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•

•
Monday, December 28, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

The

cowgirl l twins:

If it~s worth noting or Evans an~ ~er stunt double
knowing, it's in the book!
By PAUL LEE CANNON
Marin Independent Journal
St)lc Afici onados. rejqice'
''The Fa,hion Book'' (Phaidon
Press: 539.95) has arrived.
Anyhody and anyone who· s
made an impact on the f~hion

" orlct' dunng the past !50 years
has h1 s or her own page in thi s AHl-Z l:ornpendiurn . Enc yclopedta

Bruan nit;a eat your heart out.
A m1n1 hiography graces the
top of each glossy page of ··111e

Fashion Book'' and is Illustrated
by a phowgraph which captures
pc:rhar~ I he

best example of rhe
mJJ , 1duar~ work . Running the
~amu t
fro m the · Victorianin:-.pi rcd .'- tt_YIC of Laura Ashley to

the

ll \anh- ~a rde

'" Hiroshima

L: hi ~" ~~r ~;;hji Yamamoto. thi s
m a:-.~ i\ c . 5 12-page reference ·
gu1Jc t.~l,o fea tures cdttors. hai1
8. nd mah..t: up ar11 sts, illustratOrs.
milliner... ph otographers. stylI1 1~b. and mov ie and music i con ~
a-. we ll :1.. , severa l other dcs i ~:mcr&gt; . And. yes, all the supenn ~d­
cb arc represe nted. too: Ch n sty.

•

. THE HISTORY OF FASHION - "The Fashion Book" is a
vast overview of the world of fashion, style and trends,
pioneering puhl!shm g force. and like 11 or not. has affected us all. .
homage is paid to makeup mogu l For example, Levi Strauss and
Cr nd y. Linda. Naomi . They're Max Factor. the legendary Greta the Gap·s Donald anci Doris Fi s·
al l in the re along with B~verl y Garbo and the alWay s 1nlrigumg '-; her get their kudos. We all own
a pair of jeans or khakis, right?
Johnson. Lauren HUlton . Pene - Oscar Wilde .
One
nam
e,
however,
sl
ipped
What' s more, even ~arin ,
lope Tree and, of course, the
rhrough
the
cr;u:ks
o
f
th1s
magCalif.,
fashiOn rllustrator Gladys
st•ck·thin Twiggy · the supers of
nificent co ll ec ti on of fashion Pcrint Palmer has apparently
Yl'~ l c r year.
Madonna has her own page, notables. Goodbye, Norma Jean. made fasluon· hi story. Her page
304. wearing Jean Paul Gaulti· Yes. Manl yn Momuc got left prese nt s the artist 's whimsical
er s pmk satin corset for her out. Nonethele ss. a pic ture of her sketch of an Yves Saint Laurent
" Blond Ambition " tour. Gaulti · from "The Seven Year Itch" catwalk show. Palmer, a resident
cr. a majo r French fash1on force, lrvcs on th e page laudin g of SanRafael. couldn't be more
William Travilla. dcsrgner of thrilled.
has hr&gt; -ow n page, 100: 189.
"I thought they were kidWhat's particularly intriguing that famous halter-neck dress
wh1ch
succumb
s
to
a
breeze
'over
ding,
" she says of being selected
.s the nostal g•c feel thrs book
a
city
grille.
·
for
the
book," but now I am
co nveys. There's a photO· of the
"The Fashron Book " al so absolutcly.-honored."
v·cry frrst Vogue cover •n 1893
rellects
how fashi on, whether we
on the entry for Conde Nast, the

Alcohol and the · holidays:
How to drink in a safe manner
By DR. NICHOLAS PACE
New York University School of
Medicine
Rum-spiked eggnog. Port in front
of a fire. A buhbly toast on New
Year's ·Eve: Sometimes, alcohol
seems to be synonymous with holiday
f~stivities. Yet alcohOl is a potent drug
with posSibly dcvastatJn g he alth
effects. Can you mix alcohol and the
holidays safely? It depend s on who
you are and how you do it Here is a
primer of alcohol do's and don' ts for
the holidays:
Don ' t ever drink 1f You arc an alcoho\ic. There IS absol utely no degree or
.alcohol that you can safel y drrnk.
Ever. .

rate at which liquor enters the blood
stream. Don't choose cocktails that
are a mix of two alcohols, such as a
martini or a Manhattan. Do serve and ·
choose appetizing nonalcoholic beverages as tempting alternatives. Try
exotic tropical juices, fresh-squeezed
lemonade, sparkling mineral waters
with sliced fruit.·
When poss ible, always offer tradi1ional liquor-spiked beverages with
the liquor on the side. For instance,
serve or choose mulled cider with the
rum as an extra, the punch without the
champagne pre-mixed in, or the
Bloody Mary mrx with vodka as an
op1ron Don't make d'inking the centcrpiccc,\ of your holiday social lrfc.
In stead of a bar, go out dancing or to
the the ater When you entertain al
home 1 ph;m on some party games or

JACOB BREWER
TURNS ONE Jacob
Matthew Brewer, son of Charlie ·
Don ' t drink ami dri ve .. Evt.:n "one
and Stephanie Brewer, Jr., glass of wine can impair your visUa·l
Chester, recently celebrated his acUJty, coordina1iun and Judgme nt.
first birthday at his parents'
Guesses about how much alcohol is co nv e rsationall ~.: e- breakcrs.
home.
''safe" for each individual arc too
Don 't ever give alcohol to children
A Winnie-the-Pooh theme
·
unce1tain
'and
the
stakes
mt.:
too
h1gh
or
have
it within their reach. Children
was presented and cake; il:e
to
take
chances.
Pick
a
des
ignated
dri
and
young
teen-agers have immature
cream, chips, ·cookies, · and
vcr
instead.
li
vers,
wh1ch
&lt;.:annat sufe\y process
drinks were served.
Do
make
sure
you
cat
bcl
orc
you
alcohol.
It
's
also
unwise to get kids
Attending the party, besides
go
to
a
pany.
Rest,
too.
The
better
used
to
the
taste
and
the verv idea of ·
his parents, were grandparents,
Charlie and Diana Brewer, physical Shape you are in hcfore You drinkin g at too early an age"'. After a
Ronald and Lady Oavis and drink, the,'morc cllcctrvc\y your body party, throw away leftover drinks
great
grandmother · Dorris wlil metabolize and handl e the alcp- before you go to sleep so that curious
Goodrich.
hoi. Da eat while vou dnnk. N•hhle chrldrcn don 't help themselves the
Also attending were Justin on hors d'ocuvrcs or take the time to next _morning.
,
Brewer, Ronnea and Sierra Hud- sit down to a proper meal. Head for
Don 't ever let a fri~nd or guest
.. son, Aaron Brown, Joey, Misty, . the buffet. before yo u he.ad for the bar. drive while drunk. In fact. in many
Zachary and Trey Coates, Wilda
Do pace your dnnking . Cultivate states, as a host you are legally
and Emily Hudsc;&gt;n, Jon Brewer, the fme art of drinking and dawdling. rcsponsrble 1·or that guest's alcoholic
Prissy, Juan, Mikael and Mikey Talk to a few people before you get consumptian. Don't think that coffee
Tabler.
.
your first drink . Sip the drink, don 't . can sober up an intoxicated person; it
Sending gifts .were great gulp it. Have a dance bcfore_you ·h"'e just makes for a stimulated drunk.
grandmother Pearl Scott, Danny
Do stop drinkmg one hour before
Hudston, Balinda Taylor, Travis another d!jnk. ·
Alternate
your
alcohol
choices
·you
plan to .go home or to sleep to
E!rewer and Heather McKiain.
with nonalcohol ones . Do pour your· allow your. body time to metabolize
self alight one, or ask the bartender to the alcohol. Don't mix alcohol with
Barbara Walters nixs - be extra light on the alcohol in mixed medicattons without checking with
idea of fourth marriage drinks . For instance, rather than mak- your phy sician or phannacist first.
NEW YORK (AP) - Barbara ing a spritier half sclt 7.er, half wine, · Don 't treat a hangbvcr w·ith another
Wolters says she has no desire to try only a quarter of wine mstead. Do . alcoholic drink. Rememb~&gt;r, prevenchoose fruit juices over carbonated t! on is the best hangover medicine.
marry again.
Ms. Wallcrs says in TV Guide's mixers. Carbonation soecds uo the
upcom1n g issue ·t hat her current
heau , Se n. John W. Warner, R-Va. ,
won't ht:c llllK her foUrth husband.
'"I love Jnhn He. love"s me . But it
is a di ffcn: tlt th in g,·· she sl.l id " [t 1s iJ
lu11g. \'C ry cJnsc fncndship ."
As for her fir~t husb;md. husincs"sman Roh~rt Hl' nry Kai7 . she said , " f
wouldn ·t· k.n m\ hmv 1l I met hml."
The coupl e' we re marricJ just a vcar.
" It Wa'J SO hn c.::f that ITI V f3 thcr didn ' l
thi nk it shouiJ h~.: on tl;c record "
Although her second marrwgc. to

th catncnl pt·l•du ~:c r Lee Gu hcr.
failed . Ms. Walt e r ~ ~~ml thcv
remained cloSe fri ends unlll hi s death
in 1988.
Her third hu shand. Hollywood
producer Mel\ Adels on. sold h1 s
company and "d1dnt ha ve anythrng
to do ... Ms Walters sai d. He w·a snt
l'mnfortahle 111 New York. and she
wasn't happy •n Ca li fornra or Colorado. where Adel son wan,tcd to live.
'' If I wa ... :l diffe rent wqm an . I
· nlny have smd I wlll l1 vc my wh~lc
life in Aspen ... she said.

Andrew
Brady, Ty and
Haley

By MARK MUCKENFUSS
The San BerMrdlno Sun
Most baby boomers grew up
watching Roy Rog~rs and Dale
Evans keep the West safe from tile
bad guys.
They also j!rew up wat~hing
Alice· Van-Springsteen. Most of
them just don 't know it.
Van-Springsteen worked as
Evans' stunt double in most of Roy
Rogers and Dale Evans big-screen
movies and in about half ofthe duo's
television shows.
At 80, Van-Springsteen has long
si nce given up stunt work. But she
and Evans, 86. have remained
friends over the years. And Evans
recently accompanied Van-Springsteen to Houston where the fonner
stunt \\'Oman was inducted into the
Cowgirl Hall of Fame.
"I really grew to love Alice as a
sister," says Evans,. seated in her
office at the Roy Rogers and Dale
· Evans Museum in Victorville, Calif.
Va~ · Springsteen sits across the desk
from her. She's there for a visit, having driven up from her horne in
Coronado.
"That's right," Alice nods.
"We 're li ke sisters."
It was on the set of "Yellow Reise
of Texas, " the second film Rogers
' and Evans made together, that VanSpringsteen and Evans met. ' · ·
Evans says she remembers
watching Van-Springsteen work and
trying to learn how better to ride a
horse by following her moves.
"Republic Studios thought since
I was a Texan, surely I could ride a
horse," Evans recalls. "They were
mistaken. I watched Alice when she
doubled me and I learned things. I
watched the way she sat a horse like
a man. She would give me tips along
the way."
1
Van-Springsteen was the dght
source for riding tips.
A professional rodeo .and trick
rider since the age of 12, she performed durin~ openin~ cere111onies
at the 1932 Olympic Games in Los
Angeles and had won world titles in
champion trick riding. She also rode
as a jockey and was the third woman
ever to receive a trainer's license for
thoroughbred horses. In 1937, at the
age of 18, she was invited by the
queen of England to ride in tbe

WlllUal Royal Easter Show in Aus-

tralia,

.

"' • "She found out about my riding,
I guess," Van-Springsteen say~. "so
· f went to Australia and rode the
Easter show. I'd just got back and
somebody (that met her) at the ship
said, 'Fox Studios watits you to
work with them.' "
· She had worked in movies
before. Her first work as a film stunt
woman was in Will Rogers' 131'1
movie, "In Old Kentucky." Eventually she was a stunt double for many
=ognized stars such as for Eliza~ Taylor in "National Velvet,"
Marian Davis, lane Wyman, lngri&lt;\
Bergman and Barbara Stanwyck in
"llle Big Valley" television series.
-. ~~ had other women that doubled
me, 'but none of them impressed me
lik5 -Aiice," Evans says.
.lo-the days before Evans married
RoJers, she and Van -Springsteen
al,;ll viere roommates. They shared a
guest house at Bing Crosby's home
for about a year. In addition to sharing their living space, they shared
the trials of their early careers.
" When I came to 20th Century
Fox, I had to spend my first week's
salary on the dentist," Evans says.
llle siudio head of Fox at the time
placed great emphasis on the perfect
smile ..
"I had io wear caps," she says,
"the kind you paste on. I did 'The
Cowboy and the Senorita' and I had
the pe~rect smile." BUt because her
riding ·skills weren't up to par, she
spent a lot of time bouncing up and
down in the saddle.
In one scene, she says, "I
bounce~ so hard, my caps llew off
and w¢nt, in the din and (her co·
star's) horse stepped on them and
broke .\hem. I was so thankful: I
never wore caps again.' '
•
Most of Van-Springsteen's pit·
falls catife in the way of bruises and
broken bones, including a broken
back fiom coming down on top of a ·
gate during a rodeo event.
"They said, 'She'll never .walk
again,' " she says, recalling the doctots' prognosis. "But I was walking
in six months. "
There was a time when the studios tried to move Van-Springsteen
from anonymity and turn her into a
star.

H~mane Society offers rules .to live by for pet owners
By Alden Waitt
Meigs County Humane Society
Here you go, pet owners. LiSten
up' This is your dog and cat speaking!
• My life is likely to last 10 t_o 15
years. Any separation from you will
be painful to me. Remember that
.before you adopt me.
*Give me time 10 ~nderstand
what you want of me.
*Place your trust in me ~ for it's·
c rucial to my well being.
.. , *Don't be angry with me for long

and don't lock me up as punishment.
You have your work, your entertainment and your friends. I have only
you!
• Talk to me sometimes. Even if I
don't understand your words, 1 do
understand your voice when it's
speaking tO me.
*• Be aware that however you
.•
treat me, I'll never forget it.
*Remember before you hit me
that I have teeth that could easily
crush the bones of your hand but I
choose not to bite you. We cats, too,
~;an do some damage!
·

*Before you scold me for being .
uncooperative, obstinate, or ·.lazy,

ask yourself if something mig~t be
bothering me. Perhaps I'm not getting the-l'ight food, or I've been in
the sun too long, or my heart is getting old and weak.
*Take care of me when I get old;
you, tao, will grow old.
.
*Go with me on difficult journeys. Never say I can 't bear to watch
it or let rt happen in my. absence.
Everything is easier for me if J&lt;lU
are there. Remember: I love you,'

Low-Fat Cooking: Banana Bread is rich in taste, low in fat
Low-Fat Cooking: Banana Bread ·
8 drjed dates chopped .
mix). Transfer to the pan. Bake until
By The Associated Press
6 dried apricot halves, chopped
a toothpick inserted in the center
Bananas, not fat, give this dense
I e~g
comes out clean, about I hour. Cool
loaf of Banana Bread its moist texI very ripe banana, mashed
completely on a rack. Makes 12
ture. Toast it and top with nonfat
1/4 cup fat-free milk
servings.
cream cheese for a speedy breakfast
Pr~heat ove,n to 350 F. Spray an
Nutrition facts per serving ; n I
or snack.
8-liy,4;inch loaf pan with non stick cal , I g total fat, 0 g saturated fat ,' 18
Banana Bread .
cooking spray. In a medium bowl, · mg chol., 174 mg sodium, 24 gtoial
I 314 cups all-purpose llour
combine llour, brown sugar, baking carbo. , I g dietary fiber, 3 g pro., 49
3 tablespoons.packed light brown·· powder, salt and c.innamon; stir in mg calcium .
sugar
dates and apricots. In a small bowl,
2 114 teaspoons baking powder
bjla(, the egg; add the banana and
Recipe from Weight Watchers
112 teaspoon salt
·
milk ... Pour over the llour mixture; International.
112 teaspoon cinnamon
.... siir just ·until blended (do not over-

• All Desks

a

• All Recliners
• All Sofas
• All Bedroom Suites
• All Dining.Room Suites

a or

ANDEifSON'S FURNITURE
.
PO~EROY

.J•.

992·3671

)

I

Five NFL head coaches out of work, Page 4
Squirrels as indoor pets? Page 6
Social Security ready for Y2K, Page 3

Tomorrow: Flurries
High: 10.; Low:10s

Jacksonville
humbles
Steelers 21-3'

-Page4

•
..
Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper .

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 49, Number 167

Single Copy - 35 Cents

Treasurer offers commissioners more funds for debt retirement
Py BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
'"
Meigs Couniy Treasurer Howard Frarik
again offered the Meigs County Commissioners the opportunity tq retire almost $100,000
in bank loans before the end of the year, using
procee'ds from the county's- investment program.
· Frank met with the commissioners during
their regular meeting on Monday .to ask that
funds ~nerated during the month from his
investment of inactive county funds be used to
retire bank loans in. the amounts of $62,872
and $34;066, taken out for the purchase of a
Pomeroy office building and the purchase of a
'new fiscal computer system, respectively.
The loans were approved by the board earlier this year, and according tq Frank, the commissioners could save a total of S18,000 in
interest by paying the loans off by year's end.
· Frank said that ·the $100,000 in additional.
revenue could be used tO·pay off both loans
,and to buy a new air conditioning system
which the commissioners plan to purchase for
the multipurpose senior center next year.
Frank met with the commissioners earlier

this month · with a similar proposal, but the
commissioners used those investment revenues lo pay an outstanding debt to th_e Public
Employees Retirement System and to pay the
county's ·share of employee health insurance,
leaving the loans unpaid.
Commissioner Janet Howard expressed
support of paying the loans off, but Commis- '
sioner Jeffrey Thornton said he thought the
·hoard should wait .until after the new year to
see if the county should retire the debts, or to
use the new ful)ds to supplement the general
fund carryover for the new year.
Howard said that the county will be
required to carry over $250,000 in order to
meet payroll and debt before the 1999 budget
is approved, and Frank estimates the carryover
available to date at $180,000.
Frank said that his investment program has
paid $323,244 during the yeai, $148,000 more
than he estimated in January.
He emphasized that the funds he has offered
for debt retirement are new funds not related to
the county's general fund or the 1999 carryover.
"I'm sure that the taxpayers of this county

want this debt paid off, • Frank said.
Commissioner Fred Hoffman, who attended
his last meeting Monday, was honored by feilow commissioners and office staff. He was
commended by Howard and Frank.
"It has been a pleasure working with (Hoffman)," Frank said. "He is very knowledgeable
about county government and has tried .to do
his best for the county."
Hoffman called his years as a county commissioner an "honor."
~·1 appreciate the opportunity to serve the
people of Meigs County, and I wish the new
board the best," Hoffman said.
The cqmmissioners also:
• Opened bids for bituminous materials
!rom Asphalt Materials of Marietta and Middleport Tenninal of ·Gallipolis, which were
tabled pending review by the county highway
department;
.
·
• Approved the closing of the courthouse at
noon on Thursday for New Year's Day;
- Meigs County Commissioner Fred Hoffman,
• Granted the county auditor authority to ·center, attended his last meeting on Monday and was honOIWd by
make needed transfers for the year's end.
colleagues with a cake and other refrashments, Also pictured are
Also present was Clerk Gloria Kloes.
CommiSJioners Jeffrey .Thornton and Janet Howard, Clerk Glo~
Kloes and Secretary Victoria Cundiff.
.:

Board of Public Affairs appointees approved by Middleport Village CouncO_
Judge allows shai'Jltshoo

of deer to begin again

By BRIAN J. REED
whose wife, Beth is president of council, voted against the appointments. · '
. Sentinel News Staff
. In other business, council elected lannarelli as president of the council for
Three Middlepon reside.nts were appointed to a newly reformed Board of 1999, upon the recommendation of Councilman Robert Pooler. Both
Public Affairs at Monday evening's regulai meeting of Middleport Village lannarelli and Rae Gwiazdowski abstained from voting.
CQuncil.
.
··
'
,
Stivers is currently president of council, and was recomme~tded for reap-'
Mayor Dewey Horton appointed, and council approved, Jean Craig, Don pciintment by Horton.·
.
, ' .
.
-·
Stivers and Myron Duffield as members of the board, which will oversee the
Sam Eblen, who has served o~ the vdlage. recrc;allon commtllee, ~otcd
operation of the village's water and waste water systems. Council voted last that Mayor Dewey Horton had reJected hts restgnatton from_the committee,
month to reform the hoard rather t~an replace the village administrator who which he ~ffered e.arlier this fal!, and sard that he would contmue to serve on
was released from his duties last fall .
the commrttee unttl further not1ce.
Craig was appointed to a .two-year term, Stivers a four-year term and · Stivers noted that a mobile home near South.Sixth, ',"hich was the s~bjec!
Duffield a six-year teim. They will be paid $25 per meeting, and Craig, who of complaints from residents at the most recent counc1l meetmg, contmu~d
has attended council meetings regularly to discuss water and wastewater to be an "eyesore."
·
, :
issues, said that the board will likely meet twice a month while improve· ·
Councilmen Manley and Pooler noted that the occupants of the !fatler
ments to the two systems are discussed.
were in the process of mstall rng underprnnrng and takmg oth~r actton to
The village plans to seek grant funding and other financing to improve improve the appearance o_f the property:
·.
the sys~ms, which have been subj~ctlo investigation by the Ohio EPA and
In other action, co~nctl ~pproved Lrnda Warner as ytllage attorney and
complaints from village residents.
.
approved several appropnat1ons adJustments.
.
Also present were .council. member Stev~ Ho~chrns and Clerk Bryan
Council member Sandy lannarelli abStained .from the vote, and Roger
Manley;· who 1Al8e11'ilf Issue of a ct&gt;nflict of interest in appointing Stivers, Swann.
·

By JOHN AFFLECK
Aaaoclated P - Writar
,
a.Ev'ELAND (AP) - After l&lt;»ing another court battle, animal rights
activists pledged to keep trying to stop sharpshooters from killing up to 300 deer.
this winter in l\\lo local parks,
"We're going to keep fighting and fighting and fighting. We're not giving
up," said Bonnis Vlach, a spokeswoman for the grassroots group In Defense of
·Deer.
a.yoihoga County Common Plea-; Court Jud~ Frank D. Celebre= Jr. on
Monday lifted a tempomry ban on the deer hunt which he had imposed last
Thumda~
,
Oeveland Metroparlcs officials want to trim a herd of about 800 deer down
to about 500 ailimals by March.
·
·
The deer Ire on the Bedford and Brecksville reservatiQD$ abdut 15 miles
south of aeveland Parka 'officials have argued it is necesSary to shoot the deer
because of environmental and property damage caused by an overpopulation of
the animals and the threat of deer-car accidents.
·
Celebrezze last month allowed the hunt to begin over the objections _of In
CINCINNATI (AP) - Some pardons
-A Columbus office prod~cl's distribut~r
Defense of Deer. 1lle group appealed that decision and IOSL
Other
requests
merely
ask
a
govfeared
he wouldn't be allowed to adopt hts
spare
lives.
However, Celdlre= held up the hunt last Thursday so he could study a new
to
clean
up
a
person's
record
for
the
second
wife's children becaus~ he was ~~resternor
attempt by In Defense of Deer to block iL
.
·
sake
of
a
job
or
promotion.
ed for smokmg manJuana
He rejected the activist group's new.
in
Janunearly 25 years ago.
Since
taking
office
argumentS on Monday. .
ary 1991, Gov .. · George
"Clemency is ~ nece~sary
Among other things, the group said
Voinovich
has
recetved
4,761
safeguard,
especrally rn a
that Metroparks officials were putting
petitions
from
killers,
drug
state
with
the
death penalty,"
out com on Brecksville and Bedford
burglars
and
oilier
sai~
Da~iel
Kobil,
a Capital
·
dealers,
Today's
resetvations to lure deer from the adja.;:riminals
seeking
a
pardon,
Untverstly
.
law
professor.
..1 Sections - 10 Pages
cent Cuyahoga Valley National Recrereduced sentence or early·
"Bu·t . given · the tough-onation Area- park land.where deer are
release from prison, according
crime tenor of the times, it's
protected by order of a federal judge.
to
a
review
of
stale
records
by
one
of the few powers of pubIn Defense of Deer argued in court
The
Cincinnati
Enquirer.
lie
service
that governors have
papers that the M,troptll'ks were.using
of
those
requests
not
wanted
to exercise."
Most
a "side door" method to kill deer on
were
rejected.
The
Enquirer.
found that durfederal land.
But
Voinovich
did
use
his
ing
his
eight
years
in office,
But Celebre= rejc:cted that arguexecutive clemency powers to
Voinovich has granted parment, saying only it was "without
grant
official
forgiveness
to
a
dons
'\o 69 ex-convicts.
merit"
·
select
few,
the
Enquirer
That
doesn ' t ·erase the con"Every single thing they say about
found.
viction,
bul allows the person
why they are killing the deer can be
The
only
th.ing
stopping
a
Cincinnati
!o
hold
certain
jobs,
such
as teacher, police
Lotteries ·
totally disputed," Vlach said. "I'm
woman from becoming . a teacher was her officer or foster parent.
very disappointed Judge Celebre=
OHIO
past; she was busted for stealing nail polish,
Another 50 criminals_ had their p~is.~n sen ,
didn't give us a chance to bring forth
Pick 3: '9-3-0; Pick 4: 4-2-9-8
panty
shiefds
and
chewing
gum
while
in
coltences
commuted, makrng them eltg1l\le for
the truth about the slaughter."
Buckeye 5: 2-5 -~·27- ;!9
.lege,
parole
or
early ·release.
.
Vlach said her group woulc;l
W.VA.
-;A
Las
Vegas
casino
manager
needed
a
Mike
Dawson,
_
Voinovich's
spokesc~an,
now consider the best strategy for conDaily 3: 8-2-9; DaUy 4: 7-6·3·7
higher security clearance to bolster his declined If' say· how the governor dec1des
tinuing to fight .against the deer kill.
C !998 Ohin Vallc)l Publishing CD.
career,
but a 1971 conviction for illegal gam · which requests to grant.
.
"No way is this the end," she said.
bling in Cleveland blocked his way.
' The Enquirer's re~iew of case fries suggests

Governor's pardons clear way tor jobs,: promotions

Good Afternoon

consideratio~s . indude_ criminal_ and prison
records, parltctpatron tn educatton and substan~e abuse programs, and famtly and communrty support. .· .
..
"We get all kmds of requests, Dawson
said. "Th.~ decision is based on the totality of
the facts.
Ten criminals were released because they
were dying, the Enquirer found.
Vornovtch, a death penalty , supporter, has
not commuted a death sentence.
But he has granted cle~ency to four convicted murderers, rncludrng a ~o.ledo. man
released after a _key prosecutiOn wtlness
re.canted hrs teslimony.
.
•
Under rules adopted by the Ohro Parote
Board, prisoners and ex-convicts who hav.e
completed their sentences may peti·tion for
. clemency from the governor every two yearo.
Most petitions are .rejected after inveslilfators research the cases and ask for the opmions of judges, prosecutors and victims.
Those deemed worthy of another look are
sent ~o the parole board, a 12-member panel
appornted by the governo r.
The board then sends a recomme~dation to
the gov~rnor that mcludes ~n overvrew of the
cas~ •. brography and cnmrnal record of the
petJtroner and letters supportrng or oppostng
the request.

