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Ohio Lottery

Dallas·edges
Eagles 21-20
in NFC action

WE FINISHED 1996 AS THE #l ·TOYOTA 414
TRUCK DEALER IN THE WORLD!·
WE CAN'T IMPROVE ON THA\ BUT NOW WE HAVE TO
· .
STAY
HELP! HELP! HELP!
· ·

Pick 3:
4-5-6
Pick 4:
6-6·6·9
Buckeye 5:
4·5-6·11-18

Sports on Page 4

'

NOTICiz C&amp;0 MOTORS CHEVROLET &amp;OLDSMOIIU SIIVICI DIPr. HAS IOUIUD 1111 SID TO ACCOMMDDA111HI HIGH VOlUME SAliS DEPT.
NOW TAKING APPOIITMEm 727-2921, ASK FOI1HI SDVICI DEPAIIMEIIT.

~LOVE

LEXUS

•

LOVE TOYOTA-

en
tiDe
..
VOl. 48, NO. 106
C1H7, Ohio Valley 1'\Jblllhlng Company

1998
TOYOTA
TRIKI'S

IS
LOW
IS

By BRIAN J. REED
Line Co. of Streetsboro submitted had been experiencing problems traffic control at County Road 79, · overseen by Treasurer Howard Frank, ·cost the office an additional 50 cents
Sentinel News Staff
one in the amount of $27.058.59. . obtaining steel and· other materials near the entrance of Veterans Memo- ac'cording to Hoffman.
per transaction processed.
The Meigs County Commission·
The bids were ta.bled, pending needed to complete the project.
rial Hospital. Hoffman noted that
The commissione-rs authorized the
Two contracts between the couners opened bids for road work when review by County Engineer Robert
The retaining wall will repair traffic would increase when the new installation of a new cash control sys- ty and the engineering firm of
they met in regular session on Man· Eason, who was presenl at the meel~ damage caused by a flood-related slip Holzer Clinic opened.
tern in the office of the county i Burgess &amp; Niple Lid. wer~ approved
day afternoon.
which occurred in March.
in g.
· In other business, the board appro- recorder.
.
for studies involving (he county's
Eason noted that C9un1y Road 29 priated an additional $30,000 into the
Two companies submitted bids for
David Spencer of the county highThe system will supplement the abandoned landfill ncar Pomeroy.
paint striping on approximately 50 way department reported that w.ork . (Bowman's Run) has been closed commission~rs' contract services computer system now in place in the
The studies will probe leachate
miles of county roadways.
on a retaining wall behind the coun· temporarily for bridge repair. The account and $20,000 into their con- office. and was recommended by the problems which are believed to be
The bids were submitted in two ty jail should begin later this month. repair work has been delayed due 10 tingency fund .
slate auditor's office. Funds for the- contaminating soil around the abanSpencer said that he had been in problems gelling concrete needed to
parts ...:.. for center striping .and for
The additional funds , certified by pur(:hasc will come from the doned site.
edging. Chemtrol Chemical Co. ol contact with David Weber of the D. V complete the work.
the county budget commission. rep- recorder's equipment fund , whic.h
Earlier thi s summer. a rcprcscntaGibsonburg submitted a combined Weber Construction Co., the con·
Commissioner Fred Hoffman resent "unanticipotcd income" which involves funds collected from record- tive of the Ohio Environmental Pro. bid of $27,347.17, while the Neal tractor on the project, and thai Weber asked Eason to consider improving . resulted from county investments ing and other fees . The system will
(Continued on Page 3)
.
.

1997TOYOTA

HAVE
DUAL

Ill, AM/FM RADIO .

AIR
BA&amp;S·

$

.\

Area Boy Scouts stage camporee Tax cut accord
Forked Run State
for deregulation
Park plays host
to five troops
slowed by costs

COROLLA
2Ai . . . .

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smue ....

.....

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PIISTU,uc.

1997

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LOW

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IIIIS, . . . . UICIS, ...

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IIEW

UV4
MUST

IS

SEE

,TOYOTA

HURRY,
HURRY,
HURRY

IS
IS

LOVE TOYOTA AND LEXUS
W.VA.'S LARGEST TOYOTA
IS LOOKING
FOR GOOD RELIABLE SALES
PEOPLE. EXPERIENCE NOT
NECESSARY~ PLWE APPLY
IN
TOYOTA
OPEN

•·•+

MOI.·RI.
SAT. 9-6

AND

HAWK

• they are a brand new )roo?.
' An estimated 45 boy scoutf'and
20 cub scouts. along with their
leaders, attended the camporee,
which started on Friday evening
and ended on Sunday. The 'camp
was scl up .in Ihe 'group campingarea of the park. located just inside
the main entrance.
A full slote of cducotional and
recreational events were planned
THE SCOUTING WAY TO DO IT- Scoutmaster Terra Lea Darling helped demonstrate cook·
for the boys. including several
ing sk111s to area Boy Scouts who gat~ered over the weekend at Forked Run State Pari! near
demonstrations by the West Vir·
Reedsville for the annual camporee of area scout troops. (OVP photo by Catharine Braley)
ginia Army National Guard.
The guardsmen offered the scouts
pose-vehicle.
courses on rifle and pistol target
scouts. Troops competed in seoul
scnted with · souvenir walking
Camp cooking and other activshooting and a compass course.
skills events,
slicks. donated by the 0 . Ames Co. .
ities were also conducted by
and gave .rides in a Humvcc all purThe hoys attending were pre·
of Parkersburg, W.Va.

Girl was dead when dad asked about visitation
IRONTON (AP) - Investigators
believe 8-ycar-old Seleana Gamble .
was already dead when her mother
participated in a hearing lo delermine
when the girl would be able to visit
her father.
Arrest warrants on charges of
aggravated murder have hccn issued
for Sclcana's mother. Mona Volgarcs, and her stepfather. Jack Volgcyrcs, in the death. She was found
buried in the family's back yard last
week.
·
During the hearing on July 28.Muna Volgarcs said Sclcana would .
not be able to visit her father because
school was about to resume . She
agreed to postpone the visitation

LOW

LOW
AS

Boy Scouts and leaders ·from
throughout Gallia, Meigs and
Mason counties converged on
Forked Run State . Park ncar
Reedsville last weekend for their
annual Camporee .
. Five troops from the M-G·M .
District Troop 235 from
Chester, 299 from Hemlock Grove,
249 from Pomeroy, 259 from Point
Ple~ant. W.Va. and 20 I from Gallipolis - were represented at the
event. For the Gallipolis troop, this
weekend's cvenl was th•:ir first:

•

All

TOYOTAUV4

2 Sectlona, 12 Pill", 35 cen11
A Gannett Co. Newapapar

Commissioners table bids on road projects

.All '

1998 ·TOYOTA 414

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 16, 1997 ·

NUMBER
1

IMPORT

untillmc De~emhcr.
Authorities say the girl was dead
when Mrs. Volg;ues. 28. was making
the arrangements.
·
Lawrence County Prosecutor J.B .
Collier Jr. said Monday that neighhor~ last reported seeing Sclcana in
carl~ June. The Volgarcscs said the
girl ;.as in Tampa. Fla .. visitiog her
rather. Randy Brown, Collier said.
But Brown s.aid he hadn 't seen the
girl all summer and was having trou·
hie coordinating a visit when he
asked Hillsborough County (Fia.)Circuit Ci&gt;un Judge Greg Holder to
help.
.
Holder arranged a (clcphonc hearing during wh1ch he asked Mrs. Volp:mcs " is there any reason why we

can "t have that visitation right away
with this little girl'!"
" Yes. Number one, school is starting in two weeks, and at thi~ point,
she is going to summer extracurricular programs with her scheoling."
Mrs. Volgares responded. ·
· Mrs. Volgarcs and Brown agreed
IO move the visit and the hearing con·
eluded with the parents making preliminary arrangements.
.
.
" Law enforcement is now saymg
in all probability Scleana was probably murdered when the hearing was
held," Holder said Monday.
Collier ~aid investigators arc
almost certain the body is Selcana's.
hut arc waiting for DNA test results
from Brown and the girl to confirm

the identity. He said the results should
be available iii two weeks.
Collier said the Volgares~s left in
the middle of the night on Aug. 17
. after family members became suspi_·Cious. He said they have been seen in
Michigan and Kentucky.
Police say the Voigarcses are on
the run with their children, Tesla. 4,
and Jcrimiah. 2. as well as Vivian
Gamble. II. Mona's daughtcrfrom a
prcvioul'i relationship.
·'We're concerned. Obviously the
safety of those three children is paramount. .. Holder said.
The FBI is assisting in the search
for the Volgarcscs and has issued a
federal chaf!!C of flight to avoid
prosecution.

Clinton slaps health care
providers with moratorium

DWER
Ill THE

STATE
IS
LOW

IS

OTORS· LEXUS
ST. ALBANS
RT. 60 MacCORKLE AVENUE-ACROSS FROM SHONEY'S
AND TOYOTA

TOYOTA

By JENNIFER BATOG
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Calling Medicare ripoffs "a fraud tax on all the taxpayers of the country," President Clinton said Monday he is cracking down
on abuse of the system. starting with an unprecedented stx-month morato·
rium oli home health care providers.
·
In a speech before the Service Employees International Union, the president detailed efforts to put "fly-by-night providers" of home-health care out
of Medicare. Medicare is enrolling nearly 100 new home health care agencies per month, the fastest growing part of the system.
. .
"First, we' re going to keep scam and ripoff artrsls from gcttmg mlo'the
' Medicare system in the first place," Clinton said. "These kind of praciJccs
amount to a fraud tax on all the taxpayers of the country. For those of you
who work in health care, they cost public confidence in the work that you
do."
·
During the moratorium, Medicare will enlist no new home-health care
providers. Clinton said. Federal regulators w1ll develop toughc1 rules dcs1gned
to weed out dishonest provtdcrs. such as requmng that they post surety bonds
of at least $50,000, have a minimum number of pauents before enr@lhng
Medicare patients and submit detailed information on all of the busmesses
they own.
·
.
·
"Medicare is. for us, a way to honor our parents and strengthen our families," Clinton said. "We can't maintain it ... if we tolerate unacceptable levels of fraud and abuse."
.
This is the first time Medicare has halted new home health care prov1ders.
The program spends $18 billion a year on home health care, up from $2.5 r
billion just a few ~ears ago.
·

•

COLUMBUS (AP) -A legislative committee and utilities negotiators
arc close to agreement on reducing taxes on ~lcctric utilities as part of the
state's plan lo deregulate the industry.
But the issue of "stranded costs" and whether customers should help pay
for them has not been resolved. Stranded costs include utility investments
in nuclear pi'ants and other equipment. and costly long-term fuel contracts .
Sen. Bruce E. Johnson. R-Columbus, co-chairman of the Joint Select Committee on Electric Utility Deregulation, said the committee is close to agree·
mcnl on replacing electric utililics'tax:cs with an cxcisC or user tax on cus- ·
tamers' electric hills.
But the 12-mcmher committee won't meet the Oct. I deadline to draft a
competition plan for lcgislatiyc review.
" If we had complete agreement today. and started writing immediotcly,
Oct. I would be ambitious." Johnson said. " It's a long legislative process."
The committee wa&gt; established in January by Senate President Richard
Finan. R-C incinnati. and House Speaker JoAnn Dav1dson, R-Rcynoldshurg.
h held a series of meetings in the spring, when the committee heard from
dozens of speakers: and rnllccted thousands of pages of tcstim(my.
Johnson and Rep. Priscilla Mead. R-Uppcr Arlington, co-chairwoman of
the committee. recently began private meetings with utility representatives.
state regulators. the Ohio Consumers' C(1unscl. hig indu!-itrial customers and
others.
A study ·o ~ the 1mpact (If stranded coSis was released hy Ohio Partners
for Affordable Energy. a conlili&lt;ln of cr-mmunity action groups. mclropolilan housing authorities. rural elcrtrir cooperatives and energy brokers. The
study, done by MSB Energy Associates of Middleton, Wise .. showed that
some American Elet:tric Power residential customc;;rs would sec a dcl:rcase
of more than 10 percent If utilities·did not pass on any stranded costs.
' It also showed aSJgnilkant decrease if utilities passed on half the costs.'
H the utilities passed on all stranded costs, the hills would remain about the
~arne, and would incrca:-.c in northern Ohio. it showed.

Educational Service Center
approves personnel items
The Governing Board of the Meigs County Educational Service Ccn·
ter settled a handful of personnel matters pi its regular meeting last Thursday
The hoard approved as school bus drivers Carolyn Gillilan. Joseph Masters and Rhelt Milhoan. Eastern Local; Carla Milhoan, Frederick Thomas
and Benjamin Upton, Meigs Local; and Kathy Barringer, Southern Local.
The board also hired Donna Myers as a speech and language palhol,.
agist for the 1997-98 school year and approved a leave of absence for San. dra Sayre Howard.
Angela Swiger was hired as a substitute spe.cch and language pathologist and as ~i"uh sti tutc teacher. and Lorri Barnes ns a suhstitutc teacher
for the 1997-98 school year.
In other business. the hoard:
I
• Adopted salary schedules for the 1997-98 school year and approved
a permanent hudgct "" liscal year 1998.
• Approved a revised list of employees h~ving access to student records.
• Approved the mmutcs of the Aug . 14 meeting and the paying of bills.
The hoard also appmvcd a marketing course of study and adopted mar- .
keting tc"hooks.
·
Present were Superintendent John D. Riche! Sr. ; Treasurer Carole
Gilkey; Board President Jeff Harris. Vice President Robert Barton; and
board members Howard Caldwell. 1.0. McCoy and Jeanette Thomas.

Consumer prices rose
0.2 percent in August ·

mingled with the
Service Employees International Union Monday In Waehlngton
after speaking to the group, calling Medicare ripoffs "a fraud tax
on (Ill the taxpayers In the country.'' The president said he Is
cracking down on abuae of the system. (AP)

.•

WASHINGTON (AP) - Con- utilities were operating at K3.9 persumer prices edged-up a moderate 0.2 cent of capacity in August, the highpercent last month despite the fact csl operating rate m two years.
The comhination of low inllation
that gasoline price:-. soared by the .
higgcst amount since the Persian Gulf and solid growth proved a tonic for
crisis in 1990. Meanwhile. output at · hoth bond and stock markets. The
the nati on\ fac toric~ rchoundcd Dow Jones industrial average jumped
sharply.
n points in the opening minute.s of
The Labor Department reported trading wday.
that the August increase in its ConAnalysts said the U.S . economy
sumcr Price Index matched a si milar continues to enjoy ncar-perfect con0.2 percent rise in July as the biggest ditions even though the expansion,
drop in clothing costs in eight years Row m its seventh year. ha!oi long
helped to offsci, the hi gher energy passed the point where tigh,t labor
prrccs.
markets normally begin triggering
· . The Federal Reserve said that rising price pressures.
industrial production shot up 0.7
"II has been a remarkable
percent in August as outrmt in man- stretch.'' said Oscar Gnnzale1 of
ufacturing rose by the biggest amount John Hancock in Boston . ." Economin 16 months.
ic historians may be able to explain
The increase in production meant this period some day. hut right now
that America's factories, mines and we can only guess and enjoy the
ride."

�I

\

Cotntnenta
The Daily Sentinel
'E.stll6(islid i111948

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-1112-2156 • Fax 1182·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publllher
·CHARLENE HOEFLICH

G_.IManager .

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

Details of Clinton trade
proposal slow in coming
By WALTER A. MEARS
AP Sjleelal Com111pondent

Page2
Tuelclay, Septtmb« 16, ,..,

ructu ng . e
By JICk Ancleraon
anc1 Jan llloller
Months of backstage haggling
behind them, Congress · will bring
into public view. !his week an issue
that's dear io· Republican hearts:
restructuring the Internal Revenue
Service.
Hearings begin tomorrow on a
plan, based on a commission report
released earlier this year, that would
bring the tax-collecting agency into
the modern age and make it more
like a service-oriented corporation
than the hidebound bureaucracy it's
become.
The agency has wasted several
years and billions of dollars on a
modernjzation effort that yielded
almost no results. So now Congress
-- tired of hearing the agency 's
annual excuses -- has decided it's
time for drastic change. ReRublicans
also hope they've found a potent
issue they can use against President
-Clinton, who is expected to oppose
the bill.
GOP leaders have signaled that
IRS reform will be the last item !hat
Congreso vates on before adjourning
for the year, which could come as
early as late October but more likely
will be pushed back to around
Thanksgiving.
When the vote comes. it will represent a personal victory for Rep.
Bill Archer, R-Texas, the chairman
of the taK-writing House Ways and
Means Committee. He has made
IRS restructuring his top priority for
the rest of this Congress. The goal,
supporters say, it to bring drastic
transformation to an agency that's
widely perceived as being rude and
imperious, and which can strike fear
into the heans of the inost law-abiding Americans.
.
"Why can American Express
process millions of pieces of paper.
and do it politely, and the JRS
can 't'" Ways and Means spokesman
Ari Acischer· asked our associate
Aaron Karp. "The answer is that
(the IRS is hampered by) the culture
of government. ... The rest of the
financial services community in
America has modernized. The IRS

.WASHINGTON- President Clinton's trade allies in Congress have
been pressing him for months to deliver in writing !he legislation he wams
passed !his year to give him unfenered authority to negotiate trade deals.
Not quite yet l!'s still wait, and then hurry up.
'
For all the rhetoric on an issue debated for more than two years, the specifiC terms aren't ready yet Whal Clinton seeks is clear: a new lease on the
fast-tract trade negotiating authority !hat expired in 1993. That would allow
the administration to mate trade agreements and put them to Congress as
yes-or-no propositions, no amendments permined.
How Clinton gets there is unclear. There won't be a detailed proposal
before next week, a symptom of the political stresses at work on the issue.
At a White House sendoff on Wednesday, Clinton made fast-track
approval sound like the next thing to patriotism. " ... If we want to spread
prosperity and open trade to support peace and democracy and freedom and
free markets, we must do !his," the president said. ·
Congressional Republicans stayed away to protest the lack of a bill.
This is traditionally a Republican cause; labor and liberal Democrats
always have been at least skeptical about the impact of trade agreemeius on
jobs at home.
,
"There's nothing complicated here: · Gene Sperling, director of the president's National Economic Council. said of the delay, calling it a matter of a
· few more .days for consultation.
!here are political complexities.
Clinton can't win without a solid' Republican majority in Congress.to offsci opposition amon~ Democrats. So he has to balance Democratic demands
that the bill include provisions on labor standards and environmental protection by U.S. trading panners against GOP insistence on terms that don't
tie strings to trade.
·
.
That's nothing new; the lines were.drawn long ago.
By 1an Shoales
.
"Trade issues have always been hot-button issues for organized labor,"
After Princess Diana's funeral, I
said Secretary of Commerce William Daley, who had to tackle tl'iat political was surprised to discover that every
problem 'when he was chief lobbyist for Clinton in winning approval of woman I know had stayed up for it.
NAFTA, the free trade deal with Mexico, in 1993.
My girlfriend and her friend even
That agreement has not been the trade bonanza advertised at the time, an made a slumber party out of it, calladded burden for the administration now. Labor argues that it has been a job ing their friends at 4 a.m., weeping
drain, to low -paying Mexican manufacturers. The administration counters and dishing dirt, wishing they had
that ii has had a positive, but modest economic impact.
tiaras.
This trade debate is over umbrella authority to cover future trade agreeMy girlfriend only reads tabloids
ments. Clinton sought it unsuccessfUlly in 1.1}95 and shelved it as too sensi- in the supermarket line. Whatever
tive for campaign-year action in 1996. The case for it is that o1her trading knowledge she ha.• of Diana's life
nations won 'I make agreements with the United States unless they can be she gained the same way I did.
assured that Congress won't pick the deals apart with amendments.
through cultural osmosis. Yet, as my
When the administration withheld specific fast track legislation girlfriend patiently explained to me ..
more than three months ago, Democratic Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, after Princess Diana had died. she
who supj,orts the authority. complained that the bill was being held up was amazed to find herself grieving.
because of political calculations involving Gore.
Diana's doings were large
enough for the world to.sec. whether
EDITOR'S NOTE- Waller R. Mears, vice president and columnist the world wanted to look or not. She
for The Associated Press, has reported on Washington and national pol· could weep, have a new outfit every
Ilks for more than 30 years. ·
day. make heads turn at a party. bless
orphans. raise the Heirs. lose love.
find love -- all in true royal fashion.
She was the last true Princess. the
last we shall ever sec.
Even when she stumbled on her
way towards a new life. she looked
fabulous . There was no irony in her.
The only"things post-modern about
Dear Editor.
Three cheers for Robert Weedy's column in Sunday's paper! I'll go you her situation were her divorce and
the relentless gaze of the media. And
one better: How ahout pulling clear out of the United Nations'!
Congressman Ron Paul (R-Texas) has introduced the American Sover- that's why she was loved.
And'yet ...
eign Restoration Act (HR 1146).'.1bis will pull the United ·states out of the
A New York Times reporter ·had
pro-communist. pro-new world order. money hungry UN .
access
to film from Hotel Ritz secuWe don't need a globalist organization dictating American policies and
rity cameras, released to the media
law through illegal treaties.
_
Call or write your Congressman before you wake up to a UN flag nying
at your courthouse.
Politically .incorrect,
Lowell W. Rogers By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
New Haven, W.Va. Gannett News Service
SEATILE - First a "Pig War,"
now a fish fight.
Back in 1859, the United States
and 'canada nearly came to blows
Dear Editor,
In .reference to the letter Mr. Edwards wrote about what Meigs County when Lyman Cutter shot Charles
does have, I'm looking at this from the other side of the coin. Opportunities Griffin's prized pig- felled with a
come and . go in life, but it's what we want to do with opportunity that single bullet as it ~oraged ahout Cutchanges things. Are we satisfied with letting opportunity pass'' Do we ask ter's potato patch.
The shooting occurred on San
any questions in hopes of gammg addttoonal mformauon? .Do we have the
"What's in it for Me/Us? Syndrome"? Do we have the "It's not my Job Atti- Juan Island, a small piece of land in
the waters northwest of Seattle tliat
tude"? Or most of all do we even care '/
.
In case you didn't know, Meigs County has a lot of u~employed people . hoth countries claimed. Griffin, a
Our school buildings are overcrowded and m need of maJor renovauon, and ..Canadian, demanded_ ~mpensation,
getting someone to volunteer for an after-hours activity is becoming almost Cutter, an American, refusl;ll.
When the governor of British
impossible. (Dads)
· . ·.
For the last several years our local county development and commiSSion- · Columbia sent in a warship and
ers office has had several inquiries from companies on the available vacant troops to back Griffin, the United
land located throughout the county, for example, in the Great Bend area States dispatched .troops to the
(AEP land) three miles from 1-77 we have nearly 800 acres avatlab,le, and yet island. The standoff lasted 13 years,
here we sit, still makrng excuses. If you take a look around, you II see that . until an international arbitrator ga-.
new industry is going up all around us . Contrary to what sor~c. people thmk. San Juan Island to the United States.
Today, territory is at the hean of
1 believe we do have a problem and the only wa_y to solve 11 •.•(pardon the
phrase) less lip service and more actiOn along wtth accountabdny from our another rift between the two countries.
·
elected officials.
- Canadian fishermen say their
I had the privilege to sit in on a motivational meeting (compliments of my
boss) and the first thing this speaker said has never left my mind: "There are AmeriCan counterpans are catching
people who want things to happen, there are people who make thmgs hap- hundreds of thousands of salmon
pen, and there are people who simply ~ay, 'What happenedr." We need spawned in. their country's waters.
To back up this poaching claim,
'nd try'.
.
IUS
. ..
' hk
' ' h. ?'
Jt's high time we get our pnontles stra1g t, as more _questions ":. y: , get Glen Clark, the premier of British
involved with our kids, get mvolved wtth our communtty, lose the mtghter Columbia - !he Canadian province
than !hou attitude", and lay groundwork for ourselves and our chddrens to the north of Washington state filed a suit last week seeking $235
future . You have more by doing more!
·
million in damages from the U.S.
Bob CoUins government, Alaska and WashingPortland
l

Time to drop United Nations?

tions . Administration officials, many
of whom saw little harm in inviting
oosavory contributors to the White
House for coffee,
worry that it would
beaconnictofinterest to have major
corporate
CEOs
oversuing tall policy in Washington.
They fear it 'would
formalize the t,imehonored custom of
watering down wellservice organizations."
Besides the . private sec- Moller and AncMrwon intentioned tall bills
with provisions that
tor members, the board
would also include the Treasury sec- benefit specific industries.
retary and a representative from the
But the bill's supporters say the
National Treasury Employees board would have no role in setting
tax policy, and would merely advise
Union.
The hoard would be responsible and instruct the IRS on how to best
for setting major policies and for collect taxes. Besides, board memlong-tenn strategic planning, and hers would fall under the same conwould decide how die agency flict-of-interest laws that prevent
!llher federal officials from particidivides up its money every year.
But the bill faces a major hurdle · pating in issues that affect their perin tbe Clinton administration, which sonal bonom line.
UNDER THE DOME -- Somedilesn't like ceding any authority
whatsoever over government func- times it seems., like everyone in

has been left behind."
The bipartisan bill wouid compel
the president to name a seven-person board of directors,
culled mostly from the
private sector, to run
the aaency. According a
summary of the bill,
board , members would
be required to , have
" professional experience and expertise in
managing large-scale

Washington is a lawyer. Or at least it
does to Sen. Arlen Spectu, R-Pa.
Specter, R-Pa., perhaps best
known for his haranguing of Anita
Hill during the Clarence Thomas
hearings in 1991 , has been careful
not to make waves during the invesligation into !he campaign fund-raising abuses of 1996. But be just
couldn't help himself last week.
After the revelations earlier this
taonth that at least $120,000 of the
money raised by Vice President AI
Gore was deposited in "hard'money " accounts, Specter was
among the first to call for Gore to
voluntarily testify before the committee.
Alas, .while the vice president
may indeed be guilty of many
things, being a lawyer is not among
them. Sen. Fred Thompson, chair· man of the committee and himself a
lawyer, was quick to point out
Specter's error.
Jack Anderson and Jan M~r
are writen ror United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

..

