf space or pnYacy by c1nlry 614~6583
Kitchen
Set Workshop Play crest Care Cent« 01.,.....7112
vldeo phone 1aps airplanes ve
houn
Possible
~ny Other Little
hicles s.atellte Slay off day and Lost Would The Person Wtlo
Job Opporru"<r
ntght 1/lola!ors Will be prosecut P eked Up My Oog A 4 tb York e Tyke Tors Please Call 614 245 Hair StyliSI And Na11 Techn e~an
5887
Needed Call614 448 69511 For
ed 12 5-118
In Vmton Aree Pleas, Return
MOfelnfonr.bon
Family
Oeva.sraled
W
II
G1ve
Re
Wanted
To
Buy
We
Buy
A
utos
No hunrlng or trespaas1ng on the ward No Oues11ons Asked 614 Any Condi!IDO. 6t4 388 9062 Or
1 MIGhael Faw properly located at 380
licensed Managtng Cosmttolo
9686
614 446 PART
~1tt And E•perleneec:l Nail Tech
j Side Hll Rd Rutland Oh
Wa nled f'oot Powered Sc roll Stnd Re&ume To P.O Box 74t
70
Yard Sale
J No nt1n11ng or trespass ng on
Gathpolls, OH 45831
Saw
814 448.{)6()9
Chatles Yost farms Votators
be prosecu1ed Slay oil dar and
Long Term Care Nuratng fac1ht)'
Gallipolis
St1k1ng Enthualaat1c Ohio State
n19hl
EMPLOYMENT
& VIcinity
Tasted Nune Aides Excellent
We process deer make h1ckory
SERVICES
Benef11 Jlac~age Including Vaca
smoked hams trail bologna pep. All Ya rd Sales Must Be Pa1d In
tlon Chnttm11 Club. 401K Plan
peron1 jerky summer sausage Advance DEADLIN E 2 00 p m
lnltuance ~nd More Sian On
Cooler kept clean samtary Hunt the day befo re the ad s to ru n
Bonus Please Apply At Pinecrest
Help Wanted
~ ~ng suppt es hcense & game Sunday ed111on 2 00 p m Fr day 11
Cllle Cenler 170 Pineetnt Drrw
check statiOn CAAWFQAQ s Hen Monday edn on 10 oo am Sat
Gallpohe..
derson WV
urday
BANKING
MED~HOME HEALtH AQENCY
40
Giveaway
Oh10
Valley
Ba~~~k
,~
'
';::;·~~:~,:
E
~;x
;
;llmma<l
ate Open.ngs
TtNt Gal
per enced And
llpah& /Point
PleasantInArea
Art
t
Pomeroy,
als For Three U
Ava1labla Wth Uedi Home Heallh
t 112 Sponger Span1el & 112 Temef
Middleport
pupptea to good home cute
In Our OperaTions Fac I ty Pre Agency Wt Need lndiYidUalt
ltulfr & iuor 304 675-5630
'¥ d ng Genetous Benehts Pa ck
Who Ha\'e Tht Exptr11nce And
& VIcinity
aoe Inc ud ng 401(k) Ret rement Comm tment To Succeed In The
'! 9 Parr Lab pups B weeks old s Al t Vard Sates Mus t Be Pad In 2 Pos aons PROOF OPER4TOR Home Health Industry Medl
males 4 females black & shad Ac:lvance Dead hne 1 OOpm the
1 Day Sh h M F 815 5 15
Home Health Prov1des Skilled
~ ed tan J04-675-3Q3.11
day before the ad 1.1 to run Sun
Nunes Home Health Aldes
Hosp1ct Mtd1c11 Equipment
9 Pupp1es reall~ pretty part day & Monday edH on 1 OOpm 9 ;,_,Evenlng Shift M F 12 00
Job Requ rements
Homemakers And Other Great
Seagle m1x 4 months old 304 Fndar
Self Mo!Naled IJ)ependabl&
Programa Our "One Can DoH It
675 1975 or 304-675 3129
On the T n Mddleport Oh at old •• Analyze
/Solve Transacbonl
An• Concept II Truly Unlqut And
R
verDoal
Monday
Fr
day
10am
Alaskan Husky Reg1 ste red 4pm brand new cloth nQ & snoes • Perform Repeuwe Tuks
Is Unmatched II Vou Have The
SPaYed 614 256 1274
10 Key Addtn n Expenence A Necessary Expenence And
boys ctoth.ng tots ol msc
"
lookrntl For A Future Med1
Pkls 1
f rewood Already Cut And In SO
Home Health Is The Answer We
Public Sale
Salary Depends On Expenence Need The Foliowtng Enlhuslaallc
I•k:s:::6::1:_:.._:388=..84=.:.7:;2- - - 1 ~L::_:
• Mer11 Bonus
Individual&
and Auction
Fra Chr Simas Pupp1es To A
1 Posol~n COMPUTER
EXPERIENCED HOME HEALtH
GoDdHornel 614-388 8815
OPERATOR
SKILLED /PSYCH AN
• 1 Evemng Shiff MF 12 00 9 00
• Must Haw At Least 1Year
Free Chnstmas K111ens 614 u8
Job Requ~rements
Homt Heallf'l
0016
Rrck Pearson Aucuon Company
5etf Mowat~ IOependable
Expen«''CC'
lUll 1me a uct10neer compleTe CorrQUte F1gures And Anatrze
• Responllbll For Oel..-y 01
Fre& Firewood Easy Acceu a ~lei on se1v ce
Licensed • Enrer Commands lmo Computer
Medica!And~Paychlatrlc
Tops From last Vear 6t4 446 t~e& Oh o & West Vrg n a 304 1. oy~"""
Sotvicea
9346
773 5785 Or 304 773 5447
• Gl1dUIII Of An Approved
Male Dwarf Rabb 11 61 4 388 90 Wanted to Buy
~~Of
9123
Nurlllng
•OHIWVL1Ut11t
Complete Household Or Estates!
Pupp es Mother'' redtwhlte co Anr Type or Furn tu re ~ ppt anc
Avenue
EXPERIENCED HOME HEALtH
oper rased Beagle 30 4 675 es An tques Etc Also Appra sal
Ot;o
ICNA
~
Ava lablel61 4 379 2720
Please Call Mr Ph liP • High SchxolAIDE
Education
At 814 445 2631 Or • 1 Year Previous Experience AI
We maranertBoxer pups 1 mate ... b 1 T 0 11 All u S S 1
Will b• teadr ,2121 ,.. so ute .op o ar
To HA OeportmenL A Nurses Aldt In A Stall Ll
1 fe ml.le
,.
ver And Gold Coms Proolsets
•••·" ·'"·'"' Box 2•0 Gallt ctnN Cart Setting
304 675 1671 aher 5pm
D amonds Ant que Jewelry Gold
CONTRACT POSITIONS
60 Lost and Found
A ng s Pre 1930 us Curoency
MSW
Sterl ng Etc Acqu st ons Jewelry
AEGISTEREO OtEnnAN
FOUNP 2 Small dogs n Mason
MTS Com Shop 151 Second
PT IAT lOT
Call 304 773 S7A8 to descnbe Avenue Gathpols 614 446 2842
If Yo11 1-laYt The Abovt EKpttl
am to pay for ad
Clean tate Model Cars Or
ence And Want To a. Consid
ered For An lntervtew Call Tht
Lost mate m nature
Trucks 1990 Models Or Newe1
'"JSsfng 12/4196 Lucky
Smith Bu1ck Pont1ac 1900 East
Human Ruourc• Managtr AI
814 633 5848
Rd v1t:in ty reward call 6.~.•; I ern Avenue Gall polls
EO£
Jeflet's. 614 g92 5232
005
for Rtnt
Earn 11 000 WHklr Stun1ng En
vetopea AI Komt Start How No
Expenence FrH Supplies Info
No Obllgat10<1 Sond LSASE Ta
ACE Dot>< 1351 Box 5!37 Ilia
mond llllt CA 1111&.