Sa.ddam said using air skirmishes as part of ~nti-sanctions strategy

'
• All Gun Cabinets

Bissell

.l.

The fri end ship was rekindled a nd
remains strong.
'
When Van-S pringsteen 's so~ ·
Norman died three years ago, it was
Evans that she called. Roy and· Dale
drove to her home to be with her. :
A .,Yeek before Roy Rogers ' death
in July, Van-Springsteen was sitting
with him in the Rogers and Evan!
home in Apple Valley.
· · •
"Roy said, 'Alice, I want to t~lk
to you. I'm dying .. .' I said, 'No, you
can't do it right now.' And he saict
'Will you do something fcir me?
Take care of Mama. She's going ti&gt;
need you when I'm gone.' ~~
·
The nurse who was attendin~
Rogers when he died let Van-Spring·
steen know first.
:
" He said, 'Alice, Roy just passed
aw~y.' I w~nt in to see him. I kisse~
him on the forehead. I went te
Dale's bed and said, 'Dale it's time
for you to wake up.' She startec;l
right up in the bed and said, 'Is Roy
OK?' I said, 'Roy 's gone.'
..
"That was real hard to tell ltct
Dale is very strong. But that night,~
was the worst I've ever seen her. k
was like part of her was gone."
"It still is,".Evans says quietly. :

'.!

• All Curios

Children of
Todd and Diana

~·

·

December 2e, 11H18

TodiiY: Wintery mix
High: 40s; Low:20s

"!went to Warner Bros.. and they
decided they were going to make an
actress out of me," she says. Tbey
wanted her to play Annie Oaldey.
"llley sent me to dramatic school.
This teacher wanted to teach me
Shakespeare. I said, ' I'm doing
westerns!' llley had me fencing ,
until the instructoi was behind me
and he copped a feel and I hit him.
They told me not to come back. So,
I said, 'I think I'd better go back to
what I know.' That ended my career
as an actress. I said, 'Dale, you do
the acting and I'll do the stunts."'
In the late t.950s, AI ice and Dale
went on to different professional
projects. They kept in touch with
occasional telephone calls but didn't
see each other for 20 years. It wasn't
until 1970, when Alice and her husband Bud Springsteen were having
dinner at an Apple Valley restaurant,
that Roy Rogers ran into them.
.
"Roy said, 'Oh Alice, will you
stay here·&gt; I'm going to call Q;,dc::
She'll want to sec yo u,' ·~an;
Springsteen says.

Tuesday

Dale

'•

By LA!JRA MYERS
· .
,
and six precisio-n-guided
Associated Preas Writer
bom\:Js to strike an"anti-air- '
WASHINGTON (AP) _ The latest u .S. -Jraq craft site in northern Iraq
clash, a missile ~xchange over northern Iraq, was that launched three missiles
' provoked by Iraqi President Saddam Hussein as at u .S. fighter jets on patrol,
part of a calculated strategy to challenge tight Clin- the Pentagon said.
ton administration and U.N. controls on his nation,
lr~ ·reported four soldiers · killed and seven
.U.'S. foreign policy experts say.
·The Pentagon says U.S. and British patrols in the injured.
"no-lly'' zones over Iraq will continue in an atmosBefore Monday's inciphere of increased tension after the .incident in dent, the Iraqi military had
which Iraq said four soldiers were killed. ·
' · claimed its anti-aircraft gun"I'm sure that pilots will be much more alert," ners had driven off an attack
said Col. .Richatd Bridges, a Pentagon spokesman. by "enemy" warplanes that
· "There'll be more adrenaline running. But the llew from Kuwait and Saudi
mechanisms to respond appropriately are already in Arabia on Saturday, and
Iraqi leaders vowed to fire
1 "
p a~~~y Cordesman, analyst at the Center for on warplanes "violating" its
Strategic lnteniational Studies, said, "What you're airspace.
watching here with Iraq challenging the no-fly
Over the weekend, two
2ones is just the noisiest part of a ·very broad strat- British Tornado planes
egy. It's a visible sign of resistance ."
reported Iraqi anti -aircraft
Saddam's rejection of U.N. weapons inspections fire in the distance .
prompted four days of U.S . and British missile and
In Baghdad, Iraqi offibombing strikes earlier this month.
cials harshly denounced
Baghdad also is· suggesting Iraq might not renew American pilots as "murder·a 2-year-old U.N. oil-for-food program next year ers and . crit:')inals" and
, designed to ease the impact of economic sanctions claimed that all of lr.a q's
~!If".:
on the Iraqi populace.
actions were defensive .
Inspector Richard Butler leaves the n t
At the same time, the Iraqi military has been
The Iraqi News Agency Nation Monday, Iraq's trade minister said
goading Western warplanes to hit 'its air defenses in also reported that the Iraqi Monday Iraq hasnolmmedlateplanatoejact
Western-patrolled no-fly zones set up to limit Sad- . mis si les "almost certainly 400 U.N. humanitarian workers who monitor
dam 's power.
shot down an enemy plane." an oil-for-food program. American warOn .Monday, U.S .. warplanes fired three missil es White House spokesman planes · patrolling a "no-fly zone" fired on
Iraqi air defenses Monday.

David Le~vy called · th.~ ~one, in _o peration since, August 1992, protects Shi·
report "totally not t&lt;Ue.
•te Musltm lraqrs.
.
.
.
Briiish officials also sa!d
Tom Kefan~y, a r ~trre_d ~rr Fo,rcJe hcolo~el ka.ncj
none ~f ~he~r planes was htt. head ,Of a orergn po tcy rnstttu_te at 0 ns . 0 P tns
"Thts ts JUSt more ·propa· School of ~dvanced lnternatronal Studtes, ~at~
ga_ntl~ · from S~ddam Hu s· Saddam rsn t loo_k!ng to encourage another fu~;
sern, . Leavy s_ard. . .
scale U.S. and Bnttsh attack.
·,
Prestd~nt Clrnton: r.nsr sted
He JUSt w _ants to portr~y Western forces as tlte
U.S. prlots ~cted tn sell bullres.to garn .sympathy rn the Arab world and~
defense ~nd fr_red only after the..Umte9 Nat tOns.
••
the lraqt an_tr -~rrcraft stte
Thts ts dearly another move to getth~,U-N , ou~
launched mtssrles at the an.d get all sorts of controls on Iraq off, Kean ~ ·
Amerrcan planes. .
sat~. .
.
.
. _.
He al~o proclarmed that
ThiS technr.~ue keeps the U.S. tn the headltnes
th·e Unrted States, wo~l.d as thc_attacker.
.
•
keep the ltd on Iraq s mrltUltrmately, Sadd_am wants U:N. and A.'ab SU£1•
tary.
. poll to end economrc sanctrons, rn effect s1nce Iraq
' "Because we effectively invaded Ku~ait in August 1990.
.
. control the skres over m~ch
Challe~gtng no-fly zones, .~capons rn~pectJons
of Iraq, Saddam ha s been and the o!J.fo_r-food program rs S~~dam s way of
unable ~~,.use arr power to sort -of otbb,ltng around the edges of sanctrons,
repress hrs o;wn pe~ple ~r t? Keaney ,sa•d.
.
. .
,
lash ?,ut agatn at . hrs netghIraq has! always reJected th e legtllmacy_of ~he
bors, Cltnton sat d.
.
~o-Ily zon~s and has ~h~llen~ed patr,ols ~s vlOI?~rng
He described _the b_arrrng rls soverergnty when 11 sutts Saddam s poltttcal
of lraqr overllrghts tn the purposes , tncludrng '."- \996 mrss1le ~xchanges !hat
zones over the northern and prompted a .U.S. mtlttary buildup In the regiOn,
southern parts of the coun- Cordesman sa•d.
.
.
.
,
try as · a br_oad U.S. strateg~
Unltke the ~capons •.nspecttOn regtme , there are
for squeeztng Saddam.
no U.N. Securrty Co uncrl resoluti ons mandat•ng th e
The northern zone has no-fly zones .
. .
.
.
.
been patrolled regularly
The Cltnton admrotstratJOn, how ever, cttes U.N .
since _April 1991 to protect Re solutio n 688, which s_ays Iraq cannot hurt.Jt~ ow_n
Kurdrsh rebels; the so uthern people, as th e legal basrs for the no-fl y zones .

1

.

'

�,

I

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
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"'t.n-. 1*11 111:1· Left.,. to liN ~ n.. Sentinel, 111 Court st.

Po;:;* or, Oltlo 457SSI; ot,

FAX 10 7.f0 :182 2165

Is the American economic
expansion built to last
into another century?
'·A year that was expected 10 end with a whimper seems instead to be end1ng'w1lh a bang, despite reports of d1sappomting hohday sales And more
bangs could be ahead in the new year.
.
: Where consumers arc concerned, the current economy IS s1milar to what

aStronomers are findmg about the umverse, that tt is ever expanding and may
c¢ntmue to be so, and why worry about tl.
• Now in tis etghth year, the expanston has slowed but not stopped, and
nti&gt;thmg seems able to bring it to a standstill, not to menlton a recesston,
"-1ttch often follows a long penod of growth
· It has def1ed the odds - the collapse of trade partners, military actiOns,
pieSidenltal scandal
and .-=---,...--:-::--:--::-:------,
uitpeachmen~ corporate merge¢; and anlttrust sutls, global
warm1ng, floods, drought,
qwakes and killer bees
: It has held recess1on at bay,
'*sed
wages,
inflated

World

fmances,

lowered

mtcrest

rates, put to "ork a greater
~rcentage of Americans than
e•er before, lowered poverty,
ni1sed home ownership. bala~ced the budget
· And 11 has confused econo~~~ts who thought they knew
11: all s1nce they were patd
a~cordmgly Now, for the new
ye~r. they cautiOn about lower
executive confidence. lower

P~~geA2.

Today In History

Plain and simple, that's jury tampering
By O.WAYNE WICKHAM

bers. n

Gennett - · Service
WASHINGTON Tom
DeLay knows better
Jury tampenng ts a serious
offense. Most people who get
caught trying to rig the verdtct in
a tnal usually wmd up behind
bars But not the House Republican whtp
Delay, who spearheaded the partisan GOP vote
to tmpeach Bill Ointon, is now trying to influence the outcOine of the Senate trial that gets
under way next month. Fearing
that a deal might wtll be struck to,
censure the prestdent, DeLay
tssued a statement Wednesday
warning senatoiS against such a

The secret ev1dence the Republican whip talks
aboutts the kind of stuff that would never see tile
h,ght of day m a real trial It IS mostly hearsay and
Innuendoes, unsubstanttated allegattons and
unfiltered accusations. When Rep. Christopher
Shays, a moderate Republican, got a ghmpse at
this shmy stash of documents shortly before the
impeachment vote, he concluded that whtle troubling. the charges didn't hold up. " Impeachable
offenses were not proven and the proven offenses
were not tmpeachable," the Connecllcut con·
grossman satd.

do his bidding, he is tampering wtth juron ~n :· :
ways that would land tile aver~~;• Amencan Ill ,
jatl. Clinton's Republican cnttcs - D~Lay • ,
among them- hke to say that the prestdent ts not •
above the law Well, ne1ther tS the GOP wh1p
',
Delay's role in thts hiStoric matter ended
when the House of Reprcscntattves adopted two
articles of tmpeachment All that's left for J!te
House to do is for its prosecuiOIS to present tts ·
case against the prestdent when the Sc?ate ~nal .
gets under way. DeLay has no part m thts actton,
although he has a stake m the outeom~ ~avmg . .
rallied the House's Republican maJOnty IO .

move

"Before people look to cut a
deal wtth the Wh1te House or their
surrogates who wtll seek to mnuence thts process, 11 1S my hope that
one would spend plenty of ltme in
the evtdence room "
Plam and stmple, that's Jury
tampering.
In the Impeachment process, the
House of Representatives indicts
the prestdent and members of the
Senate serve as jurors tn the trial
that follows Havmg done h1s JOb,
DeLay now seeks to tell the Senate
how 11 should perform tis j!!ry
duttes. He wants 11 to not only find
that Clinton broke the law tn
attempting to keep secret his adulterous affatr with Monica Lewmsky, but also to conclude that he
should be removed from offtce for
domg so
Of course, the 13 House Repub·
hcans who wtll serve as prosecutors tn the Senate tnal w1ll have
ample opportuntty to argue }USt
that But 1t's poss1ble that a "pleabargam" agreement whtch tmposes a lesser punNot surpnsingly th1s "ev1dence" remams hldlshment on Clmton and spares the natiOn the trau· den from public v1ew
ma of a prolonged tnal, mtght cut short the tnal
If DeLay gets h1s way, the Senate will shun a
and the House Republicans' presentation of the1r deal wtth the White House and accept the secret
case aga1 nst th• pres1dent. DeLay's pubhc plead- material as compelli ng proof of the president's
mg was a preemptive strike against such a posSI· , gutIt m thts matter
b11ity
But m trymg to influence the decisiOn of senalt is "premature to be talking about a deal or tors, DeLay overstepped the !me of responsibility
short-ctrcuihng the process," DeLay sa1d because !hat divides the two houses of Congress when 11
"there are reams of evtdence that have not been comes to Impeachment
publicly at red and are only avatlable to memMore senous, in attemptmg to get senators to 1

,.

tmpeach Omton, he hopes the Senate wtll support '
thiS folly by convtctmg the prestdenl
DeLay has a nghl to hope for as much, but he ,
ts wrong to lobby senators for such a result Were
he not a member of Congress, Tom DeLay would '
not get away wtth JUry tampenng But m this .
quast·judtclal process, he can safely seek to ' ,
mampulate the Senate's pendmg actiOn without .
fear of penalty
'
And that speaks volumes about the great
unfairness of thts impeachment actton

Democrats have become hooked.on political libel
quotes It made for nvettng ltstemng
because it confirmed what many
conservatives have long known The
Democrallc Party has become
hooked on political l1bel
At the heart of the trend ltes a
debate of central Importance --the
argument over whether government
dispenses compassion or oppression,
and who best preserves the values
that have defined and blessed America for the past two centunes, fed~ral
agencies or indivtdual citizens
Conservatives have warned
against undue concentrations of
government power, cauhonmg that
even the most benign ruler wtll
become a despot if g1ven the oppor·
tuntty. They Have cl01med that many
of hberahsm's proudest monuments
were tn fact costly frauds Welfare
dtdn't work Clean-needle programs
dtdn't work "Save the Children"
sChemes d1dn 't work Econom1c
pump·primtng
didn't
work.
Medtcare and MedtcOid were mak·
ing workers p2y the h1gh pncq of
false promtses Social Secunty was

pnmed for dtsaster
These are formi&lt;lable arguments.
But DemocratiC elders have chosen
to fight back not with facts or ideas,
but calumny
A few examples will g1ve you a
flavor of thmgs Congress debated a
mmor change m the school-lunch
program three years ago .. a change
that would reduce federal authority
over k1ds' meals while allocatmg
more money for food Rep. Lynn
Woolsey accused the GOP of "starv·
mg

ch1ldren ''

House

By DEBORAH MATHIS
Tribune Media Servlc•s
WASHINGTON · Back when Alexander
Hamtlton was trymg to get a national bank and
other econom1c apparatus set up, Thoma.• Jeffersgn smffed that smce the ConslllUtton dtd not call
for such things, Ham11ton's tdeas were unconstt·
tullonal
'
Treasury Sectetary Hamilton won the day over
Vice President Jefferson, but the dec1ston d1d not
settle lhtngs More than 200 years later · last
week, 1n fact · government men were fussmg
about what's tn the Constttutton and )"hat's not
And whether anythtng not laid out tn the docu·
ment IS, by 1mphcat10n, prohtbtted
That was the prem1se of the censure argument,
you know -some folks saytng Congress may not
censure a president because the ConstttutiOn
doesn't say 11 may, others saytng Congress may
censure a president because the Constitution
doesn't say 1t may not One more time for stnct·
vs -loose constructiomsm
Let's g&lt;t thts much stra~ght nght now There 1S
nothing m the Constitution that says the president
of the Un1ted States shall, each December, host ,,
Whttc House party for members of the prfSS and
other chattel Only tradtlton bmds the ch1ef executtve to that annual r1tual I, for one, am perfectly
wtlling to let the prestdent off the hook
Mmd you, I am a Southerner and, as such, was
raised to revere hospitality ·both as host and hastee Grac10usne'~s and politesse are the cotns of
the realm where I come from. Someone mvttes
you to a party, you rsvp, you g1ve a little Ioken
to the host; you don't complain about the food,
mus1c, or other guests, you don ' t make a mess,
you leave before folks start yawmng, you at least
offer to help clean" up, and you thank them for a
lovely t1me
Forg1ve me, then, for bemg so ungracious as to
say that thts year's Whtte House press party was
about one smkmg hull short of dtsaster It should
not have happened It need not have happened ,

Mmonty

Richard Gephardt warned that "the
Republicans are takmg food out of
the mouths of mill1ons of needy and
mtddle-class children " Rep John
Lewis took the most incendiary
approach, cla1mmg uThey' re com·
1ng for our children They're commg
for the poor They're coming for the
sick, the elderly and the disabled."
In s1mtlar fash1on, the Wh1te
House led a ch~rge against the Con·
tract W1th Amenca, accustng the
enterprise of betng "mean-spirited"
and "extreme" In one floor debate,

Again, I refer to constitutwnal om iSSions
For starters, the gijeSt list
was nd1culously large I
should have known somethmg was up when I was
tnv1ted to brmg along
"three fam1ly members " In
prev10us years, an mv1tee
was allowed to bn ng one
guest.
Second, "casual altlre" was noted on the invitalton. Before, people were expected to dress up
Thirdly, that gigantic, wh1te, billowy tent that
the Ch~ltons must l:)e getting a commiSSIOn on was
set up nght by the East Gate The Whtte House
prefers to calltt a "paviliOn," but that's pure sptn,
baby. It may be well-anchored, decorated mcely
and full of freshly pumped heat, but a tent IS a ten!
1s a tdnt and this one bad our names all over it.
Prevtously, the prime real estates were the East
Room w1th 1ts dance band and the State Dmmg
Room wtth lis lamb chops and sp1ked c1der
Our evemng opened wnh an hour of standmg
in gr~dlocked ltnes, tnch1ng up the sta1rs, through
the hyper-gilded East Room (where there was no
dance band), through the assorted parlors,
through the State Dmmg Room (where there were
no lamb chops), down the great hall (where there
was enough hang1og sliver and. gold to shame
Kmg Tl'l and Elvts Presley both), back down the
sta1rs, through the diplomatiC room (where we
used to, lake ptcl~res wtlh the F1rst Couple), and
out onto the South Lawn toward the dreadful tent
There, m the cold, we watted for another half
an hour, a compact mass standmg upon a parcel of
slopmg turf that sent more than one h1gh -heeled
lady to the ground. Small ch1 ldren da~ted through
the crowd to pass the ltme A few cned One or
two got lost Several squtrmcd and Jumped, beggmg for a non-ex1stent bathroom And all of th1s,
m a human v1se that had me so closely pressed
agamst one man that I wasn't sure whether I

Arctic air will bring cold,
snow·to region tonight
By The 8 11 XIIII ~ "'-ii

'

Anolher Arclic blasiiS headed for OhiO, sending temperatures plvnging and
producing some snow, the NatiOnal Weather ServiCe said.
Rain is expected 10 change over to snow in northwest Ohio this afternoon,
SJRading aaoo; the slate dunng evenmg Inns.
Meanwhile, temperatures wtll take a nosedive, bottommg out tn the teens by
Wednesday moming. Northwesterly wutdsof20-30 mph w1ll drive wmd chills
to 10.20 beloW zero.
Some breaks in the clouds should be seen Wednesday but temperatures wtll
only rise miO the upper teens as the cold au settles over the state.
The recotd-htgh temperature for this date at the Columbus weatller slaiKlll
was 67 degrees tn 1889 while the recotd low was 10 below zero m 1880. Sunset 10night will be at 5:15p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:53a.m.
WeatiRr fom:ast:
TonighL .. Rain shoWers changing 10 snow showeiS around midnight. An inch
or less of snow accumulatiOn Breezy. Lows near 20 Northwest wmd 15 to 20
mph. O!ance of precipitation 90 percent
Wednesday . Much oolder and breezy. Partly cloudy wtlh a chance of snow
showers and snow flumes. Temperatures steady m the upper teens. Olance of
snow 40 percent.
Wednesday ntght...Partly cloudy wtth a chance of snow. Lows near 10 above.
Ex1ended forecast:
ThuOO.y .A chance of snow dunng the day, otherwtse partly cloudy Htghs
from the upper :2&amp; to the mid 30s
New Year's Day. Partly cloudy wtth a chance of snow Lows m the upper
teens and htghs in the 30s.
Satutday .Snow or ram hkely Lows m the lower :2&amp; and h1ghs near 40

'What's the hat for?' - rabbis and
priests broaden religious horizons

Rep Pat Schroeder, Gephardt and '
four others used the phrases with
almost robottc frequency
The 1995-96 debate about
Med1care offers ~n even more dra- ',
matic view of the hate-thy-neighbor
approach to poht1cs The Wh1te ~
House and the GOP produced very :
sim1lar plans for keeping the pro- '
gram afloat Nevertheless, the prcst· '
dent and his party portrayed the ·
mmor discrepancies as crimes
agatnst human1ty Jerrold Nadler
called the plan uoracoman, mean- :

spmted and 1mmoral " Rep Luts
Gutierrez complatned, "Once agam,
they're playing Robin Hood in
reverse: takmg from the poor to gtve .
to the rich." Rosa De Lauro warned,
"our children are bemg left the' _
crumbs of the Gingrich Revolution "
Or th1nk about the Thompson
committee's hearings into the sys· '
temal1o fleecmg of Astan Americans '
by the Democratic Party Rather ,
than dtsputmg facts, Team Clinton
actually accused the Republicans of
betng antt-As~an!

•

By:The Associated Preas
_
'i'oday ts Tuesday, Dec. 29, the 363rd day of 1998 There are two days left
m i),e year •
.
l'oday's Htghhght tn H1story.
Dec. 29, 1845, Texas was admitted as the 28th state
•On
On lhts date
In 1170, Archbishop Thomas Becket was murdered In Canterbury Cathe·
dral m England
ln 1808, the 17th president of the Umted States, Andrew Johnson, was
bo&lt;n m Rale1gh, N C
'
In 181J,the Bnttsh burned Buffalo, NY, dunng the War of 1812.
In 1837, Canad1an mllltlamen destroyed the Caroline, aU S steamboa!
da.iked at Buffalo, N. Y ·
In 1851, the ftrsl Amencan Young Men's Chnsltan Assoc1ahon was orgamzed, 1n Boslon
in 1890, the Wounded Knee massacre took place m South Dakota as
some 300 SiOUX Indians were killed by u.s troops sent to dtsalm them
.Jn 1934, Japan renounced the Washmgton T\Javal Treaty of 1922 and the
L011d0n Naval Treaty of 1930
'
In 1940, during World War II, Germany began droppmg mcendtary
bothbs on London
,In 1957, smgers Steve Lawrence and Eydte Gorme were marned m Las
Veeas. Nev
ln 1975, a bomb exploded m the mam termtnal of New York's LaGuardia
AttlJort, killmg 11 people
}n 1986, former Bmish Prime M1mster Harold Macm1llan died at h1s
home m Sussex, England, at age 92
tn 1996, war-weary guernlla and government leaders m Guatemala
s1g~ed an accord endmg 36 years of civil confltcl
Ten years ago: The Federal Av1atton Admmtstration, responding to the
bodlbmg of Pan Am Flight 103, announced tightened security measures for
US. atr earners at 103 a1rports tn the M1ddle East and Western Europe
~1ve years ago. Nearly three weeks after the orbittng Hubble Space T~le­
scojle was repaired by the crew of the space shuttle Endeavour, sctenllsts
re~rted "absolutely no Sign of problems."
"tine year ago I long Kong began k1lhng 1 4 mtllton ch1ckens to stem the
spraad of a mystenous b1rd flu that had already ktlled four people.
Today 's Btrthdays· ABC newscaster Tom Jarnel 1s 64 Actress Mary
Tyl~r Moore ,161 Actor Jon Vo1ght IS 60 Country stnger Ed Bruce ts 58
R~k mus1cian Ray Thomas (The Moody Blues) 1s 57 Smger Mar~anne
FaiUlfull ts 52 Jockey Laffit P1ncay ts 52 Actor Ted Danson IS 51. Actor Jon
Poi1Jo 1s 48 Smger-actress Yvonne Elliman is 47.

