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on Page .5

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 10,1997

"; LOW

Vinton County gets $10 million for new school
McAKI'HUR (AP)- Vinton County High School had become a symbol of what's wrong with the suite's method of funding public schools.
But in a few years, the run-down, overcrowded building will be replaced.
By a vote of 2,752 to 1,837, county residents passed a 3.82-miil tax
levy last Tuesday to help pay for a new high school in one of the stale's
poorest school districts.
Some had thought county voters would be reluctant to support a new
tax until the Ohio Supreme Coun approved a new funding plan that is
expected to increase the money available to poor areas.
But residents recognized the deal being provided by the Stale Building Assistance Fund. As one of 19 districts eligible for millions in state
money, Vinton County received approval for a 2-to-1 match in money.
The state will pay about $10 million toward the new $15 million
school, set to open in 2000. Local taxpayers will provide the remaining

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$5 million.
.
Vinton County Local Schools was among the hundreds of plaintiffs
in the lawsuit that led to the coun's finding that the current propeny-ta&lt;
dependent system was unconstitutional.
Even befone that, the crumbling schools in the 2 500-pupil district in
southeastern Ohio were featured prominently in "Children in America:s
Schools," a 1996 documentary on PBS hosted by Bill Moyers.
A new high school "is niore than the bricks and the monar. For Vinton County, it's business, it's jobs, it's opponunity. lt's pride," said schools
Superintendent John Simmons.
He said the decisfon to take part in the filming of Moyers' documentary meant opening the doors to the deficiencies in the county school system and comparing them with the educational luxuries of wcal.thy districts.

"At first there was some embarrassment," he said. "People had wondered , 'Was our facility really that much w·orse than most?' The answer
was, 'Yes.' Then the altitude became, ' By golly, look at what we've got
down here. Something isn't right."'
For years, the district has boasted about its dedicated teachers and
bright students but cringed at the high school's leaky roofs and toilets,
flood-buckled floors and lack of a cafeteria.
What supponers are savoring as much as the taX~Ievy victory itself is
the message their votes sent to legislators wrestling with coming up with
a fairer way to fund public education by ne&lt;t March.
"Had this ta&lt; issue failed, do you know what they would have said?"
Simmons asked. "They would say, 'They won't do anything for themselves. They don't care. They're lazy.'"

Defense counters image. of bomber with homey details

.

*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

'

A'fter voters OK· $5 million levy

Bumpers, and' Increased Horse . Power!!

AS

2 Sectillrll, 12 Pogea, 35 cen1l
A Gennett Co. N..,op.,...

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Froq~
~

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a1
\1)1. 48, NO. 141
01117, Ohio._.., Publelllng Comporoy

Cloudy tonight, chance
of rain. Lowe In mid·30a.
Tu81day, cloudy, high in
lowar40.•

DISCUSS BOOK • Jamea Nichola, right, ·brother of Tarry

NJah11~ 1 ~ 1c1b P~~ dlacuail their bao~'J'~'aind:

COneplncy in ~ .. Iowa Cl~, IOWII' u,....y. erry
Nlcttc* leon trial for his II~ r~ In th• Okllhoml (:lty bomblng.
.

DENVER (AP) - When FBI
agents searched Terry Nichols' house
after the Oklahoma City bombing,
they found anti-government litemture
in a storage room and a Disney singa-long videocassette tape atop the
television.
Together, they represent the image
of Nichols that defense attorneys are
trying to build for jurors- that of a ·
committed. father who hol&lt;js some
critical views of the government, just
like other Americans.
"(Defense ·attorney) Michael
Tigar is ·setting the stage for the
defense later that 's going to say Terry Nichols was an ondinary guy," said
Denver anorney Andrew Cohen, who
has followed the trials of Nichols and
Timothy McVeigh.
"The anti-government literature
wa• · in the •..,..., The~
books were on the eolle~ ilble," he
said. •· All of thi~ is &lt;Jeslgncd to

cy and weapons-related counts in the attempted tn "humani/_c·· Nichols.
bombing April 19, 1995. McVeigh For example. they asked FBI agents
was convicted of identical charges in if Nichols lived on a quiet street in
June and sentenced to die . His appeal _Hcringlon . dcsnibihg his horne U.'i a
sniall, frame hnusc.
is pending.
Defense attorneys have argued
"Togar " doong a g&lt;Xxl job of
that Nichols was at home in Hering~ dcllccting the' allcntl(l'n uwuy frnm
ton, Kan., when the bombing what the gnvcrnmcnl wants the jury
occurred ·and was unaware of any to consider." Cohen said. .. Evcoy
tirilc the prosecution has made a poi~t
bomb plot.
During the first week of testimo- over the past few days , To gar ha.&lt; hccn
ny, prosecutors called 29 witnesses, quick to stand up and try to refute it."
On Sunday, James Nichols said
ranging from bombing survivors and
victims' relatives to a former boss of his brother is holding up well and that
his family helicves the trial is going
Nichols.
FBI agents testified that anti-gov- well. He also believes the e.asc
ernment literature seit.cd in Nichols' against his brother is weaker than that
house was similar to writings found against McVeigh.
"I don't know what else they're
in McVeigh's getaway car. Prosecutors also tried to connect Nichols with going to put on, but they'll have ttr
the acquisition of bomh components. put on some good stuff," he told
lhe:plidlaok,. Thoioo•'!'., M.-11 said, inchodinJ thc -purchnsc of about two reporters during a stop in Iowa City,
could dr.Wtheir own conclusions.
tons of ammonium nitrate and the Iowa, on his way to Denver. "Oh.
NichoiJ, 42, f~ThC dtlllh'"jlcnal- stolen explosives.
h~ 's concerned. His life's on 1hc
At every tum, th·c dc!Cnsc has line. "
ty if convicted of i\iurdeF, ~pira-

humanize Nichols and to make him
not seem like a monster.·'
.Testimony was sclieduled to
resume today in Nichols' trial, with
more cross-examination of James
Cadig~n. an FBI e&lt;pen on tools and
tool markings.
On Friday, Tigar successfully prevented Cadigan from telling jurors
that he believed a drill found in
Nichols' basement was used on a
padlock at a rock quarry where
explosives were stolen. Prosecutors
say some of those e&lt;plosives were
used in the bomb that destroyed the
Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building,
killing 168 people.
U.S. District Judge Richard
Matsch ruled Cadigan could show
jurors the markings he made when
testin~ the drill and the markings on

LegiSI&amp;tOfS want to eliminate a~irmative action programs
CLEVELAND (AP)- State legislators are putting together a proposal that would eliminate affirmative .action programs that give preference to people based on race. se&lt;
or ethnicity, The Plain Dealer reponed.
The plan would efld racial or gender preferences in hiring and stop col~
leges from considering race or sex
when awarding scholarships and
admission.
The state's set-aside programs,
which requires govcrnmentngencics
to give construction pr0jects to
minority-owned companies, also
would be eliminated.
The proposed amendment to the
~ Ohio Constitution will be introduced
:in the Legislature this week. the
·newspaper reported Sunday. But even
·if it is approved, voters could get the
final say.
Lawmakers.· led h~ state Rep.

Michael Wise. R-Chagrin Falls. say nuts-and-bolts approach, but they memhcrs of minority groups being
repealing the set-aside programs also ignore the heritage of this coun- shut out of contracts and college
would eliminate discrimiiiGtion. Crit· try, which is to treat people based on classrooms.
"I expect that this will get ugly,"
ics say the issue will drive a wedge merit and not on their skin color,"
Johnson
said.
between the mccs and in tens ify racial Wise said.
Johnson hns called a meeting of
and political tcn.&lt;ions. ·
Rep. William Batchelder, R-Medthe
Legislative Black Caucus for
"It's tantamount to political war as ina, and the second-ranking RepubWednesday
to plan a defense of the
, far as we' rc concerned." said Sen. lican in ihe House, said he is cO'sponstate's
program.
Rep. Otto Beatty, DJeffrey Johnson, D-Cicvcland, pres- soring the proposed amendment
ident of the 15-mcmher Ohio Leg- because set-aside programs reduce Columbus. asked the House minori. ty leader to convene the House's 39
islative Black Caucus.
competition and increases costs.
The proposal is similar to CaliBut Johnson believes that gov- Democrats in a private meeting the
fornia's Proposition 209, the nation 's ernment must play a role in ensuring same day.
" I knew this was coming because
first across-the-board repeal of race- that discrimination does not prevent
based program~ in both state and . some students from being admincd Rcpuhlicans arc running out of things
local government.
into law school and businesses from to altack." said Beatty.
Any constitutional amcnjlment
Wise said repealing Ohio's 17- getting their fair shnre of contracts.
must
be approved by Ohio ~otcrs.
year-old program is necessary
·:This is a reaction to a problem
Such
an
amendment can get to the
hccausc it's riddled with fraud. and that doesn't exist in Ohio," Johnson
hallnt either through a three-fifths
hccausc it defeats the purpose of the said.
14th Amendment's equal prntcction
He said Ohio has become a fair vote 0f the General Assembly or a citclause.
·
state with the existing programs. and izens initiative. which requires the
"The programs arc failures on the fears that repealing them will lead to signatures of nearly 335.000 registered voters.

U. N plane resumes flights over Iraq this morning
UNITED NATIONS (APJ Washington is seeking a l,J.N. Security Council resolution on Iraq that
hns "teeth." U.S. Ambassador Bill
Richardson said today. He also said
U-2 flights would continue ._,long as
the United Nationo believes they are
necessary.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan
was to make one. tinal attempt this
morning to persuade the Baghdad to
back down during a meeting with
Iraq's deputy prime minister. A
refusal by Tariq Azit. was e&lt;pccted to
result in Annan telling the Security
Council that U.N. effons to mediate
the crisis had failed.
An American spy plane resumed
nights high over Iraq today despite
warnings from Baghdad that it would
shoot down the U-2 aircraft. The
U.N. night carne hours before the
Security Council was to incet to
respond to Iraq's refusal to cooperate

wilh arms inspections.
Iraqi military oftici(ll• said tho
plane. which crn."scd in,l1) snuthcrn
Iraq from nonhcm Saudi Arahia. new
uulsidc the ran~c of its gunners hut
that it monitored tlw aircraft with
radar until it lei\ Iraqi airspace three
hours later.
Shortly · he line Annan and Aziz
were to meet. Iraq said in a letter to
the United Nations that it no lonper
recognizes U.S.-manned U-2 nights
as part of the U.N. inspection prn·
gram and "will act" against such
nights.
.
The letter. from Iraqi Foreign
Minister Mohamme-d Said ai~Sahhaf,
said an American spy plane "csconcd by several formations of American
aircraft'.' had violated Iraqi skies and
sovereignty. a reference to today's
surveillance 'Oight.
"It is no longer one of the U.N.
means of the alleged (weapons)
inspection,·· the letter said. "We will

act towards this plane and other
American aircraft violating our skies
pursuant to this Mscription in a man~
ncr that preserves Iraq's sovereignty
and security."
There was no comment from the
United Nations.
It was unclear whether there
would be funhcr overflights today. As
for longer-range planes. RiChardson
told NBC's "Today" program: "It's
a U.N. decision but I expect they
would continue."
..
State Department spokesman
James Rubin said past dealings with
the-Iraq is showed playing tough was
the hcst way to get through to Saddam Hussein.
" The stronger the action ... the
more likely he (Snddam) will reverse
course," Rubin said.
On Sunday, Iraq barred U.N.
weapon inspection teams that included Americans for a seventh day. No
inspections were expected today,

Richardson said.
Iraq has said that American
weapons inspectors working with
the United Nations' are spies trying to
prolong U.N. economic s~nctions

imposed after the 1990 Iraqi invasion
of Kuwait. The U-2 Oights arc used
.
'
hy the weapons monitors.
Washington made clear that the
United States will be pressing for the
"strongc.•t possible action " against
Iraq when the 15-membcr Security
Council inccts this afternoon .
"The United States is going to
&gt;.eek a very strong, punitive resolution that will have teeth, that will unify the international community,"
Richardson said today.
In Baghdad, Saddam warned his
people t~ey face a choice between
"sacrifice or slavery." Iraq wants
Americans removed from the team
and, diplomats say, a timetable for an
end to inspections that are the key to
lifting crippling economic sanctions.

Ohio EPA:

Big 'A'Auto Parts
landmark closes
Another Pomeroy business landmark is gone -- this time the Big
"A" Auto Parts outlet on West Second Street. Employees of the
store were advised at the door .on Monday_morning that they were
no longer needed.
Known to most area. residents ,by its original name, G&amp;J Auto
Parts, the store was most recently operated by APS Holding Company of Houston, Texas, the parent company of the Big "A" Al!to
Parts stores. Prior to being pun:hased by APS Holding Company,
the store operated under the name or "Parts Plus."
In conjunction with the parts store, a machine shop operated in
an adjacent location on West Main Street.
The business has been in operation at the West Second Street
location for a half-century. The original "G&amp;J" operation was
owned by the Cornett family of Gallipolis. Stores were operated
there, in Pomeroy and in Mason County, W.Va. The Pomeroy store
was managed for 43 years by Ralph Graves of Pomeroy. Afler
Graves' retirement from the company in 1975, the store was man·aged by Don Thomas, Graves's son·in·iaw.
According to Lyle Atkins, operations manager for the company,
the closing' is pennanent, ·and will leave six employees without
work. Atkins did. not give a re,ason for the closing, but said that the ·
· decision to close the store had been madc at the corporate level "a
few weeks ago." Employees, however, did not learn of the fatc of
the operation until they reported to work this morning.
Those employees have been given a '',::enerous" severance pack~

age, Atkins said, and have been encouraged to submit applications
for employment at the Big "A" store in Gallipolis, which will
remain open.
Atkins and three of the store's local employc&lt;!s wcre on the job
Monday morning fielding phone calls and working to close up
shop.
.
One employee was covering tile windows of the storefront with
brown paper. The si11ns now covering the glas.• read simply,

"
,..

'

.

FLIGHTS RESUME· A U·2 spy plena resumed flights over Iraq
this morning despite threats by Baghdad to shoot it down. Officials in Baghdad said the aircraft flew outside lh•.ranga of their
gunn•r•. (AP)

Two southeastern ·Ohio streams still aren't what .they used to be
WILKESVILLE (AP) - A coal
company has been ordered to develop a plan to clean up two Meigs
County streams it used to dump about
I billion gallons of acidic water
from a mine. ·
The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency told Southern Ohio Coal
to do more to restore populations of

fish and other aquatic life in Leading Columbus-based American Electric
Creek and Parker Run.
Power. She said the EPA is making
The ·agency wrote the coal com- unreasonable demands.
·
pany lost month and gave it 90 days
The coal mine, about 100 miles
to comply with the order.
southeast of Columbus near this vil. The letter was unfair because the lage, was flooded on July II, 1993.
streams are improving steadily, said The water contained high levels of
Deb Strohmaier, a spokeswoman for acid and iron.
·
the company's corporate parent,
When the coal company began

pumping the water into area streams,
It wiped out aquatic life and caused
an uproar.
The dispute pitted Gov. George
Voinovich and the mine operators,
who argued that the mine had to be
pumped out to protect jobs, against
the U.S. EPA.
The pumping was allowed under

a federal coun order, hut an appeals
coun reversed the decision. The coal
company eventually agreed to pay
$2.5 million in fines and civil penaltics. At t~e time, a company -paid
biologist said the streams would fully recover within two years.
Most of the fine and penalty money was to be used for restoration.

Leading Creek and Parker Run
have improved, but sampling showed
some fish and freshwater mussel
spocies had not recovered as well as
they should have by now.
The coal company said the court
settlement gives it until Jamlary to
return the streams to good health.

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Commenta

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Monday, November 10, 1187

Pege2
Monday, NOVII'IIber 10, 1997

II . I

Clinton, Republicans
reach census deal.

OHIO Wc,llllCr

.

The Daily Sentinel

Terrorist dollars go·to U.S. congressmen
By JIICk AllcleQon
•nd JM

Mo!ler

'£sta6(i.sfid in 1948

,

·

My tnemy .s enemy ts my fnend,
or so the saymg goes_. In the ~.S.
Congress, thiS motto nngs espec1ally true when the fnends bear campaogn controbuto~10s. .
The, fnends on 1hos case are the
People s Mujahedeen of Iran, an
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
opposttoon.group that wants to '?P·
pie the rehgoous e~lremosts wh? ve
ROBERT L. WINGETT
ruled
that country sonce 1979.Woth a
Publisher
30,(J()().troop anny amassed on Iraq
JUSt across the border from Iran, the
Mujahedeen. see .t~emse)ves as a
MARGARET LEHEW
CHARLENE HOEFUCH
government on waiting
Controller
Generll Manager
Smce 1994, however, the State
Department has mcluded them on ots
Tloo Smllntl , . . _ , _ . tolloo-,..., _ , . , . , _ , . . , . otrop,...
lost of orga~tZatoons that sponsorterShorlltlllrtf30D""""•"''..,I'-""tloo--otbo/llfiiJ&lt;lbU.-. T'ii»d,.,_
ronsm, whrch makes them unwel- ... f K I - Mit Ml moy tJo - · EM:h 11/Jould Jn&lt;:r.m. • •lgn- •-u.
, c_ome among Washmgton's cstab·
IIWidllytlnMpfiiHMnumbM. SpMJI¥Id41Nifth.,. ·• •~to•,.v~ou••rt~c~t
11 shment · 0 ne re ason ~or th os ~ay be
"'toaor.
,.,
un...
Editor,
""Sanffnol,
m
court
st,
~.
CHilo
11111
that the group operates wuh the
L...!.,~m::::;:,:or.::,.FAX:;::~'"::,:',::":;:flll:l:;;-2~1_::S7~.
· blessong -- and und~r the w.atchf~l
eye .. of a world panah, Iraqi Pnesldent Saddam Husse1n. Groups that
arc on the hst are forbodden by law
from enteron~ the United States and
from fund-r~ISong here .
.
By JOHN McCARTHY
So what s a struggling terronst
Associated Press Writer
group to do? In Washington, it helps
COLUMBUS - The Slate os helpong Ohoo busonesses sell thcor goods on of you have a few onfluentoal lawthe lntemet, but at the same lime. Gov George Voonovoch wants the state to makers to help carry your water
be able to collect taxes on those products.
Voonovoch os among the governors and local officoals who oppose a boll
that cleared a U S Senate commmec last week It would ban slate and local
taxes a1med at Internet sales and onlme scn'lCes
Ohoo takes on about $12 mol han a year on taxes on sales of online servoces
like Dayoon·based Nexus Countoes around the state collec t another $2 mil ·
han a year on those taxes
As chaorman of the Nauonal Governors' Assocoatoon, Voonovich testified
about the boll on Washongton last mon~h
After gearmg up the Ohoo Depanment of Development's new Web site
last week, Voonovoch talked ahout the omponance of the sales tax and the
states' opposollon to the congrcssoonal ban. A vote by the full Senate is like·
ly next year
Ohoo's sales tax produces about 39 percent of the state's total revenue As
more busmesses selltheor products on the World Wode Web, bans on lntcr·
net sa1es taxes could cnpplc state and local governments' abohty to provo de
servoces, the governor saod
Boll supporters say the taxe s could hamper the Internet 's abolny to dchv·
er products and servoces faster, easoer and cheaper than current ways of
doong busoness
SoonsonnR Sen Ron Wvden. D-Ore .. saod last week that current tax
structures are too complex to apply them to Internet commerce
"To subject 1110 as many as 30,000 taxmg Junsdocuons applymg dotTeren! rules of taxauon would be a mostake, " Wyden saod.
Voonovoch dosagreed.
"Some states are passong legoslauon 10 preclude theor taxing of the Inter- By Nat Hentofl
net- penod- for economic development reasons," he said.
Some years ago, I talked to John
Guido,
then the most hated and
"We arc concerned, though , that we would lose revenue that 's very
omponant to our state "
,
' feared man in the New York City
,. Voonovoch and the governors' assocoauon want Washtngton to find a way Police Department At the tome, he
headed the Internal Affaors Oivision,
to ensure the taxes don 't evaporate.
.
whose misstoor ts lo' find alld purge
"What we' rc tryong to do IS to work out on the nallonal level some solu· corrupt and brutal.cops Other mem·
uon to try to compensate·to states th~ loss of that revenue," he saod. "But bers of the department have been
you've got to do 11 on a way that doe&gt;~&gt;' I en~umber rapod usage of technolo- known to callu "the rat squad."
gy "
"I know they fear me," Guido
He saod the cyberspace ondustry os rcsisung the governors' 'attempts by
saod
"They should. It keeps them
lokcnong Internet busmcsscs to catalog sales. States lose about S4 btllion on
out
of
trouble. " He went on to
taxe s annually on catalog sales, and Voonovoch has saod he's seen one estidescrobe
the fcar-inducmg work of
mate that lntcrncl salescould reach $1 5 lnlloon by 2002
undercover field assocoatcs of the
"There arc people on the ondustry, of course, who lokc to say, 'Forget Internal Affairs Division.
about any kond of tax a&gt;pcct of thos thing Let's just kind of have a free-lorA number of recruits were selectall,... Vomvooch saod
cd from each dass at the Pohcc
"But in tho process of doong that, they are not govong constdcratoon to the
Academy and assigned, as field
omponancc of the sales tax to providtng basoc scrvoccs."
assocoatcs. to varoous police
prcconcts as the eyes and cars ol
lntcrnalAffaors
The rank and . folc knew they
cKostcd but dod not know who
/among them was takong secret no(es
'I
Thos intensified the fear on cops
Dear Editor.
Exprcssoon that say "!love you" arc spoken daoly by you and l tn homes tempted to tWISt rcgulauons for fun
and apanments on the sleepy vollagcs along the Ohoo tucked on the woods as and profot. But after talkong to some
pohcc officers, l '\tQndcrcd at the
cahms or structures as handsornc as handsome can he
. The heauty of exprcssmg love on not the words. mere sounds thrown seizing fear these young offocoal
·about between chores, but the ommcdoatc soul contact between people who spies felt-- fear that they would sud·
:ruse hke molten steel to weld thcor love on the sands of time, and whospered dcnly be found out and thrown out a
wondow.
: ~bove the ragong , raging .• ravages of life that take i~&lt; toll.
Durmg the reogn of this panicular
: Had I known etemoty was not part of the deal here on eanh but the
}leavens and comfort of a Creator who waus for e~ch of us at the end of our head of Internal Affaors 0972 .
road. we would stay the course, for Love is indeed part of the Creatoon, an 1986), corruptoon in the force went
extensoon on two parts, on earth and later on the comfort of the healed down, but pohce hrutalny was not a&lt;
wounds of Hom .
Intense Iy cxammcd . 1n 1hc years
My best friend , Anna. ts now sharong eternal JOY for her walk on earth, as
the love of your life also docs. It's comfonong to know that I can whiSper
''good mght my love," and be heard by her, her trip to Heaven·· peaceful by
:Canng angels in the health fields, and Hospocc. whom l behcvc .. arc all
By Joseph Spear
·
}leaven sent
Forgovc my heresy, but the ManRoger Reeb dclas are lorong my mmd.
Ra&lt;in•
Nelson and Wmme arc revered as
heroes around the world for their
brave stand against the brutal racism
that was official pohcy m South
Afnca for 40 years. I, too, applaud
theor coufagc. But that doesn't mean
I have to hke them.

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992·2156 · ,Fax 992·2157

~

.

to,..

