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f

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV '

Monday

Sunday, December 6, 1998

Weather

Job cuts abound, but economy still points up
By DONNA MURPHY WESTON
AP Business Writer
It wa.... a "c;:(k uf JOh

t.:Ub.

a' a

·

1

of bu!'.mt:'..e' from am:rall

'Jl.alt!

hmught
paign.

ma11u ~

111

hu ... me ... -.

thi~

pasl weli!k:

layoffs abound
Trymg_ tu remam \'iable anmJ unrenamty m the global t:(unomy. Bot: HI~
annnunct&gt;d II Will CUI ::!OJ)(K) mmt' JOh ... tnr a total nl 4X,OOO t ' Uh by the t:nJ
of 2000. Seank-baseJ Bnemg 4.:1l~d dedtnin£ airplane: orJa,, largd) du\! w

.. c ut a..;o a re~ull of corporate mergers. the b1gge~t chunk commg from the marnage nt ml gaants E)("&lt;On and Mub1l
,
Mer£ers lhat would create the wnrld"s largesl oal compan\ and world's
largest tinan~:aal anslllUUon caughl lhe allenuon of anlltru~l "-;&lt;llrhUogo.;. but

Wall St. ponders
desl're for U.S.
stocks overseas
Whal 1f every thing turned ng.ht1n
the world'' And m Ihe world ecqnomy'!
Demand fOr Amencan exports
would surely rt:-bounJ, so thar \ good.
Bur a better outlook lor orh~r
econom1es. Lind 10 Wm the1r mve ,tments. would likel y reduce dcmand
for U.S stocks and bonds the most
P?pular A111encan t:xpon among tore1gn mvestors.
Of course. 11 would be wrong to

pnse move was &lt;.kfens1ve in n.uure.
.10 effort .It counterin'!.! the 'e~.:onomac "
dr&lt;~g.lrom otherrt:-gw~ s ButjuUgm'g
trom the huge rJIIy on Euro~an markeb . Thursday's ralt&gt; l'Uis c.:an u_bo he
sct!n .1" a ~H!O ol bettc:r tlmt:s .lhc:.u.J
··The Eu~opeoms .m:&gt; nutmg nlll' r·
est ratt:s prt!tty Ur.tlll.IIK'ally. ~tncl
evcntu.tlly that\ gn1ng to stnnulate
anti restan their t.!cononues tO&lt;l.'' s.ud
Su-eed "'The b1ggest 1ssue 1" that wuh

suggest that Wall Street\ lalesl and

.1ll1h" (cap11al m US

greatest escape:: from 1um was s1mply
a function ol strong demand from
overseas mvestors . Yd. With all that
money lleemg ~;orld markets 1n late

n eventually be: ch.ulneled b.u.:l.; 11110
Ihe real world ! W1ll A~1a get 1ts ad
together .mrJ start to reabsorb th1s
capital?"

equl[~esl.

summer and early fall. Ihere was a lol

Fortunately. hecause the U S.

plt\(;e to go
And somewhere m the m1d!'»t ol a ll

economy remmns sound. there won't
be a .. g1am suckmg !'ioun,.r ol mvestment ~.: aptt,tl le.n' rng the Umted

Ihe chaos. wuh a IIIII&lt; help rrom Ihe
F!!d~r.ll Re sen·e. IRH~tors nl .111

Slates. said Streed .mu other analysis
"Wt:'ve bec:n a~ hulllsh .,~. . 1we've

~tnpe:~

been Without us1ng the word llqUidlty. " sa1d Jeffrt:} Applegate d11 ef
lllVestment "tralt:'!.!lst .at Lehman
Brothers.
...
··Drd the . . rock m.1rket pe.tk ... uddeply on July 17 .Lnt.l stall nmnn
0

wh1ch

expla1ns

the speed

of

None

of lhts

Will

happen

lhe ,Dow "hold1ng a

I~

The technolog:y-c..lommated N~1s­

, II was the failure of .1 key reform
me:tsure 10 Br.IZIIIhal r.1p11!red Wall
Street's all enli on on Thursday. when

Jaq compvsne mJex ro"e 4X K3. nr
2~.5. percent. to 2.00.716 on FmJ.1y.
lmtsh1ng the week 11 .28 lower and
about \3 point helow 1ts rt:u!l;ll h1gh
The Standard &amp; Poor"s 51Kl rose
26 60 on Fnday lo ~ I , 176 74. dnwn
IS 59 lm the week and abnul 12

the Dow 1ndustnals tumbled nearly

pomts away Irom record tcrr.un .

week 1ha11he world's ftn.IOCial woes
won't_be a

l.JUI~.:k !1x

h1m Wllh some sporls t1cke1s The
company reluclamly eomplteu
' But Quaker Oats had an interest tn

corruptiOn (.:harges 1s yet anot her
n:buke or the independent counsel

wh1ch m. mdates a pnson term tor .my

.t

chah

proc~ss tng

It dramatized the ,tlm..,er.. pe1pe·
trateJ by an ambitioUs and ovcrze.tl ous prost:cu tor With too nl uch pnwer,.ton m..~n y re,ources. and no over-

the law. He esc . tped even thou~h 1has
l.tw does n't re4mre proof th~11 the
renprent d1tl a favor lor the ...:omp . l-

sig~t.

Tyson, lhe Arkansas-bused poultry
processing giant. had pleaded guilty

Espy\ char.IL.:IentmiiOn ol Smaltz

ny

Departmt: nl W.J\ wrong - .md he
deservt:"J tn ht:' Jnv~n Irom olfice.

He was. v.1fhou1 ,my help Jrorn
special

pro..,t:~.:·utor

Don.!ld Smaltt

·Espy. who lohh1 ed Prestdenl Cl tn ·
ton for tht' JOb. rt:.., lgncU m11t:~.:~: mber
, 1994. Je..,.., th,lll two y~.ll . ., ~ller he
bec~une the f1r..,t agrh.:ulture ~ec n: t.try
from Ihe Deep South d11U th~ I1rst
Afncan-Arnl!ru.:an 1n the pnst
Hr: was ou..,tl!d by au:urale .md
legi wnatl! revel:.1t 1o n" of hh !.! thJ~.: a l
tran..,g:n:,~um . . by the pn:: '"'
Sm.tllt then pur. . ued lmn lor lour
years anJ spenl -.ome ) 17 nullum

Ye1. he t.nkd lo p11 tve lh.1l Espy.

10

return for M)lllt: $3~.000 ol 'POl h
w.: ket ~. g1lh and t raH~I. h.td ~ lone
luvors ft.)r lht: &lt;.:omr~tnre.., 111'-'0I\cd.
wh1ch mcluded Ty-.1111 FooJ-.. ln l .
Qu.tker O.th Co ;wJ Sun -IJ1.unoml
Growers
Hl . . clo,est hru"'h With prt\Oil w.t~
hi "' n:quc -. tlh.tt Qu~tker Oah prov1de

del.ty 111 ll191 anU 1994 111 hnn!.!lf\ !.!
the poultry com p.l!llt: s unJer ... th~
~.tme ruks applleU to the heel .mU
pork l ndu ... tncs

Espy. who had saved three lcnm
m Congrcs~ from .t M"'"\~'"PPI tilstn ~ t. ~:ou ld

not make the tran:-il llon
frnm the fa!e·whee hng eth1cs pr11u:1·

pies ol C.tptlol Hill 10 1he more
n: . . tn ct Jve tode lh.tt gove rns executi ve branch offK'I.tb
Furlhl'r IlL' w.r.., ~ li i!Oum l~d h\ .1
~ . :.ulul .111d prnk'~o.ll' ~,: ... l.tlt ti1.il
l t. lltlll'd the t.::t h1 ~o.' .td\r~.:c \d \l'h:r.u l
-. t.llkr . , rnthe "-'Ut'l .ll \ 'o ttiu:
Lei·, he dc.tr the ( JSDA W..l" no
p.tr.tgun o l VIrtue belorc E... py
.111'1\l'd
In the c.H I) l l)7().., 11 :d l ow~..'d I kn ry K1ssmge1 to lc~h.c over 11-. ~tlod Itil
P e d ll' pmgr.1 tnlt J p1ov1d..:: h1dd~Jn .rrd
to certa in Cnld W.rr .1llll'!'l I ht.:
llep.utmt'nt hl'lpcd h1 g wlcrn aurm.tl
~;r.tm ~.:omp.m, c . . IHIY _t.!l.l lll chc.1r

State to randomly·
check motorists :·•
for insurance
coverage

Investigation COl rtlnues in hunting accident
MEOiANICSTOWN, Oh1o (AP)- Authorities are investigating the fatal
shooting of a 10-year-old boy who was hunting in Carroll County.
Sheriff's deputies said Jarod Nign of Carrollton ww accidentally killed Friday by another member of his hunting party. Authorities would not release the
suspeaed shooter's name Sunday. The hunler was treated for shock after the
shooting. ·
Nign, who was wearing an orange ha~ wa-; shot after he wandered away
from his hunting party and squatted down. The shooting look place in a remote
and wooded area of Fox Township, about30 miles southeast of Canton.
The death was the second during the firearms deer season that ended Saturday for much of the state. Andrew Lehigh, 28, of MidVale, was fatally shol wilh
a 12·gauge shotg{tn Monday afternoon while hunting in Harrison County.

By CHARLEY Gllil:SPIE

Father charged In son's death

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- A father was charged Sunday m connec·
lion with the weekend hunting-related death of his son, officials said.
'
' ' John Buffington, 19, of lower Salem, Ohio, was killed late Saturday night
when a IS-year-old's rifle accidentally discharged, striking Buffington
Buffington, the teen and Buffington's father, John Miller, of Lower Salem,
were spotlighting illegally in Jackson County and hunlmg while intoxicated,
said Hoy Murphy, spokesman for the slate Division of Natural Resources.
"They had spotlighted a deer last
night and killed the deer and loaded iJ
up into their vehicle. Whtle Jhe three
were gelling into the vehicle, one of
the shooters' rifle discharged accidentally and hil Buffington and killed
him," Murphy said Sunday.
1 Sections - 10 Pages
The name or lower Salem teen Wa';
not b&lt;ing released because he is a
10
Calendar
Juvenile, Murphy said.
6-8
Classifteds
The teen was charged in juvenile
court with negligent shooting, carry9
Comics
ing a loaded gun in a vehicle and
Editorials
2
unlawful possession of deer, Murphy
3
Lot;al
said.
Sports
4&amp;5
Miller was charged with illegal spotlighting. carrying a loaded fireann in
3
Weather
a vehicle and illegal possession of
deer He remained held Sunday in
Lotteries
Jackson County Jail. Murphy srud.
QHW
· After the shooting, the men dumped
Pick 3: 3·9·0; Pick 4: 6-9-8·5
the deer along the side of the mad and
Super lotto: 12-25-26-36-39-45
drove Buffington to Jackson County
Kicker: 8-3·3-6-4·9
Hosp11al, where he wa-; pronounced
W,YA.
dead upon arrival, Murphy said.
Daily 3: 2·3-4; Dally 4: 2·0·0.6
An investigation would conC 1998 Ohio \'alley l~•llli:&lt;~hmg Cu
tinue, Murphy sa1d.

Good Afternoon

1

as a· schoolyard bully"" .1ppl1cs also c.tril~r to g1ving h1111 gratUitlt!s
to ot her spec1.ll pro ..,ectnors operat1ng '
Poultry companle&gt; d1d henefil
under a law that, exp1res in Junt: .•tnd from USDA fool-dragging on apply · \
should he all owetl bv Connre-.s
to do mg to them 1ts policy ol zc ro-to l ~
0
jusl lhal.
•
an&lt;.:t!' for fecal comammatwn of mi! at
Whm Espy d1d 1n nul only aLC&lt;pl· proUuL'Is
in g. but sni iCILtng. g1!t..., from compaBut 11 was Willie Hou se ot fic1al s.
mes regu l.tl r:d by tht! A~.;ncu lture nol Espy. who ca used lhe USDA"s

frame of~ nearby two-story building across from n~
Moiliih Fteld stayed thai way until after Jhe war encbfip
1245. "The unfinished house," as we referred Jo it, m~
for a neal hangout
Scripts were required for cenain goods.
.
All windows had to be painte&lt;l over so no light wolil!l
show outside.
Paper money had "Hawaii" stamped on one side. II
wasn't unlll about 25 years ago thai they were finally
taken out of circulation.
•
The war years also meant backyard bomb shelterS.
Every family had one- nothmg fancy, but well-stocked
with water and canned goods. We'd have 10 clean out Jhe
underground shelter from lime 10 lime and it was an
unpleasant task, what with spiders, lizards and othr:r
yucky insects.
:
Everyone was required to carry gas masks at all time..
To test lhetr effecllveness, there would be random drillS
where everyone would wear their masks and rae~
through a tear gas-tilled room.
,
At school, we had surprise air raid drills where we·
marched out in orderly fashion and positioned ourselves:
tn either shl trenches or shelters. As kids, we liked to"
sneak up on s1des of the shelters, causing the gravel 10
slide off and expose the wooden structure. If we got
caught, it was off to the principal's office.
_
To wile away idle time, we made a hobby of identi(r-:
ing planes z1pping through the skies. Moslly P-40s and.•
once in a 'While, the P-47 Thunderbolt or nifty doubT(~
fuselaged P-38 Lightning. Rarely did we see bombelt;
the B-17 Flymg ,Fortress or the B-25 Mitchell Bomber,!:
With thousands of militarx stalil'ned in the islanc!S;
we'd snap orr a salute or give them the "V for Victorf!:
•
•• .
s1gn.
More often Ihan not, they'd wave back.
'•

be no school for stuwere second'-generation
dents at lunalilo Ele"'
Japanese-American, or
Nisei.
HONOLULU (AP) _:. The scailered mentary. There was
good
reason:
a
shell
had
'
tl
In no lime, we kids
patches of brown-black puffs against
"r
of Japanese ancestry
the sparkling blue morning sky should landed on the main twowere out playing with
have been an indication that some- story building and
our Otinese and Por·
thing was wrong that Sunday morn· burned down the second
level
tuguese neighbors and
ing.
We
stayed
home
for
parking ourselves in
But, as a 6-year-old, I was more
two
weeks.
their
homes.
eager to get in a full day of " pee-wee"
Everyone was conBut neither my 7·
- a game using different lengths of
cerned
about
additional
·
year-old
sister, Edith,
an old broomstick- nol knowing the enonnity of events
attacks
On
occasion,
an
nor
I
strayed
too many
taking place 8 miles away.
air-raid
siren
went
off,
doors
'
away,
always
The laughter and cajoling, however, came to an abrupt
~ .~ .
leaving word w1th my
end when all , l~e · kids' parents came oul and literally sending us scurrying Jo
a sheller.
',
mother where we
marched us home.
ll was rather ironic.
would be.
That nigh~ I remember my father telling the fam1ly
Hawaii, then a terri·
not to tum on any house lights. The winter season was On the way l~ school
prior
to
the
auack,
my
nlng
Amerlca'alnvolvement
In
World
War
II.
tory
of the United
here so darkness fell early. II was eerie, the entire neighpals
and
I
would
admire
a
slore
display
depicting
two
Stales,
had
the
largest
Japanese
population
outside of
borhood was pitch black. •
opposjng
annies
maneuvering
against
each
other.
The
Japan,
and
many
of
them
were
Issei,
first-generation
As we went to bed, my father pi aced the radio under
Japanese.
a table draped with a sheet so there would be no visible flag of the army with the advantage was that of Japan.
We thought it would b&lt; a neat g1fl to get for ChristWhile the possibility of Japanese sympathizers probalight outside.
1
bly concerned the governing military, Hawaii's isolation
Thai's when il struck me that something was serious- mas.
Then, like my school, the store and the entire block created what could be considered a "captive audience "
ly wrong.
were
demolished by a shell, killing lwo people. James
But some considered "too friendl~ :· to Japan:s cause
Thai's the most vivid memory I have of Dec. 7, 1941
Jones included the mcident in his novel "From Here to were senJIO a camp nol far from Pearl Harbor.
-4- "a dale which will live in infamy," as President
Eternity."
Still, ,the war years were different for those isolated in
Frankl in D. Roosevelt would say.
Those
of
Japanese
ancestry
living
on
Jhe
U.S.
mainthe
middle of the Pacific.
That morning, al Pearl Harbor and olher military facti-.
land
were
subjected
to
racial
halrtd
and
suspicion,
then
Martial
law was in effect with a strictly enforced 8
ities on Oahu, the Japanese launched a surprise allack
uprooted
and
caned
off
to
whal
was
genlly
referred
Jo
as
p.m.
curfew.
that plunged the United Stales into World War II.
"internmenl camps" with lillie advance warning.
There was rationing of food, "especially fresh meai War was not in my vocabulary then.
Bullhose in Hawaii fared beller.
probably ,the reason Hawaii remains the biggest conI learned quickly, however, that 11 disrupted what we·
living in the islands, with their melting pol of ethnic sumer of Spam :... and gasoline.
normally took for granted.
,
groups,
eased the fears of retaliation for my parents, who
lumber was in such shon supply thai the skeletal
The nexl day being Monday, we·were told there would

ff(iig{Onar·~riefs

company. hrmuln"

federal empl(1ye who .lcc&lt;pls .1'ny·
thmg of value trom a fmnl'o ve reJ hy

Single Copy- 35 Cents

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

il under1he 1906 meat tnspecllon-.ICl

setup

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

By GORDON SAKAMOTO
AModatod Press Writer

--

Espy exonerati·o n· shows
up special counsel abuses
By GEORGE ANTHAN
Des Moines Register
WASHINGTON - The exoneration b) a fedcr.ll court-:tury ollnnner
Agnculture Secretary M1kc Espy on

Hometown Newspaper

A schoolboy's ~orld altered by Pearl Harbqr attack

percent ga 111

9.374.27.

Meigs County's

Volume 49, Number 152

changt!d contllt10ns changed around(
the world and p~ople got nl!rvou s."
Applegate" sa1d. "For me . thtn~ s
always start out w1 th 1unJamentals..."
On finday. tht: Dow Jone:-i 1ndu!'1·
tnal average ro!'ie 136.46 to 9.016 14.
clo ... mg out a rough week ot prot 1t taking: wuh a loss of 316 94
With lhree weeks tu go m 19Y8.

ery efforts and -ann1he.r J1re torecasl
from Llpan, not to menuon lhe latest
proF1t warmng trom Boe1ng there
were enough re:nunders this past

• 1

1

tor the year. Jown t rom ~1 gam ul 1X5
percent at the Nov. 23 pe ~t k of

of course
1 hnnl.:sto a ~n ag m Br.llll's recov-

-Page4

·.

down because liqLuJ1ty Jncu up ' Nt:
It went do\\n because- perc eptlons

0\ ermght.

Sundy's NFL
results

~

w1ll

of homdess ca!'l h lookmg fur some-

advance.'' sa1d Robert Streed, ..,enror
mvestment advt se r at Nunhc:rn Tru ~ t
Ill Ch1~.: . 1go
But a lew month s later. ewn lithe
world rcm.uns qu1te UIH:Ii!rtal n. there
•Lr.e ' '£"" oll1gh1. or a! least honk mg.
.u tht: r:nJ of the 'eumonm: tunnel, anJ
11 nMy beg1n 10 U1st r. H.:t ~o me allention - ,md 1 money - away from
Wall Street

High: 50s; Low:40s

1

IK5 JXllnls Brushed a&gt;~ue hy the seiiing was news of coordmalcu reduc11nn m 1n1aes1 rat&lt; ruts by moslof
the lr:adm,g central banks ol Europe
Much Ilk&lt; the recent senes of rale
cut !'I hy the Federal Reserve. the sur-

By BRUCE MEYERSON
AP Business Writer
. NEWYORK-Aneas} 4U&lt;sllon
tor most people a11d a lyph.:al
quandary lor Wall S1n!e1:
'

appurt"ntly l,it:!CILle:d th.lt even
a we.11\er U.S. c~.:onomy v.a~ a prdty
sohd bet 111 su~.:h .m uncertam woriU
') "There Is JUst 'o mu~:h money m
rhe tinancral system. and 11 \ headmg
towanJ the ( U S J ~lock mml.:et

Toniorrow: Rain

w1th Jb ··The Softer Su.le ul Sear',. ad cun-

Ti&lt;ker ,
.
~n1ver~al Pictures rhairman Ca.\t!y Silver wao; ttm.:ed to ·res1,gn after the
·hohday ~~~kerKfs f.l isappuinling open1ng nfthe expensive sequel '' Babe· Pig
1n Ibe C1ty capped a diSmal year ... A bankruptcy judge threw Canat.han theater com!"'ny livent Inc. a lire jacket. approvmg $25 million Jinancmg deal
to allow II to contmue opemlmg through June ... Philip Morris. the nauon·s
b1ggesllubacco company. plans to spendS I()() million on a campaign to urge
k1us not to smoke ...
US A1rways agr~d ~o pay_S390.000 in back pay and salary adjustments
to women managers m hghl ol a labor Def1Unmenl audit found they receive&lt;!
less than lhetr male counlerpans .. In the M1crosofl antitrust trial. company cha1nnan B1ll Gates acknowledged he believed the rival computer language Java cou1d threaten hiS lucrJIIve Window' f"ranchtse. But he denied
h1s company ever tried to discoup.lge software c.Jevelopers from r._iloring lheir
products louse Java rJlher than Wmdows ... Prestdenl Clinton announced
~lans lo promote buymg and selling on the Internet. saymg il " an engine
tor glob~l econom1c _growth ... Medical device maker Medtmnic Inc. bough I
tbe leadmg maker ot stems - ltny mesh lubes Ihal prop open clogged comnary artenes - tn a $3 7 btllton stock deal wuh Anenal Vascular Engineenng
ot Santa Rosa. Calif.
.

the A:o.wn econonuc .. tuwdnwn Meanwhile nval Alrhu' lmJu ... tne .... uJ 11 ha'

I •

'lun~

pen:ent fnr cars.

a long baeklog of orders and plans to 1ncr&lt;a..., ou1pu1 by JO perc&lt;nl n~\1 )ear
Elsewhere. health Lare f1ruduch g1ant Johnson &amp; Johnson and aboul a
dozen o1her cumpante .. announced cut~ lotahng more than O.tXMJ m n:,trucJunngs aimed al becom1ng more compe1iti ve. Anothc=r9.5(X) Job' were be1ng

1

!lack luI he

Southern boys lose opener, Page 5
Alcoholics: master manipulators?, Page 10
A flying billboard?, Page 6

Today: Rain
High: 50s; Low:40s

~llhough re1a1lers seemed to b&lt; m trouble. truck dealers were counting,
lhetr ca.'h a.s sales of new pickups. spon uuluy vehicles and vans surpassed
cars la.'l month lor the Jirsl t1me evor. with the so-called li~hl trucks caplunng 50.9 percent of the new veh1cle market in November. compared 10 49.1 '

fal:lu~er-. IH I~ makt'r ul Band-A u.J, &lt;~nnuurlct!d plan~ h) dnnmate mnr~ Ihan

J5.(XMI lhuu,and J&lt;tbs.
A look otl "hat happcneU

wun~n

DKember 7, 1*

V8, LEATHER INT, LOADED

$10,995
96 WINDSTAR YAN
LOW MILES POWER
EQUIPMENT
3 1N STOCK

$16,995
93 OLDS 81 ROYALE
4DR
V6 AC, POL, P SEAT
CRUISE, TILT

$8 995
91 OlDS 1UTIJS4 DR
VB, A/C, POL, PW AMIFM
CASS

$5995
95 PONT, GRAND PRIX
4 DR, VB A/C, POL, F'N
AM/FMCASS

$9,995

AUTO M;, TILT CRUISE
CASS

$11,995
97 DODGE RAM 1SOO
EXT CAB4X4
VB, AUTO A/C POt. F¥1,
TILT, CRUISE CASS

$22,995
96 CHM 1·10
BWER4 DR
LEATHER SEATS ALL
POWER CD, LOW MILES

$20 995
94 PONT GRAND AM
4 DR, V6, PS PB, AC
POL, PW

95 CHRYSLER NEW
VB, A/C. I'W. POL PS,
CRUIS5, TILT I MORE

$12,995
97 PlY VOYAGER
MINI VAN

V6 AJC 1TILT, CR~ I$E,
AMIFMCASS

4 DR, V6 A/C. POL PW
CRUISE, TILT CASS

$4,995
96 LINCOLN MARK VHl
BLACK EXT BLACK
LEATHER INT, lOADED
MOON ROOF

~5,995

$24 995
9610l!D ixPLOl!ER

4X4, V8 AUTO AJC, POL,
PW &amp; MORE

EDDIE DAUER V6, ALL
POWER, LEATHER TRIM

91FOR l·lSOEXJ(I.q

$23,995

7 '~ . '

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Today's Sentinel

l

CHRISTMAS CREATIONS - Six colorful wooden nutcrackers, designed and created by
Wesley Thoane, have been placed In Pomeroy's mini-park next to The Dally Sentinel building.
The talentad Melgs High School student put them In place ltiat week. Ufeslze Vlctorll!n flguraa
made by Thoene two years ago for an Eagle Scout projact are featured In the larger Court
Street mlnl-park, and he Is now working on e nativity which will go on the hillside near the
Pomeroy Unlted Methodist Church.

Assodated Prm1 Writer
COLUMBUS, , Ohio (AP)
OltiOIIllS who "drive wilhoul auto insurance may b&lt; getting an unwelccme surprise in the mail.
Starting today, the Ohio Bureau of
Motor \.l:hicles will begin sending
nolias to about one in every 20 registered drivers, selecled at random
statewide, 10 demand thai they prove
they have hability insurance to c:o;er
damilge for accidents they may cause.'
"Just reabzing Utat we may b&lt; sending them a notice may b&lt; enoogh or an
incentive for some people to go out apd
get insurance," said Ohio Departmenl·of.
Public Safety spokesman Leo Skinner.
Driver.; who can 'I prove they have
insulance could lese their licetR for as
long as three months.
ln the pa-;1. authorities checked for
insurance only when plolorists were
stopped for "'olations. About 1.7 million
molorists are checked each year and
more thllll JOO,OC() licenses have been
suspended since the law requiring insurance look effect in 1995.
Skinner said about 2ll&gt;,OC() drivas
· will be selecled from the state's 5.6 milbon registered motorists.
Those seleCted·will receive a fOnn 1o
fill out puving they have the appropriaJe
c:o;erage. Those who fail to n:spor¥1
within a month with proof they had
insurance at lite time of the request &lt;:00
have their drivers' licenses SLL'I~
immediaJely for 90 days.
•
The state will monitor those driv~
for five years to make sure they ~
insured as long "' they carry Ohio li~
es.
Besides providing copies of an insurance policy or insw-ance identificatm
card, driver.; can send in a copy of a bond
or other legal form or covernge of fi"''!!cial responsibility for accident liability..

Family Fun Fest will ~ ~potlight hea·lth, survival ·issues next ~pri_,
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Senttnel News Staff
Meigs County's first "Family Fun Fest," a oneday seminar focusing on posittve life sktlls,
heahh and survival issues, will be held at Eastern
High School on April 24.
Planning for the event was held Thursday
when representatives from area hospitals, heahh
agencies, law , enforcement~ service and civ1c

otganizations mel al Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The event will be held from 10 a.m to 4 p m.
There w1ll be no charge to allend or participate in
an'y of the programs or serv1ces offered.
Notma Torres, R.N, director of nursing at the
Meigs County Heahh Department, sa1d about 50
agencies will be 1nvolved in the "Family Fun
Fest" which will be held inside the school in the
auditorium and cafeloriu(ll, as well outside the
·
' build1ng.
As explained ,by Torres, the plan is to combine
everything into one big event which will be
muhi -generational and centered on a celebration
of the ramily.
She said that immun1zat1ons will be orfered,

•

cholesterol, blood sugar, and lead screening will
lake pl ace, dental, vision, and hearing tests will
be g1ven, mammograms will be offered, children
can be fingerprinted, safely issues will be dis cussed, information on colleges will be available, ·
mental heahh issues will be addressed, recycling
will be d1scussed, nutritious snacks will be
served, and contests for all ages w1ll be held.
Torres, Margie Skidmore, instructor at t~e
Ohio University College of Osteopathic Medicine, and Rebecca Nelson, director of the Holzer
Home Health, are co-chairs of the "Family Fun
Fest.'~

April was selected as the. month for the event
to take place because of the many national observances relating to health issues which are annually celebrated in that month.
Observances which will be folded into the fest
will include "Immunization Week" by the health
department; "Victim's Righls Week" by the Prosecuting Attorney's office Victims Assislance Program, "None Under 21" by Ihe Health Recovery
Services; "Child Abuse Prev ention" by the Meigs
County Department of Human Services; and the

"Week of the Young Child" by Gin·
gerbread/Head Start
,
Among the other agencies parlici·
paling will be Woodland Centers,
Meigs County Council on Aging,
ACCESS,
Menial
Retardation,
Scouts, Meigs County Extension
Service, Liller Control, llumane
Society, the American Heart Associ ·
ation, and the American Cancer
Society.
Numerous other community -based
service agencies and businesses have
also commilled to being a part of the
program, Torres said
Entertainment w1ll also be fea·
FEST PLANNING - Rebecca Nelson of Holzer Home
lured with Rockin' Reggie and Mick
Childs doing hula hoop and bubble Health, Margie Skidmore, lnatruct~r at the Ohlo Unlvaralty
blowing contests, ACCESS offering College of Osteopathic Medicine, and Norma Torr11, R.N.,
face paintin~, and games being con- dlractor of nursing at the Mlega County Heelth Departmen~,
dueled by several other agencies .
are co-chairs for Family Fun Fest. About 30 organlzatlona
"The goal of the Family Fun were represented at last week's plannlng aeaal~n.
•
Fest," said Torres "is to reach out to families and 1n a se t11ng where the total emphasis focuses on
provide a day of' comprehensive health services the family"
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Monday, December 7, 1998

Commentary

P8geA2
Moodily,

Weather

o.cemll« 7, 18111

The Daily Sentinel Surprise! Democrats are becoming Newt-boosters
'Dta6fiJ~d 17r

1948

111 Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157
'

Community Newspaper Hbldings, Inc.,'
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
DIANE HILL
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gener11 M1nager
I

n. Sentinel INkom.• ,.,.,. to th• ~It« from rH~ on • brl»d rang• oft~
wr.,.