Death Notices I

•

Strict-vs.-loose constructionism

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

..•
•

ctpllal spendmg plans, and
consumer sat1ety.
~ · &amp;-&amp;.• •
... o1 aJOI&lt;
In fact, they have thetr ptck , ..., - - - , _ , 9 .,. ..,....
of problems areas manufac· ., , .., - , . - o1
o1-' dnlnk •
tunng ts weakentng. jvO
By TONY SNOW
growth slowmg and profit. ""'l'"lli- Slocl:s are vulnerable, consumers Creators Syndicate
have btg debts, 1M
CL.~ ~., "" 1&gt; ~ matk..
WASHINGTON
It takes
And so, and pro6.:1ll.:ct- "'&lt;:m lk~ d\w..1 fn«:se&lt;: a pretty good year Olympian shamelessness to send
have escape claUS&lt;S T•~· - 'ol..,.. "• ~xpect ronbnued growth, one pr~vate detectives after your ene&lt;:an never be certam, " etc. AJlld""""'" lc.,&lt;cas1S are plam negative
mtes, use the arttfice of law to hoodTo an optimist's eyes, the bleakest outlook ts from The uvy Institute, an wink your fnends, sew seeds of
.ndependent thmk tank that states "tile domesuc outlook ts for recess10n, hatred everywhere .. and then beg,
modest deflation and senous financ1al consequences ·•
as Btll Clmton d1d on Dec 18, to
That should gtve a Jolt to anyone senously contemplating a big financial "stop the politics of personal
move m 1999 And 11 may be worse for the rest of the world, accordmg to destructton . (and) get nd of the
Levy In fact, "the worst year m the past half-century."
poisonous venom of excessive partiJM the pess1m1Sis more often were wrong than nght m 1998, and that sanship, obsess1ve ammosJly and
tnoludes Federal Reserve Chamnan Alan Greenspan, who for most of a year uncontrolled anger. .. "
thooght the commg btg battle would be over mflalton II d1dn't come
Chnton ts the und1sputed master of
;J'he stock market pesstmlsls thought they were nght about the market practtcing everythmg he condemns,
coHapsmg, but after the btg October d1p 11 came nght back. And the JObless whether it be tile gltb abuse of power
rate kept fallmg when pessiimsts satd 11 could fall no more.
In lr~q or the reductton of women to
llut now, at the close of 1998, even the moderate optimiSts concede that carnal playthmgs But nowhere has he
19~8 pressed tis luck - that 11 may have only delayed the eruptton of presexplored the posslbtlilles of cyntctsm
su~ buildmg wtthm and beyond the U S economy
more fully than m hts recent quest to
rhe economy, they say, IS a fragtJe COnstrUC(IOn, but)! not by archttecls, portray Republicans as foammg vesengineers and sktlled craftsmen coordmatmg thelf efforts, but by the hopes, sels of hatred and h1mself the samlly
drooms and wtts of mdtvtduals w1th varymg goals
target of thctr rage.
~e question, therefore, 1s how well the structure can withstand the eco·
Rush Ltmbaugh, who has taken
noi)ttc gales and quakes that almost certainly will blow and shake, and shots at CliniOn and felt the heat of
whtther alterations, such as the Y2K factor, can be accommodated
returntng ftre, recently complied a
In the v1ew of many economists 11 could topple, but economtsts have a long litany of DemocratiC Party
po&lt;lr record of callmg the b1g economtc turns The consumer, meanwhile,
ac~ as tf 11 1s butlt to last beyond this century, and maybe 11 is.

··-.. -·

Tuesday, December 29, 1998

should sue htm or marry him.
Fmally, the horde began moving. lnstde the
tent at last, a clown tried to hug me only to be dtssuaded by dec1dedly bad kanna There was no
food, only cookies, we were told. There was no
sptked c1der, onJy punch And the Cfmtons would
not be postng, however bnefly, for photographs
with the guests thts year for the f~rst lime Instead,
the prestdent would make a little chat from,jhe
stage of h1s fancy tent, mayb~ mmgle with a few
folks, then flee
Wtth that, my chtldren and I made a beeline for
the chute Ltkewtse, a colleague and his w1fe
made a run for 1t, encountenng some resistance as
they !ned to ex 1t through tbe Whtte House moiOrpool. For a while, it looked as tf they might be the
r,rst people arrested for trymg to break out of the
Wh1te House
I would offer a kinder appraisal of !he whole
botched affair were it not for the obviOus The
Chntons had to plan to make that 'party that bad.
It's not thattt didn't work, but that 1t worked per·
fectly I dare say most of us got the message that
the press is neither wanted nor respected nor
appreciated And that goes for our spouses and
kidS,IOO
"Thts wa.• a perfect metaphor for the Chnton
presidency," one journalist fumed later "Mass
chaos, everyone trying to JOckey for postlton, a lot
of promtse on preciOus httle substance; and tile.
prestdenl, the user of people, d1ppmg in for a
celebnty cameo "
• To wtl, let's not do th1s agam, Mr Prestdent.
Next year, JUSI gtve a hohday shout-out to the
med1a and be done wtth 11
Don't be cruel

If anyone complams, JUSt remmd them that
such gmngs-on are not authorized by the Constt·
tut10n of the United States, whtch you are sworn
to uphold
Write Deborah Mathis, Tribuna Media Ser·
vices, 435 N. Michigan Avenue, Suite 1500,
Chicago, Ill. 6061t.

(

I'
I

By GENARO C. ARMAS
Associated Preas Writer
FAIRLESS HILLS, Pa. (AP) Howard Cove's classroom looks hke
any other at Conweii-Egan Catholic
High School. A crucifix hangs on a
wall. In front of htm, one student
slouches back m her chatr and
another struggles to stay awake.
Then 15-year-old Joe Stevenson
notices Cove's yarmulke.
"What's the hat for?" he asked,
silting at the front of a class of about
20m thiS Philadelphia suburb
"This ts called a yannulke, and
it's a symbol that we are m the presence of God," Cove, a rabbi , rephes.
It's the type of questton Cove
often faces and he 1s not the least btl
offended. It's his JOb as part of a new
teacher exchange program tn the
Philadelphta area.
The Catholic/Jewtsh Educational
Enrichment Program is among a
handful of efforts pultmg a new
twist on educating private school
students about other fatths. Similar
programs also exiSt in New York,
Chtcago, Los Angeles and San FranCISCO.

1

"It is challenging in terms of try·
mg to share your fatlh to people who
don't know 11," said the Rev Paul
Daugherty, a Catholic priest who is
Cove's teachmg counterpart at the
Akiba Hebrew Academy m the
Philadclphta suburb of BaJa Cynwyd
The program ts funded by a grant
from the Righteous Persons Founda·
tton, whtch was established by
movie director Steven Spielberg tn
an effort to strengthen mterf81lh
relations.
.
The response from students has
been overwhelming, and the ques·
lions challengmg, parttc1pants say.
One recent afternoon, Cove
answered queshons about the Jewtsh
hohday of Hanukkah, and Jewish
stereotypes
"The initial questions are based
on TV and the movies and how they
'

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see Jew1sh people portrayed, they
are based on superfictal roles of
Juda.sm," Cove sa1d "Seemg these
kids reinforces the need for me to be
here "
Cove teaches classes once or
tWICe a week at Conweli-Egan,
whtle Daugherty ts at Aktba every
several weeks Both wtll keep thetr
respective jobs, but will be hed to
the program for at least the next several years.
Except for the yarmulke, Cove ts
dressed hke most other lay teachers
at the Catholic school, athred in a
stmple gray suit and glasses Daugherty ts a bit more consptcuous. He
amves at Aktba m a black pnest's
robe and wh tte collar
"Whoa, what's gomg on here?"
one student asked another when she
saw the pnest walk tnlo Gatl
S1mon's ntnth-grade classroom.
Inside, the 12 students are wary
at first, qutetly st thng in thetr seats
as Daugherty Introduces htmself
Then the queshons start rolhng off
thetr tongues
"Why are pnests celibate?:' one
student asks. Others ask abou\ the
chu rch's vtew of homosexuality.
"Do you beheve that we as Jews
are gomg to go to hell after we die?"
Ilana Jerrod inquires.
Daugherty responds calmly each
hme, telling Ms. Jerrod, for example, that Catholics believe that if
people are mh ere ntly good and are
domg somelhtng good for God, they
will not go to hell.
Swamped wtth quesltons, hts prese ntation overran the class penod by
15 mmutes. He answered more later
m the library
"Tht s ts really very interesting
and informahve," student Hannah
Arem satd.
''It's was tmportant to gel from
htm the Catholic perspective."
Cove and Daugherty say they
hope to meet soon to compare expenences.
"I n bemg able to try to make
faith a littl e more understand ab le, tt
betters my understanding of thetr
faith," Daugherty s01d ·
"Just understand tng what other
people bcheve in helps lo w1pe out a
lot of people's preJUdices "
6

Hospital News
Veterans Memonal Hospttal
ADMITIED MONDAY Edith Davts, Mtddleport
DISCHARGED MONDAYNone.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................... .46'·
Akzo ................................... 44'•
AmrT ech ..............................60''•
Ashland 011 .......................... 48':.
AT&amp;T .............. ...................... 75~.
Bank One ............................ ,51'·
Bob Evans .......... ,................. 25~
Borg-Warner .......................50'1•
Broughton ........................... 17"/•
Champion .............................. 9'/,
Charm Shps ........................ 3'1•
City Holding ..........................30'/,
Federal Mogul ....................... 56'~
Gannett ................................. 67'~
Goodyear .............................49'!.
Kmart ...................................13 1'1.
Kroger ................................ 5~'/,
Lands End....... ......... ... .. .. 25 1.
Limited ....... ,......................... 28'1•
Oak Hill Fin! ......... ................. 18'/,
OVB ..................,.....................41
One Valley ............................. 32).
Peoples ................................... 23
Prem Flnl ............................ 17
RockWell... .......................... 46
RD/Shell ............................. .49~
Sears .................................. 41 ~

Shoney•s ............................... 1 '·~·

First Star ............................. 84 1•
Wendy's .............................. 21~.
Worlhtngton ...................... 1n,

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

I
Macie M. Priddy

Mac1e M. Priddy, 77, Beech Grove Road, Rutland, d1ed Tuesday, Dec
29, 1998. al her restdence.
A homemai&lt;cr, she was born Oct 5, 1921, tn Putman County, W.Va, to
the late Frank and Sarah Dee! Lane.
She ts survived by two sons, Arnold and Dav1d Priddy of Rutland, 11
daughters, Frances and Juanita Harmon, Dons Starch~r. Junice Ada_ms.
Sandy Priddy and Belva Pierce, all of Rutland, Vivtan Slack of Sandyvtlle,
Janet McCune of Smtthvtlle, Shirley Stowe of Columbus, Peggy Bates of
Mt. Vernon, Debbie Priddy of Delaware, Ohto, two sisters, Gay Glassburn
of Btdwell and Wanda Lee Henson of Flonda; three brothers, Brooks and
Walter Lane, also of Ronda, and Coleman Lane of Delaware, Ohio, 32
grandchtldren; 39 great-grandchildren; four great-great-grandchtldren;
numerous nteces and nephews.
She was preceded '" death by her husband, Truman Pnddy; two Sisters,
Retha Conl&lt;le and Hazel Smtih; three brothers, Alvte, Ethel and Otta Lane;
a daughter in law, Pam Pnddy ~nd three sons-m-law, Johnny Henry and
Lloyd and Elmer Hannon
Services will be held Thursday, II a m. at Birchfield Funeral Home, Rut·
land, wtlh Ted Glassburn offictahng. Bunal wtll be m Miles Cemetery, Rut·
land. Fnends may call Wednesday, 2-4 and 7-9 p m at the funeral home.

Kaiser settles grievances with
members denied impotence drug
SACRAMENTO, Cahf. (AP) drug from Apnl to September
The Katser FoundatiOn Health Plan
"Although we dtsagree wtth
has agr~ed to conhnue paymg the some of the DOC conclusions, we
cost of the anlt-tmpotence drug Vta- do agree there was confuston
gra for Californians - at least for regardmg coverage of Viagra,"
now - under a settlement reached Katser spokeswoman Kathleen
with state regulatoiS.
McKenna told The Sacramento Bee.
The state Department of CorporaThe settlement doesn't affect
lions, which oversees health mainte- Kaiser's pendmg request for permisnance orgamzahons, began mvesll- 'Ston to drop coverage of all types of
gatmg Kaiser last summer after the sexual dysfuncllon treatments, and
HMO announced tl would not cover mstead offer employers a separate
Viagra starting m 1999 because of benefit at a higher premiUm.
1ts cost.
The agency ts constdenng s1miiar
The agency mamtamed that tf a requests from several other large
doctor prescnbes Viagra as bemg HMOs, mcludmg PactfiCare Health
medically necessary, then the health Systems, Health Net and Aetna U.S.
plan must cover tl.
Healthcare.
Investigators found KaiSer's
Twelve other states and the Disacttons to be "straddling the ltne" of tnct of Columbta have already
legality. But Dale Bonner, the outgo- agreed to allow Kaiser to drop covtng commiSsioner of the agency, _erage of sexual dysfunclton treatsatd the settlement announced Mon- ments. New York and Connecticut
day mdicates "there has been no have turned down Katser's applicafindtng of habthty on the part of the tions. An apphcahon ts pendmg m
Washtngton state.
plan."
If Katser WinS tiS bid to drop COV·
Kaiser also agreed to pay the
state $250,000 to help cover mvestt· ·erage of impotence treatments, the
gallon costs, and satd tt would HMO cou ld exclude the benefit m
resolve all grievances from mem· any new con tracts it Signs with
bers dented prescnpttons for the employeiS m '1999

Clinton says Social
Security ready for Y2K·
By WILL LESTER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGmN (AP) - President Clinton's announcement that
Soctal Security payments will not be
hmdered by computer glitches related
to the year 2000 was hailed by some
computer expert~, but they 're more
concerned aboui systems that aren't
prepared
"It's good news, but certamly
expected g1ven that Soctal Security
was out front all along," satd Ed
Yourdon, a New York City computer
consultant and author of "Time Bomb
2000," a book about the Year 2000 •
computer problem, known as Y2K
"The danger is that people mtght gen·
erahze that thmgs are gmng to be OK
Most of us m the computer field thtnk
that 75 percent of the government
agenc1es and businesses will make
It "

Yourdon satd 11 was "a ques11on of
whether you look at the glass as halffull or half-empty. What's the .effect
of the 25 percent that's not done?"
Jack Gribben, spokesman for the
President's Counctl on Year 2000
Convers1on, sa1d White House officials focused on the computer problem are "most concerned about orgamzattons m government and busmess
where the head of the orgamzation
does not have Y2K as one of their top
pnonhes."
The Y2K problem arose w~en programmers of ea rly computers represented each year by 1ts last two digtts
rather tha~ by all four- for example,
1972 as 72 - mostly to save computer memory that was vastly more
expenstve at the ltme.
Trouble begms when computers
try to add or subtract dates uSIng th at
two-dtglt formal and the world
approaches the year 2000, or 00. The
larger, older mamframe computers
sllll used by government and btg corporations for many Vital functions are
particularly vulnerable.
"Unless orgamzattons that have
done httle on Y2K mount ag8resstve
efforts over the next year, we could
face d1sruptto~s that are local tn
nature 1f there are small busmesses
that aren't paytng attentton," Gnbben
sa1d "If your mayor or county manager tsn't paymg a lot of attentton,
there could be problems. Local governments prov1de a lot of serv1ces to
people."
The prcs1dent assured Amencans
on Monday that Soctal Security wtll
be patd wtthout delay in the new mil·
lenmum because government computers are free of programmmg bugs
many expect at the start of 2000
"The millenmum bug wtll not
delay the payment of Soctal Secunty
checks by a single day," Clinton satd
m a Wh1te House ceremony
" It 's a good showmg for Soctal
Securtl) ," sa1d T1m Wtlsun, publisher

ofY2K News Magaztne m Crossvtlle,
Tenn. He satd about two dozen other
departments and agencies are sttll
workmg on the problem, and congressional watchdogs have satd one-third
of them wtll not be ready.
"Health and Human Services is
the o~e that womes us thC most,"
Wilson satd, nottng that agency delivers Medicare, Medtcatd and welfare
payments through the stales, whtch
have Y2K problems of their own.
Actually, the Soctal Sec unty
Administrallon had its system ready
m September The Treasury Department bureau that dtsburses 600 milhan Soctal Secunly payments each
year - the Financtal Manageme nt
Serv1ce - got tis system ready Wtlh·
m the last couple of weeks, federal
offic1als satd
That bureau also delivers checks
for the Internal Revenue Serv1ce, Veterans Affairs and the Ratlroad Rcttrcmeot Board Delivery systems for
those agenctes are close to bemg prepared but have not been mdependently tested, said bureau spokeswoman
Alvma McHale
Government officials said it cost
JUSt over $43 mtlhon to get the Soctal
Security delivery system ready for
2000.
Rep Steve Horn, a Cahforma
Republican whose House subcomm ittee momtors Y2K preparatiOns,
pratsed the Social Secunty Adm1mstrat10n's compliance, but noted the
agency had 10 years to prepare

Local briefs:
Chester VFD names officers for '99

1
j
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l1
,
I
I
j
I

The Otester Volunteer Ftre Depanment recently announced tis slate of
officers for 1999.
Elected ala meetmg held Wednesday ntght were: U:onard Myers, president, Jason Rtdenour. vice-president, Marvm T~ylor, secretary; Charles
Radford , treasurer, larry Cleland. chief, John Rtdenour, first assiStant
chief, Bruce Myers, second assistant ch1ef, Elmer Newell, captain.

Loose bull damages property
A)oose bull damaged the property of two Syracuse-area residents Monday mommg, accordmg to a Metgs County Shenff's Office report.
Juhus Waldnig reported the an1mal damaged a yard ornament, water
fountam and pushed a heat pump off its foundalton .
Jerry L. Adkms reported the bull damaged a 1984 Ford Tempo, 1991
Ford Escort and a 1997 Ford F-150 ptckup truck in addtlion to damagtng
a heat pump.
•
The bull was eventually returned to Its enclosure. The name of the bull
owner was not available.

1

•
:
:
•

I
I

t

Crimirral mischief reported

A tratl of otl leadmg from damaged roads1de stgns in the Racine area l
led depuhes to the car of a JUvemle suspected in the mcidcnts, according l
to a Metgs County Sheriff's Office report.
J
Deputies Monday rece1ved a complamt of a person using a car to run .I
over stgns along Bashan Road
•
At the scene, deputies could see where a person mlentionally drove off
the rood (O Stnke the Signs, apparently damaging the car's oiJ pan WhtCJtl"
began to leak, the report stated
Officers followed the tra1l of 011 to a Racme-area residence, found the; I[
damaged car and met wtth the 17-year-old male suspect who agreed 10 pa)"~
reslttulton of severa1 hundred dollaiS, the report s;ud

•

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-

Announcements:
• •
.. .

Blood drive slated

An Amen can Red Cross blood drive wtll be held Thursday, 11 a.m. to
3 p.m. at)he M1ddleport Church of Chnst's New Ltfe Center at Fifth ano "
Mam streets, Mtddleport
.
fA two-liter Peps1 product, popcorn and a tree movte rental wtll be
gtven away to all donoiS.
't

TPRSD Bqard meeting

:1·:

The Tuppers Plains Regtonal Sewer Dtstnct Board wtll meet tn special' '
sess1on ton1ght at 7:30 at the construclton tratler to approve r.nonthly bills; ~-:

New Year's Eve party

··

The Tuppers Plains Veterans of Foretgn Wars wtll hold a New Year's 1
Eve party wtth a potluck dmner at 6 p m and round and sq~are dance at •
8 p.m. wttli the True Country Band, J.B. Wilson caller. Pubhc welcome. · I''

Steak dinner

·

;

Racme Amencan Leg10n Post 602 wtll have a steak dmner Sunday, U:' a.m. $5 dme-m or carry out. All welcome.
,,

Finance committee meeting

.

The Metgs County Fmance Report Comm1ttee wtll meet Thursday, 9
a.m. in the Metgs County Auditor's Office.
Harnsonvtlle Lodge
.•
. Harnsonville lodge 411 F&amp;AM wtll meet Saturday, 7:30 p.m. wtt~
work tn the FC degree Refreshments.

..:

EMS logs 4 calls

'&gt;

·
'
:
,

1c
Units of the Me1gs County Emergency Medical Servtce recorded' 1
four calls for assastance Monday Umts respondmg' mcluded.
~~
CENTRAL DISPATCH
• "'
7:59 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Pfiylhs Latllmar, Veteran'!.
Memonal Hospital,
• .n
2:03 p.m., state Route 681, Reedsville, louise Posey, Camden-Ciarl(•
Memonal Hosp1tal
MIDDLEPORT
1 39 a m , volunteer fire depar1ment and squad to state Route 7, structure' '
f1re at Terry Dewhurst res1dence, no InJUnes
• ,o
'
RACINE
•
' I
3 11 p m , Ma1n Street, Ora H1ll, Holzer Medtcal Center

. '.

STAR TREK (PG)
7 20 l i:30 DAILY
THE PRINCE OF EGVPT (G)
7301i10DAILY
UATIN!!IOAILV1311&amp; 330
NO PAI8U NO BARGAIN NIGHT

MIGHTY JO£ VOUNG (PG)

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BIG oiiFmt.~ o'

[0 Movies

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700&amp;i20DAIL.Y
MATlNfEI DAII.Y 1:00' 3 20

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IMPOR,.ANT NO,.ICE ,.0 OUR IRA ACCOUNT ·owNERS
IRA Deadline of December 31, 1998

You only Lave until December 31, 1998 to convert your traditional ~RA
to a ROTH IRA.
Special Tax treatments are in place during 1998 that will be gone
as of January 1, 1999.

I

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the conversion details with you.

Your Bank#J-t~...

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Fanners Bank
&amp; Savings Company

211 Wes l Second S1ree1 42120 State Acute 7
1
PO Box 626
PO Be)( 1339
,
Pomeroy OH 457 69
Tuppers Plaon5 OH .&amp;5783
7401992 2136
740/667 3161

Mamber FO

~C

! 'l''
., f ~

164 Ucper River Road
OalhpoiiS 0+1 45631
740/446 2265
BAN K,

I

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~
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LENDER

\

~

'~

.-

•

�'

The Daily Sent~~!~-

Sports
J~guars

claw Steelers 21-3

By EDDIE PELLS
JACKSO:'i\ ILLE. Aa (AP) The lad&gt;on\llle Jaguars played
great deten&gt;e 'napped a two-game
lo&lt;mg "reak and made thetr btggest
rl\ aJ, look bad
lbe onh thmg mtsstng was Mark
Brunell
The Jaguaf' &lt;nJoyed as good a
\londJ) mght a' they could hope for
"uh Bru nell Dn the stdellnes. getung
a ,olld performance from Jonathan
QUtnn tn a 21 3 vactory over the
Pn!'N.ir~h Steeler~

T1e game \~ J-, meanmgless m the

hut

-·.l rJ~n~,.

11

Tuesday. December 29, 1998 ~

.._amed much more

~&lt; · :ht ;n the J••uars' locker room It

Of course, the Jaguars know theor
playoff hopes - begmnmg Su~day
agrunst New England - rest not on
Qumn, bUI on Brunell. who massed
his th1rd stratght game wuh a htgh
ankle spram
''We'll JUSt have to see,'' coach
Tom Coughlan sa1d " He has to show
a httle more sorenglh m that (ankle)
area He has to show hC can push pff
and take a hit and protect htmself
He '• made outstandmg progress ,.
So has the defense
The three pomts were the fewest
allowed m Jackson valle's four year
htstory The only low pomt was the
139 yards Jerome Bettts put up
agamst the NFL's 26th-ranked
defense The Bus surpassed the century m,ark for the e1ghth stratght ltme
on a Monday mght
"'Lots has been sa1d about our
defense and the numbers don ' t add
up. " Coughlan satd "There were a
lot of rushang yards tontght and there
were a lot last week But agam. 11 -5
A lot of guys tomght were gomg

•a-e them a b&lt;·.,," for the playoffs
anJ put an e'dama uon point on theu
tiN ~FC Central utle
Tht• "'a&gt; the Pittsburgh Steelers.
the., e""OCcn the champs and we
y.anted t L p ro'~ to them that we're
the champ; no" left tackle Tony
Bo&gt;cllt &gt;atd A new rctgn has started '" the ".f-C Ce ntral That's why
th' ~ y. a~ a h1g f!Jme for us "
The Jaguar'&gt; ( 11-5) were reehng on ~ u b al one '
It was another good mght for Fred
from u 10 10 l o~ s to the Mmnesota
VJkml!:-, J&lt;t..,t ~ cl'k Qumn bounced Taylor who caught mne yard screen
back · ho" c"r throwtng for 192 pass for a 10uchdown and scored on a
\ards and gctung a touchdown each 12-yard run m the thord quarter for a
21-3 lead
runnmg ami pa'&gt; .. mg

Taylor finashed the season w1th 17
touchdowns. lted for second m the
league wllh Mmnesota Vikmgs rook
1e Randy Moss
There were no such mtlestones for
the Steelers, who fmtshcd below
500 and miSsed the playoffs for mt
first ttme smce 1991 , the year before
B1ll Cowher replaced Chuck Noll
Kordell Stewart had another bad
game, fJnashmg 17-for-37 for 174
yards and two mtercepuons He finIShed the season wtth II touchdowns, 18 tnterceptiOns and memones of hiS Dec 13 &gt;~dehne spat With
Cowher sull fresh m a lot of mmds
' 'I'm not even gomg to thank
about 11 for a long ume," Stewart
sa1d "I went to get away from n,
relax and work from ll ConStdermg
all the h1gh expectatiOns gomg tnto
th1s season, to not even come close to
mcetmg lhose 1s preuy hard "
The Steelers closed the season on
a ftve-gamc Josmg streak , thetr
longest smcc 1988
Meanwhile. the Jaguars wen t 7-1
at home for the thtrd stratght year
TAYLOR SCORES - Jacksonville running back Oldham (24) in the second quarter of MondB¥
and were lookmg forward to the
Fred
Taylor (29) gets past Pittsburgh defensive night's AFC Central battle in Jacksonville, where
franchose s first home playoff game
backs
Bo Orlando (at Taylor's feet) and Chris the Jaguars won 21 -3. (AP)
" ' We talked all week about the
co nfidence .mJ momenlum that smd · Wuhout a doubt 11 w&lt;1s cnt1- cal lor us I ca n 1 find anythmg gO&lt;.&gt;d that comes out ol losmg "
would feed Jrom a wm, ' Cough li n

anu ther

And 11 probably dtdn 1end there
· I thmk rt s disgusting Some of
lhe bcller coaches m lhc NFL gol
fired toda) " smd one ol the sur
VJvors M1arn1's J1mmy John son- a
close fnend of fired Chtcago coac h
Dave Wann stedt
· I know we re htghly patd, but
1t 's a shame when coac hes JObs are
de pende nt on 10JUTI£S, skyboxes,
people 10 the stands and offic~atmg

calls " Johnson satd " It doc~n 't
gl\ e me a goOd feeling about our
professton when I see thtngs hke I
saw th1 s mornmg
The f1vc who went wcr'e
Wannstcdt (4- 12), Dom Capers ol
' Caroltoa (4-12), Ray Rhodes ol
Ph1ladelphta
(3-13),
Ted
Marchtbroda of Balttmore (6- 10) and
Denms f:nckson of Seattle (8-8)
" It hurts to see empty seats, peo

pic who've already patd for those
seats choos mg not 10 show up." sa1d
Chtcago owner Mtke McCaskey
And Balttmore owner Art Modell
sa1d ' Ted March1hrod-" 1"" a proud
wonderful
human
he111g
Unlortunately, n JUSt dtdn t work out
here "
Each of the fired coac hc s knew
hiS fate or sensed 11 long before 11
was announced In fact, th1 s m1ght

ston Cle,eland Browns and San
Dtcgo. where June Jones, who
rcrlaccd Kcvm G1 lbndc 1n m1dseason has opted for the JOb at the
Unt versny of Hawan ratherthan take
,, shot at the permanen t JOb wtth the
Chargers
e quanJmll}
There " ti l be more
"We arc 3 IJ ' Rhodes satd ' A
Whtlc Bruce Cos let tn Cmcmnat1 '
new coach w1ll be m here shnrll y
There already arc seve n vac an
(See COACHES on Page 5)
caes Monday's five. plus the cxpan-