WediMICiay, Sept. 17

.

Beat of the Bend ...

A=W t~ ftwteill ftw daytia COIIditloas aad hi&amp;h

by Bob Hoeflich

Clifford Icenhower.

Clifford Icenhower, 63, Star Hall Road, Dexter, died Sunday, Sept. 14,
1997 at his residence.
The recent fund drive on bebalf of
Born April I, !934 in Meigs County: son of the late Homer and Annie Ralph Parker, who is having health
The Rudand Department Store has
Ward Icenhowu, be was a retired truck driver for Jeffers Coal Co. m Pomeroy. problems, was quite successful, with · been around for a long time. One of
Survivors include his wife, Helen Eblin Icenhower; four sons and daugh- $5,450.75 being raised and ano!her Ohio's oldest businesses, it was estabters-in-law, Rick and Jackie Icenhower of Dexter, Donald and Teresa Icen- $2,000 i~ donations pledged follow- lished in 1858.
hower .of Bell, Ra., Richard and April Icenhower of Albany, and Scott Icen- ing the event.
The present owners, James Birchhower of Dexter; two daughters and sons-in-law,.Sharon and Mike Gaffney
field
·and Kimberly Willford, are
The fund-raiser was held at the
of Thornville, and Mary and Dave Crow of Racine; six grandchildren and Tuppers Plains Elementary School hoping to set up a display of memoone s1epgrandson; and a broti]CF, Lewis Icenhower of N':_ighle~;
and included a dinner, several bands rabilia from the early days of the
eo·
He was preceded in death by four brothers, Leonard Buck Icenhower, playing through the evening. a bake store. They ask that you check about
Bernard Icenhower, Ralph Icenhower and Roy Icenhower; and two SISters, sale, craft items for sale. and an auc- the house for some items from the
store. If you do come up with anyHelen Jeffers and Alberta-"Bertie" Keys. ,
tion conducted by Dan Smith.
Services will be I p.m. Wednesday in the Cremeens Funeral Home,
Among the donations was $500 thing, please let them know. Your
Racine, with the Rev. Roy McCarty officiating. Burial will be in the Rock from !he Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary anicles used in the display w.ill carSprings Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 tomgh1.
Club. Donations are still being ry your name as the owner. · ·
If you can help , just stop by the
accepted at the Farmer's Bank and
W.VA.
store,
open from 8 am. to 6 p.m.,
handling donations are Shirley RockMonday
through Saturday, or call
hold, 985-4481 , and the Rev. Sharon
James.or
Kimberly
at 742-2100. It'll
with local ~ingers.
Hausman, 985-4312.
Benefit car show
be
interesting
to
see
what residents
Ralph, who is 43, underwent
The Belpre Church of the
come
up
with
from
way
back when .
.
major surgery at a Cincinnati hospiNazarene Music Department will Cancer Board to mel
The Meigs County Board of the tal in June. He is now homebound at
host a benefit car show and silent
There was so much interest shown
American
Cancer Society wiU meet his residence in Locust Grove, on
auction,' Saturday, at 130 I Putnam
last
week in two meetings held to air
Howe Drive, Belpre. Registration Thursday, 5 p.m at Veterans Memo- heavy medication and requires some- the possibilities of establishing a
one to be with him at all times. His
will be from I 0 a.m. to I p.m., with rial Hospital conference room.
wife is the fonner Jenny Cline. Mr. branch in .Meigs County by the Unithe judging to begin at I p.m. The
and Mrs. Parker attend the St. Paul versity of Rio Grande.
silent auction will be held at 3 p.m. Camp meeliag
Official&amp; of the university are
The Rutland Church of God will United Methodist Church in Tuppers
and awards will be given at 4 p.m.
convinced
that the interest is berc, but
The entry fee is . $10. Refreshments have host the Rutland District Camp Plains. and the church is sponsoring now a lot wiU depend upon your
. meeting at the Rutland Church of the fund drive .
and hake sale.
God, State Route 325. east of RutFunds raised will be used formed-. completing one of the educational
By Thtt Asaoclllled Press
·
land, Sept 25-27, 7 p.m. Evangelist ical and general living expenses . need survey forms. Not only is information on the form vital to the pro,
There will be a chance of rain across Ohio on Wednesday as a cold front Services announred
Special services will be held at the will be the Rev. Russell Ward, Pigeon There is presently no income and the ject, but the number of people
' • collides with the warm and humid air covering the state.
Forge, Tenn. Special singing each hospitalization is exhausted.
responding by completing a form is
:
A band of showers and thunderstorms will precede the front as it moves Mount Olive Community Church,
evening. Nursery provided.
·
Long
Bottom,
Wednesday
through
' across the state, forecasters said. .
.
And in Middleport Mildred (Bet- e•tremcly important.
Saturday,
7
p.m.
Elder
Charles
Bush
If you don't have one of the forms
Temperatures will continue to be unseasonably warm with highs in the
ty) McDaniel has-undergone surgery
Songfest
set,
.
will
be
speaking.
to
complete
for your household, conlow to mid-80s.
at the Holzer Medical Center. Betty
A
songfest
will
be
held
at
the
Old
tact
Ron
McDade,
Meigs County
Drier air and cooler temperatures are likely on Thursday. the National
Bethel Free Will ·Baptist church, has diabetes and this was her second economic development- director.
Boosters
to
meet
Weather Service said.
The Meigs Athletic Boosters will Route 7 and Storys Run Road, Sat- surgery in three months. She resides through the office of the Meigs
'
The record-high temperature for this date at the Columbus weather staon Palmer Street.
County Chamber of Commerce. 992tion was 96 degrees in 1897 while the record low was 40 in 1916. Sunset meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at urday, 7 p.m. featuring earthen vesMeigs
High
School.
All
parents
arc
sels
and
Leslie
Allen
.
Revival
starts
5005, and I feel confident arrangetonight will be at 7:38p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at 7:14a.m.
Sunday
and
continues
!hrough
Sept.
urged
to
attend
.
mcnls will he made for you to receiv~
Weather forecast:
27.
7
p.m.
each
evening.
Speaker,
one
of the survey forms. .
Tonight...Mostly clear. Lows in !he upper 50s. Light south wind . '
Homeromlng
set
Dave
Johnson,
special
singing.
PubAm
Ete
Power
.......................
46'4
Wednesday ... Partly cloudy. A 40 percent chance of afternoon showers.
The annual homecoming at Morse lic invited by Pastor Ernest Phillips .
Akzo ......................................80\
Were you the one who ordered up
Highs in the lower 80s.
.
·
·
AmrTech ..c. ....... .. . . ................64'!.
Chapel
Church,
County
Road
35,
such
beautiful weather'/ If so, I'm .
Wednesday night...Scauered showers until midnight, otherwise partly
Aahland Oil ........ ,..................52\
Racine/Portland Road , will be held BREC meeting
proud
of you and I hope you have it
cloudy. Lows in the inid 50s.
AT&amp;T .....................................44'Sunday.
Services
ai
10
a.m.,
dinner
at
,
The
annual
Buckeye
Rural
Elec·
Extended forecast:
Bank Orte.............................S3"J. coming on a long-term basis - like
noon, afternoon service. I .to 4 p.m. tric Cooperative annual membership
Bob Evana ............................18'until April. Do keep smilin$.
Thursday... Mostly clear. Highs in the mid 70s.
meeting will be held Oct. 4 at BuckBorg-Wamer ••••••••••••••••.••••...567!.
Friday .. .Mostly. clear. Lows ncar 50 and highs in the upper 70s.
Champion ............................. 1a'!.
eye Hills Career Center in Rio
Saturday ... Mostly clear. Lows ncar 50 and highs in the upper 70s.
Charm Shps ............................. 7
Grande.
Registration
will
be
at
II
Units of the Meigs County Emer~PRING VAllEY CINEMA
City Holding .............., ...........43'1.
gency Medical Service recorded six a.m.. followed by lunch from noonFede111l Mogul ......................34'1.
44 6-4524
.
calls for assistance Monday. Units 1:30 p.m. with the meeting beginning
Gannett ...............................101\
at 2 p.m.
'•
Goodyear ..............................64'4
Grande Community College Board of responding included:
(Continued from Page 1)
Kmart .....................................14'4
CENTRAL
DISPATCH
Lands
End.............................
tcction Agency met with the board Trustees, whose tenn is about to
Revival
set
10:09 a.m., State Rou.te 684, Har·
Ltd ......................................... 24'4
and staff of the County Health expire.
Revival
services
will
he
held
at
the
Also present were Commissioner · risonville, Stephen Pullins, Holzer Wesleyan Church, Coolville. Sept.
Oak Hill Flnl ..........................19~.
• , Department to encourage the county
Medical Center;
ova .................... :....................37
.
Jeffrey
Thornton
and
Clerk
Gloria
to seek a solution to the problem.
Noon, Main Street, Pomeroy. Fred 23-28, 7 p.m. each evening. Rev. Bud
OM Valley ...............................34
Kloes.
The two studies will cost· the
Peoples ...................................39
Pullins. treated at the scene, Pomeroy Allman. evangelist. special singing.
... .county $9,100, and will involve testPrem Fln1 ...............................20'1.
squad assisted;
Rockwell ...............................59'4
.. ing le.achate and investigating '!'eth6:25 p.m., Mulberry Avenue, Reunion planned
RD-Shell ...............................54't.
The
family
of
John
and
Ida
Stohan
' ods of treating the leachate, whteh IS
Pomeroy, Joe Sisson. Veterans
Shoney'a ...............................,.s,_.
COLUMBUS
(AP)
Indianawill
hold
a
(cunion
at
the
Forked
Run
contaminated water seeping from
Memorial
Hospital;
Star
Bank ............................ ..45'!.
Ohio direct hog prices at selected
State Park, Sept. 27 .. noon. All
· . the landfill.
Wendy's ................................ 21'1.
Dusky
Street.
Syracuse.
8:48p.m.,
descendants of Thomas and Belle
·
The commissioners also met in 6ilying points Tuesday as provided by Thomas Allen, HMC.
Worthlngton ......................,... 19't.
the
U.S
.
Department
of
Agriculture
Weaver Stohart invited. Those attendexecutive session with Prosecuting
'
RUTLAND
Stock
reports are the 10:30
ing
to
take
a
covered
dish
.
In
the
Attorney John Lentes and Dr. lames Market News:
I:26 p.m., volunteer fire dcpana.m.
quotes
provided by Advest
Barrows
and
gilts:
steady
u,&gt;
1.00
'. Witherell, Scott Lucas and Rhonda
mcnt to Main Street, Pizza Dan's. event of rain. the reunion v.ill he held
Gallipolis.
of
higher;
demand
good
with
a
moderin the hascment of the Long Bottom
Dailey of Veterans Memorial Hospi electric lire. no injuries reported.
ate movement.
·
Methodi st Church.
tal on possible litigation.
SYRACUSE
U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs. country
The board also:
8:26 p.m ., Water Street. Roher! ·
• Approved an interdepartmental points 49.50-51.00; plants 50.00- Boster. VMH.
· transfer of $25,000 within the budget 52.00.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 45.50. of the county EMS office;
49.50;
210-230 lbs. 41.50-45 .50.
• Established new line items for
Sows:
under 500 lbs. 50 cents to
the county auditor's office for tax setVeterans Memorial
dements, as recommended· by the 1.00 higher; over 500 lhs. steady.
Monday admissions -Alice GarBoars: 36.00-37.00.
state auditor's office;
.
nes. Langsville. ·
Estimated receipts: 32.500.
• Approved payment of bills in the
Monday discharges - none.
·: amount of $342.721.53. with 223
Holzer Medical Center
Prices from Producers Live· entries;
Disrharges
Sept. 15 - Mrs.
stock AssOc:iation:
·
• Discussed the replacement of
Danny
Angel
and
daughter, Mrs.
Hog market trend for Tuesday :
John T. Wolfe as a member of the Rio steady to strong.
Shannon Scholderer and daughter,
Doris Beardsley. Mrs. Barry Pete"'
and
son. Mrs. Jerry Ramsey and
Summary of Monday's auctions
·d .
'
daughter,
Cody Wond.
The following couples were at Hillsboro and Creston:
Birth
- Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Hogs: steady to liigher.
issued marriage licenses in the Meigs
Shoemaker.
daughter, Cheshire. ·
Butcher hogs: 46.00-54.00.
. County Probate Court of Judge
(Published
with permission)
Cattle: strong to 1.00 higher.
., Jtobert Buck:
, . Bo!&gt;by Eugene Dill Sr., 67. and . Slaughter steers: choice 62.00· Corrine M. McDaniel, 62, both of 68.00: select 58.00-63.00.
Slau~htcr heifers: choice 61.00Middleport; Carl Wayne McDade,
66.00:
;clcct57 .00-62.00.
18, Middleport, and Robin Dale
CLEVELAND (AP)- Two Ohio
Cows:
steady to lower: all cows
Donohue. 17, Pomeroy; Jason Lee
Lottery
tickets show the right five 42.00
and
duwn.
Jthodes . 18. and Misty Dawn Ehe"'Bulls:
steady
to
2.00.
lower:
all
number
combination in Buckeye 5,
bach. 18. both of Middleport.
and each entitles the owner to claim
bulls 51.00 and down.
Veal calves: lower; choice 130.00 a $100,000 prize.
·
Both
winning
tickets
were
sold
at
and down.
Sheep and lambs: steady to low- . Mack 's Beverage in Parma. the lot!USPS UJ-9601
er: choice wools 70.00-82 .75: feeder .tcry said.
Published every arternoon. tdanday tllrouKh
lambs 89 .00 and down : aged sheep
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
Frida¥. I I I Coul1 St., Pomeroy. Ohio. tly th~
38.75
and
down.
•
$338.009.
Ohio 'Valley PublishiQM. Compan~/OIRMII Co.,

' ' '•ICotumbU81

I

..

Meig~

announcements

~_hance

of rain re-enters
.\ PJcture on Wednesday

Stocks

Meigs EMS runs

7

Commissioners table bids

2n.

by the Fayed family.
Sketch artists on scooters will then perhaps the princess isn't dead
"In the film," his anicle revealed follow them at a discreet distance, after all.
solemnly, "there do not appear to be wearing hair shirts, and confessing
She's alive, in disguise, looking
any paparaui at the back entrance." their many human failings over little for true love. The hero is disguised,
I had to stop reading right there. loudspeakers.
on the adventure of his life. The
So why was there popular saint is in the desert, alive, waiting .
Levels of reality were
outrage at the royal family for for God's word. ·
peeling back'' like onion
not expressing their grief in
The rest of us, trapped in the
layers.
· Here was the . New
puhlic'l Wasn't the Important mundane. curl up nights with the
Lesson we consumers were ovcrlit stories on the tuhc.
York Times, a self-consciously
unobtrusive
supposed to bave learned that
When we leave the house .
medium, examining an
public figures have a right to nohody's watching us; we wear nut
intrusive medium for cvi~
privacy ''
scat hells. nhey the -speed limit,
What business is it of ours don't drive drunk .
den~e of the presence of
abusive media.
Shoales . if Prince Charles weeps or not?
We're ordinary.
I felt r.ke a snoop listenIf a solitary tear should happen ·
Renown was not thrust upon us,
ing to an eavesdropper who's watch- to roll down the cold cheek of the nor have we sought it out.
ing a peeping tom who's on the Queen. do we really. need to sec it'!
Nothing dogs our every step hut
lookout for a voyeur with Tourcttc 's
rm t\lonc in this opinion , I know, these glittering Sl"rics, in whose
or at least I'm male in this opinion. . shadows lurk every deed we left
Syndrome. ·
And there was something else I
And sure. I have my own ohses- undone, and what we might have
sions. Any time an Audi~ Murphy hecn . .
couldn't figure out..
The popular belief seems to he movie shows up on television, I
(To receive a romplimenlary
that. metaphorically speaking. watch it.
He was Amcrica·s last true hero, lan Shoales newsletter, call 1-800Princess Diana was killed by
paparazzi, and the photographs that and even in the washed-out form of 989-DUCK or write Duck's
ne.edled her to her doom were pub- his westerns, I always tear up watch- Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada
lished in tabloids.
ing him.
City, CA 95959.)
But of course, we must lose them
Some supennarkcts. in a display
of meaningless courage, yanked -- the princess. the hero, the saint.
Ian Shoales is a syndicated
That's why we follow stories about writer for Newsp1per Enterprise
tabloid' from their shelves.
Many tabloids made a public them : we know they'll he gone from Association.
show of denouncing -their own pre- us soon enough. .
(For inrormation on how to
Maybe the security camera at the communicate electronlrally with
vious policies.
Henccl'orth, I assume, they will Ritz is our security blanket. If it this columnist aad others, conlatl
only accept artist 's depictions ·of would only reveal that there were no America Online by calling 1-800evil paparazzi lurking that night, 827-6364, ext. 8317.)
.mcgacelcbrities.

U.S., Canada need to settle their fishing

You have more by doing more

OHIO Weather

rna

Security camera .may be our security blanket

Letters to the editor

The Dally Sentinel • Page 3

Pomeroy • Mldcllepor"., Ohio

'

down a U.S. Navy submarine test
ton .
The legal action comes after rnnge in Canadi'an waters.
Canadians committed two warlike
Salmon don't carry passports.
Fish spawned in Canadian and U.S.
acts.
In 'June, four American fishing rivers spend most of their lives in
boats were detained in a British waters far beyond their nesting
place. Only a treaty
Columbia port. A month
later, a flotilla of Canadian
between the two nations not the hostile actions of
boats encircled an Alasl&lt;an
ferry, holding it hostage in a
Clark - will settle this
dispute . An attempt to
British Colombian port for
reach a0 agreement colthree days. Alaska responded by cutting off ferry serlapsed earlier this year
when !he Canadian govvice to the port and Sen.
Frank Murkowski, R-Aiasernment broke off talks
after the United States
1&lt;9, staned talking about the
refused
to submit the
Navy and Coast Guard
Wickham
salmon
fishing
dispu1e to a
being used to protect U.S.
binding
arbitrator.
fishing vessels.
Both sides need to get back to the
What the Canadians want is a
treaty with . the United States that negotiating table .
The outcome ,of this disagreeregulates the catch in waters worked
by fishermen from the two coun- ment will have an impact that reachtries, What they are likely to get is a es far beyond the Northwest salmon
hostile backlash to their salmon-boat fisheries. The border between the
United States and Canada long has
diplomacy.
' The United States will not be tJ,en more of a line on a map than it

. Anyo11e who thinks it can't come to that .is naive.
cajoled into coming to terms with
Canadian fishermen --'- nor will it
towtow to the demands of Clark, a
provincial politician; whose grandstanding includes a threat .to close

is a demarcation of. the people on
either side. The people of Canada
and the Un,ted ·States share the
world's longest unpatrolled border.
That's testament to our long-stand-

ing ability to get along.
The flap over salmon fishing
threatens to change that.
Left to fester, it might produce a
na.•ty incident- one that could tum
back the clock on U.S.-Canadian
relations all the way to 1859. The
last thing our nations need are soldiers staring down their gun barrels
at each other because politicians in
Washington and Ottawa cannot
solve a minor dispute over fishing
rights.
Anyone who thinks it can't come
to !hat is naive.
In the 1980s, fistfights broke out
amo~g American and Canadian fishermen - and a few shots were fired
~ during a dispute oyer salmon
fishing_ rights. That one was thought
to ·have been resolved by the 1985
Pacifio Salmon Treaty, but its provisions governing size of the annual
catch have proved too porous.
If recent events in Bosnia and
Rwanda have taught us anything it is
that people who once 'lived side-by~
side in peace can become bloodthirsty enemies if cooler heads don 't
prevail.
While ~.S. and Canadian officials are immobilized by their own
diplomatic intransigence, Glen
Clark fans the names of a dispute
that is only a spark away from
becoming a major international incident.

•

Livestock report

-·-·-

Hospital news

'

ofze!" Oft~le O.l(rf/fofzY' Iferlieo.lOe-l(te/"
eo~t6al~ tirv-ite tk eoiKMMt'tj- to attelfrl
~tbbO/f eattilfj' t-U"eiKOirtM fo~ tk lfUt/

1/ol'ze~

· Marriage licenses

Lottery results

#up tJtirte

8/J Ea~t !leiKO~tQIo~til-e, PoiKV'OJI'

. O/f t~ caJif/'«~ of {/e,ter-alf~ !feMO~talllo9ltal

The Daily Sentinel

r;..lrla?i .fetturbe-1" 1~ 1997
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8th Annual
Sternwheel
Festival
Parade
·call992·2239 to enter your unit
• Walking • Marching • Vehicles
• Bicycles • Horses
BE CREAnYE AND DECORATE.YOUR BICYCLES

Pr.ices will be awarded
for children . rades K-S ·
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~efe.rh-IKt-lft.f titriK~atef? folftJwtirj'

�Sports

The Daily Sentinel.
.
:
"-ae4

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Orioles clinch AL East division

Tueadly,SephHnblt18,1i97

Cowboys slip past Eagles 21-20~

'
i
'I

TOUCHDOWN - Dallas' Anlhony M iller (83) catche1 a fourth
quarter touchdown poasa agalnlt Phllldelphia'a Tim Wltlon (33)
during the fourth quarter Monday night In Irving, Texas. Dallas
won, 21-20.