Rep.
TRUCKING
-----------------------~------------------------------------~ Fla1tfed
~~·SAMMONS
/Spect&IIZed Recruiting
90
...... --...-.....- • Page D5
j;4~1io~Hou~•;;s~tor~R~,nt~~440~=:A~IP~•~b~i"';"'~;,~=ji540~ill~114~c~tl~lln;;~et~a~us;§:~540~~~~~~-;c~ll~la~..o~u~s~TI540~~·u~llct~iiii~MOU;;~,~~540~=ii.~~~~~~IC~s~,_~.,._~~m~IOI~~yl
Copper futures fall on
Greenspan comments
'
Pomeroy •lllclclleport • GIIHipolls, Ott • Point Pleaant, WV
Don Ours Racing, Owners Don & GIOIIa Ours,
would like to thank the following people for
making their 1998 race 8111801'1 auch a great
IUCcelle
eu~ile
Company
for thBir
lpONOI'Ihlp, Ray Uvlngiton, Point Pleasant,
VN fOr doing a auparlor
or !~riving, Sharman
on
lob
Gerlich, New Haven, VN & Tim Haaa, Scolt
Depot, VN u thaW engine builders We are
looking fotward to another auccesslul racing
eeamln 1997
FUIINIT\IIIE
IICI M'l•l IUCtial CO. ~se
Lunch Mason, '1/'N
Res1dence (304) 773·5785 or Aucl1on
Center (304) 773·5447
Exacutrix Vicki L Wamsley
Terms Cash or Chack with
1.0
Not Responsible for accidents or 1088 of property
�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolle, OH • Point Pteaunt, WV
Page06•
5SO
560
Building
Petalor
Sale
=-~~~~~~~':::':~~
Cop~r Note Bt•gle Pup, 3
, tewtf P4P*I, wu'ld· Montt'lt Old, S50, G1 ... 44&-789e
...,~·--· ,..: .: tiC. Claude Wtnltfl,
Ria Gr•nde, OH Cell Cl14 -245· Dalmattona. Stlots. No Papert,
560
sale
Pets tor
710 Autoa tor Sale
ItO SAYINGS! 0% Financ:ing On
Ownttt Manuel, Projtcf Car,
Hl70 CMIIIIIC Convenlbfe. WI
New John Deere tia~ Equipment
fo r 3& Womtt&. Purchaae A Ntw
5000 Series •o To 73 HP John
S100, 148 Charnberlane Bidwett, 0Hfe TI'8C'Iot At The s.me Time
814 -381-8822.
And Gel 0% For 3e Months Or
Oo~rm.n Pup1 AKC Male1, Fe- 3· 9% For eo Mon1tta. Car.
nwlel, 111 Sholli, 9 Weeks $200, mict'w.trs hrm I lawn Gallipol II,
lt2t.
Black Female, To Good Home ~~~t~!~ · ••e - 2•t2 Or 1·800·
Hou-....n. e1 ..381-2126.
1:----:--:------
e-Full81oododCnowChow
Puppl11. $50 Each, 614-448·
em
Ferguson 30 With New s· Bush
Jack Rut~eU Terrier + Rottweiler Hog Scraper Blade. And Disca.
A Groom Shop -Pet Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Ba th. Don
Sh. .tl. 373 Georges Creek Rd.
814-448.0231 .
Had Shots, Could Hold fa·r Excell ent Cond111on, &U -448 ·
Christmas, 614-379·2563 Even· !778.
lng•
ABA ·f'tOilt&r&d American bulldog
pupp~, female , first sho ts &
MlntahHt Schnauzers, AKC ,
shots and wormed; also toy Poodies. champ ion bloodlines, e t4667-3404.
wormtd, like "Chance" in movie,
JiofMWild 8ounct. 614-582·1625.
Adorable Boston T&Jrier Puppies,
Just ~Time For Christmas! Now
Taking Deposil, 814-388-9325 Or
At<C Chihuahua Puppies, Born
814-388-0413.
11/21118, 1 Ftmale, 2 Malta,
1350, Otposil Wil Hold, 81 ..38804102.
AKC German Shephard Puppies,
Pets Plus, Silver Bridge Plaza.
(10% Off Ewny Thing, Every Day~
8H-«1 ·0770.
~~~~~~~~:=~
AKC Regiatered •
Fo r Christmas,
Puppy Palace Kennels, Boarding,
Srud Serv1ce Pup~es, Grooming,
$lS0..3CM..el5-n1, _
Buy, Sell & Trade, All -Breeds.
Paymen ts Welcome , 614 · 388 0429.
AKC German Shepherd pups tor
ta'-. top German bloodlines, par-
Two lull blooded m1niature C0U1t
puppieS, one male. on& lemi11e,
S1 2S'ea., 614· 742-2050.
Yellow Cot~ati el, 6 112 month's:
blue Cockatiel, 6 112 rmnths; talking Mynah bird ; large cages, ask
for details at .,dult Care Home,
614·992-5042.
.
tnt• OFA Cer1ilied and on prem 1181, 814·582-5930:
AKC Reglatered Ch•nese Sl\arpel
!*Pl. loll of wrinklea, tint shots
" " " - · 614·949·2126.
AKC Registered Chocolate Lab
Pupa, Roady Oocember 5th, 111
Sholl Wormed, Vet Checked,
570
1250. 81>1-446-0229.
AKC Rtgialered Chow Chow
Puppiea, With 30 Generation
P.digrH, t1 Weeka Of Age , Paren11 On 'Premlse1. 1st Shors &
Musical
Instruments
Wo<mod, Aa"'no $225, Price No- 2:!00.
·
----------
golioblo, el4-«1-ll662.
SALE : CONSOLE PIANO
I~··~~·~n,sib!l!•_P~
AKC Registered Oalmalian puP·
piea, MYtn weeks okl, firsl shots
iond wormed. szoo. 614-992-5116
1
atw epm or anytime weekends.
268-6218.
AKC ReGistered female whire Siberian liusky, , 112 years old,
Wanred To
On
I.H. Cub with belly mower 8"x12"
tra il er, 2 axleS. 304·895-3,441 at,
1er 4:00pm.
630
Livestock
· h a Old ,
2 Fema 1e G oa 1s, ·9 ..
MOnt
Great Will'l Kids Or 4· H Project!
Chocolate/White, Call 9 A.M. · 5
P.M . 614-446·941e: Or 8 P.M. -10
P.M.6 14-446-3887.
2 Western Horse Saddles, 1
Pony Saddle, New Pony Wagon, '
614-446 -2222.
1
"•MERRY CHRISTMAS'"'
Henry E. Cleland Jr..99Z..2259
34 Horse Power 4x4 D•e;oel Trac·
tDf $8,795, Massey Ferguson 135 .
Dlesel $4,995 : Ford a N $2,595:
Gravi t~ Bed Wagon, $295. 614·
286·6522.
'
4508 Dozer With A B Way Blade,
,968 Ford Tru ck, Trailer, Tractor
And Equi~t, 614·256-1274.