----------------.1,

VOi novich sees Internet tax
ban as burden to States

Sonc~
1?93, tndovrduals tied
to the Nil~onal &lt;:;ounctl of

wuh insist that the group does not
make political contributions, and
that the group doesn '1 orchestrate
con~butions from their allies 10
speer fie members of Congress.
Reststan~e,
But a Torricelli spokesman
the pohllcal acknowledges that the contributions
and
fund- ·- most of which arrived on the same
raising arll\ day in a process known as
of the Muja· " bundling" -- did come courtesy of
Moller a, Andenon hedeen, have the NCR. And the senator doesn't
contributed
mind one btt. Torricelli is "not
considerable sums of money to con- embarrassed by assoc1ation with the
gressional campaigns ·- wtth most group," the spokesman told our
of 11 gomg to three main allies. Per- associate Kathryn Wallace, "and
haps as a result, this group .. which disagrees with the State Departkilled ~ix Americans m Iran in the ment's characterization that the
mod·l970s •• has managed 10 win Mujahedeen is a terrorist organizafriends on Cap1tol Hill.
tton."
The biggest recopient of the
The spo~esman added that TorriNCR's largess has been Sen. Robert celh believes "the present govern""
·
•Omce II I, D• N•J., who has accepted
ment of Iran is the most tyrannical
$132,000 from NCR-allied individ- regime in the world, and is a greater
uals sonce September 1993. Also threat to national security and Midaccepting considerable funds from die Eastern peace, and the u.s.
these sources was Rep. Jim Trafi- should applaud any armed resostance
cant, D-Ohoo, Rep. Gary Ackerman, to the regime."
D·N.Y., and Rep. Dan Burton, RIt appears that the NCR has goJlnd, -- who, coincidentally, is lead· ten its money 's worth Both Torri1ng the · House inquiry into the celli and Traficant have been outO.mocrauc fund-raiSing abuses of spoken supporlers of the MuJa·
1996.
hedeen, and have posed for poctures
Two NCR representatives we met with the organization's leaders. But
none of the
lawmakers
who support
the group have
translated this
• onto support for
their
lraqo
patrons Torricelli, for exampie, introduced
the House resolution
that
authorized the
1991 Gulf War.
State
Department
officials insist
in their report
on the Mujahedeen
that
their "conclusions about the
(group) do not

rn any way imply support for the
behavior of the current regime in
Iran."
Judging from the State o.pimment report, the Mujahedeen aren't
exactly the demi)Cratic freedom
fighters rhal their Washongton representatives make them out to be but
instead IS an autocratic organization
that has httle tolerance for dissent.
"Despite Mujahedeen assertions
that their groups has abandoned tts
revolutionary ideology and now
favors a liberal democracy, there is
no wntten or public rec&lt;&gt;rd. of ditcussion about the dramatic reversals
in the Mujahedeen's slated posiloons," the report reads.
Established in the mod-1960s by
Iranian students intent on over·
throwmg the shah, · the group
"developed an eclectic ideologtcal
blend of Islam and Mardsm that
dictated both a war of armed struggle and a war of propaganda to
achoeve pohtocal power," accordong
to the State Department. But when
the shah was finally ovenhrown by
followers 9f the Ayatollah Khomein1 the Mujahedeen found them·
seives frozen out of the new Irnman
power structure.
Exiled to France in 1981 , the
Mujahedeen leadershtp was kicked
out of that country five years later
and quickly found themselves
embraced by Iran's arch-enemy, ,
Saddam Hussein. "In return for
weapons and the use of approxomately 232 square miles of lraqo ter- ·
ritory, the Mujahedecn provode Iraq .
with political support," the State
Department writes.
A spokesman for the State •
Department sums up the situation '
hke this. "We can't condone terror·
ism, even against countries we don't
agree .with orthat condone terrorism
themselves."
It's too bad that members of Congress don't always feel the same
way.
JKk Anderson and J1lll Mollcr
are wrltcn for United Feature
Syndicate, hie.

The f;!yes and ears of Internal Affairs

Letters to the editor
'!love you' is for eternity

a

so nee, deep pock·
cts of corrupuon
have
been
exposed by various investigative
commossoons, but
not much has
been done 10 illumonate
police
.
brutality.
With
the
Hentofl
recent sodomoz·
ong of a Haotian immtgrant in a
Brooklyn police precinct, there ha.'
been much ontercst in figurong out
ways of purgong the force of out-of.
control cops, who, hetwccn 1994
and 19?6, cost the clly $70 mollion
on settlements or pohcc brutality
cases.
Beller scrcenmg of applicants is
one venerable suggcstoon But
cKccpt for aberrations in the appli·
cant 's previous history-· Joke recurrtng bursts of rage -· scrccnong IS not
hkcly to mdocate how an officer woll
react when he is provoked or afraid.
A currently fashoonablc odea IS to
govc college scholarshops 10 men and
women wollmg 10 serve two or three
years on a hig-clly police force.
TI1is, it os said, will provide a civil·
tan presence to covthzc the men and
women already on blue. However.
two or three yeari; " hardly enough
ume for these outsode scholarship·
cops to be included on tbe sohdaruy
of the rank and file -· a bondtng trust
regular officers consodcr a matter of

survoval.
More useful suggestions would
be variations on the efficiency of
fear as a motovatoon forcops to stay
on the right side of the law. In a talk
to the CongressiOnal BI3Ck Caucus
·
m September, Gerald Le Melle of
Amnesty lnternauonal noted that the
Mallen Commission, set up on New
York on 1992. recommended a covil
nghts unit that would work 24 hours
a day to investigate police brutality
complaonts . . Instant response to
accusations of brutality would make
it harder to cover them up on the .
back rooms of the precincts. Mayor
Rudolph Gouhani ognored the
Mollcn Commission rccommcndations.
Former pohcc commtssooncr
Wilham Bratton poonts out that the
Police Academy docs n01 give a new
cop any hasoc sense of what it's like
on the streets. Therefore, Bratton
lccls that after a rccru,it ha.&lt; become
a real cop lor a month or two, he
should he mono tared to see how he is
rcactmg tn stress, hostility and other

unpredictable challenges of polic·
mg.
Cratg Horowuz, a wrner for New
York magazmc, adds that alter a new
policeman has hccn out on the
streets a month or two, he should
return to the Police Academy and
tell the beginners what's ahead of
them.
A current suggestion by covol
nghts groups •• to have more dover-

sity on the force. Harvey SiiYerglate,
a civil rights and c1vil liberties
lawyer, cautions, however, that
nolicc
inhalell\
''black and Hispam~
, ~ ...-t
, . lir.,~
the cu Iture of ~lice voo 1 cnce us
deeply as white"officer,; do." Not all
of them, but some
1

Fundamentally needed os a fulltime mdcpendcnt investigatory cummtssmn with suhpocnu powc~ -staffed with covolians who have
cxpenencc on law enforcement ·- .
that woll look onto all complaints
ugaonst the police and woll, wuhm
due process, quickly report the
results to th~ pul&gt;llc ,
,
That also requires an ondepc~dcnt
PROSECUTOR. Rcsular, pro!ecu 1
tors can be too dependent on the
police, who make theor daoly cases.
And it would help greatly of judges
had the same standards lor pohcc
perjury ·- to whoch they arc IIXJ often
indoiTercnt •. as they have fur covil·
oan perjury. .
Makong pollee accountable os
csscnlial, says former New Yurk
dctccuvc David Durk, who brnkc
through the blue wall of solcncc: "At
3 o'clock on tbe mornmg, a cop ts
more pilwcrful than the mayor, the
government and the president. He
can ktll you."
"'•

•

I

Nat HenJ,ofT. ~ ' a . n•tionally
renowned •utlilfiity on the First
Amendmejlt and the rest of the
BiD of Rights.

The Mandelas·are too much to take

Barry's World

.

&lt;'91: IN7

I'S'vt
by NEA, IrK:

..

•

Africa's

rcvolu-

uon."

Nothing like being
preached to by sin·
ners.
Nelsou Mandcla,
presodcnt of South
Africa soncc 1994,
spent 27 years on
pnson tn defense of
Spear
hos pnncoples and IS
thus regarded as a model of morah·
ty Thts os oronic, as he has demon·
stratcd a boundless affection for
such tyrants and terrorosts as Vasser
Arafat, Fodcl Castro and Moammar
Gadhafi.

group's Jcrronst taches against Israel
with a public embrace of Arafat
"We regard the PLO as one of tlie
most progrcssovc liberation movements in the world," Mandcla said,
"and we arc going to continue that
Fricndshtp."

In July 1991, Mandcla stopped
ofT on Havana, where dictator Castro
awarded hom the Jose Marti medal,
Cuba's highest honor The two men
Winnoe, you may recall, proved a
hugged and Mandcla praised Fidel's
bn too ondoscreet for her hu sband.
rcvoluuon The lesson that the
He dovorced her, and she now goes
Cuban peop,lo had taught the world,
by the name of Wonnie Mad1kizela·
Mandela satd, was that " no matter
Mandela. She was convicted of
what the odds, no matter what doflionvolvemcnt on the 1988 kidnapping
cultocs you have had to struggle
of a 14-year-old actovost, Stompoe
under, there can he no ·surrender."
Up to a ponit, this is understand· And then he added, to a populace
Sopet, who was kollcd by one of her
bodyguards. Wmnie Mandcla was able . These aging pracmioners of that is decidedly unfree, " h is a case
se ntenced to SIX years in pnson for not and revolutiOn succored Man- ' of freedom or death."
her c11me. Her punishment was later dela and hos African National Con•
In September 1990, whole tribal
reduced to a fine. and she is once gress wllh money, manpower,
weapons
and
words
du11ng
the
long
warfare
raged on South Africa, Man·
agam under mvestogation for possistruggle
against
apartheid.
Mandela
dela
traveled
to Lobya to hug Moamble complicity on the Sopeo murder.
deeply appreciated their support and mar and ·· no joke -· to receive the
She recently put on an appearance has demonstrated a fierce loyalty.
Gadhafi International Prize for
at the Mollion Woman March in
He met with Arafat on February Human Roghts.
Pholadelphoa, where she was inlro1990, just weeks after bemg released
duced by congresswoman Maxme
Last month, the South African
from
prison. In January 1992, Man·
Waters of Californoa as the " mother
leader returned to Tripolt •· not once,
of a nauon and rhe mother of us all," dela vtsoted the Palestme Loberauon but 'twoce on a songle week. On the
and a person who aspores to honor Organtzatwn's headquarters on motial vosot, he lambasted the Unttcd
"all the choldren who died on South Tunisoa and tacitly endorsed the States for cn tocizing hos trip. "Those

~ho

say I should not be here arc
without morals," he saod. Then a few
days later, he rushed back to present
Gadhafo, his "dear hrother leader,"
with South Afnca's. htghcst award
for foreigners. ·
What Mandcla now wants to do,
analysts behcve, os broker an end to
the United Nations sanctions that
were imposed on Tropoli after Gadhafi refused to release the Libyan
agents who are thought to be rcsponsoble for 1hc 1988 bomhmg of Pan
Am Flight I03 over Lockerbic
Scotland, that took the hvcs of 270
people.
This os 'Where Mandcla's onfatuatoon wuh despots ~cts too gamy for
my taste. When he kosses the scum·
ball Gadhafi, how con he not thonk
of the mothers, fathers, daughters,
sons, sostcrs and brothers who were
hlown 'out of the sky on that cold
December evcnong' How can he not
taste the blood of the innocent college students who were on their way
home for tbe Christmas holidays?
I'm sorry, bu1 the whole thong
nauseates me
Joseph Spear Is a syndicated
writer ror Newspaper Entfrprlse
Association.

•

IManalltld !4o· I•

'¥

I

WASHINGTON (AP) - Congressional Republicans say they have
resolved their dispute with President
Clinton over hl&gt;w the 2000 census
will be conducted: But a perennial
fisht over international abortion aid
was diyiding the two sides and 'help- ·
ing to delay Congress' adjournment
for the. year.
The House was in recess until
Wednesday, when it plans to resume
work on the last three spending bills
for fiscal 1998, which began Oct. I.
On Sunday, the Senate lumped the
three bills into a songle $44 billion
measure and approved it by voice
vote.
When the Senate resumed business today, it used a voice vote to

W.VA

•

roo--

send Clinton stopgap legislation
financing federal agencoes with
incomplete budgets through Friday.
That bill, passed by the House by
voice earlier this morning, is the fifth
temporary spending boll Congress has
passed since the new fiscal year
began.
The largest remaomng measure$30 billion for the Justice, Commerce
and State departments -contains lhc
census language. The issue has
prompted a months-long partisan
baule because the 2000 census will
be used to redraw congressional dis·
tricts for the comong decade.
.

Meigs EMS logs 11 calls

Local briefs

Man cited In crash
A Dexter man was cited on charges of driving under the mfluence
and failure to control following a one-car crash Saturday evening on
Star Hall Road near Salem Center.
Rickie W. Icenhower, 37, pulled out of a private driveway at a htgh
rate of speed, slid off the left side of the road and came to rest on a
ditch, according to a Meigs County Shenfrs Department report. His
1987 Chevrolet sustained hght damage.
·
He was plll(;ed in the Meigs County Jail pendong an appearance tn
Meigs County Court.

Woman cited In accident
A Portland woman was cited following a one-car accident on Ball
Run Road near Pomeroy Saturday around 3:43 p m.
Amanda D. Long was westbound when she met another vehicle,
II(;COrding to a Meigs County Sheriffs Department repon. She lost con·
trol of her 1987 Cadollac whoch went off the left stde of the road, stn~­
mg a ditch
She was co ted on a charge of failure to matntain control.

Horse/vehicle accident reported

No inJUries were reponed following a collision between a horse and
•. .
a ptckup truck on state Route 7 near Pomeroy early this morntng.
II :32 a.m. Sunday, Main Street,
Umts of the Meigs County EmerJohn D Riebel Jr., Pomeroy, was nonhbound when he struck a horse
gency Medical Service recorded II Tuppers Plains, Tony Williams, Camon the roadway, according to a Meogs County Sheroffs Depanment
repon. The horse was not killed, the report stated.
calls for a.~sistance Saturday and den-Clark Memorial Hospital, TupMochael C Huddleston, Rae one. was westbound on state Route 124
Sunday. Unots respondmg mcluded: pers Plains squad assosted;
4·24 p.m. Sunday, state Route 7, · near R~cine Saturday evenon¥ when he struck and killed a deer that
CENTRAL DISPATCH
, ran into the path of hos 1997 Jeep, causing hght damage. according to
9: 15 a.m. Saturday, Durst Ridge Middleport, Sharon Moles, treated at
the
scene,
Moddleport
squad
assisted:
a Meogs County Sheriffs Department report.
Road, Portland, Fanny Durst, Veter5:01 p.m. · Sunday, Overbrook
ans Memorial Hospital;
'
Minor injury reported in accident
II :07 a.m. Saturday, Dead Man's Nursing Center, Middleport, 'Mary
Curve Road, Pomeroy, Clara Gilkey, Canton, Holier Medical Center, MtdA Pomeroy youth was shghtly injured in a one-car accident Saturday
Pleasant Valley Hospotal, Middleport dlepon squad assisted;
Extended forecast
on State Route 24'8, the Galha-Metgs Post of the State Highway Patrol
7:15 p.m. Sunday, Pinegrovc
Wednesday.-.Snow flumes north- squad asststed;
reported
Road,
Racine, Ben Lee, treated at the
4:04 p.m. Saturday, Ball Run
east. Fair elsewhere. Lows 25 to 30
, William A Schultz Jr, 17,43681 Cherry Ridge Road, was not trea!·
and highs in the mid and upper 30s. Road, Pomeroy, Mindy lang, VMH~ scene.
ed at the scene, accordong to the patrol.
Thursday .. Scauered flurries.
10:39 p.m. Saturday, Willow REEDSVILLE
Troopen satd Schultz was eastbound in Olive Township at9 p.in. wben
2:45 a.m. Sunday, Swan Road,
Lows 25 to 30 and htghs in the mod Creek Road, Pomeroy, Richard
he lost control of the car he drove in a roghi-hond curve, went off the left
Ruth Stetham, CCMH. ·
Demoss, PVH;
and upper 30s . .
side of lhe mad and struck a tree.
SYRACUSE
Friday...Chance of snow. Lows 25
5:37am. Sunday, Lower Route 7,
The car was severely damaged, and Schultz was cited for faolure to conI :32 p.m. Sunday, state Route 7,
to 301and highs in the mid and upper Joyce Grimmeue, treated at the
trol.
Mary Kline, VMH, Pomeroy squad
30s.
scene:
Citations Issued by patrol in crash
asststed.
Two drovers were ticketed by the Galha-Meogs Post of the State Hogh·
way Patrol following a two-vehicle accident Saturday on County Road
34.
The same cold front also brought
Troopers saod a a ptckup truck droven by Joshua J. Bartels, 23, 302
Wnght St., Pomeroy, was northbound at II a.m when ot went left of cenram to southeastern Texas, Arkansas,
ter in a curve and collided with a southbound pockup droven by Douglas
eastern Tennessee, louisiana and
E.
Warden, 28, 32395 Court St., Racmc.
Missossippi. The rain changed to
accident on state Route 5 II in Lorain
By
The
Asaoclated
Prell
Damage to hoth vehoclcs was sloght. Bartels was cued for left ol censnow over eastern Missouri and por·
At least sox people have died in County.
ter.
and Warden for a scatbelt voolation, according to the report.
uons of llhnois
TOLEDO- Chad A Somon, 2S,
traflic accidents on Ohio roads this
Snow also was expected to fall
weekend, the Sta(e Highway Patrol of Whotehousc, drover on a car-train
throughout onto tonight m central
accident on a Fulton County road
Colorado and northern New Mexico. said Saturday.
FRIDAY
The
patrol
counts
fatalities
from
6
A cold front moving over the West
NORWALK - James S Shrewsp.m. Friday until mi~night Sunday.
The followtng land transfers were Michael to Darrell and Jcnnofcr S.
Coast dumped rain on northern Calbury,
41 , of Jackson Mich., driver in recorded recently in the office of Michael, Syracuse;
The dead:
ifornia. Snow was poSSible on the
a one-car accident on U.S. Rte. 20 in Me1gs County Recorder Emmogene
Deed, JcfTrcy Jay and Londa R.
mountams of California and Oregon. SUNDAY
PIQUA- Scott A. Berry, 21, of Huron County
Warner
to JcfTrey Jay and Londa· R.
Hamilton:
Elsewhere,• fair and dry weather
VAN WERT - Zachary MarkWest Mdon, a passenger in a one-car
Warner,
Pomeroy ,
Deed,
Glor1a
June
and
Ralph
Kcodomonated the much of the East and
ward, 17, of Van Wen, and Joshua
accodent on a Miam~ County road.
Deed,
Derrah &lt;:;. Woodrum and
th Oolcr to Lorena Lynn Tdrlcy and
South, except for scattered rain across
Bragg, 16. of Van Wert. drover and Kevm Wayne Oolcr, Salem, 17.75 Dcrrah G. Basham to Komberly D.,
SATURDAY
'
the Northeast.
ELYRIA- Lilhan Allen, 71, of passenger in a car-lratn accident on a acres;
and Michael Ray Turner, Bedford.
Temperatures across the conti·
Wakeman, driver in a two-vehicle coty street.
Deed, Chester Church of God, ct
Deed,
Wtlham
A.
and
Hazel
I.
nental United States on Sunday
.,
al.
to Mary E Cook. Chester:
McKelvey
to
Bruce
Edward
McKranged from a high of 84 on Thermal,
Deed, Larry D. and Anna Ruth
elvey, Lebanon;
Calif, 10 a low of 4 degrees below
Carpenter
to Randall R. and Peggy
Deed,
Wilham
A.
and
Hazel
I.
zero in Cut Bank, Mont.
Ann
Carpenter,
Middlepon,
McKelvey
to
Bruce
Edward
McKHighs today were expected ro
will he held 1)1un;day in the church elvey, Lebanon ,
Holiday fair plaMed
Deed,
Thelma
J. Poulson to Ranreach the 20s and 30s in the Rockies,
An all-natural hohday fair os being basement. Scrvtng w1ll begm at4:30
dall
R
and
Peggy
Ann Carpenter.
Deed. Wolliam A. and Hazel I.
norfhern • Plams, Great Lakes and planned for Dec. 6 at the Rutland p.m.; $5 for adults, and S2 50 for chilMcKelvey to Marvin McKelvey, Syracu~,
Northeast: 50s and 60s on the. south· Department Store. Crafters are betng dren.
Deed, Gladys Barker to James C.
Lebanon;
em Plains, Gulf Coast and Northwest;
invited to parttctpate in the fair and
Barker.
Rutland vollagc:
Deed,
Wilham
A.
and
Ha1.cl
I.
and the 60s and 70s m the Southeast,
those who make items from Mother Revival set
Deed,
Carol W Clone to Mall J .
to
Marvin
McKelvey,
McKelvey
West and Southwest.
Rev oval services woll be held at the Lchanon:
Nature's abundance are invited to
Sebo. Olive,
exhobit. Items can include such things Mt. Hermon United Brethren in
Deed, Dale and Pauline Barr. Carl
Deed, Wilham A. ~nd Hazel l
as homemaae soaps, wreaths, and Chnst Church, Wednesday through McKelvey to Juy Patrick McK~Ivcy. Bufnrd and Norma Blake to Howard
Kcoth Dorst, Orange,
Koffel, 42, and Teresa Evelyn Koffel, woodwork crafts. To arrange to dis- Sunday, 7 30 p m Evangelist woll be Lebanon,
Deed. Sylvan l , and Dolly Cleland
38, both of Portland; Roger Lee Hud· play, . resodents are asked to contact Rev. David Canfield Specoal singing
Deed, William A. and Hazel I.
mghtly
Church
is
located
in
Texas
at
the
Rutland
Maureen
Burns
tn
Rutland
Furnoturc Company, RutMcKelvey to Mt~hacl Todd McKnail, 26, and Angela Marie lee, 23,
Community
on
Wickham
Road,
off
Department Store, 742-2100 or 742·
land village:
'
elvey, Lebanon;
bOth of Albany.
7243.' The event wrll tncludc gove- Tcxa.&lt; Road.
Deed. George J Jr. and Carolyn
Deed, Wolltam A. and Halcl I.
aways, 'lsots woth Santa, refresh·
McKelvey to Bruce Edward'McK- M. Kom to Joseph one Wells Bunch,
Pomeroy;
ments and store specials.
Carey open-door meeting
clvcy, Lebanon;
Clinton's approv,al rating on the
State Representative John Carey
Deed, Mary Joscphonc Wells,
Right of way, Ronald S. Loscar
poll has rcmamed around 60 percent Trustees to meet
(R-Wellston) will hold an open-door and Judy L Barber Morris to West- Mary Joscphme Bunch. Dana Lee
throughout the year. Gore's approval
The Scopoo Township Trustees sessoon Nov. 17, 2·3 p.m. at Rutland ern Reserve Telephone, Olive:
Bunch to Frank 0 Wells, Ohvc;
rating fell from 53 percent in April to woll met in special session on Thurs- Vollage Hall. Area residents may
Deed. Southern Ohoo Coal ComRoght ol way, Ro~cr L and
42 percent in September bu1 leveled day at 6:30 p.m. at the Pagcville attend to ask questions or address Pamela K. Hoffman to Western pany to Krtsty S. Bowman, Salem.
out in the latest poll.
T{)wn Hall
concerns with state government. Reserve Telephone, Chester;
. TIJc Institute for Policy Research
Roght ol way, Marvon L. and Mar·
Carey woll meet one-on-one with resintervtcwcd 874 Ohioans by tele- Meeting set
Joric
J Keebaugh to Western Reserve
idents
phone between Oct. 22 and Nov. 3.
The Oltvc Town shop Trustees will
Telephone, Olive :
The margin of error is plus or minus meet in spccoal sessoon on Wednesday
Right ol way, Garrett and Ruth
Chester Township Trustees
3 percentage points.
at 6:30p.m. at the townshtp building
Watkons
to Western Reserve TeleChester Townshop Trustees woll
The Cincinnati Enquirer and the
phone,
Ohvc,
meet on regular session Tuesday, 7
University of Cincinnati sponsored Bazaar to be held
Deed. Harold C. and MarJoroc L
p.m. at the Chester Town Hall.
the poll.
The Sacred Heart Church bazaar
Rocc to Andrew B. and Juha Ann
Vaughan, Rutland:
Deed . lsahcllc V Couch to Della
lapsmg on hos dormotory room.
Choalastri, Chester,
Ryan Bommer, 18, of Bryan, was
Easement, Wilham G. and Mary
pronounced dead at O'Blencss HosUnots of the Mei.@S County Emer- Tuppers Plaons. Tony Wolloams, Cam- E Russell to Horace and Dorothy
pital Sunday night about one hour gency Medocal Service recorded II den -Clark Memorial Hospital. Tup· Karr, Chester.
after collapsing, pollee saod.
Deed, Horace and Dorothy Karr to
calls for aSSIStance Saturday ana per&gt; Plams squad asSisted:
The Athens County coroner Sunday. Unns respondtng included:
4:24 p m. Sunday, state Route 7, Bernard V. Fuhl, Chester; .
planned an autopsy to detcrmonc the CENTRAl DISPATCH
Moddlcport. Sharon Moles, treated at
, Deed, Darrell and Jennifer S.
cause of death.
9: 15 a.m. Sat~rday, Durst Rodge the s.:cnc Middlcrort squad assostcd:
Police Lt. Rtchard Russell said Road, Portland, Fanny Durst, Veter5:01 p tn . Sunday, Overbrook
foul play was not suspected.
Nursong
Center, Middleport, Mary
ans Memonal Hospotal;
Canton.
Holzer
Medocal Center. Mod·
II 07 a m Saturday, Dead Man's
Am E l l - ............................ 4&amp;"7.
Curve Road, Pomeroy, Clara Golkey, dlcport squad assostcd:
Akzo ............................................. 84\
7:15 p.m Sunday, Poncgrovc
AmrTech ...................................... 68~
Pleasant Valley Hospotal, Middleport
Aahlond OH .................................. 47\
Road
,
Raconc,
Ben
Lee,
treated
at
the
squad assosted,
ATlT ..........................................."'Vete ..ns Memorial
4.:04 · p m. Saturday. Ball Run scene
lhonh One ..................................... 51\
SatOrday admossions - Fannie
Bot&gt; e..ria .................................. ttl.
Road, Pomeroy, Mindy Lang, VMH; REEDSVILLE
Durst. Portland.
aorv-w.,,.. ................................ u\
2.45 a.m. Sunday, Swan Road.
I0:39 p m. Saturday, Willow
Ch•mplon ......................................17
Saturday discharges - Ira Van
Creek Road, Pomeroy, Rochard Ruth Stctham. CCMH.
Chlml Shpe ........................:........4'l.
Cooney.
SYRACUSE
City Hotdkog ................................... 40
Demoss, PVH ,
Sunday admossions- n9ne.
Flderel Moiul ............................ 44,
I
·32
p.m
Sunday,
statc
.Routc
7,
5:37a.m. Sunday, Lower Route 7,
o.nn.tt ....................................... 53'Sunday discharges - none.
Joyce Gnmmette, treated at the Mary Kline, VMH, Pomeroy squad
Gaad')••· ......................................
Holzer Medical Center
assisted.
Kmert ,,,,,,.,,,.,, ...................... 1~
scene;
Disch8l'Jes No". 7 - Mrs. Doug
llroger ,,.,,.,,...., """'" .............44
II :32 a.m. Sunday, Main Street,
Lllntle End ,,,............................»\
Pettit and son, Kimberly Cunmng·
Llmi!M ...,,,,,,....... ,,.,....., .... .24~
Oell Hill Flnl , ..........,.,,,.,,,.... 20~

Today's weather forecast
Ohio
Monday night.o.Cioudy. Chance of
rain before midnight northeast and
central. Scattered flurries mainly
northeasl. Lows in lhc mid 20s to mid
30s.
Tuesd•y... Variable cloudiness.
Snow showers in lhc northeast. Highs
near40.