1sb.
" When Chris carne out, I thought
it was only appropriate that he be the
one to beat us after all he did for us
last season," Dallas special teams
captain Bill Bates S81d. "But I've
played a lot of games in high school,
college and IS years m the NFL, and
the game tsn't o•er until the last second'ucks off the clock."
The Cowboys (2·1 ), as does
Philadelphia, have a bye next week,
and they're going to need it to give
over the shock of winning \his one
after trailing by two touchdowns.
Dallas blew a IS-point lead last
week to lose to Arizona.
"I couldn't believe what happened," Dallas coach Barry Switzer
said. "Somebody up there likes us.
For the first 59 minutes, I wasn't sure.
That was just a chip-shot field goal.
I thought tt was over. I'm worn out."
Ty Detmer h1t Freddte Solomon
with a 46-yard pass to the Dallas S
with four seconds to play. 'The Eagles,
who staned from thetr own 16, called
their final timeout for Boniol.
· It was going to be a sure game·
winner. Un~erstand that Boniol had
made 46 consecutive field goals from
inside the 35-yard line. It looked like
a second upset win in a row for the
Eagles, who beat the Super Bowl

last week.
"The snap was fint," Hutton said.
"I just dropped it. I take all the blame
for it. 1 should catch every ball. It's
·my mistake. I took off and ran, that's
aU! could do."
Boniol was shocked to see the ball
on the ground.
"I'm really disappQtnted because
this was against the Cowboys,"
Boniol said. " I know how the fans in
Philly feel about them. It was important to me beca11se it was my old
team . For me, it was money m the
bank from there. I'm still in shock."
Aikman took the Cowboy~ 62
yards in seven plays for the winning
touchdown. A founh-down passinterference call on Charles Dimry
set Dallas ~pat the Philadelphia 45.
Then Aikman connected wtth tight
end Eric Bjornson to the Philadelphia
17. Two plays later, Miller, grabbed
the ball away from safety Tim Watson in the back of the end zone
"I was lucky I came down with
It," Miller said. "I saw Troy scrambhng and just went to an open spot.
I thought the ball was gomg to be
intercepted. ! was just fonunate."
Atkman satd the ball slipped comtng out of his hands. .
"I was late with the ball and just
decided to take a chance," Aikman

throw. 1 didn't ha•e a good hold on
the ball."
•
Watson said he thought he had a
• pick.
:
"I thought I had the interceptiol!o"
he said. "SomehowAtkmanjustg!lt
the ball in there." .
~
Eagles coach Ray Rhodes was
stunned.
;
"It's a shame to waste such great
effon," Rhodes said. "There) !lo
excuse for it. 1 can't think of a mqre
frustrattng way to lose. That 's somethmg we work on every day "
The Eagles held Dallas to five
field goals by Richte Cunmngham
before the late rally.
Running back Emmitt Smith
summed n up: "That was a gtft; It
was nothing mcredtble that we did.
Thanks for the early ChriStmas present."
'The Eagles won 31-21 on Monday
mght last year wttlla bizarre play tn
Texas Stad1um with 3: 19 to go.
James Wtlhs intercepted a p~s
from Aikman 4 yards deep in the efi!
zone, returned it 14 yards. and !at·
eralcd io Troy Vincent, who raced llo
yards for the longest interception
return in NFL history.
"Usually we come up on the sho'rt
end of these type of games," comet·
back Kevin Smnh said "For once,

By RONALD BLUM
not be !dent1fied. said they mtcnded
AP Sports Writer
to suppon San Francisco.
ATLANTA -Faced with a pas·
''When you buy a team, you buy
sible lawsuit by the San Francisco assets,• wh1ch mcludc exclust.c
Giants, baseball owners might not monopoly rights to promotmg games
take a realtgnment •ote at th\:ir meet· Within your own league in your area
ings this week
on an cxdusavc bas1s," Giants own·
Acting .commissioner Bud Sehg ~r Peter Magowan satd Monday.
hoped to call for a vote Thursday, the " We would be a.• ked to give that up.
final day of the owners' three-day That's exactly why the Mets and
quancrly meetings, which stan with Cubs resisted."
an executive council sesston tonight.
'The radical plan that Sehg and
Selig is in favor of radical reahgn- reahg'nment committee chairman
ment, tn whtch 15 teams would John Harrington have advocated
swllch leagues.
would put all Western teams m the
Less radtcal plans have been for- NL and all Eastern teams m the AL
mulated, with most mcjudmg the shtft It would put the Mets and Yankees in
of the three AL West Coast teams to the same dtvision, pair the Cubs and
the NL. But the Giants have threat· Whtte Sox, the Dodgers and Angels
ened to sue, argumg they can't he and the Giants and A's.
forced to accept the Oakland AthletSince no team can be forced to
1cs in their market
swnch leagues or divisions without
Rankmg officials on two other NL • its approval, the Mets threatened to
teams. speakml\ on the condition the~ veto the plan, as did the Pirates, Reds

and Braves. Harnngton's group then
formulated a less radtcal plan, but n
still would have the six Pacific Coast
teams in the NL along with the Ari zona Dtamondbacks and Colorado
Rockies
··Bud Selig mollified the Mel" and
Cubs by allowing them to stay m
their separate divisions What ts the
logte behmd not a!lowmg us the same
thing ?" Magowan said from Atlanta.
where the Giants were playing the
Braves.
.
Baseball's lawyers ha-. said the
G1ants do not ha•e veto power
because they arc not heing asked to
change d1Vts1ons Some teams have
argued that the resolution approved 1n
January. which created the realignmcnt cummttlee, overrides the provtsion 1n the NL ConstitutiOn that
protects a team from having tts temtory encroached..
"Each member shall ha•e the

exclusl'e right ... to play ba.,chall
games as the home club within the
hmits of the c1ty tn whiCh the mcmher's club" located and an area with1n 10 mtles in all directions from ihc
city lumts uf such city," the NLCuris\ltut\On says
·.
San Francisco's city limlls adJ&lt;Ii'n
Oakland's, and the Athlctks' ballpark
Iails wtthm the l().mtle ltnut. II tljc
A's move to t(le NL. the Gtants sijy
they probably would sue
"The last thing baseball needs 'is
another lcllai mess," Magowan sa!,~·
Selig did not want to respond to
Magowan's threat, and wouldn 't pre~
d1ct whether a vote would he taken
thiS week.
''I' m trytng to be sensltl'e ,;o
every club's needs," Schg satd "I
expect ongoing discussions. Eve!}'·
body understand's we need to go
somethmg. The schedule is our N11.
I marketmg tool. We cannot live with

By DENNE H. FREEMAN
AP Sporte Writer
IRVING, Texas ..:... A horrific
mishap on the NFL's most automatic play allowed the Dallas Cowboys
to avoid retracing their sorry Scptember of a year ago.
Not wishing to stan 1-3 like they
did in 1996, when the Cowboys
struggled to make in the playoffs,
Barry Swttzer declared Monday
night's meeting with Philadelphia a
"must" game.
'Then, after bemg outplayed for 59
minutes, they got not one; but two
gifts from the football gods in an
tmprobable 21-20 victory over the'
. dumbstruck Eagles.
Ftrst, Anthony Miller made a circus catch on a 14-yard pass from
Troy Atkman for a touchdown with
51 seconds left.
This was the same Miller who
decided last week after two plays that
his hamstnng was on the verge of
giving him trouble and took the rest
of the day off.
Then came mtracle No. 2· The
Eagles ( 1-2) botched a 22-yard fieldgoal attempt as time exptred.
Punter Tom Hutton, holding for
former Cowboys ktcker Ch'ns Boniol,
fumbled the snap, tried to run with it
and was tackled by Deion Sanders,

Scoreboard R;;yg;;;;,;~t ·;;;~}/b~-; ;;;~;;·i~sue;
American Le•gw

w

91
II!&lt;
74
7.1

y-Balrunon:
New Y«k
Dotroit
Bos10n
Toronco

71

w

79
71

Clevel:uad

Mllwaukt.c
ClliCIIO

7J

Klmsu C1ty
Minncsotll

61

60

Seatlk

II'

w

''

Annhram

10

lbu

·

By The A.uori•tetl Prm
• East .i)Msion
L
GB
S1 ,
611
6]
S14
6

.....

76
76
79

• L

49J

490
473
Cenual Dtv111on

Pct.

GB

m
m

67
7S

7

49J

...
77

8

411

R8

GB

m

67
72

~20

:'i 112

4().1

I ' 1/1
2.1

.J67

lit)

Oaklllr-'
61
90
y-chnclrd po.115ellion benh ·
Mondly"s Games
Baltimore 6. Cleveland S. I.U g.:urw:

•

18 1/1

20

-lOS
Wnt Dtvision
P&lt;t

l

18
18 Jn
21

Clcvclnnd ~- 801IUmore I. 2nd ,.arne:
N Y Y:mkees 7 Bosron 6
M1lwauk« II Ctucapo White SOJ. 10

Kansas C1ty II . Tclf.as 9
Detroit 6. &lt;bkbnd l
~ule 7 Toronto '
J\IIWtm ll. Mmnesoca !'i
'I'Pnd.y"s Cama~
Clc....:ltmd {Weatben 1-:n 111 Baltlmon: CRodnJ.uez. 0.01 12 Olli p m day
Boston CSclc l~-12 and Olec:oO-OJ llt NY Yank«s (P&lt;ttlll&lt; 17-7 illld BMks 1-01. ~ !'i 0~ p m
Clevdand !Nagy 1"-10 ill: Balum~ (Key l~-91 6&lt;ri pm m~ht
ChiCDIO WMe Sol (!kre +-I) at Mrlwouk&amp;:t IHMn•S(h 0-1 ). 8 05 p m
KusasCuy tApp1er 9-11) at T~JUl~ &lt;Pal'ltk \ . .l) !I \!'i p m
M1nnc:S01a CRdc 18-9) at J\na~rm CH'ikpwA 1-6) 10 O"i p m
Only gnme~ schedutea
Wedftf.a.y•• CamH
• Toronro IHelltgcn t ~-91 01 BoMan (Suppan 7-2). 7 O"i p m.
Detron(Moehltr 11-10) at NY Yankees(Mendot.16-6). 7 .1"i pm
Mi1waukt:!r (0 AITIIm 8·6) at Balllmort (F.Jid:son 16-6) 7 \~ p m
Cleveland (Wn~ht 7-31 "'Mmncsota (Mtller 0-.11 KOS p.m
ChH::tJO Whne Sox tBaldwtn 11 -1-'l n1 Kan,:u C.ty !Rosado 9-121 II 0~ p m
Scattk: CFilUtm I 5-91 at TcJW.5 t Burkett 7-121. ll .\5 p m
Oakland &lt;ludwrck. 1-21 at Anaheim (Watson 11 -10) tO lS p m

.,w

Alblta
Florida

""
"

~York

•1

Montreal
Ftuladelphim
Houlton

PinsburJh

11 ~.

7~

497

61

loll

~KI

.Iii 11.2

5-'1

10 I I~

.10.•

11

H9

w

Crnlral Dh lslon
L
Pet.

74
7H

"
69

00

69

80

6)

~·
.JliO

'

'"

....-no

6
6
1.2 1/'!.

COLUMBUS !API - How i1 statt p:mcl of
sporu wnr~n 1nd broadcDStcn rn1es Ohto hiJh
Khool foorhatl teams m rhr first or ctpht weekly
1997 regular·stli!On polls for l1Je Assuc1ated Prr1s

WHt Dl; lsion

l

8.1

61

.2
78

6K

I

12

~

71

19

ll

Mondlf• Canws
NY Mets 10. Phtl:wlclphra 5 10 lnnm,s. ht
Phrl::ul:lphli11 NY Mers I 2nd l!llme
Coklrudo 7. Aondn I
PiusbufFh ~ Monrreal.f. 10 rnntnp
Atlanta ~ San Fmnctsco-'
Cmanrwll -'· Ch11.:"'o Cubs I
Soo DicJO -1. HouJton J
lot 1\nJck:J i . St Lours 6 I "i mmnP

1uttda,·, G~mt~

s:~m.:

I.Ctc' e S1 l~nauus( 17 J~-0
.2 CantnnMd(tnlc)fi~JJ - 0
.l C.n St Xonr..:r1-0

l~:!

:!91

1.25
10 ~

I00
ll2
71!

66

62
10 EtJCltd~-0
61
Yl'lunr.s Boanlm~nl -0.
61
Others. n:o:cr,mgl~ or more pornts 12. wc,tcr·
v1llt" North ~5 I i Lakewood St Edward 52 l·t
C1n Ehler 49 15 ljp!Jer Arlml!lun 42 16. Wurthrn~kln Krl~nurfll.• .W 17. Hamilton 2H IH rrenwmr R~~ 27 Ill M.lsslllon Perry 26 20. Akron
F1rc~tnnc 2-1 ~I 1\cttcr• nr.l a1rmon1 lll2J 22 Ihe I
Gahonn:. Llno:oln Sokm 11 2-' GallllW!I)' W~s rlant.l
Ill ~"i (Uc) Crn Anderson lru)' I ll 17 27
StronJ!:SVIIII" H• ~M Berea I:!
DIVISION II
I Ak.ronSpnnJ!(tddil-' Il -0
119
9,Htllmrd0a\ld~Cinl-0

'-~)::II

-Sports briefs
tJmc lor next season.
LAKE FOREST. Ill. (APl- The
Chil:ago Bears named Rrck M1rcr
startmg quarterback for Sunday's
game at New England. replacing Enk
Kramer, as the Chtcago Bears desperately try to salvage their season
after an 0-3 stan.
Mtrer, the lowest-ranked passer in
the NFL last season, was acquired m
February from Seattle for a firstround draft pick and was SJgned to a
three-year, $1 0 milhon contract.

PRIMESi ill•

$,., ••.

DIVISION I

6 Cm Modlcr2·1
7.UmilSr 2·1
II Brunswu:kJ.(J

~-~lat

FOOTBALL
EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. (AP)
- New York Giants rook1e receiver .
Ike Hilliard will mJSs the remainder
of the season due to a neck tnjury su~­
taincd in the loss to Jacksonville on
Sept 7.
The mjury has made Htlhard's
spine unstable and forced doctors to
plan surgery, the team :ind medical
expens satd It IS not considered
career-threatening, but he will have a
throe-to-six month rehabtlitatwn pen·
od. Coach Jim Fassel said he expect·
ed Hilliard wtll be able to return in

hy OHSAA drmtolls. wnh wan-lost record and tmnl
\)(liRI ~ (liBt· p\:l(e: \!(}(~In p:rrcnd~~S)

~ . WarrenHMdrnJ' 0
~ To! St Fr.mm ~-0

All;mta (MIIIWOI.I.J , _\) I 10 r m
Houston tGa.rcr::~ '6· M) I ,\~I' n1
Color:t&amp;kl (Casu lin II-II t ,,, Flund~ (Oj:tln 1-1), 7 o~ r m
NY Mcts (Reed 12-tll .11 Ph•ladelphm (Si:tuUin~ 15-101 7 O"i r m
Montn:al Ooh~n :!-J .11 Pttt~burgh 1Lieber 9- 141. 1 OS p m
C11~rnn:x1 !Mercker 8-10) :ll ChiC:lf.O Cub5 (Tapam6·J) II OS p m
llll Anrelrs (Marttncz 9-41 at St loUis IBusby 0-0) ~ O"i Jl m
WttlrMIUy"s G•mtt
.
St. Lnuis (Mom!! 10-fO at Chrcatt.o Cub! tB::msm 0-J) 1 !0 p m
Phlladdrflia !Stephenson 6-6 &lt;~nd M t..·ncr 10-1 5) ill Flonda tH\·mnnd.:z 9-1 .md Saunllcr~ \ .
6) 2 !'I:O!'ipm
Howton (Rl'ynold~ 7-101 ;u Pinshur~h (Schnud• 9-71 7 ' ~ p m
MootK&lt;~I tVakli:-5 HI .at Crn~· mnau (Rl"nllinJc-r 7-Ml 7 J:'l r .nl
NY M~'l.\ (Jones 14-31 lll Allanta (M:Idllux IR-'1. 7 .W r m
Color.tdo { llKUtllll)D 7-MI ill San DK!~CI (1\~ hby 3 Ill 10 1~ p m
loiAn}!t:lc~ iP!rl I \ . 7) nt San Frnnc•s.:•l tRutlt.'r' 12 b) 10 ~:'i r rn
San r-rnncuco (AivMl'l

San D...:tto (Smtih

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Six
schools with both tradition and talent
to burn - Clevelund St. Ignatius,
Akron Sprmgfteld, Mentor Lake
Catholic, Germantown Valley V1ew,
Marion Pleasant and St. Henry - arc
the No . I 's in the inaugural week of
the 51st Ohto Associated Press high
school football poll
The poll of 48 spans writers and

broadcasters was released Monday
The six schools have combtned to
win 16 state championships on the
field and another 18 AP poll utles.
Among them a year ago, they won
four of the six poll crowns and two
state champtonships.
Undefeated Meigs was ranked
23rd tn Dl'tsllon III ctrcles
St. Ignatius, wtth a record-tymg

-AP grid ratings-

GH

Installed

...

Familiar names top first AP prep polf
six state champumsh1ps won , headed
Divtsion I over another nauonally
ranked powerhouse , Canton McKin ley, St Ignatius. ndtng routs ol _
heavyweights Berwick (Pa.) and
Mentor Lake Cath&lt;!ltC, piled up 322
pomts to McKmlcy 's 291.
Three more urihcatcns made up
the top five . Cmcinnau St. Xavter.
Warren Hardtng and Toledo St. FranCIS

' 1/.2

.J(oi

B7

w

t.n~ Anr~lcs
San Fr.llli!'!SCO
Colorldo
Srm Di~n
...

GB

"

617

toO

11

C1ncmna11
St Louts
Chr'a'-o

NationlllAaJ\It
East Di"ision
l
P&lt;t.

~ Cn l~

Wath.'m•nlflJl 0
l Umontu'4nl..akcl-O
7.tnfl\ illt(4 )3-CI
~ .Ch~IIJ\-0

fi.Cm

Rn~.:rB.l(••nt 1

)l-0

1 TlffmCnlunlhl:ln( IJl 0

~UI

...'""
'"

Ill
11 0

~ lXIiancl'(:! Jl-0
9 M:~~~di\·ldM .Id i~IIOI11l -O
91
10 Vt.&gt;rmthnntl Jl.()
6l
01hl=n rl'l'l'l\ lllj!. 11 or mml' f'lllnl~ II
letmooniJJ(){) J !.~ nc\'a'i-' l'fltct. Bru:whrcw
Hu 8R'Cb' riR• Vinttllt \\'arnn Local (I) 47 1~
- Gartkkl Ht ~ -'2 lb We~lal.:~ -'0 17 All.anc.: ~IJ
IM Lll\'Cianll 24 19. W,ll'~aw-Rtvcr V1ew IIJ 20
O~~:fnrd Tnl::awaml:t 12

"'

DIVISION Ill
I.Me ntGrl.nh"('ath 1612- 1

Ill~

1 Cm Pun·d 1Manan(til'-O
J WCHMmmrTnte.:(~IJ -0
.a AvonUI.:.t(6)J.QI J 1

I\~

~~ -~

Bdlev~l)\-0

9-1

Col~ OtSalesm~-0

Y.a

"i

OUT AT SECOND • Baltlmore'1 H•old Balnn, right, 11 out t1t
aecond •• Clevlland'a Omar Vlzqual, left, tum• the double play
to end the game In the ninth Inning on 1 grounder hit by Lanny
. Webltlr. The Indiana won 4-1 In the n - . p of 1 twlnblll with
a.mrnore Monday night In Baltimore, (AP)

Thornv1lleSherid::m( J )\.Q
94
8 Youngs Mooncyll12-1
87
~. BclonWest8rnnch[ t ).\ 0
8-'
10 Mmerva ~-0
711
Others rtCCI\InJ 12 or more pomu II lt1CJ
Cm McN•cbot::u. Wmters.,alle l"'ban Cmek {1:) 69
13 (Ire) Cuy Falls Wald1 J~suit (I ) Eaton 6~ , I "i
(II~). Stllllbers. Youngs ChQncy 60 17. Hebron
lakewood ~7 II. McArthur Vial..- County 33
19 (I~) ClrclevJIIe Dover 28 21 Btlld'ontll.lnt' 24
22. KtnttlnJ Alter 21 11, P"'!~Y M~lp 10

LANE
ACTION

DIVISION IV
l .GcrmantownValkyVx:\1.120}\-0
2 Clc\C Bt...:d1Citn...'(7)2·0
l Omilll'(\}'i-0
-1 . 1\krMM:tlk·hc~t~-ri IJl. O

~K9

219
166
I 1-1

Dtllrufl!ll)l-0

11-'

ti Ca~ml1aMar~arcttal I 1~-0

XI

7.Bucynu,l-0

H

K.EiynaC:xh J.(J
6~
GrnnvllkJ-Q
69
9.AellvllltCJcarFork.l.(J
57
Othen rcle1VIRJ t 2 or more JIOIIIC~ I I (}.1k
H:trbor 'i!'i 12 Onawa-Glandorf (I) ~ ll W1d·
hffc ~ ~ 14, M:tRIJ\5 f'l.-ny -'9 IS 7.oorvrllc Tu~ ·
carawas Valll!y .&amp;II 16 Sm.-eubnro -'' 11. Perry 41
Ill. Canton Cent C&lt;!th -10 19 Portsmouth l2 20
(11~). Ch:tgnn Falls. D::lylon Nnrthnd~ \0 Z1 (litt,
Ntlson\'illt·York, Zancmlle May~vrllc 27 24
Finncy10wn ).1'1 :!'i. Cln lnd1an Hlll2'i 26 WclllhE·
ron 19 21 Cleve Vrll:t Angcla-St JMCph I7 211
Youn1~ l.rbcny I o; 29 Spnnglictd Kcmon Rrdpc
11
DIVISION V
I ManonPicn!LnntC221.l-O
2 Am:wuJ :~ -Cie::~rcn.'\.i:ll f\-0
\ Hilmlcrl':um:kHeuryiiJ \.(1
-1 Col\ HarHcyO J\-0
'i Coldwatcrl lJ\.Q
6 Sulh~an81a\ kRm.-r( I )\-fl

'

or even more

We must close out old Inventory to make .:
room for new Fender merchandise
• Scratch &amp; Dent items
• Items from our rental pool
• Close out Items
• Discontinued Items
• Repossessed Items

167
166

I·H
U~

l OIIi

~ DolnHnrdtnNonhcm~-0

9\
IJiklla•rcStJohn(I)\.Q
71
10 T04'ontoCI)1-0
6'1
Others l't.'CCIVIOJt. Jl or more pomlli II lnde
pt"ntkncr 12161 12. Cuyalwla Hu 61. I\ lkrhn
Ctr We~tcrn Re.crvc S8 14 (!let Bci!llmll.: (It
Ddiaace AyermUc !It Sl l6 McDonald 47 17.
MoiU'Otv1lk ,..5 18 Monal R•d,cdnlr Ill \S 14
Lucas 22 20 (lte) Covm,ton, Zanesvrlle Ror.ccmns
20 22 Cedarvrlle 1~

By The Anoclated PrHI
. The San Franctsco Giants blew
one in the ninth. The Los Angeles
: Dodgers almost did too before escaping with a dramatic victory that g"'e
them sole pQSsession of first place tn
.the NL West.
After squandering a tWo-run lead
in the ninth, the Dodgers came back
with three runs m the 15th inning

Studio E Masic :·

$59 9

See Store for o.talli

.

In.Athens Mall
614-593-3998
Athens, Ohio 1-800-982·7636 .
Open Monday - Saturday 11 a.m. • 8 p.m.

"Junior ism position," Manners
manager Lou Piniclla sa~d "It would
be special to see to him do that But
I don't want to put any pressure on
him . We've got a dmston to wm here
and we'v~ sttll got work to do."
Seattle leads Anaheim, which beat
Minnesota 8-5, by 5 112 games in the
AL West
·The Orioles assured themselves of
at least a wtld-card spot by beating
Cleveland 6-5 in the opener ofa daynight doubleheader, but did not eel·
ebrate with champagne.
·
"Thts year, getting there JSn 't as
imponant as what we do after we get
there," Balomore manager Da•ey
Johnson satd.
The Orioles the AL's wild-card
team last year, 'have not made playoff appearances in consecutive seasons smce 1973-74.
In other AL games, New York beat
Boston 7-6, Milwaukee defeated
Chtcago 11-10, Kansas City topped
Texas 11-9 and Detroit downed Oak·
land 6-3.
Griffey, batting 304 and leading

'

the maJors with 139 RB Is, took over
baseball's home run lead with one
more than Mark McGwire.
Gnffey, who hll 49 homers last
season, became the sixth major
league player to hJt 100 or more
home runs m two consecutive years.
McGwire also accomplished the feat

Davis, who had not played since
May 25, receJVed a 70-second stand·
ing ovation in his first at-bat He went
O-for-3,1md d1d not play in the second game.
In the second game, Chad Ogea
pi!Ched SJX shutout mriings and Mar·
qUJs Grissom homered for the Indith1s season.
ans. Cleveland leads the AL Central
At 52 homers, Gnffcy tted for the by seven games over M1lwaukee
most home runs tn a year since 1961 , Angels 8, Twins 5
when Mans and Yankees teammate
Garret Anderson fouled off seven
Mtckey Mantle h1t 54. Smce then, pitches from R1ck Aguilera with two
Wtllie Mays (1965), George Foster strikes, then hit a three-run homer m
(1977) and McGwtre (1996) also the nmth mmng that sent Anaheim
have hJt 52.
over Mmnesota. 'The host Angels
Griffey had gone 4-for-27- w1th won for only the founh time in 13
all the hils mere smgles - Si nce games.
homenng at Mmnesota on Sept. 7
Yankees 7, Red Sox 6
"We won and that's the most
Derek Jeter's two-out single 1n the
imponant thing," Griffey said
bottom of the nmth mnmg hfted New
Orioles 6, Indians 5, 1st game
York over Boston. The Yankees'
Indians 4, Orioles I, 2nd game
number for clmchmg a playoff spot
Baltimore cut its J1lagtc number ts six
for chnching the AL East. to ntne. Brewers 11, White Sox 10
wmnmg the opener at Camden Yards
In a game dommated by hitters,
in a game highhghted by Enc Davts' soft-tossing Doug Jones was the difreturn from colon cancer surgery.
ference at County Stadtum.

Monday night to beat St. Louis 7-6
The Giants, who staned the day
tied for first wtth the Dodgers, lost 5·
4 to Atlanta on Fred McGriff's twoout, two-run homer in the bottom of
the ninth.
So wtth 12 games left for each
team, the Dodgers lead the Gtants by
one game. The archrivals play
Wednesday and Thursday in San

Francisco, their last head-to-head
meetmgs thts season, barring a playoff.
Elsewhere in the NL. it was Col·
orado 7, Florida I, Ptttsburgh 5,
Montreal 4 m I 0 mmngs; Cmcmnatt
4, Chicago I: and San Otego 4, Houston 3 New York and Philadelphia
split a doubleheader, wtth the Mets
wmmng the first game I0-5 tn 10

tnnings and the Phtlhcs taking the
ntghtcap 2-1
Rockies 7, Marlins 1
At M1am1 , Larry Walker hit hiS
league-leading 44th home run and
Andres Galarraga followed with his
37th homer m the seventh as Golorado won tts fifth straight The Mar·
lins lead the Mets and Giants by five
games m the wild-card race .