Agco· A.IIis tractor specials'. <1660
2wd, 52PTO ·hp, radial lires, ,
remote valve, 12 sl)eed Svm;ho
trans. ., year or 4,000 hour drive
train wa rranty..World famous air
cooled diesel. S 1s,goo. 4wd
equipped same way $19.000. Did
you know that 11 takes 6 u&able
hp to run a watch pump tooling
system? Keefer's Service Center
St At87Leon,WV 304-895-3874.
.
Office ................... ~ ...... 99Z..2259
1182 GMC Solo;l Mini -Von XT,
1817 Hondo XRIOR LOOks Good,
Runo Good. $750, 080 814-4411·
11151.
.
=:.
KENNETH AIISBAAY, PH. 245-AS5
WIWS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 441-1131
cond., $1,200. 304·875·
1003 Yamaha 100 Motorc., .clt.
1800; Fue Oil Stg~r Stow S1~.
LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
Hay & Grain
Residentl al or commercial wirinQ,
new sltMct or rtpaira. Master Li·
eensed electrician. Ridtnour .
Electrlcel , WV000306: 304 ·875·
1186.
lilttime Memberal'lip, 614 ·3881100.
Resident lil Or Commercial WirIng, New Serv1ce Or Repa irs. u.
censed E!ecrrlc ian. Welsh ElectriC 614·446 -9950 , Ga llipol is,
32' 1084 Skylark with ~ereened in
porch Md uriUry bU~ding, on 101 in
Q!t,o
last Chanc:e-AIIalla Her Rolls
Only-Morgan Farm Rt35 304·937-
2018.
TRANSPORTATION
71 0
Autos lor Sale
'82 Ford Taurus Gl, V·8 au IOmatic, PS. PW, air, loaded, looks
and runs good, high miles, $1200,
6 , 4-247-4292.
.
446-1066
RACINE- Older Two s1ory frame home, living
TO LAST A
All
Brick custom bul~ home with a Spanish Design. Court
Yard entry ·to this great 4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths,
formal living rm , w/dlning area. Equipped knchen
w/eat-ln-area. In ground pool , plllio and gazebo. 2 car
attached garage plus 25'x31' bam. Cement circle
drive. 2 ac. MIL VIrginia L Smith 388 8826.
room, dining room , kitchen, 4 -5 bedroomS, 2
baths. new shingle roof, carpet interior, 2 car
garage, original woodwork, vjpyl siding, patio,
appliance . Nice location. ln·great caridition!l
ASKING $89,000
REALTORS:
floor older remodeled home
with vinyl siding , has 2 bedrooms, kitchen,
dining room, living room , 1 bath, lots of closet
space. Laundry· room w ith washe r & dryer,
643·5283.
1
~-
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!! No reasonable
offer refusod!l This proper1y located jusl off
:ffilttlttttl
'
Small yard to maintain. Clo~e to schools and
"-t
ASKING $36,500
UNION TERRACE· 3.945z_acres o f nice
building lo1s. ASKING $16,900
wJIOtl Of oak catMnlll, basement
W/famlty tm. & bedroom, outllde
entry to an attov. ground pool ,
Storage blda . 2 car aU1ched
.
-or =KU
ramp on Raccoon Crtft &
parking for vour boat tralktr.
Great . Spot.
518,000.00 VLS ~.
lleoullfultotto build 'fOil'12011 HANDY IIlAH IIPEC:IAL 3
10
. - t Call
bodn!Oma, 1 1>1111, u11111y , _ up. Patty Hays
Need 1 11111e flnllh- p11co II 12005 NEW
LISTING
~41,500. 8n8 u-.PJ<.
Remodeled 1973 12 • a~·
tto10 VEAV NtCE LJnLE Starduat mobile home wltfl
COTTAGE 2 bedroom, 1 ba1h, e•pando. 3 BR'a, largo ll¥lna
washer & dryw hoo6l up on 1 IC. room. SHuated on 1 IC. rM wtdl
PriCe II right 131 ,000. Call Etta a hac* up lor anoti!Or mobile
~~
h
J 11 10 mlnU1H -m
-CE FOR REAL LIVINGSome dllcrlmlnallng lamlty will
1ake priOo owning a beautHul
BR1CI< !'lOme. Central toyer enuy
w/extra large moms l!tmugll014.
2800 sq. n. 2 car attached
gara.ge. Elec. H.P. loadl of walkin closeta. Laundry rm ._
, kh .
w/ltland bar. oak cabinet•. an
~ cemtnl - • Y Pld
& walks. HUQ8 deck VLS 388·
=~ ~~~~·OMMERCIAL
US11IIQ.
units. alsoLa,r,oeore"pt, .
bmldgl.or"'/2•
00
lor=
a 24' abOve ground pool. Cell
Cteude for an ~ment.
12 0 1 7
. 1 U 81 N E 8 8
stalrcue. biiCocty, patio In tronl
and beck, Anderson till In
wlndoWI, oak - - · elac.
51.., w1t1t el ~ & o1oek.
Hunllntl and llsltlno llcanse are
equipped wUh dlshwaoher I
dloooaat
. . Cell Patty Hayo 446-
OPPORTUNITY'
ht. pump, central air, kitchen
Convenience
3884.
aold . Deer and furtcey chec:k
station . Owner wants to
retire .call Etta today tor more
-E
lrt10rmlliort.
12020 NEW LISTING· 1 1/2
story house with 2·3 8R'e·& 2
baths. Nice size kNclten w/refrlo,
·
STOR't . range & microwave. Full
l.oea1e<lnear RIO Grande. besemenl, utility room, family nn.
4 bedrms, 2 1/2 baths, lovely & Ul. Gas heal, """""" llr. Nice
living rm, formal dining rm, 26' kit , large lot. 1 car garage. Porcl'l
w/eat In apace, family rm, also wtth swing. I..Dcatld on 4th Ave.
Rec. rm, 2 ac, Mit Only 3 yrs. $44,900. Call Patty Hlyt 446·
old. Why build hen this can be 3884.
boughl for $42. per sq. II . , .f t031 NEW USTING ·WHAT A
12021 COLONIAL 2
$120.000.00
· GREAT HOMEI 3 BA, 3 bllh
12034 EXCEPTION~LLV Frame I Brick split tevel. New
SMART we highly recommend roof I hot pump In 13, ntW hOI
3/4 B home. Approximately 4.5 you 188 this ranch home before water heater, LR, OR, Fam. Am.,
miles out of Vinton. Ohio. If you ·, you buy. BuHI:In 1991 . 3 bedrms, . Rec. rm., utility rm., large eat ln
are Into country tivlng this COUk1
1 112 baths, Huge kit. w/oak 'kh~han wllpls of storage space,
be for you. It won't laat /c;!ng.
cabinets, 2 car attached garage. finished basement . Thll Ia a
110t4 HOW ABOUT. THIS s Acre• mfl wtth ueea galore. must ' " ' can Pattr tor your
Perry Twp, Green Schools, . 3/4 IllS 388-811261446 8806.
pt1vate- - Y - . -.
bedrms. 8Mev&l, kit. wJrange & 110tl SECLUDED IN 1HE 12031 NEW L.1ST1NB, WHAT A
ref., Dining rm., tamity rm .. Patio, WOODI26 acres MJL 3 bedrm ., BARGAIN! .._.. ledrm. Brick
2 car garage. Exira 101 fOr mobile
2 sly. Addison area. FREE GAS. home w/2 full batha. Ful dMded
home w/septlc & waw. Reduced
A retreat from the hulll8 & bUStle. basement. wfflxlurts for a 3rd
to $69,900. Vl.S 388--88261~·
can be used tor a hunting camp bath, 1,588 sq. ft. l4)8~1"1. 1,518
6808.
or lUll enjoy a peace1ul qutla life. sq . ft. In basml. mfl. 2' car
11011 PRICE REDUCED
~2pumplnggasweb . VLS
attached garage. This home is
Homesl1et Lakeview Es1ateo L.o4 12033 LOCATION I LOCATION I I greal Hyou need a lo1 ol ~I
5 AI:./ m1l S29,500: LOt 2 •
Great Investment or hOme. Make Call Pany Haya t~ay to see
2.348 ac. mJI $23,900: 4 lots 2.5 an appo1n1men1 10 see this 3 . w1tat a <loii1NIIsl 446-3814.
ac. tii/IS15,000to$18,500.
bedroom 1 112 ba1hs, lull 111Jit. Commercial Bldg. 62
1873 PRIME DEVELOPMENT bosemen1 wnamlly rm & 112 balh. Olive Sl. COmer .locaUon. 1990
1
' •.