Scoreboard
Basketball

NCAA Division I
women's scores

NCAA Division I '•
men's scores

South
Kemucky ?0 Cmctnnatt 59
McNees.e Sl 70 SE Lountana 68
N C Chl\1'\one 80 Temple 68
Penn 85 Stet~on 72 ~

Iowa 89 Ill mot~ 86
Kansas 79 Houston 54
MKhtgan 72 lnd1ana 58
Mt ssoun Kansas Cn) BJ WJiham Jewc:l1 49
Toledo 89 San D1ego Sr 72
WJ scpnsm 70 Mmnesora 59

ll~

1\

OTJ

\. trji! tnt n Il l Brown -19

Hunk Ont F~~~Ia Ho\• I Cl a~~u&gt; firs t round

He lyCm5s4 1

Florida AtlantiC Nt\1 \ 'ears Classtc first round

round

So uthCuohn~H 9

Wt s Mtlw 1ukce 6\
fo.~~ P"n Amcmnn 80 Fl onda Arlnnm 60

ll&lt;l~thn U ~ I
\j lilt Ill '\1 1)5 (Jni SIU&lt;, 61)

( llootaduiiK

flortdu lnlunaltunal Hohda ' Classic fir~l round

Co\• ho1 Sh\HIInut lhampwnSh lp

111 ln ternmton II 69 Walh nm &amp; Mnry ·H
l dugh 70 Nt~~.&lt;JT~ 'iR

\\ ~oJm ~ ~&lt;.: W l l! n~r 71

I htrd pl.tu·.
ill ()()

I obo ln\ltaltnnal fir st round

lun ~~ lnt erc ahl~

HutJ'iiOil 71.J f'otllimd St 67
Nc11 Me~ 1.0 91. Nelli H~mr s h rt: fi7

Otttn(otger llolds Rambo" C lau u:
Pnn ~ t! O il ~0 ll nnd 1St 46
lna!i l\ 1 Mm &gt;~ tppt St Ti
St~ rr a

fir~\

round

Pro\ldenl:e Sun Classrc fl rs t round
f.J/ tirmlbltn): St ~6
fl Pa!io 7f.J \\ n~lnn~to n St 6fl

2~ tc n m~ Ill

llu~ J\~&lt;;nct.!ll'd

Pre s~

women' l&lt;J ikl!c ba~hlb tl l pull 11-tth first place
\tll S tn p t rt:n!he&gt;~ ~ f~nlrth thnugh ]).:L 17 !Dia l
po mt ~ lt~~ed e n 2'i po tnl ~ fur 1 fir st plac~.: H\tc
lhr lll f h llnc p1 n1 lor) 2 ~\h pi ne~ \ ~11c tmlprC\IOUS
rtnkt ng
Last

Iwn

-

lU

I Cnunt:u ~ ut r ~RJ

2 kune'"' ( (\)
1 Purdue
4 {o.:or!! l l
~

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fil.llid

(} 0 1 0~~
'J 1 IJ~(j
K 1 942

I
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71:(~

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~4 67

14

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411
~91

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X4
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10 I
Q I

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~ I Kuo;n 'i
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62
Kl
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6 NunhCu ult t
7 !&gt;; Hit l l~JI)('
8 r~xa ~ lech
'J LCI A
10 Cl\lnson
II Culundu Sr
I' l'~ tut St
11 OldDom ut nn
I~ Alib ltn n

)91J
1911
IK'i

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24
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21
1\ ltLht g ln
jl} 111 ltu~rHltt o nll I~ l( 1\ mrt Bthut 11'1
lnJt n l"i SWI\ ft ~So r1 ~ I..J ,\ nrn 111ll 0t&lt;'11ll1
10 l nl k(J CaliiOrnl~i'l ~ 1 14\ldt Ll'\ Orc•g lJl St ~
LSU ~ ,.. 1l '"~s tppt St 'i lk11 l •r l H ~'' ut OHIO
ST l I 1h 1 Vmdcrht lt • W 1\ ~ ntu l1 ! \tlm~1,
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15109l8556 296
11S0688 40B 31 9
880500' 14 295
5 1 10~ 1 1306 178
4 11 250276 168

n

Ch t ca~o

\hsttrn Dtv1s1on

14 2 0 87S 442 289
11 4.07504?9
6100HS~OS 1&lt;9
412 0 250 '36
41 2 0 2502K5 178

x A!lanra
y-San Franl"l ~(O
New Orleans
Carolina
St Lou ts
X WIJ I1 dtVISI\lll llfle
y Y. tld card qualifier

"'
'"

'
Monday's
score
Jackson,tlle 21 Ptttsb urgh

~

lie L I

ru.

101

1:14

9
7
7

41
l'i
II

8~

N Y R&lt;~n~ e r s

20
16
14
12

Ra
90

NY lslnndea

I 1 20 2

2R

!0 101

N~w

Jem:}
Phtlnde lphtn
Pmsburgh ..........•....

9
9
10
IJ

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J

19 7 'i
1'.! !1 .:!

Toronto
Boston

C. tr ~l tnn

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

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lie k I 1'!&gt;. IT l'A
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~NY h ts
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10 6 0 62"' 12 1

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62'i 400

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CI NCINNAT I

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l-1 2 U S7'i ~01

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HRO'i002S!'1Wo
8 R 0 &lt;QO ~72 I. l 0

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NATIONAl CONFFRFNCE
East~ rn

'6

1~ 11
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1-1

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86
9.:!
7'

17

81J

Gree'iiftcld

r-.h Ci t n

SS

Rtchmond &lt;~le

Sout hen&gt;t~rn 40

Gro\t: Cn y ~ I Grandvtew 41
Hnnmba l H11er 78 l)lcr W Va Co nso hdnh.:cl

12
Johusto""'n Nonhrtdge 54 Col A.cnr.letn): 26
lectn mn 71 V.nodrnw Wilson S I
lt bt:ny Unwn 49 M ntt u u~k NY 4~
l uc,JHtlk Vn lky64 Z.1nC TrlllC(l":\
'-htlt~Q ll ~ 2 Ashwbu la Harbor '7
MilT nn H ml ~~ , 7 rol Scott 72 (0 f)
M \Son 6~ Mukwon 1go 40
r.l~d ant~~burg 46 Day tun N1,rthndge l(J
Mtlkr ~ek w~~~ Uml v Htlltop ~0
femp ll'
Chm 1111 l(J

If the 992 Exchange is a Free Part of Your
Telephone Service, Then You Can Call
Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis
Toll Fr.ee!
DIAL

992-7834

~Holzer Clinic ... Kee i

the Promise!

7.2
7K

96

I lot J ,

Ill ~

6

1~

~~

W~dung l nn

I I IX

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70

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7 9
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1 s~ 26l! -' 52

II

J ti.:b\1 11\tlk iJ

4~
91
40 107

Col umbtnna Cn.:slvtew 411 lt ~ bon Hcn1cr 1 OL tl

Ohio H.S. boys' scores

90

74

:'i

n1

(~nfral Dlll~wn

71 Ottllt cot11e &lt;\

Co lumbu ~ Grove S2 Cory Rnwson 41
Conneaut 66 Grand Valle) l9
CrDoksl lie \iO Hemloc k Mtller 26
D&lt;mtlk 49 CSG W
l)daw.tre Bucke)e V;~llcy 48 R1 ver Valky 46
D0ver 43 I ou donvt llc ~9
I tndlay 60 ltma Semor 4~
1on Jcnnm gs 61 Way ne Tra ~e &lt;9
Frecpon Lahl1nd '8 Mnlvem l l
Gah 1 m t54 \1.-orthmgiOn Ktlbourne 44
G:~lh p ofts 60 Wheelersburg 42
Gt rmd 5 t Southtnglon l8

n

I~

26~

lJ70'Hn1li
1110 1XK110

ln d 11n1 1poh~

Dallas I Nashvtlle 0

l...os Ang~les 4 Phocmx 2
Ph1ladclph1a I San lo~e I (t•t:)

Tomght's games
N 't Islanders at Ta mpa Ba) 1 OS p m
Ph iladelphia at Calgary 9 p m
Montr~al fl l Edmnnlon
m.
Co lorado ar Vancou\er I p m

98

Wednesday 's games
New krsey at Washmg16n 7 p m
Tampa Bay at Carolma 7 p m
Anahetm at Toromo 7 10 p m
El o nd~ at Pl t1 5b urgh 7 ~0 p m
Boswn at Nashvtlle g p m •
NY Rangers ~ t Ph ~ntx 9 p m
San Jose m Los Angeles 10 10 p m

"~

By

Dave
~rate

of
Bottle

Gas

Next year
ktds 1
turn 16, and 9 000,000 parents
wtll turn pale

*·* *
expert ts someone

An
who
knows no more than you
except he's better organtzed
and uses slides

***

You get out of life what you put
tnto 11 That's the trouble.

***

If 11 were as easy to arouse
enthustasm as 11 ts to arouse
SUSpiCIOn IUS! thtnk What COUld
be accomplished

* *'*

When you try to make an
tmpresston, chances are that's
the tmpresston you'll make.
Happy New Year and a fine '99
from the folks at Rutland Bottle

I

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"Grr.:cnl!l:ld

Anzona (7-0) used a 19 0 run an
the first hal f to break the game open
Terty, who fintshed wnh 13 pomts,
ftve steals and four assiSts m 17 mmutes. scored II m the first nane mmutes of the game
"It ts fun to get out there and
run," he sa1d " Hav mg fun IS part of
baskclball "
Rtchard Jefferson and R1 ck
Anderson each scored II pomts for
the Wtldcats, whtle Mtchael Wn ght
and Eugene Edgerson added I 0
aptece
"Had we come an and won the
basketball game, 11 probably would
have led off 'SportsCenter "' Holy
Cross coach Btll Raynor satd "The
task was daunting and difficult, but
we wanted to come out wuh our
heads up "
;:Juan Pl!gues had 13 pomts and
Je(ed Curry pad 10 for Holy Cross
::

.,

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
NEW YORK (AP) - If the NBA
season tS canceled, 11 won't be the
fault of the commtsstoner, the owners, the umon d~rector or the maJOrity of the 415 locked-out players
It wall be the fault of the umon 's
dubwusly chosen "runaway" negotl"
atmg committee, accordmg lo com-

David Srern

"They are the ones endmg the
season, and they are gomg to do 11 on
the bas1s of some vote of a runaway
negotaatmg commattee," Slem sa1d
Monday "It's not surpnsmg to me
that m the end game, the players are
nQl allowed to express themselves on
tlie overall proposal "
Agam auackmg agent Dav1d Falk
and dehvenng some of h1s most sarcastic comments to date on the leadershtp of una on dtrector Btlly Hunter,
Slern satd there will be no more
negottatmg sesstons before Jan 7the date the Board of Governors w1ll
rr)6et and de~ 1de whether: to cancel
th~ remamder ot the season
Predicting there are more than
enough voles among the 29 owners
to scrap the season Stern expressed
di•may that the umon put the owners' ftnal offer up for a •ote and gave

NFL coaches ...
_;as told he was safe Monday after a
3; 13 se ason, Norv Turner tn
Washmgton ts on shaky. ground
• Moreo\er the Mtke Holmgren
scenano \.\On 't be played out until
Qreen Bay fimshes 1ts season The
Peekers' coach IS free to pursue a
ttead coach-general manager slot and
~auld be tbe first chmce of almosl
e~erybody
: And San FrancLSco 's Steve
MartUCCI sun hasn't stgned a con ,
t;act extensiOn becau se he's unsure
about the team 's future wtth Carmen
Polley and Dwtght Clark now run
O:mg the new Browns an Cleveland
: " There aren't too many mdustnes
m th1s country where two years ago
we had a 33-percent change, and of
thiS mormng 20 percent," sa1d B1ll
Parcells of the Jets There's tremendous press ure on everyone, on owners
" I guess that's the same as any
ot~er busme ss They have to say,
'Y/e are not JUSt standmg sull , we are
~:cian g lo do somethmg · It makes
ov;eryone thmk they are gomg to start
Qver A lot of those start-overs 1n two
Y.e.ars are worse off than they were "
: ·One of the many rumors noatm g
~round has Holm gren gomg to San
Franctsco, Manucc1 to Cleveland
:irtd Rhodes, the NFL's coach of the
~oar m 1995, endmg up as head
cciach m Green Bay - where he was
lil~lmgren s ftrsl defenstve coordmat)Jr
• Capers, coac h of the yem two sea-

1-SOCI-83~7-8217

Ask for David
May be seen AH ,..,.
Rutland Bottle Gas

Limited Quantities '

Rutland Bottle
Rt. 124,

Oh.

742·2SII

(3-9)
"We knew we had to play a perfeet game to have a shot at wmnmg
They ' re a great team," satd Patnck
Whearty, Holy Cross' freshman center.
1lle Wtldcats forced Holy Cross
into seven turnovers m the first etghl
mmutes and scored 19 strmght pomts
to take a 30-5 lead The spurt mcluded five potnts by Jusun Wessel and a
three-P9mter by Terty
1lle 48-pomt v1ctory margan was
the largest for Arizona smce at beat
Robert Moms 118-54 m thiS toumament on Dec 28. 1996
"We are startmg to come together
as a team," Jefferson satd " We
should be beaung teams by more
than we have been
Anzona led 52-17 at halft1me. the
lowest first-half score by a Wildcats
opponent smce ValparaiSo had 15 on
March 15 1996
The 41 pomts by Holy Cross were
four more th,m the record low agaanst
Anzona Northem Anzona was held
to 37 by the Waldcats m 1989
In other Top 25 games. No 8
Indmna beat Ball State 72-62 and
No 15 New MeXICO defeated New
Hampshore 93 67
. No. 8 Indaana 72, Ball Slate 62
Luke Recker scored 17 pmnts as
·lnd1 ana won the HooSier Classtc and
remamed undefeated at Marke t
Square Arena
Walham Gladness added 13 potnts
and II rebounds for lndtana ( 13-2).
wh1ch 1mproved to 42 0 al Market
Square, tncludm g 34 0 10 the
HooSier ClassiC
Ball State (6-4) was led by D.uane
Clemens wtth 16 pomts
I
Ind ~ana tratled by four pmnts at
halfttme, but started 1he second half
wuh a 19-5 run to take a JO-pmnt

OU pounds Central
Florida 94-66, gets
fourth straight win
ORLANDO. Fla (AP) -

sons ago lor gettmg C.trolm a lo the
~!=C IItle game tn Its second season,
Hi a candid ate for the vacanc1es m
l;l alumore and Ph1l adclphta
·. But the NFL office IS most conci~ rned about Rhodes one of three
~luck coaches m the league
• Smce Tony Dungy was htrcd by
tampa Bay nftet !he 1995 season, .lll
15 coac hing vacanc1es m a league m
whtch 70 petcent of the players ate
6lmonttcs ha\ e been filled hy
whiles The le.&gt;gue has gone so far as
'
'

another gnm forecast as the loc kout
neared the end of 1ts SIXth month
..The problem 1s thai there 1s a
behef (among the un10n) of ' Don't
worry. the seaso n won't be canceled,
so we don' t have to do anythmg senous That's been the problem for nme
months , and 1t Will remam a probl em
for next I 0- 12 days ," he satd
Hunter sa1d the next 5- 10 days
Will be cnucal, but remamcd opumtsuc that a deal wtll be struck
"I don't thtnk the owners are prepared to blow up somethmg they've
spend 56 years bUtldmg. ' Hunter
sa1d "They may, out of arrogance
and power, dectde to cut off the head
to spote the face But the reahty ts
that the downs1de ts so great that I
d9n't know tf the NBA wtll ever
recover"
1
Stern took umbrage wuh the fact
that nme of the 19 players on the
negot1atmg commtttce are chents of
Falk, and agam accused the agent ot
holdmg up a deal m an efforl to pro
lefllhe h1ghe st-pmd players
Hunter refused to answer a que stion about how hiS nc go uaun g commiUec was chosen but agent Mark
Fleascher responded by notm g th ~t
the unaon has already offered a max
(Contmued from Page 4)

•

Guard l.adrcll \\ lut ehcad scored 23

pomts and Oh1o Umversuy opt:nj!'d the gtlmt~ wuh a 1 "\ o run on its way

to an easy 94-66 vJctory over Central Fl nnda t..l nnJ.t\ mght
The n;lft extended Oh1u ~., v.mnmg ~1rc.1k hJ lour stra1gh1 whtle
Central Flonda (4-6) lo;t lor !he fourth It me ,nth I "l five games
Central Flonda (4-6) ,,h,,h dtdn 1 &gt;&lt;Ore untd D Quanus Stewart
hn a JUmper at the 15 21 made a bnef &gt;tah Jt kccpm g the game compcuuve when Brad Trama s three pomter c.tppcJ ;m 11-4 run and cut
the Bobcats' lead to 21 16 wuh 10041eftl0 the half
Ohto (8-2). whtch upset then 12th-ranked Syrac use earher thas
month , responded woth 10 0 run and built a 43-29 hal fume lead
Whitehead led four Ohto pl ayers sconng 10 double figures and the
Bobcats had a 43-22 rcboundtng advantage over the Goldep Kmghts
Oh1o 's Dtante Flenorl scored 16 of htS 19 pomh tn the first half and
had a game-h1gh etght rebounds SanJa) Adell added 17 pomts and SIX
rebounds and Patnck Flomo had 13 pOints off the bench
Tra10a Jed Cenlral Flonda Tram a \\lth 20 pnmt '

'

Pacific storm .kills
four in yacht race .
off Australia's coast
'

By TONY HARPER
SYDNEY Au straha (A P) Orange hfc rafts hea,ed m rothn•
GOING UPCOURT - Arizona's Justtn Wessel drtbbles the ball seas Monday as a storm deCimated
upcourt as Holy Cross guard Malik Wahers stays close to him in the the Sydney-to-Hobart yacht race At
first half of Monday night's Fiesta Bowl Classic first-round game in least four satlors were ktlled as 90
mph w mds a nd towenn g ~cas turn ed
Tucson, Ariz., where the host Wildcats won 89-41. (AP)
40-foot yac hts 1010 tub toys n tppmg;
lead
spra med m last Thursday 's loss at them over, snappmg 1hc1r m.tsts and
No. IS New Mexico 93
Washmgton
swampm g them with water
New Hampshtre 67
New Mextco (9 I) rebounded
A fonncr Brmsh Olymptc sat lor
Kev m Henry scored a carecr-htgh I rom !hat. defeat wtth a vtctory and a sa tlor from Austraha were both
27 pomts and Kenny Th omas agamst another weak opponent The mtssmg and presumed dead
grabbed 18 rebounds as New Mcxtco Lomas have played nane of the1r first
As Australia mounted one of Jb
beat Nev. Hampshtrc tn the ftrsl 10 games at home, most agamst out- largest mant1me resc ue operati ons
round of the Lobo lnvttauonal
manned opposllton
ever, mthtary heltcopters hovered
Thomas set a carcet htgh m
Carmen Mact anello scored 20 over 35-foot swells to hot st about 50
re bo und ~ despite playmg wtlh .to pomts lor New Hampshire (2-6) other satlors to safety off Auslmha 's
InJUred nght thumb wluch he whtch lo st ns SIXth straight
southeast coast, 250 miles south of
Sydney
Many of the sa~Jors v.ere InJUred
- wnh broken bones, dtslocated
shoulders. curs on the face and hand s
amum salary for all players w1th less sh1p
than I0 years o f expenence Several
"The general body voted to - from bemg struck by broken n g
of Falk's clients, Fletscher pomted empower the comm1Uee to make that gmg or tossed ups1de down when
out, gamed huge contracts m recent call," Hunter explatned "The on ly thetr boats capSLZed
years before they had been m the thmg they' ll put to a vote of the genEmergency flares sent streams of
league for anywhere near 10 seasons eral membershtp ts a deal they II sagn red smoke mto the a1r to speed the
"HIS effort to portray Dav1d as off on
resc ue effort
The 725-mole race contmued
the bad guy IS mmd -bog ghn g.
"Davtd Stern hasn' t put anythmg
because even under the umon 's pro- betore the owners for a vote , so I despote the worst tragedy m tis 54posal, nobody loses more money don 't know why we should put year hastory Of the 115 yachts that
than Davtd Falk's chents," FlctSeher somethmg to a 'ote "
entered, 59 were forced to seek shelsatd
The s1des met for several hours ter and several boats were abanThat's where lhmgs stand on Day Sunday outstde Denver, With the doned , race officaals satd There was
182 of the NBA lockout, and tf noth- talks breakmg off after each stde no hst of the approxtmately I ,000
mg chan ges for another J 0 days the made several concessiOns
sa1lors who set off m the race
season mtghl, mdeed be canceled
No further talks are scheduled,
The. Amencan maXI ) acht
Sayonara, the I 995 wmner c rossed
Hunter called for a resumption of and Stern sa1d none are necess ary
talks between both s1tles ' ncgolmlmg
H1s offer JS of the take-It-or leave the fm1sh hne Tuesday mormn g on
cornm1Uees
It vanety, and he pred1ctcd the league the Derwent R1ver at Hoban Ltst
''I'm convmccd that 1f that docs Will survtvc a canceled season 1f n years wmner, Bnndabe ll a, was
happen, there 's a strong posStbllny comes to that
expected to fintsh second. several
that an agreement could be reached,"
"The NBA Will open next year," hours behmd.
Sayonara's owner, Larry Ell tson,
Hunter satd · We've done overy- he satd "It may not have the same
thmg thai we beltevc ts concetvable. players. 11 may not have the same the chtcf ex~c utave off1cer and
and Y..e ha ve been ca1nest 111 om 11 cket pnces and 11 may not ha \'e the founder of Oracle Cotp, was aboard
the boat Oracle ts one of the largest
e fforts to make a dea l lt comes dov. n s..tme televiSIOn re venue
lO horse trddJng and 1f they Llre
· But 11 v.tll be a league .tnd 11 wtll comruter technology fi rms In the
wchned to trade tulther we have surv1ve lor a long tim e, and It w1ll world, With $8 bllhon rn annu.tl1 ev
ample umc to sm c the season
eo nttnue to grow and recoup nself II cnue
Wtn sto n
Churchill
sktppcr
He also sm d l11s commltlcc will wtll have sulfcred tremendously, but
nol put the owne1s so-called hn.1l " tl will hve to entertatn .mother day Rtchard Wtnnm g, one ol those resoffe1 to a vote of the umon member- and ultunately lhll\ e
cued from a !ti e raft. told ol" lt.llllll
Hunte1 sa1d RS pcrLC ill o l h1s str ugglc to st,ly ali ve
Af1c1 \Vc gnt min the hi\: ldl l tnd
un10n 1s su ong 1ll It s supp01 1 of hun

Stern says committee muzzles players' wi~hes

miSSIOner

Onawa al Buffalo 7 p m

lil' GA

Soulh1 1s1 Ontstnn

tswn

'.,

Washmg1on 5 Bosron l
Flonda :'\ N Y l ~l and(!rS I

NHL standings

Mrmlh.:nl

D11

Nt-\1. Jersey 7 Buffalo 4
Anaheim 2 Ot1awa 2 (Ue) ,

Hockey

Allan(IC DIVISIOn

NFL standings
F a~rrn

.•

Sr LoutS 4 Dwou 4 (Ue)

.J'i(OT)

Tulant' fournam cnt-rirst round
M une 92 Mtddl e lennessee 78
Tula ne 92 r um1on 56

Au rorn 61 Sm:etsboro 47,
Bt:llcvuc 6~ Upper San dusky 55
Rt'lhd T~ t e 64 Gle n E~ tc 59
Centerburg 75 Galton Northmor 68
Cm La Sa lle 67 Albany Ga Doughr r\y 4R
Cm Modelra 72 Coni Grove 69
Cle St lgnal tu S 67 Ct n St Xavter 47
r mtnn Tcnn 6 ~ Mn s~ tllon J IC k ~o n so
Cui DeSoles 68 Tc:~vs V.tlley 60
Col lrce of Lif~ 61 World H~rvcs t 'i2
Crooksv ille 64 Sarahs vtlle Shcn mdo .th 4~
D~ m atha ML&gt;67 Stowo'i(,
Dover-{~ Dubhll Si.: IO IO n
Dublm Coffm ~ n 5~ IJelaware 41
l l i~ l e rn ( KYJ 72 Cl!! B
t&gt;nedt{!lne7 1
fdgert llJJ 70 Ht ~ksv tl k M

Cannl Wmchester 45 Berne Vmon ~8
Catllon Ccm Cath 47 Loutsvtlle 4'i
C ~n t~ n GlcnOak 6-1 I Ml Cmu nn fl2
Ct n Hu l!hes 69 Ctn Pu n:e ll M man 42
Ctn r..loum He~l th y 62 Ctn Atken '\ \
Ctn l~fl 'i7 Col Independe nce 'iS
C n Wdnut Htlls 19 V1 1la M 1donn~ 26
Cl..: Shaw 'i4 Ely nn 11
Col H 111l ey 5'1 Urb3na IQ

....

Dt\IS!on

0\I&lt;J\\il

x Dcn1cr

Col

Centrlil
"'x "'1 mnt=~ota
v Green Bav
Tampa Bay
De1ro 1t .................. .

I&lt;wn

Football

Qf!

onshtp
V 1 n d~t bth 7K Buller 64

Sial~ fa rm Hohda} Classic-rirst round
Co hforma 58 V~ rmont 54
ll ondn 94 W Mtchtgarl 59
I ou tm na Tech I '0 Cleveland St S5
Nttholl s St 'i4 Sou thtrn Mm 5~ ~

Top 25 women 's college poll
top

Ha11k C lasstc•firsl round
66 New Ha mpshtre
lon.1 "16

&lt;..:~ro l m~ St
J o~e ph s 62

Set&gt;lhach Tournwmenl·first round
I outS \ ilk 87 E Kentu cky 49
N(!bmskn 78 Kcm 12

Umon Federulli09Sicr Cl as~ J{ champHlnsh•p
lrul,,.nl72 BlilSt 62
fh1rd piau·
l.)r~kt' 7 1 Bucknt•ll 'il

n1l

N
Sr

]

Bull alo

I&lt;wn

I\I Cl Prt'patd Far-.1 Amtrtl'a n ClasSic champ!