Cold air blowing into state
By The Auoclnlcl Pr...
Cold northwesterly air will whip
across Ohio on Tuesday, and tern•
peratures won '1 climb out of the 30s
the rest of the wor~ week, forecasters said.
Overnight low will be mostly on
the 20s.
Intermittent scattered snow flurries are likely daily, especially in
northeast Ohio, the National Weath·
er Service said.
The record-hilh temperature for
this dau: at lhc Columbus weather
station was 71 degrees in 1949 while
the record low was 19 in 1957. Sunsettonoghl will be at 5:20p.m. and
sunrtse Tuesday at 7:12a.m.
Ae.- lhc nlltlon
,
A cold front brought scauerea rain
nnd snow showers to the Great Lakes
today, while widespread showen and
thunden;torms rumbled over the Mississippo Valley. Rain also fell on parts
of tbe West COliS!.
Up to a foot of snow was possible
in northern Michigan, with less than
3 onches expected elsewhere on the
region.

Six people die on Ohio
roads over w.eekend

Meigs land transfers posted

Mei.gs announcements

,Couples Issued marriage licenses
The following couples were
issued marriagt licenses recently m
the Meijs County PrObate Court of
Judge Robert Buck: Ralph Btadley

Clinton's approval rating remains same
CINCINNATI (AP)
A
statewide poll found no significant
chanac duri1111he past month in the
apprqval ratings that Ohioans g1ve to
Pn:sident Clinton and Vice President
AI Gore.
An Ohio Poll released Sunday
found that 61 percent of those surveyed approved of the job Clinton is
doing as president and 45 percent
approved of the job Gore is doing.
The numbers were roughly the same
a month earlier.

Ohio University student collapes, dies
ATHENS (AP)- An Ohio Uno·
vcnity freshman is dead after col-

The Daily Sentinel
!USPS2U·9M)
hbUahed rvety 1fltl'ftOOII, Monday lhrouab
Frklly. Ill Covt1 St.• ~rneror, Ohio. by tM
Ohio Valley Publldii"J CompanyJOanMII Co.,
l'omeft\)'. Ohio 45169, Ph. 991-11~6. Second
d ... filii'... pold II l'om&lt;roy, Ollin
MMIItn The Auod11td P'tfp, 11K11M Otllo
NewlpiP" Anoclatlon ,
PO!n'MASTIRI Send lddr$ corm:lioft&amp;IO

11w Dally Stnllael, Ill CCMirt St. Pcwneroy.
otlkl ..,169

. suascarmoN IIATIS

B1 Clrrilr w ,...._ Rwll

One Wtck.

..

.... ......... ..... ,, ..... Sl.tWI

One Mot~lh ...... •.. ......... ......
..... SH ?II
One Yellf , .
.. .............. .. . .. ... $1t)oltll

Dally '"'

SJNCL&amp; COPY I'IICI
""
oMO

0

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.)5 Citft(l

S l 11Nn not *-'riiiiD ,.,.eM Cltritr ml)'
,_IIIII ICNIM't 4Httel 10 T1tt Daily Sitt~llnel
01111 1htte.-111 or ll.-h bllil. Crtdtt will be
,tm.cwtlcr~tld...._ .

No awbKrlpttoft by mill pennlned irt areas
II nli&amp;lb...

whitR !ant c:•nitr tervk:e

Plbliahlr '"""'llw ,..... 10 ...... ,.... .,.
"'•'"' .-nptloo poriod 'Solllcriploo ....
cUlpa 1111y .. mfii:WICIIIed by chi.P.IIhe
....... of .... _ , . ,....

MAILSUUCIIImOfll
-Moi!JI"-

1) ....................- ............... - ......... W

:16 -

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........................................... .$53.1a
lllll 56

sz....... ... ... ...........................
13 :16 -

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... "' " ..... ' . .. " . ...... ' ..... $Z9.:ZS
............ ..... .. " " ........156.611

n - ........................ .. . .. .ltll9.n

Meigs EMS logs 11 calls

Stocks

Hospital news

ft

~::;,~~~!:.~il~~~~~~~esp•e. Divorces and dissolutions
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hoi·
stem, son, Jackson.
Dlsct..l'Jes Nov. 8 - Wilbert
Ba1ley, Karol Parsons, Esta Estep,
Mrs. Larry Holstem and son, Mary
Rowland.
Dlsct..l'Jes Nov. 9 - Hayley
Tackett, Kimberly Caldwell, Victor
Brown, James Kuhn, Alva Reed.
Birth- Mr. and Mrs. Don Keels,
·
daughter, Jackson
(Published with pcnnisslc;ml
'

•

1¥..

• IColumbus!42• I

•

The Dally Sentinel• Page 3

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

•

'

'·

The following actions to end mar·
riage were flied recently in the office
of Meigs County Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer:
Dissolution asked .. Kevin G. Betzing and Laura L. Betzing, both of
Pomeroy, Nov. 6; Patrick Barry
Grueser , and Martha Elizabeth
Grueser, both of Rutland, Nov. 5,
Christopher Lemaster, Pomeroy, and
Candice Lemaster, Middleport, Nov.

3.

Dissoluuon granted -· Roland E.
Landaker, Hamden, and June A. Landaker, Pomeroy, Nov. 3: Todd S
Cundiff and Connie L. Cundoff, Nov
3; Michael Mon11omery and Jennifer
A. Montgomery, Nov 5.
, Divorce granted .. Rhonda G.
Phillips and Benton C. Plnllips, Oct.
31; Carl Wayne Moodospaugh and
Lora Rose Cleland, Nov 3

ova ...............................................31
0 . Villllly ..................................31,

P•apltt ........................................43J.
Prem Fln4 ...................................31\
Rachal ....................................41'-

RD/Iholt ,,,,,,,, ........................&amp;n.

s..r. .............................................,.
Shonly'l ........................................

4'-

sw a.nk ....................................4t,

_._._

Wen~ ......................... _. ...21 '•
Worth
................................20\

Stock reparta .,. the 10:30 a.m.
quot10 pro•lded by Ad•..t of

GaiHpolle.

�•

.

.

Sports

•

•

;The Dtrlly Sentin:!

. d .\

•

.Saints beat Raiders; Jaguars also win

Moncl!y, November 10, 1897

'

w.

Atlanta. Leading the NFC East are
Though he had a tecord-selting won seven straight meetings with
AP Football Writer
Washington, which routed Detroit 30- day, Barry Sanders was generally New York when Marino has started.
Whatever happened to "Commit- 7, and the New York Giants, who fell ineffective against the second-worst
Marino threw for 186 yards and
mentto Excellence?"
at Tennessee I0-6. Dallas moved rushing defense in the league. He had one score, while Karim Abdui-Jabbar
Apparently, it's lost in Oakland, • within a game of the top spbt with a a reverse-field, 51 -yard touchdown ran for two touchdowns.
.
The
Jets
were
hurt
by
a
controwhere the Raiders may have reached 24-6 verdict against Arizona.
sprint that helped run his streak of
their lowest point Sunday when they
The Patriots moved into a tie for I00-yard games to eight. It was also versial call late in the game. Wayne
fell to the New Orleans Saints 13-10, the AFC East-lead with the Jets and Sanders' eighth consecutive 100- Chrebet was ruled to have dropped a
Those same Saints were blanked in Dolphins when they beat Buffalo 31 - , yard road game, breaking Marcus pass when he hit the ground; the
reception would have gained a first
10, while the Dolphins were taking Allen's record.
their last two games:
down.
It appeared on replays that
Sanders became the first player in
"There's not a real good feeling the Jets 24-17. Pittsburgh remained
right now," said Raiders coach Joe tied with Jacksonville for first place NFL history to rush for 1,000 yards Chrcbct caught the pass. ·
Steelers 37, Ravens 0
Bugel. "We feel bad. We feel awful. in the AFC Central when it romped for nine consecutive seasons and finPittsburgh (7-3) intercepted three
over Baltimore 37-0, while the ished with I05 yards on 15 carries as
Every loss is just biller."
of Vinny Testa verde 's passes in the
· The Raiders, who like to boast Jaguars defeated Kansas City 24; I0. Detroit (4-6)·iost its third in a row.
first quarter and got three more off
Oilers
10,
Giants
6
Denver. which has the league's
about their record over the decades,
Before 26 .744 at the Liberty Eric Zeier. It was the eighth consechave .nothing to brag about this year. best record (9-1 }, routed Carolina 34They are 3-7, better than only winless 0 in the snow, while Seattle upended ' Bowl. Eddie George ran for 11 3 utive loss in Three Rivers Stadium for
yards and the only touchdown and the Ravens/Cleveland Browns (4-6).
Indianapolis in the AFC. They had San Diego 37 · 31.
Tennessee
(5-5) sacked Danny Kane II
Jerome Bettis finished with 114
On Monday night, San Francisco
the worst defense in the league headthree
times,
ending
New
York's
fiveyards,
his second 100-yard game
visits Philadelphia.
~ng into the weekend, and holding
game winning streak. Oilers safety against the Ravens this season and his .,
Pa&lt;kers 17, Rams 7
New Orleans (also 3-7) to 13 points
isn't anything special: the' Saints
Green Bay (8-2) won its 21st Marcus Robertson ended the Giants seventh in the Steelers' 10 games.
·
Jaguars 24, Chiefs 10
havo scored only 130 all season, straight regular-season home game (6-4) last chance when he picked off
Kanell
's
pass
at
midfield
with
I
:46
The
depleted
Jaguars
(7-3)star
and
has
only
one
loss
in
the
last
35,
fewest in the league.
·
·
tackle Tony Boselli was out and QB
But they were able to rally from a contests at Lambeau Field, which left.
Cowboys 24, Cardinals 6
Mark Brunell and DT Don Davey
I0-0 deficit as Ray Zellars tied it with was to the Rams (2-8) in the 1995
The Cowboys (5·5) had nine sacks were lost during the game - still
a one-yard touchdown run on the f~rst opener. St. Louis was done in by 15
- eight against roolUe Jake Plummer overwhelmed the Chiefs (7-3). Jackplay o.f the fourth period, and Doug penalties that cost it II 0 yards.
Antonio Freeman caught seven -as Shante Carver and Tony Tolbert sonville won its lith straight home
Brien made a 44-yard field goal with
2:57 to go to hand Oakland its third passes for 160 yards and a touch- each got two. Dallas has the top- game, picking off two passes by Rich
ranked defense against the pass, and Gannon, who was replacing injured
down.
successive defeat.
Arizona (2-8) couldn't deal with it.
"It was a struggle for us all game
Vikings 29, Bears 22 .
Elvis Grbac. Gannon lost three fumBut
the
Cowboys
weren't
getting
Minnesota
did
its
best
to
blow
a
bles and was victimized for six sacks.
offensively," quarterback Jeff George
carried
away
about
the
victory.
said of his team's abysmal offensive home game to the hapless Bears ( 1Broncos 34, Panthers 0
"We dug a hole and one game
Denver 's defense and special
.showing (221 yards, only 32 on the 9), but Leroy Hoard's 1-yard run with
ground). "There's no doubt that 54 seconds left rallied Minnesota (8- doesn't bring us out of it," . said teams manhandled· the visiting PanEmmitt -Smi1h. who played with a thers (5-S), who were shut out for the
we're down now, but we have to find 2) to its sixth straight victory.
groin injury.
"The
confidence
is
there
now,"
a way to stay up. We have to go out
first time in their three-year existence.
Patriots 31, Bills 10
·there and play for pride and get this safety Orlando Thomas said. "The
Darrien Gordon returned two punts
Derrick Cullors's 86-yard kickoff (82 and 75 yards) for touchdowns.
thing rolling- you. hate to say it faith, the confidence and everything
we need is there: That's why we won: runback for a touchdown got the
for next year."
·
Tyrone Braxton returned an interPatriots
(6-4)
going
and
linebacker
Another team already anxious for the unity and the confidence and the
ception 27 yards for another touchChris Slade denected a pass to him- down , and John Elway accounted for
next year is Indianapolis, which belief that we have in each other."
self for another score as New Eng- the lone touchdown by the Denver
became the first club since 1993 to
Buccaneers 31, Falcons 10
The Colts got more than 100 yards lose its firstiO games when it fell to
Tampa Bav (7-3) moved within a land broke a three-game losing offense on a 20-yard pass to Rod
rushing by Marshall Faulk for tlie · Cincinnati 28-13. The Bengals were victory of its first non-losing season streak.
Smith.
first time this season, but couldn't 0-10 in 1993, then won Game II .
since 1982. More importantly, the
Host Buffalo (5-5) could do nothSeahawks 37, Char&amp;ers 31
overcome their own mistakes. Their
The Colts aren't likely· to do that Bucs strengthened their playoff pos- ing offensively. Alex Van Pelt was 3At San Diego, Warren Moon, who
abysmal start is second only to the because they play defending league sibilities as Brad Culpepper had three for-12 for 38 yards and had three will be 41 on Nov. 18.threw for 295
1986 season, when they lostthCir first champion Green Bay next week. The sacks and Trent Dilfer threw two interceptions before he was benched yar&lt;ls and two touchdowns, includin@
13 games.
to start the second half.
a 40-yarder to Joey Galloway with'
Packers beat St. Louis 17-7to remain touchdown passes at Atlanta (2-8 ).
Holcomb was 19-for,32 for 23~
Redskins
30,
Lions
7
Dolphins
24,
Jets
17
·
2:20 left. The Scahawks (6-4) have
~ed atop the NFC Cenrral with Minyard•, but lost 45 yards on the sacks.
At
Miami,
Dan
Marino.
with
a
Detroit
now
has
lost
all
19
times
won four of five and swept the seanesota, which took Chicago 29-22.
Esiason was 7-for-10 for 82 yards
·it
has
journeyed
to
Washington
and
sore
ankle,
showed
his
mastery
of
the
son
series against San Diego (4-6). •
Just behind them in the division is
.
f
with no sacks.
Jets
(6-4).
The
Dolphins
(6-4)
have
18
overall
to
the
Redskins
(6-4).
Tampa Bay, a. 31-10 winner over
"Hell, yes, I expected him to do
that welf when he came into the
game," Bengals coach Bruce Coslel
said of the · 36-year-old Esiason.
"That's why we pay him the big dol· .
Iars. Thai's why we brought him in
here, to know that we have' a solid
stool in the corner after barely sur- 1994 loss to Moorer, Holylicld was the corner." Holylicld said. " But you;
backup...
By ED SCHUYLER Jr.
nothin_g but complimentary to his can't knock a fighter out .with one
viving the eighth round.
The victory was the second in a · LAS VEGAS (AP) - There's
Afterward.
an
unimpressc&lt;l
Lewis
opponent.
shot."
.
row for Cincinnati.
only one boxer and one goal left for
~ailed
Holyfield's
performance
"I
take
my
hat
off
to
Michael
Moorer
was
&lt;lrnpped
to
h1s
knees,
"We'lltake them any way we can Evandcr Holylield to conquer. ·
"mediocre" while taking a swing at Moore. A lot of people didn't think in the f1lth roun&lt;l, and went down .
'd
After pummeling Michael Moorget them," &lt;;oslet Sal .
.
er for eiuht rounds Saturday night, the en\ ire heavyweight divi~lon .
this fight would be interesting. A lwicc in the seventh Und' eighth.
t
"We knew~ it wa:; a potcntmlly
c
,
"They're
not
ready
lt&gt;r
me
yet,
champion
shows
who
he
is
~y
.what
The
final
knockdown
sent
M&lt;•&gt;r·
dangerous ~iiuation," he said of play- Holytield bolstered his warrior image
ing the winless Colts. "But you. while setting the stage for a heavy- none of them," Lewis said. " ... I'm he docs. I hit him with a lot of gmxl cr sprawling on his hack un&lt;lcr the.
can't be too careful and come in weight unification fight with LcnnoK ' the hcst heavyweight in the world. shots. He got hack ur and fought ropes ncar his corner. Still, he g•~,
Evan&lt;lcr Holytiel&lt;l might want to say even harder. He showed he has heart. hack up as I he hell sounde&lt;i to end the •
walking on eggshells. ··· We have a Lc~\::s the only thing driving me in he 'is. Our he hasn'l fought Lennox He showed lhc game of hoxing is a round and even argue(] with the ring •
hcalt~r · dose of re~pect for these hoxing now." Holylield said of a pus- Lewis so how can he say that? Final- great sport. "
. &lt;ioctor when he told referee .Mitch
guys.
·
sible match with Lennox after adding ly. I will get my opponunity to prove
Many in the announced crowd ol Halpern tu stop the fight he1wccn ,
Cary Blanchard's 42-yard lield the IBF title to the WBA champi- JO everyone what! have hecn saying 13,200 Saturday night couldn "t agree rnun&lt;ls.
goal early in the third quarter gave onship he won from Mike Tyson.
for so long."
more. The crowd roared us the two
"The dcx: stoppct.l it. I could have
lndmnapohs Its only lead ati0-7. But ·, "They say, "Why are you still
In the most ac.tion·packcd heavy- boxers stood in toc-to-liJC exchanges, continued. sa ill M••&gt;rcr. .who I hen .
the_ Ben gals took control on ·the next here, you have nothing to prove.' But weight title light in years, the impec- an&lt;l roared again as Hnlylicld hit hinte&lt;l at a rcmatd1.
scnes alter Blake was knocked grog- 1 do want it. I've fought every flght - cahly ~onditioned Holyfield rut on a Moorer with hard shots that dropped
"It's one and one , let's go lor ,
gy on_ a sack hy Daij Footman.
cr in my era. LcnnoK Lewis is the masterful performance that ranks him to the canvus.
three."
1
Es1as_on, a 14-ycar vctc_ran who only lighter 1 haven't fought. I look among his best against a lighter who
Moorer had actually looked to he
There could also he a possibility
passed lor only 39 yards all season. forward to a fight with Lennox woul&lt;in "t stay down.
the stronger and sharper fighter car- of u third Holylicld-Tyson match, if.
completed a 22-yardcr to Dav1d Lewis."
He also placed himself in line for ly, winning the first two rounds ... He Tyson gets his license h;1ck in July. II : .
Dunn on his first play. Two plays IatLewis had a ringsi&lt;le scat to wit- the one light he wants helorc calhng rocked Holylicld late in the l~rst woul&lt;l he a maJor auracuon m the:
cr. Dillon ran 46 yards for the gn- ness Holyfield knock Moorer &lt;iown it quits in a carccrthat has cwncd him round.
wake nf Tyson's Oisqualilication ror
· ahead iouchdown.
fiVe times before the light was l'inai- some $170 million.
"He hit me with a right hunk nne biting huth uf Hulyliel&lt;l"s car.s hiSt ,
A 45-yard interference penalty ly stopped with Moorer sitting on his
Although he avenged hi s April time and it kin.tl of Slagb-.:rcd me in June 2H .
helped take the Cults tu the Bcngals
20. But Ashley Amhrose. who had ,
the lirst interception nff Holcomh in
the first quarter. malic an&lt;!lher.
Esiasun then l'omplctcd all four of
his passes of the series. including live By JOHN NADEL
The Lukers. who led from start to guys much. "
he &lt;iocs a time or two every day in •
INGLEWOOD, Calif (AP) lin ish. arc off 1o I heir best start since
O'Neal. who missed 31 games practice." ·
Shaquillc O'Neal has a simple for- hcginning the 1987-88 season with a due to knee injuries last season,
The Lukers play lhcir next three "".
inula for the Los Angeles Lakcrs to franchisc-rccor&lt;l eighl wins. The · scored seven pomts during a 12-0 run games in Tnas - against Dallas. ,.
&lt;continued rrom
4; · follow this season'. Through four Allanta Hawks (6-0) arc the NBA"s to start the second half. which gave San AntoniO and Houston.
•
games
two
withoutlheir
leader
only
other
unhcalcn
team
.
the
Lakcrs
a
73-46
lead
.
Two
of
the
"Everything
is
going
well
for
us;
Adam Williams, Jamie Baker, Willie
O'Neal came oul of the game for points came when he dribbled ncar- right now." sai&lt;l Lukers guur&lt;l Nick •
Collins, Allam Cumings, Josh Davis. they ' ve done just fmc.
Now.
it
flgurcs
to
get
tougher.
cmxl
with I :59 lcfl in the third quar- ly the length of the court and dunked Van Excl, who had 12 points against
Ryan Hill, Jimmy Alley, Clay Enslen,
.. ... Win all of our home games. .l.r and the Lakers leading 88-61. He asthc Forum crowd of 14.623 roarc&lt;l. the Warriors. "Our hig test i.scnming
Jonathan Evans, Bmn&lt;lun Hill. Jere·
"(O'Nca I) sho wed the k·heat
the teams we"re supposed to pIayed 2", m1nutes.
lnu·• of"cr
• • up. Those three Texas teams, all three
my Hill, Buster Penix. Tommy
'heat.
and
stay
ahovc
.500
on
the
"
It
's
prnhahly
going
to
take
me
satility
and
athletic
ability
he
has,"
of them can heat us."
Roherts and Matt Warner.
road."'
O'Neal
prescribed
after
a
ahout
1wo
more
rractices
and
two
Lakers
coach
Del
Harris
said.
"The
The Warriors (0-b). who areunc of ,;
Special foothall awar&lt;is wcnl ll&gt;
(See NBA on Page 6)
Jonathan Evans, Impact Award ; dominating performance Sunday more games to he at 100 percent.'" thin@s that brought the house down.
night.
"If
we
can
do
1ha1.
then
we
O'
Neal
sai&lt;l.
"Right
now
I'm
about
·
....;..,::
_
_
-:-~~:-:--::-:-:-::-:-:--:-----::::-:-:--:---'---..
Tyson Evans lind Ryan Hill. Most
shouldhavcapretty
goodre~ord,and
88.725221..
.
KIT
'N'
CARLYLE®
by
Larry
W.-i~ht
Improved; Jason Writcscl. Coach's
Then . more seriously, he said he
Awar&lt;l; Adam Cumings. Jason Write- 'a pretty good standing goinb imo the
''
he licvcs the Lukers arc an improved
.&lt;cl. M:lll Dill and Michael Ash, aii - playoffs. "
O' Neal. who appears fully rccov- team over the one that won 56 games
TVC; and Matt Dill and Michael
l
crcd
from a strained abdominal mus- last season before losing to Utah in
Ash. Defensive aQd Offensive Playl
cle ahhough he sai&lt;l he 's not quite the second round of the playoffs.
ers of the Year, i~:spcctivcly . ,
••
" ltbink we're more focused ," he
Seniors honored wcrk! Scooter . there. scored 27 ruims ;,nd pulled
••
Fryar, Travis Ransom. Derek Smilh. down 19 rebounds as I he Lukers said. "I think w,c know ~hat it takes.
I
Matt Rime. Jason ~ritcscl, Michael raised their record to 4-0 vith a t32 - We know what we have to do.
·I
97
win
over
Golden
Stal&lt;.
Tonight,
I
didn't
have
to
on
the
Ash. Matt Dill ;md Tyson Evans.
••
Sixteen studenl-athlctcs earned
all -Tri-Valley C&lt;iniCrcncc, all -acadc·
COUNII
••
mic team honors. They arc Jenni
Friend. Kim lhlc, Kam King, Kim
••
Sayre. Ashli Davis, Amber ~aynard.
wiH
be
given
Ia
Melgs/Gallla
Cantles
..,.
••
Cynlhia Caldwell , Kyle Norris, Billy Young. Jert!tlliah Johnson, Josh ,
Ervin. Jamie Baker, lenni Howerton, . •
t!
Jesse Little. Chris Randolrh. JesSi ca •
Smith und Chris Randolph.