Come Seel This Is "So Cu1e"
ASKING $34,900 , ,
.
.••
,
•
NIW USTJNQI A MUST lEE HOIIEI Nice kitchen, 3
bedrooms. locatlld at 1142 "-1 Street In Middleport cbe to
shopping and IIChooltl. Pt1ced at Only $29.000.00 11888
stone flreplece . l=orma dining
rm , very niCe Clbinets in the
kltchen L!'IJ!OB entertaining rf1',
ma~ter ueu~oom is "ReiilY Uttra.
Ultl'll~ . Arpprox. 4500 sq: tf., deck
In the rear. 2 car~~ 1 ac:.
town. VLS 311 1121
H01~
PAillE LOCAT10N In the
Rodney area, •s ac. M/L, 112
~::: .';,~'i.tmem ~~ ~~.~e)'~/s~ream.
eaW/Wil-6ell6
H& &80&
I10M 10 RrH m/1 ot prima
development land . close to
freeway and State Rout:e. Public:
utilities available. Land level ,o
rolling. EKCBIIent tor development
or commercial lJIII. $,55,000 .
Call Pony Hoyo 44&-31114.
~ltlea available, Realtor
owned. call fo~ more
lnfonnatlon.
' 514 Second Ave., GaUipolis, Oh. 45631
Ronny Blackburn, 11roker, Phone: (6141 446-0008
I~ Joe
(ossociate 441·1111
Helen
675·7873
121 ·ACRES MILl SUPER HUNTING LANDI - ·
Call today. 11878
•
' '
•..
.,
ATTRACTIVE CORNEA LOT 6 THIS 3 BI!DIIOOM
RANCH style home. Uvlng
kitchen, laundry and bath.
P81tiaf buement. (Immediate PDIIIIIIOn. 11877
roam,
,
'
,. I'
kilchen. 2 . llvel lois. Call
lodayl $37,000
1876
\
.\
'•
· _.)
.-:e··
Realty
and 45 plus wooded acres.
Fully equipped, kll, 3 BR, 2
BA, so much morel Call at
oncel 1810 REDUCED
S12li,VOO
1
~ MAKE AN OFFER ON THIS
235 ACRE TRACT OF
LAND? You might be
surprizedl Asking price is
$55,000. Ideal hunting land.
()hlo To~ship . IIWVC
'
LOVETT RO.· 25 acre a of land a 14x70 mobile homo wilh
a 10x26 addlllon . Home has 5 bedrooms, II you need
plenty of rpom this is lite place !Of you, has a 2 car garage
FA AMI Over t 07 acres
com(IS wHh lhis one. FIJlCillll
lor livestock, hayfield, lots of
wooded land too. 2 story
home with vinyl siding, heal
pump, 3 bedrooms, balh,
FANCY um..E ·FIND! Super
COUNTRY
SOCIABILITY!
·dining
room, kHchen & more.
aetupl 14'K70' mobile nome
!hal conslats of 3 bedrooms, The key amenities Include, Large barn &
lmmedtate _!l(ll~~~~l
2 batt!~ . Vinyl underpinning, formal living room &
front & rear Porches. One dining each with a
garage delached garage & fireplace. family
bleektop drive. All situated on oversized eat-In kitchen,
INet' t .7 acre lot. Real neat & baths pius two 1/2 baths.
clean. 1130s
..... baSement that is Ideal lor
room, aitached 2 car ll"'·•ge.
c
RCIIIUIE-wtw.t 2 Over 5 acre a with ·
dtu sings situated on Second of purchasing I I
UKI NEW· IIOILE
Awnue· and lots situaled at acres. Immediate
AND EXPANOO UNTI.
Third Avenue . Lots . of Ownet' out of town & wants 30'•>40' metal geraga wHh
pollnlllllllld pollibllitles. Let "SOLD1 1713
concrete noor, large door 18'
uellll you abut this one~
approx. In height In center,
lotMtyl
UTTLE PAICEI For thla 10 wiU selup lor workable
acre m/1 tract of land Aaldng bull!.-. Prnen~ used lor
IIOOifV COMFOATI P~mper price is $7,500, Road
farm machinery & aulo
~ friend• wnh thro w1nner. nice ,.._to btiild
repair. Located on appr01<. 3
SpeQnt• 2 story brick home. 3
...··
1872 acres of level I rolling
ground. Very clean covered
bedrooms, 1.5 beth&, lull
IIMet'net'll. garage, Iota more.
with alfalfa & clover. Thitl
Bd<er ownedf
.
one
will like. 11171
Audrey F. Canaday. Broker
. Mary P. Floyd, 446-3:!83
.· 446-3636•
with e beautiful apartment ove.r head, there's ' a 1BJC30
AFFORDABLE BiliCKI
$35.000 . lmmediare
possessi_onl ·2 Bedrooms
bath, utility room, kitchen .
Newer replacement windows.
Nice level city tot, off street
parking.
11182
25 LOCUST ST.· GAWPOUS
.NEW USTING· 2 bedroom., 1 bath
located on 127 River 51. Roof 5 yrs .•
double pain windows.' large 'toraga
building. 2 Iota eech measure 50x150.
Call us today. $52,900.00
Thla property Ia located Off GIIFflald
Ave. There is 50' of lots 111. 12, 13,
14, 15: all of lots 116, 17, 18, 19, 20.
There is water, electric, and sewer tor
lhla property. You can bull~ your dream
home here and have lots of room .
around you. $20,000
.......,
I~·
.·. .
K
50.1.5t •, -
. .'
,
-.~
~.
Located In city limiis 'there Is an older
horn·e with 2.305 acres along with this
Ia a bee~l View of the river. $49,900
basketball court, 6K10 corn crib·and a 161120putbuilding.
Muot .... $68,900
·
·
Het't'e • nice otarter home, retirement home or rental .
KHchen, living room, 1 bath, and 2 bedrooms downs1alrs.
Could be 3 more upslairs. Basemenl with a separate fruit
cellat. Nice view of the river from the front porch. $18,000
PORTLAND ROAD· Racine- Very nice modular silting on
approx. 2 ~qea of flat ground. Home has cathedral
, ceilings throughout, 2 skylltes, garden tub, fireplace,
salettne, heat pump and central air aN lor.
WAS SM.OOO NOW' SM,OOO
DEXTER· A very private Ntllng with a 1 1/2 &101}' 3
bedroom home sitting on one acre plus 4 lots. Has Slorage
building and many fruit lrelts.
$35,000
HORNER HILL- A live aCft wooded home aile .that has
electric li1d water available. Two loW available lor $7,000
oaoh.