(3t10 tllltJI'tt. or ,..., haw tM bMI chan~ of ~ publ•h«t
7W»d ,.,.,.. .,.,. •t.nwd and •II
H RltN &amp;ctr •hould lnclud• a -'fll'•tw.
HIINM, •nd IMytltM phoM rrumbM. S~fy • dat• H th.,..'a • ,.,~ to
~ .tiel• or J.aw. Jh/1 to t..tt.,-, to lh• «&lt;ltor, TPN Sentint!'l, 111 Court St.,
Pomr.roy, OhJo 4570, or, FAX to ~~~~.1-2155

b

Shorl

m•r

11,.;.

'

:The Children's Health
Insurance Program
With the creatiOn of the Children's Health Insurance Program, the num
:t&gt;er of un1nsured ch1ldren m south eastern Ohw and across the nat1on should

:be drastrcally reduced

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Cor,...pondent
WASHINGTON (AP) - On the twisting track
of Impeachment proceedmgs agamst Presrdent
Chnton, lame-duck 1-touse Speaker Newt Gmgnch IS starling''? look good to top pemocrats
The Democratic leader who once told Gmgnch
to get out pf the case now says the Georg Jan
should come back and manage 11 out of chaos Or
at least that Speaker to be Bob L1vmgston should
take charge
,
LJvmgston said he won l do anythmg unt1l th~
House Jud1 c1ary Committee acts on Impeachment He sa1d he hopes to see 11 settled th1s year,
before he takes over for the res1gned Gmgnch on
Jan 6
He sa1d the Democrats had beell' "condemnmg
Speaker Gmgn ch for gettmg too mvolved, and
n10W they seem to be mad at me for not getung
Involved enough "
He sa1d 11 waos too soon to cons1der censure or
rcpnmand as alternaltves to Impeachment
After a week of unhkely turns mthe impeachment proceedmgs ~ "!healer of the absurd,"
Democratrc Rep Robert Wexler of Flonda called
n - the comm1ttee 1s expected to start deahng
With artrcles of Impeachment Thursday G1ven the
hard party hneup, the likelihood IS that Repubh ·
cans w1ll approve at least one, allegmg perJury
That would put the queshon to the House
There are no guarantees on the timetable
Cha11man Henry Hyde told the committee only
that the week ahead w1ll be a b1g on e for them all
But he d1d say he knows of no surpnse witnesses up the Republ1cans' sleeve " If there IS a
mystery witness, it's a mystery to me," he told a
Democrat who raiSed the questwn because of the
late Republican move to broaden the Impeachment proceed1ngs to mclude Chnton 's 1996 cam
pa1gn fund·raJSJng conduct
On a party-hne vote, hke all the rest the com
m1ttee has taken, the Repubhcans got subpoenas
ISsued for Just1ce Department memos on that
mvest1gatwn They got access, but under court
restnctwns that made 11 unlikely they could do
much With whatever they found
A Republican and a Democratic committee
lawyer read the documents, on Wednesday, but
could report only from memory - no notes, no
cop1es - and only to the cha11man and the committee's semor Democrat
Cha11man Hyde told committee Republ1cans
on Thursday the fund-ra~smg mqu11y produced no
rmpeachment ev1dence and would not be part of
the fmal case against Clinton

" We trust that th1s closes a short and unproduchve chapter of thrs very strange procccdmg. "
sard Rep John Conyers, the rankmg Democrat
That puts the case b~ck where it was, on the
Monica U,wmsky sex scandal, and Omton's
alleged hcs 1n sworn testimony aboutrl
He has admitted misleadmg answers but not
perJury That was h1s legaiJSllc way out '" fend off answers to 81 quest1ons Hyde pul to h1m 111
wntmg
The campa1gn fund-ra1smg foray led Rep
Rrchard A Gephardt, the House minonty leader,

AccuWeathe~ forecast for dayt1me cond1t1ons, low/h1gh temperatures

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1
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I•

I Manoflold 139'142"

[DaYton

ELECTION
r«:lW BACK
"D THE
IMPEACHMENT

(/

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I AIIISS

' •• AND

MICti

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PA

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_!o~ngst~~ ]3e~4!:.]

~

HEARIN6S

r·'

&amp;Jnny Pt. Cloudy

Parents whose children are el1g1ble for lh1s program need to become
aware of Its eXIstence, and, then get
Under CHIP, the state those ch1ldren enrolled
will expand Medicaid eli· The federal law establishmg the
program seL as1de $24 b1llion over the
gibility to cover children next five years to help states expand
up to age 19, whose health rnsurance to children It IS
Important to note that thiS program 1s
working families have for
children whose parents work
to wnte Gmgnch saymg he or Llvmgston should general rather than fire the Watergate prosecutor
incomes at or below 150 Children on welfare are automatitake
charge. They're leavmg that role to Hyde as President Nixon ordered, said he doesn't think
covered by Medicaid.
percent of the federal callyMos'
unlll
the comm1ttee acts
Omton 's wrongs warrant Impeachment
t umnsured ch1ldren - nme out
sa1d
the
case
1s
m
chaos
for
lack
of
"His cnmes or m1sdemeanors should, m order
Gephardt
poverty level- $24,675 of ten - 1n our area, however, have
d1rect1on
"
I
beheve
that
1t
1s
meum
bent
on
you
tp
to
JUStify
h1s removal, have to be higher than
for a family of four. parents who work The11 parents s1m
prov1de the leadership necessary to move the those at1ssue here," Richardson sa1d
ply work at JObs that don't offer health
process forward, " he sa1d
So d1d Charles Wiggms, a N1xon defender m
:
benef1ts, and, don 't pay well enough to
A
sharp
turn
from
the
Jetter
he
wrote
Gmgnch
1
1974
proceedmgs untrl he saw proof of the Water,cover the conSiderable cost of health msurance
the
speaker
had
gate
cover-up
Wiggins, later a federal appeals
seven
months
ago,
saymg
Under the new CHI)' program, Oh1o has receiVed nearly $116 million 111
dropped
any
pretense
of
fa11ness,
demeaned
h1s
sard
he
thmks
Chnton hed and could be
judge,
new funds for 1998..:.... extending health benefits to as many as !33,000 preoffice
and
should
recuse
h1mself
from
any
Chnton
Impeached
but
shouldn't
be "I would urge that
:vwusly umnsured children
,
) ou not vote to 1m peach the pres1dent/' he sa1d.
Impeachment proceedmgs
: The federal law creat1ng CHIP provided. money to states, and, allowed
EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. M..rs, vice
Clinton's
spokesman,
Joe
Lockhart,
sard
1!
IS
,them to dec1de how to best meet the goals of the prograln
president
1nd columnist for The ABIOCIIIted
odd
that
neither
Gmgnch
nor
L1vmgston
IS
acting
: , !he state of Ohw mtends to expand ehpb1hty through liS eXIstmg MedPres11, has reported on Waahlngton and
"
to
get
thiS
thmg
resolved
exped1t10usl~"
:lcard program Under CHIP, the state w1ll expand Med1caid eligibility to
Odd, too, that the Wh1te House wants Gmgrich national pol Hies for mora than 30 yeara.
•c.over ch1ldren up to age 19, whose fam1hes have mcomes at or below 150
,percent of the federal poverty level - $24,675 for a famrly of four.
1 The federal government recently est1mated that more than lour million
JChildren who qualify for Med1Ca1d and CHIP are not enrolled Many people
~imply don't know their k1ds are ehg1ble
By NAT HENTOFF .
"All documents The next day, the New York Post
: Interested parents should call the State of Oh1o's Consumer Hotline at
Ann Coulter 1s a frequent commcludmg
but
not
the reactron of minority
reported
:S00-324-8680 to fmd out1f thm children qualify for CHIP
"
batant m the cable-televiSIOn wars l1m1ted to ·· phone
mveshgahve staffer Steven Re1ch:
over the Impeachment of the preSJ
records, messages
"We'll have to dec1de what steps to
dent An attorney, she has worked or
letters,
that
take m the future and whether to
for the Senate Jud1C1ary Committee, memonalJze
or
make our requests formal "
clerked for the 8th t'J S C11cull relate to any con·
In my expenence, John Conyers
Court of Appeals, and was on the tacts or cornmumcaIS more sophrstrcated than your
staff of the Wash1ngton based Cen
hons between your
average member of Congress And ter for IndiVIdual R1ghts
self and the followmg md1v1duals or
• as I have told h1m with admiratton
A llbertanan, she has a qu1ck, enttl1es "
•· he may be the only member of the
By JOHN McCARTHY
JncJsJve w1t And - most unusual m
Th1s exuberant cnllc of the presiHouse to be aware of the free musi:Associated Press Writer
these TV free-fer-ails •• she IS a dent was asked for every contact she
cal speech of Jobn Coltrane, who
, COLUMBUS (AP)- Sen Jeffrey Johnson, who has asked a JUdge to set good humored polem1C1Sl She even has made w1th, among others, "the
greatly expanded the language of
&lt;~Side h1s November convJctwn on corruptiOn charges, l1kely will keep h1s
makes the Gcraldo R1vera show Office of Independent Counsel, any
JalZ
~eat m the U,g,slature until h1s term ends on Dec 31
bearable
persons who once worked or who
Drd John Conyers really believe
: Johnson, a two~ term Democrat from Cleveland, was conv1cted of three
Her recent book, "H1gh Cnmes now work for the Office of Indepenhe could mtrm1date a lawyer-Jour~harges under the federal Hobbs Act, wh1ch proh1b1ts public offlc1als of
and Misdemeanors The Case dent Counsel, Luc1anne Goldberg,
nahst rnto abandomng her unamusmg the11 off1ce to extort money A Cleveland grocer accused Johnson of Aga~nst Bill Clmton" (Regnery), Lmda Tnpp, and Paula Jones' attorbtguous nghts under the First
)lressunng h1m for campa1gn contnbutwns and loans
was on the New York T1mes best- neys "
Amendment?
' Johnson sa1d he has done nothmg wrong and last week asked a federal selle. hst for srx weeks
Helpfully, Congressman Conye1S
Or 1s th1s part of the contmumg
iudge to find h1m mnocent H1s lawyers sa1d the government showed InsufOn Nov 16, she rece1ved a letter defmed "document" as "any wnt·
herd-like determmahon of most
ficient evrdence and fa1led to prove that Johnson was not entrapped
from Congressman John Conyers, ten, recorded, or graphic matter of
Democratic members of Congress to
: He faces 20 years m pnson 1f h1s vcrdrct IS upheld Sentencing has been rank1ng mmonty member of the any nature whatsoever, regardless of
protect the pres1dent by any means
scheduled for Feb 5
House Judi ciary Comn11ttee
how recorded mcludmg, but not
necessary ·· mcluding the lessenmg
· Oh10 law proh1b1ts people conv1cted of such charges from seekmg public
He asked her for an array of doc- limited to memoranda, reports,
of
the11 own reputatwns for plam
olfice, but does not rcqu11e thm removal1f a en me occurred while m off1ce
uments related to the committee's expense reports toter-office and
mtelhgence?
To remove Johnson, he would have to be 1mpeached, a long pmcess th&lt;tt Impeachment mqUJry, addmg that he mtra off1ce commumcat10ns notaAnd Conyers may recall Jusllce
Involves both houses of the U,g1slature, wh1ch has been busy passmg end - hoped " you will share the spmt m
tiOns of any type of conversation "
Black's defrflltlon of "the
Hugo
of sesSion bills
wh1ch we are operatmg "
1
he
defm1t10n
went
on
and
on
-mm1mum
guarantee of the Fmt
- 4 Neither Republicans nor Democrats seem eager to force Johnson from
One would have to be a profes- to the extent that 11 would be
"If 1t's any help, however, I Amendment ·· the uncond1!10nal
t[!l: Senate, where he 1s m1rtomy wh1p, the th11d-rankmg leader 1n h1s party SIOnal wrestler to share the spmt m demeanmg to call 11 a f1Sh1ng expe- beheye that you should be able to
rrght to say what one pleases about
J~ns~n. who faces growmg legal b1lls, makes $49,842 a year
wh1ch that comnuttee has been oper- dilJon It was more along the hnes of obtam the same mformallon from public affa11s "
. : Mmonty U,ader Ben Espy, D Columbus, sa1d 'Johnson agreed not to atmg su\ce the 1nqu11y began
Capta1n Ahab 's hunt for the wh1te Terry Lenzer or another of the pres1
Nat Hentoff Is • nationally
attend any more sessiOns before h1s term ends
Ann Coulter was g1ven two days whale
renowned authority on the Flret
dent's pnvate tnveshgators
• ' "I suggested to h1m, and he agreed, that he not come back to the Sena te from the rece1pt of the letter to pro
Moreover, "unless otherwise
"Best w1shes for your future suc- Amendment and the relit of the
lifore then," Espy sa1d last week
Bill of Rights.
v1de
d11ected, the t1me penod covered by cess "
C:He sard Joh~son was prepanng for departure
r
_,Johnson al so was busy last week &lt;1! the conventiOn of the NatiOn al Black
Gjucus of State Legislators m Cleve land Telephone calls to h1s off1ce and
t&lt;i(he NBCSL staff were not answered
ily JACK ANDERSON
funds of theJr fore Alhed forces, but only now are many VJCl1ms'
:: Espy and Senate Pres1dent R1chard rman, R·Cmcmn au, saJd they had and JAN MOLLER
bears and are now
groups
seeking perhaps the only type of JUShce
seen no pressure to force Johnson from offi ce
United Features
held by the Austnan
available ·· the econom1c kmd.
: :"Sen Jeff Johnson chose not to come," Fman saJd "At th1s pomt 1nlt1m e,
Archduke felix llabsburg IS an old man now, government Illegally
Recently declasSified war records have pro~'II leave 11 at that"
bu) he clearly remembers the day 60 years ago
None of the other
duced ~ nood of laWSUits Over the last year,
::Fman also pOinted out that the Senate has no plans to meet agam th1s when Adolf ll1tl er's army marched 11110 V1enna, 100 or "so Habsburgs
attemptmg to correct half-century-old wrongs.
Y!~r, except to vote on concurrence With a few bills 111 th e House, and for a "occupy1ng Austna w1 thout Gnng ,, shot
1n Austna, 1ncludmg
SwiSs
banks pa1d out $1 25 b1lhon to VICtims'
SJ)!Cial sess1on featurmg Senator-astronaut John Gl enn on Dec 16
ll absburg, whose offic1al t1tle IS Archduke 6 other children of
groups for the1r part m the Naz1 war traffic, and
~ /'We ' re done," he saJd
Fchx llabsburg Lothnngen, 1S the second son of the late Karl I, are
for w1thholdmg account mformatwn and funds
. ; rhe U,g1slaturc's opt1ons 1n cases such as Johnson's range from a public Karl I. th e last emperor of Austna and al so the last makmg cla1ms to the
from
surv1ving family members German msurrcf&amp;lnmand to removal from office
ruling member of the Habsburg dynasty, wh1ch property
ance
compames
were docked for refusmg cla1ms
: •In 1997, then Rep M1chael Fox, a llam1lton Republican, was stnpped of re1gned for centunes 1n central Europe But even
"They (the Habsof
Holocaust
VICtims
And compames hke Volka~mm1ttee cha11mansh1p after adm1ttmg he broke th e rules by ac'ceptmg an though he's royally, the Archduke rs amo~g many burgs) were welcome
swagen,
Ford
and
General
Motors stand are
aiJ1me t1cket and_lodgmg from a Statehouse lobby1st
try1ng to p1ggyback on an mternallonal effort to '" Austna 1f they would have denounced the11 accused of prof1tmg from forced labor Owner: ;Fox later resigned hiS House seat and now IS a Butler County com nus
compensate VICtims of World War II
cl anTis to the throne and certam pnvlleg~s , .. an Ship of certam artifacts' lost m the war 1s also
SIMer
I
As H1tlcr marched m, 1-tabsburg, then a young Austnan off1 c1al told us "I thmk that IS a very under hot d1spute
man at m1htary school, was secreted through the CIVIlized way of dealing w1th royalty m the b11th
The Habsburg case and the recent rush of lawllunganan border d1sguJSed as a Hunganan off! · of a new (post war, democrallc) republic "
suits aren't m the same ballpark, says Abraham
c1 al, narrowly escapm g an arrest ordered by De r
But the 1-tabsb~rgs take 1ssue w1th the "civili- Foxman, national d11ector of the Anh Defamallon
: Today IS Monday, Dec 7, the 341st day of 1998 1 here are 24 days left Fuhrer h1mself
ty" of what they consider an 1llegal expropnation uague m New York Foxman wornes the multiIR the year
Ever smce, Habsburg ha sn' t been welcome 111 rhe royal descendants lwant the same treatment billion dollar settlements could skew h1story
:: Today's H1ghlight m H1story
h1s homeldnd Austnan offl cml s have cont1nu cd accorded Jew1sh and other v1chms of German posllmg the (alse notiOn that money can heal past
; On Dec 7, 1941, Japanese warplanes attacked the home base of the US
Hitl er's ban1shm ent ed1ct, desp1te nume ro us atrOCitieS, who had thw possesSions slnpped by m1sdeeds
l'ilcrfrc lleet at Pearl Harbor m Hawa11, an act th at resulted m \\m enca's appeals th rough the decades by lj absburg and h1s the Naz1s
"On the one hand, there 1s a need for JUStice
eUlry mto World War II
younger brother, Cari -Ludw1g fhe onl y way
The brothers, both of whom grew nch off var
and
accountability," ' Foxm,an says "But there 1s
: On th1s date
back to Austna, llabsburg expl amed lo our a'iso
1ous compamcs they operated 1n the Amencas
no
JUStice
There IS no way to quant1fy losses.
:In 1787, Delaware became the f11st state to raufy the US Constitution
elate, K&lt;~thryn Wallace, IS to renounce th e fam1ly ins1st thw quest 1S not about money "Frankly' Holocaust VICtims were not murdered for the
11
• In 1796, electors chose John Adams to be the second pres1 dent of the name as wel l as any nghts to th e fam1l y propert1es we couldn't be less Interested m money," Fell~
gold
teeth
,
Sw1ss
bank
accounts
or
Insurance
poliUjl1ted States
seJZed by !Iilier 1n 1938, and then by the Austn an 1-t,1bsburg told us " (1 he d1sputed properly) IS not Cies, they were robbed as an adJunct to the1r mur~ In 1836, Martm Van Buren was elected the e1ghth pres1dcnt of the Umt- gov ernment aft er the war
worth much, but1t 1s very Important forI us to be ders." ...
ed States
Th e properties m qucst1a n are not the pal aces recogm zed as Austnans '1
Wh1le the Habsburg's case 1s s1m1lar to law: In 1842, the New York Philh armomc gave 1ts f11st concert
and royal lib ran cs and galle nes , Habsburg
llabsburg also demes that the t1ming of hiS surts pendmg now for reparations and return of
• In 1946, Amenca's worst hotel f11c broke out at the Wmecoff Hotel 111 beli eve s these build1ngs and garden s bel ong to the appeal has anyth1ng to do w1th the recent blitz of
Atlanta, the blaze k1lled 119 people, mcl ud1ng hotel fou nder W Frank people of Austna Rather, the ll absburg brothers Holocaust -related cla1ms "We have been pres- property. Fox man believes the s1tuatwns are d1sSimllar.
Wmecoff
sec k tht: ret urn of "s 1x or seven Jandownersh1ps sunn g the Austnan government smce 1969," he
"You can't compare the loss of confiscated 1
: In 1972, Amenca's last moon miSsion to date was laun ched as Apoll o 17 and fore sts, nnd f1 ve or SIX buildmgs m the Cit y" Said
property
to those whose lrves were taken and the 11
hlll sted off from Cape Canave ral
wo rth a bo ut $~ milli on 1n 1918 (llal" uu rg docs
Of co urse, thc1r 11m mg couiJn 'I have been bet· property conliscated as an afterthought"
1n 1985, ret1red Supreme Court J ust tee Potte r Stew 1rt du~ d 1r1 II mme r, II t know tllw v,duc today) I he ll absburgs lllSISI tcr It 's been more than ~ 0 years smce the surv1v·
Write Jack Anderson and Jan Moller, Unltod
N II , at age .70 •
t
these p1opcrt1CS were purcha&lt;ed by' the pn vdte 1ng vJcl Jms of th e 'I h11d Re1ch were fre...ed by Features, ~00 Park Ava, New York NY 101"'"

Flurnes

Snow

The unseasonably warm weather 1s commg to an end. H1ghs 111 the 40s
"' Tuesday w1ll be 20 degrees or more cooler than 0 n th weekend
Prcc1p1tatJon IS forecast for Tuesday and, 1n the northe ast, 11 w1ll be
mostly m the form of snow, the NatiOnal Weather Serv1ce stud
Freezmg temperatures in the mld-20s to low 30s arc expected m the
' vcrn1ght hours
The record-h1gh temperature for th1s date at the Columbus weather sta' •n was 64 degrees 1n 1892 wh1le the record low was 1 below zero m
1~ 82 Sunscttomght will be at 5 06 p.m and sunnse Tuesday at 7 41 am
Weatller forecast:
1mpro~~~~-ceR~;nra~~d ~oger~~s m the mrd 40s Northeast wmd 5 to 10

8

Tuesday Ram likely, ma~nly m the mornmg H1ghs m th e lower 50s
r:hance of ram 60 percent
Tuesday n1ght Partly cloudy Lows m the m1d 30s
Extended forecast:
Wednesday Mostly clear H1ghs Jn the m1d and upper 40s
Thursday .Partly cloudy A chance of showers dunng the mght Morn.n g lows near 30 H1ghs m the lower and m1d 50s
Fnday .. Partly cloudy Mormng lows m the upper 30s thghs from th e
40s to the lower 50s

-· Obituaries·-~

:ohio perspective

bltuarln are paid 111nouncernente arranged by local funeral home• Obltuarle1
re publllhed 11 rwquHted to accommodate thoM desiring more Information than
10 provided In IIMIIICCOmponytng Doolh Nollc48
1

;Lawmakers not eager
1o punish Sen. ·Johnson

Bobbie Jo Butcher
Bobb1e Jo Butcher, 21, of Loveland, formerly of Harnsonv1lle. was murrlcred on Thursday, December 3, 1998 at. her resulencc
She was born on Apnl 9, 1977 m Athens. the daughter of Randall L and
, li nn L Woolen Butcher, both of Pomeroy
She was a 1995 graduate of Me1gs l-t1gh School, and was a vct ennanan s
·.-.. tstant for the Dr Henehan Vetennanan Ch~1c m M1lford
Bes1des her parents, she IS surv1ved by her tw1n Sister, Billie Jo Butcher and
her fiance, M1ke Hare, of Pomeroy; two grandmothers, Alpha Butcher ol
Pomeroy, and Fay Wooten of Shade, a grandfatller, Robert Woolen of Nel
sonvdle, a mcce, Breanna Butcher, Pomeroy, seven uncles and live
,1unts,Charles M Butcher of Zanesv11le, Pete and Bon me Butcher of McArthur,
11 ndney and Mrndy Butcher, Ronald and Cheryl Butcher, Robert and Amta
&gt;1 cher, ancl Rex and Tammy Butcher, all of Pomeroy, Phil Wooten ot Colum
' three aunts and two uncles, Sandra DIStelhorst of Racrne. Paula and Dave
11 11 th of Albany, and Cheryl and Paul Powell of Shade, and several cous1ns
She was preceded rn death by a grand1ather, Charlo's L Butcher, and an
uncle, Roger Butcher
Funeml scrv1ces w11l be held on Tuesday, December 8, 1998 .11 J 1 am 111
the Pomeroy Chapel of the F1sher
€ a1
entlfi€ Funeral Home, w1th the Rev Joe Sayre
officmllng Bunal w11l follow 1n the
(USPS 213-960)
Communlty Newspaper lloldlngs,lnc:
Wh1te Oak Cemetery 1n Harnsonvilk
Fnends may call at the Pomeroy
ll hshed every aflernoon Monllay through
Chapel
of FJSh'er Funeral Home on
, n day Ill Court St, POmeroy Ohro by the
O luo Valley Pubh~hmg Company Second class
Monday from 2-4 ,rnd 6 9 p m
postage pard at Pomeroy Ohro
Memonal contnbut1ons may be made
Mcmbi:r llle Assomted Press and th e Oh to
Newspaper Assoctat1on
to the Me1gs H1gh School AthletiC
PO!ltmastcr Sen d atldn:ss cone1.1 ron! to The
Boosters, 111 care ol Me1gs H1gh
Da ll y Sentmel 111 Cour1 St Pomtto) Oh o
School
45769
SUBSCRIPTION RAHS
Arrangements are under the d~rccll on
8y CaiTier or Motor Route
of the B11chfield Funcr,d Home 111 Rut
One Week •
.S2 00
On e Month
SS 70
land.

Th D "1Y5

Piggybacking on an effort to compensate victims of WWII

· 1

One Year
SJ04 00
SINGLE COPY PRICE

,.

Da•l y
3~ Ce m~
Subscnbers not dcsmng to pav the carm:r may
rennt 111 advance direct 10 The Dall~ Sent mel on
11 three SIX or 12 month ba~1s Cu:d11 1111)1 be
giVen camer each week
No subst.:r pllon ~ y mall perm tt e~ m ~reas
where home earner st rv1cc 1s availabl e
1 hh:oiher reserves the nght to adjust rate s dur
~ the subscn p11011 pc11 0t.l Su~npli O il mte
lgt! !i may be 1mplemented hy chan!llmg 1 h~
1110n or the s ubscnpt 1on

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION
lns1de Me.gs County
13 We eks

26 Weeks
52We eks

1

.S 27 :-10

sn 82

•

.SI 05 "i 6

Rates Outs1dr Meig1 County

Today In History

""

Ram

3y The Associated Press

John Conyers confronts the First Amendment

'

Showers T stOI'ms

[Rain, cooler conditions in
William Moses.Roush
forecast for Tuesday
W1lliam Moses Roush, 83, New Haven, W Va , d1ed Saturday, Dec 5,

1

"'

Ooucty

13 We eks

S29 Z.'i

26 Weeks
52 Weeks

S56 68
SI 09 7'2

· Reader Services
Correction Polley
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Worthmgton.•
- * -*-

1998 1n Pleasant Valley Hospital
Born Oct 14, 1915 1n Mason County, W Va, son of the late Charles and
M1lllc Roush, he was a rct11ed bncklayer
A US Navy veteran, he was a member of the Bncklayers Local 32 m
Pomeroy, Amencan leg1on Post 140 10 New Haven, Stewart-Johnson VFW
Post 9926 of Mason, W Va, and the Broad Run Rod and Gun Club, New
Haven
Surv1vmg are hiS w1fe , Mary Roush, three sons, Joey (Sandy) Roush,
Herbert (Pauletta) Roush and Harry J (Sand1) Roush, all of New Haven; a
daughter, Bonn1e (Charlie) W1lhams of Gahanna, 13 grandeh1ldren and 19
great-grandchildren, and a brother, Ralph W Roush of New Haven
He was also preceded m death by a daughter, Eleanor Keck, and by three
brothers, two s1sters and two great-grandchildren
Serv1ces will be 11 am Tuesday 1n the New Haven Funeral Home, With
t~e Rev Greg Bla11 offic~atmg Bunal Will be m the Graham Cemetery
I
Fnends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 tomght.
I
M1htary graves1de nles w11l be conducted by Stewart-Johnson VFW post
9926 and Amencan U,g1on Post 32
In lieu of flowers, donallons may be made to the Arthnlls Foundahon, or
the Cornelia DeLong Center Foundation m Avon, Conn

Report: Very few students have lost
licenses for bringing guns to school
(:OLUMBUS, Oh10 (AP) EducatiOn offtcmls say a new state
law that takes away dnver's licenses
for students caught bnngmg
weapons to school has at least one
!law. Many offenders are too young
to dnvc
"The leg1slators are passmg laws
on top of themselves, 'Judge Yvette
McGee Brown of Frankl m County
Juvemle Court told The Columbus
Dispatch for a story published Sunday.
Ten hrgh school students
statcw1de have lost thc11 license
s1nce the law took effect 1n July
1997, the newspaper sa1d
"I figured 1t would send a mes·
sage," Rep Jacquelyn O'Bnen, who
sponsored the law " I f1gured a driver 's license IS the most Important
thmg to a teen-ager "
0 Bnen, R Cincinnati, saJd she
proposed the law because parents 111
her dJstnct told her that schools had
become mcvc v1oknt and that teen-

121/w.

Stock reports are the 10·30
a m. quotes provided by Ad vest
ot Gall1pol1s

Un1ts of the Mergs County Emergency Med1cal Serv1cc' recorded 18
calls for assiStance' Saturd.1y and Sun
day Umts rcspondmg mcluded
CENTRAL DISPATCH
8 51 am Saturday, North Second
Avenu e, Paul Stctnmctz, Veterans
Memonal Hosp1tal, M1ddleport
squad 'asststed,
11 54 a m Saturday, Brownell
Avenue, Evan W1 seman, treated at
6 46 p m Saturday, Bnck Street,
Rutland, Sharon Boggs, VMH, Rut·
land squad ass1sted,
4 48 am Sunday Bnck Street,
Rutland. Sharon Boggs. Holzer MedICal Center, Rutl,md squ ,ld ass1stcd:
8 45 a m Sumjay, E,1gle R1dge
Road, Chester. Bonn1e Walker,
HMC
I 11 38 a m Sunday. Johns Road ,
Racanc, Daran Rr..:csc, VM H, Racme
squad asSisted,
3 11 p m Sunday, Seventh Street,
Pomefoy, Sharon Cogar, HMC,
Pomeroy squad ass1sted ,
I 0 I 9 p.m. Sunday, East Mam
Street, Pomeroy, Martha Grucscr,
treated at the scene
'
MIDDLEI'OR'I
2•59 a m Saturday, South Second
Avenue, Geneva Tuttl e. Pleasant ValIcy Hospit al, Central OJSpatch squad
c\SSIStCd

R 37 p m Sunday, Vme Street.