Eastern remains unbeaten in nine games
The Eastern Eagles remained
undefeated in nine games wtth 15-9
and IS· I0 wins over Ohio Division
foe Belpre Monday mght in the
grand opening of the newly reconstructed EaStern gymnasium.
Belpre drops to S-4.
In the first game of the match,
Eastern was led 111 scoring by
Stephanie Evans with five. Kim
Mayle five , and Mtchelle Caldwell
three. Evans had one ace and Cald'well two m respective 9-10 and 141S serving nights, whtle
Mayle had a sstrmg of five points

on an 8-9 serving night with an ace.
Jess Brannon had two pomts.
Belpre took the early lead m a
night highlighted by numerous volleys and great saves by both clubs.
Belpre led 1-0 and 4-2, then a Brannon serve and two aces in a threepoint drive by Caldwell gave Eastern
the lead for good. Evans added three
in a row for a 9-5 EHS lead, then
Amanda Busby brought Belpre hack
close. 9-8.
Mayle had her string of five With
a Brannon spike, then Brannon

served game-pQint off a Caldwell kill
to end the game, 15-9.
Caldwell had e1ght pomts in the
mghtcap for a 15-10 vtctory surge.
Juli Hayman had three, Val Karr one,
and Evans one.
Valerie Kair had several nice kills
in the drive and Angte Wolfe ended
the game wuh two ktlls to give Eastern a 15-10 win That came after
Belpre had led 11-9. but had a penalty point for servtng out of order,
reductng their output to ten. Caldwell
had a strong finish wit~ five points

and an ace gomg down the stretch.
Caldwell had three aces, three
ktlls, and was S-9 spiking. Brannon
was 6-IOservmg, 12-18 spiking, wtth
five ktlls. Mayle had a k1ll and a
dink. Wolfe was 12-1 8 spiking wtth
four kills and three dinks, HAyman
enJoyed another great ntght setting
wnh a 29-37 nguh wtth four sets for
kills and two dinks. Karr was 7-16
spiking with three ktlls and an ace
wh1le Evans was21-27 settmg wuh
one for a kill and five dtnks.
Eastern plays at Southern Wednesday in a To-Match with Waterford.

on Septemtier 27. Two red flags halt- agamst one another in turn three.
ed what was otherwise a classic Kemenah endured. Again he JUmped
bullfight, as matadors Mark Keegan mto a huge lead as the remainder of
and Chad Kemenah dodged the bull the race went green to checkered.
for much of the race on 1he 3/8 mile Speeds neared track records as the
clay bullring. The early leader, how- top three cars, jomed by John Ivy,
ever, was 14-year old htgh school charged on to ne~rly lap the sixth
freshman Jonathan Stevens, who led place car. Keegan squined by Sttnson
the first six rounds from his pole stan. on l~ps 26, then gathered in ·KemeJimmy Stinson, the K·C champion, nah. Keegan passed Kemenah on the
challenged early, but Stevens was too last lap onthe backchuted, but Kemequick on the tum exits. On lap nah regained the lead only to tangle
two. Tracy Hoover. the ractng attor- wtth a lapped car and spm into the
ney, cut a tire and brought out the yel- infield as beth the yellow and check·
low. That began a free-wheeling last cred flag waved. Sun son
came
to fifth campaign for the veteran rac- home second. followed by Ivy.
er. Hoover used multiple grooves and Stevens, Hoover, Jason Dukes, Rusty
Kamakazee passes in p1ckmg off 15 McClure. Rick Holley, Dave Dtckcompetitors to wm top-pa.&lt;Smg hon· son, and Bnan Benson. H e a t
ors for the night. Meanwhile, Kcme· wms went to Keegan. Ivy, and Dunnah bagged Stinson for second. then can. while Mtller clatmed the B·
with a slmgshot maneuver, bagged matn. The excitement of the sprint
Stevens for the top spot. Prcmter rac- matn was hard to match, hut Ralph
er Rodney Duncan slipped ot of gear Wtthem's bonzat passes lrom the tat I
and brought out the caution on the equalled Donntc Kinnison's cxpcntse
same circuit. relegating Stc.cns to the up front. Withem was spun and suffront. Kemenah finally got hy on lap lcrcd a Oat ttrc on the Itrst lap, havmnc. but two laps later a devastating ing to go to the tali of the 20-car field
cra.'h between track champton Bowl- Dnving with a cause. Withem blast·
Ing and two-t1mc wmner Keith Crah- cd from last to second and had hts
trec unfolded. Bowling cut a rear tire s1ghts set on Kmn1son for the wm.
exiting tum four. sendmg htm sktr· Ki'nnison withstood the challenge
mtshly out of control. Crabtree. with and roared to hts lounh Skyline win.
no place to go. rode hard o.cr Bowl- Rounding out' the top ten were Roy
tog's mount. end-for-endtng his Roush m thtrd . followed by Walker.
Docmclt chassis some six or seven Whlte,Gary Johnston . Dann Roush,
t1mes before npptng down the catch Jones, John Vandalc, and Btlly
fence and httting a light pole before Stover. Heats went to Kmnison.
wedging nose down between the Roy Roush. and Cosner T r a v 1s
guardrail and canhen rctaming wall. Holmes sent his hcaut1ful 0-1 to the
Both dnvers emerged only shak· front quickly and with stood the chalen after a very nasty lookmg crash
lenges of Mike Baker for much of the
Entrenched m the battle up front. race. Mtke Long led the mtd porKemenah check-out on what looked ttons of the race unttl Holmes blast·
to be a cenam vtctory. On lap 14,
ed by for the win Baker stood on the
however, the red agatn waved when
gas, but ran out ofume a.• Dave Sum·
Scott Mtller spun and collected Eric mcrs moved through the pack to finHysong and Rodney Duncan. Miller tsh thtrd ahead of Earl Reeves, Long,
and Hysong nearly flipped, but Htcks, Steve Roberts, Ketth Ztm·
hecame entangled, stacked upnght merman. Miller. and John Green.
Heats went to Long, Baker, and
Dana Ntchols. , Racmg contmues
·. each Saturday through October 4
Coming September 27 is thc-''Harvest
40" paying $4,000 to win for super
spnnts and Ocother 4, the Street
Stock Nations, paymg $1.000 to wm.
er East and Humcane wtth 419's.
Bridgepon and Cabell Midland
"B" lintshed ued for lith wuh 420's,
Mctgs and Chapmanvtlle finished
tied for 13th with scores of 428. Scott
followed wtth a 430, Huntington
H1gh "B" carded a 436, followed by
Wednesday evening at 5:30 in
Fatrland (441 ), Capital (442), Potnt Southern' C~arles W. Hayman gymPleasant (459) , Johnson Central naSium in Racine, the three best
(473), Williamstown (483) and New teams tn the Tri-Valley Conference
Boston (487).
Hocking DivtstOn will meet, perhaps
Williams of New Boston fired a to dectde the eventual league chamtwo under par 70 to take home match pion. Southern, 5-4 overall, hosts
medalist. Metgs senior Dave Ander- Waterford, 7-2, and Eastern 9-0 m
son fired a five over par 77 to place the Tn-Match. Eastern scored a great
htm sixth in the 100 player field. Oth- come-from-behind win over Waterer Marauder scores were Clay Crow ford last week after being down 13with a 84, Mick Barr added an 87, 3. EHS came back to win the game
Josh Pri.'e 89 and Jared Warner a 91. •nd the match 16-14

THE SUMMARY; 9/13/97
Super Spnnts
Heat: Mark Keegan, Brian Benson, Wayne McPeck,
Kemenah
Heat: John Ivy,
Mtke Bowling, J1mmy Stmson,
Jonal~an Stevens Heat.
Rodney
Duncan. Rusty McClure, Ketth Crab·
tree, Chris Fraley a.. MAIN: Scott
Miller, Ron Marks, Rick Holley.
Enc Hysong, Dave Dic~son. Mark
Imler. Kent Wolfers, John Webb.
UNITED APPEAL 30.. Keegan,
Stmson, lvy,Stcvens, Hoover, Jason
Dukes, Rusty McClure, Rtck Holley.
Dave D1ckson. and Brian Benson.
Track Champton-Mtkc Bowling
Late Models
Track ChamptonScott Wolfe
STREET
STOCKS
Heat:
Donme
Kmnison, Gary Johnston, John Powell, Ralph Withem
Hcat
Roy Roush, Jefi' White. Dan Walker.
John Lyons
Heat.
Cosner.
Darm Roush, Rtck Kapplc, Billy
Stover Feature Kinn1son, Withem.
Roy Roush, Walker, Whitc,Gary
Johnston, Dunn Roush, Jones, John
Vandalc, and Btlly Stover. T r a c k
Champion-Roy Roush .
FOUR CYLINDERS
H e a t :.
Mtkc Long, Earl Reeves. Travts
Holmes, Don White
HcaI ·
Mike Baker, Ronnte Harris. Htcks,
Young Heat: Dana Nichols. Dave
Summers, Shawn Rhodes, Kurt Sta·
cy Feature: Holmes, Baker, Summers , Long, H1cks, Steve Robens,
Keith Ztmmerman, Mtller, and John
Green
Track Champion-Dana Nichols

1

second as Chicago's Ryne Sandberg gets the late throw In the ·
second Inning Monday night in Chicago. Backing up the play Is
Manny Alex~nder. The Reds won, 4-1. (AP)

Southern spikers
.Skyline Speedway winners are announced post triumphs over
Vikings, Defender$

. lly SC OTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correapondent
A beautiful September moon cast
a spell on a wtld. excttmg ni8ht of
racing at Skyline Speeway where a
last corner pass by Fremont, Ohio's
Mark Keegan resulted in a $1.200
paycheck m the wutged outlaw Super
Sprint diVISIOn. Veteran Donme Km,. nison of Radcliff brought home the
Street Stock wm over Ralph Withem
of Athens, and Travis Holmes
stormed to vtctory over Mtke Baker
in the Four Cylinder mam.
Nearly 80 cars packed the pits tn
three divis1ons as a large crowd
turned out to ktck-offthe 1998 Umt·
.-ed Appeal campatgn. Execuu.c
, D1rcctor of the UA campaign, Skip
• ,Logan, of At~ens jomed track public
rclattons d1rcctor Ray Myers tn making trophy presentations to the winning drivers, while Skyline Speedway donated a dollar of the gate
admtssion, plus 50-50 proceeds to the
' benefit.
~
Owner-Pmmotcr Lou Hubbard of
~ Skyline satd. "We had a great turnout
., tonight. excellent racing. and a lot of
~ excitement all for a good cause.
" Hopefully. everyone henelitted from
; tomght's show." Bcstdcs the feature
:Winners. track champ1ons mall divl~ sions were crowned. including
., Sharonville. Ohio's Mtkc Bowling in
i the Super Spnnts. Racme, Oh10's
' Scott Wolfe m the Late Models:
~ Reedsville, Ohto's Roy Roush in the
·Street Stocks, and Dana Nichols of
~ Athens in the Four Cylinders Irani·
~ cally, both Bowhng and Wolfe drove
~- McDonald's sponsored cars respec~ti•cly ,with Wolfe garnenng local
_:Sponsorshtp from the Sauber family
• owned McDonald's m Galhpohs and
·R10 Grande .
.~ Trophies were provtded hy Coca: cola. sponsor of the final Coca-Cola
:',Classic race, the "Harvest 40", pay" ing $4,000 to wm for Super Sprints

••'

LIVING ROOM SUITES
n&amp;RJING If

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Inventory Clearance Sale:.
Save 30-40-50%

2M

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DIVISION VI
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Spnnglicld. the del'cndmg pull
champion tn Division II, picked up
where 11 left oil' hy collecting 219
points - nne hcttcr than runner-up
Columhus Watterson.

Untontown Lake and Zancsvtllc
ended up 1n a dead heat lor thltd
place, with Chardon fifth .
In DIVtston Ill, Mentor Lake
Cathohc assumed the top spot despite
its lopsided 52-14 loss to St Ignatius
Friday mght.
Cmctnnatl Purcell Marian was
second, Wa.,hington Court House
Miami Trace third, Avon Lake lour'!h
and Bellevue, Columhus DcSal~s
and Thornville Shertdan !ted for fifth
in the tightest balloting of the poli.
Valley View won both the poll .afld
state champtonshtps last year.
·

By BEN WALKER
AP Bleebell Writer
For !he Baltimore Orioles, the race
for a playoff spot ts finished . For Ken
Griffey Jr., the chase for history is
really heating up.
On the day the Orioles became the
first team in the majors to chnch a
postseason benh, Griffey riveted
attention on his pursuit of Roger
Mans.
· Griffey hit his 51st and 52nd home
runs Monday night, moving closer to
Marts' mark of 61 in 1961. Griffey
has II games left in the regular season.
·
"I just go out and try to hit the ball
hard," Griffey said after a 7-3 win
over Toronto. ·" Whatever it takes, 11
takes I don't look at records and I
don't look at the record book. There's
sun two weeks left ."
,
Griffey, who had not connected
for etght games, h1t a two-run homer
in the first inntng He h1t a dnve that
barely hooked foul in the third and
came back with a solo home run in
the fifth at the Kmgdome.

.podgers take one-game lead over Giants in NL West

..

the status quo."

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

~ Meigs places 13th in
.~ Huntington Invitational
i!!_DAVE HARRIS,
;prntlnel Correspondent
• The Meigs Marauder golf team
j&gt;layed in the Huntington Invitation·
.ul Golf Tournament this past S~turday
':It the Esquire Country Club. The
::roumament featured 22 of the top
~earns of the Tri-State area and is the
~nly tournament of the season to play
a. Play 5-Count S format.
' . Huntington Htgh "A" won the
leurnament with a 370, Bluefield fin·
lk!ied in second with a 384. Defend·
~ Ohio State Champion Ironton fin·
&amp;;bed tn third place wtth a 385.
~nding out the first 10 were Cabell
Midland "A" w1th a 392, Boyd Coun·
ty (394), Ripley (406), Beckley (409),
Galli a Academy (414) and Greenbri-

Big match
scheduled
Wednesday

I

The Southern Tornadoes hfted
thetr season record to 5-4 with two
big Tri -match wms over Vtnton
County and Ohio Valley Christtan
Monday mght in Ractne
SHS defeated VC 15-10 and 151.
Southern was led by Stacy Lyons
wtth 16 points on the ngtth agamst
VC with eleven coming m the final
game. Cynthia Cal well added seven
scmng pomts: Ktm Sayre had three,
Kati Cummins two, Jenny Friend
one. and Kara Ktng one ..
Vmton County was led by Nauhe
Wnght with fi" , Julie Puckett w1th
three, and Judy Orlowski with three.
Southern's Sayre had 28-34 sets tn

Southern was led hy Jenny Frtend
wtth mne pomts (ln the mght m the
OVC game a.&lt; the Tornadoes won
thetr thtrd match in a row.
Caldwell and Sayre each had nine
pomts m great floor games, while

Lyons added three, Cummins two,
Kara Kmg two, and Dena Sayre two
OVC was led hy D. Jenks with
c1ght, E S1111mons wuh sc•en, C.
Ztrclle wuh five, L. Pollard four. and
A. Mcyn three
The OVC match was a little
tougher as Soulhcm won m three sets
15-5, 10-15, and 15-11 . Caldwell
dom1natcd the uction tn the first game
hehmd a great !Cam cllon. Caldwell
gave SHS a 5-0 lead and tallied stx
potnb in that game as Southern };Ut

Ihe first game and I H-19 m the sec-

ond game. wJth two kills . Caldwell
had three ktlls and two aces, Stacy
Lyons warmed up the stat sheet wtth
12-1 Kserves overall. three aces, four
ktlls , and a 6- 12 sp1kmg n1ght Ktm
lhlc had tour k1lls and some mcc !'iCis,
while Fncnd had a ~no sl!rving mghl.
Kaue Cummmsm ktlb and three
hlocks. Kara King h.1d an ace
Southern took the early lcad5-~on

Sayre and Lyons serves. then Caldwell added lour to send Southern on
tts way 10 the 15- I0 VJL!ory
In the second game . Southern. a

15-1 vtctor. rode home on tho coat
tat Is of Stacy Lyons who laced SIX
pomts bclore VC teallcd lllnc, then
she added tour more I or a I{).()
Southern lead VC never recovered
as Southern hfted lis sptrns and cas·
ily drove home the wm

an other hoost Wtlh four Irom Fncnd.

K1m Sayre helped lintsh niT the
Crusaders. then Caldwell ollercd up
the game pcunts lor the I 5-5 win.
Southern battled in the second
game , hut dual f1vc pOint eflons li"t&gt;m
Snnmons :lnd Ztrcllt ltfted OVC to
the WID
A scvCn po1 nt effort from Fncnd
in the night&lt;ap hftcd Southern to a
ti - ll tally
Sayre was 47-10 scttlng 10 the
match with an ace Caldwell wns II. 25 scttmg w1th ten k1lls and lour aces
Lyons had &lt;IX ktll' and lour hinds
Fncnd was 15-19 scrvmg: wtth t .... o
aces. Cummms had ltve k1lls and
twp hlocks . lhk had lour ktlb.
Southern hosts Eastern and Waterford m a tn -match Wed nesday

***********************************

*
:Important
Health Care Notice! :*
:

*:
*
*
:
*:
*
:
*

Holzer Clinic of Meigs County
and

Meigs Health Services
are undergoing a major change.
The facilities will be

closed Friday, September 19.
~~
re-open on Monday, September 22
in our new location,

Holzer Meigs Clinic

:

*:

*
*
!
*!
*
:

*
Next to
Memorial Hospital
*: Health issues should
*
be referred to Holzer Clinic Urgent Care Center :
** · or Veterans90 MemorialPike,Hospital
Gallipolis- 446-5287
*
Emergency Department.
*
at 88 East Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio
Veteran~

~ackson

***********************************

�r

By
The
Bend
-.

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 16, 1997

Pege8

·couple's nude skinny-dipping has neighborhood boy getting an eye full
Ann
Landers
IW7.

1..~&gt; Anat.·lc~ Tt~
~1\11 C'rf~h.,~

S )lllittll(

Syn1.hcau:

Dear Ann Landers: My husband
and I recently bought a house we
love. One of the main selling points
was a spacious. secluded back yard
with a high fence. The previous
owner poimed out that it would
afford us the opportunity to sunbathe
in the nude . While my husband and
I don ' t do much sunbathing . we do
enjoy skinny-dipping and rcla•ing
unclothed in the hot tub . Oc~asional-

let Laura get into bed with me was
when she was upset about something or when she was ill. When she
fell asleep, I would carry her to her
own bed.
.. When Laura was 6, we had a
nightly routine .. a kiss,~ hug and "I
love you." One' night, Laura put her
hand on the back of my neck and
gave me. a long kiss . I thought.
"What's going on'" The next night,
when she did it again, I told ber,
"Laura, you kissed me like a man
and a woman kiss. You are not a
woman, and I am your father. Don 't
ever try to kiss me like that again."
She never did.
I set another boundary I thought
was imponant. When I was newly

.

By Marlallsa Calta
Today 's subject is school lunch·
es. Please pardon my soapbox.
Despite the best of intentions
from the sweetest of schoo l "lunch
hidies," the stuff served in cafeterias
js often high in fat and salt , low in

divorced, I told my family and
friends that not one word of cnti·
cism would be spoken about Laura's
mother in Laura's presen&lt;:e. They all
respected my wishes.
I am proud of the way I raised my
daughter. U you think my letter will
help other single fathers , please feel
free to print it. Do not print my
name, please, just :_ A Minnesota
Dad
Dear Minnesota: Laura was
lucky to have had a dad like you.
And it sounds like she knows it.
Gem of the Day: It may be lone·
ly at the top, but you meet more
interesling people up there. ·and you
eat better, too.

vitamins and j)ber and, sometimes;

taste. (Not ONE adull I know cats
canned spinach. Why would a kid'!)
But if you look around at the
lunches kids bring from home, the
results are just as disturbing.
.
A few years ago, I spent lunchhour in a grade school in a wealthy
suburban town , and saw lunch boxes
packed with chips. candy bars, sodas
and frosted, cream-filled desserts.
Especially popular were the
prepackaged " lunches" of high-fat
meats, ·.cheese s and &lt;.:rackers. II
seems as though every one schools and parents alike - have
.', given up on the idea ,of a healthy
lunch.
And I'm not talking tofu-and·
sprouts here. I'm talking a balanced,
old-fashioned kind of lun ch, the
kind with a sandwich. carrot sti cks,
a piece of fruit and cookies.
The kind of lunch that will Jill
your child up without sending them
off on a sugar-high, or making them
candidates for an, obesity clinic.
If you need some help in the
lunch.dcpanment 1 get ahold of "The
Parenttng Cookbook," by Kathy
Gunst and the editors of Parenting

'tVHddf9port Scouts face wilds of Minnesota
By Dodger Vaughan
The wind in your face, the sun on
your shoulders, and your only means
• of transportation is a canoe: though
this may not be everyone's ideal trip,
to a group of boys from Middleport's
Troop 245, it had been a trip anxiously waited for. . .
We left around 5:00 a.m. one
morning and 1.100 miles and one
llat tire later we arrived in Ely.
Minn. at about6:00 p.m. the following evening.
.
.
That evening we were fed and
housed by our outfitting group Tom
and Woods . They took time to
·explain everything from how to
portage our canoes across land, to
what had been packed in each of the
ultra light packs we had been providcd.
That morning Tom and Woods
outfitting company fed us our
farewell breakfast, and then sent us
on our way.
So we were off; map and oar in
hand we headed into the wilderness.
We had chosen to do a 5().milc trip,
so the boys could earn their 50 mile
patch. After all in sounded easy
enough: five days, a little over 10
miles a day, and a short trip on the
last day and we were home. (Were
we ever wrong about the easy
thing')

f,.

traveled 15 miles, and had several
tough portages.
That night when we made it into
camp. there was no lishing ·or swim·
ming, we just set up the tents. ate
dinner, and went to bed.
It was the first trip I had ever
been on that the boys went to bed
before the ·sun went down. Usually
we arc lucky if they go to bed before
the sun comes up!
. Our only excitement came that
night when my dad and I thought a
bear had carne into· our camp looking for food. Turns out there was
really 'no bear, just some really loud
snoring comins from Mike and
Mikey Wilfongs tent'
As the days progressed, we all
became accustomed to the long days
of paddling. We also found time to
enjoy the beauty of the lakes that we
·canoed across, and the land that sur'rounded us.
I can honestly tell you it's hard to
describe the feeling you get from sit·
ting on the edge of a lake about sunset, and being able to hear the cry of
a wolf. or the bellow of a moose.
there is really nothing like it.
A man whom I respect very
much once put. it to me in this way.
he said "We've all heard people say
it doesn't get much better than this.
but when you arc out here. and

the beauty that surrounds you. that is
when you realize that it really does·
n't get much benc.r than this."
Though I'm sure all the boys who
crawled out of their canoes that last
day back onto shore where we had
taken off from 50 miles previously.
were -more than happy to be. away
from the freeze-dried food , and the
mosquitoes that laughed at us when
we put on bug repellent, I aJ'so.ligurc
that very few of them would have
traded that c•pcrience for anything
in the world. I know that all nine of
us had a great time.
During this trip the fol!owi'ng
boys earned their 50 mile award:
Tyle( Faulk, Mikey Wilfong, Rob
·'tP''
Northup, Joey Cornelius. Matt
McCiasky, and Travis Robens.
-~ ·
~.
I also need to thank the following
leaders for getting . us there, Mike
Wilfong, who has helped us for
many years now, and Don Vaughan,
·who has grown through scouts with
me ever since I wils a Tiger Cub.
I don't know very many people
who have made as ,big of a differ·.
ence in my life as well as in the other
boys lives, as these two men.
Their time, money, patience, and
leadership is much appreciated, and
SCOUTS IN MINNESOTA- The following Middleport Boy Scouts and their leadera made a recant trip
there isn't enough words to let them
to
Minnesota
for a 50-mile canoe trip. Shown are, clockwise from upper-right: Doll-Vaughan, Joey Cor·
know how much we appreciate
nelius,
Rob
Northup,
Dodger Vaughan, Matt McCiasky, Mlkey WIHong, Tyler Faulk and Mike WiHong, at
them.
center is Travis Roberts.

I

Ideally the .sink work center could easily happen" from the ,conshould be located between the gcstion.
refrigerator and the range.. The three
The island kitchen occurs when
main work areas should form a tri· one work area (usually the range) is
angle between 12 and 22 feet by itself in the center of the room. A
around. Anything smaller than that bar or counter may adjoin it for eat·
will not, allow enough room for ing or preparation.
preparation. ~nd distances larger
The one-wall kitchen . is considthan 22 feet will cause too much cred the least desirable of the differconsider
wasted ciTort moving from one &lt;en· enl styles, because all three work
the
tcr to another.
centers arc in a row. Thi~ style noressential
Once you know about the work mally docs not offer very much
work
centers. you can arrange them tq counter space or corresponding cabcenters
best lit your needs and space. There inet storage above and below the
tha,t arc arrangement indicates the different counters.
needed
kitchen styles.
The best kitchen style is the U. and the
Onc particular kitchen style that shaped kitchen. The three centers
diiTcrcnt
is found i.n· many homes is the L· make an equilateral triangle. with
kitchen
shaped kitchen. In this style. either the sink bemg in the middle. If any
the stove or the refrigerator is at a one is in the kitchen, there arc· sup·
style.&lt;· that arc available.
.
First you will need' to think about right angle to the sink and the other posed to be there - not just part of
the three main work centers that arc work center. It usually provides ade· the traffic pattern of walking
included in a kitchen. There will be quatc storage space above and through to get to the .next room . The
the refrigerator for cold storage, the below the counters. as well as space work areas in the U-shapcd kitchen
sink for preparation and clean-up. for mixing . Some kitch~ns f!13Y arc concentrated so that you arc just
and the range for cooking. An area extend the "L" to form a peninsula a step or two away from each center.
for mixfng occur!'i on· the counters by using a bar or extra counter but there is still quite a bit of counter
space connecting them.
bclw.ccn the various work ~,.:~ntcrs . space.
The
corridor
kitchen
is
when
the
Once you know what the work
Some kitchens may have additional
centers for planning. such as a desk work areas arc a~ainst two parallel . centers and the various kitch~n
or the kitchen table. a reference area walls. This can become a safety styles arc, you can plan your next
for cookbooks. an eating arc:1. or . pmblcm if there is a iloor at each end " kitchen to provide ample space -for
even a laundry center for the ·washer with P.~ople walking through the your needs.
middle of the kitchen. Accidents
and dryer.