CLELAND HILL RD- A nice country 11811ing- A ten yqr old
ranch style home with wrap •ound porch, heat pump, 3
bedrooma, 2 1/2 car gerage, and barn alttlng on approx. 33
1/31Crt$. Partly wooded and partley puture.
575,000
CLELAND AD- Langavllle 60 acree of lovely rolling land 7
1/2 acres of H In hay·many beiullful homesHes some oalc •
and walnut treea all mineral rlghta Included.
$80,000
bO'frlE TURNER, ltoktr.•.••..•.•.•........~ .•..l92-5192
JERRY SPRADLING .................................. 141-2131
CHARIIEI.E SPRADUNG.:.........................II4t-2131
BEnY JO COWNS ....................................IIZ..Z313
BRENDA JEFFERS.,•••• , ..............................1182·7275
"LIST WITH l BUY FROM THE PEOPLE THAT CARE"
HAYia RIAL DTATI
Jac:k W. Carsey, Rea•or
382 E. 2nd St., Pomeroy, Ohio
Office
(8141 8112·2403 ~
Home ·
9112·2780
OFFIC:E ........................................:•••••.•••••••.• II2-2*
I
v
r:•
·.:
•
.,
with 8 deck s~lal cabinets
windows. and bullt·ln musiC
center. 3 bedrma, 2 batna ,
beautiful tree 11 ac m/t Ck)se to
'
' ';
Real Estate General
,,
$3S 000.00 Call VLS 388 ·
BLACKBURN REALTY
i
windows, fireplace, F.A .. N.G . heat. nice front
porch. Beautiful river view, 3 bedrobms .
t.•
•.-
:::.~ ~~rO:S ~
1201e NEW 1111 Bunohlno 1e·
• 10' Outslllndlng mobile home
•
,••
well maintained home. 1 H 2 story frame .
~~
:..-:
Living rm ., fireplace dln.lng rm.; ·sq. ft.good roof. Owner "'II sell
kh., garage & carpon. Locatect.Jn inwentory ar building separate or
the City of Gallipolis on a quiet togelhar.
street. Mostly retlrecl neighbOrS. 12012 LOCATED ON ... 810
AFFORDABLE. CALL VLS 38&- Older 2 sty. 4 bedrms., 1 bath, 3 . ·:
88261446..&806.
acres m/1 plus a large barn.
woodburner. F.O . furnace, central air, cellar.
Encolsed porches . Some newer carpet and
paneling . Come see this one today! Price
Immediate possesston - 2 car garage and
ufili1y·area in basement Carpet perma payne
'•
, ";
, ,·
LAND 117 Ac, M/L Close to
freeway & hosphal. Old home
and barn. Gallla Co. ·
·
12014 Vacant land 3 ac. Mfl,
ntW sewage will be avallab~ .
Gf881 Homesite VLS 38B..a826
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
reduced $31,000 MAKE AN OFFERI
..
- 1 .13oc.rr>'l,gonllyll0ped.
A.acc:oon Rd. Acofla to bOa!
AtO GRANDE 10 acre& MJL
level.
,000
12001 NEW UlTIMO Vacant
. VLS381-11828/448-1106.
12012 PLEAIANT VALLEY AD.,
mott.ly
~
12011 N!W UITING 411 SR
218- SWter or~ nome
wf2 bedrml, 2 blllht. LA. tll-tr'l
kit, ,.. biMf'nlr1l wfriC, nt\., ntW
=~~ LMIY 1rM1. VLS
~
- eCiy,
1111; - dill.
· Call lot more
-·
large variety of nowers and shrubs. There is
room . Abundance of closet/storage space . LOCATED ON EAST MAIN STREET· Very
local shopping.
,.
• one "":7et.et""":r on -
bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, LDC & cistern water.
'
.
12007 · 124 acres m/1,
mostly rolling, public
~- . . .100 . . ""',..,
SA 7, ~onfains approx. 30 acres that consistS
of woods , hayfield, garden area, fruit trees.
also a large pond for recreation or for farm
animals. The older one floor frame has 3
MIDDLEPORT Very roomy 2 story frame
home, 3 bedrooms, 1 112 baths, full basemon1 ,
F.A.N.G. h8at, wood burner insert, many
newer repairs thrDlJghout the home. Includes
dining room , family room, spacious living
-
IDEALLY LOCATED • Block
Commardal a~: Pertect tor a
stan
up · 14,800 1<1· ft.
wHh 100 foot road frontage .
I
auburt:lan area , llka ne.w 314
bedroom ranch, bath , cozy
llvlngroom, very neat kltd'lln
12- RAIIIUNO TRI·LEYEL
FOR
THE
PERFECT
8
WANT TO SALE THIS,HOME'!
ASKING $39,500
'92 Cavalier, 2 door, automatic,
good condition, $4500 090. e 14·
'
,
11012-I QU6t1: JoCatfOn w/pttYecy 4
fAMILY HOME. loc1ted In a BednM. 21f2..._, 21M eq. ft.
·c·
-. ......
'
Garden space. Real nice ·home! OWNER
I
Jeanatle Moore, Rallltor· ~58·17.45'
Tim Watson, Realtor·256-61 02
Patricia Rosa, ReaHor
•'
!
F.A.N .G. heaUC.A., carpet/vinyl flooring.
Real Estate General
'
Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker~523
Kiln Morgan, Realtar/Broker-446-0971
PRICE REDUCED· Pomeroy- Kingsbury ''
Road· 2 bedrooms, 1 ba1h home on 2.196
acres .
OWNER WANTS .TO SALEII
$15,000
RACINE· 10Ne
}
32 LOCUST STREET, OAWPOUS, OHIO 45631
this home could be a real beauty. ASKING
$18,900
-In
y-
FUTUAIE WITH A WONOERftUL
' " "1" "
CALL US 1UDAY!
and side porch. River view. A liUie TLC and
A
HOME
~":;¥'· AN EXCELLENT
8UY.a.e2 acres mil o1 level 10
rolllnl!.land. A well . cons 1 _,.,._.,~
LET US WORK FOR YOU!
POMEROY· 2 story older home with ornate
woodwork, some stained glass windows, 3
bedrooms, kitchen , living room, dining room,
fireplace, bath , H.W. gas heat. ' Carpe1 and
hardwood flooring . Small outbuilding , front
12028
LUXURY
bu&lness, of your own. ~ Bldg
•ex96. Overhead storage I t
•!!~ro~!~R1!V1H!I!C•
each,
room, kitchen 2 bedrooms &
more . Attached garage WHY WAIT ON BUILDING
wfbreezeway. Over 2 .5 acres, THAT NEW HOME, WHI;N
30'x40' barn.' Close 10 town! YOU CAN HAVE THIS ONE.
Owner wants an offer! 1875 THAT'S REAOY TO MOVE
INTO? Gorgeous spacious
home with a 3 car attach'ed
tontage,
campers &
Motor Homes
61 ..94~·2253 .
living room, dining room &
c
790
,
Square bales, S2.00ea. Alfalfa,
clover, ·orchard grass mix. 304·
675·3900 After 5pm. '
:
Wanted To Buy: Square Bales Of
Hay 614-446· ,052.
building,- area plus an,
apartmerO wl 2 bednna, bath.
Juo1 oft lho highway for enough
to provlelt a private aettlng
amona 1n1eS. The lllld II roiNnO
steel
12
Wtllte Appaloosa colt, 17 mOnths
old, 55 inches, $500, 8,4-992··
$~5
stor-oe, lcrttned baclc porch,
much mort. New root lhl hOml
Ia malmenanco " "· Call VlS
318 11121.