( mdy Knott s, VMII
RACINE
5 IS p m Sund(lY vo lunteer l1rc
tk r c~ w/ncnt to Ravenswood. W Va,
.ts~ l "i td.i hn hru:-.h fm:. ,
~ 11 p m Sunday. VFD and squad
to i\ppk Grovc-Dorc,JS Road. LoiS

'·
I

'Of

agers had easier access to weapons
The law requ11es licenses to be
suspended for 1 to 3 years for any
youth found gUJily m court of takmg
a weapon ~ mcluding guns, kmves
and pepper spray - to school
Dunng the last school year, about
130 Franklin' County students were
expelled for bnngmg a weapon to
school Twenty-one students were
charged m Franklin County Juvemle
Court w1th bnngmg weapons to
school from Jan. I to Oct. 31, 1997
Almost equal numbers of middleand h1gh-school pup1ls arc gelling
caught bnngmg guns or kn1ves to
school, acco1 dmg to state Educahon
Department figures
Bes1des age, there IS another rcason why so few licenses have been
suspended· School offlcl31s don 't
always call pol1ce when a student 1s
caught w1th a weapon
rhe pumshment depends on how
severe the offense IS and may not be
reponed to pollee, offic~als say

EMS units record 18 calls

the scene,

Stocks

Barry 0 Bart on, 22, Stockport , was c ited for assured clea r dis-:
lance foll ow1ng a two-car acc 1dent Saturda y on State Rout e 7 at'
the 1n1ersec tw n of Orange Townsh1p Road 296 (Blak e), the Galh a.:
Me1gs Post of the State H1ghway Patrol reported
;
Troopers sa1d Barto n was southbound on 7 at 6·50 p m when he"
was unable to slo w 1n t1me and struck the rear of a so uthbound ca
dnv en by Joshua K Tolliver, 20, Concord, N.C. who was preparIng to turn ont o Blake Both ca rs were moderatel y damaged.
•

Mobile home shot at, deputies say
Chns S1mms, Carpenter Hill Road , reported early Fnda y that
:
someo ne shot at h1 s ma btle ho me around 3 30 am
•
Deput1es of th e Me1gs Co unty Shenffs Office found a SJngl .,:
hole about the s1ze of a 12-gauge slug 1n the s1de of the res1d e nce ~
S1mms left the res idence
•
He reported the shot .:.as fired from a car on the road 1n front o~
hts res1denc e
:
He was not InJured and lhe inctdent rematns under 1nveshga-~
tiOR

V11grl R ue, 67, Pomeroy, d1ed Sunday, Dec 6, 1998 m Holze&lt; Med1cal
Cente r.
A rellred crane operator for Foote Mmeral/Amencan Alloys m ~ew
Haven, W Va , he "as born Dec II , 1930 m Sahsbury Township, son of the
late John W. 'and Mabel Knapp ue He was a member of the Nazarene
Church and Local 5171 Steelworkers, New Haven
He 1s surv1vcd by hiS w1fe, Maxme ue, a son and daughter-m-law,
J1mmy and Kim U,e of Pomeroy. two daughters and sons-m-law, Brenda
and Don Guthne of Mrddleport, and D1ana and Greg U,w1s of Chflon
W Va , seven grandchildren and four great-grandchildren; four brothers,
Lou1 e Lee of North Carohna, Gary Lee of Nova, Charles Lee of Syracuse.
and Clarence Lee of Pomeroy, a siSter, Donna U,e Roberts of Hancock, Md ,
and several meces and nephews
He was also preceded m death by brothers, J R U,e and Leo Lee, and by
a S~&gt;ter, Margaret lee McCall
Graveside serv1ces w11l be Wednesday at 10 am 1n the Rockspnngs
Cemetery, Pomeroy, w1th Mrmster Lloyd Gnmm offJcJatmg Fnends may
call at the Ewmg Funeral Home, Pomeroy, from 7-9 p m. Tuesday

•

SE~

Lula B Hampton. 89, Pomeroy. d1ed Saturday. Dec. 5, 1998 1n Veterans
Mt mona! Hosp1t al
A homemaker. she was born Sept ~- 1909 rn Tuscaloosa. Ala . daughter
of the late John utha and Pearl Fle1mog Russell
She was a member of the Naom1 BapliSl Church, Church Women Umted,
Amencan Legion Auxiliary. 8 et 40 Mel£$ County Salon 71 0. AARP. Me1gs
Countv Scn1or C.t1zens, M1ss1onary Soc1ety of Naom1 Baphsl Church. and
the Hockmg D1stnct M1 ss1onary Soc1ety
Servrces Will be held Wednesday at noon m theEwmg Funeral Home,
Po meroy. With the Rev Edward Buffington officJatmg Bunal w1ll foll ow 1n
the Beech Grove Cemet ery. Pomeroy Friends may call on Wednesday from
11 a m to noon at the funeral home
In heu of flowers, memonal cont11butrons may be made to Naomi Saplist Omrch rn care of Fanme West, 6 Cave St , Pomeroy Ohro 45769

Virgil R. Lee

•!~umbuo f'3'/4e' I

j40'/42' l

Citation issued in two-car crash

Lula B. Hampton

Tuesday, Dec. 8
~

Local briefs:

[ Death Notic.es I

Ohio weather

mvolved He's the Republican who once sa1d he
would never make a speech w1thout denounang
Omton's wrongs and who cleared late campaign
TV ads raismg the scandal as a Republican rssue
The Democrats gamed five House seats, and three
days later, Gmgnch said he was res1gmng as
speaker and from Congress
Then, too, there were GOP odd1l1CS
The Hyde comm1ttee called two Repubhcan
figures from the Watergate era fo talk about
rmpeachment, and got advice the GOP d1dn't
expect Elliott Richardson, who qUit as attorney

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wolfe, VMH, Brenda Harper, treated
"
at the scene
RIITLAND
9·41 p m Saturday. Laurel Road,
carbon dioXIde alarm, Debb1e and
U,w15 Meeks, treated at the scene,
Central DISpatch squad and Columbm Township VFD assiSted ,
8 54 a m Sunday, Middleport
Pollee Department, Enc Morr1s,
VMH, Pomeroy squad ass1stod;
3.37 p m Sunday, VFD and squad
to Salem Street, Danny DaVIs, PVH
SYRACUSE
3 p m Sunday, VFD and squad to
Roy Jones Road, brush f11e, no
lnJUnes reported r
7· 12 p m Sunday, VFD and squad
to Roy Jones Road, rckmdled brush
f1rc
TUPPERS PLAINS
II 14 am Saturday, State Route
7, motor veh1clc accident, John Burdette. refused treatment

-

Complaints filed with sheriff's office ;

•

The followrng complamts were mvest1gated recently by depuhes

of the Me1gs County Shenffs Off1ce
Georgena L1pscomb, Pomeroy. reported Nov 30 that somethmg:
struck and broke the passen ger s1de wmdow of her 1981 Ford Mus-·
lang wh1le she was driVIng down Bradbury Road 1 he rnc1deqt
occurred around 8 10 p m
•
Kathleen Wh1te , Rutland. reported Wednesday that someon&lt;;,
scratched the pas&gt;enger SJde o f her 1997 GMC p1 c kup truck
•
Ahc1a Counc1l. Mm e rsvJile, reported the theft of a 1991"Hond0:
4 wheeler from her carport Fnday
~

Rutland woman faces escape charge
A 40-year-old Rutland woman IS facmg a felony escape charge "
followmg an 1ncrdent at the Me1gs County Sherilf's Off1ce 1n
Pomeroy early Sunday.
Debra L Haend1ges was bemg held at the shenff's off1ce on
charges of disorderly conduct by mtoxrcation and open contame.P
when she left the off1cc, according to a shenffs report
She was found later at J1mmy's Bar on Ma~n Street by the
Pomeroy Pol1ce Department and transported to the Southeastern
Ja~l 1n Nelsonville, accord1ng to the report

Announcements:
Holiday Fair planned
A holiday faJr w1ll be held at the Fur Peace Ranch, Saturday, 10
am to 6 p m There w1ll be live mus1c, door pnzes, g1ft1deas from
Appalachran artists rangmg from homemade crafts to hne art, and
gourmet hohday treats
f

Market steer weigh-in set
Robert Calaway, cha11man of the beef comm1ttee of the MCJgs
County Sen1or Fa11 Board, announced today lhatthe 1999 market steer
we1gh m Will be held Saturday, 9to 11 am at the Me1gs County Fa,rgrounds 1n the show arena
Agam th1s year, a membei may reg1ster and we1gh m two steers, bUt
only one market steer may be exh,ibrted and sold at the 1999 Me1g~
County Fa11
Fa~ lure to reg1ster/we1gh-m steer(s) at th1s t1me wrll diSqualify tile
steer(s) from exhibition and sale.
'
· All steers must be halter broke, and must be castrated and dehorned
pnor to the regrstratron and wergh-m lime
'
In the event of 11lclement weather, those mvolved should listen w
WMPO Rad1o, 1390 AM or 92 I FM for cancella!JOn notrees
!
Those who have quest1ons should contact Robert or Joann C~laway_
at 740-985-3414 or Dav1d R Haggerty, Me1gs County ExtensJOit'
Agent, 4-1:), at 740-992-6696
•

Meeting date changed
The Me~gs Local Board of EducatiOn will meet Monday, Dec 14:
mstead of Tuesday as earher scheduled The meetmg will be at 7 p 'V•
m the d1stnct s central off1ce m Pomeroy
•,,

Christmas party planned
Burlingham Camp, Modern Woodmen, w1ll have 1ts annual Chns\:
mas d1nner Saturday from 3 to 4 p m at the hall. Those attendmg are
asked to take a covered diSh The public IS mvrted to attend

Trustees to meet
The Bedford Townsh1p Trustees w1ll meet Tuesday, 7 p m at tht\
townhall.

OAPSE to meet

.'

The Me1gs Local Chapter 17, OAPSE will meet Thursday, 7 p m .1!
the Me1gs M1ddle School, SIXth grade burldmg
I

----Veterans Memorial·- --.._
Saturday admiSSions - none
Sunday diScharges - none
Su
admiSSions Neva

McElroy, Pomeroy
Sunday diScharges - none.

***************
BIG c.,IIForr~o~~ To flll'S

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•

ILL BE HOME~R CHRISTMAS (PG)
S'lr· SUN 1 00 &amp; 3 00
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8 8 8 - E U R ,E K A - 7

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•

-

·Sports

••

The Daily Sentin~!

- ~onday,

Broncos rally to beat Chiefs 35-31, retain undefeated status .
NFL roundup

· To be able to come thrnugh
when we needed the l'assmg game,
1fs mce Jo make the !'lays when you
have to make them:· sa1d Elway.
who threw for 400 yards. including a
24-yard ,louchdown 1'3SS to Sterlmg
Sharre for lhe game w,nner w1th
3 3~ left
.. It's been so long smce we've

been m a game like this. Th1s was
fun."

But New Je""y wasn 't fun for the
Scaule Seahawl&lt;s, who lost 32-3 1 to
the New York Jets on Vinny
Testaverde's live-yard run. Replays
showed Testaverde only went four
yards on the founh-&lt;lown play
landing '" front of the end zone.

Cln \\'ithrow 80 HO Wooruton f~'a.sh 0 C )60

ABL standings

Ncwth•nt«.m .Mutual Classir-&lt;haMpioml11p

E!I.STERN CONEERENCE
. Iwn

U~UJ US
Phll:wklrhtt~

CUI

Cht•Jj!.O

~
H

L

8

~

&amp;10
800

l

6

Hl

'

1'&lt;1.

2

!:ill

Piua Hu1

4
~J

27211
!
9 18!

Sr\1 f.nl!l.and
Na!h\tll'e

-·-

6

J ol~&gt;e

7
7

1
4

Po&gt;n bnd
(;•h'f.ldcl

4
:!

4

San

P;tn.Jimc'man 7l Tcus Souttk'rn 61

Tom RotM-rson llissK-C"harnpionstup
J.:...lson~dk St 78 B1 l'\o\IOO Parl..er ~9
Sunda~·s

1

l&gt;~

1

'i

Classic·ch am~•p

Third piau

178
616

m

,

78

&lt;iS

71

South
Aullum KO Fltw1da Sl: M

Phrl;~lklph•a 8-l Colorado 6\
'i::.n J,•'l(' T2 Pord.lnd 70

Sunday's scores

\hd11nl

No games through Tuesday

Galwn ..J6 ,\ shl;md

South"t'!it
Pr::. m ~

\'t('ll

I~-'

S\\

Te,as r\&amp;M 77 l ;un~r 69

Wednesday's 2ame

'

l'h ti::!Jelph1a atl'nrtltind tOp m

fournaments

NCAA Division I
men's scores
Eas~

Salurdav's aclion

1\kron 72 Buffalo 60
Col umb1a 61 Army 50
Conll&lt;."ctt cut 82 Mtclupn St 68
Delawar.- 70 Drext&gt;l fl2

Fa1rfield 75 Lo~ol a Md 6Q
Han ard 79 Sacred Hear~ 6-'
MrJ · Bahtmore Cuumv 71 S1 Francts Pa 4"\
fo! ou nl St Mary s Md 74 Bud.~ll67
Nonhcastern 68 Boston U 67
Pr1111 St 70 Vtlla nov~ 53
Pro\ 1d~nc~ 8 1 Oro"' n 60
Rolmt Mom s 87 St Franm NY 86
Rutgers 80 Fatrlc:tgh Dtckmson 59
Se1on Hall 71 La Salle 55'
St John 5 7 ~ Boston Co llegt' 5.5
St Joseph s 8 ~ Ch ~ uan oogo 68
Wapllt'r B2 l ung hland U 72
South
Ah Bl rflU ngham 87 W Kentucky 72
Al~bama 5' Tulane 52
Ausnn Peay 80 E llhnol§ 67
Cent enary n Nonh..,estern St 70
,
Cal l ol Charleston b6 North Carohna 64
Duke 89 ~ Cnrohna St 69
Duyucsne /I Radford 67
East (aroltnil 6J A~man U SB
Flondn 80 Chnrlcston Southern 67
George MQson B~ James Madtson 81 (QT)
Georg1a Tt&gt;ch 74 Appalachian St 72
Jncksnn St 90 Tougaloo 66
Kemucky 74 ~hamt 65
Lal ayene 6K Ho\\oard 5'i
Mar~ hall 88
Memph 1 ~ 65

••
••

Massachuse ll • 66
Vandcrbth 56
Mercer 71 Covenant 62
M1ddlc Tennessee 67 Ten n es~e Tech 56
M1smsrpp1 88 Luuts.,.lll~ 69
•'-1orehead St '14 Tenn M anm 6-4
Murroy St 108 E Kentucky 66
N Caro l1naA&amp;T8 ' UNCG ret:nsbol079
N C Chariot! ~ 62 Virgm1a Tt&gt;ch 51
Na• y 79 Wofford 64
Old Du muu un ~9 South C.rrohn a 56
S C 1\1 kcn 'i7 Co n ~la l Carohn 1 :'i6
Sl Mmou rt 70 Tennessee St 49
SW l .ouls t.trla ~6 Southern Mtss 47
SPulh Florr da 86 llon dn Atla ntic 'iO
SPuthnll U 90 SE LouiSioHJ.I ~9
'\tct~ o n

8' I he

C tt ~ do.:l

fJU

I rtt) St 9:'i Flonda A&amp;M 9!
Y MI 1l l R.mdo lph Mal Oil ~'i
\ u~rrut ')1. N, w H n11rstm .. 'i2
\\11l1nm &amp; M ~n ~6 RKhnwnd ~~

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JJ,.,, IIIli!

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7 1 111 m &gt;Is S1
\\nl!hl St 1'} 1Ju11cr ~7
\\ II Chnsm

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t\rkansa~

IJ.I)Iat

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:,

Te~a~ Chmt1~n

1:

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r~Lh

74

R6 Tcu~ lll'a ~o 79
h '· ' ~ Arh ngwn 70 ]~:-;as \\ls lcyan :'\7

i\r1to n 1 9~

FarWn t
!1.4

W~ u m1n g

St 79 UNLV 7U
ll m~c St 119 V.n &gt;lll ngton Ql
C ~l St l t1llcnon N St Mnr; ~ trtl 1\9
L thl{lt nln 71 Rholk lsl,\lld ~J
(,J[orado 90 ldnhn S1 h \

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79
San Dtego_6 1 Te~as ~7
San Jose St 79 Morn ma 'iJ
uc ltYIO C68 N '' "Nil~ '\4
un A 6'1 Oklahom.1 St M
Ut:~h 61 Long B c~d1 Sr ~~
w ~ ~h ln !lt nn St IJl I W.l~h tn)!tun 72
fuurn.mtcnl~
Am!! rita~ Lla sstc c ho mrun u ~lllfl
Nl•hr. 1 ~ k rt 6()

Colg,uc 48
Thtrd pl ~,u
IJ 11 1U~nn 611, SW 1 ex a~ 64

,., Ulu c &amp; Gold Coca-Cola l.la sstC·I h 1111pmn,l11p
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lul, t07 Marquene5 1
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Third pla n·

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" 11

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Yurnnnt 67 Co rnell iti

( o rrrrr (; l as~ !(·\ h.tmpll&gt;n"lup
OHI O 7S Ill Cluu1gn 69
flurd plan
'n rl lll~l·t)'i S.lnt\CI,u a 7~

(. 'rlnnr C hallrngr·c hampmnShl p
tm1.r s1 ~o \1. 11h 11ut• 7l ro r r
rh',rd piau
l'tlll~(lnn flK Ntlrth Tc~as 411
h n t \lt•rchanl llank -C \'C
( ht ~~ l l £hllmpmmlup
1!.111 St (l'i J.11. l..'nn1 rl k "'-1

rhlrd phu t l
S (. unltn 1 '\1 :&lt;R St J\t,cph' lncl X2

4~

10 1 0 769
7 6 0 'il8
1 6 o s~s
5 B 0 lB'i
2 II 0 I '\.a

Tennes~

Pmsburgh
Bahm~

CINCINNATI

2n 241
219 161
217 l \.1

Wmun o;_.,sliOO
1\ 0 01 IXlJ 4'0 2H
7 6 0 'i\8 116 271

y IJen\n'"

Oakland
~attle

Kan ~as

1-'8 169
276 151

670%l:l86)ol2'
'i 8 0 lB 'i 269 ~9-1

C11y

~

Rt chmo!WJ Hts ~J f:urpon Harbor 49
R Oll~ 7~ Pr.:ble Sha .... ltee' 26
S ClHJJk' §IOII Southeastl!m 6 1 Spn n~ Sh':lwn«

S m Dlet!O

Srmd u~ l y

PC"rl.:tns 10 Monroe\ I lite 62
S ut~h V:tl "'- R Un1tl'd Ux~l -i ~
S!'bfl n!,! M~Kmlty 'i l Sou rh1n~ton .W
Sp;wta H1Jhland o; I lklh •lit: Ckar Furl lS

fum

Sprint: Cath 7'i Tecumsah 'i'i
SprtniJ: Uxal68 E Paksm~ 'i7
Spnn~ Nonheast~rn ~I Cedaf\ 1lle .tl
SprllliJ: SOOrh 56 Hanuhon 46
Spnngboru ~ Be llbrook 5~
51 OcmanJ 'i8 Cahan C hpsll.ll1 'i"i
S!rnsbur£! 68 Rmman 59
StrongH tll e 1~ N Olmsted -12
Tav lor 46 Harmon .W
Teays Vallt&gt;y 6:'i L1ia-v.QOd S"i
Tol Cetur;~l6 8 Tiffin Columbtan H '
Ta l Emmanuel8apt1st 6:'i Bells11lle 'il
Tot Ltbbe y 64 Akron GarftddiS
Tul SuuthHrw 67 Tol Swamon 16
lol Woodward 7l Perrysburg 'i1
Toronro 6 1 Co lumbmna Crcsl\1ew .tK
Tn"'ay 61 Ch: South 56
1 usrarawa5 Val 55 Canal Fulton N W .U
U mnntown tale 68 Akron Col'C:Iltry 49
Valley V1ew 74 M1ddlerown Chm uan 42
Van Wert 7l Bryan 44
(
W~p.1lmnet a 62 Bclldontmne 'i'i
Warren S\'IIIe 6l Lake wood ~ 4

Wash1n2ton

-·-

8 0

~B:'i

20 1 271

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Da.llas

l!:LI&amp;rl' fA
8 , (I
6 7 0
~ II 0
""" 9 0

Anzuna
NY G1ants

11 0 0

Plulado."iph1a

:rum
1 Tennessu 170)
2 AoridaS1 '

11 -1 1671

4

l OH IO ST
~ K:aM.U St

10. 1 I 61Jl
II I I 4 76

5

'i Anzona

11 -1 l412

6

6
7
8
9

10.1

9-2 I _H7

1398

'
7

61'i 128 ~\9
..[.61: 170 H ]
111'i 1 19 27h
~ 264 ~57
21 1 l l~ 191

Cen1n1l D!fision
I!

Grl."':n Ba)
Ta111pa 8a\
lktrnrl

I 0 91\ 442 ]oil

0 667 114
0 ·H7 221

8 4
'i 7
"i K
'10

C h1cago

~ll"i

0

UCLA
Annda
Te1as A&amp;M
w,sconsm

10 Tulane
II Arkan§&lt;IS
12 Gtor!•a T~c h
tl Vi!J.tma
I .I NebrMka

l"i M1ch1! 1111
16 A1rforcc:
17 Notrt D ~me

~ .ao

2 ~0

, II
10
6
., l
2

St Lo ut ~
Cmvhna

~ 21

15
17

M'i
610

16

~7 !J

18

+12

8 l

"\12

21

S.l

19\

22

106

24

190
159
1\
Othrn rtcel-wlnl \oln· Y1rg1111a T!'ch lOb
Southern Cui ~0 West V1rgtm a \8 Purdue 2 1
MARSHALL 15 MIAMI OHIO 4 Kentucky- l
Bn ~ham Young 1

NCAA Division I scores
Saturday's action

0 &amp;.a6 l ~ l l\9
0 769 l8S 212

Eut
Army

0 462 2\8 268

~4

Na\ 'I :ID

Massat husens 27 Leht gh 21
M1sencord1.J67 Marywood 41
Rowan 22 W1$ ·EmJ Clatn:'! ICJ

0 l 'J 221 l02
0 l'i4 264 15'

dn l§tOn ltl'f
South
Carson·Newll\3n ~7 Sli ppery Rock 21
Georgm Southern 52 Connecttcut ~0
M1am1 49 UC(..A 4S
Northwestern St 1 1, Appabtchtan St 20
T~nne~t:e 24 M1sstu1pp1 St 14

San Franmco l l Carolma 18 &lt;OD
New York Jets U Seaule ll
New York Gt::tnls 1l. Anzooo 19
Denvc:~ '~ Kansas Cny l l
Mtamt 17 Oakland 11
Tennessee 16 Bnlnmore 14
Mmnewla 48 Clncago 22

MartOII El¥10 6l
Marton Ri\~r Val
Medm:t 8~ C le East

79\
689

19
10

8 \
8-.J

hcksonYtlle H Detroit 22
Allnnla 28 lnd1anapohs 2 1
New Erlgland 2l Pimburgh 9
Washmgton 24 San Otego 20

Zane Trace 58, Pructom lle Fatrland ~7

'1-1.
8-\
8•\
8- \

Mt&lt;lnll !Fla I
~hsm~ tppt St

Buffnlo l l CINClNNATi lO

Z::mes1,1tlk 67 Co l WheiSione 56

9
II
12
14
1\

2~

New Orle::tns 22. Dallas l

Westfall 70 Cude Ytllt ,,
WOO!iter 6!1 Mans field Madtson 49
\\oosler Tnway 61 Canton S 56
You Mooney 5~ Metter Pa 49

II 0 I 067
9-2
960
9-2
87~
92 8 17
9- "\
815

7- ~

Sunday's scores

Wa, erly 89 S Webster 48
Wayne Trace" 7~ Della 44

8

MtSSOU!l

x dtrtLhl=d playoff berth
y-c hn~ hed

10

266 100

0 2\1 219

2
l
7
iO
11

11 -2 1 •ro

~1

W~slun 01\1~1011

x At lnnta ,
.\·San Fr~!KI S~o
New Orlt'ans

2

10- 1 1 176

IJ.\
11-1

19 Georgm
10 T..-xas
21 Oregon
21 PennSt
2'i

y- ~l 1nn.-su1a

~ &amp;!Y.all
12-0 I 7~
I

I R S) l at:' U ~

Easlrm Dtn51CH1

,

,_

tn pln"IOUS poll

Mtd'fHt
Moon! Umo o 34 Tnmty Teus 211
NW Musoun Sl 49 Te:tas A&amp;M-Kmgmlle "\4
Oltvd Nazan:ne:·..H, Tn·Sta~ lB
Tens A&amp;M \6 Kansas Sl .\"\ (2 OT)
W llhn ms 24 Aonda A&amp;M 21

T lENT

ROBElT

) 0 NES
0 f

G0

"'

out the playoffs
The Broncos had tra1led m only
_three games.this season and never by
more than six points Ngt only did
Elway throw an interception on the
•goal llpe late m the fJrSl half, but
Terrell DaviS, who hadn't fumbled in
836 touches, fumbled on the Kansas
C&gt;ty I m the th1rd quarter.
"They caught us off-balance
early, and we fell behmd, " coach
M1ke Shanahan sa1d of the Ch1efs (5-

F•r Wtst

A1r Force 20 Bngham Youn&amp; ll
PacJiic 26, Huron 2•

Go L F

Tl

AI L

L f

8)

No n- conrertnc~

Case Western R2 Fn111ry

flf1

S h ~ ""nl'e St 119 W1l herfor~e 77

Ohio womeri 's college scores
Akr1•n 6'

~kn lnt~r~ull r ~etule

!\ I 0 bl'tlrn 71
71 [ml h,nn 6~

Ohlo { unftrt nce
Hl Juh n C.uwll
Cajllt 11 KO Muunl L1nt(Jn 61
Ol11 n Northl"rn 68 Oucrhem 'il)

~~

Non-cunrtrtnce
Dc h .m ~c

9D Adn m 'i 1
M1a1111 Uh1o 6\ W11 11.htSt

&amp;~

Mutll11 V~rn on Na?areJlo' &lt;Jx Wilb crl cl r l~ 62
01110 S1 6 1 Rm ger~ '\@

Tournaments
Carntr C l aJ~tc- fint round
Kent 86 t.ar•• y~te 57
Cedarv dl ~ lnvttatmnal-champiOnsh•p
Cedamlle 80 C'e:ntml St 74
Third place
(icorgeto"n, Ky 9!1 Oh\ c t Nazarene 72

Shawnee Sl. Holiday Tournament cha mptonsh1p
Shaw nee St 84 1'1kevtlk 4K
Th1rd place
lay lor 92 Webber 42

Sund') 's action
Non-conference
Case Wtstem 74 Emurv 70 ,
Marq uen e 68 Dilyton 'i9
Wa lsh 69 Carlow 5'i
X~Yt er 64 Wu · Mtlwaukee 6 l

1•

Ohio H.S. boys' scores
Saturday's aclion
Alm 'n Kenmore 65 Akron M.mdl~~t.: r ~(,
1\ n)('hn ~~ I ehe•ly ~9
As hl and 46 Gnl1on 45
Au\hnburg ( ,r,H1d Rtver AcmiL my q Cn h.11 ~
Chm uon 48
B 1y ~~ Obcrhn :'i4 (OT)
lkaCh\\ tnd "i ll M llllllct' V~t :'i2
Bcdt ord 9i fYt lll burg 69
U~fo rd Chull(l B9 Col L1st 69
Berlin Htl mrl

~

l Clenr I orl.: H.;

llexky 77 Col World H,u\cs t -n
Ul!'nm ( ,lffllll 61 M1arn1 f1 ~u 46
Bluffton til 1\kComh 'i2
lh~lh111le 'i'i Nnrdom:J 4~
Bul\'fu' 77 N ~w " ~~tu n gh•n Uu~hy&lt;'llnl 'i t
B11q1u&lt;; \\ \nlord 60 S111111nlt: l\ll•h.1'11.. .f f1
l1 ( ut,ll \\ lll!.lll''lt:r 'it&lt; Cnl '\l.ld ' Ill ) ~ K
~ tnl olll ( okuO tl W M IIISitdd Sr 'i~
C1rtlH\)!I&lt;111 K7 M lll~hdd St l'l't\!1 ~ "i{)
(dtu (,l I mil'&gt; .tl

( ~nlr tllltllll'l '&gt;\/ :\., ru~ N '""'
( lt~'·'lh.".tk~: r11 { o d1puh~ ~~
lttl ltlth Ill H II (,1'( t Ltl latt 17
( til

M.1tlc•u1 77

&lt;til

( lit

No

1 11 111 ~ '1 I..,

,.

sc reens. You will see improvement
r~ght before your eyes and, most
imp~rtantly, understand why the
improve ment is made .
The teachmg system has been used to
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The list ol golfers who have used
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Nicklaus,
Greg
Norman,
Tom Kite,
Payne
Stewart,

Davis
Love Ill and Val Skinner and
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You will improve your game at the
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Trent J ones GolfTra11. Call us
toll -free at 1188-446-5203 for
more information.