By BARRY WILNER

•,

ALL·TVC
HONOREES ·Thtee Southern 1tudent-ethlete1 not only
excelled on the court and on the field, but alto
earned honort for hard work In the claa1r00m.
They earned all-Tri-Valley Conferance, all-ecad·
emlc taarn honort SUnday afternoon .at the
Southern fallaporta banquet In Charlea
Hay•

The Dally SenUnel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, November 10, 1997

•

.

mail grinntelurn,_ln front are IL-R.J.Iennl Friend, .
Kim lhle, Klra King, Kim Sayre, Aahll Divis,
Amber Mayntrd and Cynthll Clklnll. Behind
them are Kyle Norri1, Billy Young, Jeremiah
Johnaon, Jc:ilh Ervin, ·J amie Baker, Jenni How·
.ton, J - Utile and J•alca Smith. Abaent
from picture
Chrie Randolph.

wa•

I

I·

l
I'

l
~

Bengals tame Colt~
28-13 for ·second
consecutive victory
VOLLEYBALL SENIORS HONORED...:... These
four outstanding players were honored for out·
1tanding careers as Southern volleyball players.
In three years, they were part of teams that com·

By STEVE HERMAN
INDIANAPOLIS
(AP)
Boomer Esiason in relief is still better than ·a staning Kelly Holcomb.
Esiason, wlw replaced a shaken
Jeff Blake midway through the third
quarter, passed for two touchdowns
· and Corey Dillon ran 46 yards for
another louchdown as Cincinnati
beat winless Indianapolis 28-13 Sun- ·
day.
.
·
"It seemed like when I got on the
field, all of a sudden, I had the ball
around the 50, ourdelcnsc was mak. ing turnovers," Esiason said. "I do?'t
think I really had that far to go With
the offense, so I was the bencfic10ry
of some good defensive plays and
good field position. .
"It's just tile now of a football
game and how it works. It wasn'tlike
it was anything I did or saw. It's nothing m~ than thai;.' , .
Holcomb, making his tirst NFL
slal1 in place of injured Jim Harbaugh .
and Paul Justin, was sacked seven
times and intercepted three times,
two of which led to touchdowns by
the Bengals (3-7).
~
·
.
"I expected a lot of pressure. Th1s
was my tina start," Ho)comb sa1d.
"Guys aren't going to sit hack and
play on their heels when they know
they have a rookie playing quarterbark.
"tnu' Jc go\ a lot of stuff to think
ahout. and they're not gomg to s1t
back ond not ptcssurc me and let me
throw the football. I responded well
to some of it, a"nd some instances I
didn't. Hopefully, I'll get some more
experience," said Holcomb. who
also was injured in the lirst hall , but
played the rest of the game with a
small fracture m h1s non-throwmg
hand.
The Colts became the first teams
since the Bengals in 1993 to start 010. Cincinnati won its lith game thm
scaslln.

piled a 54-15 overall record. Pictured ara (L·R)
Jennl Friend, Cynthia Caldwell and Jennifer
Yeauger.

Southern fall athletes get
various awards at banquet
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
The annual Southern fall sports
banquet was held Sunday aFternoon
in Charles W. Hayman gymnasium.
Mcmlx;rs of the football, volleybail. golf and ctieerleading squads
were honored with a first class
awards cer,emony and meal prepared
by the Southern Athletic Boosters.
The welcoming address was given by banquet emcee and high school
principal Gordon Fisher, t()llowed hy
the invocation by Stephanie Ash. The
buffet style meal followed, then the
initial presentation of awards was
directed hy school athletic director
Howie Caldwell.
Cheerleading awards were presented by high school cheerlcading
advisor Julie Randolph. Squ.KI mcm:
bers mcluded Jess1ca Sm1th, Jcnm
Howerton, Laraine Lawson, Andrea
Neutzling .. Jessica Janey, Fallon
ltoush. Jessica Nance, Kacy Ervin,
Macyn Ervin, Sara Ball and Brandi
Codner.
The golf awards were presented
by coach Jim Anderson. Southern
111ain licldcd a good team, following
in the footsteps of many great Southern golf clubs. Billy Young was honor~d with the lone senior award. Othcr learn mcmhcrs honored were Scott
Brinagcr, Bill Coc, Troy Hoback,

MHS fall sports
banquet slated
for Tuesday
Meigs High School will hold its
111nll:ll fall sports banquet Tuesday at
6:30 in the high sehoul's cafeteria. All
llltcnding arc ask to bring a covered
di•h an&lt;l a dcsscrl.

Benji Manuel, Kyle Norris, Chris
Randolph and Mitchell Walker.
Coaches Howie Caldwell and
Becky Winebrenner presented
awards to the freshman and reserve
volleyball clubs. Freshman team
11Jembcrs, placing second in the
Miller tournament and also part of the
reserve team were · Ma.cyn Ervin,
Tammy Fryar, Coui1ney Hilt;· Shallna Manuel, Fallon Roush, Emily
Stivers and Erin Struble. Sophomore
members of the reserve club were
Sarah Brauer, Heather Dailey,
- Lar~ine Lawson, Amber Maynard,
Autumn Thomas, Stacy Wilson and
Ann Mathies.
Caldwell challenged the 12-6
reserve team to "work hard in this
off-season," saying, "There will he
seven positiQns open on the varsity
next •year. Which seven· make it?
Well, that's entirely up to you." Caldwell praised the reserve club for its
hard work and tenacity. Honored
wcic scorekeeper, Linda Friend; line
judges, Curly Crow and Clinton
Hatcher; timer Chris Yeauger ~d statistician Kcri Caldwell.
Caldwell then praised his Divsion
IV sectional champion varsity club,
which arter a 4-6 start, finished a
strong 15-8 and Southeast District
runner-up.
Caldwell's three stroog successive
campaigns that his seniors were
involved in with records of 19-4, 203 and 15-8 (54-15) ovcrthc last three
years. Caldwell cited that this club
had a dillicult job coming mto the
season with just four letter winners
returning. He indicated that this
group had a great work ethic and a
never-give-up attitude. Caldwell
rcnectcd, "These girls would go
through a brick wall if you asked
them to. If you told them to chisel

A Big Thank You to the voters of
Sutton Township for your vote
and support is greatly
appreciated.
Grover Salser Jr.

through, they would would say
'coach, that's too easy. Let's use
spoons or our hands.' They never
took the easy way out, but worked 1\&gt;r
everything they had."
Caldwell also cited the fact that
four players were National Honor
Society, members and six gained
acade!'lic honQr&gt;i,eCynthia Catwwcll
became the thfrd Southern player in
a row to cam district "Player of the
Year" honors, following in the limt·
steps of sister Keri Caldwell and
Sammi Sisson.
Varsity volleyball team memhers
were Cynthia Caldwell, Jenny
Friend, Jennitcr Ycagucr, Ashli
Davis , Kara King , Kim Sayre, Kim
Ihlc, Stacy Lyons, Dena Sayre,
Amber Maynard and Kati Cummins.
Senior awards went tu Jenny
Fri~nd, Cynthia Caldwell and Jennifer Yeaugcr. These outstanding
players were honored for outstanding .
careers as Southern volleyball players. In three years, these y.oung ladies
were part of teams that e&lt;nnpilcd a
54-15 overall record. Special awards
went to Stacy Lyons, Most Points;
Kim lhle and Fallon Roush. Most
Improved; Kim Sayre, Best Setter;
and Cynthia Caldwell, Most Kills.
Caldwell and Kim Sayre were lirst
team, all-Tri-Valley Conference.
Next, the Southern football which
enjoyed one of its best records in
rcccOI year was honored for its continued · imprqvcmcnt. Head cm1ch
Pave Barr an&lt;l stall' mcmhers David .
Hawthorne, Tim Fuulk, Pat Newlan&lt;l,
Joe Kirby Jr. and Jamie Evans presented awards.
. Barr said·, " Our 5-5 record wo.asn'ra winning record , but most importantly, it wasn't a losing record either.
From last year we dosed the gaP, a little bit in closing in for a winning sea(See BANQUET on Page 5)

by...-. Grovtr

~.

man Gymnelium. In front ara (L-A) Jonathan
Evtnl, Adam Cuminp and Ry1n HIM. hhind
thliif are coach Dive Barr, J -· WllloMI, ""
Michlll A1h, Matt Dill and T)'1on Evane.

FOOTBALL SE,NIORS HONORED - Senior (L·R) Scoote,· Fryar, Travi1 Ranaom, Derek Smith
a warda for the 1997 gridiron aeuon .were pre- end Matt Riffle. Behind them are coach Dave
aentad to thl followl119 Southern pilyet'l Sunday Barr, Jaaon Wrltenl, Michael Aah, Matt Dill and
at the Southern fall aportl barfquet. In front are Tyaon Evana.

!*

'SliliiPI.
AP

*

l!l!l!l!rJ

CE

SALES I SERVICE

NEW SHOWROOM AT 114 W. 2ND ST.
"SERVING OHIO SINCE 1953"

·

FRIGIDAIRE'"

Jr, 4Mt2 81. At. t24 Rocine, Ohio 4~nt

5 and reaching that next lcvd nl'
being a great team will ttlkc that san~c
type tlf ..:,,mmitmcnt this y~ar. Tholl 1s
the diiTcrcncc hclwccn hcing strong

!*
*

i*

*

I*

**
*

*
*
*
*
*

**
*

:

•

son . This will be rcmcmhcrcd us the
year we turned the corner."
Barr conlinucd. "Our success wm;
u rcncction nf the cmnmi tmcnt we .
hall m the wci~ht room in the oil season . The dilfcren~e llctwecn heing 5-

I

JIM YOUNG, OWNER
985·3561 or 992·5335

.

**

:* ·
.
BURRV. ONLY A LIMITED TIME
!**************************}*********************
1

1

I

and stronger and h~in~ ~&lt;KHJ ami
grcut." Barr pmiscd tltis year's tca~u
..:upto1ins as being the hcst he's h:.1J 1n
his six years as a hc~u.l coal.'h. He ~llso
-named the 1998 captains :IS Je.&lt;s&lt; Little, Jeremiah Johnson, Adam Cumings and Jbsh Davis. Tca1n managers
honored were Michael Abels an&lt;l
Brandon Wolfe ;·dock keepers John
Manuel und Alan Crisp, annnum:cr
Donnie Duddin~ and hi s speech
class; ground crew. Chuck Willi:nns;
Chain G;mg-Doug Little, Rex Cum ings an&lt;l Hcrh Ervin; video-Brian
Allen and· equipmenl manager Joe
ll.irby.
.
.. .
Team members m additiOn to the
seniors were Josh Ervin, Jeremiah
Johnson. Dave Hopkins. Jesse Lillie,

.:

Lakers pound Warriors; Sonics also win

Pa~e

•••••••••••••

TO THE CITIZENS OF
ORANGE TOWNSHIP
Than• You for Your Support in
.Tuesdll,'s .lleetion.

.

,

Holyfield defeats Moorer by TKO

Southern banquet..

...

*************'***********************·************

5
L-------------'.
.Pd tor

RECEIVE SPECIAL AWARDS - Special
awards for the 1997 gridiron auaon W1ll'l pre-t•d .to tt.Mplr,erelw;tte, llftarn-.111 the
Southern fall sporll banquet In Cherie• w: Hay-

Title fight halted after eight rounds

LEWIS WHITE

Pd. lor by cendldeto: 3t115t Sllvtrllldgtlld., AHCievtlle, OH 45n2

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••
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P8ge 8 • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

NBA

S c oreboard
B&lt;lsketbi!ll

s- FfMcik'O ..

. . . ...a
CoroliM ............ ,.................l
New Ortrw .....................J
A11Aftr.1 ................................ 2
S1. ~i1 ............................ 2

NBA standings
EASTERN CONFEilENCE

t..
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Sacnunento ........................ I
Golden Stutc .........................0

4
4
6

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.100
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Saturday's scores
0..\ando 96, TorottiQ 87
Minrni 114, WllshinttM 106
Atlanln "l9, CLEVELAND 97 !OTI
Ontlottc 89. lndim:~ 82
Ponlant.IIOI. Dallas94
Oti~;uct&gt; 99, N~w Jersey 86
San Antonio 87, Ulnh 80
Milwau~

~ni"

10\ Bn!lon 96

12.\. LA Cllp~11IO~
Minlll!sota 97, Golden Stille 90

Sunday's SCOI"eS
Stmrlk I 12. Philtldclphia 10~

SncrllfllCftlo 116, New Yc:d 78
Vam:ouvcr 104. l&gt;droil96 (0T)
L..... Lukcr1 B2. Go~n S1a~ 97

Tonight's games
Tuesday's pm..

2 JIIK
4 .6.16
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lnili:um ................. I
Miiiiii.."SSIII ......

2
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6

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X..

Miami ......... ......... .~
Kent ............................ ]
B1tWiing On.oc:n .......... J
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Football

Eulcrn Dh-Illon

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~ 0 ~
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................ J 7 0 ..WKI 2.' 7 lAA

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
t&gt;MternPM.._

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f'ICIIJ 2tl.l I~2
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T:m\fiU llay .................... 7 ,\ 0 .71MI :!tiM tn

G':'-'Cn~ay .....

~~MI .,... ... ...., .............. ..... fo 0 .41.~1 I'.J7 !I~
(hii:U~tl ........................... ! If 0 ltMI lhl ~~

£eo's Cruise &amp;Travel
Wheeling
nfestival !If Ughts"
* Motorcooch
• Tour Through Odebay Pork
• Steubenville's.Murak
Clll882-4233

Rutland
Department St~re

Di¥1Ho1V

~

6

--'~~

4 fl .400
2 Y .1119
0 Ill .000

DlvhiDn VI
Clllli1 42. TIWUnlu 20
St. Htnry 21. Ccdnrtilk 7
Dola Hnrdin Nonhl:rn 'Z7. DcOraiTRivu•Kk)
Dclpho1 St. Jnhn'1 ~. Oetiata.'t' Aycnvillc 14
F.-.:mont St . J~ .. 2. F.lmnn~ Wlltw.lmorc ll'l
IN.Icpe:no.kftl.:f "· C\ll•mbinna 14
Ncwnrk C;nh. 1.1. Lac~a~~er Fislk!r Cruh. 0
Nnt'\llalk S1. Pool ~I. Cuyllho1u H11. 6

S~t~htrday•MAl'

1\kmu ;at Tuk-di•
N. llli1w.li~ ;at Mimni
flHICI at Ml\ltSHAI .I.

Hockey

Non-&lt;unfrn&gt;JK"~

Atlantic 0..-lak.n

ra.

,

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PhiiiKitlrfliu ...... :........ :...... IU
N..:w kr~y ........ ,...... .. .. .... 10
W~U~blllJ,Illn ...... .
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N.Y. l~l~n .....
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N.Y. Rnntu..'fs ......... ........ A

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r,·nt. ( 'nlllk.'\: tll·ut S1 . !-'. S. l'1•ma.;.;tkut t1
C:ul~'*-' .\-1. Tllw~un ·'

Tlllllf\3 Day ................. ,....... 2 12 :!

II:1R111uuth B . ('ulumhia ll

Muntre;tl......
Bt,.ton ......

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20 4-7
20 ~
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Bufft~kl ............................. ~ K .\
1.\

U.l'. !7. St. M1n ' 11, NY (I

.n

311

Patty Brandy's

mON
CITY
GYM·
Ravennood,
WV 21114

(304) 273-0038

..y...,. ,.......~ ....... c.t.r."
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'ltlurMiy .......- 10:0M:OO
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Machine
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llanday........... 1o:oo-t:oo

1\JIIIII'f-........ 10:004:00

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(1 0 to 100 lbe.)
Spetlll Bag • Heavy Duty Bag Glovet,
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oe.dlo GHdM ·~·Rollers Belts • Step Boxes • Weights • Mats
Provided : Sports Drlnkl •Blender Ba[
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lunday ............... 1:01J.8:00

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Stop in for the Cl\ristmas
Layaway Sale. Fine
Jewlery, Guns, TV's,
CO's &amp; Much More

992-PAWN

~hop

Dominos Pizza
MEGA DEAL
2 Lg. Pepperoni Pizza's

•14.99
2 Medium Pepperoni Pizza's

•11.99

The Daily Sentinel

Pizza, Subs, Salads,
Hamburgers, Tacoa, I "agna &amp;
Spaghetli diMera, and much
more.
Now featuring the areas largilll
selection of fresh Amish Baked
Goods and Candles.
(Order early for ThankagMng &amp;
Christmas Holidays)

Stop In and check us out or
we deliver

Relflllltls p to support fiOIU local
businesses!(
cro PI'Oiflote ~ Business
£111 Qe Swtall Business DlrectolyeaU Dcrve H~trls 0r Don Riffle at 992·2155

• ,

Page 7

'

.I

jail time for bad checks and embez- man and giving him money. She has
zlement He had been manied four set him up in business near her home
Ann
times and had several children and handles the phones for him. He
Landers
whom he did not support. He had •refers to himself as her son. I've
IW7, J,.o.u A.nFll'l lime•
convinced several investors to back heard that she's changed her will,
Syndlca1c aid Crcuon
some of his hare-brained ventures leaving him ali her propeny. When I
Syno.liCIIC.
that wenl bankrupt When tbe detec- asked Mom aboul it, she denied hav.
tive located the man's present wife, ing any contact with him.
Dear Ann Landers: My 75-year- she said he had squandered her
I realize now that I will have to
old mother inherited a substantial entire inheritance and ruined her hire another detective to find out
amount of money when my father life. I insisted that my m~er break · what Mom is reall~ up to. She has
:died five years ago. She was lonely, off all cont.act with this'! ' an. She been lying to me for years. It's hard
,and not long after, she mel a repair- agreed to do so.
for me 10 keep an eye on things
·man who is 30 years her junior.
Last year, an out-of-s 1e detec- because I live in another state, and I
Within two weeks, I heard rumors tive contacted me. He WA$ hired by don't know what to do about her
thai she hall seen a lawyer and set up another wealthy widow's. family. sei f-destruclive palh. Any sugges~
.a silent paruiership, giving this man The detective told me 11\C' man has lions? -- Wom Nightmare in Cali$50,000 to start a business .
fathered an illegitimate child with fornia
I hired a detective to check him his secretary and is currenlly awail·
Dear California: Jt sounds as if
out, and this is what I found: This ing trial for felony ass-~11. He also yqur lonei y mother is an easy targel
·· man had a criminal record, including told me that Mom is stiD' seeing /this for a con artist Obviously, the main'

.

OVAL's books

Open9am-5pm
Mon. thru Sat.

IIH·2644

CALL ABOUT OUR DIES. :

•Tanning

Cfhe C71Jicker

Middleport, Oh

EASftRN CONFERENCE

Other NCAA
Di'llision I scores

•Smith

Coming December 8th
From 9:30 • 4:30
Stop By Rutland Dept. Store
For Our Holiday Fair.
Bring you kids In to enters
coloring contest.

NHL standings

E Ml~'hl)l:iiU al C.\'111. FlunJa
W. MldlljlOIII :11 Nt: l.utn~i:m;~

ft·
...

JEFF

111 w. Second St.

Akron M~lll!T 20, C01hol.1on 1
BclhUre )4, PikciOfl 22
Cle. Bcl'le\Jktine 2M. WcllinJ'Oft"
Gertnatuown Vnlley View 40, ,PI:tin Cil)'
Jnftllthan Aid« 7
Orw~A~..Ginndorf ~7. Cin. WyomiBJ 7
CtmtnnCulh. 21, Wi~klifTc6
Ntt...,.lllt·York 41, Whfthnbura 14
Orrville J I, Bcllvilk Cltll" l:lWk 20

TbiM week's ll•te

222 Mulberry Street •

614-992·7508

•

M I .HIW
1 J .700

can:

Insurance Agency
113 W. 2nd Street,
Pomeroy. OH 45789
Otllce: 992-5479
1-800-742-3888

Telephone

D&amp;wlaon Ill
Trtnton Edlt:Wood 10, Humilmn Rlln 7

Hall St. ~5 . l'nh:du .1
Millmi -1~ . OHIO 21
W. Mi.:hip.an JM. Ccnl. Mk:hit:an 24
Akr11n 4~ . K~·lll .1~
MAitSHI\LI . 211. ~•wlin,~t Gn..~nO
F. Midll!!lltl JK. N. lllitlm~ 10

("-'o.II'KI!IilWR.

· Ownm

Cld 4~, St&lt;~nfooJ 21
St . 17. SW Loui•mllll7

y .1119

F 01 HonwnWIH'I s
lll Sll fdiiCC

WARNER

Jon &amp; Carolyn Jacobs

Canton McKinley .tO, North Cnnron Hnt1vcr K
Cln. Moeller ~. Hatn101 ~6
Cin. St. Xavier 27. Hllmilm:t 14
ToledO Sl. FrGDCil27, Fremonl Ro11 0
UrtJer Arfinaton 23. Uma Senior 16
Oc. St . lana~iua :lO. Stronal'lilk 21
Shaker HciJbl• 33. Eudid 26'
Worthinaton Kilbourne 3~. Tro~ 20

,1100

2 .MOO
·' .700
7 JOO

Tueoday'apmeo

Otic,.a IN Toruruo, 7:JO p.m.
ColonMJo 1&amp;1 Dtetrolt, 7:l0 p.m.
Tumpa ·a a, at Phoenil. 9 p.m.

28001 State Route 117
Cheshire, Ohio 45620

-·

l

.

Ot';IWI 1M Philadtipnill. 7;)() p.m.

C&amp;ffCFumlfure

Ohio high school
regional semifinals

H
K

Sl. Lwia M Dall111, 8;JO p.m.
Soo Jow at Anllhrirn. 10:3() p.m.