.
fZG22 LOCATED SR 141 ,
PERRY TWP., 34 Ac. Mil
country ronch ' -· 3 - · · 2
baths, wrap porctt. 40 .eo ltO&Yy
12031 " IRIOHTIN
. . . ITARTiR HoME wtth 3 t;:.'ciMuParty HayS~.
bedrooms, 1 bath. Washer & .1 1011 2.5 ACRES MIL New
lormal DR Great rm w/WBFP,
dryer wiN stay. Location In a goad brlctl/VInyl reiHd ranch In a
llr~t floor MBA hot tub oak · na6ahborhood. C&tl Efta today.
country setting tust mlnulll trom
cablneta lr1 kitchen, tueakfut
11'031
CONVENIENT town. Allowance
area ovortooko a pond 7 yra old, C:OMFORTAIILE & CLOSE TO range at your c1101C0. 3 ·o wll)1
~ 101. call VlrQinla 311-118211DOWNTOWN. 2/3 BR lull 1010 olcloMI space, 2 fUll
,
~N.EW BRICK R•NCH· baaament and garage apt. den,' utility rm . 1 tamtty room .
~
PrlviiC'f fence complelely around Fonnlll orOry wl1h beautiful ..k
bMuUtul tra\118f' ~ovrt. Arcadia, FL:
814-..cl2S.
Tammie DcWiu .................. ,.... ,........245-002l ·
Martha Smith ................................... 379-265 j
Cheryl Lemly ................................... 742-3171
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
Roomy 2 s1ory with vinyl
siding, 4 bedrooms, bath ,
BUDGET STRETCHER!
Cozy 3 bedroom home. Vinyl
sided on nice sized lawn .
Modern kllchen. L-shaped
dining area & living room.
Alhlched carport.
1121
Call Tom 304 -875-4188 . 20 yeara
experience.
1985 Rockwood Motor Ho~ Low
1188 Vamal'la 40b 4·Whetler, Wllt&Qt, With Royal Oak Resort
sized rooms Includes l.iving
oftlce, etc. Nice wood~ork,
bath, kitchen , living room ,
bedroom. 12'K16' front porch.
,... show you haw culs.
$15.000
1111
ORYWALL
Hang, linlsh, repair.
.
New Coral Springa, Back Gtua · Ceilings textured , plaster repair.
1881 Herl-wy Davldaan FLT, fUb··
ber moun~ 5 1peed nn1missian,
AUIFM s~ereo, nlct bike, aaklng
11.000,
or 814·
742_ 814·142-13115
__
1
would be suitable for a nice
lbe'ie the LR. 3 be<lrms, 2 1/2
baths, LA. W/IOQ ftteplaet, eq&ap
kit, bf8akfut nn w1 bey window,
.1terao throughout, bra11 IIQht
flxturea, 2 car atllldled gar,, a1tlc
Motorcycles
PHONE 446-7699
4'16-4618
FARIII Acreage lhal .lolals
over 140 acres. Abundance
of pastur and tillable land.
Several largo barns, & misc.
buildings in super condition .
· like new 2 story home that
has approx. 3,800 sq . H. 1o
much to mention call us
lodayl
1831
7795.
Ford Truck Frt1m11 And Body
Pllr11. OO'a Vintage Clb Part a.. 2
fully lo•dtd, excellenl cond.
·Large 4.S Voney 20CIItt>. IIIIMIIII Ell:. AIIO. \llliS CObro Hood, R S
e7 ,000. 2 To no blut l gray. 304· F 0 R., 01hor Ilia<. Late Model
Pilr1l. SliQhl Dornoge Toke 011. As
·~Ia SO% Off List , eu-388 ·0181
L....,.Meas•ge.
STAFFF THINKING ABOUT SPRING 6 SUMMER 1997 Fishing, Boatlng,Huntlng, or Just Rala><ing in your own
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overlooking Blue Lake & Raccoon Creek. WE ARE NOW
GOING TO SELL THIS CAMPSITE & CAMPER. BUY IT
NOW AND BE PREPARED FOR SPRING 1996. SEE IT
NOW. PHONE TODAY!
1584
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
DO YOU OWN YOUR OWN
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•
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Budget ::Price Tranaminiolla,
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Flywheeta, Overhu11 Kin, fl 14·
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Has privacy, city school.dlst. Good location,,you can own
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nao
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Name Branda Over 25 Ylrora Ea-
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Li mo . cross cows & calves &
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7<12·2331 between &-7pm only.
' 78 John Deere 2840 , 82 hp.,
1857 hr•. With 148 JO endiOader
buckel and forks , $13,500 , call
614·992·7421
.
Judy D~Wilt. .. :........................... 441-0262
J. Memll Caner ......................... 379-2!84
Ru1h Barr................................... 4'16-1093
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.
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1111 DHgo c.,_ L£. , . _
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m!~1 _need to aell, reduced
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614·9112.. 514
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of Otcembel 12-12.
SPECIALS:
$10 lot pel boll1 & condition,
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20% off of weryrhing in stor~H
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after 4 :OOpm. ,
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C:Mily'l Polo
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Hrdrautic Oll $12.50·5ga1 I>Bil.
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Ground ear corn, 304-675-2443
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' I
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675-7421 .
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875-1510.
11185 Oldt 118 Rogoncy PW, POL,
•
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Improvements
IIASEUENT
square bales , S 1. 50, Herelordl
'
CFA rao•••e~ed Himalay8n kil -
racket engimt, ~10 posi track ,
plus e•tra rear end, 350 motor,
455 motor. $2,000 tor ell. 304·
_ , 814-256-6574.
Husqyarnl model 51 chain saw
on aale S339 this month emir.
rrtt case & tree chain & free
glo\leS. Siders Equipment 304·
640
AKC Registered Glden Retriever
prwni- 1100. 30<-67~746.
,970 Cutlast Sl.lpttmt. 350
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Use the elassified ads!
, 170 Ford 31• C•ntpet Speci•l
351 Clevel1nd Entlnt, Auto
Trana, C1mper Top & Cattle
good COnd. 304-213-421~
Pupa, 5 Week• u1 Shots & 610 Farm Equipment
Wormed $225, 614·••6-6651 ,
AKC l'ri· Color Beagle puppiet,
1tt lhots I wormed, parenrs on
9181 Anytime
110
Gent or•nder m ilo;&~. John Deere
grain- drill. 12ft.tranaporl disk .
Owatonna hav bine. lnlernational
806 Farm AI diseal tractor, aU
Hoo- 6313,
FARM SUPPLIES
& LIVESTOCK
-.y good narured, $75, 61 ..992·
3085 -*""·
V«y Rtatorablt , Drivuble, Top
Works Best, NHCis Cov.,, Have
R -Gina And Boo I. Full 472 Cu.
ln. Turbo. No Storage. Mull Sell
Or Trade, $500 080, 614 -38.8·
AOHA Stallion Brood
5 piece Pearl Drums , Zildjian,
Camber symbols, paid $2,000. 3
montha old, se ll $800, 614 -7 42 -
71 o Autoa tor Sale
610 Farm Equipment
,.
Sunday, December 8, 1996
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�OPBI
lOti filM
SA1'9-6
AFIIIOUOI
Ben gals
defeat
Ravens
SUNl-5
Ohio Lottery
Super Lotto:
22-23-36-40-42-44
Kicker:
4-2-8-9-5-4
Pick 3:
8·7-4
Pick 4:
7-6-5-5
Sporta on Page 4
Moatly cloudy tonight,
low. In the lOa. Tuead8y,
variable cloudlnell, high•
In the lower 15111•
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47, NO. 1&3
,
2 Sectlano, 12 Pllgu, 35 -
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 9., 1996
0111118, Ohio v.lley Publlehlng Comp~~ny
'
Missi·ng Pomeroy man found
at shelter in western state
AS
LOW
AS:
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel Nawe Staff
The IS-week search for a missing
22-year-old Pomeroy man ended
over the weekend, with his location
at a homeless shelter in the western
U.S ..