~ADEMY 6F ~LF
ACDMPUIPOIT TEACHING CENTEI

til ~II

N ( .,u, !'~ lhll 1&gt;11

l w f-hN tdld:!' ,1 ( 111
( Ill Mck lie 1 :-\~ l

The new Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail
Academy of Golf is a CompuSport
Teach1ng C.,nter, offering golf
instruction that is unique to
Alabama and found few other
places in the world.
The CompuSport teaching system is a
,one-of-a-kmd teaching tool piOneered by Olympic Medalist and
biomechanics expert Dr Ralph
Mann CompuSport provides what
evecy golfer wants - mstant feedback and 1mmediate improvement.
Dr Mann filmed over I 00 of the
world's greatest golfers and developed a model golf swing. The composite model is adjusted to your
body type and then used m a varJ·
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you 'Ill earn where your hands,
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CompuSport in struction also cov ..
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The sy~tem uses two high speed
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The entire lesson is recorded on a takehome vid~o tape w1th live Instructor co mmenls. As each lesson progresses, you w11l see yourself
"before " and "after" on sl'lll

W.lln u llllll ~
J ~K

ll Ill ([[I

1 ( 111 lnrpul fJl)
Dl) JL'II • I"'II-1 2

ltttl{ l~ ~ l llt c"l i~l

l111 \\,,t,lnHtJl,r,_. (,[ " l llllin4.2

17

TRENT JON ES G OLF TRAIL

I

167 SUNBELT PARKWAY

Southern took an early 7-2 lead,
forcing Ross to callume out Then
Mnchell Walker three-pointer gave
Southern a 10-9 lead.
Another Walker three ht the nels
to the tune of a 15-14 Southern lead,
then lhe Tornadoes fizzled to a 15-19
deficit In the first quarter. Southern
was whistled for 13 fouls to Ro.s's
three.
Soulhem then began a msh of
turnovers that led to a ncar-record 31
recoveries for lhe Panthers Southern
m1ssed the first of three bon us tnes
JUSt before half and missed lhree lay-

I B IR~t!NCHA~I . AL 35211I I 888 . 446 . 5203

for mne straight weeks. It's difficult down to the Alamo Bowl agamst
to run the table to go undefeated. unrankcd Purdue (8-4).
.. How can we go from bcrng one
The day we got beat. we d1d noll'lay
pomt away, one play away from
our besl game
" You scub your toe ~me umc. play ing Ten~essee lor the natwnal
you ' ve got to be a great team to get champ1onsh1p to playmg Purdue 1n
a chance to come back ··
the Alamo Bowl''.. Kansas State
Oh1o Slale was beaten 28-24 by pres1dent Jon Welald wondered.
unranked M1ch1gan State on .Nov 7, .. We should be m a BCS bowl ·
K-State &lt;:ouldn ' t even get mto the
while Florida State lost to unranked
North Carolina State 24-7 on Sept Big 12's more lucratJ vc bow l games
because Texas (8-3) had the Cotton
12
Last season, Mrch1gan was No I Bowl locked Ul' and Nehrask.t (9-1)
in both polls entcnng the bowls. The had already been invued to the
Wolvennes won a closc&lt;Rnsc Bowl, Holiday· Bowl
while a No 2 Nebraska beat
For now. though, the b1g game
Tennessee m the Orange Bowl m Will be Flonda State vs Tennessee
coach Tom Osborne's linal game. - only the second urne 1he teams
Whe n the final polls came out. have met (Flonda State won 10-0 1n
.
M1ch1gan was the AP nat1onal &lt;ham- 1958)
Salurday's shoolouts se t up
piOn, Nebraska the cpaches · champI·
an, marking the third ume m the Sunday's bowl picture. Miam,·s 4945 ol UCLA knocked the Brums out
1990s there were co-champ1ons
o l utlc picture. while Texas A&amp;M
It m1ght hapren agam
After Saturday's w1ld, woolly and upsel Kansas State 36-33 m double
wacky results saw both Kansas State overl1me to Win the Big 12 tlllc and
and UCLA lose perfect season s and gam an automatiC S!'OI m a BCS
chances to play in the , F1esta Bowl . game
the two other BCS l'aJrJngs matched
Tennessee was the on ly learn lo
remam
perlecl when 11 came through
No. 6 UCLA (10- 1) vs No 9
Wisconsin (I 0-1) in the Rose Bowl with a 24-14 Win over MI SSISSippi
and No 7 Florida (9-2) vs. No 18 Slate '" lhe SFC llll e game.
Syracuse (8-3) m the Orange Bowl
In lhe final BCS standmgs, wh1ch
Kansas Stale (Il-l), ranked third uses a complicated formul a of poll s,
m lhe final BCS slandmgs, was lelt compulers and slrenglh-of-schedulc ,
out of lhe $12 m1lhon per team pay- the Vols and Semmoles came oul a
out a BCS game carnes, and toppled c lear 1-2

NFL action ...

Sunday's action

0

Knnsas 62 l'..: pp ~ rdm~ S')
luyul.1 M.tryrtJuunt 94 S.m D1cgo St 64
Montana St '::10 C Lrrvll Mou1 7l
Oregon 9l 13rt~ha m Young n2

Sou thern W

J ao.:l-.sun\111~

Dil'Hion

By RICHARD ROSENBLATT
AP Football Writer
Just because college football pul
together a No I vs No 2 game m
lhe F1esta Bowl doesn't mean there
can't be another spin national champlonshil'.
1
Cons1der tht s scenano
A No 2 Flonda Stale beats a No.
I Tennessee m a poorly played game
that feature s little scormg The result
leaves all lhe lop teams w1th a loss,
but the Semmolcs are a.'surcd of a
nauonal tille because lhe ' coac hes
agreed to automaucally crown The
Fresta wmncr 1ts champron
Three mghts carher. though . a
No. 3 Oh1o State routs a No. 8 Texas
A&amp;M 49-3 and coach John Cooper
starts stumprng tor votes. cla1mrng
hiS Buckeyes should share lhe
nalJOnal t1tle by fimshm g ~o I m
The AssocJated Press ' medw l'oll
A loss by the Vols would free up
all 70 first-place voles m the AP poll.
and when the fma l res ult s are
released, on Jan. 5. can anyone be
certain "Honda State will be the
clear-cut champ1on'
On Sunday, when hi s thirdranked Buckeyes ( I 0- 1) were
matched agamst the Agg1es ( 11 -2) in
the Sugar. Cooper planted a seed
" We're happy to be in the Sugar
Bowl, but I lhmk we can make an
. argument lhat we're one of the top
two," Cooper sa1 d. "We were No I

duate .with

D You YII k 60

M 1 wn ~

~ ~;~~:;~~~,6~1 ~.:r~~~h~~; s~ l '-1

••

•
•1

9~

l'ornt Park

NC\!Idn -&lt;i6

Okl.Jhom.l f\7 Ark :~ns~s •n
Skph~n r: \ uslm 7'i r~xa-

·'·'
•

onshtp

Ce ntral St ~6
Third place

Mal o~ ~7

Sr IC» 1\labama A&amp;J\.170

70

c~nt.ra l

\&gt;

Dee S IOI.aJ
potnts based on 25 points for a frtll-piKC: vptc:
lhrouJh one poml for ~ nth place .-ot~e and rankin~
\'01« m parentheses rttords through

f\1alone College!Sheraton Inn C lass•e·cha mp•·

I1IIm 77 Notre Llamr Oh1o 66
Urhann 9"1 Ge nt'Hl liM
W.rlsh 97 S~:ton H1ll 69

South\\oest

IBdt:mapohs

Th1rd place
Wabh 98 Ham s Sto"e 7~

l nbl nf•~

\\t\ (ol r~ n B" 7X fo hnrm Ohm ('.0

Lmden 7-1 Lorm n Adnnral Kmg 69 t::! 011
LttlC~H IIe Pa 69 AnrJo,rr P) rnalllntll¥ Val
l..ilgan 61 V1n1on Count\ -l 7
Lout s\I lie 61: NaY¥te Fatrle ~s ~6
LOui!YIIk Aqum as 66 CVCA 61
Lmebnd 46 Ro!.1dtng ~ l
Lucns 70 Pl)'mouth 62
Ludlow 84 CO\lllllton U.t1n 22
M Khson w Conne ~ut ~ l
Map le Hts 87 lntk~ nd e n ce 57
Map l~;~.on 52 Kid ron

8 5 0 61.5 28"i 2~5
8 5 0 61'i \0 1 262
2 II 0 154 229 :'04

~

AtADEHY

Jim Reid Chamber C lassic

BaiU w m . \\ a ll aL~

Olm.1St 6l
V~ lr u u ~" fl6 r&gt;h ~5r, un K.tns~' ( It) 6 l
\\id\lt I St 1':2 r~\.l'o S:~n ,,ntOIIlil 71

Ruffalo

On1211o M ShC'Iby 'i._
On-v.dl Gr.md Val 78 ~a 74
OttO\ Ilk 70 Lmcolm ~ew 41
P3dua 1'!. Cle,eland C C 67 (0TJ
Parnc~ltlk Hilf'~\' 74 JC'Ilenon 71 jQTJ
Pa1nes' die Rt\ en tdl' 68 Cle GJen"lk 67
Peeb les 61 E.a~trm Ptke 56
PIClenngiOil b~ j\ianon Harding 'iS
PDft 01n1on 68 Danbury 64 (OTI
Rn:hmond Dah:- ,- Soudwastern 8\ R a~.1ne

TNE

t-•nd 1t1zk Classlc•dtamptonshtp
Urbnnn 7~ W1lmmgton 72

Wm1 s 1 ~1

Nnn hll l'511,'11161 Da\lon '\7
Dun~ Xl C..:tti Mtdttl!olll ~6
Oi.ll l{oht:l t; "'tl lnd Pur lndpl ; 611
Pmli11r 71 X,llll'r ~7
S till! I nu 1 ~ 7; C o r .tm bhn ~ St 62

.,•,.•..

.•

Tournaments

~

9 4 0 692 147 2~
9 4 0 692 258 ISS

1'kw En&amp;laod _

New lex1ng1on -19 Fa.trfield Unton 44
Newart. 6() Upper Arlmzton 42
Northndp.e &amp;II New Albany 65
Norwalk S7 Cas~aha Ma!JIRUa -16
Oak Harbor 67 Gtnea

l!'LI&amp;rl' fA

M1am1

Tornadoes for never giving up
Kevm Netter. Southeastern ·s 6foot-1 0 scmor center, J13C&lt;d all scorers w1th 31 points, wh1le 6-4 semor
shOOting gua&lt;d Tyler Barbee had 14
points.
Southern was led by Mitchell
Walker's' 16 points
Southern hn 12·34 two-pomters.
6- 18 three-pointers. was 17-29 at lhe
Ime and had 22 rebounds (Manuel 6,
M1lls 6) Southern had 31 turnovers,
10 steals, 10 asSJsts and 28 fouls
Ross hit 28-61 overall, with 3-11
three -pointe~ and IS-32 at the lme.

turnove~ as the Panthers outscored
SHS 22-2 for a 41-17 halftime lead.
The Panthers once led by 36
pomts and d1d not call off the dog~
until the start of the last quarter. In
that last quarter. several SE 1startcrs'
still managed to filter mto the lineul'
as both clubs tal hed 42 pomts The
damage had already been done however.
JV, freshmen Tornaodes win;
Southern won the reserve game 5546 led by Brandon H1ll w1th 16
points, wh1lc Garret Kiser. Jeremy
Fisher and Matt Warner each had

SE wnh 14 and Dav1d McGarvey
had 10
Southern also WOJl the frc~hman
game 49-43 led by Matt A'h and J P
Hannon w1th nmc. Dall y Hill and
Joe Cornell V\Jth seven each. Bnce
Hill and Macy Rces ,six each and
Nathan Martm fi,e Kyle BaxJcr led
SE wnh 15 and Ruh Dett\ had I0
The future : Southern ho&lt;ts
Me1gs Tuesday
Quarter tl!llili
Southea't~m
19 22 25 17=83
Southern
15-2-17-25=59
Southeastern: Greg Schrader Q.

J1mmy Wiles 1- 1-011=5. Jo,h Bell J.
0-112= 7. Kevin Netter 12-0-7112=3 &gt;.
Justm Wood 2-0-213=6 Totals: ll$J-18/32=83
•
Southern: Chns Randoll'h 1-d0=2. BenJI Manuel 1-0-4/6=6. Kyle
Norns 2-0-)16=1. Troy Hoback 2-00=4. M1tchell Walker 2-4-0/0= 1~ .
Josh Dav1s 0-0-2/2=2, Adal)l
Cumings 0-0-212=2. Matt Warner 12-113,;,9, Jerrod M11l s 1-0-215=&gt;1 ,
Adam W1lhams 1-0-011 =2. Garr~t
Kiser 1-0-212=4 Jeremv FJShcr 0-0112=1 Totals: 12-6-171Z9=59
:

·

·

•
•

•

Third-ranked Ohio State to face Texas A&amp;M in Sugar Bowl

Thr Top 25 teMlS 1n The A.s~~ed Preu final

Food For the Hungry lnvllational -c:hamp•onshtp
Mount Vernon Nazarene: 108, Ohvet Nazarene
98

\\-ml' r~hl' rg

., 1\ korn S1 7~ Southern Me'th 74
•

Geor!ctown Ky 94 Wal sh 74
Mount St Joseph 86 Reth;my W Va 7 1
O h1o Domrmcan 72 Ohto Valley 65
R1o Grande 8 \ Wtlberforce 76 (OT)

Nurl h (uu~ t Cunrr ruwt
1\ Jil')/. ltCn) 'iH l.k nt ~U ll ~2
Ken) nil 70 Olun \\ cs lL ~ m ~IJ

N ltc

"

•,

Non•confert-nc~

Drf1anre 97 Thomas More 9~ (OT)

Grtall

IJ thO hO

Md 11

Oh10 Conrt'rmctCaptol 70 Mount Unmn 57
Hetdelberg 7.S Muskingum 74
John Carroll 84 Baldm Wallace 66
Manrita 58 H11am 52
Ohto Non hem 71 Ouetbern 71

f.hth l1'·111 Tcd1 Ill :\ \hl.mll 'itl
S. tgtn "' V tll 7 ~ l mJla1 71

H t•niLc• ntu r~ ~IJ

S.1111 H ol ll ~tn ll ~ ~ ~9 \\t ~

Luna (em Cath ~9 H.nh 4~
l1nm P&lt;!rr.' :'i I R1d ~~mont lO

\f•d'&gt;'ntrrn (ollrgtah•
Yn u nj!~!O\In St 74 Clnd;md St 6'i

t m.111n.1ll IOf1 Onk land r.11d1 7K
( •~t;&lt;hlon W! S l llmu 1 ~ 6()
1II tk&gt; Kh l l\\rll,l Ill fl 1}
llltllPl' q llt !&gt;Ill'\ --~~
lot-I Ill I /) I ILtllpk h]
lnrlllllol "it 7 1 N lPII.t ~K
lo..~m f1~

Co••rt-~e

\lld· Anut•un Cunf~ren\ c

(n~-..:n (,S 1:: i\11du11 m 66
l'l ut[Lf(,O l \111&lt;111kli0
~

M ar~hall ~9

Ashtnbul.1 Edge" '"&gt;d 'i,!
Johnstown No rthndgt· 6H Nr•\ Alban) 6~
1
Ke) sll}ne 'i~ Columbi a ~(]
Ktdron Centra l Chr 62 1\ shland Ma p l~w n ~I
lerps1\ ~ Holgate 21
Lcx m ~tn n 'iR W•llard i"'Lex m ~to n Dunbar 62 Holmes ~I

Allegheny 87 Drt~t sc n 72
Kenyon 67 Ohto Wesleyan 57
W1trenbo!rg 8' Oberlm 5l
Woouer 78 Earlham 62

Tok•Jo 7~

:\lld~f S I

HC"ath .,~ Johnstown 66
Hl' ru a~Ze Ac.ldem} T!. Da}lun 6J
HtllsbotTI 77 W1lnun ~t on ~9
Hubbard 'i 'i H 1dwr~ Pa 4'i

lOTI
John

Saturday's action

~f!

~0

Jom\C'SIO"n Grc:en\le\o\ ~7 \\a~hw~ll!n ( H "iO

Grtal Labs ·lnttrt nlll'~atl'
Ashland 77 M1chtgan Tech 6~
f1n dla ) 7'&gt; Sa~ m a~ V~ llq St 60
Nor1h Coast

.t~

Grote Cll\ b9 H•llmrd IJ ~ t tl\ ..0 .
Hamthl,)n To"'mhtp 'i,! Watlms M,mt•nll
Ha\l.ki'n S, holGI "i7 Hud ~mt WRA 4R

Ohio men's college scores

Salurda y·s action

-

reflecting upon last year's reg1onal
tournament form , sl'anked the
Southern Tornadoes 22-2 10 the second frame , then outlasted Southern
83-59 m a non-league boys bastel·
ball contest 10 Racine.
The game was the season opener
for Southern (0- 1), while the conlest
was the second in as many mghts for
Ross. Southeastern ( 1- 1) lost mo vertime to Washmgton Coun House in
friday 's McDonalds Holiday Classic
: at ChJllteothe.
'
:: Saturday's game marked the debut
~f Southern alumnus Jay Rees as

Tennessee, Florida State to meet in Fiesta Bowl

rqul:. SQSOn col k~~ football po:l. ••lh f1nt-plaee

Easlt-m Dil'isltn

N Y Jets

B~)'. 8 20 p m..

AP Top 25 final college poll

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

N I.Jma Sooth R.mge 106 Uri:ONa 76
Napojeon 71 Sherwood Fatmew 44
New Brrmt,n 7"\ Ru.su~. 62

By SCOTT WOLFE
Southern's mentor. Rees acknowl- Ross had 33 rebounds (Netter 8, Wes ins. The Panthers pressed ferocious- seven points. Chad Hubbard had SIX. 1-0=3. Tyler Barbee 5-~/5=14.
s.ntiMI CorrelpOndent
edged thai Southeastern had a sure- Wood 5), 26 turnovers. 31 steals and ly. forcmg numerous turnovers. Jonalhan Evans had Three poinls and Matt Castle 2-0-11~=5. We s Wood 2· 1lle Ross-Southeastern Panthe~. rior team. However, he prmsed the 17 assiSts (Schrader 6, Barbee ). ~puthern had II second quarter Clay Enslen two. Tyler W~reman led 0-011=4, Nathan Cash 1- 1-3/4=8.

Toniibt'• pmr

&lt;Men Bay aa Tampa

NFL standings

&lt;7
~:!

Gr uu Cuunr 1 6~ Ptl&lt;:1tlk "9 tQ I I
Gn.'C:IIC'\Il'\1 "i7 \~ :J~hlll£11'11 { H ~ 1()1'
Gret:n111ch S C~mra l ll Uld I ,,r1 H

BB&amp;T Classrc nrSl round
lk P:~ui !I.T G.-orl!e \\ adumtll~!l 79
Mar. lrmd 62 Sr:~nkord bO

C11y 74 Olbowa-Giandlxf .a8

Mtllmpon -41 Mtlb :l9
tdthoo Un100 .59. Spnn3- Northwntan 51
Mu~rva 5.1 Indian Vallry 4\
Mmstrr 71 Spmcrr"1lk "\S
Moptbe Mek165 Buc~yc V~ley 61

a.,

G•anU Rnc• Aladt:ll1\ ~7 Me:1thtll~ !I' 1 1 (1u

7"i

Ath.-nll~t

~lalltr

€ol St O!.:iJin 87 Col
W:tiiiUI 86
Col \\t'll 1~1ori 78 Lake." R1dV' Academy 'i6
Col Nonhland 55 You R,ayen .p
Contull!llt&lt;~ l 62. Archbold ,.&gt;b
Cory R.3'cfo; son 62 Kopt-"dl - 1~.... ~9
Co'm!IOO CathoiK 6l BUOflC' County 60
Dan, Ilk 91 ~hr;lNttha ChriSIJan ~ ~
O..ue llt~ghl~ 67 \lo'ill1amSt~n ~!I
Oublln CoffnlJn 'i.t Rt'ulOilhbu!¥ 'it
Dublin SciOto ..n Col Fr:~nlhn Hl'll!hiS ~

I t J ~nmnll!~ ()9 1\ )en•lllc." W
I I Rcr.lll"r.} 9"'- MnSI\Stn:l"!l Val

'M1~h1~:11t 7 ~

\\ MtdUI!:ln XI

'''t"

EudnJ 7~ L1h Catholll M
l mdla\ ~~bt rl) Benin!'! 70 1\an\.1\ I K1lot:~ 'i 1
fuq ona .t8 Carey 17
'
I o~I&lt;'IIJ St \\'cllllehn 77 S.tn.lusll S1 \.h.-\ ~
F"'U.-nrkltll\11 66 Mt G1k·.tJ '\0

Norfolk Sr 7! t.ld Easrl'rn ShocC" 61
Tl"nrll ~\("( )!1 Putd&gt;m)! h "i 1

CO l li MB US 6"i Ne... En~t .nd 61
Ptnladdph1a 85 S:-anlt e~~

Oe St l!ft3'uJS 8~ Cle Hrs 75
Cle VASI6"\ CJe Benrdtntne61
Clennont NE 61 C1n Maoemonr 'iS
Col Cmt..·mual45 Worthtntton K1l~ ~'-'
Col H:vtlq: 68 Appk Crcoek \\;~)ned.lk: 5'i
Col
M~Ktnlo!\ J.a, l.orilln Adtn!J'ill K1ng

night.
For Denver. this was by fa&lt; the
b1ggest scare of the season agamst a
team the Broncos beat 30-7 three
we.:lr.s ago m Kansas City. They had
to overcome deficits of 14-0, 21-7
and 31 -21 to clinch a first-round bye
and home-field advantage through-

Football

Mrnlar Ow 75 Ot Herita,r jiJ
"-lllan Eilison 56 Norwalk :'iO

E Camon .!8 Mal\ent .u
~
1:. lu rrpool ~I l\hqu1ppa P;~ 7'i
E:mcrn Bro~~o n 72 [.._'tK'~clo\o\ 11 'i'
F..d~cnun 79 Stf\ l.er 'i6
I hd~ 7h Sha,.lll-e bO
El~na FBCS ~~ f:l}rta O~n Ot~•r 'i2

"' PetL,- ~ 60 Can111u~ 'iO

Salurda} 's scorrs
Chtca~n

actio.p

F..a!it

~hnh:u t an

Marut 60

N• ~!.lfJ ~7 lon:~

N:lilu 1lk: 80

69

SY. M11isoun St 86 tou•s•am Tech 60
T('\~

WESTERN CONFERENCE
fum
~ L 1'&lt;1.
GJ!
w~ult'

San I ranctsco 67 Webct St 60
Thtrd pbrt:
R.c-c 81 Holy Cros~ 49

t.okftfor 88 Wd1ou!flby S 75

Ctn '\\ yomut~ 98 Gn v,ua M..OO~ 11
Oe John Manhal l 59 A)hlabula F.d!~ood 'i1

Ha• .. nt" lm Uttonal~ mpiollship
lmu. M IXtmn 60
Thtrd platt
Gonl..;~~ -80. Soudl Al;abama 6'

"There was a lot of luck on our
s1de, .. conceded coach B1ll Parcells.
whose team JS now 9-4 and ued for
M1ami 1n the AFC East, a game
ahead of New England and Buffalo.
Mmnesola,' meanwhile. ran 1ts
record to 12-1 and chnched 1ts first
NFC Central utle smce 1994 with a
48-22 win over Ch1cago on ~unday

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Ross SE def.eats Southern 83-59 in Tornadoes' opener

Monday, December7, 1998

Broncos
The Broncos joined the 1934
Bears and the 1912 Doll'hons a' the
only 13-0 teams on NFL h1story by
· By the Associated Press
rallyong from 10 pomts down on the
On JUS! another routine Sunday m final monutes to beat Kansas City 35the NFL. the Dcn,•er Broncos I' On 31 John Elway demonstrated he still
and thcr~ was another oflictalmg has last-quarter magtc m the rare
conlm\·ersy
momenls the Broncos need it.
Well, It wasn't that rouune for the

December 7, 1998

"But we felt 1f we JUSt kept our
coml'osurc and could come up with a
couple of plays down the stretch, we
could wm "
To do 11, they called on Elway,
who has been relatively pasSJ ve lhi s
·se ason , 1n part because he miSsed
four games w1th a grom pull ancl m
l'art because h1 ~ comeback touch
wasn' t reall v needed .
But Jhat· old Elway mag1c surfaced when 1t had to 111 the 47lh
game- tymg or wmmn g dnvc 1n ,, 16· year career
After Pete Stoyanov1ch's 20-yard
lleld goal put the Ch1cfs ahead 3121, Elway took over
He combmcd with W!llrc Green
on a 50-yard l'ass thai se t up DavJs·
th1rd 1-yatd touchdown run ol lhe
' game wtth 6·48 left
Den ve r' s defen se lorced a punt
and Denver g&lt;;&gt; t the ball at m1dfrc l~
F1ve !'lays later Elway threw for the
wmmng score to Sha1pe It was the
mnth time Elway has beaten Ch1efs
coach Marty SchotfenheJmcr Wllh a
last-mmute dnve
" I have the greatest admiration m
·the world for h1m," Schottenhe1mer
sa1d of p iway
" II has nothmg to do w1th hiS
. ski ll. It's that the guy IS the most
· comretJtJve mdJvJdual I have ever
known He 1s the fmcst compeutor I
have eve r seen m l'rofcsswnal
sports."
In other games, It was Buffalo 33.
Cmcmnat1 20 , New Orleans 22,
Dallas 3 Jacksonv tll e 37, Detrmt 22,
Allanta 28, lndJanapohs 21: New
England
23,
Ptttsburgh
9,
·Washmgton 24, Sa n D1 ego 20, San
FranCISco 3 1, Caro lin a 28, m overtnne, the New 1 York G1anls 23,
·An zona 19; M1arn1 27, Oakland 17,
' and Tennessee 16, Ballllnorc 14
Phtladelpht a beat St Lout s 17- 14
laSt Thursday Green Bay" at Tampa
Bay tomght
Jets 32, Sea hawks 31
The leis (9-4) trail ed 28-13 and
,31 - 19rn til e thud quartet belorc rallym g behmd lest.JVerdc, who passed
for 418 yards and two touchdow ns
and ran !01 the wmnmg score on the
•disputed fourt h-dow n pl ay.
Tcstavc1dc passed n carccr-h1 gh
63 lnn es and ~.:o mplcted 42 . The
AFC 's lOp-rated p:.tsse r lou nd
Kcys hawn John son nrne tllncs tor
114 ya1d s and the ww.: hdown that
closed lhe Jets to 31-26 The loss all
but el11nrn a1ed Scuttle (6- 7) from
playo!l co ntcnunn
'lt makes yo u "ck ," Seattl e
coac h Dcnnr s Et!Ck'&gt;(l\1 sd rd ol the

' fou nd a wav

Tennessee fmtshed wuh 3 47
pomts - I !'Oint lor poll average.
I 67 points lor computer rankmg.
t'l HO lo&lt; tl•e 20th-toughest schedule
nnd 1ero pornts for losses
Flonda State, m fourth place lasl
week. jumrcd ahead ol UCLA and
Kan sas Stale With 4 91 pnmts - 2
pomls tor poll average. 1 75 lor
computer rankmg, 0 16 101 the
lounh-toughest &gt;e hedulc and I lor a

10
-Citrus Bov. I - Arkansas (9-:?J
co.\c h Plulllp v- M1chtgan (9-3) Jan I
Fulmer sa1d
We 've lh!cn on the
- Cotton Oowl - MisSJSSJPP'
edge of play mg 111 a nawmal Lham - Stale (8-4) vs Texas (8-3), Jan I
plon slup !!amc. a nd llU\\ \ \ l' ha\l' .1
- Gatm - GcorgJ&lt;J Tech (9- 21
r hancc to do ll ·
vs Noire Dame (9-2). Jan I
In otht'r hem I mah.:hur . .
- Las Y~.:gas - North C.~rohn.l
(6 5) vs S.m D1c go St.ttc (7-~1 Dec

loss
Kansas State was a drslllnl thlfd

vi Ma"hall i ll - I). De c 2J

~cason and " 'C \t'
get ll done · Vol s

all

Eastern gets two
teams to win
in Gallia cagefest

l"l

- Motor Cit) - Lou tw Jik
-

Aloha -

t7 - ~ 1

Color.1do (7-4 )

v~

wnh 9 96 pointS - lour lor poll 01 c•un (S-1) Dec 25
~ Oahu - &lt;\ 11 Fo1 cc tll -11 vs
3 00 tor computer rankmg .
Washmglon
(6-5). Dec 25
I 96 lor the 491hctoughesl sc hedule
lns1
ght
uun - .Mr !'isOUII (7--l )
t~nd I lor a loss
~
vs
West
V~rgmt
a (S-3') Dec 26
Oh1o State was lourth wuh 10 37
- Mus1c City Bowl - Alabl(ma
pomls and UCLA was r.lth wnh
(7-4) vs V~rgnua Tech (8-3 ). Dec 29
10 90 pomls
•
- MJCrun PC - Nt,\rth Caroh 1 ~
··1 feel we arn vcd ar two tremendously qu alllicd teams to he ranked State (7-4) vs Mwm1 (S-3) Dec 21J- Humannanan - Idaho (S-3)
1-2 ·· BCS cbamnan Ro~ Kramer
vs
Southern MJSSJSSlppl (7-4 ). Dec
sa1d .. They deserved to be there
30
based on all the crileri a We want to
- Holld,ty Bowl - Nebraska (9·
create I vs. 2 The others arc up to the
3)
vs
Anzona ( Il -l). Dec 30
mdJVJdual how ls •·
Liberty - Tulane ( 11 -0) vs
The Ftesta Bowl m Tempe. Ariz .
was the site of lhe lasl 1-2 matchup Bngham Young (9 -4), Dec 31
_ Sun Bow l _ Soulhern Cal (8m a postseason game In lhe '96
F1esta, a No I N ebrask~ won the 4) vs Texas Chri slmn (6-5), Dec 31
_ Peac h _ Georg 1a (8-3) vs
natwnal title wnh a 62-24 rout, ol a
V
11gmJa (9-2). Dec 31
No 2 Flonda It also mark s lhe 12lh
- lnderendence - Texas Tech
t1mc No I Will play No. 2 m a bowl
{7-4)
vs MJSsi ss lppl (6-5), Dec. 31
game. Tol'·ranked teams hav e won
-Outback- Kentucky (7-4) vs.
s1x times
.. We have been a res1hent team Penn State (8-3), Jan I
G\erag~.