High school students ·can ·find
their future at OSU's career days
High school students looking_for to explore opportunities jn the food , ing and counseling to students."
a college that will prepare th~m lor a agricultural and environmental sci- Miller says.
·
career in the world's largest mdustry ences. Career Days will take place
Free to all participants, Career
and one that will never grow obso· on The Ohio State University cam- Days will take place n the auditori·
lctc arc urged to consider The Ohio pus in Columbus. Tours of residence um of the Agricuhu"l AdministraState University's College of Food. halls. libraries and the campus will .lion .Building, just 'Q!Jlh of Lane
Agricultural. and Environmental also be available.
Avenue and cast of S :ate Route 315'
"The best way for students and · at 2120 Fyffe Roac. Registration
Sciences.
The College offers diwrsc career parents' to learn about a college is to begins at 8:15 a.m.. ·~ith advanced
selections: food sciences. econom - visit the campus and meet with fac- registration suggested . The event
ics. a~ricullural and cnvir~nmcnt~l ulty and students," says Ray A. runs from 8:45 a.m. to early afiercommunications and education. am- Miller. assistant dean for Student noon.
mal sciences; crop and horticultural Affairs.
To receive a Career Days
"The 1997 Career Days promise brochure or for more information ,
sciences. agricultural engineering.
plant health management. forestry. to be that kind of an experience ·- ebntact Thad Welch. Coordinator ..
recreation and tounsm. lishcncs and where students and parents can Admissions, The Ohio State Univerwildlife management. and environ· beg-tn exploring career opportunities sity, 100 Ag Admin. 2120 Fyffe
and receive important information Road; Columbus, Ohio 43210, or
mental sciences.
With its science-based curricu· about admission and financial assis- call 614-688-4144. Career Days
lum.tbe.Collcgc also offers students tance options," Miller says.
information and registration materiParticipants will visit with facul- als arc also available via the Colpreparation for professional schools
such as veterinary medtctne, medt· ty in two major areas of study of lege's world wide web site at
their choice and will learn about the http://www.hcs.ohi(}cine. law, dentistry, and optometry.
Students .interested ·in any of admissions process. student finan - state.edu/facs/feast/cd.html.
these areas arc invited to attend cial aid -availabilily and honors proBrochures and registralion forms
Career Days. hosted by the College grams in the College. "
are also available from county
"The College is proud of its fac- extension agents, high school guidon Oct. 10 and II. Career Days offer
interesled students, parenls, teachers ulty wbo takes pride in giving out- ance counselors, and agricultural
and extension agents the opportunity standing, individual academic advis- education teachers.

•

•

By DEBORAH . PORTER·
FIELD
. Gannett Suburban Newspa·

including signing up more members
than it could handle and planning to
sell users ' personal information.
P8TS
Jonathan Hauff. president of tbe
For many home Internet users, Westchester PC Users Group, usual.
America Online IS the Internet, ly Steers beginners toward AOL.
especially among teen-agers who · "There's a lot of hand-holding
consider it pan of their social liveS. . .going on that they can 't get anyLauren Pctlick, a 14-year-old . where else," he says.
AOL fan, is typical.
Such fierce loyalty, not to men"Usually if I call a friend and tion peer pressure, has helped Amer·
their line is busy, I know they're on ica Online suck up 40 percent of all
America Online, so I' ll go on," says lntcrm;l users.
Petlick, a New York ninth-grader. .
The online service now has nearPetlick goes straight to America ly 9 million subscribers. And that
Online 's personalized buddy list doesn 't count the 2.6 million cuswhere she can sec which friends arc tomers AOL will pick up from Comon AOL. Other users rave about puScrve, if the WorldCom and HAOL's other extras, including home- and-R Block deal announced this
work helpers. travel services and wee£ is approved by the Jus'liee
easy-~o-lind information . Most have
Department's antitrust division .
forgiven AOL for its recent gaffs,
For now, at least, AOL is prom is-

Williard has
celebration
for 1OOth

BY BECKY BAER
_
Meigs County Extension Agent
Family and Consumer
Sciences/ Community
Development
.
Are you thinking ahout remodeling 'your kitchen'! Before you begin.
you
should

By KAREN THOMAS
USA TODAY
Gathering contributions fur the
Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial
Fund is shaping _up to be 'an unpreccdented world-wide collaborative
effort.
A London law firm is administer·
ing the fund , which has grown to
more than $240 million. Banks
worldwide will collect the donations.
The U.S. collection point is Fleet
Bank in Hartford, Conn., which has

honored on her lllOth hirthd•IY on
_Aug. 31 with an open house held at
the Meigs Counly Senior Center.
Refreshments of birthday cake.
punch. chccschalls ~md crackers.
minis and nu1s were scrvet.l frqm a

decorated table by the quihcrs from
Hemlock Grove Church of Christ.
where Mrs. Willard is a member. .
The Gentlemen Four Quartet
sang several sclc~,;tions for the party.
which was given by Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Rice of Union City, Ga .. and
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice of Middleport.
More than 150 peop.lc attended
the celchration and many .cards and
gifts were presented to the honoree
by friends and relatives.

For A

[]

-

FREE
Hot Dog!

.

In the dawn of the mind's eye
A'er before awarene&gt;S,

Proudly Announces , · .

3
D11ys,·
Dnli
Y

tears from their eyes .
Before awareness
Even humanities frailness

..

._-'\ (~

-"

......

Watch For Our Full Pa e Ad!

Monday • Friday 9:31).6:00
Saturday 9-3

I make the winds hlow

with might
and send the little birds
down south in night.
I make the sun shine
and dew drops fa ll

Ebbs mother earth's fairness.

1/4 cup chopped green and/or
black olives OR
2 tablespoons fi nel y chopped or
grated carrot OR
2 tabl espoons fine ly chopped
scallions OR .
A generous pinch of fres h or
dried herhs such as basil , thyme,
s~g e, or rosemary OR
A few drops hot chili sauce

Pinc h ground c innamon

1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
12 thin slices black bread or
rais in bread

Bring a saut.:epan o f watCr to a
boil over high heat. Reduce the tem cheese, rai sin, nuts and grated carrot perature to moderate and carefull y
(if using). Add the cinnamon and , add the eggs. Simmer for 10 to 12
vanilla extract. Spread 6 sli ces of the minutes. Drain and place theeggs in
bread with cream cheese mixtu re. cold water to make the eggs ea!-.icr to
Top with remaining bread.
peel.
Yield: 6 servings.
Peel the eggs and chop finel y,
- Recipe from "The Parenting with a potato masher or fork. Add
Cookbook ," hy Kathy Gunst (Henry the celery, salt, pepper, mayoimaisc
Holt and Co., 1996). Adapted by antl pijon mustard. Mix.
Chef Mic~el LeBorgne of the New
A,dd any of the "variations "
England Culinary lnsutute in Mont- ingredients and mix again, or serve
pelier and 'Essex, Vt.
as is. Spread on four pieces of bread
In a medium bowl , mix the cream

and top each wilh another piece of

FAVORITE EGG SALAD
bread.
8 large eggs
Yield 4 servings.
112 cup linely chopped celery
- Recipe from '"The Parenting
. Salt and freshly ground black Cookbook," by Kathy Gunst ( Hc~ry
pepper
·Holt and Co .. 1996).
About 1/2 cup mayonnaise
I tablespoon Dijo.n mustard
QUESADILLA POCKETS
8 pieces sliced sandwich bread
I large pita bread
, Variations:
1/2 cup rcfricd bean s
I tablespoon drained capers OR
2 tablespoons mild salsa
I tO -2 tablespoons chqpped
1./2 cup Monterey jack. or· Chedgherkins OR .
dar cheese

4 th in slices rope avocado
(optional)
2 tabl espoons sour c ream
(optional)
Cut the pita bread crosswise in
hal f, creating 2 half-moon pockets.
In a stn~ll bowl, blend the beans
and salsa, the n spread the mixture
inside each of the pita halves.
Tuck the cheese and avocadl!o
slices ·into the pocket, heat if
desired, then spoon .in sour cream (if

using).
Yield: 2 servings.
- Recipe from " The Parenting
Cookbook." by Kathy Gunst (Henry
Holt and Co., 1996).
BANANA-PEANUT BUTTER
SPREAD
1/2 ripe banana, peeled
3 tablespoons peanut butter
Pinc h ground cinnamon
Drizzle of honey or maple. syrup
2 pieces sliced sandwich bread
Mash the banana in a bowl. Mix

in remaining ingredients . Spread on
pi ece of bread and top with remaining piece. (This is also great on toast
in the morning.)
Yield: I serving.
- Recipe from "The Parenting
Cookbook," by Kathy Gunst (Henry
Holt and Co., 1996).

some big names with enough money
to fight back.
As of June, Microsoft 's MSN had
.2.3 million subscribers. AT-and-T
WorldNet and Prodigy had about I
million each. Any of these competi·
tors could overtake AOL by simply
winning over the 20 million comput-

" Someone just gave me a Prodigy
address," Arlen says. " I was awed. I
hadn't seen a Prodigy address in
years .''

the amount or duration of the co lice·
tion. "This is so unprecedented in
world's history. We'll staff it as long
as necessary
U.S. contributors can send
checks to :
.
The Diana, Princess of Wales
Memorial Fund
c/o Fleet Bank
P.O. Box 30596
Hartfor~. Conn. 06150

The church bell rings
Come hear my word
It is the best you've
ever heard.

Dear ones I write this
Psalm to you
To remind you hearts
all. things I do.

trend tips to her a~ I Gannett Drive,
White Plains, N.Y. 10604. You can
also reach her via e-mail at
debp(AT)cyburban.com
About half the players on the Oak·
land A's sported mustaches in 1972,
a pennant-winning year.

Birthday ..
observed
·arreu Haptonstall celebrated his
fourth birthday with a party at
McDonald's. His birthday was on
July 23.
Attending the party were hi s parcnts, Bill and Debbie Haptonstall.
paternal grandmother Lennie Hap·
tonstall, his sister, Brennan Hapton·
stall, Gabriel Starcher, a cousin,
Michelle and Edie .Starcher, J.W.
Porter, Teresa Porter, N1ck Ham. mood. Holly leiTers and Carl Moedini.
After eating and playing games,
the children played in McDonald's
Play land.

Gallipolis

Second

Haptonstall

'

1·800·285~1117

'

Teen idols.

I am your SaVior
who dtcd for you
I shed my blood
just to save you.

I love my children
I'm God your King
Follow me .
I'll blessings bring.
Pick up you Cross
and .follow me .
I'll always give you
victory.

If anyone needs me

Less seen by many ...
drawn few and far '?f any
God is and always wi II be
standing in the gap for his children .

SEPTEMBER 18TH, 19TH &amp; 20TH

(614) 992-2635
1·800.426-5581

I am you Savior
you need not fear.

He judges the many soul s on this
earth
and he woll wipe away all

··

~ CredltTerms
~- Lay-A-Way~

Though rain comes down
and stonns arc ncar

Less seen by many
drawn few and far of any
Only, he is just of fairness .

GRAND RE-OPENING
106 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Your Savior

Even humanities frailness
ebbs mother earth's fa1rncss

·FURNITURE f JEWELR~ INC.
·

ties to London's -Westminster Bank.
Fleet's Jim Schepker says beneficiaries will include homeless, AIDS
and leprosy programs.
Fleet has added 125 people to its
220-person Hartford staff to run the
lockbo• operation.
Mail will be picked up 14timcs a
day, with the money wired to
Britain. " Addiiionally, we'll send by
overnight mail each day, any person al notes th'at are sent," Schepker
says.
Fleet isn 't making projections on

Will be wrinen in the Lamb's Boo.k
of life and will be opened by the
The Righteous Judge
·Righteous Lord to Judge us all one
day.
. Open the book that tells the story of God gets the glory.
~ Jesus ...
How he loved us so much ...
Tim Coats and
He died on bleak Cal vary
Barbara James
so men of all stature could be free .

Mr. and Mrs. John Rice lind Mr. and
Mrs . Harley Rice, Reedsville;
Caitlin Mackenlie Roce, Coolville;
Mr. and Mrs. Don Dunfee. Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Graham. Gallipolis; Pat Carson, George Harris.
Jr., and Bill Rice, all of Middleport.

Stop In

1- 1/2 cups regular or low-fat
cream c heese, at room temperature
1/2 cup finely chopped raisins
1/2 cup finely chopped almonds
or walnuts
1/2 large carrot , trimmed, peel ed
and grated (optional)

But then he hasn't traded e-mail
with Joe Hewes, a loyal Prodigy
user who signed on in the early
1990s:
er owners who aren't yet online.
From time to time, Hewes in
The fickleness of an emerging White Plains, N.Y., has been been
industry has knocked big players tempted to switch, but what keeps
down before. CompuSer~e. which him hooked up to Prodigy is the hasdebuted in 1979, once reigned as the sle factor..
online king by catering to business .
Says Hewes: ''I'm reluctant to
types. But then Prodigy in White change my e-mail address. "
Plains, N.Y., created an online serOf course, that hassle factor
vice that catered to regular folks. works both ways, which will make
·AOL seized -this innovative idea and catching up with AOL even harder.
outmarketed the competition with
countless TV commercials and free
Deborah Porterfield covers
discs.
trends and technology for Gannett
net service providers , including
Its marketing blitz worked: Suburban Newspapers. Send your

-Poet's Corner-·

Rices entertain with buffet dinner
Louise Carter. Eastpoint. Ga.; Belly
Rice. Las Vegas, Nev.; Mr. and Mrs.
George Harris. Sr.: Mr. and Mrs.
Kcnnct,h Harris and son. David, Mr.
and Mrs. Durward Cummings, Mr.
and Mr.. John Anderson. ·Gerald
Powell. and Edith Sisson. Pomeroy;

ing to treat CompuServe as a sepa·
rate entity. Even so, this new chunk
of business will give AOL control of
60 percent of the home Internet market.
Which raises· the question: Can
any competitor catch up with an
online firm whose Oame is becom·
ing synonymous with the Internet?
. "AOL has become sort of a brand
that defines a category, just · like
Kleenex or Xerox or Coca Cola, but
that doesn't mean it controls that
category," says industry analyst
Gary Arlen.
·
"It will have to fight to defend its
position." says Arlen, president of
Arlen Communications, a research
firm in Bethesda Md. "The other
players arc not to~ sneered at.' ' - The players include 3,000 Inter·

Diana memorial fund makes history

Bi!lv3 Willard of Pomeroy was

Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice enter·
taincd with a dinner buffet for family and friends on Aug. 31 at their
home on Broadway Street in Middleport:
Allcnding were Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Rice of Union City. Ga.:

maga1.inc. Gunst, a mother of two, juice. Buy peanut butter made with·
apparently li ves in the REAL world out sugar. Just because a bread is
with REAL ki ds and a REAL (i.e. .. dark doesn't mean it 's made with
busy) life.
·
whole grains (the hue may come
Her chapter on Qui ck Weekday from food coloring).
Lun ches has great ideas for variaFinally, just because a food is
loons on such stand -bys as tuna, egg " low-fat" dO.sn 't.mean it's good for
salad and c ream c heese sandwic hes. you (or your kids). There are plenty
(OK, she does include a recipe for of low-fat foods that are high in
zucchini soup - WAY. too weird for calories and low in nutrition.
most kids - but. maybe that's for
- Kids are often rushed for time
Mom or Dad LO eat at home or take during lunch; bite-sized pieces of
to work .)
fruit, veggies or cheese, and sandThe point is, she keeps her wiches cut into quarters may make ir
recipes simple. straightforward and easier for them to eat in the allotted
n,utritious. It's the kind of sluff kids time.
will actually cat.
- If your kids take the same
And here's MY advice gleaned thing every day, don't worry about
from years of filling lunch boxes:
it, as long as it 's· reasonably nutri- Try to invo lve your kids in tious. YOU may crave variety, but
planning, shopping for and making when it Comes to school lunches
their lunches. My kids cat the stuff your child 's motto is: "No surprisTHEY pack; if I pack it comes es." Let them try out new foods at
home .
home first before adding it to the
- Respect their taste s but don't lunchbox.
be a· wimp. Kids have plenty of
- Practice good hygiene in
chances these days to pig out oo preparing lunch, and think about
treats ; lunchtime does n't have to be food safe: y when packing it . The
one of them ,.
Industry Council on Food Safety has
- Try different breads - oat· a free brochure on safe food prepameal , raisin, date-nut. bagel s, pita ration. Call 1-800-266-5762 for a
bread, etc . - until you lind some- copy.
thing (aside from puffy white stufl)
The sermon is over; thanks for
that your kids will eat.
li sten ing.
- Read labels. After toddlerAnd now, lunch is served.
hood, most kids should be drinking
low' fat milk; if you buy juice hoxes,
CREAM CHEESE, RAISIN
make' sure they . contain I 00 percent AND Nt'JT SANDWICHES

Teens go online as part of their social life

-·

Tfffi9'"'6iJfFOr Tips

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Punch up kid's lunCh healthfully

Tueeday,~~ber18, 1997

mock on a Sunday afternoon..
can be done about this ... Sticky Sit· · used to crawl into bed with her at
Our problem is a neighbor boy uation in Santa Clarita, &lt;;:alif.
night, just to snuggle. Apparently,
who climbs a tree -at the far end of .
Dear Santa Clarita: The boy is the women who wrote were not
his yard and peers at us with binoc- not violating any law so there is no happy with the inen 's parenting
ulars~ We have asked his -parents way you can stop him from tiaining skill s. You were absolutely right to
nicely to see that their son stops this his binoculars on you. Eventually, say. " It is the father 's responsibility
spying. but they said that they can 't the novelty of being a peeping Tom to set the boundaries."
,possihly ·watch him 24 hours a day should wehr off. In the meantime, . I became a single father thrOugh
and that if we arc · uncomfortable your onlyrecourscistobuildafencc divorce when "Laura" was 18
about the boy sceinl! us naked, we that is higher than the tree.
months old. She is now 24. I didn 't
;hould put some clothe~ on.
Dear Ann . Landers: Recently, remarry until she was 16. I often t:elt
We feel that it is our rit:ht to be you published a couple of letters inadequate, but Laura assured me
naked in our own back yard if we about the way some single fathers that I did just fine . She used to give
want tn. It is not our intent to be treat their daughters. One of your me cards on both Father's Day and
cxhihitionists. Ann. a~d we do not correspondents complained that the Mother's Day.
arprcciatc these prying eyes. I think man she was dating "roughhoused"
I set boundaries. When I got
this boy needs some discipline ond with his young daughter in a Laura ready for bed. I would lie
these neighbors arc being c•tremcly provocative way. Another said when beside her and read 10 her for 15
uncooperauvc . Plca.&lt;e tell us what she was a young child, her father mmutcs every night. Tiw only time I

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

I

Abide in him and he shall lift you
up.
His love we cannot compare.
h e xtends un li mited .to the hei g ht~
and depths
Be aware

It reaches the lowest valleys
and extends to the majestic mountains high .

The righteous Judge from the tim~
of our binh.
I
· Tell the time we leave earth's atmosphere
God in Heaven will sec what
hear and say

All our deeds hoth good and had

\VC

They can just call.

.

Barbara James

I calm the seas
· I make tall trees

Groovy prices for your cool teens. .

and mountains high

About God's Word

I heal di!)case so
man won't die.

For all who arc willing .

I am your Sav ior
who lo\'c s .y ou I rue
I made these wonders
just for you.
The honey hccs wllo swann
arOLmd

and he who's lost
1 can make found .

God 's Word is fruitful
Many blessings every day
And he will ~ivc us favors
Eac h time we kneel and pray.

God's Word is understanding
His masler plan for man
By reading HIS Holy Wmd.
the Bible ·
All who will ,' they can .

Free activation. Free local air time.

Phones starling al $15. Pagers slarling at $39 .

CELLULARONE'
PonMroy 204 We&lt;\ 2nd Street 614/ 992-7070
Gallipolis 1502 Easl~rn Avenue 6 14/44 1-0547
Athe.n s II 00 East State Street 614/ 594 -4800
Jockson 384 Main Stoeet 614 / 286 -6073

I call the tlowers to bl oom
m sprmg

and nwc"'- tng hll'(.ls
their snng tn s ing

Barhara James

Offer 1tnds 5ep~ember 30. 19 9 7 Cer!t~ln r11Urie1ion 1 apply Nflw lone ol sllt"•ce, 12 monl!1 comll'lllmenr ond cr&amp;d t
oppro110lrequired One mo~!h $2.4 95 ro te plal'l inclll&lt;le~ 75 kxol m•nute1. Two month $39 95 mdude-1 150 iocQl monut~1
,
C~110m" uuponJi ble lor'011erll9"', toll ond rooT.ot~g S.. ltore for dt•t,ll

�Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Senti~ • Page 9
80 . Loet IIICI Found

Cassini spacecraft's nuclear
load worries environmentalists

MISTAKEN VOUCHER- Cleveland Mayor MichHI White pointed to e copy of e voucher thet mistakenly trenafemld more then
$600,000 to en entJ..crlme group In Cleveland during • Morldly
news confwence. White ennouncecjeuspenalona of city workers
raponelble end promiMd court ecilon to recover the funds. (AP)
I

By LARRY WHEELER
Gennett Newe Service
WASHING'ION - NASA isn' t
telling the truth about the health risks
posed by nuclear material aboard a
planetary probe set to launch next
month, a coalition of scientists, environmentalists and peace activists
have said.
If there is a launch pad explosion
or if the craft re-entered Earth 's
atmosphere during a so-called "gravity assist" fly-by, nuclear fuel aboard
the Cassini spacecraft could rain
down on populated areas with deadly consequences, said Bruce Gagnon,
coordinator of the Florida Coalition
for Peace and Justice. an advocacy
group opposed to nuclear fuel and
weapons 1n space.
" We ' re not opposed to space
exploration," Gagnon said. " We're
opposed to carrying a bad seed into
space.' '
The " bad seed," in this case, is 72
pounds of radioactive plutonium 238
which can cause cancer if even one
microscopic fleck is inhaled, said
Janice Kirsch, a California oncologist
and cancer researcher who participated in a press conference to draw
attention to the upcoming Cas~ini

mission.
. N~SA officials disputed the
group ~ claims that. the space
agency s nsk analysos '·' flawed and
that safer, more envuonmentally
benign options are available.
"We are leveling with the American people,'' said Brian Welch,
director of news and infofiJlation at
NASA headquarters. " We wouldn 't

proceedifwethoughtit .was~n~e:"

The $3.4 btlhon Cassmt miSSIOn IS
scheduled to launcb 10 mod-October
from Cape Canaveral, Aa., aboard an
Atr Force.TitanIV rocket, the largest
launch vebtcle m the U.S: fleet.
Packed wtth 12 scoenhfic mstruments, the craftts to ~ve at Saturn
. on Jul~ I, 2004~ to begm a four-ye~
tour. Ptggybackmg a rode woth Casstni is the European-built probe Huygens, whi~h will detach and attempt
to land on Saturn's largest moon,
Titan.
Last week, NASA delayed the
planned Oct. 6 launch when workers
discovered the Huygens craft had
been damaged by its own high-powered air-conditioners in place to offset . heat produced by on-board
radooachve heaters.
.
Even 10 the worst-case scenano-

if Cassini were to somehow rip
through the Earth's atmosphere and
release its nuclear cargo during a
fiery re-enrry - the risk to public
health is minimal, Welch said.
Individuals who might inhale
radioactive dust following .such an
incident would be exposed to less
radiation than they nonnally would
he expected to receive from natural
sources such as cosmic rays, over a
50-year period, NASA's analysis
concluded.
·
But that analysis is flawed, antiCassini advocates said Monday.
"NASA's scientists are living in a
.fantasy land," said Michio Kaku, a
professor of theoretical physics at the
City University of New York. "These
numbers are simply made up."
Kaku who has authored text
books 0 ~ quantum field theory, said
he dissected NASA's risk analysis for
the Cassini mission and found the
work wanting.
"If NASA engineers submitted .
that paper to me, I would give them
an F," Kaku said.
Welch defended NASA's work as
sound science that passed rigorous
peer review by scientists not affiliated with the space agency.

r

"The 'anti ' people have nO! done
that, " Welch said. "What they' ve
done is make a lot of statements and
ask us to prove negatives."
Although the mission has been
under development for eight years
and is almost ready to launch, opp&lt;inents have sent petitions to President
Clinton and Congress asking that it
be delayed and redesigned.
The nuclear material aboard
Cassini is contained in small canisters
: ailed · radioisotope thennoelectric •
generators that produce heat that '
:on verts into electricity to power the
: raft 's scientific instruments during
its journey to the .giant, ringe!l planet.

· Opponents said NASA could :
replace the nuclear fuel with new, ;
more efficient solar panels.
That option isn 't viable, Welch
said.
To generate adequate electricity at
that distance from the sun, the solar
panels would have to be the size of _
tennis courts. Pushing a pair of ten- .
nis courts out to Saturn's orbit isn~
feasible ; Welch said.
,
In nearly 40 years of existence, •
NASA has launched 26 craft with ;
nuclear material aboard with three of :
those shots experiencing mishaps.