· Jay Allert Holsinger was discov·
ered late last week at the shelter,
working as a cook. ·
He was identified by a homeless
drifter who had been at the shelter
earlier this month, and saw posters
describing Holsinger as a missing
person during his travels back east,
according to Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Soulsby. ·
"After receiving contact from this
• drifter on Holsinger's whereabouts,
we contacted the shelter at which
Holsinger was said to be working as
a cook. The director of the shelter
ALL WHEEL DRIVEl.
AS
'LOW
AS: .
gave a description which matched
Jay's description, and a background
check of Social Security numbers
proved a match to Holsinger's, " said
Soulsby.
,
Soulsby would not confirm the
exact location of the shelter where
Holsinger was located, stating simply
that it is somewhere in a western
state.
Saturday morning, The Daily Sen·
tine! agreed to a request by Soulsby
to hold publication of the story for 24
hours to allow family members time
to travel and meet the subject
believed to be Holsinger.
"The family went to the town
where the shelter is located and met
with Jay during a prearranged meet·
· ing organized by tbe head ofthe shel·
·ter. The shelter's director stated that
Holsinger had been working at the
shelter since Sept. 13, and was doing
a good job for them," Souls by said.
'"I'11e shelter's director said that
Holsinger was 'different' from the
other people who frequented the
facility. He didn't appear to have the
problems of substance abuse that
many of the other people had," Soulsby added.
HQ)singer was reported missing
b~ family members Aug. 24 after he
fatled to arrive for his morning shift
of work as a management-trainee at
84 Lumber in Jackson .
During the course of the investigation into Holsinger's disappearance, law enforcement officials con·
ducted an extensive search of the
local area for the 1987 Chevy
Cheveue Holsinger was last seen in,
and also launc~cq a sonar search of
the ·Ohio J.l,iver on the assumption of
foul play.
Authorities finally di scovered the
missing vehicle during the first week
of November, abandoned at a Fort
Wayne, Ind .. truck stop.
The Fort Wayne Police Department said initially it thought the car
· had been there since Aug. 6, Meigs
County Prosecutin~ Attorney John
Lcntes'ssaid. Since Holsinger did not
disappear until Aug. 24', Lcntes said
that authorities must have meant
Sept. 6 - 14 days after the event.
"We're glad to sec that' Jay is alive,
well, and healthy. It's a good thing for
the family's sake that we were fortu·
nato enough to locate him jtistllcfore
the holidays. The Holsingers
expressed their deepest gratitude to
all the law enforcement personnel
assisting on the case when I spoke
with them yesterday," Soulsby said.
Administration downplays fe.~ chief's remarks
WASHINGTON (AP) - Trea· 327.01 points, or 1.61 percent, to
sury Secretary Robert Rubin is min· close at 20,603.71 points.
imizing remarks by Federal Reserve
Many had intCJllreted Greenspan's
Chairman Alan Greenspan that sent remarks as suggesting that the marthe stock market tumbling, and says ket is rising too quickly and that the
the economy is basically in good Fed will step in with an interest rate
shape.
rise.
"All (Greenspan) was seeking to
Rubin. while stressing it was not
do was widen the intellectual debate" his place to predict market moveon the current course o.f the market ~ ments, .said the -markets should -con"
Rubin said Sunday on NBC"s "Meet tinuc to rellectthe strong-economy.
the Press." ·
"Stocks will follow t:undamentals,
Markets on Wall Street aqd around .and wc've had good fundamentals
the world dipped sharply Friday after and for good reasons. given the poli·
the head of the nation's central bank ~ cies th.e president's put in place," said
asked in a speech whether "irrational Ruhin. a former Wall Str_eet invest·
exuberance ha.• unduly inOated asset ment hanker.
values." Recovery set in today, with
He said the economy will remain
Tokyo stock prices making solid robust if the administration and Con·
gains from Friday's plunge. The · grcss can work together, as they have
Nikkei Stock Average bounced back promised to do. ·on such matters as
balancing. the budge,!.
Rubin said he and Greenspan
have discussed the market occasionally and he was aware the Fed chairman might· express his opinion at
some point. But he added there was
·"certainly not an attempt by the government" to use !'1e power of
Greenspan's comments to cool ~
what.some--eCOIIOIIIlll!fiw~ is "ah
overly rapid rise in stookva1ucs. ·
Senate Majority Leader Trent
Lou, R·Miss., said drecnspap 's pow·
er to move the.market with a single
comment made him "a little ocr·
vous" about the central' bank's independence from the administration and
Congress.
"I try not to be a Fed basher, but
I sometimes think they focus too
much on one side of the equation
HOMETOWN HERO- Donald Shaffer, right, waa honored Set·
· urday afternoon as a Racine Hometown Hero by Mayor Jeff Thornton. Thornton presented 'Shaffer with a plaque during the cere- ·
mony, attendee! by about 50 people.
rather than the broader .basket of
things. " Loll said on ''Fox News
Sunday." "And I'm a little nervous
about the degree of independence
they have."
Rep. John Kasich, R-Ohio, chair·
!
man of the House Budget Committee.
said it would be beneficial if
Greenspan's comments ward off the
need for'\~ interest rate increase. ''J
'
. State Route 124. und pu·ll~d J:y~~rthink wha!' Mr: Greenspan is saying By JIM I'REI:MAN
old Michael P'fe'"" to safety.
is that he's concerned about this . Sentinel ~s Staff
Donald
Shaffer.
20,
Racine.
was
Grueser was in the trailer with his
economy. I am. too." Kasich said on
recogni1.cd
Saturday
aftem,non
by
2-year-old
brother, Christopher
NBC.
Raci
nc
Mayor
Jeff
Thornton
as
a
Gruescr.
and
his
mother when the lire
The GOP lawmaker disputed
hometown
hero
for
his
role
in
saving
hrokc
out
around
H a.m.
Rubin 's asserti 0ns that the economy
a
child
from
a
burning
'
m
obile
home
Christ.
o
phcr
Grucscr
died in the
is healthy. He cited '" very. very Icc'
a
week
earlier.
hlo:tzc
and
his
mother
was
ahlc tn
blc" improvements in wages and nn
On the morning ofNov.•30, Shaf- jump to safety from a window.
··undercurrent of fear '' among Amerlcr ran into t~e burning home of Rod·
She was treated at the scene for .
icans about the futur<>.
ney and Kimberly Gruescr, located . i:uts ;md abrasions. ·by the Meigs
on the north end of Racine along
(Continued on Page 3)
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Racine commends ·
hometown hero's .role
in saving youth's Ufe
Southern Ohio posts
large disability listing
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.AWunWheels, va Vortee
_Power Locks,
AS
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SS panel's
work torn
by discord
By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Prell Writer
WASHINGTON- The most impoverished areas of Ohio also have the
WASHINGTON (APJ - Gerald
highest proportions of people who have trouble getting around. lifting a bag
Shea
had high hopes of saving the
of groceries or walking upstairs, the Census Bureau says.
Social
Security system from dissolu·
A Census Bureau report released l;~st week estimated that45 million non,
tion when he joined ·~ advisory paninstitutionalized Americans age 16 and older - about 25 percent of that segel.