Two ol EaSIJrn 's three JUniOr h1 gh
basketball teams datmed VJ&lt;:toncs tn
Saturday's Galha County Jumor
H1gh Basketball PJcvJew at · soulh
Ga lha H1gh School.
The Lady Eagles beat BJdwcllPorter 11 -10. wh1le the e1ghth-gradc
Eag le boys got by Bidwell-Porter 13·
12
B1dwell-Poner's seve nth -grade
boys beat Eastern 14-1 1.
In other actiOn , 1t was Vmton girls
9, Southwestern 6. Vmton seventhgrade boys 24, Southwestern 6,
Vmton e1ghth-grade boys 18,
Southwestern 10, Hannan Trace gills.
14, Kyger Creek 12, Hannan Trace
seventh-grade boys 18, Kyger Creek,
4, Hannan Trace e1ghth-grade boys
29, Kyger Creek 21.
All conlests were two-quarter
affairs

Orioles acquire Clark
(ContmuedfromPage4)

final play
Vikings 48, Bears 22
WJth a pregame injury sendmg
Cns Catter to the Sidelines to JOin
three other ailing offenSive staners,
Randall Cunningham threw three
louchdown passes to Randy Moss for
the second stra1ght game as
Mmnesota clinched Its f1rst NFC
Central title smce 1994.
The Y1k1ngs (12- 1) outgained lhe
Bears 341-14 on the way to a 27-0
halftime lead, guarnnteemg themselves a first-round playoff b~c. the
first lime lhey have earned that durmg coac h Denm s Green 's seven seasons
Moss, who burned Dallas lor 163
yards and three touchdowns on
ThanksgiVIng, caught sc onng passes
of SIX , three and 34 yards agmnst the
Bears (3- 10), who lost then llfth
straight.
That gave Moss an NFL-best 14
TO catches brcaktn g the league
rook1e mark of 13 se t by Green Bay's
B1ll Howton 1n 1952 and matched by
San D1ego·s John Jefferson 1n 1979.
falcons 28, Colts 21
·
Chns Chandler came back ,tltcJ
m1ss rng a week wrth a spra1ned nghl
ankle and threw f01 two touchdowns
and ran for another for Allanta ( II 2) The Falcons fell behind 2 1· 7 lo
the Colts (2-11 ), but r.tllrrd as
Chandler shook of five sac ks and
went 20-of-28 for 297 yards as
Atlanla held on to tts one-game lead
m lhe NFC West over San FranCISco
Saints 22, Cowboys 3
Kerry Collins threw touchdown
passes of four and 89 yards, and New
Orleans held Dallas lo 182 yards of
total offense, JUSt 18 on the ground
Emmnl Smith had JUSt S~&lt; yards on
15 carnes.
The v1ctory put the Samts (6-7)
IIlio a t1e for The last NFC wtld-card
spot and prevented Dallas (R-5) from
ehnchmg the NFC East
49ers 31 , Panthers 28 (OT)
San Franc1sco blew a 2 1-poJnl
lead m the linal 16 mmutes of regulatwn before defeatmg Carolina (2II ) in overt1me But Steve Beuerlcm
fumbled a snal' on the first series of
overlnne to scl Ul' Wade R1chey' s 23yard li eld goal on San FranciSco's
' first I'OssessJon of the exua pcnod
That clmched a\ leas t a wild-card
!'layoff beJth for San FranciSco ( 103), as well as tts 15th stra1ght 10-wm
s~ason

f

Bills 33, Ben ~als 20
Doug Flu tie lhrew. lm 319 yards
as Buflalo (B - 5) stay ed a game
bchmd the Doll'hms and lets wnh us
e1ghth wm m 10 games The Bcngal s
(2- 11 ) lost lh CJr c1gh lh '" .1row. thetr
longest los mg slreak sutcc 1994
Jaguars 37, Lions 22
Janttc M.nlln , who ~: n t!.!rcd the
game alter Mark Brunell w.ts l llJUrcd
on 1hc second play, llu cw . 1 h7-yard
touchdown pass oo ht ' . . c ~.: o nd
attempt and 11n1shed wJth 22K yards
to lead J,lcksonv JIIe. Rookie Fred
'Ihylor ran lo1 IH3 yards to '&gt;UI p~1ss
the 1,000-y.ud ma1k '"the J.t gu'" '
( 10- 1) tn ( I VCd thr ee game s al1cac.l (ll

the Pittsburgh Steelers in the AEC
Central Barry Sanders gamed I 02
yards for the L10ns (5 -8)
Patriots 23, Steelers 9
Drew Bledsoe threw an 86-yard
touchdown pass lo Terry Glenn, who
fm1shed w1th a team-record 193
rece1vmg yards lor New England (85). whtch 1s ued wnh Buffalo, a
game behmd the Dolphms and Jets.
Bledsne, who led lhe Patnols to last·
seco.nd v1ctones ~ the prevwus two
weeks desp1te a broke n mdcx fmgcr
on hiS throwmg hand. was 21-of-34
,for 327 yards and overcame three
inlercep11ons by the Steelcrs (7 -fi )
Dolphins 27, Raiders 17
Lmebackers Zac h Thomas and
Roben Jones returned mtercepuons
for short scores, .tnd Mmm1 (9·4 )
turned f oUl lllsl-h. tlf IUTIHWCfS IIllO
24 pmnts Thomas and Jones each
had anothCI tn1Crt;e pl1 01\ In lhC SCS·
ond half. and The Dolphms h.ld six
ovcr.tll , JJ !s ln g the1r NFL-Icad1n g
total to 26 th1s scmon Mr arnr also
sacked Don.&gt;ld Hoii.\S c1ght tones
The Ra1dcrs (7·6 1 have lost th1 cc
stra1ght and lour ol 1he11 la st live

The Giants (5-8) ran for 200 yards
to come back from a 17-7 defiCit
agamst the Cards (6-7) who fell m\o
a ue wnh New Orleans for the final
NFC w1ld-card spot. Kent Graham
combmed w1th T1k1 Barber on an 87yard touchdown I'"" and Gary
Brown ran for 124 yards fur New
York
The Cardmals have never made
the playoffs smce mov rng to An7.ona
l'nor to the 1988 season
Oilers 16, Ravens 14
AI Del Greco k1cked three f1cld
goa ls, mdudtng two 4R-yarders, as
Te nnessee (7-6) broke a two-game

losmg sk1d.
J1m Harbaugh mo ved the Raven s
(5-8) RO yards and hi I Floyd Turner
w1th a 20-y,ud touchdown pass with
I 46 left to make n 16-14 Tile
Ra;cns got the ball back wnh 1· 18 to
go. but Harbaugh's pass was upped
by rook1e Saman Rolle and mtercepted by Steve Jackson
Redskins 24, Chargers 20
Trent Green's 20-yard touchd own
pass to Leshc Shel'hcrd wnh I 54
lclt gave Wa&gt;hmgton (4-9) ItS fo urlh
wrn m s1x game s
The Redskms have ncvc1 los t In
the ChargcJS (5·8 ) 111 SIX mceungs

BALTIMORE (AP) - Five years
later, Will Clark finall y jomed the
Balumore Onqlcs - and only
because Rafael Palme1ro IS back 1n
Texas.
, Clark replaced the man he once
d1sl'laced w1th the Rangers. agreemg
Saturday loan $11 m1lh on, two-year
contract wnh Baltimore.
Clark. who hit 305 with 23 home
runs and 102 RBis for Texas last season, became expendable when lhe
Rangers agreed Tuesday to a $45
milli on. f1 ve-ycar ·contrac l. w1th
Palme1ro lhe Onoles· lirsl baseman
lhe past f1vc sc.t so n ~

312 GIFTS
,FOR THE PERSON WHO HAS EVERYTHING
1 YEAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO
THE DAILY SENTINEL

g.unes

Giants 23, Cardinals 19

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"YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER"

Call Me For Details!
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lnvestrnenl and ;rax Consullanl'
740-992-7270
Securities offered through H D. Vest
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Highway 161, Fourth Fl011r, Icvmg TX
75038-(972) 870-BXIO

STATE

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• Page 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

1
Monday, December 7,

"

1998

Monday, December 7' 1998

The Daily Seritlnel • Pap 7

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:~~One-third of space station will go to pr.ivate.sector use
: :By LARRY WHEELER
Service

we also have a role in opening the
frontier in a M&gt;adef se'l"'," said
···- WASHINGTON - Even as the Mochael Hawesh nrematt&lt;lllal space
.- first pieces of!M international space swion chief engi-r. " We recognize
· station are mated in orbi~ NASA is in trying to do that we're going to
moving ahead with plans to rum over have to work with commercial
up 10 one-third of 1M orbiting outpost providers in a different way."
10 1M private sector. \
NASA's blueprint for commercial
The shon-term goal is to attract development of the international
commercial investment to offsel a space slation. relea&lt;ed with little
share of the public cost ~or operating fanfare in mid-October, sets out an
the space shunle neet and the space ambitious schedule of studies and
station.
market analyses to· quantify someEventually. government space · thing that does not yet exist and to
bureaucrats hope to stimulate a suggest a framework for doing busi' ··national economy for space prod- ness on a government-owned vessel
j - ucts and services in low-Earth orbit"
I'M-frorn home.
- with 1M space station serving as port
An initial hurdle is to determine
:- retail mall. part research facility and whl!l"dompanies might use-the space
part industrial park.
station and how the government
Whether those objectives can be could capture revenue from them.
realized w.ill play out in the coming
'" You've got to identify what the
months and years as NASA and its market will bear," said Pat Dasch,
international partners assemble the executive director of the National
one-of-a-kind orbiting habitat at a Space Society, a space advocacy
cost to U.S. taxpayers of more than organization devoted to promoting a
$40 billion.
spacefaring civilization. "The space
'"Just as NASA tries to open the agency recognizes the complexities
space frontier to generate knowledge.' of lrnnsitioning a government pro-

:::Gr.Nn .....

gram to

cornme~eial

operation and

panie, , The details...., proprietal) al

has developed a c'autious and mea-

thi' rime.

sured strategy."
'
1l!e marketing firm KPMG Peat

wanl~ 10
a (.·orpor.ue a~tronaut
aloft ro conduct certain experim~nl,.
T1tt!: other proposal. from a con\umer
product company. would . involve
exploiting the microgr•vity and ultrn-

Marwick. under an existing conlrnct

with NASA, will conduce an initial
market assessment that could answer
tho&lt;e questions, said Mark Uhran,
NASA's manager.of space Slation utilization.
That report is due in May.
II is impossible to say what the
potential revenue stream from space
station commercial enterprises might
be because there are too many
unknowns right 'now. Uhran said.

The marketing survey is intended
10 till in some of those blanks.
Uhran just completed assembling
an internal NASA swdy that identified 13 broad categories of potential
station users , ranging from the obviou., -' ,pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries - to the not so
obvious- entertainment and adverI ising.
Among the findings :
• NASA is already evaluating
proposals from two unidentified com-

vacuum

~aid
~nd

Uhmn. One company

environment~

available: on

station to enhance product development, Uhran said.

• Advertising on the shullle and
the station could become a reality.
NASA is evaluating a policy change
to allow so-cafled "'public service·
sponsorshi'ps of night equipment
such as camera.• or services li~e food
and bevernges by nonaerospoce companies. The agency would pollem the
sponsors hip!&lt; after those used by the
Ptlblic· Broadcasting System. Low. key approaches and good ta.,le would
be required. Uhran said.
• In the entenainment category.
television industry representatives
are interested in carrying programming generated aboard the space sta'
lion. By 1()()(), the station is expected to return to Earth. more video
imagery each day than most local

involvement in the comml!ocialized
ponion of 1M space stalion through
the creation of a •·nongovernment
organization."ll!e so&lt;alled '"NGO"'
would serve as a landlord of sons fpr
the
station community. ensuri1g
agency's commercialization plan
includes establishing a benchmark etTective and efficient use of the oqt ·
cost to fly one shuule mission per oost by scientists,'technologi sL&lt; "''d
commercial users.
year during station .construction.
The possibility of dealing wiih
. Dubbed ··commerce Lab... the
missions would give researchers and ' something akin 10 a super chamber l)f
others opportunity to get .their pay- commerce instead of the traditional
NASA bureaucracy has excited spaoe
loads into space sooner.
:·
Rep. Dave Weldon. R-Fia.. whose busines.~ advocatts.
'"The old plan for running tf!e
C"!Jgressi~Jnnl district host.&lt; Kennedy
Space Center, said he has been 4rg- international space station was a di&lt;ing NASA lo start '"commercial" a.&lt;ter for opening space to the people
and exploring the solar system,"
flights sooner mther than later.
.. You can ' t have no commercial said Rick Tumlinson, president of the
space industry, then put up the station Space Frontier Foundation. "We are
and say. ·Bingo!.Let's commercialize gl;ld to see (NASA) decided to bring
it." ·· '"itl Weldon. ··That is a tormu- in 1M private sector to do what it does
Ja for failure. Ynu need IO be culti- best. so NASA can go do what it does
vating rhe commercial im.lu ~t rie&gt;i - by best. science and exploralion. "
NASA proposal envisions.the stagiving theni space on the shunle so
1-thecapital will begin llowingand the
tion NGO to be up and running in the
year 2000 to coincide with the
infrastructure Will begin to develop.''
NASA is aJso considering remOv- . deployment of the !J.S. laboratory
ing itself entirely from day-to-day module, which will greatly enhance
the station's reSearch capabilities.
television stations currently provide.

Even before 1M station is ready
for occupancy. NASA is considering
opening the shullle fleet to commerce-oriented sonies. Part of the

Custom Homes

M&amp;J

an

~ .. Associated Press Writer

~: SPACE CENTER. Houston
-. ll!eJirsl lwo building blocks of the
·: international space ,~tation were firm•· ly hooked together and soaring high
~ above 1M Earth today. awaiting a vis~ it from two spacewalking a.'tronauts
' · to attach electrical connectors and
~ cables between the parts.
,
During the 6 In-hour spacewalk,
· ::SCheduled to begin this evening.
t •• a.&lt;lronauts Jerry Ross and James
~ ~ ~ewman will hook up 40 connectors
' ;; to supply power to the fledgling out~~-

i

·.

· ·.·•

post. Newman likened the job to con- our. The joined modules will be
struction work.
·
·
released from the shuule once all of
· "Essentially we're pulling an the spacewalks are completed.
office ' building together," he
The cnmponents were linked as
explained.
·
Endeavour soared 240 miles pver 1~e
• Two other spocewalks are planned · South Pacific.
during the 12-day a.•sembly mission,
Aslrpnaut Nancy Currie-used the
to install handr,Uis and other tools lor shunle's robot arm to grab hold of
future crews.
Zarya (Rus.ian for Sunrise! and posi.The firsltwospace station parts lion it several inches directly above
the Russian-buill Zarya control mod- Unity. Then shunle commander
ule and American-made Unity cham- Robert Cabana fired Endeavours
ber- were conneCted on Sunday, thrusters. raising it enough for the
creating a seve n- story tower out of docking mechanisms on the two slathe cargo bay of the shunle Endeav- loon components to snap together.
'' We have capture of Zarya ...

.

[~Competition . spurs :'-'·S. cities·
~.......to find ways of goirig global

.
, l By HARRY DUNPHY
.
~ Associated Preas Writer
t " WASHINGTON - Las Vegas
' fias mini-erriba.&lt;Sies in three countries
·:'"and,Orlando, Fla., boa.•ts its own for: eign policy. Denver helps support a
: rtade mission in London. ·
. To compete in the increasingly
' intertwined world economy, many
; American cities and' towns are devel ; oping new ways of-promoting theme selves ~y going global. ..
' The stakes are high.
i Whether a city competes for a fac~ tory, a major convention, tourism dol· ·
· Iars, or export markets for its own
:· businesses, the way it reaches abroad
·-ean mean the differences between
. success and failure.
. As the global marketplace has
; become mqre cosmopolitan, cities
·. must possess world~dass resources or
~ lose out to their rivals at home and
:, abroad.
~ City activities in the global arena
: include maintaining sister-city rela!tionships with foreign lawns, pro; moting exports, worki~g with their
· •slate trade offices, helping local busi: rlesses to secure new foreign markets
··; and a variety of cUltural activities,
!according loa survey by the Nation"A I League of Cities.

Cabana announced the moment the
. pieces came together.
"Congratulations lo the crew of
the good ship Endeavour," replied
Mission Control. "That;s terrific."
The task took several hours
because the two parts needed to be
perfectly aligned before they were
joined, and the pieces are so big 77 -feet long with a combined mass of
70.000 pounds - thallhe astronauts
had to rely on a computerized vision
system and camera views, rather
than direct line of sight .
This wa&lt; t~e first lime such a
"b li nd" docking had ever been
auempted. and Currie was credited

~~

"The World may appear to be get-

-1ing smaller in many ways. but for
~.aders who want to move the ir. :;-: ities ahead, the horizon looks bigger
~Gnd wider than ever." said Brian
~!'&gt;'Neil, president of Ihe league and a
;,.hiladelphia city councilman.
•.. "'While our interesl!i may be local ,
The following actions to end mar;c,.ings in distant places can help make riages have been filed with the Meigs
!'8ur own cities prosper or langu ish County Clerk of Courts' office:
.l::iepending on what they do," O'Neil
Dissolutions asked - Rollie D.
;laid
Stewart II. Syracuse. and Michelle
~ In recent years, his organization.
Dawn Stewart, Cheshi re, Nov. 20:
Lthe U.S. Chamber of Commerce. the Dawn Taylor, Racine, and Mark Tay, U.S. Conference of Mayors and the lor, Rutland. Nov. 18; Margaret Lynn
· National Association of Counties Story Schwab. Midd lepo rt , and
: have been urging their members to Thomas Schwab. Detroit , Mi ch..
: think globally in developing their Dec.'J; Joseph L. Shepard. Mason.
: economic strategies and share ex.pe- •W.Va., and Deloris A. Shepard.
• nences.
Pomeroy. Noy. 30: Penny Sue Prid; Orlando Mayor Glenda Hood dy, Racir1e. and William Robert Prid•helped establish the Metro Orlando dy. Pomeroy. Nov. 23; Billie K. Lau!International Affairs· C9mmission to dermih, Pomeroy, and Waller S. Lau:coordinate global activities by gov- dermill, Lancaster, Nov."23.
•

Public Notice

i

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
· - sTATE
OF
OHIO
DEPARTMENT
O·F
•:tRANSPORTATION,
Columbuo, Ohio, Olflco ot
.l :onlriCII, Logo! Copy
-..ul"!lber: 980788, UNIT
')&gt;RICE CONTRACT, Mailing
· Dolo: 11/16/1998
,
'• Sooted propooala will be
·~ ccop1od from all pro\quollll•d blddoro at tho
'OIIIco of Contr~c11 ot the
J)hlo Doportmonl of
"{raneportatlon, Columbu•,

:,Phlo, until 10:00 a.m.

..Wedne1d1y, December 16,

·'1888, for Improving
:-ocllono MEq-684-0.000;
,JIEG-692-0.000, . State
iloutoo 684 1nd 692 In
.illotgo County, Ohio , In
oiccordonco with plana and
)plclfleatlono by grading
.nd reourfaclng wllh
l1phall concrete.
·
-. "The i1111 111 for
C:ompl1llon of thlo work

,

Public Noticj!
ohall be u aet forth In the
bidding proposal. " Plana
and Specifications are on
file In the Department ol

CHRISTMAS TREES
Live Spruce, White
Pine wllh root bell $6/ll
Plant after Chrllltmall
Or choole I Cut Pine
or Sprilc:e $2.50/ft

UII'S WIISCIPE

IUISEIY

transportation.

Jerry Wray, Director &lt;&gt;I
Transportation
(11) 30 (12) 7 2 TC

Dennie E. Hill, Treasurer
(11) 30
(12) 7, 14 3TC

Public Notice

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
' COURT,
.
Public Notice .
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PUBUC NOTICE
IN
THE
MATTER OF THE
NOTICE OF PUB~IC
HEARING ON THE TAX SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS,
BUDGET
Two coplaa Of the tax PROBATE COURT
budget for the Southern MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Account• and vtJuchera
Local School Dlalrlct of
Racine , In Meigs County, ot tne following named
Ohio, ore on lite In the oHice fiduciary hoo bean flied In
of the' Treasurer, Dennie E. the Probate Court, Melga
County, Ohio, for approval
Hill of oald dlolrlcl.
Thue are lor public and settlement:
ESTATE NO.- 22462lnapectlon; a public hearing
A.ccount of
Eightoenth
on ..ld budgol will be held
al tho Southern ~ocal Robert B. Tltua, Guardian of
School Dlalrlcl, Board of the person a,n d .estate of
Educ.atlon office on the day Stephen E. Tltuo, an alleged
or December 2,1, 1.998 at Incompetent

CABPET
PLIJS

•·•

I

740-698-9114

~,OH

or

PIL 740-992·7285
(Sat, Sun. IVH.)

740-698-7231

Wreaths~ Swags

..

•'·. .•"t • .
•

r

..
.,

'

Public Notice
Unless axc:epllone are
flied thereto, said account

will be. for hearing before
oald Court on tho 7th day of
January, 1999, at which limo
oald account will bo

RUTlAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
·BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOPT
SUH., 1:00 PM

OILER'S
DEER SHOP

YOUNG'S

Skin, Cut, ·
Wrapped
&amp; Freeze

740-742-2076
You KUJ. 'em
We ChUJ. 'em

conalderad a.nd continued

from day to day until finally
dlepooed of.
Any person Interested

may fllo written oxcapllon to
eat~ account or to mattera
pertaining to lhe~oxecutlon
of the truot, not 1111 than
five days prior I the dote
set for hearing.
Robart E. Buck
Judge

OPEN NOV.

CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Additions
•New Garages
' ·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Aloo Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
\',C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
'

-: R. L. HOLLON

CLASSIFIEDS!

P/B

c
0
N

c

R

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T
E

CONT~ACTORS,

° CONCRETE
0

MASONRY

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INC.

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TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
\
Agricultural um·e,
Limestone • Gravel
· Dirt • Sand
985·4422
Chester, Ohio

YOUR MESSAGE
CAN BE SEEN HERE
FOR ATOTAL OF
$7.00 PER DAY.

..
TRUCK DRIVER TRAINING
An informational meeting lor area residents !flhO are
Interested In attending truck driver training will be held
at the GMCAA Office at 33105 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
on Wednesday, December 9. The meeting will feature
Ed Adams Coordinator of the Mid-Ohio Valley Truck
Driver Training School at the Washington County
career Cenler in Marietta.
. .
.
Mr. Adams will discuss careers on the truckong'
Industry and what it takes.to succeed on th1s foeld .. He
will also explain requirements to enter truck drover
training.
. .
Mid-Ohio Valley 1&gt;ffers severe 1 traonong programs
Including a 5 -week/200 hour . program for
approximately $2000 with classes begonnong every few

~'::n;eating is open to any Gallia or Meigs resident

interested In truck driver traonong. Rep~esentato_ves of
Gallla-Meigs CAA will be at the m.eeling to doscuss
JTPA ~ funding which may be available for ehgoble .
Individuals. JTPA can in many cases pay the full tuotoon
for tho'se attending truck driver tra1nong. GMCAA
currenfly has available training and retraonlng funds for
unemployed and underemployed eligible residents of
Gallla and Meigs Counties.
. ·
If you would like to attend the meetong please call
740·446-1018 ext. 88 or 740-992-2222 ext. 88 to
reserve space. There is no charge to attend the
meeting or lor JTPA services.
.
.
If you cannot attend the meeting you can obtaon a
JTPA Preappllcallon by calling 740-446-1018 ext. 99 or
740-992-2222 exl: 99 or at the followi~g GMCAA
. facilities.
.
Gallia-Meigs Community Actoon Agency
Central Offko
Gollio Office
Meigs Office
,010 Nlll1h Slalt Route 7
8591hird AYOnuo
33105 Hiland ~ood
ChoshJtt Ohio 45620.0272 Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

I

•'

'

I

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'
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•.

614-992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)

2/i........

. .-

CHRISTMAS TREES
BRADFORD'S

At. 124, Mlneraville, Ohl1&gt;

'
RESIDENTIAU///1/////COMMERCIAL

Brltua MorriMJn I iltJCin«, Ohio (140) 9BS..S948

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut
Any Scotch or White Pine· $15.00 ..
Wagon Rldee on Weekende .,
Rt. 33 to Darwin, East on Rt. 681 , 4 miles to Cherry,
Ridge Rd ., t y, miles to tree farm . Follow signs. ,
Daily 1o am til Dart&lt;
N . 28 thru Dec. 21
"

!

740-992-4559

-CREDit
Credit • Slow Credit • Bankruptcy
' Repo • ·Divorced

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment --·
You're Treated with Reepectl

N
R
y

FREE ESTIMA,TES ....... -.FULLY INSURED

'

•

20 Vrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronrole Jones

~.

•• ·~....&amp;..

24th

''

I

thm Christmas

0

'

Dave's Garage
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

Our Customers Are Special
-

L &amp; L Tire Barn

Near the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Bend

-Complete Auto Seroice-

.

740-36i-7342740-992-6629 140·446·1018
fax:740-367-7510
www.gmcaa.com

740-992,2222

Equal Opportunity Employer

Pomeroy, OH 45769

(740) Bl-11344 .,

SUE'S GREENHOUSE
•Roping

•Swags

. •Live

•Grave Blankets

$5 to $25

&amp;

Free Estimates
Joseph Jacks

740·992·2068
11NI mo.

296'70 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio 45771
740..949-2217
Sizes 5'x10'

1J/24/J mo.pd

to

10'x30'

Hours
7:00 AM-8 "PM
11/19/981 mo. pd.

Maplewood Lake
Racine, Ohio

949-2734 ·.
11120{1

mo.

L

GUN SHOOt

CONNOLLY'S
CHRISTMAS
TREES ,·
2Y. Miles South of
Tuppers Plains on
St. Rt. 7
(740) 667-3483 or
(740) 667-3073
Open Evenings and
Weekends

~~1(1CJ;t4rriri

MoonUte

11123(1

Sertli"lf Pomeroy, MUldleport &amp;: -Ma1on

992-0938
Charter Available

. . 7/22/lfn

Wrapped

Gravel, Sand, ,'
Top Soli, Fill Dht

-·~ ~--~---

985-4473

Skinned • Cut

Free Estimates
(740) 367·0412
(740) 992-4232

(614) 992·3838

R.OBERT BISSELL ..
CONSTRUCTION

DEER
PROCESSING

Limestone,

Limestone Hauling
Hous6 &amp; Trailer Sites
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading .
Septic System &amp;
utllltlea
Estimates,

•Poinsettias

11/ 13 1 mo .

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY
St. Rt. 7

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
740..985-3813
4" thru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe &amp; Regulators
Open:
9:00-4:30 Weekdaya
9:00-12:00 Saturday
-41211M tin

'
.

MOBILE HOME
PARTS

GREENHOUSE

"Huge lnrtntory"

Now open for the

Bennett Supply ·
,.

Racine Gun Ou~ '1
Nease Hollow Rd.:
Every Sunday "
12:30 pm
Limit 680 sleeve '
.737 baCk bore
l

~bof C9atlngs
"VVnyl Skirting
*Water Heatera
•Door/Windows
•EJectrlc/Plumblng
Suppllee
•Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Steps
Discount Prices ,

.··-·

HILL'S
SELF STORACE

too-a"

EXCAVATING CO.

At the OLD AMERICAN LEGION BUILDING
Middleport, .O hio
. Food to be served by the
LUNCH LINE
of PomerQy, Ohio.
Phone 740-992-6670
or 740-992-5827
I

·New Homes
•GaragBs
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
'
ESTIMATEES

WICKS ·''
HAULING

. HOWARD

Cut

~: Trees

74D-94NIII

,.,
'

614•992•3470

Auction Every
- Saturday at 6:00 p.m.

New Roofs,
Repairs, Gutters,
Coatings, Siding,
Drywall, Painting,
1 Plumbing

(Lime StoneLow RaJas)

"Nolell too .,.. or

•Wreaths

"Wirere Qr~e~lily Doesrr '1 Co1l More"
740-446·9416 : 1·800-872-5967

43370 St. Rt. 124 .:
Miners~ille, Ohio ·•

Improvement ond
Painting &amp; Coating
ResidBntial &amp;
Commercial

Racine, Ohio &amp;
50 Weat, Albany Rd., Athena, Ohio

BENNETT'S :HEATING &amp;..COOLING

Speciall on' oil ~'
chartges, tirea, ·•
brakes, 1hoclu.
740·992·9909
1 month pcf.1

New &amp; Used Tires
Computer Balancing &amp; Mounting
44087 Wlpple Rd.

ltal'll't Cutroli
Quick Lube

'Computer Graphlcil
.
Detilg'l'
All Land1caplng &amp;
. Lawn Servli:e"
•Commercial
•Realdentlal
Owner, Mickle Hollon
Cheeter, Ohio

, 52954 State Rt. 124

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction

Grand Openin&amp; ~

DEIIIII ·,

Fonnei"-''Velvel Hammer"

*Free Estimates

1

,_

FREE ESTIMATES

.