Presenting Some of the Best Kept Secrets Aroand 'lbwnl

Saturday's ictlon

1 . M~
I .1'1"
:! 714

TOIIIPt'a pmn
-•B•Kolo,lp.m.
-~~~ N.Y. I • - · 7:JOp.m.
eat,.,
• O.h:qo. ·~;\()p .m.

;; ':i•~lie:
Daily
Sentinel
~t .
'

By The Bend
Con artist has elderly woman fooled

(Continued from Page 5)
three winless teams in the NBA and
have more losses than anyone in the
league, were never in contention
after the Lakers blitzed them at. the
start of the third period.
"Everything is disturbing," firstyear Warriors coach P.J. Carlesimo
said. "I thought our guys were trying
and wanted to play. It's not one thina.
it's a lot of things.
··
"I was disappointed with the way
we played, but not in our guys'
elTon."
· Kobe Bryant came off the bench
to score a carecr·high 25 points for
the Lakers before leaving wilh a
sprained right ankle with 2:41
remaining.

.

Wther St. ~2. Sacramento S1. 14
W~omiDI ~~- UNL~ ~

l!! I.M

_,1
64
60

Sulltlay'•-

FiorkloJ,Wuloi...... l
llolooil 6, Ca1pty .I
CwoliM ... Otl1wa I

V-.wvtf• Lw AnaeiH. 10:)0 p.m.

W~t~~hiOJIIIO

o....

~s

Plloni• " · TOJOIIO 0
M......... Loo ........ l
Allllhrim l. V~vtr 2
San J01e ~ . Tamp~~ Bay I

Saturdlly'oll&lt;llfta

t'•r Wtlf
Air Fun.-c 24, Ann~ 0
Arizuna 27. Oregon St . 7
Arizuna S1. 2ll. C:.litbrnia 21
Bnt!lwn YountL~, 49 ...Tuls.:~ J9
8u~kncll&lt;l!'i. St Mary'1. Cal. ~H
CS Northridge J I. llli~Hl Sc. 2l
Coli Pui)'·SL() 20. Munlunn St. 19
Cnlflfal.k1 St . .. I._ Fn:~oo St . .1
E. WaJhin(!.hHI ~I . N. Arizona 14
Mllntunu .n,pl,l11nnd St. 7
Nc:vuda ~6 . Bni~ St. 42
Nnnh Tc:111J 26. New Mtlioo St . I~
Orc,tM1ll. W:WlingtOn 2R
San l&gt;ic11u JO. Whinier I~
S;an l&gt;it:l!O St. 4H, Sun J!J$C St. 21

I .OH

:10

18 !7
13 l6

Cnlomdo 4, Sl. Louis I '
Buffalo l. Pittdwah 2 (ric)
Oli~11fU4, N.Y. IsT!Wien2
W1Uhina1on l. Edmc&gt;~~on I

S.Uihw"'Art. •Pit~ Bl1.1f( 4K, PnUri~: Vi.:w 14
Arklill~ilS St . .1~. SW Milii(lllfi St 17
East Cnrullnli2S. Hous1011 17
MeN'~.~ S1. J I, SW Te1a1 S1. 21
Oltlahoma St. 30. Oklahoma 7
Ril..'(: 3K. Tc11.a5 Christian 19
Sum H11u1100 Sl. H SlcJihen F.Austin 2R
SciUII)CI'n Mtch. 28. Tcxt\1-EI P1110 14
Telttll A&amp;M 38, Bayluc 10
TI!JHts Soutlk!l"n JR. Lnnc 0
T!!ans Ttch 24. Tc•:u 10

Chtnll

4)
.,_

SanJoiC .. ..... ,......................51 •1 I II 40
Calpry ............... ................) 12 3 9 48
Van.,:oovcr ..........................312 2 . .8 39

W. Illinois ]7, Illinois St. 2J
W. Kt'ntucky 21.11}diunuSt 14- ·
YII~IIJSIOW~ J4. s. llli~i· 10

ll!'i

~

Lao .U,.Iol........................7 7 •
Edmonton ...........................~ 9 l

""·.Kt'·

2.~

u 55
.t 20 44

l'odllcDICokwodo ............................ l ) 6

EvamviUe
W~k:ynn 6
Kansas St. 4H. Kans:\S 16
N. lowu ~n . S. Utah 3.\
Nehrtlskn 4~. Miuouri .'II ·

Saturday'11cnra

2S-l IM
2.\7 IWI
110 21.~
1,_. 2.~M

1 J o 7011 204 lft7
. .. 6 4 0 MMI 2H 2JK
... 4 6 0 A&lt;MI 21l~ 251

AriltiiUI ......

2.~

I~

Wnlfm Div.._

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

.. .... r. -1 o
.b -1 0
....... ~ ~ 0
A ~ Cl

-MW
.172
2K9
2HK

s-Tulctkl .....................0 I . 14~7
w. Mkhti&lt;IU ............... (1 2 .7~1
Ball S1 ........................4 -1 . ~J
E. MM:h1~t:m .............. J ~ . JH
C. Mkhil!all .............. I 7 .125
N llliOtliJ ........... U 1 .(kX)
l· dinchcJ di¥biunal ch:U11flitllt"llir

NFL standings

Wllllhlll)IIIMI ....... ....
Oall&lt;~~ .. ..... .......
l'hila.Jdph\:1 ~......

41M
-MJ4

0 1.00

!!: I. M

-MARSHI\LL ...............6
OHI0 7. ........................ fl

Julie: 111 COLUMBUS. 7 p.m.
Philade-•hia at Sc;lllk. 10 p,m.

ra.
N.Y. Giant.......... .

17
19
21
2J
20
22
12

Cool.

SLIII

S!UI Dti!J'O
Oitkland

61~
47~

l!alrm DJ.-.
-

Kansa~ City ....
Scaltk: ..... ,. . ..

16

MAC standlnp

Wednaday'111mti

I U

117.\
865

lowu a1 Nwthwaotern
Minncaot11 at Indiana
Mi\'hipo at WiJI.Vfllin
P~nn Sltlle 01 Purdue

No games toni1bt
or Tuesday

(ltnYL'f , ............. ....

6

lllinoisruOHIO~~

E••gl.imd 94. PhilaUdf)hia 74
COLUMBUS 94. A!lantn Iii (OT)
Scaltk K7. UmJ Beach II~
Color.&amp;!Jo 65, Ponland b4

1J

D

M~K

~

Syra.:lllie 10. 8011011 Coll4e I3
Villanova 2.1, Nc!.w H.vnpshirt 2Q
WAke FMt~lR . Rut,.,.. 14

A"*lm .............................l

44
44
44

I I 19

TGrOIWiu .................................4 R

Mlthm
Aknm 4~. KcDI J,!i
Aururn .n. \lalrufuisn 7
Bull« 14. Dmkto n
Cim:innuti 21t. Uaui•villt' fJ
Culnmdu 43. ll•wa St. .~K
E. Kfnlud:t"la.'iE Mi,50Uri 10

This week'• slate

~w

Cmtnl 01.-Won
Jllckll.mvillc ........... ,............7 3 0
Piudwr¥h ........:............... 1 ~ 0
· Tcnnc•~\' ....
.. ..... .IJ ~ 0
lbllimore...
..-1 6 0
CINCINNATI
......... J 7 0
Wntern JtnoLMn

119$
IJ66

)4, lllinuis 21
Wtscorwn 13. Iowa 10
OHIO STATE Jl. Mintl(solo .1
Purdue 22, Michipn S1:11~ 21
Mi..-hignn J4 . Penn S1111c H

Sunday's scores

Mmm• ...............
...... 6
New EnttlanU ................... 6
N.Y. J~..1s .................. ......... 6
Btlffalu...
. ...~
llkhan.1pl•li• .....................0

~

10
II
l-4

S•tunlay's soores

Seut!li! 7.~

film.

2
9

Northw~lem

Salurday's score
lk:~i.!h K~ .

.0

lllinrns ......................0

Wntem Cunftnn.:t
.. ........ 7 3 .700
PonlanJ .....
.......6 ~ ~5
Lon&amp; Beach
... 4 6 400
Cok.lnd.• ........... .

Long

K

l . ll~

Wi!lt.'Oiuin
.... ... 5 I .IOJ
Purdue ...... ................. 5 I Jill
Penn St......
,.A I .MUO
Iowa ...........
.J .l ..'\00
MichiJ&lt;~n Sl ........ ,.. .....2 4 ..\.U
NorthW!!SICftl ...... ....... 2 ~ .lb7

Gl

!!:l.ld.

SOUIJD~~e ..... .

t •.n7

1..\.12
IJ I4
1.24K
1.200

!!: L fll. .W l.bl.

MkhiJ!an ....
..6
OHIO ST................ ~

\

... 4

I

7

1.496

Conr.

Butrrw Conlutrtn!
COLUMBUS ...........
.. ..IJ
New Enslalld ....................7
Ph1luddpfua.
,__ 5
Atlwua... -·
.. J

.I Neb~b(J) ....................... '11·0 1,62)

4. OtiiOST..................
...9·1
s. TenntUCe ...
.......... 7-1
6. ~no St.....
7-1
1. GeotJitt ....
.. .7-1
S. Nonh Carolina ......
... M-1
9. UCLA. . .. . . ........
..7-1
10. KunsusSt. ........... ......
..H· I
II . LSU ........
7·2
12 AOO~a ..... ...
.. .. 1·2
IJ. W111hangton........
.1·2
14 Wlllhington St. ................... M.·l
I~ ArizonuSt....... ..
. .......:.. 1·2
16 Auburn .............,..
.. ........ 7-2
17. Miutuippi S1. ....................... 6--1
Ill T!!XU A&amp;.M .......
.. ........ 7·2
19 PurUw ....................................1· 2
tic. VirJiniuTcch ......................... 7·2
21. Syru..:usc ..........
. .. 7·3
22. Iowa......
. .6-3
2l Whconsln........
.. ......... H-2
24, Oklllhomu St ........................... 7-2
2~ - Minouri ..........
.. .......,. 6-ol

IwD

ABL standings

.... J

~

Big Ten standings

Dcnv'-" :rl N~w Yoct. .1:3Up.m.
SIICr.tmcillo al Miam1. 7:30 r.nt
Scalllc: ul Atlanta, 7:)0 p.m.
ChlcitgO :~t CLEVELAND, 7:JO p.m.
S11n Antnniu at Mim~esuta. II I' m.
L.A. Lakt'l'~ at Dallas, HJO p.m.
I. A. Cl1ppcn al V;w:ouva-. 10 p.m.

Scaltlc ....... .

4

Olhtn ruelvlnJ vetr1: We.t Vir,:iniu KK.
Colora® St. Kl, VirJinia 26. Southtm Min. 22.
Luuiainna Trch 14, TOLEDO 14. Air Fnrcc: 1.\.
Miuiuil'!"i 9. Tull\l'le .l Clemson 2. MARSHALL
2. MIAMI (OHIOJ 2. MichiJllll S1. I. &lt;&gt;rt,on I.
Southern Cal 1.
·'

S11n AniUnio 111 TUfonao. 1 p m.
Decruil ar POJtlund, 10 p,m.

Ium

.IH.:I llo. .wm.

~

Rabat Moni1 1-t, St Fnmcl1, Pa. 7

. -h

I. Michigan (4-4) ....................... 9..0 1.723

I 00

Dalloii ................................ IO l l lJ !7
- . .. .............................. .? 7 2 16 47
Cloi&lt;... ............................. .? 10 0 I. ))

.

Ak:orn St, l,, Miu. Volley St. IK
Arf'lll~~ehinn St . .. 2. VMI7
Cc1111rt llil. Davicbnn 14
Ciullltl7. Outlllli'IOOJD J
ClftftiOrl 29. 0uu 20 (an
E. T'"'~d Sa. :u , WoiTool 28
Elon 17. w. CaroliM 16
f"IQrlda 20. Vanderbih 1
f'lorid.1 A4M ~~- Soulhern 3
~dn S1. 20. ~011h Carolinn 3
Getqlu Souahetn 30. furmun I 3
H~on 21. lechune-Cootman 0
LSu 27. Allllmm:a o
Uberty 17. Norfotl S1. 6
LouilillNI Teo.:h 32. "-1a.rBirminJham 29
Middle T~nn . -\9. AlolSiin hay 10
M~ St 5~. Ow1¢siOCI Soulbern 27
MUITI1)' S1 . 24. E . lllinoi1 17
N. C~~nlliftll A&amp;.T 22. Dclltwn S1. 1•
N. CIIIVIinn St . .. ~. Maryl11nd l8
NW Louiaianu. 41, Jocbon¥llle St . 11
Richmond 27. Rhode hland II
,
S. Cnrulioo St. 27, Howard 18
SNnrord 14, Tenn.-M!Vtin 7
Sooth Florida U . Cumberland, Tenn. o
Tcn~ncc 44. Southern Mlu. 20
Tennts~« St. 28. Tennessee Trcn 21
Tulan.: 26. Memphis 14
Vira,inha 3~ . GeorJia T~h 31
Virainiu Teo.:h 27. M1ami 2~

San Fr~U~Cisco a1 Philadtlphto, 9 p.m

IQa

Teq,le 17

-10.-01117
Slcnoi7.MITil

2. floriUaSi.l2,:t) ..... ,................. Y.O 1.69.\

.. .... 4
. . .......... 5

Na~)l49,

._

2'~

2';
J'il

Coolnl-Detroil ..............................ll
ll' I.) I) !II.
l7 Ill!
64 GA
oiO
St. LoW• .......................... .11 l 2 24 ~) oiO

Honhulln 41. Janwt MICiiiM 17

Here 111e tbt Top H tcam.t in 1he A11ncia1ed
Preu collt:&amp;c football poll. whh fim·pbce vores in
parcndlnes, cwm!l m:onh as of lui Sal:urd;y, ID-tal pointa baled on l,"i potiiU for II fiM plu..~ 'lOti!
ahrouah one point ror a 2~th pht~'t' votl!. and lust
week's tiul ronkiR&amp;:

Cill

u.

_ _,1,_0

Plli~4,0oawo)

WESTERN CONRRENCE

c... 20, Llhloll I.

~~o;., ll. lloffolo
-20.C.U..6
Nldlipo )oi,J\IM Stl
-III.I'I.J. li, Wq""7

117
lOfl ·
l71
l:ttl

AP Top 2S college poll

hdfk Dhlllon
L ..'.. Lnkcrs .....
Scanlt......

·*

l 0 .!00 166
7 0
Ill
I 0 .100 119
I 0 .200 111

Tonicht's1ame

4

..,

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mkl•at DIYislon

- 2 1. a-a10

Holy

o .... m ,,.

DaUM 24. luiZONI6
Minne10111 29, Chic.lp 22
CINCINNA Till. lndiiiDilf'Oii• I:t
Wllhina• ~ Detroit 7
JKboa¥1lle 24, KaMal 01y .IQ
Miami 24. Nrw Yoril Jeu 17
Orten Bay 11. Sl. Louis 7
Ttmpo Bay Jl , AIIAIIItiO
Denver :\4, Carolina 0
New Enallmd 31. Buffalv 10
New Orkanal3. Chlland 10
Tennn• 10. New Yon Giams 6
Scauk: 37, San Dieto ) I
PlttsburJ,h J7. BlliiiFI"IOff0

Ctnlrll Dhillon

Atlanta . ...... . . ........... 6
Milwouktt ...... ... ... . ... .f
CharllMte ......................... 4

1

Suadloy'o-..

A -'01-

Miami .............................. 4
NewY..t...... . . .. ..... J
Dflando ........... ...
J
Wuhinaton ......... _. .............. 2
801ton ............................... I
Philadelphta............
.0

w_.,._

games.;.

An fiVal,uatjon of the summer
Ohio Valley Area Libraries (OVAL)
has proven that summer. reading
really d~livered.
The successful summer reading
program was a part of the OVAL
Books By Mail program and operated entirely through the mail for nine
Southeastern Ohio counties including Meigs.
The region encompasses some
30,000 households which have very
limited access to public libraries
because of challenges such as geog·raphy, transponation al)d disabili.ties. But through the mail program
cbildren can participale in a library
summer reading program.
· For children who like lo read, the

~"o1 OSclaw

Monday, November 10, 1997

tenance man is using her for all she king by hi s wife, but lhat is nol
is worth . Is there a clergyman, a enough.
My 1wo birth·control " failures"
close friend or a family member
whose support you can enlist? This have brought him great happiness.
poor woman needs help, and it is up You say you have to settle for whatto you to see that· she gets it. Good ever time you gel to spend with him.
My time with him is filled wilh
luck and God bless.
Dear Ann Landers: I have never .polite conversation and looking al
written to you before, bul after read- his back in bed. I spend countless
ing the letter from "The Other hours lying awake trying to figure
Woman and No! Ashamed," I had lo out how to make lhings better, but
write and let her know how the wife the sad trulh is that he doesn 'l love
me and he never will. I am lonely,
feels.
Dear "Other Woman and Not frustrated and depressed . If il
Ashamed": You are right when you wercn' l for my children and my reli ·
say I have not made my husband gious faith , I fear I mighl do some·
happy. Lord knows I have lried, but thing foolish .
I love my husband and sensed hi s
. something deep inside of him yearns
for more -- more love, more posses- unhappiness a long lime ago . I told
sions, more ·of eVcrylhing he never him I would make il easy for him if
had as a child. He is treated like a he wanted to leave or ( would let

him remain in the house and pretend
to the children and lhe outside world
thai nothing was wrong. He chose to
stay with me, but it's bell tO be mar·
ried to a man who wishes he were
with someone else. --Augusla, Ga.
Dear Augusta: If you offered lo
lei your husband go and' he chose lo
stay, he mus1 n01 be as much in love
with the Olher Woman as you think.
I havo a feeling things are going to
change. Please let me know when il
happens. Meanwhile, get some
counseling. You need help to gel
lhrough these difficult day s.
Send questions 10 Ann Landers. Crealors Syndicate. 57'17 W. Cenlury
Blvd .. Suite 700, Los Angel es, Calif.
90045

by mail summer reading program successful
According to one mnlher, OVAL
has kept her son inlerested in read·
ing really lielped him as he started
second grade this fall.
As explained by an OVAL repre·
sentative, children and young adults
can select books from a catalog of
2,400 titles and send in postcards
with their requeSis.
The only cost 10 the child is the
inilial cost of a stamp. OVAL pays
all other postage cosiS.
In the program, participants
chose their own reading goals and
kept track of their own accomplish·
ments.
When they met their individual
reading goals participants sent back
to OVAL a completed reading log.

summer can seem endless without
books, said Gail Zachariah of the
OVAL ~tafT.
She notea that pafl!nts and children who .participattid. expressed
how important the Books By Mail
Reading Program is tO•them.
An eight-year·old child in Meigs
County wrole how Books By Mail
helps her as she learns how to read.
A mother in Lawrence County
wrote how important Books By Mail
is to rural parents. ·
A woman in Ross County
explained that her son read 13
books, loved the 'ummer reading
program and looked forward ·to the
day when the mail!flan would deliver his books.

By Mail Summer Reading Program adult's sections nearly bare. it was
reading more than 1,359 books and reported .
This summer 1he most reque sted
clocking more Ihan I ,675 hours of
reading. Sciolo Counly had Ihe high - lilies included ")3ing Bang Bong " by
esl number of participants bul all Douglas Florian: "Lellers From The
eight OVAL counties had readers Inside" by John Marsden, and lhe R.
L S1ine titles.
participating in the program.
Founded in 1973, OVAL is
The ages of participants ranged
placed little extra incentives such as from I to i 8 years of age . The Ohi o's oldesl chartered regional
special pencils and bookmarks in majority of 1he participants were i 3 library syslem .
In coopcralion with member pubto 14 years of age; however, lhc
Books By Mail orders.
lic
librarie• . OVAL provides
Personnel explained thai the average age of the participant was
OVAL Books By Mail summer·read· 10 and the median age was II, said resources sharing, library development and books by mail services 10
ing program was patterned after 1he the library spokesman.
Traditionally, during the summer more than 260,000 residents in
State Library of Ohio's reading pro·
Hocking,
Jackson,
gram. The theme during i 997 was months Books By Mail circulation is Athen s,
Lawrence,
Meigs
,
Pike,
Ross,
Sciolo
pawn overall. However, the OVAL
"Ride A Wild Book. "
A total of I09 children and young Boo)&lt;s By Mail Summer Reading and Vinton counties.
adults completed the OVAL Books Program keeps children's and young

Children who mel their goals were
rewarded wilh free paperback
books, a gold medal and a special
·
congratulatory bookmark.
Children who read beyond lheir
original goal received additional
paperback books.
Throughout lhe summer OVAL

or Not Declaw Social Security has special materials for special children

By·Aicltiil Waitt, Pre•ldant
Melgl County Humane
Society
,
Many people (my own father, for
one) have their much-loved cats
declawed 'tecause they are concerned about potential damage to
draperies, furniture, carpets-and
themselves. Many of these same
~pie lll\iOII4~ tlle.it decision by .
saying that the cat is anesthetized
d~rinll, the operation, doesn't know
what's happening, and eventually
learns to cope.
Well, the first two slatemenls are
true, buithewholeissueofcopingis
highly controversial. We don't know
what lhe cat feels emotionally,
although.we can guess when we witness ihe animals' sometimes bizarre
be~avioral qhanges after declawing.
One thin11 is ~nmistakably true: the
cat. coping wlthl a situalion beyond
her or his cqntrol,· is inevitably
deprived of one of the few defenses

these claws sharp and Clean · by
working on the scratching posts you
should provide thbm.
Cats are born with strong Jigaments and tendons that give enable
them to extend ana retract their
claws. Without this, cats cannot
grasp, hold, or establish footing for
walking, running, springing, climb·
ing, or stretching. When the end
dis it,~ 4ncludtlt1!! • 1he• claw,.,. Ia
removed, the sensory and motor
nerves are cut, damaged, and
destroyed.
These nerves do not repair themselves or grow ·back for many
months. There fclllows, then, a lack
of feeling· and a tingling sensation
during a long convalescence during
which the declawed cat must walk
on the stub end of the second digit.
There are also instances of the claws
growing back, alt~ough not in the
nonnal way. They grow up through
the top oflhe paw, ireating a bloody,
raw sore.
l
·

1

By Ed Peterson
Social Security Manager In
Athens
, Social Security has a special
informational package for people
who work with young people who
are disabled . Called "Graduating to
Independence," the materials should
help parents as well as teachers,
counselors, and olhers in helping
youn~ people expand tbair..!&gt;&lt;&gt;rizon•.
A multi· media infonnatmnal
package, it includes written materiais, two computer software disks,
and a video. It is distributed to special education teachers and administrators, numerous advocacy organizations and Social Security offices.
The package provides infonna·
tion that young people with disabilities can use to learn how Social
Security and Supplemental Security
Income (SSI) can help lhem achieve
their work goals.
It explains how the "work incentives" in the disability programs

help people with di,s~bilities· who
w1sh to work by pr.ov1dmg cash benefits while they attempt to work,
help with medical bills, · help with
vocational rehabililation and training, and help wilh the expenses
associated. with working with dis·
abilities.
.
.
But more Importantly, the mfor·
mation expands the horizons of
young people. abcNt their futu...,s.
"Parents and teachers have told us
, that students are surprised by the
fact that they can work and still get
help from Social Security," stated
Georgia Hall, project coordinator.
"Most are inspired by _the examples
of other young people who have
succeeded in making that important
transition into the workplace.
The package also provides in for·
mation and assistance in understand·
ing the effect of earnings on entitle·
ment to SSI and Social Security ben·
efits.
We feel that as more young peo·

ple re.alize help .is available l~ ~ove
them from a childhood d1sabll1ty to
the world of work, more will make
the attempt.
The earlier you reach them with
the infonnalion, the more they can
use their expanded horizons to
achieve their dreams. Social Securi:
ty 1s commmcd to helpmg them to
the grealest extent poss1ble.
.
Poronl•. teacher.s, or orgamzalions that wish to order a copy of the
. kit should conll\ct GTI, Social Security Administration, 545 Altmeyer
Building, 6401 Security Boulevard,
Baltimore, Maryland 21235: fax
}10·966·8597.
Social Security Protection is
Portable
'
Social Security has a lot of
options, but here's a basic fact lhat
mos.t people don't think about ·... it
goes with you from job to job.
This means thai when you change

j~bs, Social Security goes with )oU.
Smce more and more workers
change jobs once, twice or even
more during lheir w_orking careers,
it's important to know that the protection you earn at one job goes wilh
you to the next. Remember, the protection you ea~n lhrough Social
Secunty today, 1s yours for a lifetime. ·
------You don't. need to retire for
Medicare
Even if you're not planning to
quil working when you reach age
65, it's a good idea to slOp by your
local Social Security office two to
three months before your 65th birthday. That's so lhat you can discuss
Medicare. Even though you're still
working, you'll want to have this
valuable protection when you turn
65 if you do nol have group health
insurance. The Athens' Social Security office is loca1ed at 221 1/2
Columbus Rd ..