D~lrot\
I ~K~&lt;;

,'

:

Wi Penn St (,1

309
421

Norrhcasl Dt\lsmn

Hob:) n (o-1 Ct ~:St•~~•Dd "1
Akron Ma nc hc ~ r e r 61 Woodwlgc: -P•
A.mhcm S 1eel~ 70 Mtr.htrw .n
Arhn~ton q Kenton 4&lt;i
Ashl nnd Crest' 1e1\ ~0 l u.as ~~
A~ lntl l¢ leays V~llr) W Htlh arJ Dnb1 ~ ~
Bnrbertun 8'1 John M tghal/11
B 1SUJI1l Hopewell l ouJuul 06 E\tn11 oniJ 16
B cllur~ 6'i flruok(' \1. \Ia "iK
Belldum une Bt: nl ~ tnll1 Log.m 6'i W 1~ tt: ~ h c l d
Goshen .W
Berhn Cenrcr We stern Rc~cr1e 74 Akt on
lu d ut d~ 29
De1et ly Fll t1 1rvc 61 Fcdcr1l Hoc ktn g W
Do\ICr!ilon C1tno1ton Va ll ~y 72 fmo 110 70 !2
A h l.l r~

Diamond Club C la~S l( fin;t ruund
1\1 ~m~ tppt S! ~l Camphc ll %
V qp nw ft&gt;ch ~0 Akron 59

"'

Monday's.scures

EASTERN CONFERENCE

You B oar d m~n 19 Canfie ld 1 ]
You Chaney 61 I ast Ln erp ool 'i9 (0 I )
7. . anesvt11 c 60 '.\ Mu skmgum W

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

0Hil Soap C lass•c-fir~ l round
Mt ryl md81 Coppt nSt 6l
K1c hmo nd R4 M :~sH~husem .,()

\117on~ S ! ~-l N11.V P

Wal~h Jesun51 L~ k e Cathol tc 16
Warren Hardtng 44 Champwn l'i
Warsuw Rt H:r V1cw 41 West Hol11e~ .W
Wa tc ~ford 51 Ne .... Maramoras Fronuer 45
Westervil le N 9Q Medma W
Wmdham "i6 Maplewo0&lt;1 1 ~8

275

40

Wan en JFK 81 Suu d11ngton 5~
Wesl~rvtlle N 66 Akron Ruduc160
'Wtbun S C 46 Ctn Pur, ell Mnttan -11
You Wtlson 74 C&lt;! l v~ r y Chmltan 4'i
You Rayen 52 R ~.,r V1ew -1 2
Zant!~\ tlk Mays' tl\'e :'i'i Man ~ ua .&amp;7

Aubu rn 9-1 Mam1 4 1

Mogadorl." F1eld 56 Akron Garfidd 4B
M1 Orab Western Brown 59 Cm Wlmeook 56
N~:w Albanv 61 Col lrte of L1fe 43
New Wruh Buckeye Cenrral 59 M onn~\ llle 27
Newark Catb 52 laflt:a~ler Fisher 45
Ne'"'ark L1ck.ing Valley 46 Uhnc hsv •lle
Claymont J7
N1les 40 McDonald ~7
O ld Wash1ngton Buckeye Trrul 71 Mon roe
Cemral 29
O ntan6 45 \\oynford ~6
Onawa Glandorf 61 Onnvtlk SR
Oxford Tal awanda 52 Mtddletown Fenwtck 15
PameS\ tlle Harvey 45 Wtck htfe 40
Panna Hts Valley Forge 60 Tnmty 18
Pet"bles 65 Manchutt:r 21
P ~ekermg t on 61 Montgomer) Cou nty Ky 36
Poland 48 Hubbard 32
Ra\~ n;t59 Watelloo '4
Rpck Ht\1 61 Frankli n Furnace Green 52
Snlem 52 Copley 48
South Charleston Southeas tern 51 f ort Laramte
17
Spnn g!ield Cath Ceu1 57 Spnngfteld North n
Sprmgfie ld Northweslern 48 Bcllc(onlrunc 45
Sleubc:nv!lle Cath Cent 42 Cadtz 39
Tol Emmanuel Rnptl sl 62 Mogadore Chm!mn
Academy 11
Van Wen Lmcol n\l ~w 90 Kocldord !'arb~a) 'il
Vcrm1lhon 55 Elyna Carhohc 17
Vmcent \1. 1rren 80 Belpre 22
W La fa yclte Rtdgcwood -I I Newcfl mcr~ t llw n

Summi t Stauon Ltcklng HI ~ 74 Johnstow n61
Th ornv tlle Shendan 4R Hehro n I al.:ewood 42
lifhn C'o l~mb1an 5' Wtllilrd 49
lol Em manuel U~ plt s t 6K Mogacjo re Chnstt 10

A~adc m y

Ca,allu Class ic first round

\SlJ lite~! a Ho~l H ohd11 ~ Chasste fir'\1 ruund
Ai&lt;1~l Am. h&lt;l1J1!X l:!O S o uth~tll t.kth 72

S'i y

t

8tnha Teligut Memor1al Tournament-firsl
round
Oklahoma RO De nver 'i2
Oklaho,na St 82 Ste phen F Au~tm 62

fuurnaments

IIJI~I 1111 l ~d

Peeble$ 86 M ~ n chester "\6
P1ckermgton 66 Westervtlle S 54
Pttsburg Fran klin Monroe 65 Arcanum 42
R1pley 74 Williamsb urg 52
R vs~ Southeas tern '7 Col Manon Frankhn 67
Snndusky 80 Woos1er 77
Shelby 61 Bucyrus 58
Solon 66 Collmwood 58
Spnngfield South 66 Dayton Dunbar 50
St Pans Gr.tham 89 We~t Liberty Salem 6~
Struthers 'i 1 Cardtn ~ l Mooney 2'i
Stryker 71 Bh s~ fi el d Mt ch 66
Sugarcr~k Garaway 69 Unton Endt con N Y

far Wut
Colorado 75 Stanford 64
Duke 85 UCLA. 80
S Ut3h 68 Weber St 67
Sam~ Claro 70 Pactflc 58
UC lr\'me 6-+ Duqursne *9

Tournaments

far \\ esl
Cent Conne~tK UI Sl 76 Bulfal u 74
UenHr 'i7 Dnnmouth ~:'i
Oregon 87 St Marun s 67
Ul; lr &gt;tnc 7~ S Oreg on U
UNIVMS S Ut1h6 i
Utah 61 V. tkc 1 orc~t -1 '\
X1\ tcr77 S1 Mrlrys Ca l ~~

I

Norwalk 87 Galton 72
0 \mued Fall s 76 Kenston 69

Soulhwcost
FordhJm 49 Texas San Amomo 48
NE Lou mana 70 SW T&lt;"xas 61
Texlls Arhngron 64 Sam Housron St 5!1

South'-'tst
Go nzaga 74 Tc~a s Pa n Amencan 71
NE Loulstan5 b-1 SW Te"';u 61
T&lt;"•as Arltngwn 12"i Sam Housto n S1

Chl ~~lc-fir sl

Manon C.1th 54 l ancaster F1sher Cath 49
MtddletOY. n Ch nsuan 56 New Mmmt 54
Mtddletown Madtson 72 Cm Chnsuan ~8
Ntw Albany o48 Col Aemkmy 28
,
Ntw Madtson Tn Village 52 Versoulles 41
Ntw Rtchmond 7H Orch:vd Street Academy SO
~wark Cath 52 Uttea 48
Ntles 57 Brookfield 55

Midwest
DePaul12 Ill Ch1cago 54
llhn01 ~ Sr 95 Bradley 91 (OT)
lndtana St 61 N Iowa 58

M1dwut
Alcorn St 5R lnd Pur lndph 51
Butler 56 ldal tu Sr 44
Kansas St 67 Samt Louts 6'
S llltnOIS 70 SE M1 ssoun 49
Wngl t St 75 ChKago St ~6

Huhc at llnhtl:.&amp;l

Ltbert) Cenr er 70 PeUt svt lle 61
Logan M Cht lhcothe 51
Lordsto"'n 48 Matera! Rtdge '9

E Tc n~ ~sec: St 82 UNC Greensboro 58

South \
Cam pbell 75 N C Asheville 68 (OT)
Coli of Charbton 77 W Carolina 48
b~t Caroltn a 75 Francts Manon 65
George Ma~on 72 Sac red Heart 51
Georgm 73 long hi and U 59
Georg1a St 72 N Caro lina A.&amp;T 51
l amar 72 NKholb St 56
OHIO 94 Cent Flonda 66
R1chmond 76 Floud;\ Atlanttc 65
SE Lout$llllla 90 McNeese S1 84
Southem MJ)S 60 Memph15 54
Southern U 92 Texas A&amp;M 68
Tul;.mc: 86 H;mford 6'
Wtlham &amp; Marv 79 UNC Greensboro 74

lnr..:rn~llr\ 1~ 1

Fa. rfield Umon 67 Millersport 44
Faye r~e 89 Bapust Park 47
Find lay l1 be{t y Bemon 72 New Rtegelll
G 1lmour Academy 6 1 Chagnn Falls 53
Gto\e Cny 75 Day Whne 66
Hamler Patnck Henry 74 M1ller Ctty 63
Huron 6~ Margareta 53
Jeromesvtlle H1lhdale 81 Mapleton 72

E..t
George Wu hmgton !:11 R1ce 62
Ohto St 72 P~nn St 54

Robert Morm 91 Brow n 59

Ib

Euchd 58 East Tech 5~

Regular-season action

Regular-season achon
Ea"

Artmn~l&lt;!l

Edon 58 1\mwerp 35
Elmore "- Oodmort 58 Van Buren 49

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

No. 6 Arizona r611s
over Holy Cross;
lndiana also wins

OJ·

have been a record day m :1 record
year - there could be LIS many as I 0
or 11 \acan~.: 1 es thl ~ year ~tp pro&lt;~ch
mg the II new coaches after the
1991\ season
Most of the vtcltms took 11 1.\tlh

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
'

Bf MEL REISNER
TUCSON, Ariz (AP) - Holy
Cross, whach has only three players
on: scholarshtp, was outmanned and
outgunned by Anzona, a college basketball powerhouse
The
smh-ranked
Wtldcats
remamed undefeated an the F1esta
Bqwl Classtc by routang the
Cntsaders 89-41 tn a first-round
g!""e Monday mght
" Obvtously we had too many athlet_es ~n our Side and too much qutckness, Anzona coach Lute Olson
s;ud "Defensavely we got after them
a~d pressured them The key was
when IT (Jason Terty) was m there
'they got nothmg"
; -The Wildcats, 270m the 14-yearold tournament, wtll play Ronda
InternatiOnal for the tourn ament utle
ct.ri Wednesday ntght Flonda
InternatiOnal defeated Penn State 85-

NFL clubs fire Wann$tedt, Capers, Rhodes, Marchibroda, Erickson
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Sports Wrtter
The ne" 11me a group of NFL
t oachc.., get~ together and someone
,a)'
Block Monday.' nobody
~ho uld a. . \. : hm1 wha t he 's talk ing
about
11 ""' !he day five NFL coac hes
- one stXIh ol the league s total \\ere f1red wHhm a few hours of one

Tuesday, December 29, 1998

to htre a consultmg 111m to 11deotape es tn addtuon to Rhode, " headed
potent.al candtd ~te ~ for ov. ners to hy Sherman Lewt&gt; , Green Ba) s
VICW
otlen sl\e coordmalm But there
'
either than Rhodes thcte ate no see ms to be a fe ehng .mton,g team
obviOu s black ~.:.tndld ..Jtcs among the offiClcl ls that Lcw ts t1me h.ts [ldssed
"hot" ltst of name s for head-coach- alter 1two yems of 1ntcrvJC\.\ s
The most ob; tous candtdatc ts Art
mg JObs
Holmgren and former San Shell, Atlanta 's offcnstvc I me coac h.
Franc1sco coach George Setfcrt are who was lhe NFL s first black head
at the lop of most ll sts
coach 111 the modern e1a and who 1s
Others mclude Capers, oftenme the last wmmng cudch of the R&lt;utl ers
coordmators Gary Kubtak of Denver, at 56-41 m 4 1/2 ~c a sons Shell, howBnan Bllhck of Mmnesota and Chns ever ts ~evalucd by some teams
Palmer of Jacksonville, defenSive because R . uder coaches are considcoordtgators Btll Beltchtck of the ered pawns of AI Dav1s
The otllcr pu'!is lbJIJtJcs among the
Jets, J1m Haslett of Ptllsburgh and
Greg Robmson of Denver
mtnont) cundtdatcs are Tyrone
Add defenSive coordma10r R1ch Wtlltngh am the Stanford head
Brooks of Atlanla, !he former coach coach, Wtlhe Shaw. Oakland's
of the Ram s and the temporary de fensive coordmator, and Herman
replacement for Dan Reeves, who 1s Edwards, ass1stan1 head co,u.:h of the
recovenng from heart surgery
Bucs
The hst. of potential black coach-

Divac signs to play
for Yugoslavian team
BELGRADE, Yugosl avta (AP) Free agent cc nlcr Vlade Dt vtlc stgm!il
wtth Yugoslav champton Red Stat,
~ut can return to the N BA m January
1f lhe lockout ends Dtvac, who
played for the Charloue Hot nets last
season, wtll pl.t) onl} tn Euro
League games

bcc.unc scpm a ted h om the ot ilLI"
the damn ed thtng capsrzcd 1\\ lt:C on

these great seas at ntght - \du ch 1s
bloody fltghtenang lei me tel l )OU
Wmntng satd ' I wouldn l w.ull to
have spent another ntght out there
Amencan John Campbell \\oas
swept overboard when h1 s y.tcht capstzed Atter less than an hour m the
watet. Campbell was so cnppled by
hypoth ermia that a hcltcopter
dropped a pohceman down on a ltne
to scoop hun up
,
'1 here was a pomt I dtdn I thmk

Yea~En~
At Dan's

Insulated Coveralls
&amp; Bibs
For Boys &amp; Men
Carhart, Key and Camo

l was gnmg w ~u n rve, Campbell
satd
Some 27 na\\ shtps scoured the ~
seas [01 sun 1' or~ ttfter the first call
of 'Maida)' Ma)day 1 Mayday'"
came 0\Cr the rmllo
,
Twu Au!-. lrahr~n s,ulors were k11led
when then -+0 loot boal , Bu smess
Post N.uad &lt;.tpsl!cd 60 mt les oft the '
New S&lt;1Uih \\dies town or
Mcnmbula '~tppe r Bruce Guy and '
crew mem bct Phd Skcggs
'
Bnltsh satlnt Gl)n Ch~rles 33,
was washed oil I he Sword of Onon
yacht Sund.lj mght and was presumed drowned Tuesday. sa1d Bnan
Htll, the Australtan Manttme Safety:
Authortt) spokesman Htll had earh-:
er added Charles name to the hst of'
those ktllcd It \\as nut tmmedtately •
clear why he later hacked off from ~
that dectstOil
~
Race o ffi~t als satd Charles had
represented B111 \J.m 111 the Star Class
at the 1996 Su11tmer Olympacs tn
Atlanta whetc lte ltntshed lith
Three ere\\ mi,;mbcrs from the
stncken Wtnston Chu rcht ll - Jim
Lawler, Mtke Banmster and John
bean, all from Sydney - were
\\ashed out to s.ea S1x other crewmen were rescued, offtcmls smd
Two of !he bodtcs recove red and
are beheved to be those of Wmston
Churchtll crewmen Rescuers were
sttll hunttn g for the thtrd man from
the culler
Forty boats sought shelter
Monday m the sma ll mLtml and port
of Eden &lt;~rnv 111 g wllh broken n ggmg, twtstcd m. t\ts .md ot her damage Am hul.mLcs fc iH cd smlo rs to
the local hosplt.tl
Dad l&lt;n cd s. u1mg ' ~md Guy s
son. Mat k · He lrn cd the compel tItan He also i&lt;hcd a beer and a talk
after the race Dad s1mplv loved
ltfe "
Th e 1ave s..1w 11:-i hrsl !dtahty 10
I 984, when .1 72 year old) achtsman
was woshed overboard In 1989, a
58-year old nun dtcd from head
lllJUIICS ,1ftc1 &lt;L ga le snapped h1s
hn.tt s nust
D t\id 1 \lhn

111.111~ .., ll lo1o.. h td 111 1\ ~d In a state of
sh(lck
II \\.,ts the \\111st seas anyone can

lcmcmbd li l.:lt.~

he sa1d · We saw
and
prol"Mhly JU "" t hum1chef ~~.~a ll y to be
on d1 y l.md
Even the s.ulur s themse lves could
no t belte1 c !he toll
'Ever) one h.l s been rea lly qUiet
today stncc we heard about the
deaths,' racer Sus\e ,Grancy sa1d m
Eden
1.IC:W~

On
Justin Work
Boots
8

2&amp; /a Off
Boys, Ladies, Men &amp;
Steel Toed

Second •\ve.
M u]Jj.,I' o rl

992-3684

\~.;.U~ 1 1 ~ 1111 CX h,IUStiOn

'

Carhart
Coats &amp;Jackets

Australian

Drover
Coats

Only s9999
Reg. 5134''

Ladies
Western&amp;.
Casual Boots

201/a Off

201/a Off ,

Double H, Red Wing,
Carolina, LaCross, &amp;
Chippewa

Insulated Boots

The Place For Work &amp; Western
290 North

111

aavings

20°/o Off:20°/a Off
OlOIIOUT

ov. ncr of the

\V h eclhou-.c rc -.I IUI,\11 1 111 E d en sa 1d

�•

The Daily Sentinel

By Th.e Bend

...

..
;.

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

··
P~~ge8
Tu11day, December 29, 1881

Don't think that squirrels will make good indoqr pets- they chew everything in sight
&lt; •

•

•

though the ,quorrcl had teeth. he """

Ann

!&lt;.IJII

ton )Dung to "al~

I

rcfu~rd

to

li'-ltcn.

Landers

Sanum "a~ :! \'Cars o ld m Ocw-

~- L. I -\11~~ &lt; 11M&lt;:"•
S,nJ~.,· .,l e Jn.l Cr~·• ·· rt

ber and ha' ohc ru~ of m) apanment.

,, II!Jo.c.,llloe

Although I ha\C long been an · ani ~
mal lover. I do nm reco111mcnd
!)q uirrcl ~ as pet;; . Sammy has
chewed up everything m hL\ path

·Dear Ann landers: This

h

a

: response tn til\! 1~ - yea,r~old who wa,
: concerned about the baby squirrel
• found h' a clen;\ \\Oman . That leiter
'·rcallv h-it do.,~· -,o ·home hecau~e I,

too. ·adopted an abandoned baby
, squmel TI1c Di\lsion of Wildlife
;told me if the 'q"'rrel had teeth. he
· ·Wa!&lt;t old c'no ul!h W fend for himse lf

:~: and ad\ hcd r~l' tn turn him l oo~e. I
:. :·.hou2h1
. ... thh \\a~ odd . bccau~c even

two years and has chewed up everything in &lt;ighl, I hate to think of what
your place looks like. '
·
. Keeping Sammy in your apanment is not fair to the poor

~realure .

and dug up e' cry plant in my place.

Please reconsider and let the squirrel
out in the nearest park.
Dear ·Ann Landen: I recently
went to my minister for counseling
when my hushand left me for anoth-

If an} one think.., h&lt;.w ing a wild ani-

er woman . He mentioned a column

mal for a pet is a good idea. tell him
to forget it. I lm·e Samm'' dearly and

you had printed a while back about a

would nCvcr g1vc him

snake when she went walking in the

uP. but as pcb

go. dogs and cats make a lot more
~t:m.c. Jw.t !-l ig.n me -- Not \Vild
Ahout Wildlife in Portland. Ore .
Dear Portland: If Samnw has
had the run nf ynur apartmc~ t for

'"I •

'·

"".. ,...-'-------~-----:-----,
'

Wedding

young woman who encounlered -a
mounta!ns . I told the minister I didn·, e:ct the connection. He said.
.. Yo~ will when you read Ann Landers ' col umn ."

TI1c [llinister could no1 find the

column in his fit• . Will you please
find it and run it ·again? - L.W. in
Riverside, Calif.
Dear L. W.: Here is the column
you asked for. The "lesson" is clear.
· I hope you will learn from it.
A young girl was trudging along
a mountain path, trying to reach her
grandmother's house. It was biller
cold·. and the wind cut like a knife.
When she was ' within sight of her
ilestination, she heard a rustle at her
feet .
Looking down, she saw a snake.
Before she could move, the snake
spoke to her. He said, "I am about to
die. II is too cold for me up here. and
I am freezing. There is no food in
these mountains, and I am starving. ·

Please put me under your coat and
take me with you."
"No," replied the girl. "I know
your kind. You are a rattlesnake. U I
pick you up, you will bite me, and
your bite is poisonous."
"No, no," said the snake. "If you
help me, you will be my best friend.
I will treat you differently."
The little girl sat down on a rock
for a moment to rest and think things
over. She looked at the beautiful
markings on the snake and ·had to
admit that it was the most beautiful
snake sbe had ever seen.
Suddenly, she said, " I believe
you. I will save you. All living
things , desen~e to be. treated with
kindness ...

The little girl reached over, put
the snake gently under her coat and
proceeded toward her grandmolher's house. Within a moment. she
fell a sharp pain in her side. The
snake had bi11e11 her.
.
..
''How could you do thts to me?
she cried. "You promised that you
would not bite me if I would protect
you from ihe biller cold."
The snake hissed, "You knew
what I was when you picked me
up," and slithered away.
---Send qnestioos to Ann Laoders, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W.
Century · Blvd., Snite 700, Los
Angeles, Calif. 90045

OPENING

SPECIALS ON
TIRES
BRAKES

ate Bill 55 .
The
requirements

Sali~hury

retaining any fourth grade student

ond and third grade levels.
The Fourth Grade Guarantee
require~ districts to provide iritef-

Elcmentarv School ncar Pomeroy.
Wendy · Halar. Title I direct or

who fail s to pass the reading portion of the Ohio Fourth Grade Pro-

vention se rvice· following third
grade, ~ including intensive summ er

and ass istant superintende nt of ficiCncy Tests unless the child is a
Mci Q.s L o~: al rcvciwed the te st . student whose individuali zed edu:-.l'or~s fro m last year for the CBE cation plan excuseS him or her

reading programs. to those st udents

ent/teac her meeting at

and proficicnq• iests. She also dis ~.:usscd the programs ' available at
each ~c h oO L

The local sc hool repori card
from the slate was reviewed and

di ssemi nated. The Fourth Grade
(JLiaran tcc was reviewed from Se n ~

include

who need them.

from taking the tests or the student 's principal and reading

The Ohio Fourth-Grade Reading
Proficiency Test will be administered three times a year to founh

leacher agree that the student is

graders including once in the sum-

a~ademically

mer before fifth grade. Beginning
with the 2001-02 sc hool year, students who fail to pass ihe test by
the second administration must be

prepared for the fifth

grade.
In add ition, each student will be
assessed at the end of the first, sec-

~-

I 43370 SR. 124
RACINE, OH 45771
(MINERSVILLE) ·

-

&amp;

..

SHOCKS '

·CARPET

PLUS
Professional
Floor Installation
FREE ESTIMATES

offered intensive summer remediation during the following summer.
· Each building ' was represenled
at the meeting by its teachers:
Bradbury, Shannon Korn ; Harrisonville. Marsha King (Paula
C:hancey); Middleport, Elizabeth
Story, Teresa Carr;. Pomeroy, Janet
Hoffman, Becky Triplett, Bryan
Zirkle ; Rutland , Linda McManus;
Salem Center. Shirley VanMeter;
Salisbury, Barb . Matthews-Crow;
Meigs Middle, Ron D[exler, .
Pamela Vogt; Meigs High School;
Tim Lawson and Lester Manuel.

740-698-9114
or

7 40-698-7231

lndi~:idual,

Tcu Relun••
Federal and aU •ta re•
.
., Ho1lr.l: Mon.thru FrL 9to 4:30
,
Sat.91o 12

Evenings and Sat. afternoon by appt. only.

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.
Main St.,
P,omeroy, OH
Paying $80.00
per game
$3()0.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburst
Progressive top line.
Lie. 11 oo-so,
11 ,..,"n

CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical a. Plumbing
•Roollng
'•Interior a. Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES!
\f.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Pomeroy, Ohio

Trustees will hold their year-end meet -

ing on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal Building, with the
1999 organizational meeting follow-

ing on Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the Rutland

mg.

Fire Station.

Rutland Township

·

RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conservancy District Board meeting
Tuesday. 5 p.m. at the district otlice.
DARWIN - Bedford Township
Trustees year-e nd meetin'g Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the town hall.

ALFRED - Orange Township
Board of Trustees year-end meeting
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Clerk 0 ¥ie Follrod.
,.
SYRACUSE - Sulton Township
Trustees will hold their year-end meet-

..
'•

CHESTER - Shade River Lodge
453 F&amp;AM will hold a special meeting Tuesday, 8 p.m. at the lodge hall
with work in the EA degree. Refresh-

THE

P.LA INS"

-

· '1998. wedding cere mon y at The
Plains United Methodist Churc h
The hridc is the diJ.U\.!htcr or Mrs.
: Rita (Bogges s) Kc1th ... {If Parkcr~ ­
burg . W.Va. and the late R&lt;"rhcn L.
Boggc:-.s. Th.: hridcgroom i~ the ~o n
of Mr. aml Mr:-. . Dcn·nls Tha-triH.'r of
Watcrfnrd.
The 3:)0 p.m. scr,·ilT ~'' &lt;h pcl·furmcd hy thl'\ Rcv. Wcsky Thatl'hcr," the hr!dcl!room · ~ !..!randfath cr.
Nupt_1al rnusi~ wa., r~·o ,· ~dct.l hy
Mary Thatc hc"r. the hri&lt;..lcl.!roon1·s
grand lll\llhcr. A IT'Cc ptwn '~''" held
: at the Ramada Inn. Nclson~· ilh.:..
Give. n in marria!:!c
hv" her mothc1.
I
I
• the bndl' wore a whit~ ..,:!l in 1.!0\\'11
.. wi th a cathedral-leng th tr:tln. :-.~\·cct ­
: heart neck line. With c r y:-.tal~ and o,ca
: pearl s. and an open hark cn lum:cd
· -with tear drop pearb. She wore a
:: headpiece o f silk rns~ tt c~ accen ted
;. with pear ls. silk rihhon ~ and lll v 111
~:, th e vaii~Y- Thl' hridal h\luquct w"'a.., a
~ cascndt; of wh ite ro.-;cs. purple irise s.
1 ·orch id s &lt;
md baby 's hrcath
.~
Maid hf honor was Tcrl'csa J.
:. Brinker, cous in tJf the hride, ol St.
' Alban s. W.Va .. and Renee Malthcw.
\·
: ·son of Thc Plain\. Their tca- lcn1!th
· gowns fcmure-d purple \'C I ~·c t
,.... bodices and ~3 tin \ kirt s wuh an
overlay of whi_tc tulle . They carried
bouquets of purple lilic~ . hahy \

...