CtiQI0TML\0
GQEETING EDITION
•

.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL ;

Weekly Sales and DraUJingl

s

· • BOBCAT SERVICES

~ree 5 Parts WarrantY. .
*Free Digital Thermostat

'

Garages • Replacement Windows i
Room Additions · .Roofing
'

Tues.-Fri. 10 to 6
Sat. 10 to 4.

A

BACKHOE SERVICES

Heat Pumps Ae Low Aa138 1 month

Melga County, Ohio
(12) 71tc

In the

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing, ,Siding
Commercial &amp; Residential
27 yra. exp.
. Ucensed &amp; Insured
Phone 740-992-3987
lir.&lt;.
Free Estlmatee
~
lil!!i
Owner: John Dean
Ill'!!

"Enay O••er lite Pltone ,Bnuk Financing"
Air Conditioners ~·Low As 128 I mpmb

.•

•Mulching
•Retaining Wall &amp;
Brick PatiO Construction

AND MORE

._.............

, THE.DAILY·SENTINEL

I

THE COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP

TRPPRn

Wish all your customers and friends
a very Merry Christmas in our
Chrisunas Greetings Edition o .
1n December 24th

·.

I

: ·. New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

~

R~sidential &amp; Mobile Home ·
Air Conditioners &amp; Heat P ..........

With wreaths of holly a~d misletoe; sto«:ldng:s
hung by the fire and s.:enes blanl.;eted witl•
snow, Cl.rist.nas en«=o..:.;.passes warmth anid
good .:l.eer as we «:herisl. tl.e blessings we'~e
sl.ared tl.is past year, For us it . means saying
''tl.anl.;s" to you, our many friends, old and new,
wl.ose l.;ind support, we'll alway~ treasure.
Doing business witt. you is our greatest
pleasure!

11/27 I.I'G

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.;

•Lawn Care

741 .....,...

.

101'25J96/tln

Common Pleaa Court,
· Probate Division

Buy, Sell or Trade

742-3051
11 T09:00

~c~~~a~c~·~ti~

Slug &amp;Shot
Matches

h- ~

'

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR DAVE EXT. 104
992-2156

*992-1696

wv

Degree Certified Landacape Specialist
from OSU·ATI
Jeremy L Roush

BOB SNOWDEN'S Llrr
Rl. 124, Rutl1nd, Ohio

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT 6:30 P.M. "
Main St.,
Pomeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coverall
$&amp;00-00 Starburet
Progrnalve top nne.

11111.-1 ma. pd

•

December

After 5""

2310

•Maintenance
•Planting
•Design
•Lawn Care

·Roping&amp;
Grave Blankets
$10 &amp; Up

1(11/lltfn

Lie.' 00-5\',,....

•
•

Thursday,

*U.P.S.
*fills

ROUSH LANDSCAPING

CHRISTMAS TREES

Professional .
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

Hlmlock Grove Rd

Part of being ·a big-city mayor
these days involves · leading trade
missions overseas. Smaller cilies ·
send officials on trips sponsored by
the National League of Cities or the
may.ors • conference. , '
Besides trade mi·ssions, some
cities have used their sister or twinning relationship with overseas towns
to build economic and commercial
bridges into international markets ..

Public Notice
7:00 o'clock P.M.

,.1'\:.

304-576-2255

,,,,,

- .. .. . ..

j·;

Divorces asked - Pamel a J.
Carter, Racine, from Keith A: Carter,
Patriot, Nov. 30; Patsy .Ann Choate,
Vinton, from Waller Allen Choate.
Hunter, Okla .. Nov. 25; Carla Dill,
Pomeroy, from Bobby Eugene Dill,
Pomeroy. Nov. 20.
Dissolution granted - Linda K.
McKinney and Brian Scon McKin'
ney, Nov. 23.
Divorces granted .- Cynthi a Jo
Krauuer and Jackie l. Krauner, Nov.
20; T&lt;mya Renee Stewart from Randall Lee Stewart, Nov. 20: Kim
Diann Mitchell and Edward
Lawrence Mitchell . Nov. 23; Harold
E. Rose and Leah R. Rose. Nov. 25.

ADOUGIGIII l5.llll ~·
ADOUGIG Ill - ,.
ADO-

., ADOtr_1_
ADO
40.1111
..,._ AD0211 CPU
50..1111

'

with a nawless performance - lin- · cials lauded the lirsl step of space slaing up the parts so they were only li&lt;:&gt;n a'sembly a&lt; a success.
half a degree and less than an inch
·"This is hi story," said Fmnk Cul,.,
off-center.
bertson. deputy program manager for
A problem wa• detected with two space station opemtions. ',"Bringing
antennas on the Zarya module that these two components together in this
failed to deploy. The antennas must way ... I think is a good omen for
be unfurled in order for Zarya's what's coming ahead."
backup docking system to work.
NASA esiimates 43 more launchThat system won." I be needed before es and 159 more spacewalks will be
next summer. but NASA is consider- needed to a..semble the entire orbiting havi ng Ross and Newman unroll ing co mplex , scheduled for complethem during a spacewalk.
tion in 2004. Once constructed, the
A Zarya ballery also was nol station will have a mass of I million
worki ng properly; but the astronauts pounds, be longer than a football field
took up a replacement part.
and )louse up to seven a.&lt;tronauls and ·
Despite the glitches. NASA offi- cosmonauts.

for. Pritt ~!

.,

ll11rlwell

~

revenues.

Cities genera lly rely on their stale
offices, U.S. en1bassies and more
than 130 offices of the Commerce
Department's U.S. Foreign and Com- ·
mercia! Service in approximately 70
counlrks to n:present their economi ~: interests abroad.
Hdwever, Den ver contributes
$50.1XXl a year 10 the Colorado Trade
Mission in London to help market the
city. Mayor Wellington Webb credi ts
the trade oftice for &lt;!ecislons by two
British hi gh-technology consulting ·.
firms to establi sh their U.S. headquarters in D~nver.

15"-

. •

11 -

Pomer.o,, Ohio 45769

the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
say,s.
Metropolitan regions are spendi ng
hundreds of n1illions of dollars annually in pn,&gt;grams and incentives to
anract this direct investment to their
jurisdictions to create jobs. diversify
their economies , and enhance tax

Actions to end marriages filed

•

7~!19%-1135

1998 Martin Street

~

emment and industry in central Florida.
.. The commission is an example
of what I calllocal-ba&lt;ed foreign policy aimed at building global economic linkages." she told an international syrnposi um·earlier·this year.
"If we consider ourselves global
players. then we'll act that way."
Asked how her region had benefited from this approach. she said the
Commerce Department reported that
the Orlando region "was by far the
fastest growing major export market
in the stale of Florida. Exports are our
newe st billion dollar inctustry."
Hood said Orlando area business- ·
es were building convention centers
in Brazil. providing medical serv iceS
and m•.maging in Mexico and advi sing on 1heme park co nstruction in
China.
"When you l&lt;lOk at the manifest of
a plane leaving from our airport. you
see products ranging from aircraft
·components and co mputer equipment to ferns and ornamental plants
heading overseas," she said.
The U. N. Conference on Trade
and Development reported that the
United Stales ranks No. I in "direct
investment by foceign-owned companies, wi th $9 1 billion !lowing in
last year. Five million Americans now
work for foreign-owned firm s and
ge nerally receive higher wages than
their counterpart s at domes1ic firms,

WriWQIMWtf&amp;

"BuiWYourDream"

~-:Astronauts link station's f_
i rst set of building blocks
~ By PAULINE ARRILLAGA

"Be3t Prices of
~~ the Season"
:~ Vickers
®==...~Wood Heating

Remodeling

740-446-9416
1391 Safford
'· School Rd.
Gallipolis,
OH
.·

HUBBAaos

Chrislmas &amp;aoon
Poinsellilll in 6colo~

Poinsettia Blllkell
· Holly Trees
Cut Chrislmos Trees
Grove Blankets -Wrealhs
Open· Dally 9·5
Sunday l-5

HUB BARDS
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Ohio
. 992·5776
We honor Golden BU&lt;keyo Ca1&lt;k

'

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Monday, DKember 7, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

December7; 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
. I CA.N"T THINK
~E

CW:

I'D

RA.TWE.Il. .t;.ET
Ul5l' 'WfT)I •

AnUQues &amp; dean UMd furfltltura
will buJ one piece or complete
household, Osby Martin. 7.. 0.
992-6576

Ef.1PLOYI.1ENT
SERVICES

AW&lt;OUNCEiv1ENTS

110

Help Wanted

AVON I All Areaa I Shirley

s.-. J04.675-1429

Personals

005

ASK QUESTIONS,
GET AIISWERS
CALl AMERICA'S t1 PSY·

CHtCS1 900-7-Ext
3596.
www lheho1pag052 corr&gt;'nslpoy
cNc1250291 htrn S3991M•n 11l+

Serv·U 61H45-&amp;434
rLL Tol your Fvtunt,
NOW Ill
1.-..20-3012
3 99 per rmn MU15t be 18 y111
5etv-U(61 9-645-8&lt;134
KNOW 'lOUR FUTURE NOWIII
1·900·868--4900 ext -4169 18yrs
or Older, S3 99 per mm SERV-U,
1-619-~5434

Starr Dating Tonight! Have fun
playing 1110 Ohio DaUng Game, 1·

•-slon 9015

800-AOMANCE

30 Announcementa
Naw Farmers Tobacco CO INC
Ripley Ohio Is selhng tobacco 4
days a weft, call for app Orville
Whalen 1-888-8«--4365 or Edl-

scn Mayas 304-675-1658
-To You Ttvifl Shoppo
9 Wesl SHmson, Athens
740-592-1842
Quality clothing and household
Items S 1 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru Saturday

9 00.5:30
No hunllngf trespassmg or A.TV,
day or night on the Charles Yost
farms VIolators w1t! be prosecut-

ed
Stolen

If you won guns or purchased al
yard sale In Meigs or Maaon
County area, plene check serial
numbers
1200 Winchester
1L698889

or

1300 Winchester

IL2976137 These are atolen
guna Please contact Becky al

740-742-4012

Glveeway

40

2 yr old copper nosed beagle, 10
s good home, good hunting dog
304·458-1515

3 Mo Old Sheltie Pup, 3/4 Shehle,
114 Beagle Also 1 Year Old Parr
Chow Also Trained Hunting Brit·

tany Spaniel 740.367 0153
4 Puppies To Good Home, 740·

388-9147
Beautiful kittens, free to

a

good

homo, llltat' trained, 740.843-5268
Klttena, 8 Weeks Long Hair
!J iack /Yellow Mixed 740 4•8·

0865
Mate Black Lab Female Golden
Retriever, 740-441·9513
Puppltl To Giveaway, To Good

Home, 740-446-1610

Lost and Found

60

Lost· Shltlle COHie male wlcoltar,
redfblacklwnl1e 'TJ', 740·985·

-7
Woukl The Party In The Gray •
Pr t~O Van Thai P1ckeO Up A
lJJ$1 8&amp;adl: A/'rlj White Sl"tin·tzu AI

-

7 &amp; 35 On

,.,. COme&lt; 01 -

&lt;TUAUoMnG Oa:y Please Call
740-44H,777 REWARD OF·

BoPoidlnAdvoneo

PfJiPV"f: 2 00 p.m
, . dey dMo ad
Ia 1o run Sundoy
odlllon ·2:00pm
Frldoy. Monday edlflon
• 10:00 a.m. S.tun:lay

45631
Local Trud&lt;lng COmpany 5eekl"'l
Qualified Truck qrtvera. Good
Pay And BeneHla. Send Resume
To PO Box 109 Jackson. Ohio
.t5840 , Or Call 1· 740·286·1 463
To Sch&amp;duae An lnl&amp;Mew
Need Babysitter In My Home. For
7 Month &amp; 2 112 Year Old Beglnlng In January, 740-245--5823
Nursing Clln1cat Instructors
Seeking Pari And Full· Time Ap·
phcants Fot Pool Supervtslon Of
Nursing Studenls In Area Faetll·
lies Minimum Position Requirements RN Ucensure In Ttle State
Of Ohio. Practical E11per1ence In
Tne F1eld 01 Nursing BSN Required, MSN Preletred 5end Re·
sume To Hocking College Per·
sonnel Department, 3301 Hocking
Parkway, Nelsonville OH 45764
Deadline To Apply Is December

All Yard Salta Mutt Be Paid In
Advance Deadline 1:00pm tht
day btfort the ad Ia to run,
Sunday &amp; Monday edition·

1:OOpm F~doy.

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson Aucllon Company
full time auelloneer, complete
auclion
service
Licensed
166 Onto &amp; West V1rglnla, 304·
n:l-576~ 0t 304-n3·5447,

WedemeYer s Au ctiO n Service
Gallipolis Ohio 740-379-2720

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All u S Silver And Gold Coins Proolsets
Olamonda, Antique Jewelry Gold
Rings , Pre-1930 US Currency
Sterltng, Etc Acquisl11ons Jewelry
• M T.S Coin Shop, 151 Second

- . . . Galll&gt;qj,., 740-446-2642
A.nfiQu... top prices paid, River' "'• 4nllQUII, Pomeroy onto,
Al.llt Moore owner 740-992·
~

C. .. •n Late Model Cars Or
Tr~JCSJ 1990 Models Or Newer

..,...,. 8uidl Pontiac. 1900 East·

............. Gallfx&gt;lls
0

Auto

Parts

Buying

wrect~td or aatva~Jed vehicles
:JOO-n~

LCJC of 112 To 2 Acres Fairly Near
GallipOlis On Paved Aoad Alrea -

ltt EQU!lcled For a Single Or Dou·
ble Wide Mobile Home No Flood
Or Slip Area 740 446·2725 Ask

For Tom/ Doma.

INOl1CfJ
OHIO VAllEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do buat·
neu with people you know, and
HOT IO send money through the
mall until you have lnva&amp;ttgated

...

~

TUNITY EMPLOYER

LPN'tl CNA'S· Ravenswood
Center Is now accepting appllca·
tfona tor fuM and pan time poaltlons Excellent benefit package
11 -..led, please apply on pot·
son Monday ttvough Friday, !lam4 pm. or wr1te attention Tom
Reynolds Administrator 200
South R1tchie Avenue Raven

owood WV26164 phone (304·)
273·9385 EOE A Glenmark·

GefloiiFacilily
vENOtNO: Lazy Persona Dteam
Few Hours "~ Good S Price To
Sell Free Brochure. 100·820-

4353

Professional
Services
Llvlngaton'a Baeemant W•ter·
Proofing, all basement repairs
done, free estimates lifetime
guarantee 12yrs on job e1pen

once 304 -3117.
Livingston'• Baeement W•ter·
Proofing, all basement repairs
done, free est•mates llfet1me
guarantee 12yrs on job eJipenence 30HI6-3887.
Plano tuning , repa1r &amp; adJustment
Lane Daniels. Quality Service
SlllCI 1965, 740-742·2951

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAl. SECUfi11'Y ISS!?
No Fee Unless We wtnt
1·888·582·3345

POSITION: CLINICAL SUPER·
VISOR For The Gall Ia -Jackson •
Meigs Treatment Allernatlvaa To
Street Crtme (TASC) Program
Full. Time Position With County
Employee Benefl~s Package Ll·
censed Independent Social
Worker {LISW) Or Lk;ensed Pro·
fesslonat Clinical Counselor
(LPCC) Required. Minimum 01
Two Years Experience Working
In A Substance Abuse And /Or
Criminal Justice 5entng Preferred
Duties Include, But Are Not Limit·
ed To. Performll'l(l ComJ)rehensl\18
Assessments And Referrals,
Monllorlng Relationships With
AOD Treatment Providers A.nd
The Courts Ouallly Assurance
Reporting And Reviewing Jhe
Actlvl11es 01 The Case Manage
ment And Urinatysla Components
Additional Requirement• Valid
Ohio Drivers License To Fulllll
Travel Requirement Salary
$24 790 ·$35.000 Negotiated According To Experience, Licensure
And Education Applications
Available By Fax Or Pickup At
414 Second Avenue, Suite 202
Gallipolis Ohio, Phone 7.W.446·
647t !Fax 740-446·7894 Appll·
cations Must Be Received By De·
cember 1,., 1998 Gallla -Jackson
· Meigs TASC Is An Equal Op
portunity Employer Funded By
Tne Ohio Department 01 Alcohol
And Drti\) Addiction Services
Through the Gallla ·Jackson
Me igs Board 01 Alcohol Drug
Addiction And Mental Health
Services
Starling Part Time /Full Time
Secretary Or Office Anlsatant
For An Accounting Firm Campa
ny I Professional Experience
Helpful, Minimum Wage I Send
Re&amp;ume To P 0 Box 180 Sandyllifte WI/ 2S275

Business
Training

4 1999 Call Tooayt 740-4464367 , 1-800·214-0452. Regt9005 12748

180 Wanted To Do
'Pat Spencer• Is Back To Wall
paper A.nd Painting Full Time
Again 740·441·1033 740·367·
0514, Leave Message

Furnliure repair, refinish and restoration also custom Ofders Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop, Larry
Phillips 740 992-6576
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the milt just call
304 675·1957
1
Have 1 Opening For 24 Hour In
Home Care Of Elderly Or Handl·

capped 740-44, , 536
Interior PalnUng, Plumbmg &amp; Re
modeling Any And All Odd Jobs,
740.245--~151

J&amp;l Cleaning Let Us Do Your
Holiday Cleaning For Commercial
&amp; Aesldental By The Hour Or By
The Job, 740.441·1357 Jackson
74()-286-6510

to adwrrtiJe "any pra1erence,
Nmltatlon or discrlmlna110n
baseil on race, color, reMglon,
aex lamltlalatatus or national
origin, or any lntenUon to
make
such prelerenel,

•nv

limitation or dlocrtmifllll001 •

This roewsp- wil not
kr'Qwtngly IICeopl
lldvertiaementl for real ettall
• ~ In vlolallon of dMo
low Our readers ate '*""Y
tnformed lhftt an ttws!IIIIQI
lldvtrUHd In lhll niWIPIPI'
n l'lallallll on an equal
opporl.nly bello.

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for Sale
3 bedroom country kitchen llv·
lng/lamily 2 baths, detached garege on t 112 acres country set·
Ung Chaste~ area, $46,000, 740.
985-3511
3 br 1 ba new heat pump new
roo! ,with corner lot close 10
school &amp; stores at 621 4th ST
New Hawn WV 304·8S2 3845
6yr, 2·3 bedrooms, loft, tongue/
groove, pellet stove HP/CA, ap·
pllances, garage, spa, acre, Bula·

ville Plko, 740·367.0286

2704. 740-~2-5896
By owner· three bedroom, lanced
yard, pool double lot In Gallipolis Ferry, call 304·675 1105 alter

Free Nursmg Assistant Training
Class Ravenswood Center can
help prepare you lor the luturet
Acceptmg applications for CN4
class will start soon 60 hours
chn1cal mstructtons This class
will be held from 8 00 am to 4 30
pm and features lectures practice labs and clinical rotations as
requ•red under OBRA Must have
a high school diploma or GED to
attend Successful candidates
will be considered lor employment Please call (304)·273-9385
or apply by December 9 1996 to
Ravenswood Center, 200 South
Alrchle Avenu e Ravenswood
WV 26164 A. Glenmark- Gensis

EOE

-'-------~

1992 Norris. 16Ft X 70FT, Vinyl ~
Wltll Sllinatos 2 Bdrms , 2 Ball1o,
All Electric Appliances, Porches,

Carport. 740-2S&amp;-6336
1996 Sunshine 1·h76, 3 Bed rooms . 2 Baths. CA. 740·388-

IIM7

Immediate occupantancy, 5
miles south PT Pleasant RR 2
30 min for to Toyota plant 3br
brk;k ranch . 2 lull baths, lg kit
wl appliances All elec 2 car
heated garage For app 304·675·
1226 for sale or rent

Style

House, E)(ceilent Condition, ParUally Finished Basement 2 Car
Garage, Serious \nqumes Onlyll

$237-per mo Fr.. delivery &amp; &amp;el·
upt-Him
DOWN PAYMENT BLUES?
OAKWOOD HOliES
NITRO,WV
WILL MATCH 'lOUR
DOWN PAYMENT
CALL FOR DETAILS
SPECIAL FINANCING
AVAJLAelf
304-75S-61185
UnVIed Oller
Good selection or used homes
with 2 or 3 bedrooms Starting at
$3995 Quick delivery Call 7.W·
38~9621

Oakwood Homes, BarboursvUie,
WV. Model Close Out, 304 736-

3409
New 1o4x70 $500-0own $199-per
mo Free a1r, skut 1 800 691 -

6m
New 16x80 S500 Down $245-per
mo Free air. skut 1 800·691·

3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. 800-383·

6862

SINGLE PARENT PROGRAM
SPECIAL FINANCING
AVAILABLE
NEW 6 USED REPO'S
CREDIT HDTUNE
304-755-7181
We Flnanca Land &amp; Home WJtn
As little As $500 Oo114n 1 606-

$500 Down on any 14X70 In
stock, limited number free dellv·
ery Call 1-800 691 6777
$999 Oowl' on any 98 mOdel
Doublaw.de m stock Free Dellv·
ery Call 1 800 691 6777
Abandoned Home TPkr. Over
Payments Or Make Offer 1 800
383 6862
1979 Fairmont 14Ft X 60Ft Can
Be Seen AI K&amp;K PI Plea.,a'nl

Call740-446-4310

am. 10 6~ p.m., Sundatr 1.00 10
8 00 p.m. 740· 992·2526 . Russ

540 Mlecellllneous
Merchandlee

F...-. Heat " ' - · a ,. eor.-

dltionlng Free Eslimalett If You
Don I Call Us, Wt Bot" Lolli
7-40 ue t:JOB, 1-800-~t-0091
-...

1 and 2 l&gt;edroom _,..,,., fur·
n11hed and unlurmshed, aecurtly
depos•t required, no peta, 7-40·

992·2216
1 Bedroom $235fMo , Plus Utili·
tlet, 317 E College Street, Rio
Grande, Jack Neat, 740·368·
9948
1 Bedroom Apartment, Private,

Ouiet, 111ry - · J04.67S.1m
1 Bedroom , EconomiCal Gaa

2bdrm apts , total electric. appliances furnished . laundry room
tac1Utles, close lo school In town
Applications available at VIllage
or call 740-992·
Green Apts

,,.g

3711 EOH
3 br lljll,

balh &amp; 11ai, Spring Avo,

Pomeroy. 1280 per month , $100

(740) 446-3945
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movies Call HOt-4-46·2568
Equal Hou~ng Opportu"''y.
Country Sjde Apar1ment Large 2
Bedrooms, 2 Baths, WID Hook·
UP'. CIA., $435/Mo • Including Wa·
ter. Sewage, Garbage. Call Toll·

nue, Gallipolis, $300/Mo , O.poslt,
1171 9-5 ~M
Furnished o4 Rooms &amp; Bath, Completely Redecorated, Clean, New
Carpet, No Peta Or Smokl~, Reference &amp; Deposit Requlred r Also
Furnished 2 Rooms &amp; Bath, Upslair5, 7.W-446-1519
Furnished Upstairs Apartment
Close To Gorcery &amp; Downtown
Gallipolis Refrences And Depos·

$32,500, Call 740-446·2927

New Haven 2 Bedrooms, Furnished Or Unfurnished, Deposit &amp;
References, 304-882·2566.

From Point Pleasant, Route 2

We Buy Land 30 ·500 Acre&amp;,

We Pay Cash 1-800·213-8365,
Anlhony Land Co

RENTALS

410 Houses for Rent

2 or 3 beOroom hous~t In Pomeray, no pets, 740·992·5858

Four bedroom hou-e In Middle·
port $325 month, $200 deposit
references required, no pets
740-992-3457

Nice two bedroom house In Po·
meroy, $350 per month plus de·
posit no pets wil l consider land
contract alter one year. 740·696·

7244
Three bedroom, two bath, (loubte
garage on Willow Creek Ad , 740·

1 Mobile Home And 2 Apart·
ments No Pelsl740 388 t 100

2 And 3 Bedrooms, On Cora Mill
Road 4 Miles From Rio Grande,
Deposit, Aelerences Required No
Pets 740 245 5622
2 bedroom mobile home In Mid·
dleport $275 per montn plus deposit 740.992 3194
2 Bedr ooms In Kerr 740 ·446

9669
Brand New Mobile Home 3 Bed·
rooms Furnished Except Bed·
room Furnllure No Pets Refer·
ences Required 140 446-9616
Seau11ful R1ver VIew 198 River
Street Kanagua Depos it References, No Pets, 740- 441 0181
Fosler Tratler Park

1980 Felrmont 14ll70 3 Bed
rooms 1 112 Baths. All Electric
Ver y Solrd Well Kept Many Up
~ales, Needs Moved 740 682·

Two bedro 'Jm n0blle home In
Middleport no pets 740· 992·

3446

5039

Elec1rlc Scooters. Wheelchairs.
New And Used. Stairway Eleva·
tors Wheelchair And Scooter
Lilts Bowman's Homecare, 740.

floral Sola fChalr 2 Pc. Living
Room Suite, Hunter Green, Bur·
gundy, Mauve &amp; Cream 1 Like

Newt $500, 740·245·9546, 366·

For sale solid oak gun cabinets
call 304-675 3423 or 304-875-

plano Or 740-446-4525
Healthdyne BX-5000 oxygen generator, completely refurbished, all

new part&amp;, $700, 740-992·5208
JET
AERATION MOTORS

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
C811 Ron Evans, 1..acJ0.537·9528.
Large buck stove, practically
new 304-675-3601
Little tykes cottage bed, jenny
linn baby bed/ mattress blue tod·
dler bed 304-675-3765
Nordic Track Exeriser for sale

(740) 446 8599$150 oo F&lt;ml

GOOD USED

APPLIANCES

\Vash4Hs, dryers refrigerat ors,
ranges Sk.aggs Appllanc9s 76
Vine Street Call 740 44e-7398,

1-1188-616·0126
Used Furniture St01e Below Hoi!·
day Inn In Kanauga, Bunk beds,
beds mattresses, dressers,
chests couches. tables, cUnenes.
desks, what·nots 740-446 4782

520
Camo Hunting Blinds, From SSO
Up New Or Cemo Indian Creek

AI Rio Grande 740.245-5747

'

USED

TRACTORS

service, $15000 740 742-7004
Satellite Syatame 18" DlrectTV
dish total purchase price $99
Ask about free programming, 1SeasoMd oak f1rewood split aM

dallvored 304-675 3508
Slate· top pool table with green
felt, In very good cond asking

$500 00 304-675-1251
Used computers, S100·$300, will
build to your needs call 740·992
6700 leave message II not home

314 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100, 1' 200 PSI

Waterline Special

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES

we buy antiQues and partial or
complete estates. baby Items, al'td
old Flestaware Jean's Furniture
&amp; Antiques Tuesday tnrougn Frl·
day 11am-4pm 145 North Sec·
ond, MiddlepOrt
WHITE 'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allison, 1210 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OhiO 740·4-46·
4336
Wood For Sale I $25 00 Per Load
You Haul Call740-256-6016

Compact Utility Tractora ·Several
In Slodt
OeeZee In Bed Fuel Tank, Dia-

mond Plate Aluminum,

L~Shaped,

t 05 Gallon , With Electric Auto

Shut Off Pump, $900 Now, Asking
$750, 740 371H869
Ford new Holland December apt·
clals, modal 5030 rental tractor

62 PTO HP, 4 wd, 2 pump hyd,
shuttle

trans,

128 hrs.

apees, 303 hra

22,500 00 4830 55 plo hp, 2wd,
&amp;arr41 opeca, 57 hB $17,900 00
4630, 4wd, 18xo4 dual power tran.
24,00000. •
258 rakes In erala~.050
oo
451 7' rnoworo 3.250 00
472 7' haybl"' 8.395
634 R bakn 650 0,
00
1144 R bakn 1
ng ue

able Water Tank S6D, 740-24!-

5747
POLE BUILDINGS
by Laredo any alyle, any size,
740.S96-1809.
Your Area John Deere Dealer
For Flealdentlal And Commercial
Lawn Equipment Compae1 Utility
Tractors From 20 To 39 HP. All
Sizes Of 4 WD And 2 WD Farm
Tractors, Hay Equipment, John
Deere Skkt Steer Loadlrl Chtac
With ua AboUt Financing On
Lawn Trac1ore A.nd Low Rate Fl·
nanclng On New And Uatd
Equipment CarmiChael's Farm &amp;
Lawn Gallipolis, OH 740~446-

.. J 6 2
•AJI0642
• KQ 4

0111o Valley Bank Will OtMr For
SolO By Public Aue110n A 1988
Ford Rar9r IC221 71 &amp; A 1992
Plymoulil Acclaim t22590G On
12/12/118 AI 10:00 AM. AI 1M ·
1C3lhird ... . Gil'
llpolls. Ott Tht Above Will Bet
Sold To Hlghelt
'At lo -•
Whoro lo' W1ll1oul EJqnuod Or_

Implied WarraniJ' And MBJ Be '

AaseJW•
The Righi To Accept Of Rojecj .
Any And All Bldo, And WllhdroW •

Pass

NOBODY II HE'S IT

CAN JUGHAID
C0ME TO MY

ova

-

1991 GMC

So-.

4~

37Anecdola

~.':!!..

collection
38U-.-cl
40 Lacatlan

5
Sem 6 ¥i8nne

INSECT MUSfUM

GYPSY
M0Tt4

IOMmouago.

,....-----.
GYPSY

· ~O~t L.tt
MOTtf

~

...
,. [

good. tn good shopo, $1,000
080, 740-992-4183 H no • -

~

1984 Chevy Blazer, 4 Wheel
Drive, 350 Engine. New Ptlnt,

N.., nru, $5,200 00 080. 740388-91131

'J;'}IE BORN LO.SER
..