"This is opening a door 10 gcnelic therapy in cardiovascular disease," said Dr. Valentin Fuster of
Mount Sinai Medical Center in New
York City, incoming president of 1he
heart association.
So far, 20 patients with severely
clogged arteries in their legs have
received injeclions of laboratorymade versions of the human gene
thai makes vascular endothelial
growth faclor, a prolein thai prompts
blond vessel development during
growlh in the wonlb. Of 1hese, Isner
said 16 have responded by growing
new vessels lhat carry blood around
the blockages.
Besides being spared the need for
leg amputations: some patients have
been freed of constant pain. Several ·
even found that their toenails arc

growing again for 1he first lime in
years.
Isner said MRI scans and X·rays
show improved circulalion und lhat
blood pressure in Ihe patient~ ' legs
has increased - something that
never happens by ilself in such
cases.
He said he has asked 1he U.S.
Food and Drug Admim strmion for
permission to slarl lhe therapy on
patients wilh blockages in Iheir
hearts. which biologically are virtu·
ally idemical to clogged leg arteries.
He hopes to begin Ihose experiments
by early ncx1 year.
Drs. Michael Mann and Viclor
Dzau of Brigham and Women 's
Hospi1al in Bos10n use gene lherapy
10 try to make lraditional bypass
surgery work better

D t
rt t• t
I f·
f I
th
~o~~~~~~'a~~'t:~;'J~i~;~s~::~ ~~~it~~~e~o~?I~~s o~~~\ir~~; ~c ors repo 1rs examp e o ~uccess u gene erapy

available to feline creatures.

In addition to the physical mutiia-

.

that of a dog, for instance. In the
shoulder there is so much play that
lhe shoulder blade may touch the
jaw or slide back as far as the eighth
or tenth rib (now, don't you try this
al home, kids!). All the muscles that
govern this lithe liulebody are highly developed, and this naturally provides kitty with great climbing
power.
Those razor-.sharp claws that can
be . whipped out for business or
tucked neatly away are the fanciest
of all. The elastic tendon holds the
claw in its own sheath . The claw is
nat on each side so it will slide in
better. When Princess slides her
claw down with the usc of the big
tendon that lies under part of the toe,
the ligament stretches like. a fresh
rubber band. It is hooked on the end

behavioral changes. Once they r.ealize that they have no defenses, some
cats become frightened at the
approach of strangers, growl, and
attempt to bite . Sometimes this
behavior lasts. a lifetime.
The cal is not to blame for this
behavior. The owner ill. And it prob·
ably does not need to be poinled out
that a cat, unable to srring to safety
or climb a tree, is &amp;lways al the
mercy of predators, including neigh·
borhood dogs, unless the cal always
remains indoors.
There are other ways to prevent
cats from scratching furniture. Try
vigilance, water pistols, those antiscratching scents on the market,
loud noises, and, of course, scratch·
ing posts. Surely there arc other
wavs to preserve furniture!

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Medical Editor
ORLANPO. Fla. (AP) - For Ihe
first time, researchers say they have
used gene therapy ' 0 reverse a
human ill and hope to use it to make
bad heans better.
A team working in Boston injected genes directly into the legs of
people with bad'circulation, triggering the growth of new blood vessels
within two 10 three weeks.
These carry blood to oxygenstarved tissue and appear 1o have
spared some severely aftlicled. pco·
pie from otherwise cerlain amputations . The doctors believe lhe same
technique will work as well inside
the heart, prompting the body essen·
tialiy 10 perfonn its own bypass.
The idea of manipulating genes

Community Calendar
The Community Calendar is published as a froe service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events . The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space penn its and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.
MONDAY
POMEROY - Big Bend Fann
Antiques Club, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs High School Library. Officers
to be elected . Pasl and present club
members urged to attend. ·
POMEROY - Meigs County
Right to Life, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Pomeroy Library.
RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, 7 p.m. Monday at the
municipal building.
POMEROY - Meigs County Ohio Bicentennial Committee ,
Monday, 4:45 p.m. al the Meigs
County Museum . Planning 10 begin
on programs to be presented next
year in comhJUnities · and !jChools

to cure disease has been discussed
for at least a decade. Despite several
tentative auempts, especially i~ can·
cer and some inherited disorders,
1here has been litlle 1o indicale it will
actually work.
"This is 1he first time that any
gene 1herapy has been shown to be
clinically successful,'' said Dr. ief.
frey Isner of St. Elizabeth 's Medical
Center in Boston.
Reports by Isner and anmhcr
1eam working 0n a different gene
lherapy approach were presenled
Sunday al a meeting of 1he Ameri·
can Heart As sociation . I.f their
proll)ising but preliminary findings
st~nd up to more rigorous testing,
gene therapy may someday prove be
an important way 10 control heml
disease, the nation's biggest killer.

~

and to organizations.

Pancake/Sausage Breakfast
at McDonald's of Pomeroy

DARWIN - Bedfqrd Township
RACINE - Southern Local Trustees, Tuesday; 7 p.m. a1 the
School Districl Reorganization . town hall.
Committee meeting Monday, 6 p.m.
POMEROY~ Revival services,
in the high school cafeteria.
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Rou1e 143,
TUESDAY
Pomeroy, Tuesday through Sunday,
SYRACUSE- Syracuse PTO, 7 7 p.m. each evening. Bill and Noami
p.m. Tuesday at lhc school.
. Tillis, speakers.

(All you can eat)

DELINQUENT REAL ESTATE PROPERTY NOTICE

Saturday, Nov ber 15, 1997
7:30 am·IO:OO a11

In compliance with provisions of Section 5721.03 of the Revised
Code of the State of Ohio, there will be published on November
14th and November 21, 1997, in this newspaper, a delinquent
land list containing the description of the property as It appears
on the tax list, the mane of the person In whose name lhe
property is listed, the amount of taxes and penalties due and
unpaid.
Each person charged with real property laxes and penalties
may pay the full amount of taxes at lhe Meigs County Treasurer; a
Office by 4:00p.m. on November 12, 1997, lo avoid publication.
To avoid additional inlerast charged on December 1st, a
taxpayer may enter Into a written agreement with the County
Treasurer to pay one-fifth (1/5) of the de!inquanltaxes.
Nancy Parker Campbell
Meigs County Auditor

$3.00 donation.
Benefits to United Fund for Meigs Co.
'

~

~----------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
l

'·

~

�•

Pomeroy e Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

_ Adu~t?

Monday, November 10, 1997

llonclly, NcMmber 10,1117

'*''

Americans t&lt;&gt;&lt;!~Y "ar~ taking in her tale 2~.
· '.
.
longer to grow up, she wntes.
•
When shes not playmg musoc ,
Adolesce,nce now lasts to theend , Lalilgy works'a day job *Computer
of a person s_ 20s. True adulthood Sa!•~ and ~rvoce m Henneua. N.:;.
doesn t get goong untd 3\), and many b~t 11 hasn I tame~ her outlook. I
baby boomers don't feel fully grown sllll get everythtng ~one, b~t I
up unttl thetr 40s - and when they always take the .~ost trresponstble
do , they res ost 11 at all costs.
road to ge~ there, says Laragy.
Accordmg to Davod Dunham, 32,
Her bo&amp;:\!esl career goal at the
there 's a good re~son.
. .
n:oomenl IS to u:r, to get a goofier
" Our generatoon losJ fanh tn the sogn out '" front. So far, manageA~en can dream -;.!n marroage and ment has been slow to act on her
m ca~eers for hfe. says Dunham. proposal.
. ..
. .
who has found ohe perfect JOb for
But Laragy IS ..constantly m
someone who "" t ready to grow up nursery my me mode . an~ a bundle
compl~tel y: He plays . vtdeo games of fun to talk to, whoch IS why her
for a liVIng at AmbroSJa Software. a co~.pany has, her answer the _phones·.
Rochester. N.Y., company that marI haven t found anyth.mg _~
kets vodeo games.
.
about people . ....Everybody s. mce,
People o f hos generauon WOITJI she says, explamong .her chddhke
about gemng ·a "real" JOb and a approac,h to the world.
"real " life, but. they ' ve seen too
(Shes not as bad as the b'ass playmuch d1vorce and career burnout. er m her backo~g band, who slept on
say s Dunham, of Rochester, N.Y. So a cnb once when the band was on
they're taking their time .
the road.)
" I'm still asking myself what I'm
Extreme cases aren't so much
going to he when I grow up." he fun.
say s.
Ast.-any parent whose _adult ch~d
Not mu sician April Laragy. She is living at home long after the
&gt;ays she has no plans to grow up lunchbox has rusted away.
ever. Stayin g young is the key to
Or check out the phenomenon of
happiness and besides, it's good for adult babtes, wh? dress m Pampers
your health .
.
and seem to hve by the motto
"I could be in one of !hose cor· "When the g01ng gets tough, the
poratc jobs where I'm so str.~ ssed I tough suck theinhumbs." 1
have to med1cate my se lf. says
But adult bab1es who know when
Laragy. who says she 's somewhere to grow up are onto something.

"If someone can do lha~ an~ be a
functoonal adult and funcuon m an
adult rel~ti~nship_. ,there's nothing
wron.~ wnh ot- ot s actually desir·
able, says Rochester psycholoa.tst
Marcy A. Bush .of Hamthon Associate~; .
I see . a lot of people who have
lost the ktd on them and they're dry
an4 stuf!'y and t~ey've lost their
Spontaneoty. ~res something to be
saod,.ror allowong the chold to come
out-.
.
. The problems come 1f you can't
tum It off, says Bush. . .
.
Som~ people stay m ktd mode
when 11 s lome to be~ grown-up, and
theJC adult relatoonshops su.ffer.
The od~al IS to combme childhCJ?rl pasSions ":''h adult responsib1l!lles. Randy KmgsleyofFIII]IIing·
ton , N.Y:, was 32 when he discovered the JOYS of splatball, essentially
a grown-up version ofCowboys·and
Indians.
.
"When I was out there playing,!
was a kid again," says Kingsley, 47.
" It kept my thinking young. 1 have
!his eternal kid inside and !let him
ou.o sometimes."
Kingsley did more than play.
Eventually, he bought Splatball
lndo?r Inc., and now finds himself
fighung the baltles of a businessman. .
.
He s also marn.ed ("I wasn't
ready to gel married") with three

70

By CAROL DEEGAN
Associated Press Writer
There arc many ways to learn
how to cook. II all depends on the
approach that works for you.
Shirley 0 . Corriher promises "no
more failed recipes" wilh "CookWise: The Hows &amp; Whys of Successful Cooking" (William Morrow,
$28.50). This book covers everything from the rise and fall ·of cakes
. and the esscptial role of crystals in
making fudge to why red cabbage
turns purple during cooking but red
peppers don't.
She offers more than 230 recipes
including Snapper Fingers with
Smoked Pepper Tartar Sauce, Big
Chunk Fresh Apple Pie, Pan-Seared
Steak with Bemaise and Roasted
Asparagus with Lemon-Chili Oil.
Corriher. an Atlanta cooking teacher
and food consultant, provides lots of
helpful information with each
recipe.
"The Good Housekeeping Stepby-Ste~ookbook" (Hearst Books:
$30) is fill(\(! with more than 1.800
photographs and 1..000 recipes. The
emphasis
of this cookbook is on
TO CONDUCT REVIVAL- The Rev. Bill Tillis and his wife, Naomi,
will be conducting revival services at the Calvary Pilgrim ChaP-81, cooking techniques, and each recipe
Route 143, Pomeroy, Tuesday tltrough Sunday, 7 p.m. each evening. is accompanied by a complete nutritional analysis. preparation and
The Rev. Victor Roush, pastor, Invitee the public.
cooking times.
Explains Susan Wes&lt;morcllnd.

food direclor of Good Housekeeping
magazine : "Many of the classic
American recipes are here, but with .
a fresh flavor twist. People are eating out more, and they're curious to
try new dishes at home. I wanted to
include the · recipes and the techniques so they could do just that."
Among the recipes : Texas-Style
Chili, Panna Coua with Ra.•pbeiTJI
Sauce, Orzo Salad with Feta Cheese
and Almond Cheesecake Brownies.
"The Essential Cook Book" by
Caroline Gonran, :rerence Conran
and :&gt;imon Hopkinson (Stewart,
Tabori &amp; Chang, $39.95) is ail
updated version of "The Cook
Book," first published in London in
1980. This hefty, 432-pagc cookbook includes 450 recipes, 1.100
full-cqlor photographs and an ·
"ingredients encyclopedia" with
more than 2,000 entries, detailing
everything from avocados to zucchini.
Rick Rodgers, author of a dozen
' cookbooks Including "Ready and
Waiting," has adapted the recipes
·for American cooks; He also created
nearly I 00 American recipes. for the
cookbook.
Mitchell Davis offers "simple
recipes and sound advice" in "Cook
Something" (Macmillan, $19.95).
This is a good hook for busy cooks

,/;,-~
~';

'

./

'

who want delicious, fun -to-make
recipes.
Davis, a food writer, takes read·
ers through the basies, then offers
plenty of tips for each recipe. Everything is spelled out for readers with
easy-to-follow instructions for
French Toast. BLT Tan lets, Sesame
Noodles. Cheesecake Br"wnies and
much, much more.
What makes a great cook?
"I think everyone can· learn ·.to
cook, but I don't think that you can
learn how to hecome a ·great coo~.''
says Chuck Williams, founder of the
Williams-Sonoma cookware stores
and c·atalog. "Cooking is something
that has to be in you." ·
Williams shares 150 of the best
recipes he has adapted or developed
over the past 40 years in "Celebrating the Pleasures of Cooking in
America" (Time-Life Books,
$24.95). The recipes are organized
by decade, and the cookbook is
illustrated with 40 full-color photograpHs.
· ·"·
· ••·
Among the recipes: Carrot Soup
with Cori.ander, Souffle au Pampelmoussc. Roquelort Onion Custards
and Roast Rack of Lamb.
"Lc Cordon Bleu Complete
Cooking Techniques" (Williqm
Morrow, $40), ·from the famed Lc '
Cordon Bleu cooking school, con-

------Society Scrapbook----------

RECEIVES APPOINTMENT • Mlck Williams, commander Of the
Eighth Dlatrlct, Department al Ohio American Legion, hu been
lf)IIOinted to the National American Council of the American Legion,
as vlca chairman, by Nations! American Legion Commander Anthony G. Jordan.
Williams, a life member of Draw Webster Post 39, American
Legion, In Pomeroy, alto aervea on the Departm.nt of Ohio Executive Committee. He Ia a member of the Vaterana Service Commie·
alon and Ia a member of St. Paul Lutheran Church In Pomeroy.

Gregg Pinener of Columbus,
will
have a presentation on
Andrews· Raiders. who were
involved in the Great Locomotive
Chase. Public invited.
Membership drive underway .
A membership drive is underway
by the Rutland Fire Department
Ladies Auxiliary.
Anyone interested in joining !he
group is invited to attend a meeting
to be held Thursday at 6 p.m at the
fire house. Those unable to attend
the meeting are asked to contact
Cindy Parsons, 742-3703 or •Kimberly Davis, 742-2372.

Drug might relieve pain of rheumatoid arthritis
But he has .not had as mU&lt;h pain
The damage is believed caused
By SUSAN J. SMITH
since
the
day
almost
three
months
by
overproduction of antibodies and
Rochester Democrat and
ago when he began injecting himself a substance called TNF alpha - or
Chronicle
tumor neclosiS" factor, said Dr.
ROCHESTER, N.Y.
When twice a week with Enbrcl.
"It 's not a cure but I do feel bet- Michele 'Hooper, the UR rheumatolPeter Wagner heard the University
of Rochester Medical Center was ter. " said Wagner. an industrial ogist in charge of the study.
"11lc amazing thing is you can
testing an experimenlal drug called salesman. " In the. morning when I
gel
up,
I
don't
have
the
weakness
block all this cascade just by blockEnbrel, he volunteered immediately.
ing TNF alpha ... Hooper said. "So it
For 12 years. rheumatoid arthritis that I had for years. "
Rheumatoid arthriti s is a com- is a key player."
had racked hi s body with pain.
mon
disease of the immune system
Enbrel intercepts the TNF alpha
beginning in his right hip and
in
which
cells
in
inllamed
joints
molecules
before they bind to cell
spreading to most of hos JOIDts. .
His only relief came on exerciSe, release enzymes that slowly eat · surfaces and cause the innammation
that leads to sore and swollen joints.
which he does at least one hour a away bone and cartilage.
The drug is costly, $2,000 to
Eventually.
joints
can
lose
their
day, said )Vagner. 50. "! feel like a
normal person fortwo to three hours shape, bringing worse pain and •loss $4,000 a year, but is being provided
free 10 patients in the study.
of movement.
after I exen:i se."

Rutland Fire Department's annual Thanksgiving dinner will be Nov.
20. Pic donations or contributions
toward purchasing pies arc being
solicited. Those interestell in helping
should contact Parsons or Davis.
Arts and crafts show planned
The 12th annual arts and crafts
show will be held at the Senior Citizens Center, Pomeroy, Friday, 10
a.m. to 6 p.m.
Area craftsmen will be there to
sell handmade crafts, baked goods,
candy and holiday gifts and decorations. Lunch will be from 12:30 to
4:30p.m. AdmiSSIOn _is free .

·~Kitehen•

• K.lee•e• Caltlaet Befaelal
• .4.ad•ae llepreductlona
IMndcrllffed U.tntl ~~ Co. H•rtlwood
814-992-4108
FrM Eltlrnatel

~RMw

Joe N. Sayre

61

I IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROlATE DMSION
. 111108 COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE llAmA OF
SETTLEMENT Of
ACCOUNTS,
PROlATE COURT
111108 COUNTY, OHIO
Aocounte 1nd vouchtrl
·ot 1111 following n1m1d
11kluclarll1 hlvl llMn nled
In 11M Probllle Court, lletga

}

County, Ohio, lor approval

lnd Nllllmlnt.
IITATI! NO. u ..o.
Second and Final ..._.,.
ol Ru11tll E. Starcher,
Gutrdlln ol the 111111 ol
Doi'OIIIy II. Hy1111, allegld

I~
1!81: :1'1! NO.

24.01·
Twetllll Aocount 01 .....,.,.,

lhMia, GUirdllft olthe
01 Ollvar 1!. llllly, In
L.

llleged IIICOIIIflllltlt

Public Notice

NOTICE OP IALI

IIOI1hlrly rlglll-oi-WIY IIIII
ol Carroll IIIMI, 113.15 fMI
to lhl point of beginning,
IIICI oontalnlng
luiJieOI to Ill llgll hlghwayl 1nd eanmenll ol
..-.~. Dllortjltlon lor the
lllove ~bid tnct bllng

lay vi~ of Ill Onllr of

llleiiiUid out of t h e man PIMa Ccut of 111111
County, Olllo, In !he of
the Home Nlllonll Ill*.
...lntlll, ve. KMI C. KMfiP
..,. Klvln I&lt;Mpp, tt II,
.,.,...nla,
~

Upofl

•an•lttllll'tlna• fl

I

ld,

...... Cela liD. 17.()¥.1011n
llld Ccut, I . . Olllr for
.... at tllllrotlllloor of the
Cowtttou• In "-Dy,
lllllga c:aunty, Ohio, .on the
11111 dlly of D101m1:11r, 1117
at 10:CIII Lm., lhllollowfntl
landeandlllte...,.._
. . al 2114 c:amtll ......
lyracuN, Ohio 4mll. A

-pllle leflll ~ptlan
of the ............. fill-

.._

The lal:a:•llll ,.., ......
lltuate In the VII.... 01
-,..auei, In !he Cou ~, of

..... and._ 01 Oltlo:

..._ln1DOAcnLDINO.
Itt, Town 1, Ra.,.. 11,

a.-. Towlllhlp, V1111J11 of

lyracuM, 11111(1 County,
.... of Oltlo, and bllna

.....,

ftiOI'efuUy diiCrlzld U~

CornJMfiCIIng at I point In
thet-•o•onOitheexlat·
Inti Clllllrllnt ole- rOUI1(
No. 114 IIICI the lllllflr
-..tOll ol ·the ·· - · ·
· aoulhlrly riiiM of ..., lint
et Carroll ltraet: . , _
norlh p ........ lllonll the ........ IGlllllllllt
llghl of w.y lint of Canoll
ltnei,I03.31 !MilO MirOn
lllln: lhanOII norlh • .....

•·•·-~alnl,
14.32 "" to M liOn pin In
the l&gt;lllllng noriiMiy rlghl01-way IIIII of Camiiii!Nel:
thtnoa-"" p .......
. . . . . . ~_eXIIIIng

land herefn deaortllld:
thtnoa north • dig.••••
llollg I .,.., 114.11
tNt to 1~n In the
prap1rty
: lhanOII
84 dig.
41'12" .... 1101111 the

a;:-·

.-·1
nne, suo'"'

northlfly profterly
10 MirOn p1n
In the FW'IOI'a1 MI'IIIIIM
property - r : lhtnoa

IIOUih • dig. . . . . ....

llont the l(l'llntorl' ...

property IIIII, :101.31 lwt lo
an Iron pin In lhl tJWIIola'
~

IJIOplrty-

IIICI !he IXllllng IIDIIIMIIY
rtglll-ol-way Una of Carroll
ltNel: t h - norlh 17 del(.
H'tlll" wall along the
gdntora'

IOUthlrtl

propt~

ty lin• 1nd the ex11t1ng
JOSEPH RICHARD HILL
ROUSH II

SMALL
WANT ADS
PACK
ABli PUrcll

BIRTH ANNOUNCED •
Joe and Jennifer Roush of
Ravenawood, W. Va. ennounce
the birth of a eon,- Joaeph
Richard Hill Roush II, born Sept.
26 at the Holzer Medical Center,
Gallipolis. He weighed nl.ne
pounda, or11t ounce and waa 22 •
lnchealong.
Maternal grandparent~ are ·
lea belle ·Couch and the late
Robert Couch of Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents ara Marshall and Debbie Rouah of
Letart Falla. Paternal greatgrandparent• are Dallaa and
Donne Hill of Apple Grove.

Unllll IXCtptlont lfl
tiled hereto, llld ·100oun11
will be lor haart~ before
11td Court of 1M Oth d~
of Dlolmblr, 1817, II wh
IIJ11e Hid IOCOunll wiM be
oonelderld and contlnuld
from d1y to day una! ftnllly
cllf!DIId of.
An'•'""on lntaraatld
lillY
written IXoeptiOftl
r

Public Notice

nilltlwly ............... llna
~nat, lUI ,..
to en Iron pin IIIII till rwl
polnl 01 lllalnnlng lor the

Public Notice

Public Notice

. ..

-~

0.2111-.

reaultl of 1 eurwy
miCie by Rlohlrd C.
GlllaOW, R.I. N0.1111.
DI!!D
. RI!I'I!RENCI:
VolulM 328, Pip 301,
Melli
County
Deed

IIMI

R~aarcll-.

The abcMI ~IIICI ,..1
Mille II ldlllllllad In the
Olllol of the Meltl• County
Auditor ....... No. 2000478.

.MY PLACE
Handcr1fted Wood

ProJICtl

Swings, BetKhes, Tobias,
Misc. Items
34718 St. Rt. 7
Ph. 985-4198
..._,_11101
....

...................
........_.._"

I
I

010n.oao

Md Pll1111r 8111111 In uld
Vlllllll·
Ralennct Deld: Volume
320, Page 3117, M1lga
County DIICI Recordl.
Audltor'l PII'CII No.: III-

lllallowl:
Number NI!:1!!Y.·

l'or

tn P1tmer •
Shlllletd, now
Ohio.
ct.crtptton Ill·
made to tha
PI1t of 11Id
satdpnmlllllln

,,,,__
....,., u.
Ch1pter 7

applllncea, blttertea,
many mallie &amp;
motor blocka.