~

ivy.Bes t man was Adam Thatchc,r.
~
brother of the bridegroom. of Whipple . and Eric McCutcheon , or Wa ·_
ford. Ushers we re Dusty \Vagncr.
cou .. in of the bridegmom. of Mariet-

ta. and Joe Shockley. of Cambndge.
The' hridc is an .indepe nde nt
l. nn\!a h c r ~cr
co nsultant
aru.J
employed . . hy !&gt; &lt;'nvash. C\irsO,n &amp;
Ferrier of /uhcns and Ihe hridl.! ·
groom is employed hy Globe Mcwl.lurgk·a l i,f 'vVatcrford .
"l"hc TlL' wlyv•.- cds honcymotmcd in
Myrt le 13L:ach. S.C. and arc makin~
t h~ir horne in Amcs\ ' il l~ .

· We Give Mature
Drivers, ·Home
Owners and
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.
Our st~listics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
fewer and less costly losses
than other age groups. So it's
only fair to charge you "ess .for
your insurance. Insure your

-·

THE

I

I

In an c llorl tn rrnvlllc our readership with current n..: '' ·"· the Sund;l~
Timc .... Scntincl "ill IIlii act.:L· pt \\T d dings after 00 d:1y_., fn 11ll the date oi"
th~ event.
Wedding-s suhrnltl ed af1 L' r til ~ (lO day deadl ine wll l &lt;~pp..: ar durin g til~..·
week 1n The Dail; Scntind a11d thl'

~ ·

i

:
~

I

.~

Ga ll ipo lis Daily Tnhune
Al l clu h mcdi ng., and \J til ~.: r n,;-\\ ~
t
articles in tile ~qcicty \CI:tion •m• . , t
I
t
be s ubmitted wit hin (l0 t.la\ ~ nl
J
occ~rrc n cc. All hirthda)\ nn;.,t he
~ ·. su hm illcd within 60 da\ ;; ,)j IIH.'
.:: • occurrence .
~.. :,
All material _., uhrniu cd fiH puh li
cat ion is suhjcct to edit in g.
;

:! :
t::

TRENT

jONE!

OF

instruct~on that is unique to

30 Announcements

BINGO
screens. You will see .improvement

right before your eyes and, most
importantly, understand why·the
improvement is made.
The teaching system has been used to
help golfers of all skill levels, from
beginners ~o PGA Tour Players.
The list of golfers who have used
CompuSport includes s'uch greats
as J ack
Nicklaus,
Greg

CompuSl'ort instruction also covers pitching. chipping, sand play
and putting.
video cameras ( one directly
· behind you and one to your side)

tP capture ev~ry movement in your
golf swing. The CompuSport
Model is superimposed on top
of you for an
immediate com-

Tom Kite ,
Payne
Stewart,
Davis
Love Ill and Val Skinner and
many- more.

to the list.
Y'\lu will improve your game at the
Academy of Golf at the Robert
Trent Jones Golf Trail .. Call us
toll-free at 888-446-5203 for
more information.

swmg versus

the ideal swing
fUr your body type.
The entire. le~son is recorded on a take-

OGAN ~
~RNER~

"before" and "after" on split

nsu ranee Services

dcADEMY OF
~

~ t ul o-Ou·twr.&lt;c I tuurtttlt't'

Life Hollie Car Business
[),_

•
TRENT

)ONES GOLF TRA ~L / 167 SUNBELT PARKWAY / BIRMING~A.M, Al 35211 / 888-446-5203

•

.I

·r

every Saturday
night
6:30p.m.
American Legion
Middleport
Post128
·Starburst
Door Prize
14·5 people or
more will play
$1000 cover all.
Average $90 per
regular game.

·"Bingo"
New Year's Eve

. Bingo
American Legion
Middleport

Starburst $2050
6:30 to 9:15.
Door Pri&lt;e $700
Will have Second
Bingo 10:00 p.m.
to Mid.night • .
Second l!"ll1"
payout Based on
size o£ .crowd.

•
The following land transfe.s .were .
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recorder Emmogene
Hamilton:
Right of way. John M. and Tam~ . my L. Cre means to Tuppers PlainsChester Water District, Chester;
Right of way, Cecil W. Rowan,
Corene Rowan and Samual Shain to
tPCWD, Sutton, 2.49 10 acres;
Right of way, AI Conard to
, TPCWD. Bedford, 6.062 acres;
,
Right of way. Anhur W. Nease Jr.
· and Donna Jean Nease 1o TPCWD,
Sutton, 11 2.93 acres;
Deed, David M. Dorst to Lisa.R.
Bolen, Lisa R. Dorst, Columbia parcel;
Deed. Lisa R. Bolen, Lisa R. Dorst
to David M. Dorst, Columbia parcel ;
Deed, David K. and Patricia D.
Snyder to Larry 0. and Joy E. Clark,
' Sutton. 1.014 acres;
,! Deed, Michael A. Carsey to Terry
1 W. Carsey, Scipio parcel;
I Deed, John T. and Judith A.
Williams to Van S. and Paula J.
I Counts, Sutton;
Deed, Larry W. Rup~, Beverly

·s.

, and Eli.aberh,
·Pomeroy Calvary
Pilgrim Chapel arad
other chr•r('hes,
Ewirrg Fwaeral Home,
Meiga County Sheriff
for c1corl, and to
Jeremy\ BnaketboU
Coacla ond team.
Your tl&amp;ouglllfulnen
will alt41~Y• be
remembered and

appreciated.
Nara, Children,
Grandclilldren,
Great-grandchild.

In Memory

In Loving Memory
of our Parents
Joe A. and
Ada E. Bissell.
This would have
been their 70th
anniversary.
Our Love,

Orvn }ecm, Marilyn,
llfike &amp; Families.

985-4473
• 7122/tfn

Custom Homes

FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-7643
(No

'

.

Sunday Calis)

Remodeling
•

1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Cousin's Home
Improvement and
Painting &amp;.Coating
' Residential &amp;
Commercial

_.....

"NoJo•-•~a · or

,

Free Estimates
(740) 367-0412
(740) 992-4232
12/1/98

Jack's Roofing
&amp; Construction
Lawrence R. &amp; N~nnette
Powell announce
the birth of

a dausht.er,
Braruhe }wteera PoweU,
born at
Holzer HoJpital on
Sepl. 22, 1998.
7 lb•. 1 ....
20 112 inche• long.
GrandduU/5hter of
Delbert &amp; Lorello Blake
of Middleport and
Hattie &amp; Geralcl Seller.
a/Pomeroy.

Happy Ad

Mr. Nolan
You are
the best!

Naw Roofs,
Repairs, GUtters,
Coatings, Siding,
Drywall,· Painting,
Plumbing

Gravel, Sand,

Buy, Sell or Trade ·
¥t'

CLAS IFIEDSI

CSP. Rutland;
Easement, Gary W. and Emily 1.
Gilmore to CSP, Salem;
Easement, Kathleen Caton to CSP,
Salem;
Easement, Kathleen Caton to CSP,
Salem;
Deed; Guy W. Tibbs to Mary F.
Tibbs, Chester;
Deed, Evelyn E. Wiblin, Ellen J.
and Guy M. Thoma. Arvil D. Wiblin,
Rutland Village;
Deed, Harold and Betty Newell to
Three C Properties, Chester parcels;
Deed, Margie Jean Schuler to
Roscoe and Sandra]. Mills, Le!&gt;anon;
Deed, Manha E. Bums to Jeffrey
C. Lewis, Salisbury parcel;
Deed. Charles E. and Daisy L.
Blakeslee lo Denise Smith, Pomeroy
parcel;
Deed, Family Homes Inc. to Carpi Ann Robenson, Salisbury.

To get a current weather
report, check the '

Sentinel

Top Soll 1 Fill Dirt

614·992-3470

.R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK
· SERVICE .
Agrlt;ulturalllme,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio
1Of25196Jt!n

Snow
Removal
591-1897

Cell phone
992·3141

Home
Call Anytime
Grand Opening

Kana'• ca.trol

.

New eonstruetion &amp; Remodelinf

.•
Minor Repairs • Cabinets • Siding
Roofs • Decks • Garages
lnaurad
Free Estimate•

•

740·742·3411
THE COUNTRY CANDLE SHOP
AND MORE
Tues.-Fri. 10 to 6
Sat. 10 to 4

EXCAVATING CO.

Weekly Sales and Drawings
thru Christmas
1!

Rt. 124, Minersville, Ohio
740-992-4559
C ! ]II I WCil U:Octi Uli 1\W'

BANKRUPTCY can relieve a debtor of
financial ohligations and a~range a fair
1
diatribution of assets. Debtors in bankruptcy may
keep ••exempt.'t property for his or he r personal
use. This may inchlde a car, a house, clothcR, and

household goode.
For Information Regur~ling Bunkr·uph·y ~~o ntn c t :

W!Jiiam Safranek, Atton1ey At law
(7 40) 592-5025 Athens, Ohio

Dave's Garage

Quick Lube

Fonner-"Velvet Hammer"

Specials on oil.
changes, tires,
brakes, shocks.
740-992-9909

52954 State Rt. 124

Near·the 338 &amp; 124 split in the Great Be nd

43370 St. At. 124
Minersville, Ohio

-Complete Auto Service-

'
Racine, Ohio
Phone: 740-843-5572

I month pd .

RUTLAND, OH.
AMERICAN
LEGION
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
GUN SHOPT

SUN., 1:00 PM
Slug &amp; Shot
Matches

Residential &amp; Mobile Home
Ail' Conditionet·s &amp; Heat Pumps
TRPPRn

.

HOWARD

. 12/18/ltn

Llmestbne,

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION .~•

-

(614) 992-3838

(Lime StoneLow Rates)

'•
•

Computer Graphics
Deslg'ls
All Landscaping a.
Lawn Services
•Commercial ·
•Reeldenllal
Owner: Mickle Hollon .
Chester, Ohio
7 40-985-4422

740·992·2068

GUN SHOOT
Racine Gun Club
· Nease Hollow Rd.
Every Sunday
12:,30 pm
Umlt 680 sleeve
.737 back •ore

Checlt u out 11 www.p.m·desiQn.eom
•
~
Ot phone (74D) 991•1917
"''It', ••·

LANDSCAPE
DESIGNS

Joseph Jacks

Free Estimates

••

Joe Wilson
(614) 992-42n

Limestone Hauling
Hous&amp; &amp; Trailer Slttl
Land Clearing a.
Grading
Septic System a.
Utilities
Estimates

WICKS
HAULING

Happy
Birthday
'

~

Qaallty Affordable Web PaQe Desl!ln
{
for Smalllulneu In MeiQs, Athens. and ::
GaiDa Co. Ohio and M11on Co. WV. . . .•
.•
"Let u put your buslneu on the Internet"·:

"Build Your Drecun"

740-446-9416
1391 Safford
..&gt;c:hool Rd.

In the'

•

.

Bennett Supply

,,

20 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

M&amp;J

"Hugelnnnttry"
•Rtiof Coatings
"VInyl Skirting
~Water Healers
•Door/Windows
•eiec:trlc/Piumblng
Supplies
•Fiberglass &amp; Wood
Steps
Discount Prices

land transfers

Rupe, James Snl'!dgrass. Charlotte
Stewan, Ralph Stewart, Brenda' J.
Dotson and Darrell Dotson to
Lawrence and Cora Lee, Rutland Village;
Easement, Michael and Juli e Hill
Russell to Columbus Southern Power, Lebanon;
Easement, Rhonda G. McGrath to
CSP, Lebanon;
Easement, Michael L: and Barbara
Triplett to CSP, Salisbury:
Easement, Joseph Graci to CSP,
Olive;
Easement, A.W. and Donna Nease
to CSP, Sutton;
Ea.'iement, Julia M. and Thomas E.
Sayre to CSP. Bedford; .
Easement, Leroy Paul and Amy
M. Hendri x to CSP, Orange;
Easement, Tony D. and Sherri L
Hendrix to CSP. Orange;
Easement , Nt~ncy and Eugene
Phillips to CSP. Scipio;
Easement, Howard E. Frank to
CSP. Col umbi a;
Easement. Patricia E. and Robert
D. Williams to CSP, Rutland;
Easement, Zion Church of God In

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

~
IIi '~
11 /1~mq.pd
M:..Ant..Ah.·~;...~~~llil'i\
. ~­
ttl!!! f.I!!!IJJ!J it!!~ ~~ ~ iJl!!l ijl_!IJ Ill~ _ ~ fit!~ {il~tl

who sent food, card.,

..

:

•;

Free Estimates

The family of
ller•ry C. Hartman
would like to exp~e,.
their lhanh to aU

Family, Bob Mary
Barrell, Kenneth
Ruth Delo11g, E•ther

Room Additions ~Roofing.

Owner: John Dean

Card of Thanks

Re11. Amot TdlU

Garages • Replacement Windows · :

New Homes &amp; Remodeling
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofing. Siding
Commercial a. Residential
27 yrs. exp.
Licensed &amp; Insu red
Phone 740-992-3987

Gallipolis, _OH

12/31/98

~ Recorder _ posts

i

~N~ PI'CJ~"' "

'.
••

~LF

COMPUIPOII TIA(HING UNTU

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

•
ROBER T

.,

Let us add your name

parison of your

home.vldelo tape with live instructor comme nts. As eac h lesso n progresses. -you will see yourself

I

Norman,

1

need to be on every shot •

The system use's two high speed

'
992-6687

Good Times presents
New Year's Eve Weekend Party
with party favors &amp; music by
"Stillwaler"
9- 1,
Thursday, Friday &amp;

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop Compare,
FREE
ESTIMATEES ·

We hiNHir Golden Budteye Cards

flower•, vilita, phone
caU., proyen and ,_
who helped in any
way during the lou of
our lu.uband, father,
grandfather, and
great grandfather.
We would e1peciaUy
like lo thank Reo.
Yictor Routh Family,

1

BISSELL .
CONSTRUCTION ·

m-sn6

New Years Eve Weekend p,,1vl·
with party favors &amp; DJ music
i Q--2, Thursday, Friday, &amp;
Saturday nights

The new Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail
Academy of Golf is a CompuSport
Teaching Center, offering golf
Alabama and found few other
places in the world.
The CompuSport teaching system is a
one-of-a-kind teaching tool pioneered by Olympic Medalist and
biomechanics expert Dr. Ralph
Mann. CompuSport provides what
every golfer wants- instant feedback and immec;liate improvement.
Dr. J';lann 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 in a variery of ways. From set-up to backswing to impact to follow through,
you 'II learn where your hands,
hips, head and shoulders and club

Syncuse, Ohio

Waynes Place

TRAIL

onors

•
&lt;

GOLF

GOLF

duate with ·

·-- News polipy ·
;y
,

ROBERT

ACAOE"I

and LenOra Lc ill1ciL Pomeroy. ha~
been nll mcLI to the Ohi.o Nl)rthcrn
University Jcan· s li ~t for the 1 99~
fa ll quarter. He is a first ycur phar macy maJor

'

MIDDLEPORT - BI&lt;JO!I · drive
Thursday, II a.m. to 3 p.ni. at the Middlepon Church of Christ's New Life
Center at Fifth and Main streets. ·A
two-liter Pepsi product, popcorn and
a free movie rental will be given to
all donors.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer District Board
special meeting, 7:30 p.m. at the construction trailer to approve monthly
bills.
·

home and car with us and save
even more with our special
multi-policy discounts.

Leifheit named to list
' Michael Llc!lhci"l , Sil ll or Roger

;•

..'·

" ·

Tamara . brc:.uh , mums and rrcsh greens and

· Bog gcs~ and Bradle y Th:::~t~:hcr were
. united in marriage during a Sept. 19.

''

LONG. BOTIOM - Faith Eull
Gospel Church in Long Bouom will
hold a New Year's Eve service and (ellowship time at 9 p.m. on ThUrsday.

ments.

Boggess~ Thatcher

I :.

.

PORILAND - Lebanon Township Trustees year-end meeting
Wednesday, 6 a.m. at the township
building. Organizational meeting will
follow.

Mr. and Mrs. Brad Thatcher

.

.

SALEM CENTER . Salem
Township Trustees will meet in regular
session.on Tuesday at 6 p.m. The meeting will be held at the firehouse.

:

~OBERT

PARTS

HUIIARDS·
GREENHOUSE

Meigs County
Veteran Service is
moving to a new
location
117 Memorial
Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio
behind the New
Holzer Clinic
Open for business
J
4, 1999

· New Homes • Vinyl Siding New

4121111Un

GREENHOUSE
Now open for floe

Open Daily 9-5
Snnday 1·5

CARPENlER- Columbia Town·
ship Board of Trustees will hold its
regular year-end meeting Thursday; I
p.m. at the fire station in Carpenter.
Organizational meeting for 1999 will
follow.

Pomeroy, Oh 45769

MOBILE HOME

PoinseHios in 6colors
PoinseHia Baskets
Hoi~ Trees ·
1 Cut Chrishnos Trees
Grove Blankets -Wrealhs

from Cottageville, W.Va. All welco~.
WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township
Board of Trustees year-end meeting
Wednesday, 6:30p.m. at the Pageville
Town Hall. The 1999 organizational
meeting will follow.

33334 Hysell Run Rd.

HUBBARDS

Christ.ma;; &amp;8!JOn

---,---------Community Calendar·-----,--.,-,---------TUESDAY
RUIT.AND -

Tuppers Plains, Ohio 45783
740-985-3813
4" lhru 48" Plastic Culvert In Stock
Full Line Of Water Storage Tanks Septic &amp; Cistern Tanks
Sewer Pipe: 3" thru 8", Gas Pipe a. Regulators
Open:
9:110-4:30 Weekday•
9:00-12:00 Saturday

Partnenhip and Corporolion

Jeanie Howell, EA
Phone 740-992·7036

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC4!

St. Rt. 7

BooiJceepinlf and PayroU

YOUNG'S

.

G&amp;W PLASTICS AND SUPPLY

Howell's Bookkeepi•g
&amp; Tax Service

KARNS CASTRDL
QUICK LUBE
992-9909
WE HAVE GIFf CERTIFICATES

..

Meigs Local parents updated on reading requirements
Meigs Loc~l School District
recently held its annual Title I par-

The Dally Sentinei•.Page 7

'

n.i II
/Mil '.

.............
"Ensy Ot•cr rfre Pirone Bmrk Fimmcing"
Air Conditioners· Jls Low As 128 a monlh
Heat Pumps As Low As 138 a month
*f7ree 5 Parts Warranty
· ~Free Digital Thermostat
*Free Estimates

BENNETI'S 'HEATiNG &amp; COOLING
"Wflere Quo lily iJoesrl'l Coat More ' 1
. 740-448·9~1~. 1-800·872-5967

LOttG'S
COttSTROCTIOtt
• Vinyl Siding • Garages ,
• New Homes • Pole Buildings
• Room Additions

Over 20 years experience.
Free Estimates

Call 740·843·5426

1218198 1 mo.

CREDIT PROBLEMS
No Credit • Slow Credit· Bankruptcy
Repo • Divorced

WORRYING!!!
No Embarrassment ...

You 're Treated with Respect!
Call Now for Instant Approval!!..

· C"·L ila. roao

(740).4411-8800 OR
•, . . . .272-8179
Guidelines

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

Serv -U 6t~

Stan Oatmg Tomgtttl Have fun

ptaying the Ohio Dating Game, 1·

AVON I All

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
All Yerd Sl~t Mutt Be Peld In
Adv1nce. Deadline· 1:OOpm ttte
d•y before the ad It to run,

Sunday &amp; llonde~ edition·
1:00pm Fricloy.

80

BOO-ROMANCE. extenSIOn 9015

30 Announcements
End or year ta• sale, everything
must go befo re 1999 Su:lers
Equipment Company, Henderson
wv. 3:)4-675-7421

New To You Thnlt Shoppe

9 West Stimson. Athens
740-592· 18&lt;12
Oual•ty clothmg and household
Items . $1.00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday !hru Saturday
g·(l()-5 30

40

Giveaway

Auction
and Flea Market

Rick Pearson A.uctk&gt;n Company,
full t im e auctioneer, complete
auct1on
serv1ce
liCen'sed
t66.0ttio &amp; West V•rgm•a. 304·

n3-5785 Or 304-n:J-5447
Wedemeyer's Auclfon Serv1ce .

GaH;potls, Ohio 740-379-2720.

90

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar All u s S1l·
ver And Gold Cams, Proolsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
R ings, Pre -1930 US Currency,
Slerllng, Etc Acqu•s•rtons Jewelry
• M T S. Co1n Shop, 151 Second
Avenue. GaiH~Iis 740-446-284:2

2 mate siberian mixed pupptes, 1
With t blue f1te 304-773-5972
Beautiful Neutered Male Blue
Eyed Yellow Angora Type Cat, To

Good Home. 740.441-1029.
Good Used Ca rpel, 740-446-

0175
RecNner Chair In Fa~r CondlliOfl.

7-10·388·9919

60 Lost and Found
Found Long Ha1red Oeclawed ,
Blue Grey Ca1 Traveled By Car
To 0 J Wh ite Road , 740-446·

9618
Found Male Beagle Collar With
No Tage s, On Prospec1 Road ,
Near Bidwell . Porter, 740-4411118
Lost! Small Change Pu rse Clear
Plasti c Tr~mmed wtlh Yellow
Keys , Rmgs Necklace Enclosed
740-44t-0369
lostl Wicker Cl'la1r. Bidwell Rod·
ney Ad , State At 650 On 12!24!
9 8, S mall Reward Please Call
740-446-4936
Stolen -cream colored lemale Pomeraman !rom Owl Hollow Ad on
December 23rd, answers to
'Abby', 740-667·0109

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity
ALL Yard Sales Must
Be Paid In, Advance.
PEAQLINE': 2;00 p.m.
tho day before tho od
11 to run. Sunday
ediUon ~ 2:00 p.m. 1
Ft1day. Monday edition
- 10:00 e.m Saturday

Antiques, top pr1ces pa1d , R•ver~ne Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Russ Moore owner, 7_.0·992-

2526.
Antiques &amp; clean used lurmture,
wtll buy one p1ece or complete
household, Osby Marlin, 740992-6576
Clean late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer.
Smith BUick Pont•ac, 1900 Eastern AIIGnue GallipoliS
J &amp; D Auto Parts Buymg
wrecked nr salvaged veh•cle~

30&lt;1-773·5033
Wanted To Buy Plot. At least
Two Grave S•les In Concord Ce·
metary, At Couch W Va 740·
992·6667

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
110

Tuesday, December 29, 1

-·

••

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

70

Personals

ASK QUESTIONS,
GET ANSWERS
CAll AMERICA'S tl PSY·
CHK:S 1·900- 740-0500 Ext
3596,
WWWthohotpages2 ~­
chie1250291 hfi'Tl $3 99/Min. 18+

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Help~wanted

Company Drivers · Steel Haulers.
Do you want to be o ne ol the
highest patd 5 axle llatbed OTR
dnvers 1n the Industry ? New wage
and benefit package . Must ha'.le
1 year stee l haultng experience,
be 23 years o l age and have
class A COL .. benetus ~n c t ude ,
paid vacallan, paid hOlidays , pa1d
pension plan. paid llle Insurance
and medic al msurance paid for
dnver and \amity We ha11e only
tate model conventiona l equip·
men! If you think you can qu alify
lor the be st call 1·800-652·9057
tor more lnlormation GREAT

AMERICAN LINES, INC.

Areas

I

Shirley

Spears, 304-&amp;7:;-1429.
Co Or1ver NeedeO, clean liCense,
COL class-A. wages negotiable,

start by lSI of year. 740·992·
7363
Company Qr•vers - Steel Haulers
Do You Want fo Be One 01 The
Htghesl Patd S A):le Flarbed OTR
Dr1vers In The Industry' New

Wage ""d Benelrt Package.
Must Have I Year Steel Hauling
E~epenence. Be 23 Years 01 Age,
And Have Class A. COL. Benelrts
Include Pa1d Vacation. Paid Hoi•·
days, Pa1d PenSM&gt;n Plan, Paid I.Jie
Insurance And Med1cal Insurance Pa u:l For Onver And
Fam1ly We Have Ontv late Mod·
el Convenl1onal Equ ipment lf You
Th mlo;, You Can QUal ify For The
Best Call 1· 800·652·9051 For
M ore
Information
GREAT

A"ERICAN liNES, INC.

tnc~~

Dancers $$
Southfork Showbar, PI Pleasant
Wv 304·675·5955 alter 6 pm W·
sat 740-99&lt;:!·6387 arternoons
Full-Time Waitress. Apply In Per·
son Holiday Inn. Gall1pohs
Galha Me•gs Commu011y Acl!on
Is Seekmg A weathenzallon La
borar To Work Wtth Our
Weatherl.lai!On Program On A
Temporary Bas1s W1th The Pos·
Slblllty Of Fullttme In The Future
E11ce1tent Phystcal Condillon Or·
gamzat1onal Sk1lls, And Abll1ty To
Deal With Persons Of Vanous
Soc1o -Econom•c Backgrounds.
Must Be Able To Work Outside
In All Types Of Weather, On Ladders. And At T1mes, In High
Places Drl11ers License. High,
School Graduate Or Equivalent.
And Trammg In ConstructiOn
Trades. Weathenzahon Or A Related F1eld Helpful Send Resume
W1 th ThrQe (3) References To
Ms W1lt , C S Div iSIOn 0 1rector,
GMCAA Bo• 272, ChAShlre,
Ohio 45620 By 12!31/98 GMCAA
Is An Equal Opportun ity Employ-

er
Local Tr ucking Company Seeking
Ouallf[ed Truck Dr1vers Good
Pay And Benefits " Send Resume
To P 0 Box 109 Jackson. Ohio

45640 Or

Call

1·740·286·1463

To Schedule An lnterv1ew
Person to work 5pm to 9am at
adu lt care home , calll40·9925039, as~ lm Kathy
RESPIRATORY THERAPIST fu ll
T1me Posttlon . Health Insurance
And Aettrement Benefits Available Apply In Person Or Se nd
Resume To Bow mans Homecare. 70 Pme Sl, Gallipolis Oh
45631 Ann Lew1e
sOmeone To S1t With Elderly
Lady In Eure~a. 740-256-1291

130

Insurance

Crop Insu rance , Burley -Tomatoes ·Corn, Ken Bass Insurance, 1-800·:291·6319

140

Business
Tralnln~

Gallipolis Career Calhtge
Winter Quarter Starts January
4,1999 CaiiToday• 740-4464367, 1·800·2t4·0452, Reg 190·
05·12748

180 Wanted 1'o Do
Electric rna tntenance se rvice
W1rmg brea~er boxes, l1gh t fixture. hea ting systems, and Remodeling 304-674-0 1:26
Furmlure repa1r, reflnlsh and restoration. also custom orders Ohio
Valley Rehn1sh•ng Shop, Lar ry
Phillips, 740·992-6576
Geo rges Porlable Sawm1ll, don'l
haul your log s to the m1ll 'JUSt call
304-675·1957
Have 2 Opemngs For 24 Hour In
liome Care Of Elderly Or Handt·
capped 740·441-1536
Interior Pa lnllng, Plumblng &amp; Aemode lmg Any And All Odd Jobs,
740·245-5151
Prolesslonal Tree Serv1ce, Stump
Removal' Free Estimates! In·
surance, B1dwe11 Oh10 740·366·
9648 740 367 7010

your
'•

Classified
Advertising

limitation Of disctlminltiOr'l:
ThiS ne•rpaperwll noc

k""""9Y actepl
advertisements fof real estate
which ~ " violation of tho
taw O~M readers ate hereby
ll"lformmO that al dwellngs
acMtttised In this newspapef
are available on an equal

opponuntty ""'"

310 Homes for Sale

800-541·5832

from

origln, "' •"Y Intention "'
make any such prelel'ltiiOI,

Colhputer Users Needed , Work
Own Hrs $:20K ·S75K !lY r 1-800·
348·7 186 Ext 1173 www amp-

Wanted Men To Work Tale
Construction Must Have Buned
And Ar1eal E~per1ence Call 1-

Hoi ___ays

All real estate ildvertiSing In
this new5paper n •ublect to
the Federal Fair Hoosir\1 Act
ot 1968 whiCh makes II illegal
to advertiSe ~any pntl8fet'IC8,
limitatiOn or discrimination
based on race, color. religion,
sex lamiliaJ status or natkJnal

Repa1rman 20 Years Expenence
Applian ces Plumbing Electrical
Heat1ng, Anything! No Charge To
Look 740-256-9212

,

FINANCIAL

210

Business
Opportunity
1NOTICE!