1988 Ja•p Cherokee, • Wheel

Drlvti. 12,800.00 740·379-2909
Af1er8~PM

F~\51TE: 1

Wf\r-J DO YOU (£.\
r--:- 1~~ INf\f.l&lt; YOU C.W~:) lo..
SNOW~ Wl'\'1-\ lo..

1991 Chevy lumina APV, 7 Pu-

oanger, Loaded, $4,000.00, 080 ..

.,

Loadedl

...

IJf&gt;,.~PI~ 7

.... .

19118 Chevy 3/4 Ton 4x4 Loor •
Mllae, Excellent Condition, 1

I '

1887 Chevrolet K UOO, 4.3. 5

Spd , Air, CUHIIe, Rally Whealo,

Posl·1ral&lt;, Blue, 111,500.00. 740448-7648..
""I

·BIG NATE

82 K5 blazer, 350 motor, auto.
power
wlndowal
locks:

I G.UE55
CNI T HANDlE
WHEN ~OU
- --"~WER A
qUESTION

HOO."oE ME WHE.N

WHY

CALLED ON
ME TWO QUESTiONS 1'00,
WHY NOT PICK. ON

'(OlJ .JU5T

$1,000 00 304·882·3411/740·
•'

88 ~ XLT wl ' - ' 4 orl1. cir.
V·8, 5 op high mu ... good
COnd $2,900.00 304-882-2030

SOMEBO(l'(

A

Motorcycles

E.L.SE

FOR

WITH A

CHANG.E?

QUESTION

,...

1991 Yamaha warrior, Qood

fer? One opmton at the end
Thos week. ,we wtll look at defens1ve
second-hand play The declarer leads
etther from his hand or from the dum·
my, and you are next What do you do?
The usual advice IS to play low, and
that wtll be nght lar more often than
not. Thts deal is an example of how
second hand htgh can be fatal
Acconbng to the textbooks, East 1s
one trick short of a vulnerable three·
bid Yet in these days of longer, looser
trouser belts, we are penn1tted a bttle
freedom.
Agatnst four hearts. West led off
wtth the two top clubs Declarer
ruffed, drew trumps, and cashed his
diamond winners endmg m the dum·
my.
Now declarer had to play the spade
suit for only two losers The leg~timate
chances were to find an opponent wtth
either a singleton or doubleton honor,
and to lead the sutt through that oppo·
nent first. Given East's opemng, he
was the log1cal choice So, South
called for a low spade
If a nervous East plays second hand
high winnmg with the ace, he lets the
gam~ contract through. But if East
plays low, West captures South's Jack
wtlh his king, then returns the spade
10, allowtng the defenders to brush in
four tricks three spades and one club
Accordmg to George Jean Nathan,
"The art1st and the censor differ tn
thts wise· that the first is a decent
mind in an indecent body and that the
second is an mdecent mind in a de·
l'ent body"
.
Your rum m the future, 1rrespect1Ve
of b()dy shape, is to make only decent
plays

Shape, $2,400 oo 740·378·2909
Altar 6·00 PM.

p~~r1ner

32 Owno
34 Water ftaok
35Chooleoa

ltlbiH
46 Splre

orument

49 Hoodlum, In
Britain

50 Print unlte
52 Medieval

'

Saturd~ only 304-675-4869.

Square bales of good mixed hay,
$1 50 each, 740·985-3510.
Would Like To Buy Rou.nd Balea

01 Hay, 740·256·1724

Summer• not onrl Kawa1akl
STS Jet akl, still under warranly,
three seater, 83 horsepower,
bought new July of '87, three
matching Kawuakl 'akl vesta and
1ra11er all go with n. Priced 1o ull,

• U T

TRANSPORTATION

710 Auto• for Sale
1979 Trans Am Good Body, T·
Tops, Runs very Strong, 403 En·
1 ...1 $600 740-441 1083
g ne,"' 0
•
•
1980 Oodl)t Omnl, Good Work

Car 69 000 Miles, $400, 740-441 ·
1063
1986 Merucry Lynx Runs Good

$650, 740-251H 352
1987 Ford Escort Looks !Runs
Good New Tires, $500 OBp 740·
446·4736

Chevy &amp; Ford truck beda Chtvt •
Front End, :rl4-578-~. .

1966 Plymouth Sundance 4 Cyiln·
der, Runs Great, 146 000 Lots Of
Now Pans Installed Call 740-448·

1989 Geo Metro, looks and runs

740.992·1493
1989

olds

cutlass

supreme

12150 00 304-458· 1077 or dunng
111e day 304-675·2760
1989 Pbnttac Grand Am, 4 cylinder 5 speed. two door, $1500,
74()..7.2·2357
1993 Plymouth Sundance 4 Cytl~
der Automatic Air, 93 000 Mllea,

$:1,200 060, 74().258·1233
1994 Cl'levy Lumina Eurosport 2
door llnted windows, black, runs
great &amp; looks good, 740·992-

6057
1995 Corsica V·6, Auto A/C,
Loaded, E)lcellent Condition.
93 000 Miles
Book: Value

$5,600 $5,, 00, 304-675-5576

10

Running boards IIi&lt; Ford Explorer,
s150, cal 740-992·3802.

SERV ICES

810

1988 Bonnevltla L.E. maroon, 4dr,
new tires &amp; brakes, good cond
$3,200 3Q.4-675-5792after5pm.
1988 Plymouth Caravelle, runs
gOOd $700 , call 740·992·7271 al·
ler 5pm

SO \'le111t SVI'roSW

New gao tanko &amp; body peril. D a
R Aulo, Rlplay, WV 304·372·
3833 or 1·6oo-273-113:!9

I'

~l\~\11;

RW

KFZFJE

C T K K .'

.'..

r Rr,~c"

F!&lt;Ct/1

~ RtltiiO~t'I1\IE.

.,
I,,

~Ui1LUS

II\~C~INE' 1 ''

Home
lmprovementa
IIASEMENT
liVATERPROOFINO

Uncotldltlonal lifetime guar~~ntea
Local reference• furnished Eatabl~had 1975 Cal 24 Hrt. (740)
446-0870, 1·600 ·287.0~76 Rog·
era Waterproofing
Appliance Parts And S4tNICe. All
Name Brands Over 25 Yeara Ex·
perlence All Work Guaranleed,
French Clly, Maytag, 7•0·,.48·

7795.

C4C General Home M&amp;lfl•
tt'nenca· Painting, vlnylaldlng.
cawntry, dool'1, windows, baths,
moolle home repair and more For
free -'stlmate call Chat, 740-992-

6323
Proleseional. 20yrs experience
with all m.llonery, brtck, block &amp;
stone Alae. rpom additions, ga.
ragaa, ate Free tltlmatet 304-

773-9550
Square H Carpentry Vour Small
Job
I , Gary Hoffman,

Electrical and
Refrigeration
ResldenUal or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs Master tJ. ,
eer1ted electrician Ridenour

Eieclrlcal, WV000306, 304·675·
1766

• ASTRO.-GRAPH
Tue-.duy Dec. 8. 1998
Yuur prngrc-.s m tt\( year ah~·ud
, Will h!! ~lc,tdy hut m11 ne~e~~.1nly
~pc~Jv p,111 cnce m 1ghl be tt:qtmcll
when \HJtkm~ !(lW,ml~ an eullt:&lt;~vor
or enterpr 1..e yon hope w1ll lc,tJ ~ nu
, 10 more ,1ttunJ.mt clrllHn-;t,mce.,
~
SA Gil fAR IUS I Nov 21 - Dec
2 IJ Be cogn 1z,ant ntrhe lr.ult1e~ of
others tnday whenever you re m a
~lSitiUil' Ill e:c.!!t~o:1~ .IUthunly over
• : thelll A nnn h.md IS the mo~t !~at
, Y..lll be needet.l nnt a clem:hed li st
A'tro-Graph ye,1r ah!!at.l prethdlons
1 make
great Chn..,lmas ~tockmg
~turfcrs for ,111 ~1gn~ of the 70i.hoiC
Mall $2 and scll -uddresse d "tamped
cnvel(lpe lor ea~.:h to Astro -Graph do
this new spaper PO Box 1758 Mur·
• ray Hill Station, New Yurk. NY
1()1 56 Bt: sure to state all zodmc
s 1 gn~ you de,...re

CAPRICORN tDec 22 Jan 191 If

• all the family memt:M!rs work IP um
~on tuday. unstable linam: ~al condt: lions carl be, bwught under control
Not dnml! ,.. 0 could cuuse some ulthe
coo'k'u:~ 1 1 rhc Jar tn crumble

1

--:\QII\RiltStJ.m:m Feb 19)8e
' UH 1h~1 \~ht:ll , )llll h,l\e '!IIHCthmg
1u ,,,, 1n \uur pet'r' today 11 has the
nng ot lrulh ami \lni:l!'rllyr II all hml s
dnwn tu yuur gtmumene~s •I you
\\;ani to earn thetr respect 1n tt)e long
run

PISCES t FcQ 20-M .trch 2t)J Pru
he ynur llr~l pnont)

de~to:e should

tnJay m the m,ln,ll!c:'ffiCnl o1 )tlllf
fmani:IUI ,JII :.IIr., II yuu re shopping,
l;cep 'carlhmg uuttl ~nu lint.l the Item
)un .... ant .tt a pnle )nU ~.:.tn ,LI Inrd

ARIES fMun:h ::!1 - Apnl

IIJ)

Sonlo:"'hen: aw.ty lmm the m.u.ldt!n ·
mg ~:111v.l11~ \\here ynu stwuld pl.m
tO SJ}l: nd ,In) Sl'!l l,tl eOI.'IlUn\l'J~ tod,ty
Keep yuur .ldl\llle~ toned 1.h'"n
TAURUS tApnl ::!0-t\,ay ~01
Tln:re 1s11 t mu~,;h ~,;ham.:e )UU II
neglect Of ctlllfuo;e y11ur pntmtle-; .m~
reo;ponMhlhllt:~ 104.l.ty You wtll he
o;:xtremely cnnsL'Ient •nu-. ·•~ wdl a~
met h odt~o:alm yuur pnll.:eJun:~

GEMINI (May 21-lune 2111 Com·
pames t:ould have a ~trong mlluence
on your uc11Vtl1e~ and the outcome ot
events tmluy TIH s w~ll hchuove Y'lU
1\l ,ISS4"K:I.tte wuh ynur mnre u111h1
t1uus pals us oppo~~.-d to y'mr lnvo9
lou-. one~
'

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION "I am those women I am every one of them And they
are me That's why we get along so well " - Oprah Wtnfrey

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four scrambled rords
low tq form favr ltrnple wcord:o

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1 stopped talktng long enough
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Compleie ohe chuckle quoled
by Id lin g 1n the m1sSmg words
-.1·--'· you develop I rom step No 3 below

PRINT NUMBfRED
LEITERS

.'
.

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I' 1· ( I' I' I' 1 I' I' I
' '
I I I I I I I I -1 .·7

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•

Fnghl· Jabot· Opme · Lethal · BELIEF
"A cyme,· my opttm1st1c s1ster satd, "1s someone who
doesn't bel1eve tn anythtng and wants everyone to share

~C!!ES ~

Sill'lll~ER!l

MCPJET

..' ·,

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

I MONDAY

CobiA

GR

p J

~

. I

for a

"'

I

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

Auto Parll &amp;
Acce110rlee

760

P S R V G

UTXT

'='

"

·~'·'·
'

$4200, 740.949·2203 or 740-9411-

=~~0:.~der ,trade

' ..

by Luis Campos
ms are crealed from quota!tons by larnou&amp; people past and presenl
CelebrityC~~~Iheapherslal'ldsklr 11nother T~ys~ OequaJsJ

A

$13.!100, 740-448-2971 .

·~

CELEBRITY CIPHER

,_.,.;..E..;.I_:.VT:..;N--TI_;,T,;;--j
9

''OBJECTS IN
THE WATER
()15H ARE
CLOSER
THAN Tl-lEV
APPEAR"

..,.
.~:

S4 Ike

7

·I

poem

tl'

153 Goof

750 Boata l Motora
for S.lll

At 2 SQuara Balls, Sl oo-S2 00.

.~

39 Shoved
43 Jackel
material
',"!
45 Author Wletet . ~
47 Row of
•

j.,l

24 Ft Ponuon Boat t 15 Horse
Johnson Motor Fully Equipped,

;.,

t9 AciiHO
Ryder
20 Severe
experience
22 Srnoll pel

How do an artist and a censor dtf

J

1977 Chevy custom v1n. runa

ue 8962.

&lt;&gt;ut

24 American
Ilk
25 Squandered
27 Nelther'l

630

Hay l Grain
Hay fol' sat• one mile f'IOflh on

18 Medicinal
root

13 Rub

36
All pass

L._J,_...l..

640

9 By way of
10 Building
addhlon

(2wds.l
23 Style a! typoo

COnditiOn, Oillrl parto, S800, 740247·2981

Young Boars-, Hampshire And
Hampshire /Yorkshire Mix, 740·

11 Bill-, the
Science Guy

•

Honda 3 Whllllr 350X, ao&lt;lct •

Livestock

7 Mor. deiiHute
1 -LA Douce

Opening lead· • A

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

730 Van• • 4-WDs.

740

California

By Phillip Alder
. IIi

1991 5-10 5 Spoed, 112.000 - .
Excel Cond. $2,795.00. 111111 C.. ,
1o Pickup, eo.ooo Millo, v-a. 4
Speed, $1,195.00. Cook MOIOII
740 441 0103.

742·2443

3 ,.- Khan

They start;
you come next

4 .,.._ S

Automatic:,

33 Forced
36Diaemb8r11ed

Bridge

Uldng S3000. 740-742-.

Owner,

1
2 Big-,

candidate

opoecl, good IXH-1, runt good.

11uno Good 740

31 Maybe

PARTY??

"'-lr From II* Prior To II*.
Torma Of sate: CAIH 011 CEll- ,

1987 Rid F'ou' Door -

'
l.Mtleller

Vulnerable Both
Dealer: East
South West North Eul

BARNEY

e-

Good, 304-f75-7911

....

DOWN

aG~af

• 2

0118 -

By Callng
740-«1·1031.

2VChl,_
pcgCida

2412 HI00-594-1111

Block brick, sewer pipes, wind
ows, lintels, etc Claude Winters
Rio Grande, OH Catl 740 245
5121

AKC Shetl!es· mates $200, I&amp;·
male $250, tw o Persians one
blue cream one lor l oiso shell
$t50 &amp; up, female lerr~t . $100
firm 740·992-5073

Soulb

~ .,

Powlr, 740-36HJ857.

&amp; Blade $4,700, 300 Clalion Port·

good, $900, 1984 Oldsmobile
Cutlass vary good condition,

740 446·0231

812-31541

ITI8tertal

• Q J lO 9 6 5

A K 8

99 -dlllry-31\MI•

Massey :210 Dleset Finish Mower

$45,000,740 446·2971

A Groom Shop - Pet Grooming
Featuring Hydro Beth Don
Sheets 373 Georges Creek Rd

81 Cllowy ~. 2 ell'. - · II
c, 12.201J. 74CHI2-710:Z.

1ttiS Ford F·150 Supercab 414
XLT Package. Automatic, V·l,

M'les $1,200080740-2!16-1233

3416

•

loy RD. 304-895-31!74

48x46 lnstallated Building 18 Ft
Ceiling Height 2 Sliding Doors, 4
Inch Concrete Floor &amp; Footers

1 yr old registered cocker spantel, has shols&amp;is housabroken
good with kids $125 00 304·882·

I

$18,000.740-448-2127

ST AT 87 PT. Pl•aaant &amp; Alp·

4585 For Price
1989 Chrysku L8Baron Coupe, 4
Cylinder Automatic Air 90,000

Pets for Sale

30+175-81,

~"Service CoiW

48X26 Building 1 Sliding Door, 1
Man Door, 4 Inch Concrete Floor
$36,000 740-446·2971

560

as tord ncort noon. aute
55,000 mills. fron1 wn. dr ru~ ,
grMI 11.500.00 .4 et5 3691 ....

(WMithyl

55 Smell horsa Painter ~
51 A Don't llouM
out11o&lt;
sa Fond wioh

:ze
Alhlng 28 Trimming

.. 7 3 .,
Eul
6 A 8 7
K 10 9 5
.. 9
5
• 10 7
J 9 8 63

IN

2§6016

Supplies

~:--.,.-----,--- ,
For Sate Queen Size Steepmg
Sofa, 740 256-1170

24

46 Amount
46 Small holt
51 Well--

23 LAbor "''I

• Q 4 3
•KQ8?3
t A 52

tttl Pontiac Trana ..Am, Futty'
........ 740 441 t541, " No M.,

610 Farm Equipment

15,90000

Grubb's Plano- tuning 4 repairs.
Problems? Need TUned? Call the

11 - Jlm.o
21 - Lome

FARI.1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LI VES TOCK

Furby For Sale $100, 7•0·448·
9498 I

MERCHANDISE

7795

Small AKC Yorkle pupple1.2
I $«Xl OOoaoh 3m. $350 OOoaoh
would make good chrlalmaa

56ei square bater wagon hitch
9,70000

.::5=.:50.:.:::.:7'
1..;;:::B:;u.;:l:-:ld:?ln;;.g=::;_-l

Appliances
Racandl!loned
Washers, Dryers Ranges Relrlgrator&amp; 90 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag 740 ·446·

Poodle pupplao, little loyl, AKC,
&amp; wormed. 7~-3404

0631

Jad&lt;tOrl, Ohio, 1·600.537·9528

Household
Goods

-$30000304-~

au10 · -1~
13,900IPICf.
00
65-4
A baler
SOOt same

450

510

Istered, 3- male 1250 00 Neh,1·

Firewood tor &amp;ale spilt and del1v·
ered 3()4..882-3893

$37 00 Per 100. All Brass Compression Flttlngsln Stade

741)-365 4367

Pomeralnean pupplu AICC reg-

42 Hot wiow drink
44 Spenlllh hera
12 City In Onogan
El 13 Spookily I
45 U a t -

17 Fed. "''I·

---·----At .
----- --

Fuii·BIOOdld Australian Slut
Htaltr Pups, 8 Weeks Okt, 2
Matti, 1 Ftm•le, Ju&amp;l In Time
For Chrtatmasl $75, Each, 74026-5815

5030 same

Two· 2 bedroom 1 bath apartments, In Middleport, new carpet,
Immediate ocCupancy call 740·
992 1350 lor more lnlormaHon

Mobile home site available bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy, call

2128 -*'110-

24,00000.

1100 n9-et94

460 Space for Rent1

Auet,.llan IINphllrd PIIIIPI.
NSOR, three black matet. SIS.
current htalth record, 740..949·

446-7283

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage Trash $295/Mo. 740·
441-1616, 7·0-446·0957, 740·

Circle Motel Lowest Rates In
Town, Newry Remodeled, HBO,
Clnemall snowume &amp; Disney
Weekly ASites, Or Monthly Rates,
Construction Workers Welcome
740-441 5698, 740.441·5167

l

--1
7 Acto&lt; David(2

tH5 Grand Chero• Llmf'ltd.

S11JIDO. 740-441·12111

,_

41- Ttcl\

1~-

Loadotl, 42.000 MIIOI, Asking_

s..., Leave ...uagt. Or 74lomolnf ..,.7375

7025

_,
-1 ., . ·-·'
ACROSS

15 Woman
14
16 Sill,_ -

had shots I wormed 304ae75·

8x8

Registered pomeralnean, lor ~tud

14"x70" 2 Bedrooms, $300/Mo,
Plus Deposit &amp; Ulllltles. In Ka nauga, 740·44e-4107
2 &amp; 3 bedroom mob1le homes air
conditioned $260-$300 sewer,
water and Hash Included 740
992 2167

cond S250 00 304-682·3397.

367-&lt;l632

Furnished
Rooms

$200 00 eacl1 I male/ 3

Day bed style water bed, super
single with 3 deep drawer&amp;, good

5162

capped EOH 304-675 6679

AKC ReQittered ronw.ilef pupa
Parenti on premln1 gentle.

74().448-2412 Ot 1-800-594-1111
Also See The 'New' 4000 Sarles

Pygmy Goats one mate 2 temates: $125 00 lor all three 740-

Twin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications lor 1br HUO subsidIzed apt lor elderly and nandl·

6656

740·2&lt;1!Hl426

Nice Clean 2 bedroom, referenc·
Washer /Oyer Hook-Upt 304-675-

Tara ~ Townhouse Apartmenta,
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors, CA, 1 1/2 Bath, Fully Car·
peted, Patio. No Pets Lease Plus
Security Deposit Required, 740~
446-3481

740·316·9128. 740-~1·

0 A C K T-Shlrts Only 600 Left.
Has Picture Of Team. Only 1201

740-992·5858.

448-6515

$17~ .

Financing AI Low AI 8 9% With
John Deere Credit Approval On
Uaed Tractors carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lawn, Gallipollt, Ohio

Prlmestar $49 Installation One
month tree free holiday girt lust lor
calling, 6()0..263-2640

Nice 2 bedroom apartment In Po·
meroy, all utilities paid, no pets,

Shor1- PoW·

STOCK

h. 74().446·1 , 56
Gracious living 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Mkldle·
port From $2-49-$373 Call 1•0·
992·5064 Equal Housing OpportunHies

AKC Gotmon

er. 4 Uonthl Old, White &amp; LMr

949-2217

9609

Mo.+ Oepooil, 30+675-n83

Real Estate
Wanled

GUARANTEE!

I

740-742·31!05 allor6pm

Mason Trailer 2 Bedrooms, $295/

360

LOSE - 3 0 l..bs,
THIRTY DAY MONEY BACK

919 Second Ave $275 Month

Beauurul 2 Acres Centenary Ad
Level Lol Must Build Houae,
Nice 1 Acre Wooded Lot 4 Mllas

BDTTL£D WILL POWER!

3 Rooms and bath, lurmshed eHI·
clancy. an utility paid\ Down stairs.

Util\les Not Included, 7•0·446·

740-446-431!3

2961

Dometlc camper refrigerator,
52x23, runs by ~2 volt battery,
electric. or propane gas. Chevy
350 transmission, snort tall, call

deposh, 740-667·3083 oftar 5Jlfl1

330 Farms for Sale

Downtown, First Floor Office
Space, Second Avenue Proles
slonal Or Retail 740·446·0139 Or

e.

Church pews lor sale, 12 twelve
foot, • ten fool, $200 each, 740-

Fumished 2 Bedroom Apartment.
No Pets, 9'5 1/2 Second Ave-

Commercial Office or Retail, 87
Mill 51 Middleport t ,450 Sq Ft
$400 mo Corner Building 740·
992·6250 Acquisitions (next
door)

5125. htavy antlqu• braaa can·
dlt sUcks &amp; candelabra, reuonable, Lomogea china, servtct ror
extra pieces. $150, 7..0·992·

2 br furn or unlurn apt dep &amp;

1·6()0.383-8882

340 Business and
Building•

- crochet
·S950
value, $150,-.lil&lt;e
handmadtl
tablecloth. large, never uaed,

Nalural, Dr Reoommonded
(740,....,., 982

4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. $229/Mo

388-6504

1250 00 304-l575-4082

Hem WID --Up, Near Cinema
$279/Mo Plus Ul•ties. Deposil &amp;
Laaso Roquwed, 740-448-2957

928·3426

30 Acres, 3 Bedroom House,
Horse Barn, Fenced, Tillable, 740-

priced on lnspecllon, mutt buy
all. Longaberger Barn Basket

1998 McDonalds, $1,995, Cash
Onfyl Cal740 441 0231

Free 1161HI40-6521

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

NITRO,WV
304·755-5885
Umlled Offer

--·

Pomero, Hours. M T.W. 10.00

Beanie Collection. M Olftarant
Aellred, 130 Total , Plua 1 Set

Apartmenta
for Rent

rei raqtirod 304-662-2566

Restored Victorian home situated
on 12 acres, V•llage Middleport,
secluded and private. appotnl·
mant cal1740-992·51&gt;96

ONLY AT
OAKWOOD HOMES

no pets ~75-t206

440

740-446-3385

$499 DOWN
3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS
FREE DELIVERY

uti

Double W1de New S999-Down

992·3000

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

FOr "*""-'· 741H82·7849

11KIIpm

NICe 2 or 3 bedroom house, In Pomeroy, no pets, 740·992·5858

RANCH

For SaJe Or Rent 14x70 3 e.drooms, 2 Batna, In BldweH. Calf

0846

Modern 3 bedroom house, 2
baths country kitchen, large 2 car
garage, on 112 acre 1o! Tuppers
Plains, Oh sewer already hooked
up, $7~.000, 740 985·3511 or

BRICK

Monlhly Plus Socumy, Wa~ And
Toaah Paid 740- 251H121l.

Two bedroom trailer furmsned, In
Middleport. call 740-378-6353 af·

3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Full Base·
ment, Camp Conley Area, $300/
Mo , Plus Deposit, 304-67~3230

RED

3 Beclrms 1n c._ CitY. S2S5 oo

5 112 acre&amp;, 2 mobile homes,in
Mason County • buildmgs,
120.000 contact Lee 30-4· 532·

Large lamlty home lor sale on ten.
lovely acre&amp; four bedrooms two
and one hall baths, two fireplaces
format llvlpg room and family
room, lour car garage and two
storage bulldlnos. two apartments
whtcn are completely lurnl&amp;hed
please can 740·992·2292

740·667·3304

.,.a,

S250 per month. S1 00 depos11.
7-MH67-30113- 5pm

1124 E. Main Slreet. on Rt. 12A,

3 br on Crab creek rd 1200 + 87 places 40's Fiesta ware.

6pm

&amp; SET-UP

Business
OpportunHy .

2 br trailer, T....-. PlaiM

North, $12,000,304-675-5576

By owner. 725 Page Street Mid
dleport, house &amp; 3 lots, must see
to appreciate, will sell hol,l&amp;e with·
out lots for $89,000 740 992·

FINANCIAL

210

1991 . 14FI X 70Ft, 2 Bdrms. 2

Ba111s, V;nyi Sicting, Groat COndi-

PRIVATE SETTING

of I tel which ma1&lt;01 RMlogal

ue 0819

7 - -·

New 1999 14x70 1hree bedroom,
Includes 8 months FREE lot renl
Includes washer &amp; dryer, skirting.
deluxe steps and seh:ip Only
$200 74 per month w1th 11150
down Call1-800-837·3238
All real estate advertising k1
tnls newspaper 11 subject 10
the Federal Fair Housing Act

lies &amp; Deposit, Ho Pete, Plus 2
bedroom housa. 7~0·446·4313.

740

em

'(

Plumber With At Least 3 Years
J=veryda,- Ellperlence Call 7-40·
""'6·3888 Between 10 00 &amp; 5 00
For Appointment

1972 Elcona 2 Bedt001n1. 1 Bath,
New Water Heater &amp; Stove,
$3,500 F1rm Must Be Movedl

101. $17,000 00 740-446-8113

15, 1998 AN EOUAL OPPOR·

Electric maintenance service
Wlnng, breaker boKes, llgnt II~·
ture heating systems, and At·
modeling 304·674·0126

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

I

Local Busmess In Gallipolis, Has
Openings Secretariat &amp; OU1ce
Manager With Experience In
Computers, Record Management,
Telephone Communications 4
Meets PubliC Well send Resume
To P 0 Box 84, Gallipolis, OH

OoiUpotlo Co-r Colie9&lt;
Wrner Oua1111' Starts January

.W. Yord SOIN Muot

J

Elderly Lady In need of Dally
Care 1 do rou need extra money
or something to do? Call 1•0·
446 4 333

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

90

.-.:oom

140

70

80

Computer Usera N"ded, work
Own Hrs S20k -$751( fYr. HK~
3-48-7186 Ext t173 wwwamp·

Buy or ull Rlv•rlne Anllquea,

2 BMIIUCWIIS, S32!/Mo., PluJIJtli:'

PHILLIP
ALDER

CANCER (June 21-July ::!::!)
Recau'e of the wnnderlul .thlhty
~nu pos ses ~ 10 n1. 11\c the mu~1 nut ul
meager ctrcumst.tnu!s yuu mtght be
,lbl e 10 mold a lull lnal from th e
~.:rumb~ that oth~r .f •gmm: tollay
LEO (July 2' Aug 22J Unl1ke
your as~OCI&lt;tles )OU pnss~ s~ the
valuable t!)(penenl' e"' ol the pa.. t
whu.:h Will enable you to turn an
,\nJUUU&gt;; s11Uatlt111 llltn SOIIICihlll!; e.1sy
lu mana~t:
VIRGO (Aug 23-St.:pt 12) Sum~
thmg uf grt!al wnrth wl11d1 h.ts been
long over~ue nHght be m the nffing
h'r ynu toJ,1y vr tn 1hc nc.tr fut ure
Allhough you ve cnnd1!10ne d your
~ell 10 never expect 1t dreams ~:.Ul
cnme true!

LIBRA tScpl 21 Oct 231 the
nhserv.1t1m1s you muke todily rcg.trtl
111 g the true motiVes ol others umiJ
he rem.1rkably u~tute Put thc:m to
gvod u,e, but ~ ~ure to keep whut
yuu ~;unmse !It ynurscll
SCORPIO (01.1 2-'- Nov 21J
Keep 0\j\\tln ~; Ill ol dlfelll\10 tod.l)' I
where tlu.: t:i1u11' ynu (\p~nd Will
generate tht! lllll..,t hcnel1h lm ynu
Cnndmnno; pcrt.tlnlng 11 1 ~•gt.lllc .tnt
t~sues arc leon mg. m )OUr la\nr

DECEMBER 71

I

�ByTbeBend

Wlf*lf¥42 t:f$l ......... iii« &amp;#

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Beat of the Bend ...