CORPGIIL
ELii:tiiC

Sacred Heart Church

. Thursday

to llld ICCOUnll or to
m1111n pert1tntng to the
ex.-n Uf 1M tru11, not
.... then ltv• daya prior to

November f3

._.ng.

·Dinner starts at 4:30
Attendance Prize.
Games• &amp; Misc.

RoiMrllluck
PIOblll Judge
Common PI- Court,
P~Divltlon

llllgl County,4hlo

(11) 10

I

TRUCKING
DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

Hrvlce.

. S.R. 325,
Langsville QH

,....

DierS..
742-2076

.•NewHomes
•Complete

11198 Mlrtln Street

Remodeling

Pomeroy, Ohio 46788
.
·'.:

Stop &amp; Compa111

Agricultural • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators
. Oxy • Accetl Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder ·
Stick • Tig • Aluminum Welding

' I "

WICKS

Monday Tllru Frl· •
.

counta Rtctlvable, Accounts
Parable And Payroll? Our Cleric• Job Candldattl Art Tealad

614-992-3470
AWJ0l!NCH1F NTS

005

.

'ence And Skills tn One Or Mora
· 01 Tht following Areal : Ac-

Umestone,
Gravel, Sand,
Top Soli, Fill Dirt

Perwonllt

Fo• 10 ·Kar. Kojboard And Basi&lt;
Aax!unling Clerical Knowlodgo.
You Can ltl Know About Your·

..,, By Submilling Your R11ume
With Your Work History And Ea·

Pt&lt;lenc:t To Sondo Hill Cool Co.,
Inc:.. Attn.: "Joo Opporwnh1." P.a
Box 850. - · OH 45134. No
Totorot- Call Pleou. Wa Olfot
A CompoUllve Pa1 And A Good
Benefits Pack.aga, Including
.01jk).
W. Alo An Equal
Oooor1unl~ E~or

Ah Ouolliled Applicant~ Wlll ·R..
ctlve Consideration For Employmanl Wl1hou1 Rtgord To Race.

;:;,:,..=;,.;:~~.;..-=~ Color. Religion, National Origin,

232 Ellllltcll Color Photot tl To AratllJ o. s...
Bou S.rv. P.a Bo• 211. Rio -:-='-:c-:-----Orlndt, OH 41174.
An Ohio Oil Compar!JI Nllclt Ma·
=.::.::::~..:::~---- lure - n Now In Tho Gallipolio
AHXIOUit
ArM. RIGtrdltll Of ex;:nence
...:~~-:-:.:.. . ~M~~~~i P.O. ox

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

ICENEtlHENCALL 1HE
DATnlftE
-..11111 EXT. 1740

OnljU."ParMLETI

FR::o.

'2SOO 1 month
llillt Pumpa lnatalltcr 13800 a month

Avon $8 · $18 JHr. No Door ·To.
Door, Quick Cuh, Fun &amp; Rtla•-

:AVON • $8 -$20 /Hr. No Door To •
Door. Easy Caaht•Bonuat~•

· 800·M ·D1311.

1-

'

IUCKEYE
COMMUNITY
SU8 Por Min. 1·800·a88·12•S, SERVICES, Wilh Over 50 loco·
EXL 8781, Mull Bt 11Y11.
lion• In Souttltllltrn Ohio 11

Easy Bank Financing ~ ·

:urno•r.••

m:

lng,J.JI00-136.0188.

·:.~&amp;;1~'1::.::::
---======'---

::::=:~::::.:.;:::..:;::,_

40

Glvtawly

__

Acceprlng

Appllca1loh1

For

SUBSTITUTE WORKERS For
.;.;._ _~.,;...;.....;.:......,.,..,.. t11 Progroma tn Gallio And Mtigo
112 Booglo 112 Tarrlar. 2Jr old r. jCounllea. Houro Are Schactuled
n.lt dog. tlaiiCI and houH bra· AI Needed For Evenings And

J:=::ll] an. good companion. CaU

~- 'Nt:tMndL
175·1022 1her Spm. or l..va We Are S..rchlno For Compae,...._
1lonatt Pror.asionala With A
T11m Villion And A o ..,,. To
I Btogla Mixed Pupplu, I Tooch Personal And CommuniJy

FrH Estimates

(Payments baled on opprovect Creclil) __.:;.~~

,..

~M ..

day. Acctas To Human Re- ·
IOUrct Development II An AAI ·'

IDo Yau Havt Good Solid Exporl-

992·5513

~

BUCKEYE COMMUNITY SERVICES, with over
50 location• In Southeaatsrn Ohio Ia acctptlng
appllcatlona tor SUBSTITUTE WORKERS lor Ita
program• In Gallla and Meigs Countlea. Hours ara
IChedultclaa netcltcllor everilnga and wttkenda.
We art 11archlng tor compa111onate proltltlonala with a team vlalon and a dlllrs to
tllch personal and community akllla to
Individuals with mtntall'lllrdatlon/developmentll
dlllbllltltl. The work environment Ia Informal
and rewarding. BCS oHera comprehan11ve
training In lite field of MRJDD.
The raqulr1111entt are high IChool diploma/·
GED, valid clrlvtr'a llcenae ancl three yeara good
driving txptrltnct. lntersattcl applicants nead to
lind r11ume to: P.O. Box 804, J1ckaon, OH
45840. All appllcatlona muat bl poet·martcecl by
11/12/17. Eqllll Opportunity Employer.

Submit A Reaume To Jeannlt
Willlama,. Hurr~Jn Re10urce Man·
agtr, Acctu To Human Rt·
source Dtvtlopment, P.O. Bo1
311, Galipoli~ Ohio 45831 .

ACCOUNTING
IP4YAOll ClERK

(Lime Ston•
. Low Ratte)

HAULING

and Baal
lllfff.,., ,aai ' ·

HaJp Wlntecl

'

EEOE~IH.

·MobUe lome Fiarnac•

Beech Grove Road
Rutland, Ohio·
Starting Sunday, Nov. 16th
1:00 p.m.
·Door Prize&amp;

Pay II $8.501Hr.

1:00 ·5:00

7/22/lln

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
•

bptfilflCt In Computerized Ac·
Rectivable, Client Billing.
Working Tht Clltntl
Concerning Their Parmtnl Ac·
count lt.atu1 And Gran~ Rlilm· •
buraements. Beginning Rate Of ·

Tht Deadline far Accepting . A~
pllcatlona Ia Friday, November
14, 1SKa7 5:00 P.M. for Additional
lntormation Call G14·441·3D10•

FREE
ESTIMATEES
985-4473

RADIATOR. R.IPAlR

Have A 1'1&gt;11 H!Qh School DeatH
In Accounling Or Equivalent Ex·
l:ll*'ltnce And Training. Prevlou1

Appllcanta For Thlo Poolllon M11

•GBI'Igll

..

Dtv.. opment Ia Accepting Appli·

ca&amp;iCH'II For Tht Following POal·
Finance A..latant IAccounta
Rac•lvabl•: Applicants Must

10121/17 I ·mo. pd.

"BuiW·Your DN•rn"

ACCESS To Human Reaource
lion:

101m IISSILL

Rutland American Legion

Gun Shoot

AVON I AU Artot I Shirltj
~ 301-675-1.211.

Open Now &amp; Wile
Opel Dlll'ilg Tht lew

'"'·~···

Help Wanted

Need extta Chrlatmal cash. Call
aher epm Wed thru Sat. No ex~
peritnce neceuary. Soulhlark
Shaw Bar:IOI-675-51155.

CONSTRUCTION

;

SERVICES

SSDANCERSSt

OILER'S
DEER SHOP

Remodeling

M&amp;J·

...

Ohio.

FMPI.OYMENT

110

250 CQndor Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789
A Dlv..lon on NichOls Metal, INc.
·Phone: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304-(73-5861

Custom Homes

Pamero~.

owner, 814·882·

1113187 1 mo 00

Big Bend fabrication,
Machine.~ Welding Shop

24 hr. emlfllency

toP orictt paid, RiYt&lt;•

Clean latt Madel Cara Or
Trucka. 11180 Modell Or Newer,
Bmllh llllld&lt; Pl&gt;nllac, 11100 Eatl·

614-992-3220

Monday-Friday • 8:00 a.m.· 4:30 p:m.
Saturday· 8:00a.m.· 12 nooli

Electrician

Diomondo, AnUquo -lrj. Gold
Rlnga. Pre· 1130 U.S. Cur~oncj.
Sllrlna, E~&lt;. Al;qlllllllono Jowelrj
• M.T.S. Coin 5hotl. 151 Secand
-.... Clollpoll, 114-&lt;W0-2842. •

wn~Galipnh

GravelLimestoneSand- Dirt

Steel Salel, Welding Supplies, llldustrlal Gu
Radiator Repair &amp; Replaeenieoi

FI'H EtthMtel

Allootu11'Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
ver And Gold Coins, ProorMtl,

An......_ no 111m too ~ ·or too
1mall. Alto 1111tt1. apprtla&amp;ll,
ttflnlthlng. cutiOm orders. &amp;1•·
"2-85711.
.

S&amp;L

Chapter 13

Complete Machhie Shop Semee Fabrleation

Ucanud

Wlntecl to Buy

2521•.

UDmr'tf t - · .

John Wllllama,
Owner

full lime auctlonHf, tomplttl
IUCiian
HIVICI.
llctnltd
fii,Ohlo I Wall VIrginia, 304773-11716 Or 304-7711-15447.

Ru11

For Information Regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
William Safranek,
Attorney At Law
614-592·5025
Athens, Ohio

614·992-40251-*

Rick Pteroon AucUon Componr.

lnt

BAIKRUP!CY

na
Pick up dlecartlad

·

110

Public Notice

118!1 4422
Cheater, Ohio

0/17/TI'N . '

wv. 304-e7$-5104.

110

Agrlculturll Ume,
Umntone • Gravel
Dirt • Sind

POMEROY, OH.

614-992-5479

i

PROPERTY ADDRESS:
122
Union
Avenue,
30 AMOunctmentt
.
IIIII II. Soulllly Pomeroy, Olllo 45711 and
212 Filth tltreet, Middleport,
(11110. 17, 24 3TC
Ohio 411710
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
All
Vltllga
ol
Public Notice
Ponwwoy
Properly
111,1100.00: VIllage of
NOTICE OF SALE
By v1r1111 01 1n Order 01 Middleport Properly ·
l1t,7118.ao.. Tile .... ,
....
·""""'
outCoull
of ....
ComtnOII
PIHI
ol Dlnnon be told lor 1111 ·
two-lhlrda
th1
11111•·County, Ohio In the ·than
1ppr1111d
Vllue.
ofthel'll'llllfB link.
T!RM8 01' BALE: C..h
llwk• Company, Plalntlll,
VL Jllnae R. Boyar, II II., on dltlvery of deld.
J111111 M. IIOUIIIIV
O.lendlnll
upon
1
(11)
10,
17,
24 3TC
Ja.Jdgrnent i.r.ln renderwd,
IHIInll c.. No. 17.CV-G74
In llilcl COUrt, I will Olllr lor
Public Notice
Tony &amp; Colena
.... llthelront door 011111
CourlhouN In Pomeroy,
Shoemaker announce
NoncE TO BIDDERS
1111g1 County, Ohio, on the
BTATI! OF OHIO
the birth of their first
1tltluleyol~,1111i ·,
DEPARTMENT OF
child, a son, Tyler
al 11:00 a.m., lhl folloWing
TRANSPORTAOON
IIIICII lnd llltellllnl8. looll•
Cotumbue, Ohio
Jacob, born August
et1 II 122 Union Awnue,
OIIIDI of Contnct1
17th In Leesburg, Fl.
"-1'01'• Olllo 4&amp;711. A . Leaal CoPV Numbtr 117-805
oontplete legal tlelcrtptton
He
weighed 9 lb 2 oz.
UNIT PRICI! CONTRACT
olllil real e111111 1e a1 lolMaternal
IIIIIJno Dlta10/25/07
lowl:
Se1IICI propo111o will be
GrandparentsThe following d11crlbld 1ccept1d from all·
Fred &amp; Gerrl Hanel •
,... JJitullld In the prtqUIIInld blddell II lhl
Collf1ly of llalga, In ·thl ' OHICI ol Contracta, Room
·
a- o1 Olllo, IINI In 1M Ill ol the Ohio Deplrl,..nt F,logar &amp;Pomeroy,
June MoweryVlll1ge . of Po,..roy, 1nd o I
T nneporltJtton,
. Pomeroy. Paternal ·
lloundld lnd tlelcrtbld .. Columbua, Ohio, umll 1o:oo
lolkf••=
1.m.
GrandparentsLilt No. 421 of Nld Vllllge,
Thund1y, November 20,
Viola
(Peg) &amp;Lou
IJIIng 110- wlda on Union
18171or lmprow""nll In:
Kemberllng of
1nd Nnnlno blok 11 llelg1 County, Ohio lor
lhll width I DO IMI.
Improving 11otton MEO·
Belleview, Fl. And the
RllloiiJCe DIICI: Volu"" 124-f2.252, Stille Route 124,
317, Pll(l 301, Mllga · by IIIUrllclng with 11phelt late Lester Shoemaker.
County DNcl RICOI'dl.
Great Grandmothersconome.
Auditor's Parcel No.: 11- "The dlle 111 lor
Dorothy Collins01478.000
completion of thla work
Pomeroy.
And the following linda 1hlll be 11 111 lorlh In thl
-111111, ICJCaiiCI II blddllltl prDpoNI."
Della Uoyd- .Pomeroy.
flllh Se-t, MlcldlllpOrl.
JilT)' Wily
Great Grandfather·
4&amp;710. A aomptet1
DIIICIOr of Tnn1port111on
William Mowery·
ciHalptton ol the rMI (11) 3, 102 tc
I Millie II .. lollowl:
Columbus
lltualld In the Vllllge ol
lltdcllapon, County ol 30 . Announcements
8tatl ol Ohio: lncl
itiWt~more
plrtlcutarly
1
(I

113 W."2ND ST.

I

614-949-3080

the.,....... Yllue.
TIRII8 OF SALE: Cllh
on dlt"'-J.of dHCI.

IIOid lor IMIIhln -u.Ircte

I

RACINE, OH.

Public Notice

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

' WARNER INSUUNCE
JEFF

I

A771NTION VINDORI: Indoor
8pKe u.oo 0 , - 113.00 Open
Ewr•r. Slo10 hooorJ 1·5. Craw·

I. L HOLLOI
TRUCKIIG

360° Communications

I'

1l00pm friday.

ford'• flea Market. Henderson,

CELLULAR PHONES

I

I

(No Sunday Calls)

loolllll Illite coiner Ollllth

Bazaar

I

..

'

PROPERTY ADDRI!SI:
2124
C1rroll
Street,
lr;IOUN, Olllo 4&amp;771
EAL
ESTATE
APPIIAIII!D All t3I,OGO.OO.
The rael cannot be

'

!he dill Mllor

,...

- -· DIIMIIno' 1:00pm tho
4ar IMfore the acl .. to '"" ~
lund1y I llondey •dllloo·

0111valy Dealer
Spencer, W.Va.
1-800-827-4551

.____..::;~::..:...:..::=:..---_.

~

Public Notice

614-992·7643

•

All Vonl SetH llooet S. Plld In

olnllllor &amp; Exterior
P1lntlng
AIIO Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ul
1112-41215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Richard's Lawn &amp; Garden

New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

'

•Roofing

Buy, Sell &amp; Trade

BISSELL·BUILDERS, INC•.

t~.-l.,..ove•auls

Haullng,ExCIVItlng
• Trlnchlng.
UmeltoM • Grsvll
Septic Syatsma
Tralllf • Houallltta

Same Day Repair Service

Houra:
7:00a.m. thru 4:00 p.m. Mondlly thru Friday
7:00am to Noon s.turda

liNGS'

3311 Hippy Hollow .....
Mlddllporl, Olllo 4l1lt
Haw Homea, Addltlona,
Roofing, Sldlno, ·
. Pol.........
· Decka, Palntlno
Call Ut For A FrH EalitN/e
114-7U·3010
114-7U-3324
114-7U-3071

~r

Fomaroy,
Mlcldleport
&amp; VIcinity

•. . _ Addltlonl
•NtwO.ragn
•Eieclrlcll • Plumbing

(Free Discount parts liat)

LUMP AND stOKER COAL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHERS ACCEPTED .
DELIVERY AVAIUILE

Ordera for Chrlltmll

TRUCKING

• 10:6o .........."'.

STATE ROUTE 124
Approximately 1.4 miles aaat of Route 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO
614 384 8212

Heirloom QIUJity CUllom Furniture

Still Tiki

........
--too,_....
,............

BIIIIBI Mlllll

HEIRLOOM CONNEOION

ol Canoll

~

-

....,

tains over 700 illustrated techniques '
with 2,000 photographs and 200 •
recipes.
,
Writer Jcni Wrigbl and chef Eric ;
Treuillc lead renders through more ,
than a dozen chapters, from Stocks:'
&amp; Soups to Cakes &amp; Cookies, with.: ·
each chapter focusing on. a different ,
food or food category.
•
Each chapter begins with essen- '
tial information about choosing the · ·
best ingredients; the pages that fol- '
low ·demonstrate favored prepara- o
tion mel hods and cooking tech· ''
niques.
·
. ,
Lc Cordon Bleu, founded m·
1895. has schools in Paris, London,.
Tokyo, Sydney, Australia. and Nonh .
America.
Finally, the authors of "The :
Bask Gounnel" arc back with "The
Basic Gounnct Entcrlaino: Foolproof Recipes and Manageable '
Menus for the Beginning· Cook" .
(Chronicle Books, $17.95).
..
Diane Morgan, Pan Taggart and·
"Xuthft!l!h Tag'gllrt llav{j&gt;Ut t~th!lr'fl•
collection· of more than 30 menus ,.
created fo&lt; the beginning host,
including a Cla..,ic Cocktail Party,
Three-Course Diner and Sports Buftct. Among the recipes: Lo• on Rye .
with Onion-Caper . Mayonnaise,
Chicken Paprikash and Buucred 1
Noodles and Cheese Qucsadillas.

..
~"CHECK THE WANT ADS FIRS;;

GllllpDIII
&amp; VICinity

~tt!:

So here'• a handy Jist for anyone who's wondering. The way we it, you 'te probably grown-up If:
- You've boulht a couch.
-You know what a fixed-rate mortgage Is.
-You use a cart Instead ot a basket at the grocery store.
·-You spend lliOft dme In a car than 011 a bike.
-You make mll&lt;'aronl and cheese, Instead or buying It In a box.
-You've bought Thpperware.
-You buy an applian&lt;e that you can'tlin.
- All your belonpngs can 'I fit in your car.
- Toy shopping at Christmas Is work, not play.
-You own a tear blower.
- It's "BUI" now, not Billy.

AARP's executive director, Horace find something in black besides a
B. Deets. is keeping pretty. busy charred barbecue apron to wear to
.signing all &lt;hose leucrs, and Deets . the Rolling Stones concert: and buys
always gets his man {or woman).
a Sanb- convertible, nf course.
Geist , a television cOmmentator,
Geist may moan a.nd groan about
author and former New York Times reaching the half-century mark. but
columnist, · has himself joined the he also offers such helpful advice as
growing ranks of baby boomers "Tight Tux Tips" and warning signs
turning 50. and he seems tickled to like "Turning Republican." His"
laments arc laughable and chapters
tell us about the trauma.
Like a conventipneer amassing with titles such as "Health
free give-aways, Geist samples all Clubbed," "Romance - Is That a
there is about modern maturity : He Hot Flash or Arc You Just Glad to
learns the difference between "easy See Me'!" and "Sex After. 50- This
fit" and "relaxed fit" jeans; receives Will Be Brief." arc guaranteed to
liposuction counseling for his TSP elicit giggles and outright guiTuws.
Even those of us who haven't yet
(Tight Pants Syndrome): visits a
(not-so-much) Fun Fair for seniors; reached 50 hut know it's out !here
checks out a memory clinic for his looming Sl&gt;mcw~crc will appreciate
CRS (Can't Remember S--); buys Geist's giddy @Uidc to gcczcrhood.
the Butt Booster for Men; tries to

Civil War protram slated
Brooks-Grant Camp 7, Sons of
Union Veterans of the Civil War of
Middlepon. will have its regular
meeting . tonight (Monday) at the
annex of Hope Baptist Church,
Grant Street, Middleport.
A potluck Thanksgiving dinner
will be ~rved at 6:30p.m. The din·
ner is in honor Qf Pres. Lincoln's
proclamation of the first celebration
_of.Thanksgiving as a national holi. day.
·-

__
_
...........
....,

("I was never ready to have older.' ..
•;
kids") and now a granddaughter ("I
It may sound backward but that ·.
don't feel I'm a grandfather"). In kind of thinking may be on~ path to :
othe~ words, he_ ~i~'t reject real life real growth.
.
and 1u responstbthttes.
If you want 10 keep growmg.
Sure, his. wife often said "Just growing up may be the wont thing
~w up!" when he'd leave the fartt- for you.
·
dy for all-weekend splatball compeOnce upon a time it was tasy 10
titions.
tell if you were grown-up.
, ,
But for the most part; he knows
You'd hit '18 or 21 (depending on
when to lock his "eternal kid" in the how liberal your parents "'ere), then
basement and when to let him roam you ' d get a job at some career-for·
free.
life company, senle down with a fine .
Kingsley was recently diagnosed spouse and voila: Another grown-up
with diabetes, and he says his youth· is born.
. ,
ful mind has helped him fight it.
These days, it is anyone's guess '
"It's never going 10 beat me,.. who has grown-up and who has just
says Kingsley. "That kind of think- grown taller.
ing may not come unless you have a
People like Jim Carrey and
young atlitude. Some people my ·Madonna don't help mauers, with
age, they're getting tired. Some their penchant for behavior previwould think, 'See, I'm getting ously reserved for puberty sufferers.

It's a 50-50 proposition that baby boomers.
will love this guide to becoming geezers
By KATE LAWSON
Tha Detroit News
Baby boomers prepare &lt;hysclves!
Sooner or later "it" will come and
all the Centrum Silver. Grecian Formula. alpha hydroxy and liposuction
can't stop it.
.
The "it" is thin letter from the
American Association of Retired
Persons wishing you a happy SOth
birthday. and if you think you can
run or you can hide, forget it, that
l~ttcr will find you.
Bill Geist, author of "The Big
Five-Oh! Facing, Fearing and Fight·
. ing Fifty" (William Morrow and
Co.; $23), calls it "getting
AARP'd'' and, according to Geist. a
baby boomer gets AARP'd every 7
and one-half seconds. or about
11 ,000 times a day. That mcaps

Yercla.Je

~ds

Cookbook News: What to cook and how to cook it

•

The o.lly Sentinel• Page 8

Not! Growirig '01Qe.r .doesn't mean you have to 'grow up'

By MARK UU
,
Rochester Democrat and
Chronicle
Finally, !heR's a cure for that
affiiction known as growong up, an
antidote for hning 10 bunon the top
bunon. sulk 1 Iough or approach a
task ,.llh l"'&gt;f=lt-'1sm.
. "flit.....,. i.'llllulJ. Just don't.
-- ~,., ,.._"' vow up·' ." asks
Jim ~ _.,_ ,.,.. 11," of Empire
c,_,. 111 Aill&lt;:&lt;l&lt;t. N.Y.
"' •"' ~ y~hes "'hen you
P'.,.. ~ ' '"" "'"~"'be respo~soble .
Gc&gt;.,..•"P' ,.... nnl.:s _ &lt;hey re no
~,&gt;Jd.
.
. .
Furnlm. ,..._, p&lt;rt off getung mar·
nN UJJ.Qt !&gt;&lt; •n.; 4J. has a good
&lt;&gt;ruse(,.- st:nm~ )OWl£.
H&lt;&gt; t.tsw&lt;»., based on kids and
..,ru;_
,._, .l:t&lt;&gt;t&lt;ll deH iopment JS
1
JU&gt;t ~,x-.J m.:t.ti.rung.
.
When • """'• cu.1omer comes m
ast.con• ,t._,"ut s.) 01 c 1he Hedgehog:
Darl "Le~ 1,,n Part J and Furfferi can .
Ill~ J~&lt; 11 • he'; "the hero. their
bud.h ... Fur!fen explains.
Oi ·otlrs.:. " hen adults hear him
!3IJ.. 1ng' IJJ..c &lt;ho;, "they just look at
, 0 u IIJ..e &gt;uu ·rc dtffcrent."
· Buo F~rffen is not alone. In fac!,
he\ part of a 1rcnd .
Gail Shechv. who mapped out the
adult lt fe cyd~ in her 1976 best sellcr. " Passages ... had 10 upda&lt;c her
fi ndm gs in her 1995 book, "New
Passages."