But2·112 years later, Shea says the
ment of the population - have some sort of disability.
.
group
was · a failure and the three
The disabilities include all types of physical impairments - such as havalternative
plans it will_relcasc this
ing to rest while ascending a llight of stairs or having trouble lifting 10 pounds
month
arc
~·non~rccommendalions,.
. or more - and not just problems that leave people unable to work or take
. because the proposals differ SQ wide·
care of themselves ..
. ly.
.
Ohio tracked close to the national average of24.5 percent . The report esti·
\'I think it absolutely was a total
mated that statewide, 2 million people, or 24.81 percent, had some disabil·
said Shea, assistant to the
failure,"
i~
•
.
president of the AFL·CIO.
Counties in southern Ohio had much higher percentages. The Census
But in discord typical of tlic 13Bureau estimated that more than a third of noninstitutionalizcd residents age
·attheGallla-Melgs Regional Airport. The pilot,
AIRCiy.FT
DEMOLISHED
Galllpolil
volmemher panel's history, another
16 and older in Sci<:>to, Jackson, Vinton, Adams, Pike, U.wrcnce and Meigs
Jim Srock, 54, auffered only scratches and
untHr fireflghtera examined the remain• oh
member
disagreed .
·counties had some sort of disability.
bruises In the crash.
·
Michigan man's alrcraflaftlr It crashed Sunday
"
We
.were
charged with coming
Figures provided by the.Census Bureau showed Meigs County with 5,728
,
up
wilh
general
approaches,"
· people listed as disabled. GaHia County reponed 7,170, and the following
Syl
vcster
Schiehcr
said
Sunday, and
totals are from area counties: Athens, 10,577; Jackson, 8.508: Vinton, 2, 948 ;
he
was
neither
surprised
by the dis·
and Washington. 12.733.
'
. scnsinn nor disappointed with the
The figures all were much lower when the report distinguished between
results. "Now the report goes to Con·
any type of disabilities and severe disabilities. ~caning problems that' pregress
and the administrali.on, ond
vent people from performing a function at all or that force them to usc a
'
they'll
decide what to do," he said.'
wheelchair or some other mobility aid.
Sh•ilala
appointed the Advisory
The report estimated that 12.89 percent of Ohioans !ell into the category
Council on Soda! Security in June
of severely disabled, with thq top counties. Scioto and Jackson, topping 22
GALLIPOLIS - A Bluefield,
The plane hounced on the runway wind just blew me sideways."
percent,
.
.
Mich:. man walked away mostly once and Srock increased power to
Srock , who was en route to Winter 1994 to find waysto keep the system
. Another mc.asurcment tried to distinguish bet~cen those with some sort unscathed from the wreckage of his gel airborne.again, officers said. Bul Haven, Ha .. had left the airport at solvent over lhc long term .
The amount of money the govof problem and those u~able to w<:>rk.
. .
•
. '!circraft Sunday after his attempt to the plane then veered Ulthc left inlo Troy, Mi ch., around Ill a.m. Sunday
By that gauge, 4.78 percent of the state•s residents were estimated to he ~ abort a landing at thC: Galli a-Meigs u parking area for nthcr aircrafl, and said he had scheduled a stop at ernment collects in Social Security
taxes this year Will exceed by $60 bil·
struck the parked plane. slid intn the Gallipolis.
unable to work', and the perc~ntagcs rose accordingly among those southern Regional Airport went awry.
lion
the a_mount it must pay in Ilene·
Ohio counties: 13.1 pcrccn! of working-age ~esidents were unable to do so
Jim Srock's aircraft, buffeted by a hangar and skidded down the side of
Ah<tul lire minutes llch>rc making
tits
.
But
starting in 2012, as the huge
in Scioto. 12.8 percent in Jackson, II. I percent in Adams and 10.9 percent crosswind and a sudden swift snow- the building.
the approach to G·M, Srock told
bahy
h<•>m
gcneratio~ hegins retir·
Gallipolis volunteer lirefighters authorities and <\!hers at the airport
in Vinton .
·
fall, struck a parked plane and a
·All those figures are statistical estimates based on the 1990 census and hangar, and then skidded to a stop and the Gallia County EMS respond - that visibility was still guud, hut a.s ho ing. the fund will pay out far more
ed to the scene of the I :38 p.m. crash, came in for the landing "it was real- than its proceeds each year.
subsequent surveys that asked more detailed questions.
along the side of the hangar.
Withilut •orrcctivc action, it will
Different county statistics were obtained when -the Ohio Rehabilitative Ser·
But asidc.from some scratches and but most of the emergency ,units lcl't ly hi<)wihg snow."
be
broke
by 2029. At that point, pay·
vices Commission did ils own survey, using different factors to decide bruises, the 54-year-old mechanical aftcf about an hour when it wa.s deter·
· Srock credited the consttucti<)n ol'
whether 10 classify people as disabled. .
engineer from the Detroit area was mined Srock's plane would not catch his plane, a 1969 Lake .LA 4 Bucca- mil taxes will cover only 76 percent
fire and that the nilot did not require neer, for preventing serious injuries. of promised llcnefiL•.
That state survey estimated that 18.1 percent of Jackson County's work· unhurt.
Disagreements within th<: panel
ing·age population had some disability. Scioto County's estimate was next·
"Mentally I'm okay, I'm just sick treatment.
· "Other than the fact it looks like
The Federal Aviation Administra· it doesn't ,have any wings on it, the left it divided into three factions .
highest,~ 17.8 percent, followed by Wayne County at 17.4 percent and
to my.stomach," said Srock, who was
-A five-member segment that
Adams County at 16.1 percent.
·
mainly concerned about the damage lion. contacted immediately after the hull looks almost intact," he said.
Schieber, a Washington
includes
.Por the state as a whole, that survey, called Project Compass, estimated ihc accident caused to the other air· incident, advised that the scene be left "Generally, they say the hull on this·
8.5 percent of working-age Ohioans have disabilities.
craft and the hangar.
intact until lin FAA team could get to model is stout - now lllclievc it." economist, wants to replace Social
At the Scioto County Human Services Dep~ment, Director Ruby Grant
Gallipolis City Police, assisted on Gallipolis and inspect the damage.
Srock said he's owned the plane Security with a two-tier system of a
•said the Census Bureau's estimates were surpnsmgly h1gh.
the investigation of the incident by Police said the agency was expected for 1· 112 years. The crash demolished ~duced Oat-rate benefit and "per: "That's staggering to me."Mrs. Grant said. "I dQR't know how that could the Gallia-Meigs Post of thC State ·to be on the scene today.
the aircraft.
sonal security accounts," similar to
The other damaged plane, a 1955 the current Individual Retirement
be substantiated."
Highway Patrol. said Srock was
"AithQugh this might S<)em like a
AmonJ people who seck compensation for disabilities_there, )he most com· attempting a Iandini at G·M when his simple s\luation, it was not," said Piper Tripaccr, is owned by the Accounts. Retirement benefits would
mon reasons we_re heart problems, ne..Ves, breathing dtsordcrs, back prob- plane was caughl in a cro..wind.
Srock, who's been Oying planes on Mason County Plying Club and wa.< ~ary. dependin1 on the success of
each worker's investments.
lems and depression, she said.
·
and off •in~~ he was a·teenager. "The severely damaged, police said .
Michi,gan pilot mostly unhurt
after plane crash~s at airport
AS:
CHMWUOM F I • OlDSMOBilE • lEilUS
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A Gannett Co. N.,..paper
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12. December
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December 8, 1996
higley
jacobs