OHIO VALlEY PUBLI SHING CO
recommends thai you do bus•ness w1th people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
mall until you have 1nvest1ga le d
the olfenng
21st CentUiy MLM, No Meetings,
1 No Supplies No Trammg Polen
hal To Turn $130 Into 87K- 1 ISK
Oe~1gned To Work And Work
Oulck Call 740·446·0647 And
Leave PhOne Number

230

Professional
Services

Livingston'&amp; Btlsement Water·
Proofing all basemen t repa1rs
dQn e free est•rna res, ltfe tlme
guarantee 12yrs on JOb experience 304 -895-3887.

TURN EO OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We Winl

3 Bedrooms, Ltving Aoom. Oin.ng
Room K1tchen. Bath. Part1al Fin·
1shed Fa m1ty Aoom. Call740.441-

3253
EXCELLENT CONDITIONII
Red Bnck Ra nch Style House,
Part•ally Fm1shed easement, 2
Car Garage, Ser1ous lnqUines
Ontytl 740-4~6-3385

By owner. 725 Page Street, Mid·
dleport house &amp; 3 lois, must see
to appreciate. will sell house w1th ·
out lots for $89.000 74Q.--992·
2104, 740·992-5696
By Owner Bnck Ranch 3 Bedrooms , 2 Baths, 4 Car Garage, 4
1/:2 Miles Out Sandhill Road, EK·
tra Large lot1740-44H)618

FIXER UPPER
Older 2 Story Country Home 2 ·3
Bedrooms, 1 'Bath, W1th 5 Acres,
Barns, Greenhouse Giving Away
At $30,000 740-266.{)()81
For sale or trade .3 bl' 2 ba newly re modeled , 2 ponds,barn, eel·
lar out bu1ldmg, city water 304·

576-3332
Modern 3 bedroom ho use, 2
balhs, country kitchen, large 2 car
garage, on 112 acre lot. Tuppers
Plams, Oh , sewer already hooked
up, $75,000 740-985·35 t1 or
740·667-3304

740-446-4383

$2:00 ' 31)4-675-4869.

Available 111199 2 Bedrooms, De posit , App lica tiOn , Lease Re ·
qUired, No Pets , No Smokmg,
740-441-1 489 After 6
Clean 2 bedroom house m Pomeroy, $350 per month plus depOSit no pets, land contract pos·
s1ble alter a year, 740-698-7244.

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14x70 two bedroom tratler, total
elec tr ic , $250 month , $150 de·
pos1t, no pets, 740·742-2714

2 bedroom In Hannan Trace
School DIS! 740·256-t666

$26 000 00 (304)882-3604

2 bedroom tra1l4ilr. furnished , 1n
Middleport, 740-378-6353 alter

$1 000 00 G1ft Certificate Or Lot
Rent Pa1d for e Month s Wh en
You Buy Any Home From Us Between 12/ 12198 and 12/3 1/98 1-

800·251 ·5070
$500 Down on any \4 x70 m
stock, 1im1ted number tree delivery Call1·600·691-6777

B ea utiful Al 11er VIew 198 River
Street, Kanagua Depos•t. Referen-ces, No Pels, 740·441·0181
FosterTr811er Park
Tw o bedroom mobile home m
Middleport , no pets. 740-99:2-

5039
Two Bedroom Mobile Home For
Rent 740-367-0632

$999 Down on any 98 mod el
Ooubiewlde m stock Free Dellv·
ery Call 1·800·69 1-6777,

440

1973 Hillcrest two bedroom mobile home, 740-992·5039.

1 and 2 bedroom apar1ments, turnlshed and unfurmshed. security
deposit requ1red no pets, 740·
992-2:21 6

1979 Fairmont 14Ft X 60Ft Can
Be Seen At K&amp;K Pt Ple a-sa nt
Call740·446·4310
1980 Fairmont 14M70 3 Bed·
rooms, 1 t /2 Baths, All Electnc,
Very Solid, Well Kept, Many Updates , Needs Moved 740-66:2-

3446
1981 Shulht, 14•70 10•10 fin ·
tshed room new carpet &amp; linoleum sto11e, refrigerator, di shwasher, 1 01130 awmng underpin·
nmg. c/a. fireplace. 3 bedroom,
one and one half baths. S14,500.
740-742·3076
1992 Noms, 16Ft X 70FT. V1nyl
W•th Sh1ngles, 2 Bdrms . 2 Baths,
All Electric App liances. Porches.
Carport 740·256·6336
Oakwood Homes, Barboursville,
$500 Down Low Rate s, 304·
736·3409

wv.

Double W1de New $999-0own
$:237 per mo Free dell11ery &amp; set·
up t -8Q0-691 -6777
For Sale or Ren t 1:2x65 Tra1Jer.
Pnce on Inspection. Hud Accept

ed (304)675·4088
Good selectiOn of used homes
w1th :2 or 3 bedrooms Start1ng at
$3995 Ou1ck del111ery Call 740385-9621
New 14•70 $500-Down $199-per
mo Free a1r, sk1rt 1·800·691·
6777
New 1 6x80 $500-0own $245-per
mo Fre e a.r, Ski rt 1· 600·69t ·
6777
New 1999 14)(70 three bedroom
•ncludes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes washer &amp; dryer s~1rting,
deluxe steps and set up Only
$200 74 per mont h w1 th $1150
down Caii1·800-6:}7·3238
New BanK Repo 2 Single W1des. 1
Double W1de , 304· 736· 7295
PRIVATE SETTING
3 Bedro oms 2 Baths 800 383
6862
We Fmance Land &amp; Home With
As little As $500 Down t ·606926-:1426
3 Bedrooms 2 Baths, W1lh A/C
Skirt $229/Mo I·S00-363-6a62

340

Business and
Buildings

3 bedroom country ~liChen llll·
mgffamlly 2 balhs , detached ga·
rage on 1 t/:2 acres country set·
ltng Chester area $46 000, 74,9·
985-35 t 1

Commerc•a i· Ofhce or Reta1l. 87
Mill St Mid dlepo rt t ,450 Sq Fl.
$400 mo Corner Butldmg 740·
992-6250 Acqu•stllons (ne•t
door)

Circle ~otel lowest Rates In
Town, Newly Remode led, HBO.
Cinema•. Showtime &amp; D1sney
Weekly Aates, Or Monthly Rates,
Cons tru ction Wor~er s Welcome

Apgrtments
for Rent

1 Bed room . Eco no m1 ca l Gas
Heat. WfD Hook-Up, Near Cinema
$279/Mo., Plus Utilllles, Deposit &amp;
Lease Required_.. 740-446·2957
1 Bedroom, In cluding UtiiiUes.
$350/Mo., 2 Bedrooms, Including
Ut1ht1es, $450/Mo , Oepos11 Re·
qulred, 740-446·2~77
t br 'all util pd except alec
$250 a mon + dep 304 - 675·
137t or 304-675-3230
:2bdrm apts , total electric, appliances lurnished, taundry room
facilities. close to school m town
Appltcat1ons availabl e al VIllage
Green Apts #49 or ca ll 740·992·

3711 EOH
BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ES TATE S, 52 Westwood Dri11e
$279 to $358 Walk to shOp
&amp; mo..,•es Call '740· 446 ·2568
Equal Housmg Opportunity
~ro m

Furmshed 4 Rooms &amp; Bath. COm·
pletely Redecorated, Clean, New
Carpet, No Pets Or Smoking, Reference &amp; DeposJ! ReqUired, Also,
Furmshed 2 RoOms . &amp; Ba th . tip·
sta1rs, 740-446'-1519
Grac1ous lwmg 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Vtllage Manor and
R11Jers1de A.partments m M•ddl e·
port From $249·$373 Call 740992·5064 Equal Housing Opportunn•es
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,
740-446-0390
N1ce 2 bedroom apartment In Pomeroy, all utilities pa1d , no pets,
740-992-5856
North 3rd Middleport, 2 br unlur
apt dep &amp; ref 304-882·2566
Now Tak1ng Appi1Ca\10ns- 35
.West :2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments , tncludes Water
S.ewage, Trash , $295/Mo, 740·
441·16 16 , 740-446 ·0957 740
446 65t5
One bedroom apartment for rent
qu1et
dep
&amp; ref re qUired

Household
Goods

Appliances .
Aecondttloned
Washers, Dryers. Ranges, Aefngrators 90 Day Guarantee!
Fre nch City Maytag, 7 40-446-

7795

capped

EOH 304 675-6679

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers. dryers. re tngera tors.
ranges . Skaggs Appliances 76
Vine Street, Call740 -446 -7 398,

1-886·818·0128.
Living Room Sulle 2 Piece, Never
Used $275, Call 740-886-6373
ProctroviUe, Ohio
New Bol( Springs &amp; Mattress, Not
Used, 10 Year Warranty Still In
Plastic, $19500 ProctorvJIIe, 740·

886-6373

530

Antiques

Buy or se ll Riverin e An tiques,
1124 E Main Street, on At 124,
Pomeroy Hours M T W 1 O·OO
am. to 6.00 p m., Sunday 1:00 to
6 00 p m 740·992-2526, Russ
Moore owner

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
"WARMUP!"
Furnace, Heat Pumps, &amp; A1r ConditiOning Free Estimates! II You
Don't Call Us . We Both lose!

740·446·6306, 1-800·291-0098.
1994 Pace Shadow enclosed
!ratter, delu•e model 7000 GVW
wllh wm ch, used on ly o n wee·
kends retailed new for $8 . 100
sell for $4,995, call 740·949·:2045
1998 Harley Davidson Barbie Doll
$150 , &amp; Mise Holiday Barb1es ,
74Q-256·1529
CtJurch pews for sale, 12 twelve
toot, 4 len foot, $200 each. 740·
949·2217
COMMERCIAL EQUIPMENT; 7
Door Wa lk1n Coo ler, Aeac hln
Cooler, Reach In Freeze r, 8 Ft
Prep Table. 6 ft. Dell Case, P•zza
Oven . S helving , Mise P ho ne

740·698·2613
El ectric Scooters, Wheelchairs.
New And Used . Sta1rway Elevators. Wheelchair And Scooter
lilts, Bowman 's Homeca'r_e , 740·

446·7283.
E~clse

Mechtnery Packard , l1ke
ne w $175 00, Preacher Cure;
$ t 70 00 Duo-S Quart by Nautilus,
$300 00 (740) 367-0:279
Fireplace 1nser t by Kmdle Wood
with glass door, bl ower and ash

pan,'l500 OBO. 740·843-5350
F1rewood Seasoned. Split, Oellv·
ered l Jared, 740-446-6566, Or
Chad 740·446·1271
FIREWOOD· Cu t, Spilt, Stacked
And Delivered $40 00 740·446·
'2647 •

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired , New &amp; RebUilt In Sloe~
Call Ron Evans , t-600·537·9528
Johnson s Used FurMure Beds·
new and used, mallre sses, K•tc hen appliances. Dinettes Washers Dryers Freeze rs . etcl (740)

Reese hitch, $40 OBO 740-8435350
Stock ·car·D•rt LM Stock Car,
1993 Rocket ChaSSIS, Tra ck
Champion In 1997, some e•tras.
W/0 engme and lransmtsston,
$3.400 steel block T&amp;H 436
Chevy. w/Brod1x heads all $6,500,
engine only $6,000 r.all 740-949·
2045
Waterline Spec1al 3/4 200 PSI
$21 95 Per 100 1· :200 PS I
$37 oo' Per 100, All Brass Compression Filling s In Sto~k

RON

AKC bo~ee r p uppies, 4 females
lelt ,1all ·~docked,
declawed,
wor me d &amp; had 1st sho ts $250
each 304·773-5742
AKC Golden Retriever Pups, Par·
ents A11a1lable, ~40-379-2639,

740·867·52 12.

Bunk Beds New Ne11er Used Mat·
tress. 2 Beds, 2 In ner Sprmg
Mattre sses Included, $295, Proc·
!orville, 740-686-6373

Primes tar $49 ms tallalmn One
month free, lree holiday g1fl JUSt 101'
call•ng, 800·263-2640.

Twin Al116'1\ iower now accepting
applica tions tor tbr HUO subsidIzed apf. for elderly and handl·

1993 Mercury Sable GS 3.8 V-6,
Very NICS, New 70,000 Mile Fire- ~
stone Tires 740.446-1759

A Groom Sttop -Pel Groommg .
Featunng Hydro Balh Do n
Sheels 373 Georges Creek Rd .

Pomeroy &amp; Middleport· n1ce tw o
&amp; three bedrooms. eq u ipped
kitchens, relerences and deposit
required, 740 965·4373 alter 6pm

Ta ra Townhouse Apartments.
Very Spacious 2 Bedrooms . 2
FIOOfS, CA. t 1!2 Bath, Fully Carpeted PatiO No Pets, Lease Plus
Secumy Dep)os1t ReqUired, 740·
446---348 t

,

EVAN S ENTERPRISES

Jackso.n OhiO, t-800·537·9528

AKC Registered Tr i-Colored
Cocker Span1el, $100, Puppy
M ixed. l ooks Just like Cocke r
Spamel, $25,740-446-328 1
AKC Sheltle pups (mmiature col·
lies), 1wo males, 4 months o ld,
$:200 each, torto1se shell Pers1an,
lull blooded, no papers, $100, can
be CFA registered, will charge
$200, 740·992·5073
Australia n Shepherd pups, 2
black males, $60 , NSDR, current
health record, 740-949·2128 or
740·643·5 t 76
Now Open Sundays 1· 4 Man- Sat
11·6 Fish Tank &amp; Pet S hOp,
2413 Jackson Ave f?olnt Pleasant, 304·675-2063
Ch inese Pugs, 6 Wee~s. Aeg•stered P edlgr~es $350 Females,
$400 Male Make Great Christmas G1ftsr Evenings 740 -441·
117e, Days: 740-446-3977, Ask
For Clara.
Ja ck Russell terrier pupp ies, o ne
male, one female, 5250 each, deposit will hold Jor Christmas, 740·
742·2050.

.
Aeg1stered blue

'
tick coon

hound,
female 4 mon old 304·675-1275
Reg1stered poms, Chihuahuas,
pood les.. schnauzers. and mini
pinschers 304-675·5460

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
610 Farm Equipment
(3) Pequea kicker feeder wagons,
hold 8 round bales $1,700. each
New Holland 80 lt. barn elevator
tor square bales· can be short·

ene&lt;l $t ,500 304·937·201 8

9.700 00

I ~ _· \

,.

720 Trucks for Sate

Tt4t~~!

~

.I've:

,..
DON'\ YOO Tf\\t-11&lt;. YOU'VE

1960 one !on Ford truck, 6 cyli nder moto r, 4 speed tral'lsmisslon,
12' flatbed, good conditiOn ; 1986
one to n D odge tr uck 740-367·

e£,E.N ~\\NG""' 1'-WfUL

&amp;£N LOI'-.O\ t-~G uP Tf\\ ~

...

WC£1&lt;. \N C1'{;£ ti\'C NE.W

! YE.r-..~~ J&lt;:E.SOW\\0!-\

wr Lr-..\E.LY, eruruYr

7533

.-:-----1

~ IYID 00 00 !'-. 0\t.\ 1

1982 FtO O, $ 11 00 , many new
parts, 740-742-8282

1989 Chev 112 Ton Truck, With
Topper, Run s Good , Asking ·
$3.800, Good Cond1lkml 740·441 ·

l
~

0167,

,--....,._1.._

"

84 Ford F t 50. (740) 448·9253

'

•

91 Che11y S· 10 5 sp w/topper
84,00'0 miles in good co nd .

$3,800 00 304-675·5143
:-93-'-C::-h-.-,-y-:S--1-o-.-2-'--w-h.-:d-r.''
truck,2 8, V-6, 5 sp, ale, 78,000:

Pass

Pass
3 NT
t

730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs

" 1'1"RVIN "'-"'RDEN!&gt; IS

tiY F"\IORrrE PRa'EirrY:
'I'OU LE ....VE THE itPOI'\.

I

1986 Blazer 4 WD No Ru st, Runs '
Good $3",500 Or 0~0; 1982 ' Fof.l! ~
Van 351, Runs Gooi:t: 1982 Toyo- · 1
Ia Pick-Up O~esel , 740-379-2313 ~, •

'

the fonne r world ch.unpion s11ting

Wesl casheu 1he diamond king_ then
played another diamond. Declarer
immediately claime&lt;l II mcks
Can East help Wesl'? Wdl. he
tned. by dtscardmg the he&lt;lrt ntne on
the thtrd round of clubs. He was hop·

.

PEANUTS
''OTI-lER
GRANDMA''?

97 Yamaha Wolver ine ATV 4wt1ee ler, 4x4 350 c c e• cond

VE5TERDA'I' I WROTE
TO ONE GRANDMA ..
iODAV I'M WRITING TO
M'l' OT~ER GRANDMA..

!-lOW CAN
'(OU TELL
Wl-llC" 15
Wl-liCil?

IT DOESN'T MATTER .. ALL.
6RANDMA5 LOOK ALIKE
FROM A DISTANCE ..

/

'

Your
rketpfa

13 800 00 ~04-576-9907

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

UnconditiOnal li fetime guarantee.
local relerences furnished . EStablished 1975 Cpll 24 Hrs (740)
446 -0870, 1· 800-:287·0576 Rogers Waterproofing
App llapce Parts And Service· All
Name Brands 011er 25 Years E•penence All Work Guaranteed,
French C1ty Maytag 740-44g 7795.

We Ha11e from 25 To 30 Used
Trac tor s In Stock Financing As
Low As 6 5% F1• ed Rate On
Qua lifying Tr acto rs W1th John
Deere Cred 11 Appro11al Carmichael's Farm &amp; lawn, Midway
Between Gallipolis And Ato
Grande On Ja ckson Ptke 740446·24t2 br 1·800-594·t1 1t

Professional 20yrs e•perle nce
with all masonery brick , block &amp;
stone Also room addttlons, ga·
rages, etc Free estimates . 304 773-9550

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wiring,
new ser11ice or rBpalrs Master LIce nsed electrician Ridenour
Electrical WV000306 , 304 -675-

1786

47 War god

_..._...__._....._....__. ' 53 e=treuer

CELEBRITY CIPHER

S .

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EPYHX,
ALXOX

A p

DS HR

T X A

SKW

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TPW-TVEXK

AP

OXYIPKYVDVGVAN

-.

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Celebnty C•pher cryptograms are created l rom quolflhons by lamous people past And prCKent
Each Iefier ~n the c1pher alands !or iinolher Today .s due r equ&lt;tl.s P

v

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by Luis Campos

RKXZ

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--r+-t-+--t-+--1
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to a
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WSOGXKX
PREVIOUS SOLUTION 'My son was calling me 'mommy '" -

Pan l her

linebacker Kevtn Greene , when asked why he cut hts tong ha•r short

'::~:~:~' S©~c(llA-ltt.~s· tAMI
- - - - - - 1 4 1 1 o 4 loy C\AY I. POlLAN - ' - - - - WOlD

Recmang'e leHen of
O four
Krambt.d words

I I I 1I I
low to form

the
b.

four words

SUQAYE
2

I

HALET

1I

I

••
•
••
I

I
I
I .

I

!

••
•

•I

e

•••

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THE SE SQUARES

•

l•

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER

•

•

SCRAM-LOS ANSWERS
Imbibe - Jomt- Mot1f- Rashly· BITE'S HIM
At electton time, my fnend put a bumP,er sttcker on
his car that read "A taxpayer is one who· always leeds
the hand lhat BITE'S HIM "

ITUESDAY

Budget Pri ce d Tran smlsslon1;:
an d Engmes. All Types, AccesS•
•To Over 10.000 Tra nsmis sion s,
740·245-5677.

840

ve•"'
43Aialmworm
45 NHiof
pheasants
46 tt•• worn on
the walat

o,;u tt · rre f ·

)

94 Honda dir t bike, pro aclloo
sus pensi on $2,000 080 304·.
675-286'l

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

,.

divider•
42 TWo-milled

erence signal for spaues. Bu1 al the
table. 1t is impossible not 10 f.11l for a
deceplive play ltke declarer's.

Good, $1,250 080, 740·441 0584.

760

41 Court

l

mg this would he i'eatl us a

1986 GMC Safari Mini Van , Automatic, V-6, Runs Good, lookS

740·379-2451.

Poland. collec1ed the gold medals in
the Open Pa1rs However. their v tclory was somewhal marred by 1he
in~.:orrect movement used. In theory.
each oflhe 72 pairs who qualtfied for
th e tinal was to play two ueals
against each ot Ihe other 7 1. How ev~
er, thi s didn't happen. Forty pair&lt;
were affected. the most nnportanr
being Larry Cohen. from Boca
Ralon, Fla.. and Davtd Berkowttz,
from Old Tappan. N.J . They linished
second. but didn 't pluy againsl fi ve
pa1rs. They were gtven an average of
1heir score s on the olh.er 132 deals.
I couldn' t find an tnte re~t m g deal
featunng .the wrnners. so her~ 1s an
excellenl deceptive play by Simon de
WtJS from the Open Patrs
With an unappealing chotec of
leads. Wesl went wilh lhe old standby. fou nh highest from hts longesl
and strongesl. the diamond lwo. And
when East pul tn the pck. Soulh won
not wilh lhe queen bul with the ace'
Declarer Jed a club to dummy\
queen, returned 10 hand wnh a hearl.
'Jed another club to lhe king. and
pl&lt;~yed a lhi rd club. esiabltshtng the
suit

.. I'Nt\ WHE.N 1: SAY

·'

1993 Chevy 4 WD Z500 111,000

..

threal

30 FavorltH
31 Quiz
37 Edgar
Allan 38 Tea type

2

Completely fooled hy Irick one.

mlles.new 11res, very good cond .
$4,500 304-675-3954 911enlng s

6323

Three year old Apptiloosa mare,
740-367-7533

~ -~

IT'$ GOMFY

THE BORN LOSER

1978 hat! ton 4 wheel drive plcl( ...
up, $1,000, 74D-742r2421

675- 1858 Edison Mayes

Livestock

PENIAL 1 ~

\.::.!"

C&amp;C General Home Mamtene nce- Pamtlng, viny l sidi ng,
carpen1ry, doors, windows, baths,
mobile home repa1r and more For
lree estimate can Chat, 740-992·

630

~I'T~

""",I

92 Grand AM, 2 door, auto. very .clean many new parts; 1~e . ooo
m11es $2,99900740-441·1826.

New farmers tobacco ware house
1s rece1111ng tob-"-:co everyday,
1st sale J8n t t , 1999 In Ripley
0

~;~g· a;:'~o~ ~~~~~e J~:~:~; ~6!:

I NT

26 Step-(movel)
27 O.Creaoe
29 End of a

KWHlcten and Jacek Pszczola. from

B~ING IN

$3,300 00 304-675·5143

24,000 00

Keefers Serv1ce Center
ST AT. 87 PT Pleasant &amp; Alp·
ley AD 304·895·3674.

,'

wt4AT'S. IN,DN6

88 Honda Accord XL 5 sp
124,000 m1les m good cond

Motorcycles

25 Sho&lt;t swims

East
Pass
All pass

North

.

'.

24 Shows acorn

The winners
were 'unknown'

t'

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

1 994 Uncofn Town Car, ElCecu tlve, Low M1les, Burgundy 740
446-6691

740

'

By Phillip Alder
Perhaps il is only in bridge 1hat a
relatively unknown pmr can win a
world title. And 1hat happened m
Lille iasl Septemhe r. Mtchal

DECEMBER 29

I

New 5010, 6010, 7010 Series
Tracto rs In Stock , 7 75% Fl•ed
New gas tanks &amp; body parts 0 &amp;.
Rate John Deere Credit Financing
A Auto, Ripley, wv 30 4·37t· • ~
Ava11able New 4000 Series Com·
3933 or 1·600·273·9329.
pacts In Stock New John Deere
McCos And Rou nd Balers 0% - 790
Campers &amp;
12 Mos, 175%-24 Mos 35%Motor Homes
36 Mas , 4 5% -48 Mos 5 5% ·60
Mos Carm tchael's Far m &amp; Lawn , . 1963 Motor Home, Good Condi·
M•dway Between Gallipol is And
lion, 2 gas! tanks, an &amp; Furnace
R1o Grande On Ja ckson Pike .
740·367·7070 or 740.367·7093
740·446·2 41 2 O r 1·800·594r
11 11.
1985 Coachman 5th Wheel
Camper, 3t Ft Co ng Full Balh,
Ford new Holland December spe·
740.245-0572.
c1a ls, model 5030 re ntal tractor
62 PTO HP, 4 wd, 2 plJmp hyd,
SERVICES
8•8 shutll e tr ans, 1:29 hr s
24,000 00
~:---~---,----,-' ·:
5030 same specs, 30:3' hrs
Home
22 . 500. 00 4630 55 pta hp, 2wd, ,810
same specs, 57 hrs $17,900 00
lmproveme11IS
• r'
4630, 4wd. 16•4 dual power tran.
------;;.;==~,;___,,
256 rakes tn erate 3,050 00
451 7" mowers 3,25000
472 r hayb•nc 8,395 oo
634 A balers 650 If t 0,500 00
644 A balers 100011 string 11e
aula wrap, wide pickup 13,900 00
654 A baler 150011 same specs
15,900.00
565 square ba le r wagon hitch

(',.,,

----------~·'

Mob1le home s1te ava•lable bet·
wee n Athans and Pomeroy, call
740.365·4367.