Mayor fires wor.kers
responsible for flub Weld drops bid for ambassador nomination
in transfer of funds

I

I

By ~OHN AFFLECK
Aeeocleted Preae Writer
ClEVELAND- Seven city employees have been suspended for allowing $617,597to be accidentally wired to an anti-crime group's bank account,
but Mayor Michael R. White said he is ultimately responsible for the error.
Tile mayor also lashed out at Black on Black Crime, Inc., which received
the money and did not report it
White issued the suspensions Monday as he explained' at a news conference how officials failed for four months to catch the typographical error that
led to the transfer.
Black on Black founder, Art McKoy, and chainnan, Abdul Rahim Ali
Hasan, have each been charged with aggravated theft Both have pleaded
innocent. ,

I

·

The group has returned nearly S146,600 in the past ,week, police said.
" Uirimately, the person who sits in my chair has to be responsible. I'm
not going to run from it," the mayor said. " But the people who have been
arrested have a responsibility to tell the truth ...
An attorney' for Black on Black accused White of trying to salvage his
credibility by blaming McKoy and Hasan.
The suspensions were announced following an internal investigation led
by lavonne Sheffield-McClain. White's chief of stan:
Suspended without pay were: Martin Cannady, director of finance, for
10 days; Alan Schneider, commissioner of accounts. 30 days; Keith Schuster, controller, 15 days: Jeanne Sikorski and Vonja Robinson , both clerks in
the Division of Accounts, 30 days each: bookkeeper Celina Chaves, five days;
and Sigrid Gearo, senior data conversion operator. 10 days.
·
The s~spended employees could not be reached for comment None of
them has a listed phone number. - •
White also explained how the mistake was made.
Gearo mistrped a vendor number so that the payment. whicli was to go
to Cinergy Services Inc ., was misl~beled f~r Black on Black:
Sikorski and Rohinson. who arc supposed to make sure payments are cor. reel, then missed the mistake. Sikorski stamped an authorization fonn with
Sehneider's.sign!llurc. allowing tbe money to be sent to Black on Black, White
said.
·
· 1llcApril I transfer wasn ·r caught until August b&lt;.&gt;causc the city was behind
.on balancing its books, he said.
·
It then took five weeks for employees 10 track !be money and notify White.
The mayor faulted his staff for not alerting him to the mistake earlier:
White has ordered safeguards to be implemented such as balancing city
bank accounts monthly and banning the usc of stamps to authorize wire transfers.

Actions to end
marriages filed
Tile following actions to end marriage were filed recently in the office
of Meigs County Clerk ofCbuns larry Spencer:
Dissolution asked-' Bobbie Jean
Putney, Gallipolis. from Jeremy W.
Putney, Middleport
Divorces asked - Atishia Dawn
Russell. Pomeroy. from Stephen
Todd Russell , Mason. W. Va~ ; Mary
Whitlock. Coolville. from Pairick
Whitlock; Coolville: Russell E.
Wooten. langsville. from Rebecca L.
Wooten, Albany; William K. Marshall. Pomeroy. from Trudy J. Mar.
shall, Middleport: Robin A. Pridemore, Middleport. from John R.
Pridemore. Middleport ..
Dissolutions granted - Yvonne
Dee Gibbs and Stanley D. Gibbs Jr.;
Ernest Edison Harris and Roxann
Harris; Deborah Rae Ti II is and Donna Ray Tillis: James E. Parker and
Crystal L. Parker.
Divorces granted Regina
Dianne Roush from Eric Allen
Roush; Charles E. Hoffman and Janet
S. Hoffman: Patricia C. Easthom
from Yancey D. Eastham.

Our statistics 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 less lor
your Insurance, Insure your
home and car with us and save
even mora with our special

governor of Massachusetts, most
likely strengthened his hand back
home should he ever decide to run for
the Senate . again. as one longtime
associate expects.
As for a Republican presidential
run in 2000, it never hurts to be seen
as having taken on Washington and
losing - if you go out with a blaze
of glory.
"I would nO! go oq bended knee
and I wouldn't kiss.anything," Weld
said of Helms and fellow senators
who denied him a hearing.
Weld, who quit the governor 's
office to push his bid, did open himself up for criticism that he was an
· opportunist seeking symbolic victories on behalf of moderate and liberal Republicans, who feel marginal ized by their pany's stand on social
issues like abortion.
But increasingly. symbolic victoric$ have been the only ones that
high-profile moderates like Weld, and
Govs. Pete Wilson of California,
Christine Todd Whitman of New Jer-·

01111

Cuatom Homes

IJ .

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J011 Wllaon

Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

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DOMINO'S
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1

,.J

was granted. since none of the cou'!.:
tries objected.
Newsom refused comment after
the sesston ended.
The United States has come under
heavy criticism for dcmandong
exemptions to the treaty for Korea
·
.
and for certain
types of mmcs.
The
Pentagon views the land mines in
Korea as the major deterrent to a
·
·
K
North Korean attack on South orca,
where some 17000 American soldt'ers ar~ stati~n~d
·
·
Activists say the purpose of the
·. 10 ban .the. '' anti-personneld
pac.1 15
mines for humanttanan reasons, an
unacce table
·
.
thab~"YM~~~~~~~~!'som sa~ the.
United States planned to oiTer a
com romisc in which it would drop
its d~mand that Korea be exempted.
Instead. it will seek a "deferral period" of riine years before the global
ban would . take effect: allowong
mines in Korea to remaon on place for
that pe ro·od
· .
· The United States also wants a
clause that would allow a country .

edJrom one cosmic collision,theMtr
gor:another scare when ~n Amencan
~atellite whizzed by, forcmg the crew
i~to its escape capsule for 30 mmut~
until the danger passed, officoals saod
today.
.
. The U.S. military satellite passed
within 470 yards of the Miron Monday night. its closest brush With an
unrelated spacecraft during its II
years in orbit, said Vera Medvedkova. spokeswoman at Russia's Mission
~ontrol.
·
The reason the American satellite
s~ifted into an orbit so close to the

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. . ~DSLO, Norway (AP) _ Negoti:arums on a treaty 10 ban land mines
·w~re postponed·for a day today after
1troi United States requested more
~itite to reach a compromise it could
.
.
accMepl. h · IOO · ·
ha been
'· •· ·ore I· an1h Nnattons· ve ' ·tal
~eetonSeg '" 1 1 cd ~rwefC::,~
~P'on
1
sonce pl. 1
a g h' h k' nil 0
)111)o-personne mmes, w oc t r
d 26 000 · 1
10f
;woun.
peopeayear,mos
~"!inThecovu' note
oansd. S
h. h .. ed
tales , w oc JOIR
' r, .
car-old talks forthe first
thr;ncarly
Y has presse d for exempunie tn Oslo.
..
h
ld II
0 f the
uons t at wou a ow usc
mincsontheKorcanpeninsulaforat
least none years . . .
d 1od
When meetings resume
ay~
after a thr~c:d~ br~ak, U.~.~~~r
toon h~ad ..,nc
cwsom Im .
3
, rcqu~sled 24-hour postponemen
said the United States needed
. .1
·till consult· . ·he
the
. cause
t was s on a pos· tnne
'th many
govcmmcnl'
m romise treaty thai the
5:~6t'
u1 .• de~ p . ld 51··gn The request
nne tales cou
·
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under auack to withdra"': from the
"""·383l
treaty wuh sox months nonce, and an
,,..,,
exceptoon for mones used m,an antoHoule &amp; Trailer
tank system..
.
Sites
CJody WtlhamBs, ofLthedlnt~rnauo~dDrlvewaye, utilities,
al ampaogn lo an an mones, sao
lend clearing,
the U.S. demands would gut the
.. de1egaaeptlc euettml
treaty. an d 1hatt he Amerocan
.,
•
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vious conditions.
FrH EatlmtltH
A
· ' d 100 ·1· · 300
....,..,.....
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· '-----;;.~=;.~
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ld ·d f k.ll '
· 1· ·
U
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-6
992 194
Canada. in October 199¢. in whoch a
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time business
weapons. Si?cc then. scores of coun!ries have Jnmcd the process, mcludSpecializing in
mg the Unned States last mvnth .
wedding, anniversary
Backers hope the treaty woll be
and birthday cakes.
signed
in December,
and
- in
.. Ouawa
.
._
said they will press to get such key
powers .as Russo a. Chma and Indoa to
.join the process by then.
·

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Mir's was not immediately known . not immcdi'IJcly be reconciled .
... The crew was sitting in an
During arecent series of accidents
escape capsule, in case (the American on the Mir. the Russians have often
satellite) grazed the station," said played down the dangers to the crew,
- Easy Bank Financing ..;. · ·
Medvedkova.
while •orne American poh11c1ans and
In Houston, U.S . space officials other officials have questioned the Furnaces
amonth
gave a slightly different account, say- safety of the Russian spacecraft.
ing an inoperative American science
Prior to the Monday mght eptsode, Heat Pumps Installed
• month
satellite passed more than twice that the closest Mir came to a foreign
Free EeUmal,.
distance - within three-fourths of a spacecraft was when an unideniified
mile - by the Mir.
object passed 1.4 miles from the
" It wasn't anything major," said space station, Medvedkova said.
John Lawrence, a spokesman for the
The Mir wa\. involved in the
U.S. space agency NASA. "This worst space col hsion ever, when a
114-446-M11
happens every month."
· cargo ship rammed into it during a . Serving Southeastern OH &amp; WV
1.-..r.l-7
Safford School Rd.,
, OH
The conflicting information could practice docking session

Rollll,

. SERVICES Has E1panded Ita
·Servicea In Weigl County And

llobUe Home Furaaces LGIIOIV? Uoh-y? Tou flnl
....... - 24117.
.. -m•000-2i0-1077
$2.111/
and Heat Pumps.~o=, .""''
18yn.

''

Help

Pa,,..,:,~T'l::';131Hr..
TON Y'S PORTABLE 'WELDING With
Gow't llontftlt. ApoiY ToclaJ

ioi:iMn ' .......

'2800

Ell1f'L0Yr.1ENT

. 270-1015, El1L 115.

Satvfce

Jarte' 's ust01
Ca){es

14H015.

'

RADJATOB REPAIB
rr--------.
(ORPOUL ELEORIC

American satellite.whizzes past Mir
"Encourage your children to read every day.
One day they may take the world by storm:'

__

GalllpQIIs

614·992·0077
Middleport, OM

Hauling, Excevetlng
&amp; Trlr!chlng
Umeatone &amp; Gravel
Septic Syatema
Trailer &amp; House Slhta

.

We hear the .wind stopped
blowing in Chicago .one day
and everybody toppled over.
•

YIRI Slle

Carpet-Upholstery

llowa CLIIIC

SAYRE
TRUCKING

ta!~~

results
when the tongue outraces the
brain.

992.e&amp;87

Intersection Df US 33 &amp;SR 7 (Northwest Comer)
S.Dtember
&amp; 21et
Saturday lo-s p,m.
For More lnformallon Cltll:

Iritis &amp; Slnlltllll: . .,., Serwkt Ttdlticlal

70

STEAM CLEANING

Meigs County Fairgrounds

7J'3.5785Cr S0..7r.J.5447.

·I·

***
Foolishness always

. A~ IIUIII'GIIefl

CHEVALIER'S

250 COndor Slreat .
Pomeroy, OhiO 45769
.
A DlvlliOn on·Nichols Metal, INc.
Phone: 614:992-2406
·.Fax: 304-n3-588t

° '."

A comedian is someone who
knows how to take a joke--no
matter whose it is.

l.oal: Gtrmtn Sllljlliti~ """ IMti
Purplo
ToBotonga To Family 01 2 Small
Child,., Ploeu taU, No OuH·
!lone AIMd. • u 441 0'05

Ota•s

q ·

........ roar O...am"

C..-·

AI Cwpet-llpllolstery

2ndA.MIUJ!

qompromise on land mine treaty

A gentleman is a man you
don't know very wall.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

Found: Ml ol koyt wltl&gt; PhUip
lljotrn EP ... IIUU 11112

:u.s. asks for time to reach

Grate

We have a nice Ebony
Home Plano wltll a bench
for sale. Call for details.

1CU81.1141ttM7.

61

By
Dave

***

Remodeling

FOR SALE ·
MUMS {Assorted Colors)
$2.00each
!l:':lilri~1l PAUL HILL GREENHOUSES
SA 338, letart Falls, Oh.

~

Small child to father: "For a
thousand-dollar exemption, I
think I deserve more than a
quarter allowance."

Found: ...... Wtac:aJ '¥•at ""
111tt- 111 1R 12&gt;4- ol Sir·

EXP0'97

sey and George Pataki of New York Weld runs for the Senate again, "Nn :'
have been able to win outside their one is going to say .you are part ot ·
states. 11ley ~cprcsent four big states that Helms party, which is whattbey_:
with nearly half the electoral votes said (last year) . ... Being a mavericlo- :
ncces.ary to win the presidency, and Republican makes him a stronger' :
Republicans lost all four by wide candidate in Massachusetts.
:
margins last year.
"I know he wants to ruii for the :
Weld lost to DemO&lt;:ratic Sen. Senate" eventually. Tafel said. "The. :
John Kerry la't year. after Kerry's irony of all this is he could end up iri ·:
brutally eiTcctive strategy of tying the Senate someday, facing all o( ·
Weld to the par1y. of Helms. 11le these senators who denied him a :
North Carolinian and other southern hearing. some of whom were pretty.:
conservatives largciy are disliked cowardly supponing Helms."
·.
and distrusted by mo~c moderate
But beyond that, even friends arc .
Republicans of the Northeast - and not saying this helps Weld if he seek~ :
vice versa.
the GOP nomination - the party '• :
But by picking a public fight with center of gravity has been shifting ·
Helms, Weld - only 52 -'- elimi- southward for more than 20 years.
nates the "you're in tbe party with
"lrcallydon'tthinkthisisahuge
Helms" attack, if and when he runs launching pad for a presidential run,"
for office again. said Rich Tafel. Tafel Tafel said. "The cards arc stacked
heads the Log Cabin Republicans, a against a Weld-like candidate running .gay GOP group, and was Weld's . in tbe primaries. But it certainly rai,;; :
diroctor for adolescent health services' cs his name 10 (as a possihlc vice
in Massachusetts in the early I&lt;JOX!s. presidential choice) after someone .
"I think there arc positive consc- else gets the nomination...
·
quences for Weld." Tafel said. If

The Light

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners and
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings. ·

Civil suits on tap
(EdHor'1 note: A IIWIUH outlines
the griev8ncH o f - party agelnll
enolher. It doea not eatlbllah guilt
«innocence.)
Fanners Bank &amp; Savings Co.,
Pomeroy, seeks $1,405.18 plus. interest and costs in a foreclosure su11 filed
against Susan L. Dillon, Coolville ..
Meigs Care Limtted, domg bustness as Overbrook Center, Middleport, seeks $30,065.50 plus interest
and court costs from Alan T. Caster,
Middleport, to recover funds oblig·
ated .in a payment plan.
.
Hoine National Bank, Ractne,
sceb $20,739 plus interest and c?Sts
in a foreclosure suit filed agatnst
Teresa Miller. Racine.

By CHUCK RAASCH
GNS Polhlcel Writer
WASHINGTON - In the end, a
Republican moderate once again held
a losing hand.
·
But even William Weld, who
embarked on a virtually unprecedented, . campaign-like bid for an
ambassadorship before dropping his
bid Monday, took something home to
Massachusetts with llim.
In fact, while the Republican Party's cultural chasm again was
exposed and President Clinton lost
yet another majotl nomination, the
three big players in the public drama
over Weld's .never-to-be Mexico
ambassadorship take home at least
some political spoils:
• Sen. Jesse Helms. the defiant.
crusty, conservative chainnan of the
Senate Foreign Relations Commiucc,
solidified his position as an old-guard
sentinel of the Republican right.
He did exactly what be said ·he
would do by not yielding to Weld's
campaign-style attempts to bring
public pressure on the Nonh Carolina Republican . Helms further alienated those on his left. but strengthened his position as a no-yield conservative with the party's right wing.
"Every story about this had Helms
saying Weld was soft on drugs," said
Greg Mueller, a strategist for Republican conservatives. ''That resonate§
with women, wilh conservatives,
. across party lines. This is a big issue
for families. He defined Weld as soft
on drugs. And Trent Lou deserves a
lot of credit" for sticking with Heims.
• Weld, the glib, telegenic, fonner

Found: Hungtlna Oof, Bothan

-..1..-.ldl.
Fon: .... Aelll ,... , ,,......

Serv·U·

(818)845 1434.

2 Klttona V•llo• I Whit•. Lin., :::C::!om:.p~u-tor-U::'oo-~-:N:-t-tld:-o-:;d-:
. W:::o:-:-rk
Trlinld,ltl 411 IKIIII.
own hou~. UOk to SSOklrr 1·
2 Pupplta, lwko old. Gorman tiOQ.348-711111!0&amp;
Shophanlrllllled, Ill ..... .......

114-441o3302 or 114·441-1077
·-

8pm.

Abandoned Vorr Lovoablo Fo·
. mole K114or1, 114-441..-.

:::::~::.:~:-:::":7-7.::-::-:-

·FrH Klttena, I - · Old, 114·
· ....a111.
•Sma" ••·~ F..,.tt Dog HoUIO•brokon,
tnteltlgon~ Vorr

I

v.,,

.~ 114 ttl 32'10.

y

HOllE HEALTH AOENC HIR·
tNQ CNA'o I HHA'o, Full I Part
Tlmo Pooltlont Awallablo, Grut
Hourol E&gt;oolllrw Solary Plua Bin· o(ito, Agon~J Well Tralntld, But
llutt Have Hlgl1 School Diploma,
GEO, Or SOmt ElqiOiilia CIIMg
For The Eldorly, Sand Rtoumo
To: CLA 42e c/o GotUpoUa DoUr
Tribuna, 125 Tlt1rd All.....,, Golllo
polo. OH 4!131. EOE.

�Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

.Tuesday, September.16, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

:AILEYOOP

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

BUDOJ:

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

388Hr

ACROSS

3t

So-•·

Anewlr to Prew1c.e• Puale

meal
1 Trulem
40 Elploalvo
8 Along a cenlrll
(abbr.) .
line
42
a chlk
11 '!ype of . - 44 Phyllelana'
13 Songlllte
, .
14 Entltualalt~
45 &amp;;:longing 1o

o-

320 Mobile Holllll

tor Slit

...

t2xli0 2 badraom mobk homo, 3
rr. old lurnacl, haltor,
w11hor I d,_, air conditioner,
14500•81 4-11112-!1111.
t4170 Ookwood Mobil-· 2
Bodr001111. 2 Sotho, Pump,
Applllncaa,
e.G.E.
814-2!1
no , Uko - · Altor

2 I S batlroom mobllt ho"'" Remington 7400 IM)L
•280·1300, ,.,..,, water and automatic CAL 270 wtacopa.
-.lncludld.l14-182-2117.
331 L-111&gt;
a badraom nllriDr rwln llkl- -Rilelion CAL 36 . . _ . ltiO.
dltpor1, 1275,..- ........ Ruger llftolvtr llodii·Vaquore
7112" barrel CAL 45 long coiL
pollt, 8t4oi!INtM.
1:115.
304-1175-173 t
..~-·._.............. SOxtOO lo•.. u-·mo.
H,
.No petL Shady · Cove Uobne 530
Anllqutl
1881 Kentuckian 'tOxU Thraa Homo Pttrlt, Hartford. 304-1112·
Bur or Mil. Riverine AntiqUtl,
Badraom
_ .,g
-AJr
112&gt;1 E. lloln
Rl. tlol,
10ao40 Aluminum
Undtf·
pinning Dlaconnact Boa 0 - ,3 Bodroom Trolltr, In Vllaga 01 Pomaror. Houra: ·II.T.W. 10:00
Extreaillull Ba llovadil2,000, .Rio G11n&lt;la, No Pttli, pOO/IIo., a.m. 10 1:110 ....... SOncllr 1:111110
1Piut Oepaafl, Reterencea Re·
Clll81.:..24-8501.
8:00 p.m. eU-8112·2521, Rult
qulrtd, 814-3711--2720, AFTER I
tll77 Stndll 14170 311tdraomo,J0
--·
I
1-1/2 Bo.,.. Wi......., 3 Ton Bolutlful Rlvw VIew kl Ktnau111o 540 MiscellaneOus
14
Heal Pump, IB,8D5, ' -388- 2 Bedrooma, Unturnlahtd, Alf'l
llerchandiM ·
8051.
Conditioned, Na Pelt, Olpasll,
1887 Clayton Fantoor 14a70, 3 Rtloroncta, FoiiOfl llobllt "DAY CARE" Equipment &amp; pra·
gram mallrial, ~ . Bodraoma, 2 Satha, 2a8 Walla,
B14-44HI111.
to ltlrL 11,500 OBO. ilo4-87S.
P-rlco: St0,500 , 814-371-2084, us 35 - · 1 112 botll, 3771.
Wookdlyl Only.
)'.:olrPi)rt,uuitlllty.a had, nohar 1

•*

0

=311=28=·-------

Livingaton'l basement water·

proofing, 111 baHment repalrl
done. frH lllimlltl, llfttJmt
;uaraniM. 10,ra on job ea:perl·
--~2145.

caHy

:.:.11.=--'-------

-.,on

•

Norlb
.. Q 8 7 4

• K 8 52
LIYing Room, Dining Room, llfd.

roomt, Kitchen, Utility Ail Now
Condition! $1,500 'For Ail, 814·
245-1388.
Nlco .Oak Hutch: 3 Year Old
Whlto Kitclltn Eloctrlc SII&gt;VO 110
Inch, Nice Kitchan Table 4
Chllrl, 814-3711--2720, AFTER I
1\11.

CARS FOR 11001 Truckl. bolla,:
Reg. Pinto mare ttyra. Old w11 4-whetllf&amp;. motor home1, tvrrll· ;
used lor penning. Reg. Tennea~ ture eiec&amp;ronlcl. computNI etc. 1
Nt Walker matl 3yra old. Rea.
i'lil, IRS, Del. Auallable your •
Ttlll Longhom Canlt. 304-1115- br
lrtl .... Call 1·100.&amp;13-4343 :
31131.
ElL~

• AQ
• 7 6 3

Weot
&amp; A
• 7 6 4 3
• 8 7 5 3
• K QJ 9

fliGistorad S-tal bled&lt; buU, Uptori Ulad Cora Rt. 112·3 llilto•
3 YHfl old; puflbrtd Slnmentl.l Sauth of Leon, WV. Fin1nclng ~
hoiloro: purobfad Slmmontll brad .....ble -tOIIII.
-.;et4o84&amp;-2822.

720 li'Ucks tor Silt

'115 F 150 XLT 2WD, Bt4·8112·'

1eD3, Century Bravo 14170, 3

llodt'oanw, 2 Full Bo111a, Con1rll
AI~

Pay Oft. Only, 117,800 814-

24~

.AJI real estate advertt&amp;lng ill
this newspaper Is s\A)feet to
lhl FOO«ai Fair Housing Act
or 1968 which makes It Illegal

to adVertise ·any prefftnce.'
limitatiOn or discrimination

based on race, War, religion,
sex familial status ot national
ortgln, or any Intention to

...

Wao10rn lladlcol Sarvi011, JCA·
ItO Accrodltod With Conmanda·
'

Soulllom 0111o conwc:- Faeuur II SHklng To Contllct An
01110 Llcanoad Phyalclon. Con·
1r1c1 Pwriod Ia 101011117 To 11301
tl, Subject To llutual AgrH·
-.Tho l'wlod eo..r.d Br Tho
Enaulng Contract llay Bo El·
tln&lt;latl For (2) Two Addllional
- . OuoUiiad lladkll Doctor•
.... Cal Tho lnlti..tlon S u 0111ca At 814-258-~ e-11on
3274 To Racal,. Bid Fonna An&lt;l
lnawuctlona Boloro 12:00 Noon,
Ftttltr. Saplombao 1g, 11117.

s~.~;h

praf8rBnC8,
llml1atlon or dlscftninatlon.•
make any

Tnls newspaper wllonot
knowingly accept
advertisements for real estate
whictt Is In violalion of the
law. Ow readerS are hereby
-.ned that all -ings
advertised In this newspap8f
are availabte on an equal
opponunity llaSis:

3058 or 304-54S-1801.

MORE
BODACIOUS
CATFJSHH

Aparlments

tor Rent

31 o Homes for Silt

Work Schodula. Travel RolmburMtMnt Included With Wonth-

lv Salary. Sand Raauma And

ThrH Employment Roloronc01
ro Pllnnad Paronflood or South- · Ohio, 3H Richland lwenua,
" ' - OH 45l0t. EOEIESP.

3 ·Badraom Houu, 1 111111, Uvlng

Room, Kitchen, SUnroom, latQO
Barn, 7 Acrea, l ·a nd Contra~:t,

tST TillE BUYERS! E·Z Fl·
NANCING. 2 or 3 -ooma, lr·
ound S2QDimo. t-8Q0.25t.-5070.

FRANK &amp;: EARNEST

14170 3 bed-

room. $1 ,055/do•n, $1 Gil/mo.

Coli t.-.att-&lt;sn7.

Free air, free lklr~ 18180 3 or •

bedroom lt,350/down, 121111/mo.
Coil HI00-8111-e7n.

•

bedroom, 2 ba111, ..,, nloa, .....
bile home, 1 ac:re land, city wa111'. ACCIIII HUD. lo400/mo. 304512·5840 or 304-5711-2718.