I

You deseribed your daughter as "a
master manipulator" who skillfully
hid her symptoms. That undoubledly compounded the problem.
ll's bad enough to lose a daughter, but to lose her to alcoholism
must be especially painful. My hean
aches for you.
·
Dear Ani&gt; Landen: I have a
wife and two sons, ages 15 and 12. 1
love them dearly, but they are so
scatterbrained, they drive me nuts.
They are constantly losing keys,
glasses. hairbrushes and wallets.
They put empty peanut butter jars
back in the cabinet and containers in
the fridge without tlte tops screwed
on. I once found my wife's purse in
)he freezer.
'· people who
_ I am one' of those
Jokes everything in its place . I have
stancd hiding item.&lt; from my family
so I can find them when needed. I
used to loan my wife and kids thC
scissors or Scotch tape, but I would
never sec those things again . Now, I
refuse to let my family use any of
my belongings.
I'm sure I drive them as crazy as

they drive me. hut the truth is. they
are the ones who need to change. I
have pleaded with them to recognize
how frustr~ting their forgeifulness is

to me. but they iimply laugh and
ask, .. Where 's the lV remote?" (We
have at least three, none of which
they can locate.)
Do yoo have a solution 10 this
probfem? - Left-Brained in Sooth
Carolina
Dear Left-BraiDed: I can ..,·II
you they will never ch3nge, so 5top
eating yoorself up over their "forgetfulness." lt must be difficult for a
neatnik like you to live with slobs.
but accept with grace that which you
cannot change. It's a no-hoper.
Is life passing you by? Want to
improve your social skills? Write for
Alm Landers' new booklet, "How 10
Make Friends and Stop Being Loney.
Send a self-addressed. long, business;si&gt;.e envelope and a check or
money order for S4.25 (this includes
postage and handling) 1~ : Friends,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago. Ill. 60611-0562, (In Canada. send S5.1S.J
To find out more about Ann Landers and read l)er pa&lt;t columns. visit
the Creators Syndicate web page at
www.creators.com. ANN . LANDERS (R) COPYRIGHT 1998
CREATORS SYNDICATE. INC.
,,..

'

~ ~~~=:;··==~
The final contest staged by the Pomeroy Merchants Association this
hohday season will. be held Saturday. Dec. 12. at the Peoples Bank at
the. corner of Court St., and E. Second St., in Pomeroy. .
·
The two earlier contests were cookie and candy baking and with
the pnzes bemg substantml, I was surprised that there were not more
entries. Either some of you aren't cooking these days or it got 100
hot in the kitchen.
..
·
The heat in the kitchen shouldn 'I bother you for the Dec. 12 contest and you don't have to "stir up something". It is a holiday wrappmg contest and the aun here IS to wrap an attractive, appealing
package. Packages can be any shape or size but should not be any
larger than. a su11 box. And, you can enter more than one package if
you'd like.'
· ·
There is no advanced registr:ition. You just do your thing and take
the resuh mto the bank and you can do that beginning Wednesday
and anyllme through I UO Saturday morning. The bank will display
all of the packages dunng the week and each package will be numbered so that judges Will not know who wrapped what.
•
Pnzes are $50 and $25 gift certificates. You should have some of
your wrapping done this week anyway so just P.ick out your best. and
g•ve lla shot.
•
.
.

You have , on occasion over the years I'm sure. heard abOut new
houses being raffled in other communities. .
·
'
I don't believe that has happened here bunhe Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce IS carry mg out a '"cousin'' to such a project
and you might be interested .
The cham bcl has a 1990 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme in its pos~cs·s.·~~" -. ~rom now through the bus.incss day on1 Dec. 31, th~cham­
hc• IS ask1ng you to get your name 10 the pol for a drawing hrough
wh1ch the vehicle wt ll be g1vcn away at the c lo~c of business n Dec.
3 I and the _wi nner wdl be noulledon New year's Day. So at least
.someone wtll be startmg out 1999 m a super Way.
And here's how you get your nnmc into the drawing. For each $1
t.lonallon. your name goes into the pot one time- five bucks . five
ti1~_es and so fonh . I'm· ~ure y(lU can gel
the acl at the chamher
off1 ce on West Mam St , m Pomeroy. so stop by or perhaps, you can
call the off1cc, 992-5005. and find out if some of your friend s in the
cham her arc offering tickets for the drawing.
Proceeds wiU go_ towa rds another year of continued opera tion of
the chamber off1cc 1n 11s promotions and support of Meigs County
nnd area businesses.

i110

I wouldn't stake my life on it b~tlthoughtl heard an announcement on Ohio~s ·cash Explosion show that a resident of Middleport
will be appeanng on the Dec. 12 program.
·
It sounded to me as though the announcer said "Lester White, Jr.. "
but no dnc has. been able to vcnfy that for me locally so far. Perhaps
thi s note will do it.
.
'
. Although I know you will be rooting for a local resident. if
mdced, one_docs appear on the show, keep in mind the program is
taped on Fnd~y so no amount of rooting from your c.ouch on Saturday night is goi ng to help.
So do you r rooting , voodoo or whatever, on Friday or before. And
while you're at it, do keep sm iling .

.

..

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•

The Daily Sentinel
-ONLY-

rrom Social Security

$}000
Per Picture
Prepaid
Please enclose self-addressed,
· stamped envelope to return
your photo.

POMEROY - A
in g about fees wl1ich land owncr.s
must pay for tllility p ~ rinits wtll
he held at 6 p.m. Monday in the
Meig s County Common Pleas
Counroom.

Official
.Entry
Form

.,

.51
c:l

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=

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!

RACINE
Southern Loca l
Board of Educatio n.· s p~l: t al scs"111'. Monday, 7:.10 p.111. Souther n High School. Racipc . tn dis l: n s~

.,ale o f hontls to finan ce dis -

. trid 's schoo l cons tru ction pro -

ject.

i

Chester Town -

ship Trusll'C S rCgu ·l ar meeting ,'
Montl:1y. 7 p.m. town hall.

f
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Ill

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:$

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POMEROY

Cat holic
W(lmcn 's Club C hr isl!nas gath,ct iny Tue sday. churc h hall . 6 p.m.
$5 gift cxrha ngc optio,al .
POMEROY - lmmuni zution
cl ini c. Tuesday. 9 to II a.m. and I
to 3 p.m . Meigs Multipurpose
Center, Porneroy. Records to hr
provided. child to he accompa n,icd hy parent/legal guard,ian .

,.,

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....
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Ill

•Pomeroy
"Lebanon
"Wilmington

"Dayton

"Middletown

'Hillsboro

•sardinia

'Springfield

"Washington CH
"West Union

"Greenfield

'Circlevtllc

• JamestoWn

"Ga llipoli s

I

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Ill

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Guaranteed No Busy Signals!
1-888-65,7~0977
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Ill

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$150 for 12 months

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·.Dragon Internet
Full Unlimited Access
as low as $12.50 per Mo.

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.e £. a :a
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8-10
11

Calendar
qass!ncds
Comics
Editorials

§
0

·- .~
(1;1

2
3
4&amp;5
3

Local

.Sports
Weither

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 8-2· 7: Pick 4: 5-5·1·2

The Daily Sentinel
·.

Sentinel

2 •Seellons • 12 Pages

....

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

A life-laving act by
. one of lhe Ienior " officeu at the Gallia-Meigs
Posl of the Slale High·
1way Patrol last 1ummer
has nol gone unrecog·
nized.
Sgl. Paul A. Pride
received a superintenden.l'l · certificate of
recognition from lhe
patrol Monday for hia
"quick lhinking.and fat!
action•" when 1!e per·
formed the Heimlich
- Maneuver on 79-year·
Stltll Highway Patrol Sgt. P1ul A. old Elmer Morris of
Pr~, left, 1111mlnld lht IUptrlnltn· Mariella at a rasl· food
dentl certlflcatl of recognition he reslauranl on July 28.
received from thl pltrol with Elmer . "I 'ust thank God he
J• , .
.
Morris of Marietta on Mond1y It the
p1trol'1 Gallle-Melgl Poll Prldt Wll wu lherc, 111.d Morn~,
•
' .,
who accompanted by hts
cqmmendtd for nvlng Mo.rrll life It · w.ife, Thelma, wa• pre· '
a Marietta flit-food rllllurant lalt sent for lhe recognition
ceremony and recounted
SU")mtr,
how Pride's aclion saved him from choking lo· dealh.
"
Pride was presented lhe certificate by Capl. Larry R. Mered·
ith of the patrol-'s Jackson District headquarters, in lhe ptesence
of the G-M Post commander, Ll. Richard E!. Grau, and former
commander Lt. Dan Gibson, who is also on the districl head·
quarlers staff.
Pride was eating with anolhenrooper at the Burger King on
Stale Roule 7 going inJo Marl ella around 11:30 a.m. whtn Mor·
ris, who was also 'lunching at the restaurant, began choking. Two
or three people tried to dislodge the piece of food caughl in Mor·
ris' throat unsuccessfully until Pride stepped in a~d made three
or four attempts using lhe Heimlich Maneuver before the food
was forced out.
'
"He saved my life Ol&gt;tthere, because I was just out of il," said
Morris, a retired heavy equipment operator who lold Pride upon
recei'pt of lhe cerlificate that "you deserve more than lhal,"
Pride s'ailt troopers are trained in firs I aid and procedures like
the Heimlich Maneuver because they have to be prepared for
·
unusu.al situations when oul on lhe road .
" Our skills need to be sharp in thai area because you never
know when it will come into play," he said.
"As a resull of the training, il becomes Instinctive, and you do
it without thinking."
Pride joined the palmi in May I 989 and was previously
assigned to the Mariella and Jackson posts. He joined. the G-M
Post in December 1997, and as one of its sergeants, serves as
assistant posl commander.
He looked upon his action to save Morri s as one way the
patrol demonstrates it.is there for lhe public .
· "I was happy to have been of service there," he explained.
"We are public servants, and while a lot or people think all we ·
do is write tickels, we are actually salesmen - sell-ing t(affic ·
safety."

Today's

0

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Mall or bring the entry form:

•·.·. ..

'

Hunter charged In 9-year-old's death
CARROLLTON, Ohio (AP)
A
man who shot a 9-year-old
Good Afternoon boy while
hunting has been

'

Deadline: Friday, Dec. 18 at 3 p.m.

1

CHESTER -

~ -

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0

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.se

&amp; 10 meg of Persona~ Web Space! Regular rate . is $16.95 per mo.

for Nudy is dtaigntd 10 that Meig11 County can havu level playing
l'lllllilics program r~eld." '
'
.
dlrousJ! the federal
The l~Sftemenl will be available for public: i~ion at
ty DHS DircdOf
'JOIIernment, have the OI-ls and at the office of the counly comm~•onera.
Mike Swiltter.
hem ctu.Jneled into · Tom Dooley and Cathy Crow met with the board to di,..
Swisher ,.;d
the county ccooom- CUll the recent ovenuling of a decision by the Meip
that 11a1e officiaiJ
ic
development County Micro-en~ Revolving Loan review oommitwere
ntmnely
....
operation beeaUJC 1« by the board.
.
.
~lnible in neJO(iat·
o( the .link between
~ding to Dool~ and Crow, the review ~d had
tng a plan that
•
attracung
and Oltanunously voted to re)CCithe loan, but that decii!Ofl w ..
would be 111011
retaining indllllries cwettumed unanimously by the rommiuioncrs, who lta"e ·
effeaive for Meip
inlo the counly IIIJd the final authority on the approval of the loans made
County, when 1!011·
job mation. If buli· lhrough the program to Jmall bulineMeS.
sideling the """""
, _ art encout·
The commiMioner&amp; ICheduled an auction at the Meig11
· ty's unique prob-· SWisher II pictured
the county'• plftMrlhlp aged to locale in Qlunly Home on December 19 at 10 a.m., for the 11ale of
lem5.
IG'""*'t with the Ohio
of Humin SIMcll, for Meip County, wei- county home furnishings, including bed!&lt;, wardrobes and
For eumple, the provlllon of Job tnllnlng lnd ollw HrVIcn tlvough Ohio fare recipienll .will other bedroom furnishings, miscellat)WIIt common room
Swisher
~aid;. WOI'kl PI,.., Allo pictured I l l County ContmiiiiCiftll'l Jeff fifl4 it easier 1o find fumilure and 1111all appliances.
·
Meigs Counly is Thornton, Ja.net Howlrd end Fred Hulin,.,,, Clerk Glorll
work. in Meigs
· The oommiuioneB alfiO:
.
the finl counly in end ProlecuCing .Atton:.y ~n ~.
· Qlunty.
- Apprcwed tran~fet'll of funds for the County Htgh·
the 11a1e II) r«Jeive federal doJJIIIJ from the Ohio DHS for Currendy, many raidenll, including diose who have left way Department;
· ea1110111ic: development: $125,0110 w• pledged earlier lhit the welfare roll1, travel.to Alherut, Gallipolil. Parkmburg,
-Approved the payment of county bills in the amount •
year to hdp fund the county's economic: development W.Va. and other areas in order to find work.
of $251,690.15, with 334 entries;
office.
"Dapile what some prople lftink. people in Meip
Pratenl w"'e Commiuioners Jeffrey Thornton, Janet
These fundi, which come from the Temporary Allis- . Qlunty do wanlto work,• Swisher 11aid. "Thit qreemenl Howard and Fred Hoffman. and Oerk Gloria Kloes.

111011 bureaucratic
do;:umenu, aQ:OrdneJO(ialed between. Meip •'· ~ng lo Meip Qlun-

.

life-saving actlon·wlns recognition

~;

UNLIMITED Personal Access, Personal E-Mail Accuunr

POMEROY
Salisbury
Town ship Trustees, regular mccl ~
ing, Tuesday, 6 p.m. at the township hall on Rock Springs Road .

Single Copy . 35 Ce nts

R.e.gional Briefs o/isions o
',If

Web TV or Cumputers all at loca l call!

puh(ic' hear - TUESO,'\Y

Mi ddleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

. , A partnership aveemma.
County and the Ohio Depattment of Human §mikes, was
approved by the Meip Counly Commillionm wben they
met in regular ICUion on Monday.
.
'
The agreement oudillftl Meip County'J plan for weifare reform, .lllld is a mjuirementld ford! in Houle Bill
408, which gave countieo more indepettdeta in servin&amp;
diose welfare clienll who m:dve-" a~~~istance.
The goal or Ohio \\forb Pil'll, the IUII1C given 1o the
new welf~ program, is to place lhete cash recipienll in
paying jobs.
Welf.ve dollars once disbursed as Qllh wiotana, arc
now earmarked for job liaining. child care.lrarllpOrtalion
IIIJd other expenses ....._,ry to wist dients in finding
.. work IIIJd removing lhete ~icnll from the alllnly't welfare
rolls, which the Meigs Qlunty Department of Human Ser·
. vices 11aid last week have been cut by .over half since the
OWF initiative became effeelive. .
Th011e clienti who were receiviiig atii&amp;tance when lhe
new program went into effm are oow limiled to two years
of Qllh assistance.
·
The asreemenl,. which was negotiated with stale official1 las! month, i1 relatively creative when rompared to

ID

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sintlnll ..... Staff

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:ev BRIAN J. REED

(16 years of age or younger)
Will be published
Wednesday, December 23rd

-"---Cqr:nmunity Calendar---

'

Tampa wins
Ba«le of the
Bays 24-22
-Page4

~~ig~ County Commissioners reach agreement with the Ohio Department of Human Services

I

Our special page(s).
"For Children
Only"
.
.

Ill

1

Tomorrow: Sunny

Volume 49. Number 153

our
current news
Times-Sentinel wil not accept weddings_after 60 days from the date oflhc
event.
Wed1ings submitted after the 60-day dca~line will appear during the
week tn The Datly Sent mel and the Gallipolis Dally Tribune.
All club meetings and other news articles in the society section must be
submutcd wuhm 60 days of occurrence . All birthdays must be submincd
wuhm 60 days of the occurrence.
·

.

I, 1. .

Meip County'•

an

The Commu nit y Ca lend-ar is l
puhli~h e d as a free serv ice to
LI;TART - Letart Township
non -profit gro up s wishing to Trustees. Monday, 6 p.m. at the
an nounce mectiOg s and specia l office building.
,
,,
cvcnts . 1 The ca lenda r is nut
dc signCU to prnmotc sa les or fund
SYRACUSE L. Sutton Townrai sers nf any type . It ems arc ship Trustees. Monday. 7:30p.m.
printed H" space permit ~! and &lt;.:an - at Syracuse Village Hall .
'
not he guaranteed to run a .spccif- .
~c numhcr of days .
RACINE - Racine Chapter,
OES. regular session, Monday.
MONDAY
7:30p.m.

I

·Local hoops action, Page 5
Mature relationships, Page 7
Space station component operating, Page 6

Toct.y: Alln
High: 40s; Low:~

'

I. Determine whether you have
sufficient insurance to protect
Social Security Commissioner· your survivors when you die . .
Kenneth S. Apfel announced that Soc1al Security studies show that a
the Social Security Administration young worker has a 1-in-3 chance
is changing its policy to make it of dying before retirement age.
easier for victims of domestic vio- It's impon'ani to know · that your·
lence to obtain a new Social Secu- young children will get monthly
rity number.
benefits until they turn 18. You
The change in policy is can focus on how much other life
designed to help battered, abused · insurance you may need.
and harassed individuals elude
2. See · how your potential
their abuser, and to reduce die-ri sk Social Security benefits rank with
of further violence. .
'
your other investments. Consider
The change will provide for the that Social Security retirement
assignment of a new Social Secu- benefits increase annually with
rity number based on an individ- increases in lhe cost of living, and
ual 's written affirmation of the last as long, a·s you live. Family
domestic abuse, supported by a benefits when you die or if you .
third-party affidavit from sources become disabled can far exceed .
such as police, medical profes- your t.ax contributions.
SIOnals or locally-recognized bat3. Prove your income when
tered victims shellers. Previously, you're applying for a. loan. mort- .
SSA required evidenc.c showing gage, or other ·credit need . It may
that an individual is bei ng abused help your application if you can
·,.
and that misuse of lhe Social show proof of income in your later
Security number was playing a years.
role in carrying out that abuse.
4. Watch your Social Security
. In addition , SSA is taking addi- grow. Social Security benefits
tiOnal slcps to improve services 1o increase as your earnings increase .
victims of domestic violence . Coverage and protection increases 1 •
They include :
. ,
as you grow older and your family
- posting information about 10creases. You can keep track of
domestic violence on .its website;
your protection easier with the
- advising people about what annual benefit statement.
other steps they should take to
5. Participate in the public diaprotect themselves ; and
logue about the future of Social ·
---;providing individuals with Security. The statement contains
importanl referral information .
information ah.out the program as
''The import;mcc of this policy well as your protection. As the
'-=hangc cannot he ovcrcstimmcd. puhlic dialogue on the future' of
Domestic . violence plagues the the program continues, you should
ltvc s of millions of Americans. find it helpful to have ready informost often women_. and I am !nalion on exactly whal we are try pleased that we arc able to make mg to prc,c rvc for future genera-· ·
our process of iss uin g new S~cial tions.
Security number s less cumberTo order your benefit statement
some, and to make it easier for call 1-800-772-1213. If, when you
battered , abused and harassed receive your Sta tement. you have
"
individuals to begin a better life," qucsti.ons about it, check our, wcbthe Commissioner stated.
si t'ewww.ss my statement or call us
back at 1-800-772- 1213. ·
·
How to use your benefit estimate

By Bob· Hoeflich

Dec«; l

Weather

High: 40s; Low:~

•

Protecting victims of domestic violence
BY ED PETERSON, MANAGER
Athena Social Security Office ,

•-"Tt

PICTURE YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE •••

Alcoholics are often master manipulators
to get help for her, but our sy&lt;km no
longer protects the mentally ill.
Ann
They are free to self-destruct if they
landers
want. Our health 'care system is no
I'H'l t.• ABrrlt• Tront1o
better'- pushing patients out of the
1 5ylll.ll&gt;lllt ~ttd Cr~~l •
S)ndlca.:
hospiull as soon as they can stand
up.
Yesterday, I wept at Irene 's.
Dear Ann Landen: I couldn't
graveside.
She was only 38. The
help but respond to your answer to
autopsy
revealed
she had died of
" Long Island Mother," who has an
' hemorrhage.
She had been
mtemal
akohnlic~on . You said we all need
bleeding
for
weeks,
even though
10 be ··our ,brother"s keepers.·· You
some
of
that
time
she
had
been in the
arc !'IO ri ghr_.
hospital.
No
one
noticed.
I d!Sco,·cred my lovely daugh(cr
How many more like Irene are
"as an alcoholic just after she marout
there·! How many parents live in
ned 10 yea" ago .. Unfonunately.
agony.
knowing their child is wannone of us recognized her behavior
dering
the streets and sleeping in
for what it was ... Irene·· "'as a masdoorways?
Meanwhile, they live in
'"' ""'mpulator.. skillfully hiding her
. . ~ . 111p1oms . Allhough She tried a fear of a phone call telling them their
child is dead.
JL'L·mcry program and then jo'incd
My daughter could have been
. \IL-~J hollcs -~ Anonymous. she cou ld
saved
if there were a mechanism in
01 ~~ ... tay ·~ohcr. Po1r1 of her problem
place
to
deal with peop.le who are
\'""' that ~he was also bipolar .and
self-destructive
.because they are ill
had \ iolcnt mood swing!~. . She eventuall) lost her husband. her job and and huning. It's time to re-examine
the issue of personal freedom vs.
her .,~ If-- respect.
. About two years ago. Irene fell mental illness. - Grieving Mom in
and shattered, her shoulder. When Sacramento. Calif.
Dear Grieving Mom: I know of
~ he was hospitalized. she wa.~ diagn,
o
"mcchqnism" that can deal with
n os~d .as an ··end-stage alcoholic."'
Her li'vcr and pancreas w.ere in people who ~~e ill and self"acstrucdreadful condi tion. I tiied .endlessly · live and do not reach out'"for help.

Tuesday

Monday, Deeember7, 1998

Buckeye 5: 5·12·14·23·:10

w.yA.

· ·

b.tWic~~tWirw~~~~~~

.

Dally 3: I· 7-6: Dally 4: 9-6·5·0 ·
·c J'.jQR Ohl11 V1IIL')' l1uhllslllng ("u,

'charged with negligent homicide,
prosecutors said.
Le'ster Manns, 57, of Canton,
was formally accused Monday of
killing Jarod Nign of Carrollton.
said Carroll County Prosecutor
John Smiley .
The mnximum pennlty is
six month s in prison and a 51,000
fine.
Nign, who v,:as wearing an
orange hat, was shot in the head
Friday afternoon after he wan·
dered away from his hunting
party and squatted down, sheriff's deputies said. The shoot·
ing took place in a remote and
wooded area about 30 miles
soulhensl of Can tou .
Mnnns was treated for shock
.after the accident.
The statewide firearms deer
season was lust week.

Hunters kill 28
••• percent fewer
deer this year

•

••

I

'

CANDY
- Top winner' In thl ncond of the Pomtroy Mtrch1nt1
Christmil conttlll held Slturday It City Natlonii ·Bink we• Bobbll Paul1y ot Coolvlll1.
won • SliD
gift certlflcltl for htr whlll choooletl pralin11. P,aul1y, with chocolltt bllllonalrn, and Joann•
William• with Fifth Av1nue blrt tlld for Hcond pl101 and will racelv1 $25 gift c1rtlflcet11. JudgIng w11 done by home economllll Jenlce Webtr, left, and Dlene DunfH, with Annl1 Chapman, In
VIctorian coetumlng, pr11ldtnt of thl Merohent• A11ocl1tlon, holtlng the •vent. The final cont11t
will bt for gift wrapping end will bl held It 12:30 p.m. Saturdly, Dec. 12 It P1opl11 B1nk. Pack.·
agea may be left at the bank 1nytlme. At th1 1ame time, plcturee of children will bt liken with
S1nta Clause, oompllmtntt ol tht b1nk.

COLUMBUS ;....: Hunter» killed
19,356 deer during last week's
slatewide firearm• deer sea50n
which ended Sunday,-the Ohio Divi·
1ion of Wildlife reported.
The preliminary figure represents a
28 percent decrease from last year's
deer seuon tOtal of 110,875. The
wildlife agency 11aid more COMerva·
live deer hunting regulations this year
and reduced deer abundance account·
ed for the decline in the harvest.
Local counties were IOJlll in lhe
numbet of deei killed. Qlunliea where
the ·mOll deer were che&lt;:ked lui week
included: AthenJJ, 3,947; Muskingum,
3,74~; Washington, 3,360; Guernsey,
2,888; Jackson, 2,877; Roo, 2,793;
MEIGS, 2, 790; GALLIA, 2, 732;
. Vinton, 2,501; and Noble, 2,407.
Hunters may take a limit of one
statewide this fall and winter, regard·
less of the type of deer hunting SCIISOn.
A second deer may be taken in Deer
Zone C, a 14-county area of sootheasl
Ohio which inc Iudes both Gallia and
Meigs counties. Additional deer may
be taken in designated urban area.•.
Ohio's firearm.• deer sca.'iOn wa.•
open IMI Monday through Saturday in
71 countlC!! and through Sunday in
Zone C. The archery deer sewn began
Oct. 3 and remains open through Jan.
31, 1999. A statewide primitive deer
season will be open Dec. 26-30.
About 75 percent of the total deer
harvest occurs during the statewide
fireanns deer sea.'iOn.
. 'The deer gun season harvest is
aboui where we thought it would be,"
said Division Chief Michael J.
Budzik. Officials carl ier predicted a
20 to 30 percent decrease in the total
deer harvest.
·
The wildlife agency reported
many hunters did not parlicipate in
the fil1il day of Sunday deer gun hunt·
ing offered in Zone C.

-Pomeroy qouncil OKs purchase of law enforcement supplies
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel New I Staff
Pomeroy Village Co uncil approved the •
purchase (if supplies for the pQI.ice depart·
ment Monday night.
Council approved spending money from
the law enforcement fund at the requesl of
Pollee Chief Jeff Miller to address a.rash of
burglaries and theft s in the village.
Miller said most of the crimes Involved .
break-ins;
.
.
During October, November and Decem·
ber, lhe police department has handled , 14
break -ins, four felony drug cnscs in a.ddi·
lion lo sex felonies and felonious assault
cases.
"We have 37 pending felony cases," he
said.
Investigation of these crimes is hampered .
by a lack of equip ment, Miller explained.
The department needs a crime scene kit
including a camera, fingerprinting materials
and other items, he added .
Wh ~ n Miller was asked why none of the
crimes were reported to local media, Mayor
Frank Vaughan interjecled that crime
reports should be picked up from the pollee
department in person, and will not be given
over the telephone as has been done in the
past.
"Information will not be released (to the
media) over the phone," he said.
Miller said tht: department is not auempt·
ing to conceal the crimes f(om village resi·
den IS.

Most ol' the crimes took place in the east· from its customers, including a copy of their...,
ern portion of the village.
most recent tax return, in order to receive th e·.
11e said lhis morning that officers believe . seni0r citizens' discount ,
..
they have solved lhe majority of cases with
"They have tqkcn several people off th e
the ar'rest of 'I juvenile Monday night.
. d,iscounl," he said.
Furl'helinformatiQn was not available as
Vaughan said c(&gt;uncjl shou ld write the
of prcu time Ibis morning.
company co ncer ning this complai nt nlting
Miller said the investigative supplies with complaints of p&lt;&gt;or signn l quality. ,
should cosl around $750. In addition, coun·
In other business, oo un c;i l ren ewed the vii ell approved the purchase of a .new dhpatch · Iage's liqhility insurance l"ilh Downing ·
er's desk to replace an older desk now over- Childs -Mullcn -M usser Agency in Pomeroy
crowded with computers and camera moni· with Musser abstaining .
.
tors.
Co uncilulso discussed prn!Jiems with Rut·
· Council also met with a contingent from land Street and Pleasant 1\idgc, and mel in
the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department executive sessio n lo discuss personnel mnl ·
concernins the appointment of a new fire ters.
Clerk/Treasurer Kathy llyscll prescntccl
chief following the death of Danny Zirkle on
Dee. 2.
the followin~ finunciul report for November :
Vaushan said a new chief w,ould be general, $107.042_; · safcty, $4,452·.'06; Slrc.:t.
appointed afler the first of the year, ndding -$1.025; slate . h• ghwny, •$2,707 .95; I He .
that the second -in -command, Chris Shank, $34,041.42: cemetery. $4.805.1:1; · water,
would serve as fire c~icf until a permanent $55,.063.87; sewer, $21,786.87; g·uaranty
appointment is made based on the recom· mclF, $19,628.54: ut1hty, $6,964.60: over ·
mendalion of the fire deparlment.
time grant, $7,974 .01: perpetual care,
1 J"The vlllnge Is saddened to lose Danny $7,974.01;
. cemct~ry
cndowm~nt ..
ZHkl.e," said council President John Musser. $38,446.59: pollee pcnston. $~.042.75; build·
"We 'appreciate all the work you guys, and ing fund. (-$60.63); rccrcntu,ln, _$1,471.1.~;
the police department, do for the village."
ODNR grant, no balnncc; pcrn11ss1Vc tux.
Musser also said he received several com· $9.1.37 .65: law en force mcnt, $~.17 7. 93;
.plaints from village residents concerning a COPS FAST grant, $2,6()8:76 ;. FENti\ 111,
senior citizens discount inquiry from Cub ic · $24,460: downlllwn rcvllaltzatwn . '"' .hal Vision, which has a villnge franchi se to pro· ance; tntals, $361,983 .
.
.
. .
vide cable television service in the village .
Also present were counctl members (ocrt
The proble.m, Musser said, is that the Walton, Scott Dillon, David Ballard, Larr y
company is requesting financial information Wchrung and .Clc,nrgc Wright.
1

,I

"

,,

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="27964">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="27963">
              <text>December 7, 1998</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1323">
      <name>butcher</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1348">
      <name>hampton</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1481">
      <name>lee</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