510

article
21 Llglltboela
22 SChedUle
23 Japan
·

40 Conduct•

12-29

460 Space for Rent

Adorable black &amp; white spoiled
puppies. ready for c hnstmas,
mot her Is Dalmatlon $65 00·
$95 00 304-675-4653

West

Openmg lead.

1993G,.ndAM,GTLoadl 1988
Chevy Capnce, runs great!
$900 00 1987 Volkswagon Fox,
Runs GOOd $1,500.00 CaK: (740)
682·1324

1995 Ford Escort LX 1 9 Molor.
Auto Trans With 0 D , Spor t
Model With Spoiler, Great Condition 1994 Harley Da11lson Wide
Glide, 740-446-7993 E~~enlngs

MERCHANDISE

10 Allowance for

·•

560

740.446·0231

South

THIS DOORMAT
15 FER

1992 lumina Z34. low mileage,

new tires, 740-367-7533.

740.441·5698, 740.441 5167

446·4039 (740)446 1004

1005

BARNEY

·'LIKE H

----"---:--:--- &gt;

Pets for Sate

Belgium
19Gefm8n

waste
11 Uother of
Apollo
12 River in

F.DLKS YOU

Block, bnck. sewer pipeS, w1nd·
ows, hntels, elc Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740-2455121

S300 00 304·675-1550

Rio Grande Apartment Close To
College One Bdrm , All Utlllt•es
Paid $:290 00 Month 740 441-

Building
Supplies

(from)

7 Striped animal
a Collection of
. anecdote•
9 Alcoholic
beverage

•AKJ
tAQ9 84

304-675·2722

Grubb's Pla no· tun1ng &amp; repa1rs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
plano Dr 74Q-44&amp;4525

6 Originate

•A8765
• 9 85 4
• J 7
.. 9 8

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North

1991 Cadtll~c Sev1lle 4 door sa:
dan , loaded w1tti accessories ,
great gas mileage. car phone.

540 Mlaceilaneoua
Merchandise

East

• 65 4

good' $2,800 740-379-2467

550

J]et'feclly
3 llocklloh
4 Elhloptan title
5 The sell

.. J 9

1988 Bonneville LE, maroon, 4dr.' ·
new liteS &amp; brakes, good cond ,.
$3,200 304-675-5792 after 5pm
F

Furnished
Rooms

2 $erved

South

1989 Cullass Supreme , runs

GOOD

6pm

call

740-992·2240.

IL- "1

Ntce 2 or 3 ~droom house 1n Pomeroy, 1'10 pets, 740-992·5858
At 7 near Cheshire, 1 large bed·
room, wid hook-up, $3251$300
secur1ty deposit, 740,992·5226.

Ntssan 300ZX. run&amp; good.

1986 Pontiac Pans•enne , high
miles, 4 door, new engine, looks
and runs great. At. $1250, 7•0949-2045

450
2 br tteats w1th gas, stove &amp; re·
lr1g prov•ded $250 a mon ,+
dep , no pets 304-862-2016

, ·as

7102,

Two· three room apt. lull balh In
eact1304-675·1 090.

1 Small monkey

" Q 6 2

K Q 10
10 7 3
K 10 6 2
A J 2

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'97 Chevy Cavalier, two dw, arr,. .
. CD. 5 speed , $9500 , 740· 992·

Apartments
for Rent

.. 4 3 2

West

111 0 Autos for Sale

"

440

DOWN

12-29-98

• 5 3

,.

0

D1d Vou Get Land For Chnstmas?
Irs Not Too Late I Have Hunting
Ground Or Home Sites In Ross ,
Jackson. P1ke. Sc1oto. A thens,
Meigs And Galha Count1es. In House Fmanctng Available And
D•scounts GIVen On Cash Purchases Call Now For Maps And
Info In The Areas You Des•re•

We Buy land· 30 ·500 Acres,
We Pay
1-800 -2 13-8365 ,

oo-

TRANSPORTATION

7~1-1&lt;192

Real Estate
Wanted

2. Square Bales. St

11·19

•KQ107 3

BRUNER lAND

360

No

tor sale- one mile north on

l "1\1'6" '51-+A1'4N(l
?f"'~ll£'fr; l.eFiovey,s.

Appro•lmately 17 Acres In
Green./ C1ty SChOOl 01stnct Beau·
tJful Home Site 740-446-3545.

Two
bedroom
house
on
80fh:162ft lot Corner of Pomeroy
&amp; Ra1l Road S treet Mason, Wv

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Rt

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes, air
co nditiOned , $260-$300, ~ewer,
water and tras h tncluded , 740·
992-2167

310 Homes for Sale

REAL ESTATE

Hay

Restored VIc torian home s1tuated
on 12 acres, VIllage Middleport,
secluded and pn11ate, appomtment. call 740-992-5696

Commerc1al BU1Id1ng 40)(100 With
Basement Large Parkmg Area .
Also One Bedroom Apartment On
State Route 33 In New Ha11en
W VA For Sale Rent. Trade Or
Land Contract. Phone 740 698
26t3

1·868·582 3345

Downtown, Ftrs.t Floor Office
Space. Second A11enue' Professional Or Aetall 740-446 0139 Or

COUNTRY LOTS
5 To 20 Acre Tracts, Meadows,
Pond, Barns, Woods Off SA 1_.1 ,
&amp; SA 233 Near Gat11a Large
Hunting Tracts Touchmg Wayne
National Forest. Rough 25 Acre
Tract· 519.000 5 Acre Aesldenllal $11,500 Land Contracl Avail·
able W1th As Little As 5'Y• Down
With Approved Credi t 1-600213-8365

·:I

5501 round bales, S8 or S tO delivered, 740-843-5350

I

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ASTRO-GRAPH
Wednesday. December 30. 1998
L1te could beco me more mean·
ingful for you m fhe year ahead
bel:ause you'll he l''II~Wmly tnun·
, duted w 1th lresh tntctcsts. You may
~ ti nd )Ourself m ore 1111 ntully curi ous
and expenmentul th,m tn the past,
wWhiCh Will undOUbtedly open Up new
VIStas

,

CAPR ICORN

(Oec 22-Jon 19)

Outstde o f purely com mel"\:u.ll arenas,
· your judgment might leave liule to be
•Jemed today. H owever, you' ll be tn
your elemen t and at your best form
in siiUatlons that are of fin&lt;m~.;tal
•• unportance. Cupncom.t~at yourse l f
to a bm hdny g ift Send the requtred
rerund form and for your AstroGraph predictions for the yf!!ar ahead
by mailing $2 and self-addressed
'tamped en11e l ope to Astro-Gr01ph ..
do this newspaper PO. Box 1758.
Murray H1ll St~t aon, New York, NY
, 101 56 Be .&lt;i ure lo state yuur ZOOiac
s1gn

AQUARIUSUan 20-Fcb

19)We

can't plea&lt;oe everyone at all times, but
}l u 1e li~dy ll&gt; !'.U•te a high hulling

owerage tUi..lay. ~one ny m the oi ntment could be wuh someone no one

today Yuu ' ll also be clever at ma.li.tenni\ndtng things for yo ur fnends

cnn stand

greatest successes are likelj to come
I rom partnership arrungements today.
If you \;hoose. you can still uchteve
success wnrkmg mdepenJcntly from
oth ers, but to a lesser degrc:e

PISCES 1Feb 20-March 20 ) Your
luck ~:auld spring l rom the most
un likt!ly sou rces today. Lea\oe t he
dour 111 opportuni ty open ut all tunes
o;.o thnl someone who w,1nts to do you
ala vor will he g1ven the lhance.
ARIES

iMan:h 21-Apn l

19)

In

your 1n~ol11cments wtlh friend!~
todu)'. ket!p every th ing on u purely
socw l bao.;l s The be~l n::sulh w 1ll he
al:hteved when you ~tt ny out ol their
businc:o.;s ami vice ver~a.
r,\URUS iApnl ~Q-May 20) II
Joeo.;n ' t see m to mail er whether or not
)'OU receive woperauun from your
assocHnes today. You cmtld ~rather
mgemous in c ~rcum\'~n un g b:uners
that hmder you from your obJeC II'.'C'&gt;

GEM INI (May 21 -June 20) In
o rder hw you(() ht: dl eo.:tl~'e and wn~
stru"·tiVI!' tnday, you must revtse yuur
nn gi rml g.une pl.m l o accommodate
Out tuating cond 111ons. Try to be
fle111hle.
CANCER (June 2 1-July 2:2 l Wtth
· , exceptional cffec!lllcncss. you should
be ab le to manage all that IS neces~nry 10 facilitate your «Jwn neet.ls

LEO (July 23-A ug. 22) Your

VIRGO !Aug

23-Sept. 22)Tasks

that are rnore phystcal than mental
w1!1 put your mgenutl)' to work
today II ts very likely that you'll
dev1se some kmd of l abor sa11 tng
tec hn14ues.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Ckt 2.1) [\e n 1f
you have to compete ugumsl some one w ho you'd ruther b~at than say
the Pre:\Jdent, don't tum what should
be a run pastime mto a se n ou11 event.
You'll play hc!ttcr

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-N&lt;w. 22) Persons you ' re respom•ble fnr shou ld
take precedence over all of your other 1r1volvements today. Providing fur
their needs and concerns wtll be num·
ber I on your list of priorities

SAG ITTARIUS (No• 2J-Dec
21) Culler.:uve object1ves can be
.tch1e11ed to every11ne's s.1ll:\ fact10n
today, e~JXCially mvnlvemc.:nt s with
fncnJ~ Share lime with those you

cull yuur palo;.

'

Football Mtcron PC Bowl ..

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Tunt1ey, December 29, 1111

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Daily Sentinel

eat er
High: 20s; Low:Teens

7~992-6614

-

;

On the spot
financing 1bp ·
Dollar for all
trade-ins

VB, Polo Green, leather 14430
MSRP $44,795

NOWOIILY

1999 GMC YUKON
4 Dr, 4x4, SLT, leather, auto, air,
CD &amp; cass, #4370 MSRP $36,720

1999 CHEVY SILVERADO 1999 CHEVY CAVALIER

1998 CHEVY 5·1 0 ·
BenCh seat, 5 sp, cloth, Summit white,

ROWDNLY$9

LS PK~, auto, va, air, cd, ext cab,
tilt, crutse, PW, PL, two tone 14395
MSRP

Maroon, 4 WD, V6, 5 sp, PS, PB, air,
AM/FM, cass, SLS Pkg WAS $14,999

1999 GMC ALL NEW
SIERRA
4X4, 5 .... tilt, CI'IIN, cass, air, PL,

~.~

CHEVROLET 5· 10 BLAZER 1998 OlDSMOliLE BRAYADA
4 Dr, 4 WD, V6, auto, air, AMJFM
cass, tilt, cruise, WAs $16,900

Meigs County's

4 door, AWD, V6, auto, elr, AMJFM
c:assatte, leather lnt, '

n•

J 998 GMC JIMMY
2 Dr, 4 WD, V6, air, auto, AM/FM
cass, WAS $24,900

1998 CHEVROLET Y2 TON

-4 WD, Ext cab, Third door option, va,
auto, air, tilt, cruise, AM/FM CD player,
only 3,200 miles. WAS ~i!t&gt;,!lllll

Hometown Newspaper

Missiles fired over southern 'no-fly' zone in Iraq

By DEB RIECHMANN
Ancci.,...'"'-WIIIei ·
. WASHINGfON (AP)- U.S. lighter ·jels fired missiles
and laser-guided bombs on a defense site in southern Iraq
early loclay after it fired six 1o eight missiles at a British airaaft, government officials said.
The U.S. and British planes returned to their bases safely, PenlagOO officials said.
. At the White House, a senior administration official said
'that Iraq fined the surface-to-air missiles at the British aircraft. U.S. airaaft responded by firing several missiles and
laser-guided munitions at the Iraqi air defense station.
Presidenl Oinlon was 1o be briefed by his National Securily Council advisers loclay before flying to a South Caroliresort to begin a holiday vacation.
. "Our allied airaaft will conti.nue 1o enforoe the no-fly
:wnes vigorously," said David Leavy, a While House
spokesman. "As the pn:sidenl has said, they· are a key element of our containment policy."
Leavy said loclay's incident "underscores the continued
threat that Saddam poses 1o the region. We will take the neeessary pru:autions to carry out our mission and to protect
our air crews."
A British bomber first reported the activity at about 9:30
a.m. local lime (I :30 a.m. EST) near Tali!, Iraq.

.....

•owORLY

1995 GMC SONOMA EXT CAB

2 Dr, auto, air, cassl4392
MSRP $14 816
'

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Pomeroy

CHEVROLEt

( 9Q CADILLAC DEVILLE

Cloudy

Purdue outlasts
Kaosas State In
Alamo Bowl

High: 20s; Low:20s

DON TATE MOTORS INC. ·
.308 East Main St

9-8 .
Saturday 9-4
1-5

TOI'IIOIIOW!

ports

r

Dec:AI•"* 30, ~-

Meigs boys fall to Gallia Academy, Page 5
Attention starved mothers, Page 7
Beat of the Bend, Page 8

Tod-r: Blustery

Y.E.4 R END SA W'.ES EVENT

VVednesday

"They visually detecltd
.
. firm response lo the latest . among the main targetS of a four-day U,S.-British missile
firing.· They took evasive '
/
Iraqi provocation is ample assault ieoslhantwoweeksago.
action 1o avoid the missiles,"
.{
evidence of our commitment"
said Maj. Joe U!Marca. a
to patrol the oo-Hy zoo&lt;,.
TURKEY
spokesman for the U.S. Cell·
...~ ,.
No activity was reported in .
, _ _,..,-~~~,
tral Command, responsible
the northern no-Hy zone.
for American forces in the
·.: Senior Ainnan Adam Slump.
SYRIA
Petsian Gulf, at MacDill Air
a spokesman for Operation
Force Base in Tampa, Aa. "I
Northern Watch said: "We've
OOI!'t know for sure what they
tX:en carrying out flights as
IRAQ
(the Iraqis) were firing at, but
usualloclay. Everyone anived
common sense would tell you
safely.. There were no incithat they were tiring at the
dents repoited."
(British) aircraft."
On Monday, U.S.
l'wo U.S. F-16 bomber.;
warplanes exchanged missile
patrolling the area responded
fire .with Iraqi air defenses
and fired two ·lmli-radar mis.
·when the planes were fired .
siles and ·a number of preci- tor Huguet checks a HARM (Hig Speed Anti- upon by Iraqi surface-to-air
SAUDI ARABIA
sian-guided bombs onto the Radiation Missile) on an Ftll CJ Fighting Fal- missiles. In Baghdad, the Iraqi
site at '10:15 a."!. (2:15 a.m. con before take-off from lnclrllk Air Force Base miliW)' said Monday's u:s.
EST). a Pentagon spokesman In Turkey.
attack killed four Iraqi ¥Jidiers
area
. said.
.
anq injured seven others.
The aircraft safely departed the area about a half hour
President Ointon described the earlier incident as a
200 miles
200 km
later.
ctemonstration of American resolve to keep a lid on Iraqi
A spokesman for the British Defense Minis~fX said: " The leader Sad&lt;lam Hussein's military foroes, which were ~---------------..::1

I.

•

'No-fly' zones shield Kurds, Shiites and gain intelligence
By ROBERT BURNS
States' overall stral~gy for constraining .
,
.
Asaoclated PrHB Writer
' Iraq's military might.
X. ,.. .
WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S., Ied
of " po-fly" zones in northThe intelligenoe payoff is "as important
em and southern Iraq has largely succeeded in shielding minority populations in many ways" as protecting the Kurds and
from attack by the forces of Saddam Hussein . .But it also has served a less Shiites, Cordesman said.
Keeping most of Iraq's already depleted
. obvious' purpose: "spy-in-the-sky" surveillance of Saddam's military moves.
'
Protection for Kurds in the north and Shiite Muslims in the south is still . air force out of the no-Hy zones also
needed, U.S. analysts say. But that aspect of the mission tells only a small part severely restricts Saddam 's ability 10 train
of the story of why U.S., British, and Turkish forces·are still enforcing the no- and deploy his forces, which in tum confly zones years after they began as mainly humanitarian gestures.
tributes to an er&lt;lSion of their effectiveness.
· The overflights by U.S. Air Force F-16 fighter jets, F-15 strike planes, E-3 In the four-day U.S.-British missile assault
AWACS warning and control planes and other aircraft gather timely intelli· on Iraq earlier this month, no Iraqi aircraft
genoe on Iraqi foroes. By keeping Iraq's warplanes mostly on the ground, the challenged allied planes.
no-fly zones also contribute lo an erosion of Saddam 's air power.
Details about cur,renl no-Hy zone mis•
That may explain, at least in part, why Saddam suddenly is challenging the sions are scarce. Lt: Col. Jane Rinell, a
no-Oy :rones. Today the Iraqis fired several anti~aircrafl missiles at a British jet spoke~woman for Operation Northern
patrolling southern Iraq, and U.S. jets responded by returning fire on the Iraqi Watch, as tlie enforcem~l operation in
lnSWlation';'Jrt a illlhlllf tncidedt Monday, an Iraqi air defense battery fired at northern Iraq . is called;~sltid information !'"''~;-;; ~; .,...;:,.~\.• .;,;,,:,~
least three surface-to-air missiles at U.S. planes in the northern zone, and on such as the number of planes Hying and the
1'uesday, Iraqi Vioe PresidentTaha Yassin Ramadan said Iraqi planes were Hy-' frequency of their missions is classified
. ing in the restricted zones.
.
secret.
, .,
. This challenge of lhe no-Hy zonts appears lo be pari of a broader Iraqi
Iraq has never accepted the legitim~cy
effort to Challenge all international restrictions- from the U.N. economic of the no-Hy zones, the fitsl of which was
embargo to U.N. disarmament demands- that stem from Iraq's August 1990 created in the north in April19)11 aftef Iraqi
been
-invasion of Kuwait and the cease-fire it signed to end the Gulf War.
tanks rolled into Kurdish areas and crushed
An Air Force fact_sh-:et describes the. missio~ in the north as enforcing the rebels emboldened by lraq:s. Gulf War c_.::.~=
_
fats,
this
no-~y zone and momtonng_lr~q' compltance_wlth U.N: Secunty Co~n~tl res- defeat. The southern zone, ongtna_lly drawnthe spearhead of American attacks against Iraqi military Installations.
oluttons. The atr crews' "mtsstOn statement," however ts more, expltctt tn say- at the 32nd parallel, was created m August
.. . .
.
.
.
.!
ing they are to "monitpr and surveil Government of Iraq forces in northern 1992. The southern zone was expanded north to the 33rd parallel in 1996 by Base'" southern Turkey. The
States Oles 10
of planes!
the United States and Britain. .
.
.
·
Force AWACS warmng and control planes, Manne Corps EA·
Iraq."
Anthony Cordesman, an expert on the Iraqi military and a professor of
France, which slopped flying missions for Operation Northern Watch in 6B electromc warfare planes,
Force F-16
F-15 Jets, Army UH-60
national security studies at Georgetown University, said in an interview Tues- 1996, confirmed on Tuesday that it pulled ool of Operation Southern Watch Black Hawk helicopters and Atr Foroe HH-60 Ntght Hawk
used .
day that the monitoring of electronic signals as well as routine air surveillance this month in protest of the U.S. and British missile barrage.
for search and Fescue: Turkey _ntes F-4 and F-16 fighters and Bntaln has Tor:
in northern and southern Iraq is an "extremely valuable" part of the United
The roughly 45 planes that patrol the northern zone are based atlncirlikAir nado fighters and aenal refueling planes.

~nforcement

.,~

Omt~d
~tr

mcludmg. A~r

a•

1999 OLDS88
. I 50TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION- Loaded,
Champa&gt;gn MSRP $28,040

NOW ONLY

1999 OLDS88
V6. Champaign, loaded MSRP $24,750

NOW ONLY $20,996

1999 OLDS CUTLASSGLS
V6 , cass &amp; CD, auto, air MSAP $2 1,1DO

NOW ONLV $19,331

Good Afternoon

Today's

·- ,

~oiii;; ''~ ij

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All pre-owilecl cars and trucks sold
Train Warranty except Where 'factory 'w. it
'
Ask ai&gt;Qut our wide range oteXtended li.,i,.,lt

fa· antll::

•

NEED AFRESH START?
Bankruptq • Slow C!edlt • No
C!Hit. We may be able to helpl
Ask for Mr.

Two Meig:; County Boy Scouts were busy Tuesday
f.votrkin:~ on their Eagle Seoul projects.
In
to be awarded the rank of Eagle Scou~ a Life
must direct and complete a community service pro-

Matthew Keaton, 17, Tuppers Plains, delivered 1,271
Emergency HEAP (Home Energy Assistance Program) for the
· items' to the Meig&lt;; County United Methodist
1998-99 application period is into its second month, continuing
P,operati•ve Parish Thrift Shop where they will be distrib·
through Mar,ch 31.
to local residents in need of emergency clothing,
The federally funded program offers heating assistatice once per
l.~mrliin&lt; to Rev. Sharon Hausman.
heating season on an emergency basis for eligible households whose
Keaton, a t]lember of Chester Troop 235, placed colheat-related utilities are disconnected, threatened with disconnect or
. barrels Oollar General and Kroger stores in
bulk fuel supply is less than 10 days.
Vaughan's in Middleport, Eastern Elementary
The regular HEAP program also offers healing assistance once per
Eastern High Schools and at Farmers Bank in Tupper.;
·heating season to low-income households with defraying the high
lpt,;in&lt;
cost·of home heating.
Collecting the gannents took five to six weeks, he said.
The application deadline for regular HEAP is March 31, leaving
Joseph McCall, 17, Darwin, was directing a project at
Ohio Valley Christian Assembly Camp located on
appro•imately three months to apply.
\RockstDrinl!S Road near Darwin.
The income guidelines for both programs is the same, however
amemberofHemlockGroveTroop299and
regular HEAP requir~s the previous 12 months income while the past
·
three income is acceptable on emergency HEAP.
building an entryway for the church camp's outdoor
f_vot~hio center. .
•
· The 12-monlh period or three-month period for the income test is
determined from dale of application making it possible for some with
consists of a rail fenoe aitd gateway, he
decreased income due to layoff, strike, retirement or disability during
be hung from the
•
these periods to qualify later in the program .
Along with written proof of income, a copy of the current electric
bill is requi-red this year.
Applications for both programs
can be made Monday through
Thursday, 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to
3 p.m. at either the Gallia County Community Action Agency
HEAP office at 859 Third Ave. ,
1 Sections - 12 Pages
Gallipolis, o,r the Meigs County
CAA HEAP office at 33105
7
Calendar
Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
8-10
The CAA Central Office in
Classified•
Cheshire
will accept applications
11
Comics
Tuesday through Thursday, 9
2
Edi!odals
a.m. to noon and 1 to 3 p.m. ,
3
Local
only.
·
4-6
Additional information regardSports
ing the programs and income
3
Weather
eligibility may be obtained by
calling the Cheshire CAA Office
Lotteries
at '367-7341 .or 992-6629, the
Gallia County HEAP office al
OHIO
446-6849 or the Meigs County
'Pick 3: 6-1-4; Pick 4: 6-1-2-1
HEAP office at 992-2222.
Buckeye5: 3-7-14-20'-31
The toll free number for regu w.yA .
.lar HEAP inquiries is 1-800-282Dally 3: 2-7-7; Dally 4: 8-7-9-2
0880 or for the hearing impaired
0 1998 Ohio V1llty Publi~tung Co.
(TOO) 1-800-686-1557 .

Sentinel

hel!c~pters

Child, boxer
reunion ends in
Christmas
tragedy .

Area..,..,
Emergency HEAP continues

~d

dtfferenll~pes

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Alvina
Hanis trusted Dezi Ford enough that
.• ~he left three children with the professional boxer while she took a 10minute Christmas Day trip to the store.
When Harris returned, her and
Ford's 14-month-old son, Zontius,
was nearly lifeless, his tongue flailing
and brown eyes rplling upward. She
asked Ford what had happened.

CLOTHING DRIVE- For his Eagle Scout pro)act, Matthew Keaton, 17, Tuppers Plains, left,
delivered 1,271 clothing Items to the Meigs
County United Methodist Cooperative Parish
Thrift Shop where Rev. Sharon Hausman, right,
said they will be distributed free to local res Idents In need of emergency ~lothlng.
gateway.
Keaton said the idea for
project came from1 · t~~~~~
who suggested .a c
drive would be a good way
help needy people in
county.
McCall's inspiration "'"'"'
from previous experienoes
the church camp.
After completing their
jects, the young&lt;;ters ·
before an Eagle Scout •rlv;.U,_J
ry board.
ENTRYWAYMcCall, 17,
· was busy Tuesday
lng the constnJctlon of
entryway for the mttnl
valley Christian Asaern·
bly Camp near Darwin.
He Is shown here wnrk-1
lng on the project
fellow Boy Scout We,sle·y!
Thoene, right, who Is a
new Eagla Scout.

"But Dezi never said a word," •
Harris said. "I felt for a pulse every- '
where you can. I even felt for air under ;
his nose. He felt cold. flis li~le cheeks ~
were cold. And the whole time, Dezi \
was not saying anything."
:
Zontius was pronounced dead at a ;
hospital at 5 p.m. Friday, and Ford, •
who admitted to striking the child, w.S :
charged with murder the. next day.
~
Stark County Coroner James :
Pritchard said the infant died of blunt- ,;
force trauma to his chest and :
abdomen. Polioe bel i.-e Ford was ~
allempting to box with the tiny child. ~
Zontius was buried Tuesday.
·
Ford, 30, of Nashville, Tenn., is :
being held in Stark County Jail, pend- :.
ing a preliminary court hearing Jan. 6. :
"He's suffering more than any- :
body," Ford's lawyer, Steven LoDico, :told the Akron Beacon Journal. He ·
said Ford was depressed and crying, :
that he had not confessed to any crime :
and was innocent of murder.
-.
Ford's only previous brush with the :
law came in a theft arrest during his :
senior year of high school. LoDico ~
said. He had been in northeast Ohio •
for three months, training at the Ma.•- :
sillon Youth Center while awaiting a :
contract for his next fight.
. Ford won ·a Golden Gloves title in :
1990 and turned pro in 1992. In his !
professional career, he has 23 wins ;
· and 13 losses. Ford last fought Dec. 6 •
in Monroeville, Pa.
!
l

•••
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