. 0-

Tom MUstead Jr., 814--44S...2810,

814-245-554t .

'

.

Hou11 on N. Park Driva. .2br,
family room, living room, new

carpel, new roof, new windows,
new "ding, fu~ baMment 'unfinilhtd). 304-1175-MM.

: :=.:,:::=:.:.;,;:::..:..-::--:--J
S&amp;M Wataf Heullng Slrvlctl,
"Wftaro .Puri!J 11 Our Pillion•
Glvo Ua A Coil Today: 304·875·

Lovely 3br Ranch, prlcad to aoli.
304-875-5182.

S.R 211, 5 lollnl., From Galipolio,
3 -..mt. DR l&lt;itdltn LR .. 1.3
::;f1;.:;t8.=---:~--,..--J Acral 187,500 et4-448-2o405.
tut•
Tnrtt bedroom houH, large
~IOGradall
buildlng,oxtra building lilt, 8.11
lncludaa: llathamltlca, Roodlng, acru, porch, garago. 814·8411·
Engllllh/ Langullgt, Aria. Social 3t27 or 304-1175-4575.
Studloa, Science, Hlatory. Alt1Dr~CII~•~IIt~.~CII:!~304-~8115~~-~·--1 Three
bedroom, twa bath, on
_
large corner lol. localtcl3318•
W11 haul junk or lllllh
p1c1&lt;up- 304-1175-5035.

1351 ""' Lima Rd., RUtland, 135 000
OBO, 841 ·357·2854 avtnlngo

F trJMJCIAL

on,.
320 MobUe Homes

tor Slit

THE .BORN LOSER

1188 Honda GoldWinq Aapon·
cada Excellent Condiban, Low

,. Tf\f&gt;..T':&gt;

Zl57.
tg88 Ford Taurua stat!onwagon.
maroon, crulll. ~~~ onvtm c:IIHUI, aharp, Ucelltnt c::ancUUon lnsideo and out, 12885, 11•·

11112-8112A.
1888 Ford Tamt&gt;t&gt;, two door, two
ownara, full alzed apart. body
good, 11rong engine, priced Ia
aell· $,000, wl.th CD play11,
11200, 81+a.&amp;l-30a&amp; IIIVI
tagt or cal altar 5:30pm.

Small lurnlahad ljlt. UtiMtiH
paid, 01cept elactrlc. 12001mo.
Rolar- I dllpoait. 3Q.I.875·

18811 G11nd Am, 4dr, air, pa, pi&gt;.
304-67S.t5011.

13116.

Tara Towfthoull Apartment&amp;,
Vorr Bpocloua, 2 Bodrocma. 2
CA. 1 112 11111, Fuiir Car·
Plltd. Adult Pool I Baby Pool,
Ptttiil, Start l31i0/llo. No 1'1111,
L - Plul Security Dtpollh Required, 114-448-3411, 114-441010t.

Fioofl,

Twlli Rto.o T-. -

icctptina
~ lor 1br. HUD aubai&lt;j:
lzatl apt. lor tllltrly and hand!·

me•

FlfTEE:NLCYVf. I

750 Boats &amp; Motors

for sare

····~24tn

0.... Monument Bualnna An&lt;l
Equlpmanl For Sola. Call lion •
Frl, Hrl. 10·4 For An Appoint·

.........-.712.

1TIIEONLYI
IH..O.W.O.U·TI
1488 Down o n - lingle-·
lion. Sllllll Down on 111oct 111Jitl·
2o3or 4 8tdroom fllOd.
oiiiiYIIIablo.Oo- Homtl
Nloo, wv. 304-755-588!&gt;

12 Trodttlonol

West

Pass
Pass

No rib

East

3•

Pass
Pass

Pass

13 :.':ln.ndly
18 Movellk8 o
robbl1
21 - of London
23 Myt11tc.l
aviator
25 - St. Laurent
27Some29 One more
33-ondh. 34

4 Criindor, 3 Utor, 1.0., With Tilt
Trailer, Hal Recent Vinyl On 2
Fold Down Full Swivel Seata.
Padded Bow &amp; Stern Seata, 2
Storn Platlorma I RoPI Hookl, I
Iliac. Accnao~tl, Could Stand
Ulac. Repairl, Thlt Is A Goor.
Looking Boat, Raody To Sal ,
lt,71i0, 080, Or Trtdo E.V., 8143118-8181 Anytime. No Synd~
DoaiL

'

.

tll85 t8' Sta,.,.fi With 1965 tOO
HP Wercury, Runt Good Orel,l

Flllhlng Boat, 11 ,300 Will NtgO:
tilll, 814-441-4412.

tUG Olda Cudou Supromo
llako Good School Car, hcoltoro
Conditloh, 814-245-5493.

bumpers. 01~14.

1801 Chevy Lumina. 3.1 Euro
model. .... door ....... lir, cruiM,

1877 15' Glaatron With ,970 11~
HP Mercury All New lnteriol,

amllm casHUI, automatic, bfue,

Verr Fast, St ,BOO Will NOfiOiialfl

73,000 mllaa, $5:!50 080, 814·
BuM Trumptt llfaoo, E1collent 84&amp;-2844.·
·
Condlon, 12511• 81 4-2!ill- 10114· ·
tllll1 Ilardi MDL 828, 4dr, !iOpd.

tiiB7 tJh. Sol Imp, 180hp llrtr';
cruilef wftrailar, 2 life jac:kata. 4
_,

~'

114-448-4412.

In good

-rltlng """'
35 Compell pt.
37 Expellrom
low practice
38 Qulotly, old
otylt
39 VIolet
41 Potty quarrel
43 Scent
45 Heraldic

!o;,.+-+-1-+4-

CfOIIH

460..-rocre
49 Rae;an·o son
51 Author
Levin

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos · ·

CMeriry Cipher aypt~ aN CJHMd trom quo\alions by famout people, puc and presenl
Each let1er ., !he ciphar &amp;tandslor another- Todly'1 cU. .W ~ W

' 0 X E,N J V G I
UBS

ITOGSXOGI

K NI

TCG

S 'T

MTEP
Z T E

KNEV

SGEEXUVR

TJJBE,

SKGO

JKNXO . MGXHONCC.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "There are two types ol coaches. Them that have just
been lired and them lhal are going to be fired ." - Bum Phillips.

react to a .game-invitational limit

•r.

0

PEANUTS
SO~R't' I WA5
LATE, MA'AM ..

11M

•

Ra..,,.,

0

•

1

~!:~:~' S©~4{l}A~ tlrS· ••••
Uhod
CLAY I . POlLAN

WOlD

~r

0 Rearrange

letters of the
four scrambled word1 be·

low to form four ·simple words .

H E WL A R
NYTER

II
3

.I

s

I' I I

G 0 H u R .I:=:;;,'

I I I .I

To be on the wrong s1de of
an argument is better than being on lhe right side wrth no one

6

.

.

.

.

I~7~~~H=I~~=R~~E=T;,e~E~~9~~ ~-~:~:.:.:.:h.

L -l..-..1.-.J.l--..J...._l.._,J

f9 .P~INT NUMBE~ED 11

OUR KITCilEN WA5 FULL
OF SQUABBLES ..

tfTTf~S

*"

sn....

IARH t411C1HIS YEAR I HRI
Wll oliO HLUHG lrw Roq 800o

t Co1on1Mm
10 AIIO"I'an

'raise? He passes with a minimum.
raises with some extras, or {unlikely
though il may be) cue-bids or launch·
es into Blackwood wilh slam interest
Here, South goes on to game . hoping
for 1he best
Wesl leads the club king 10
South's ace. If South plays a trump
immediately, ,he should lose four
tricks: one spade, one hean and lwo
clubs. Instead, declarer should cross
to dummy 's diamond ace, ovcnakc
the diamond queen wilh his king, and
cash the diamond jack, discarding a
club from the dummy. VVith the los'
er coum down to 1hree, it is lime 10
tum to spades. Soulh's 10 tricks are
four spades. one heart, three diamonds, one club and one club ruff in
lhe dummy,

17 Ft. ,985 Cilation, Mercruilll',

1988 Ball Tracker 18 tl2fL, M•
barglan, t50hp Johnson GT, 12'
24 volt trolling motor, exc. ahape',
cappod. EOH 304-1175-NN.
Fonder StratacoiiOr olac~lc gu~ j:~~:!:~~cu~'"-"_'_·S-5,~4-8-5. , SU00.30oi-87S.1t78.
,
·
3yra old, ,tile. c:ond. 304-875Dining
room
chandollor,
5
llqhll.
75115.
Two batlroom oporwnont In llld· llko new: ailo. quart CIMing ..,.:·
111111 Thunderbird, air, aunrool, ~ 1GSS Ranger 373V t8' 12 -2~
dloport, no- 814-1182·515&amp;
Trump~~$100, eu ue ~7.
new Mtch"elln tire&amp;, exctllenl Trolling Mo1or, 150 XP Evlnruda
Bt4·1112-34Qt.
.
Ou-d, $8,800, 8t4-1112-2770.
condlon, "" 304-875-5SICI.
Unlunlllhod Aporwnont lor ronL
No Pall 814·258ot803, From g Doll&amp;, Dol/a AnCI Mort Dallal
tm Chovr Lumina, 3.t lluldport 1980 28ft Trac:lcef Parry Hat Pon!
FARM SUPPLIES
Atexandera, Gro-Haira, Old Dolls.
A.ll. ·I P.ll.
v.a lnfna, lir, til~ cruilo, lmllm loon Boat, 100hp. kitchen &amp; uP:
N- Dollo, A Whole Room 01
&amp; LIV ESTOCK
alereo e1.11eUe, automatic~ 4 per tun deck, tracker trailer,
Colla, Muat Still Unbelievable
450
l=umlslled
doot, ftiW
llfrl dean In and prictd to &amp;ell. AII·SB,SOO. 304~
Price or m Eat:h. 114-3117·740G.
875-5011.
'
Rooms
OUI,$41195, 814-11112-8824.
i l l - On L1t11t Kyger Rood.
610
Farm
Equipment
Camaro
..,.
body
atylal
vKlnga Motel loweat Ra111 In For aale- couc:h. &amp; chair, good'
1885 Saa-doo Spaco SPX jot 11&lt;1;
11183
1
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
.
16 Foot Tandem Dove Tail Trail- 8, red, auto, loaded with power eo ~.14500. 814-lll2-et30.
condlon, ... 814-1112-3708.
Cinam&amp;M. ShoWIImt I 0111111.
er, ~Included, faciOry Buift, optlons,.38,4t1 miles, tiiC. -cond.
Wetkly Rotn, Or llontly Rotn, Grubb'&amp; Plano· tuning &amp; rljlllrl. Ulad0r&lt;o,lt,400, Carl 8t~ NAOA $13,100-Salilor $1t,OOO TXt7 112· Ba11 Track• 70 HP
Mercury 50 Power Thraah Troll·
Conauuctlon Worktrl Wtlcomt Problema? N'aad Tunod? Cali tho 11837.
finn. 304-875-3087.
lng Mo... 814-245-11227.
~~8~~~~4~08~88~22,~8~t4-44~~1-6~t8~7:.,·_
plano Dr," 4 4&lt;8 4525
~B=u,::h:.,H"o-g"'P::-a-r-to-a'"=-Eq-u-,ip_m_o_n_t-. J tllll4, Dodgo Shadow: 1Gil0 Pl&gt;ntJ.
Slaoplng room&amp; with cooking.
Auto Parts &amp;
JET
.Ro1arw Cunera ~Rear Blade•· ac Bonnl'lille; 1gae Plymouth 760
AIIO lrlllllf apace an riNr. All
AERATION IIOIORS
Loadtra. Bacohoto, etc. car- Vorager, Call &amp;1H46·2t55, Or .
Accessories
hook-upa. Call altar 2:00 p.m., Ropallod, &amp; Rebuit In Stoclt mlchlll'l Ftrrm a Lawn 8t4-448- 614-24S.56n. ·
304-713-5851, lluonWV.
Budget Price' Tranamiaaion•.
Call Ron Evana, HI00·537·8528.
2&lt;12, t-8Jl0.5Go4.1111.
t~95 Sa.,rn SC2, Automatic, AJr, Used
/Rebuilt, All Type&amp;, Over
460 Space tor Rent
[).4 0 Cat Dozer wiWinch ropel, Cruise, AMIFM Cuseue, Trunk 10,000 Tranamlaalona, Accel(
Kenmore Washer 1100. Gibson power shift uana, e.11c. under car- Releal8, $12,000 Cal Ahlll 5 P.U. Remanufactured Yain Shahs Fo ~
Mobile home ''" av~llablt bel- Dryer $100; Both Working; 275 riage.$17,500.304~75-5911 .
(Sarloua lnquirial Onlyt) 8U· Standard Tranaml11lan All
wMn Athena and Pomeroy, call Gallon Fuel Oil Tank $65; 114·
448-«ltS.
Typoa, 114-2&lt;5-5877
814-:1115oo1387.
'
371-2720, AFTER 8 P.ll.
. Huaqvarna I Grien Machine
timme11 &amp; bruah cuttln on 1111 1996 Dodge N.. n ~ Doora, Auto, Full line of au1o· body •pantla~·
....... ~~o... ..,... '" lliddloport, Kitchen Corsetl8.50 Sale on all flOW. Sidor'l EquipmonL 304-G7S. AC, AIIIFII Cusettt, 27,000 paints ancfaupplill, also gillli
... 814-1182·21186.
Mllea, $8,850, OBO, 614·258· light numbly. Oxygen and ac~
room size carpet•. Mollohan Car- 742t.
8168.
poll (014)44&amp;-7444
tylane tank&amp; fillad .,.. exchanged,
MERCHANDISE
JD 2755, JD 2555, JD o4020, JD
8t4-742·2782.
I
Large GE microwave with 1urn 3020, Kubota 70 HP • WD, 1996 Mercury Tracer; 28,000
tabla, 8 monlhl old, paid $300 w11 IIF285, Ford 800, NH 250 Skid lrilu $7,88S. 8,000 mllo1 loh on New gaa tanka, 1 ton trucl(
pa~ted street,· public utllltle•;
take It 50 080; Greco pack &amp; Slaar 250 Hra., Yanmor 22 HP 4 Wa11antri (6t4)·258-81113
whaeta &amp; radiato11. 0 &amp; A Aula.,
510
Household
lamliy typo neighborhood. Homoplay, used twice, UO ; Jot Aiclt IW Willi Mower, Rhino tO FL Oft. Be Trona Am: 85 Cldililc Sovilla: Ripley, WV. 304·372·3;33 or 1...
stead Bend, Broker. 30.&amp;· 812·
Goods
car 1111 wilh canaPf, $10; Graeo lit Rotary Culler 2 yra. Old, 89 CheYrokll S-10 piCk-up ttuc:k, 800-213-1328
2ol05.
baby awing, ItO; llulltd Mario Wood a 10 Ft. Cuttlf VG C,..nd ., et4-&amp;43-5238.
~~=---:--::--:·
Appllancea:
Reconditioned chair
TuMOI Rom (8110 And Top) An&lt;(
lor a tocldiar, $5, 814·742· New Round Bale Transpo111
Trailer LDt~ Counuy Lane lloblla Waahara, Dryara, Rongaa, Ro&amp;i·
AcccH O~o~al Point Diltributor Foho
1016.
$1,850.00
NH
716
Silage
Wa110n
82
Pontile
Flroblrd,
V-8,
T-topo,
Home Park. Gallipolis Ftrl')', WV. orarors, ID Day GuarantHI
Small BloCk Chavrioot 1100, 61'1-'
VG
Cond.,
Uaod
Loador,
Uood
ouDnllc,
llal,
powor
ww,thlng,
French City llayttg, 814·448· look Tobie Wi111 8 Chloa, llatch304-1175-5421.
44t-t053.
..!
Drill, Plontoro, Round Bolora, Etc. 85 000 mila
lion
7785.
• 8t4-247-31101ollor
I. exce I condition,
lng Clina Hulcl1 "4-4411-83e8.
W. Make Parklf' H~druallc: HOI· 18300,
5:00.
RENTALS
SERVICES
Color Floral LovtiHt Wu 1400 Silo /Ront: ~ E - . Uft as, Carmichael'l arm &amp; Lawn
t9110 -tiiiO Can For StOOIII
Roduold To 1100, Excollont Con- Chairo, Eiactric Whltlchllra, An&lt;1 614-448-2412, UOil-!ill4-111t .
• Saizod And Sold
dition, Antiquo ltoma, Rocking Scootoro, Whaolchalr Ulta, Bow·
410 Houses for Rent
Largo Sliaction Of JO Compact
, ......, Tlia Monlh.
810
Homa
Chair, 81~7.
-·-.81~7283.
Trac1or• And Attachments 20 ·30
.__,
211&lt; houM In Hartford, 1250/mo.
Horaapower 2 Yr. Warranty 7.0%
Trudia. 4X4'&amp;, Etc.
Improvements
Special Fall Feeder Calf Sail: Financing With JD Credit Appro·
$100 dopolil - - 2 0 1 8 1-800-522-2730, X3901.
.Soplombar 18th, At 7 P.ll. 70 val Carmic:hatra Farm I Lawn, Oodga Oynaaty In Real Goad
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
,HNd Of Ytlarfing S-1 I Haillr 614-446-2412,1 -IIXJ-5G4-1111 .
Condillon;
Por
Sale:
1890
Ford
Unconditional lifetime ~arantM,
Con&amp;igrmonll For Thll Salt, Co&gt;
Eocort, Runa Good, LDo"' Good;
tla WiN Ba ~ Stardng At 4 Uitaubllhl 02050 30 HP. 4 Cylln- Z2• Ca~taller, 5 Spead, Power local relarenc11 furn111led. Elllblishad 11175. Call (et4) 448·
P.ll . Wedn; ~ I All Day dtr, Diesel TraciDf', 680 tfours, 15 s
1
BS B
teer ng, A
rakea, Power 0870 Or t-600·28Hl578. Rogo11
Thursday, All Conalgnmenta Mlntuaa From Gallipolis, . Askinn
• Wln&lt;lwwl, Til~ Vtry Low IIRoago, Wat•p&lt;oollng.
Welcome, Hauling Available, 14,500, 814-3711-280!.
37,202 lllioo, V·8: Lawn Chlal
Athena llVIItOCk Sa/11, 014New Holland Wo'del 782 Sileage. Riding Lawn Mower, 350 Engine,
502·2322. 814-llll8-353t.
Chopper With A Two Row Veri· Brand N.w. Bultl Up To Run. 814- Appliance Parta And Service: AU
WARII UP: HIGh Elllcloncy Nalv- able Width Corn Htad. 1 Two 251-1544.
Nama Branda Ovat 25 Yeara E•·
ral And .lP Gas Furnaces, Life· Hay Haadl. B14-388-CI816.
01\lo Voller Bon;, Will Olfor For periance All Work Guaranteed...
tlmt Wlrronty On Htat EIChtng·
City Maytag, 614·4•e;,
Salt A tG83 Ford Bronco, Serial French
7715,
or. "II You Don't Call U1 W. Bot11 U ad 3210 Ditch WI h li · h
+
~llllaxi
:P.:,n:t:
IIFIIEU15N3PLA2103t
And
A
Loatl" Frat Eotlmlttll Add-On
18117 Honda TRX21i0, Strlal C&amp;C General Home Main~ ·
HNt Pumpo Ontr Silclhty Higher. 54-7842.
1478TE2100VA004746. Public 1enence- Painting, vinyl aiding,'
Call Uo Today. tlll7 II Tho
Auction Wll Bo Hold At Tho OVB car~try, doo11, Windows. bath'\
Livestock
Twenty Srlanrh Year In The 630
Anno&lt;; t43 Third INa., Gllllpola, mobile home repair and more. For
Htatlng &amp; COOing Sullnoul 814Small Cottage Clo1t To Grocery
tiiG4 llodtt 12Ft Stock Traitor OH ON 111201117 AI 10:00 A.ll. free estimate call Chet, 6,4·a92448-8308, 1-1100-2111-00118.
Tho Above Will Bo Sold To High· 8323.
Qood Condlon. et4-2oiS.5087.
I Downtown Galllpolla; - - lit Bidder •At Ia• Without Ex·
• I Dlpoll~ 814-441-1151.
STORAGE
TANKS
3,000
Gillon
520
Sporting
Uprigh~ Ron Evon• Enrorprlat~ 3 and 4 rr• old Black Sim. Sullo, pret&amp;ed Or llmplled Warranty 840
Electrleal and
ThrH bodoom houll. t 1/2 bath,
Cowl and Bull Calvoa. (8t4)· And liar Bt Soan Br Calling
Goods
Jod&lt;aon, Ol1o, 1-1100-537452&amp;
Refrigeration
largo rard. tiUIIIdo """ parmlaod,
25H402 or (8t4)-448-1 t 58
Koith Johnaon At Bt4-44t·1038.
In Rutland .,... 1375 par monfl Ruger Ratl Hawk Stalnlau 44 Toll T.V. Stan&lt;l, With Shllvoa On
OVB
Tho Right To Ac·
plus dapoll~ &amp;14-343-5568.
llag. 7 112 Inch Barrel, 1400: Bot. Sldoa. 1100; Couch I Collot 5 roar old .bay Tannt11ao walk· copt Or Roltct Anr And AJI Blda, Reaidentl_al or CCrnfl:"l8rCial wiring, ;
lng horoo, gelding, 84~ tall, troR And Withdraw Property From new ~1c:e or repa~ra. Malter u.
Smith
I Wti&amp;On Uadtl 57, -411
Two bedroom houH with atovt llog, 8 Inch Borral 1300, Clill Tabla $80; Collot Table I 2 En&lt;l ride, road ure, w1ll work buggy,
electrician. Aidenou t'Tabloa
With
Doora,
Pttid
$1,000
Salt Prior To Slit. Tanno 01 Solo: c:enaed
.,.. rt~igofaiOr, dtpollt raqulrtd,
Eioctrlcal, WV000306 304·tl7S..
lt,200,
8t4-74~2050.
CASH
OR
CE.
R
TIFIED
CHECK.
814--1..
'
Sill: $fi)O, et • • ta 3437.
171111.
nolnlida poll. 814-QI~:IOIO.

lond..,...,

~

883t
t8881lodgt Shado!or, 4 cylindof,
IUII&gt;. .tlc, 11100 OBO, 814-74~

New Banll Repo'll Only 3 left.
owner financing available. 304-

- ou.,.,. w A...,,

nice car,

Mfloagt, Loodatl With E1troi,
1887 LtBiran 4 Doora. Vfr'l 0. 8t4-448-8880.
pendable Car, $1,500,114-251-

3 or 4 bedroom.

4 BId 0011\ ~ LIVe! With 5400 755-71111 .
Sq. F~ InclUding Full Bo11ment
Wltl1 2 ear Gtraga, Gao Haa~ a Oakwood 2Bd8 3 bedroom, 2
10011 CULLIPCLB
111111 From Gaillpolll On llulavllt bath, starling at $1QSI per mo.
. On 1 112 Fill LAt. City Callt.-.att.am.
ao
or ~
tiii,OOO,
814
4411 03110
Tho Fa- GnM~ng eo...., kl
Own a niw ham6 $1,000/down,
The Nation. We Provide A Pro· 8 Rooma, 2 112 Sotho. lnground no payments after 7 VeatL ·304lnllonol A-phart Whore We
PooL On 1.12 Acr81. Plul """" 7~.
Bolltvt In Our Ptoplt. Thora mora;
o- looldng tho Rlvor. FO( 1'1111&lt; llodol TraUor To Llvo In Ex·
App&gt;lntnwnl: (8t4~258o11103
How Wt Do - · w. Do.
tra Nice, Juat Move In The Furnl·
Apply Now At Tho Rio Granda II Room hoUH In Sln&lt;lhlll Rd. turt Gool Wltl1 It An&lt;l HYou Ukt
Job Sarvlca. Hiring Cook• • lmmacylale Condition. EMiraal To Sit I~ llr Pllono Number Ia
304-213-3301.
Sorvtra. Food Preporalion, Utility $40'~ 304-1175-5522.
a- l l a l o O f y I'Oiiiiono BUY HOliES AS LOW AS Park model tralllf with furniture,
$4,000 1 o5 Bdnn., Local Gow'L &amp; Ulra nice. I WO&amp;Itd like to 1811 on I
OOLDEN_
CORRAL
304-213-3301c
"'ruuT_,
__
Bonk Ra~·· Call 1·800·522·
2130,
X
17011.
Rapoo • Save &amp;g $$$$.Cai Crodan.tYalltl, E""Y W
It Llni800-2S1-5070.
180 Wlnted To Do
Br ownor: 2 Storr On 3 Wooded
Acral SuHtln 1114, 3 Badraoma. REPOS. SAVE BIG ISS CALL
ANY OOD JOBS: Eltt&lt;iof paint· t Full Bath, 2 Hall Batho, Full CRfDIT LINE t-1100-251 ·5070.
lng, 1hrub1 &amp; we1d1 trimmed, Baaement, 2 Cullom Wood
landacaplno •. aldewalkt edged. Floora Throughout, Cuatom TAKE DELIVERY IN SEPr: NO
lawn care, tiC. Call Bill 304-!75- Wood Wor- T~OYQhOUI Tht PAYMENT UNTIL DEC. t897. t·
711 2.
•
Homo, Ful Front......., Docl&lt;, /v- 1100-251 ·5070.
chltect Deaign, Appointments
Take Oelivarr In Sept No Pay ·
Ardlt Will Pttlnt Chlractaro
Ontr. 811 148 91103
-Oreal For
01 Children'•
'!bur Cholcaa.drooma,
On-~ Bv Owner : Wounl Vernon A~tt· man1 Until OtG. ,897 800: 251·
5070.
Nu-lat, Sundar School Cilll- nut, fl&gt;lnt PtooMn1 8 roomo, 2 or
Elc. 1 ~
3 badroom, t both, llrga klttheft. UNBELIEVABLE 28178 4 Bod·
rooma. 2 Boths, $48,885. Only At
basemtnl,
aiding,
ltnctd OAKWOOD
backrord. vinyl
$64,000.
304·875·
HOMES 01 BAR·
83t0.
BOURSVILLE, WV, 304-73&amp;·
e.-lanced cOrjionll}' .,.. , _ .
3409.
. doling. lnalda an&lt;l OUtlido,
FOR SAlE BY OWNER:
vlnVt aiding, atld-on adell- ttt Vinton Cour~ In Gllllpollo, t 330 Fanns lor S8le
ttonlo cabinet refacina or newlv Floor Plan, 3 Bedrooma, 1 Car
rtbuiiL Rafaroncoa-Frta Eati• aa..gt, Lot IOJIGO, CaN 114-3711- •o Acre Farm, Mobile Home, AIJ·
-JrnSI'&lt;II304-1175-1272.
27211 For Appolftunont Only AI· dod Rooma, Witl1 Orilild Well, Totar 11\11.
bacco Bale, Standing Timber,
Fumlture -"'· Nllnilll and rtolllnerol Righll $52,000 &amp;1&lt;·256tlnllof\ aiiD custom ordlrl. C»\\o Home In c;ounlry. with 38 acres, Be32.
Valle)' Reflnl1hlng Shop, Larry onl~ 7 yeara old, with two bed·
.Pit::•=ptl::.:8:.:,1.;_4-1111=.:2..=-8578,:·;__ _ _ raoma, living room. ltltchtn ball!, 350 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 utility room. -GlorgH Por&amp;able S.wmll,
lluldlng,
"""'
cellar, one ar garage.
locatiKI 12 Acln For SOla, Right OH 5R
lUI """ lop to ._ mil jut!
on llailay Rw1 Road, tf1 hou11 on 850.814-245-5540 Anyl . ..
3tl4-875-1857.
loh. Priced II $70,000, Clli 81&lt;·
Hazelwood Orin. lot 8Dxt75:
384-211117.

K,

- o r 304-87!hl018.

$3g,ag5. Free delivery. 1·800·
881-8777.
.

WE'U.EIIEAIW

-.~~~~~~~~·~~~=~

11i188 Reliant

d ,OOOmi. on engine. 304·175·

••

28~80

animal

KJ 2

By Phillip Alder
What was the worst bid ever to
become part of Standard American? ·
Although this will probably cause a
deluge of mail, f think it was the jump
raise of an opening one heart or one
spade to three heans or lhree spades
to show 13-15 points and at leas! four
trumps: the so-called forcing raise. If
using that bid, what would you do
with to.day's Notth hand after panner
opens one spade? Presumably, you
would respond lwo heans. Yet that is
unappetizing, especially as partner
·will think you have only three-c ard
suppon when you bid spades on the
, nexl round. And that ninth trump will
usually be wonh an extra Irick via a
ruff in the dummy.
Much beuer - and more logical
- is 1he limit raise, which shows
some 10-12 points and a1least four
trumps . (Are you wondering what to
do wilh a game-forcing raise? Tunc
in tomorrow!) How does the opener

Ooublewlde r•po nwer lived ln.
must Mil, net reatonatie ofllr r•
lutlld. 304-755-718 t.

New

II - and cralta
7 Roman dozen
8 Cryatalllne

lnatrument
5 Stubborn

The 'worst'
standard bid

au,.,.

114211.

30 Tlinbtr tNt
. 31 Craving
,32 Ape
· 33 Actor Aoclt -

Opening lead: • K

lltpoalt raqulratl, no peta, 8141112-22t8.

Traveling Patient Sanric11 At·
2 Storr, 8 room houM oq double Largo Mllctlon or ulad homo. 2
""""' For F...U, Pllnnlna Sorv· lot
in Ballameade. Full size or 3 - . . . Sartng 11$3&lt;85.
leta Baaed In Jackson, OH. 30
Oulck doilvorr. Coli 1·800-837·
Hour Waak Pl&gt;altlon With Ben• bo...,.,~ lully carpotOd, now vi· 3238
· fill. lled!cal Office Experience "'lidlng. 304-1175-1534.
Raqulrod. Floxlble Schedule To
N.,. 111118 t4x70 llrH bedroom,
Include saturday Morning And 3 Bedroom BI·Leval In VInton, lnclud01 8 monthl FREE lot renL
Not
In
FloGd
Area,
Foncatl
Yard,
&amp;anlno HOUIL Roaponalble Por·
Onlw 1181 .81 per month with
ton Who II Senalli~Jt To Birth 614-388-IIC142; Bto 388 111118
St050 down. Coli 1·800-837·
Contrul An&lt;l Roprodudvo H•lth
bedroom houae ptua I+ acre~, 3238.
Needs Of Clients. Wuat Be Or- 3
big
living room _""" firopl101, nlto
glnizld, Accurate Wllh , Figures dining room &amp; kildlen, nice river Now tllll7 llobla Homo On Rant·
And Oocumentl.llon. M1.111 Be view, located at Syracuse, Oh ed lot Coleman Gaa Furnace,
New CA, Garden Tub. 814·440·
Willing To Work AI Pttrt 01 A $55,000 000, 304-275-11 02.
Team And Handle A Varying

· IT'S ALL GONE,
HONEY POT!!

1 and 2 btdriiam - - fur·
nllhad 111&lt;1 unlumllhad, HCUIIII'

Glenwood Rd. Ashton areaKhool b&lt;ll gon by front door. 3

REAL ESTATE

...••

til Tlme
E·Z Financing 2
Or 3 Bedtooma Around $2110 Pot
llo.. 1100-251-5010.

UJn.

1 Noutlcel
command
2 Muolclan Cuget
3 Winter olghl
4 Slrlnged

21 E11111

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

South

BARNEY

1185 C..,.IDn 18a80 3 Bad OOfl1lo

F;M air, free

DOWN

• A 54

~;[rj;j,ld~'i2i"'ici'"''hed·
un..
~
tltpolil. 1350
304-7111-

440

• 10 9 6 4
• 10 8 2

t

'

not

24 Truat
2tl. Zodiac algn

• A J 10

&amp; K J 10 9 2
• Q 9

"

0058.

East
.. 6 5 3

South

I*M,.,.,

1183 Clayton llobllo Homo, 3
Bodlaoml, 1 112 Bolhl, l1e.DOO;
125 BTU 011 Furnoco 1100: 18&amp;
Gallon 011 Tonk, 150, 114·245!150.

09-t0-97

them

15 Walking poles , 47 Actor
16 Command to
Alaalalr _
48 Shadowa
Rouer
17 Character of • 50 Wnk point
people
52 Clothing Iabrie
53 F,.. - · 19 Wrath
20 Bltlb
54 Paradl22 Ad 55 Actnaal
23 Believe- Hannah

~ou

cn ..klo

quoted

by fi111ng in the missirg words

develop from step No. 3 .below.

1 I, .1• I' I' I' I' I' I
I I I I I lro I I I I I
2

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

lit ACool Cot Attd Ch«/o 0vt w

s..;.,

in""'"""""" s.c.....

ITUESDAY

sure 1o· competent
a
state your zodiac sign .
,
mauer for you 1hat is personally
LIBRA {Sept. 23-0ct 23) Select- imponant, don't do anylhing today
companions who are optimislic and thai could rock the boat.
ASTRO·ORAPH
adventuresome today. If you associ ARIES {March 21-April 19)
ate wtth people who are too reserved, Friends with whom you've not spent
lhey nught spoil a polenltally fun day. much ,time lately are eager for your
BERNICE
SCORP.JO {Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) Thrs company. Take the initialive today
BEDEOSOL could be a good day to present a mal· and make arrangemenls to gel togelhter lhat requires familial consent All er.
are likely to be in accord and positive
TAURUS {April 20-May 20)
rcsuhs are probable ,
Unusual career developments arc
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. stirring for you at Ibis time. They
21) Mental mvolveme~ts have excel- could be significanl; take positive
lent chances of succeedtng loday. You action when you gel the signals.
VVednesday, Sepl. 17, 1997
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You
Your
long-range
material will show sou~djudgmen1 and your
will command respect of your peers
prospects could be,subjecled to favor· dtsclosures wtll wm suppon from
,
today. The impact of your words and
able transformations m· the year others.
CAPRICORN
(Dec.
22'Jan.
19)
conceptions
could bear fruit for an
ahead. Keep your eyes open Jar new
Financial
ii'ends
are
moving
in
your
extended
period.
fiitlds lhal could generate larger earnfavor today•. an~ you could gel
CANCER {June 21-July 22) A
inKS.
InVOlved
In
SIIUattOnS
thai
make
Or
person
who has your best interest at
rVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22) In
~av~
you
money.
Follow
your
baSte
hean
mighl
do helpfullhings for you
orjler to perform at your best today,
msuncts.
of
which
you
'll bet unaware. This is
stimulating challenges are requrred.
AQUARIUS
{Jan.
20-Feb.
19)
a
day
of
surprises
and fulfilled expecDo nol fear paper tigers or the trapSpontaneous
developments
w1ll
bnng
tations.
pi~gs of power. Virgo, treat yourself ·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Project
to a binhday gift. Send for your you the greatest enjoymenl today.
yourself inlo situations today lhat
Aljtro-Graph predictions for 1he year Keep your schedule flexible so l~at
ahead by mailing $2 and SASE to you can move where pleasure die- could enable you to be a middleman.
Profitable developments are indicatAftro-Graph, c/o Ibis newspaper, tales.
PISCES
(Feb.
20-March
20)
If
ed
if things are done approprialely,
P.O. Box 1758, Murray Hill Station,

'

Bowman - Quaff • Hutch - Mildly - ADMIT
Dad never would say that he was wrong. Mom says
that if you face up to your faults you have one tess fault
to ADMIT ,
.
.

SEPTEMBER16I

�Ohio Lottery
Cubs blank

Pick 3:

Reds 5-0 on
one-hitter

890
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1795
Buckeye 5:
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Sports on Page 4

-.

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•

lo'll. -41. NO. 107

1998

:~11117, Ohio v.lley Publllhlng Company

TOYOTA

•

lEW I

HAVE

DUll

AIR, AM/FM UDIO

1915 Port Huron steam traction engine
to be on display this weekend at Expo '97

AS
LOW
AS

NEW 1997 TOYOTA

AIR

$

AS
LOW

BIGS

AS

$
RIDES TO BE OFFERED- Thl8 1~15 Port Huron steam trac. tlon engine owned by Robert Roll of Klngeton will be at Expo '97
. thie -kend. With 19-horse power on the draw bar and 65 on
. the ball, the engine which runa on coel will pull wagonaand offer
rldee around the county garage. It Ia baing brought to Expo by
the Big Bend Farm Antlqun Club.

TOYOTA

NUMBI

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ONE IN

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TOYOTA

HURRY,
HURRY,
HURRY

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WHITE HAWK

co-cHAIRS CONFER - State Rep. Thomas Johneon, A-New
: Concord, left, and Sen. Roy Ray, R·Akron, confar during the lnl• till meeting of the joint finance eubcommltlaa at the Ohio State. houHin Columbue Tuaaday, Johnlion and Ray are co-chairs of
, • the committee. (AP)
·

AS
LOW
AS

LOW

AS

~ Two committees ~tackle funding

•pti(E IIICUIDIS TGIO'IA C0UP01

LOVE TOYOTA·

LEXUS

W.VA.'S LARGEST TOYOTA
DULE
IS LOOKING
FOR GOOD RELIABLE SALES
PEOPLE. EXPERIENCE NOT
. NECESSARY. PLEASE APPLY
IN
TOYOTA SHOWROOM.

problem. anew

OPEN
MON.-FRI. "·"•
SAT. 9-6

AND

The Ohio Supreme Court ruled
March 24 that the funding fonnula is
unconstitutional because it relies too
heavily on local taxes and creates
funding inequities among the district.
The ruling grew out of a 1991
lawsuit filed by most of the Slate's
districts. The court gave lawmakers
one year to replace the fonnula. ·
Specialists from the Ohio Depart"It's a new day on this issue in ment of Taxation and the nonpartisan
Ohio and we must approach this issue Legislative Budget Office spoke
with an open niind." said Sen. Bruce before the ways and means subcom·
·Johnson, R-Columbus and co-chair- mittee.
Deputy Tax Commissioner Carol
.man of the Joint Ways &amp; Means Subcommitlee. which will consider ways Bessie spent much of her testimony
talking about tax rollbacks - the
•to·pay for a funding increase.
· ·Rep. EJ. Thomas, R-Columbus portion of local property taxes that
.and the committee's other co-chair- the state pays for homeowners and
man, promised the panel would work businesses. She said the rollbacks
·in· a "roll-up-your-sleeves type of cost the state more than $800 million_
·atmosphere, a bipartisan atmosphere. in the budget year that ended June 30.
"Ohio has a long history of limitEarlier Wednesday. the Joint
'Finance Subcommittee began its ing property tax growth, · reaching
work to try to detel11)ine how much back. to the 1920s," Ms. Bessie said.
State Solicitor Jeffrey Sutton, who
must be spent on each Ohio student
to satisfy an Ohio Supreme Court rul- unsuccessfully argued the state's case
ing that the state's current fonnula is before the court, outlined the court's
ruling for 'the finance panel's memunconstitutional.
· Lawmakm went back to work bers.
Sutton said the court. was clear in
about six weeks after failing to pass
a pl_an by Voinovich and legislative its opinion of Ohio's current f,unding
leaders that would have included a plan, but less so on how to fix it.
penny-per-dollar increase in the state Lawmakers must develop a consen· sales tall, subject to voter approval. · sus on what the ruling means, he said.
Rep. Vernon Sykes, . D-Akron,
Democrats, who felt left out of the
process, and a group of anti-tax said after the hearing that the needs
Republicans blocked the pian in the of children must not be lost in all the
House after the S~nate had passed it talk about money.
along party lines.
COLUMBUS (AP)- Opponents
of Gov. George Voinovich 's failed
attempt to get a sales tax increase for
schools on the November ballot complained that other options had not
been given due consideration.
-; Republicans who head one of two
g_pecial committees studying the
funding issue said Tuesday they
would welcome any new ideas.

I

IMPORT
DULER
IN THE
STATE

IS ,
LOW

AS

ALL PRICES INCWDE
RE~T£ .TO

MOTORS LEXUS

RtOOMooCO«&lt;LEA"~~~!~'"ON,.,

demonstrations which are timed
events will also be held on Sunday
afternoon by John Ridenour. · .
On Saturday from 2:30 to 4 p.m . .
Jennifer Krawsczyn will conduct a
dog obedience demonstration in the
show arena, and residents are encouraged to bring their dogs and participate.
At I p.m on Saturday a k1ddie
tractor pull will take place. The
, antique tractor pull will begin at 2
p.m. and in the event of rain will be
moved to Sunday at 1 p.m. ·
On both days there will be a petling zoo with some exotic animals, a
quilt show to be handled by Bunny
Kuhl and Alice Thompson to include
old and unusual quilts, a gardening
display by clubs of the county, and a
mounted hunting trophy exhibit in the
Coonhunters building.
Contests to see who has grown the
largest pumpkin, com, or sunflower
will also be held, with ribbons to be
awarded.
·

Cars, both new and antique, will
be on the grounds. Four dealers, two
local, one from Athens, and another
from Gallipolis, will be showing
1998 vehicles on both days . ·
Antique cars are scheduled for
Saturday and race cars, including
drag and oval track race cars are to
be there on Sunday.
,
..
Entertainment will be featured on
both days and will be presented from
the stage located ne~r the senior fair
building. No seating will be provided so those attending are encouraged
to take lawn chairs.
Entertainment will begin at 10
a.m. on Saturday. Scheduled entertainers are l..inda and Matthew King,
Sheila Arnold, Belles and Beaus
Square Dancers, Debbie Powell, Kelley Grueser and Cynthia Cotterill,
and Robin d'Hart.
On Sunday entertainment wi'll
start after an outdoor church service
conducted by the Rev. Eugene
Underwood. Scheduled to ·entertain

are Diane Neese and family, Robin
d'Hart, Big Bend Cloggers, B.ill
Crane and "Dusk", composed of
Paulette Harrison, Debbie Grueser,
Michelle Hupp, and Sally Radford
Ingles. The Trinity Church bell choir
will perform at 3 p.m. and B. J. Smith
at 4 p.m.
'
A wide varieiy of items will be on
display in the commercial buildings,
and a flea market will be held outside.
Among crafters to be there are Dcbfa
Bullington 'of Culpepper Herbs,
Denise Arnold of Fragrant Fields, the
Trolley Station. Pam Massie with
Longaberger baskets, Stouts Country
Crafts. and Rainbow Ceramics.
Numerous other organizati011s and
businesses will be there with information about their products and services, and weaving and other demonstrations will be taking place on both
_days.
Several food bootbs will be in'
operation at Expo. There is no admission charge,
·

I

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

ALL

.UV4

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Slllff
Everything from riding in wagons
pulled by a steam engine to watching
saw sculpturing demonstrations will
be featured at the 1997 Town and
Country, Expo to be held Saturday
and Sunday on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
The latest entry for Expo arrang~
~y the Big Bend Farm Antiques Club
ts a_I91S Port Huron steam traction
engtne owned by Robert Roll of
Kingston. He will be usina the engine
to pull wagons filled with Expo visttors around the county garage.
Other ndes wtll be the monster
truck ' "Cyclone" running over
crushed cars, and pon1es and.horses
fromthe Lone Oak fat?". .
.
M1ke Pace of Cmcmnatt, a Suhl
cham saw sculpturer, ts bemg brought
in by Ridenour's S~pply of C~ester.
~~~.sculptures Wllltnclude an Expo
97 deSign whtch w1ll be aucttoned
off late Sunday afternoon, Hot saw

Ohio's Bicentennial planning committee
officers for M.eigs County are selected

IrS

OOAMO

2 Sec:tlono,1t " - • 3 5 AGannett CO. Nl• F I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 17, 1997

TRUCK'S

ALL

Moetly cloudy tonight,
IOWI In the mid 501.
Thuredey, 11rly log,
eunny. High In the ao..

727-2921 ' OPIN 8 A.M. TO 8 All. DAILY-IATURDAY 8 A.M. TO 6 RM.-5UNDAY 1

TOYOTA

WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 GM DEALER SELLING CHEVROLET AND OLDSMOBILE AND TOYOTA AND LEXUS
TO S RM.

I
I

Seotinel Newe Staff
Officers of a committee named to
. plan Meigs County's observance of
Ohio's Bicentennial were elected at a
meeting held Monday night at the
Meigs Museum.
Named to serve with Margaret
Parker, chairperson appointed by the
Meigs County Commissioners, were
Joyce Davis. secretary; ,Susan Oliv·
er, treasurer; and . Brenda Merritt,
publicist for out-of-county media.
Fund raising to provide matching
monies for state grants was discussed, along with various activities
to commemorate Ohio's Bicentennial.
It w~ announced that ·the !75th
Anniversary of Meigs County Committee has given $500 as "seed money" to help the committee get started
. OFFICERS NAMED • Elected to nrve with
mlltae were Su1an Oliver, treaeurer; (ParUI'),
while fund raising to _finance projects
Mergsrat Parker, eec:011d from left, chairman'tor
Brenda Merrill, out-of-county publlcllt; and
supported by the Bicentennial comMelge County'• obHrvance of the Ohio BicenJoyce Davis, eec:ratery.
. mittce is planned.
tennial, •• offlcara of the local planning comParker reported that Ohio's Hill
Country Heritage Area Program nearness of that time. However, the torical events, poster exhibits por· · markers ' is in the prO&lt;;ess of being
developed by the Ohio Arts Council grants will be offered on a quarterly !raying events, leaders and ideas approved by the Ohio Historical
will have a meeting at thC Nelsonville basis. and the chainnan said that she which contributed to the founding of Society. Those markers are'being pwPublic Library next Monday. That is securing an application for the next Ohio and Meigs County.
chased with a grant from Ohio Travprogram. she explained, wiU provide round.
Other proposals included produc- el and Tourism matched by local
infonnation on non-matching miniSince the August meeting when a ing a mini-page educational feature funds.
grants to organizations involved in Bicentennial commemorative coin for children for the local newspaper.
Committees were named to begin
innovative projects that further the was suggested, Parker reported that doing a historical musical, bringing in planning for specific projects. Patty
goals of the heritage program.
she has been in contact with Steven live theater . for performances, tree Cooke and David Gloeckner will
GranL• of up to $1 .000 can be used . C. George, executive director of the plantings. and recognizing commu- work on a proposal for B.uckcyc tree
for community assistance in celc- Ohio Bicentennial Commission, nities which were in existence at the plantings across the county. The Rev.
brating the Ohio Bicentennial. Park- about a coin and plans which the state time of statehood.
William Middlesworth. Charlene
cr said the money can be used for might have to produce one. She said
Recognizing longtime businesses, Hocnich, and Susan Oliver will wort.
tape recorders to do oral histories, ' she had also inquired a' to whether · special beautification projects, and on guidelines for papers on historical
printing costs~ and for purchasing •March I. 2003 will be set aside as a marking the graves of early settlers events, activities and people.
materials needed .to carry out pro- ·state holiday.
were also proposed as worthy pro,
Commissioner Jeff Thornton,
jects.
It was decided that an emphasis . jccts for the bicentennial observance. Middlcswarih, and Gloeckner will
The deadline for applying for the will be made on promoting educaParker reponed that already two of serve on a committee geared to prolirst grant money is Oct 1.. and Park- tiona! programs in the schools to the 16 markers to mark Morgan's raid ducing an official county nag.
er indicated that the committee would include wriling contests for high across Meigs County have heen
The next planning session wa&lt; set
not make application in view of tloe school students, study un'its on his- ordered and that wording for other for 4:45p.m. on Oct. 13 at the Museum.

-..
•

•.

.
··

;'

Group warns about rushing into electric deregulation
•

CINCINNATI (AP) - Legislators should be careful before deregulating Ohio's electric industry, a
coalitto_n of energy companies,
unions and businesses said.
A legislative committee is study·
ing deregulation, which would allow
customers to choose their supplier.
But a report released Tuesday by
the Ohio Alliance for Affordable
Power and the Washington-b&amp;Sed
Small Business Survival Committee
warned that deregulation could raise
electric rates for small businesses and

•

•

t

residential customers unless safe· classes." said Doug Prcissc, alliance
guards are in place.
executive director.
The group says that if electric
The report projected that the clcccompanies lose large industrial and tric bill for the average residential or
commercial customers under dereg- small busine.- customers could be as
ulation, they will increase prices to much as $175 a year higher nine
remaining customers unless steps years after deregulaiion - before
are taken beforehand.
eventually falling .
"If and when Ohio moves to alter
Gene Pierce, spokesman for the
our exiSting electric service system, ·coalition for Choice in Electricity, an
policy decisions should be made alliance of residential, commercial
with as much iitfonnation as possible and industrial consumers, disagreed.
and with close consideration of the
"It sounds like pretty typical scare
J!?ICntial impact on all consumer tactics from people who are afraid of

losing their monopoly over Ohio consumers," he said.
. ·
The electric industry for years ha•
been a regulated monopoly. But 22
states have deregulated or are considering it
Under deregulation, companies
that own and maintain the wires to
homes and businesses will be sepa·
rate from the companies that creaae
Ithe power, Customers will be able to
choose the producer that offen the
best· rates, with should spureompetiContlnued on paae 3

Sheppard's son places white daisies on.father's exhumed casket
COLUMBUS,(AP)- Sam Reese
Sheppard watched and waited
p~tie 0 tly today as a backhoe dug into
the grave where his father, Dr. Sam
Sheppard, was buried 27 years ago.
The older Sheppard was convicted, then acquitted of killing his pregnant wife 43 years ago in a sensational case that helped inspire the
television series "The Fugitive." He

said a bushy-haired intruder knocked
him out and killed Marilyn Sheppard
at their suburban Cleveland home . . ·
When Sheppard's casket was
revealed about an hour and a half
after the exhumation began, his son
approached it, cradling 27 white
daisies in his ann.
The 50-year-old Sheppard placed
a hand on tbe steel casket - which

appeared to be intact- tossed a fe"
of t~e flowers into the empty grave
and placed the bouquet atop the coffin.
"Finally it will provide him the
opportunity to gtieve for his parents."
said Sheppard's attorney, Terr)
Gilbert.
The exhumation is part of the civ1
il lawsuit Sam Reese Sheppard has

filed againsi the state to have his '
father declared innocent and wrong- ·
fully imprisoned.
The remains were being driven to
Cleveland, where the casker will be
opened and DNA samples taken to
compare to the genetic makeup of
blood found at the crime scene. 'Then
the remains will be cremated and
Continued on page 3 ·

.

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