'

POmeroy e Middleport, Ohio

•

Wttkt Old. 114·317·7765. 1· Sllillt To tndl•lduots With Manta!
100-115 0113
· Retardation IOwtlopmtnlll DI• ]Aiumlnum 1torm door. 304~175- abllltiet. Th• Work Envlronmen1
, 1:116.
Ia lnlormal And Rewarding. BCS

IWIIICOOLIII

Serving Southeutem OH &amp; WV
114 441 8411 I ;;;jjM-;;i;H.""i;i;;;;;;;,i;.;; IQIIort ComP&lt;thenolve T10tnlng In
whllt -llltnl. t111•r Tho Flatd Of MAIIltl.
1-.n-IM7
1391 Sal1ord School Rd..
OH I,
homH Onlj.

- JJIIII'.,.

SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
25 YEARS IN BUSINESS

,•

"FACI'ORY
DJRE£1'
PRI£ES""
Quality Window Systems
110 Court 81.

W¥1023477

30•- Tha

RoqulremonJI Art Hl9h

=.::.:.::.-------1
School Oilllo.. IQED, Vlllld DrivCaat Iron bethtull. Cell ao•-e7S. .,•• llcenlt And ThrH v••,,

Pomeroy, Ohio

Goool Drhrlng E1porl1n&lt;e. Inlor·

AppllconJa Need To Send
Rtaume To: P.O. 8oJ BG•, Jacl1·
10n. OH •••o.
Mcattone
.... ., Ba 1'1&gt;11 -II
1 lit 21
87•EI(UII OIJpolwloy
•
CHILD CARE-Working couple
Puppitl Pwt Doblrmln Plrl Lib a.. ka •nergtllc &amp; e1ptrltnced
1Wtlktad.l1~ ~11 i P
lady 10 care tor newborn In our
Puppl" Blacll lob, Cron Btacll homo duolng Jha dej. Sind lnSho!oi&gt;t&lt;d, I1•·21S.805l
:J~~C'Ml~
1111d

011 dryer and elt&lt;lti&lt; drjt&lt; Jo
attn 1¢,11 ..154117.
llxod llloed Puppieo, Dobarman
• Ro
Mlxod, 114-317-1511.
F

=•

,

flO LCIIt Md Found

1

;::Atq,::::.oi::.:rect.~~~-Com11111tr Utt&lt;l Needed. Work
UOk to ISOk/jr 1·

1LOST: Doohlhuncl on .lericloo Rd, own houra.

. 110 . - . 1725.

· iiOI.a7S-

lllO ~~~ 7111 X11D8.

�The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Monday, November 10r 1997
'
l\lJ.EY
OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

'

PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS
1 W 1 ,.,.
5 Put up (drlpM)
t Econ. lnclellor
12 FUiun lltya.'

eum

13 llllnw
, mHOUre

Computet' U1er1 HH&lt;Itd. Work
Own Hro., S20K Toi50K /Vr. I·
100-34711111 X 1173.

North

Otpen&lt;lablt And Flnlblt CHA'I
NMded Far In Home Care. CaU

Adrlanne Or Angl AI 1·800·481 ·
· 11334.
Dolec:IIIO • PriYate

West
•J9853

rr

IJJI'f., W..4 A
AAmR (f Tllt\E

1-Mo~. T111nets

GoodWagnB14~533.

Otvt&amp;oprMnt Director For Multi·
County Family PlannlnQ Agency.
ReqUirll Exparlenca. Provide
._eadarthlp To Comprehen1lve
Fundralllng Program With
Emphulo On CuiVYating And ~­
baaing WaJot Giha. E.:perience
In Planned Giving And Capital
C.mpalan1 De1lrable. Send Rt-

..,.,., 3 Prolelliofal R&amp;fwen&lt;:ll
And Salary Roqulremon~ To Kay
R. AtiUnl, PlaMtd Paronohood Of
Southealt Ohla, 398 Richland
lire., Allonl OH 45701 .
EOEIESP

230

Professional
Services

IDeO ·111110 Clrl Far SIOOIH

HARTS MASONARV ·
brick &amp; 1tone work. 30 y•ra ••·
perience, reaaonable rata•. 304·
8115-3511 oftor o:oopm. no job to
1111111ono an WV-021208

Nolo loin Bobr Colvoo

814-381 1&amp;24

Kllchen Carpal 11.50 Vlnrl U:
IIDIIohan Carpolo, Rl. 7 N. 014·
•

South
•

ConHeflll
For UIM

Bunk Bt&lt;lo Comp. e221: Sola I
Choir $248; 4 Co"'*l' Pint Table,
Bench I 3 CJ1alra •2a&amp;; 7 Pc.
Ctdor BR $788; O&amp;k Curio Cob.
$110: ""ttery, llorlcon Blonkato,
1 Bedroom Near Holzer, WID . lndlono. Ell:.
Hook-Up, Gao Htot, $261/Mo., +
Udliito, No Poto-, 614-446-2157.
Routo 7 Soulh. c ..... CIIY
O!ltn 11-S. Sal 1 sun
2 btdn&gt;om apartmenl In " " " - ·
utllltitl paid, no pate, 814·882· Waterbtd, 1tove, refrigerator,
TY'I, •lec:tric dry•r•. &amp; mare.
.5858.
304-875-1512.
2bdrm. apts., total electric, ap·
pliances furnilhtd. laundry room
facilities, clostto school in toWn.
Applications available at: Village
Green Apts. 14i or call. 814-812.· .520
Sporting
3711.EOH.
'
GOOds
1 Bedroom APIIrlmtnl On fltlt
Avenue. Galllpolla. t2501Mo ..
Plus Deposit 81&lt;-44D-1071.

·- - - - - - - -·

Call

' Dealer: North
Soulll Wesl North
I t

For oolt· 118l Cu11a11 Cololt,
quad 4, bod - - - . , . - .
t350.11+24N!IIII1.

BARNEY

4 Bedroom~
Klochon, UR, Fenced Vard, 213
Acre. Asking $58.500. 814·371·

SoAd Oal\ Gun O&amp;blnot, Holda II
Gun' Hao 2 Doort, I 2 DriMrl,
Ercitllont ConditlCliL S175, 814-

Apartments Far Renl On Firat
Aweruo. 81......a-1221 .

340 Business and
Buildings
1 112 Balho LR. DR.

..,mtRegiater,
to Box GM·04,
Pleas·
200 Main St .. Pt
%PI

ant

-.ant WV 25550.

Now acnpting applications lot
llltchtn &amp; waitress help. laCantl·
111 Mexican RestauranL 304·6757115.
Now Hiring
Aax Rnlaurants, Gallipolis. All

:~==~·--------~----­

BUY HOMES AI LOW AS

IA,OOO 1 ·5 Bdrm., local GCJIIl &amp;
Bank Rtpo't c ·all 1·800·522·
27'JIJ, X I70i.

Formt&lt; Trucldoa Compony Build-

Ing Far Rent br Salt:

Acr011

From Tllomaa Do·ll CoOler, Me·
CornidtRood.81+440-l2l't

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
2.07 •c:rea Sml out on Sandhill
Rood. $11,000. 304-07!hllll8.

By owntt: 10·11milea aul ar
Huntington on Rl 2, 4beclrooma, llinllarm. building alias, paowr1balh, lllllilltcl gorqt, FA 1184t tllncl, I .11 acres. larue building.
lllif. 30+570-2042.
3bedrooma, baa~m~ent, -GIIage.
014-041-3127., 30+875-457~
COUNlRY HOllE

-·

Shifll Available, Flexible Hours,
E.:perlence Prelerred. Apply
Nlhln.

2&lt;15-511114.

530

Antiques

mo~N"Pl£ 1

Downtl&amp;lrl AponmenL 4 Roonw,
Wa1or Paid, NO PETS, 81 Codal 540 Miscellaneous

Sn&amp;l. 81 +311-1100.

Me~handlse

...~~--

Fori·nme Htlp Nttdtd In RtiiU
lllort llowniDwn. GlllllpoHo, Stnd
Rnumo, P.O. Box 141, Gallpolil,
OH45631.

1182 Toyol&amp; Corollo, S750, I14742-35IS.

Receptionist needed lor

,.ced ollice. Ability 10

multiple projects. EacHinu 1nd
challenging work. Working

ol WincloWI Ptogramo
!Word Ptrltct I Ercel) a
a.nct rasumt to Box AB-oe,
Pleaunt Regi1ter, 200 Main St.,
P,-WV25550.

IHI Blazer 4&gt;4 Taho

1815 Oldamollllo Culla11 lu,._
¥-1, Ful
""""·
Sunroof,Broutlhom
&amp; Equlpmorr,
110.311
~
.IIIII Mlltl, Ont OWnar, lllut Will
Blue~. eu 411 a&amp;3Z
1987 Oldl Cutlall Suprem•
Brougham, 35G outo, ole, no NIL
very cloon, aaklno 11.1100. 30+
875-0440.
U8B T·Bird Y·l, Auto, Looded,
New Pain~ $2.200, lt+«ll-7011
Allor 4 P.M.
1100 lllllubllhl Pttdo s .,., We,
runs very good, 30 MPG, now
lirA g71(. S141S. 81 .. 165 13llll.
1110 Oldl Cullaaa Supreme,
loodtd, Stonclard, L•lhor So11o,
CD, 81K, Excellent Condlllon
SS.B00,814-440-4222
·
IIIII Goo Uero, ..... IIi', 11,1110,

11+742·2852.

With two

It-&lt; f'\'(
WP-0\E.~t '
QUICK,(£\
Xl/&lt;1£ 1-JP-.\U; I

1-!E.u..., m11'-1r.. or
SC»\f.Tf\1 t-&lt;0 I

....

Q

~~----------~

r

fi

t

c:::J

~

~

I

~---

f;IIG NATE

er• •• ·m

nuhi-lina switchboard alo~

"-1tdgt

....

Fi~

I gu MUoubllhi 4X4 Plcl!·Up, 4
Cyllncltr, s SpeM, AIC, S3.1100:
1168 Dodge Dollol&amp; Sport 4x4 .,.
I, Aulo, AIC, 14,100, 014-4417BIIAhlr4P.M.
1168 GIIC _ , Ou . . . . . . .

=

=1 .:0:.,=.P~~~n Selv·

leo Recorda Since Purcha•.....,
....
014-4'0-(1157, 81&lt;-440-0B52.
1884 JHp Cherokee counarr.
avlo, 414, 4dr, new tires I b•l·
torr, 111 power, hitch. 304-17..
~54..;20;:__ _ _ _ _ __
1115 Toyol&amp; Tloo, 4X4 Reg. Colt,
I OWner, lika New Condilion, AT,
11:.. 43,000 llilol, 814-245-151:1.

740
304

4--

THIS IS A BORDER COLLIE,
·see, AND TJ.IESE ARE THE
SHEEP ~E'S 6UARDIN6 ..

SUDDENL'( A. WOLF COMES,
50 TME BORDER COLLIE 6ETS
ON TME PHON E,AND CAl:L 5
IN AN AIR STRIKE !'

.. . OWN PAYPHONES U
ft!OK Yearly Pori. Grtll Silts
- · Coli Nowl 1-1100·100-3470

.......

INOTIC!I

2 Bodroomo. Garden Tub, Erctl·
1tn1 Cor1dlllon. On A PrMIIe Rtnltd Lol, Overlooking A Pond.
$20,000, I14-440-,'JJ'e4 Call Mor

.. ofllrlnO.

Cullom Built Daubltwidite Over

...uiJ Tonnlng Salon Willi
t.ulpmonl, lWo 'Wor~lng Olrll/
Good Cllnlllo. G&lt;tot Locadon,
..., Prict, 114411 11214.

A-

MIIOUI IIILLIONAIRI-IIAK·
Ill Rovtall Excldno New wore
... Eom 110-1011(
F&amp;lll 24

-573-30&amp;

....
Hr......

' Llcal Yondlnt Ro•lt For Stlt.
larn Blge, W.ll Sell Coli - ·

.,...

4pm.

ASTRO·(JRAPH
Home

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

12XI5 lraller, 2 bedtoom. 1250

For lease

For ronl·30r50 b&lt;lcll building for
bu1lne11 on Rt 2 ntiiJ loch In
Applt GrM. 301-570-:1812.

by Luis Campos

..

·,

•0 y

ZSVNY
WPMY

GSV
ZSY

CPDPNH,

ZSY

CF

THDY

SPDY

XVTAYR

zsy

' ULTYN.'WPBVU

ULTY.

XV T A
CLIIHY

TYPXLY

CPNY -CPTT
YJYKLZHOY •
.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Anyone ol my generation who lolls you he hasn'l
'done' Brando is lying."- James Caan.

':~~:~:~' S©\\ott~
-!A t-~s·
fdit'd by CU.Y I . POUAN
lleo•rortge Iattin of
0 tou'
Krambled wards

....
WOII

the
be·

low ro form lour t1mple words

·,J

r1_,..:U::...:;.S~V:_,!;!.A~I,_,._L~

. I I 1I I
2

ANSWER

IMONDAY

~~ ~&lt;;r fe.6.1U~~ -·.

par 11'101'1111, Cllllot-712·2714.

A'*' Ra11 On SeiiCNd Modell, 2 Bedroom llobllt Homo, 114·
30+731-3101.
.
440-85118.

.

Ceiebnty Cipher~ •~ Cl"Nttd from qucMIIOfll. ~ lamout I*Pft, put lnd p.esen~
Eadl ilirtei in the cipher 5\andllor ..,.._,._TOO.V'I au.: K ...- C

V

SI'UIM. Llbllilli0 AND
$011' fOCU~ 1\J "tt&gt;"l((o\\1

/

490

CELEBRITY CIPHER

UNSCRAMtllE FORI

~II'!'S &amp;Wil~~ 1\-l~
I'\IC[()6~M'~~ U~l'..tl

8ASEIIENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltionolllfttlme guoronltt.
local raftttnetl lumlahed. E.,.
llbllohtd 1875. Coli (014) 4410170 Or 1-fl00·2B7-0578. Rogora
Wlllrl&gt;JOOflng.

250 Avolloblt Opllono, You Pld&lt; 14110 Trollt&lt; 2 Bedroom' W/0,
The Floor Plln. You Conlrol Tht large LR, Porch, AC, 814-258·
Prlct. Thou11nd1 Ltll Then 1001 (AtltrtoCtl) AVIIIIblt 111
Other CuaiGm Buill HameL Fac· OIDtc.
10ry DlracL No lllddlaman, 304- 141170 tr1ller, 2 bedroom, UOO
738-31011.
par monlh. ... 81+742-2714.
Doubitwlde On land USO D• 2 a :1 bedroom mObile hamaa
pool! ~tel. 304-7311-7295.
12110·•300, IIWII, water 1nd
-lnclucjtd, 814-11112·2187.
Doubl~wldoo Mull Gor 0.81'11.

1M

A

aASSIIIfll.

Improvements

420 Mobile Homtt
for Rent

52~Y

OF FLOWERS ..

750 Boats &amp; Motors
.for Sale

!Hot SUIIIn Dtluu 14x72 2 Bodroom, 2 Batha, Relrlgera1or,
Rant•. Eltclrlc Htat Pump, And
10X12 Dtck, CaU Alii&lt; 5 P.ll •
111 111 31153.

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
tH•mmendt lhll you do bull·
- • wllh people you know, and
IIOT 10 lind montJ lhrouall lilt
_. un•l you havt lrwHifgaltd

·-~~~~

411 Arllcle
51-Gol&amp;
Stcrel

.

II

I I I

Embalm- Bliss · Milky· Mottve ·MISTAKES

SERVICES

Business
Opportunity

43C44- -billy
45 Silk
Iabrie
47 Wordo al
under·

I' I' 1· I' lj I' I' I' I' I

New ga1 tanka, 1 ton t1uck
wheeli &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; R Auto.
Ripley, WV. 304·372-3933 or I·
800·213·11:!29-

210

420-older

A PRINT NUM8fli!D
t;r LETTERS
•

New Bodlinor For Full Slzt 1Hol

FlrJMJCIAL

41 Forl..-llrl ,
1hr~

TO 6E DOIN6
WATER COLORS

. &amp; Up Dodge Truck, 175, 114·
25&amp;-1233.

81&lt;-11112-3884., 01&lt;-11112·5813.
1gB8 Cloyton 14r70 3br, 1 balh,
hell pump. • - · - rolriQIII·
lOr, good cond. I I 2.!110 ntg.
1112 OaJ\wood 141185 2br, 1 ere . cond. 110,500. Call 3~4·
075-3000. lon&gt;Spn.

~=-~an·
381:.m
31 Oolll

WE'RE SUPPOSED

lliont,lC,..Ir:hooll&lt;-215-5877

.

35 Colloklll

declarer had to avoid a second trump
loser.
After winning the lirsl trick with
dummy's bean kin"g. declarer crossed
1o.han.d with a spade. lhcn 'ran 1he
cluh knave 10 East's ace. Whal now'!
If West had led a singleton, East
could deliver •n immcdialc ruff. But
whal if Wcsl had stancd with two
heans·/ Then returninj! a heart away
from the queen didn 't look quite so
altmclivc. Easl was unccnain. So. lhe
siOry goes, the queen of hearts came
10 the rescue. leaping from East's
hand and falling face-upward onlo
the 1able.
This dcfealcd 1hc contracl. stranding declarer in lhe dummy. He lricd
to gel out with a low diamond, bul
East won with the ,ace and returned a
hcan, allowing West to oven;uff.

ACCIII Ov.r 10,000 Transmll·

304-175-503~

-.
1111

30 Ace a Mplllh-

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

BUDGET PRICE TRANSIII..
SIGHS, UHCI/Rebull~ AU Typeo,

Will....., Jun1t o r , . . , -· $351 I GIS 14z70 Wlndoor, U411,

bramb...

29~

32 Pent

aces to lose,

1100.

760 Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

....... -

minor~suil

tD88 Honda :1:10 414 t2.UOO, 814245--854&lt;, E,..;ng..
1885 Ylmaho Blallar, 11,100,
OBOII&lt;-44B-4t73.

810

·="'"
,_.

Poas
Pass

.:.....:-11..;75-..:3324.:.:..;~----

1888 Ranger 373V 18' 12 ·24V
Trollng Molor, 150 XP Evlritude
Cu~ ...BOD. 81&lt;-112·2710.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Zl Clluteh21111Jbllll'a

P£ANUTS

Motorcycles

1817 Suz'*l BO

:zs ·Pt. ol U.S.A .

7~(prel.)

Dbl.
Paaa

days after the dreadful accident in
which Princess Diana died. She
admitted to knowing lhe basics of
bridge, but I don't 1bink any record
e•isls of a deal she played. Edward
VII wa&lt; an avid player. bul no mem·
ber of the presenl Royal Family
plays, lhough lhey all enjoy racing
demon. The Queen plays 'si•·pack
bezique and complicated games of
solitaire (patience, as they are called
in Britain).
As a tribute to Princess Diana,
here is a deal in which the key play
is made by the queen of hearls. II is
taken from "Right Through the
Pack" by Rohen Darvus and Norman
de Villicrs Hart (republished by
Baron Barclay, 1996).
Some slrangc hidding lcfl South in
live clubs (hul bear in mind thai 1he
book was forsl published in 1948).

.THE.R£.'5 f&gt;...

1114 Ford Ranger 4WD, tgll
1111 N... SS Orlglnol· 3111, 375. lutl ir1actocl V-8 engine, clvamo
leu Uator &amp; Tr1n1, whHJS. fender nar-. IUA ViHr.
$3.000. &amp;l...o2-75t2.
btd llntr, 814·841·2142 oltlf '
IIBg PonllaC Flrtblrd, 13000, 5:30pm.
01+247-2004.
1165 Ford F-150 414, 300 o Cy. ·
1175 Cadiloc, O.lvooblo, N - IInder, Vory Rollablt 114·44173311.
s-tna Colu.., Far Sollt, 2 Tlrea. Racllalor, S400, 114~41- 1111 Chovr Sllverodo -•4, 350
0247.
•••a~t!c, air, 136,000 mllet,.
· ucollonl condition, SliGO
0110,014-112-2001.
. •
Buc:ktte,

Equalllouolng Opporlllnftr

4•
Pass

24 MMcl

ahleld

E11l

By Phillip Alder
This column was written

...

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 WtaiWood Drlvo
from 1200 ID 1334. walk ., lhop
&amp; movie•. Call 114·441·2181.

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Still in the
memory

CLOTH I

Building
Supplies

310 Homes for Ssle

Pass
Pass

2•

111111•

21 AlriiM

Opening lead: • 7

Woodburnar 3o• Kindlewaod
$750, New Sell For $350, 814·
250-1114.
.

607 Second A""'""· 1 Bedroom,
Udlldos Paid, $295/Mo., 814-4-lt·
0573.

TIRED OF WEST VIRGINIA movln8 to Texas, mu11 ull my home
-1 Alii llr Sid 30+755-55BO

:PURTY DISCOUNT STORE
TABLE•

While wicker day bed lor aale.
CIII3CM-C175-5702.

$425/Mo.. $225 Oopool~ Utilltioo
Paid; 814-446·2129.

458 112 Second Avonuo, Gallipo-

NOW I! ALL 1 NEED IS A PURTY
. DISCOUNT STORE TABLE II

-FINALLY I! 1 GOT ME A

1•

3•
5•

Whllt dar btd w/new mallrtoL
Ttddr Boll youlh bod. Sun la11'9
an. noar. atand. Table model aun
lamp. 201b new prop•n• lank. 2
goldwlng back cholra. Vonltr
table wtbencn. LC Smith 16
11111111 oholgul\ 304-175-51152.

Bleck, brick, sewer pipea. windOOLFCLUBS:
ows, linlela, etc. Claude Winren.
Taylor Uadt Tommr Armour Eu:. Rio Grondo, OH Calf814·245·
Or Cullom Buill Clubs, lndlon ·
Crtok tloll81&lt;-245-5747.

lis, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliancn,

RA!dbl

......

35
vldal
37Make uplor

·vulnerable: Neither

For 5alt Or Tradt: 1g12 Old1111i- ;
bllt Flrenzo, 4 Doora, Auto, PI, ·

AnswettDPNwiD tl Pill$

14 Plly by 15 AbatriCibalng
16 WOOdWind
lnolrument
17 WWH • 18 Hlotorlc.l 1111111
period
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58 Pll'l al a plant
22C-•pert
24 Aug. houro
DOWN
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1 Exubononce
ftavortng
2. OlciiiUIP lnltl.
21 llllndled
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31 Llbyrlntll
32 Alilm
4s.ult-Mirle
33
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34 Oo
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TR/\ rJSPOFl TAT 101 I

550

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Round Boloo 01 Hor For Bola. UpiDn Uud Cora Rl. 12·3 111111 •
StorM In Born, Novor We~ Coli Soulh ol Leon, WV. Flnonclng
~1_14-...;24;..W;...:;.;";.;7·:.....-----I .. 304 15110111.
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Squoro belli .1.10 .. eus 1 720 1l'uckl foi"Ait
.... N. RL 2. 304-17WIIIO.
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RIVERSIO£ WHOLESALE
114oae·eta

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For Solt. ·- n .... Good Condldon, .... .
.
255·1158.
.

640 . Hay &amp; Grain . .

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livingston's basement water·
proofing, all baumant repi!lrl
done, free tlllmatea, lifetime
guarantM. 10yr1 on job e.:perl-.
once. 304·875-2145.

REAL ESTATE

•

StbildAndSold
'--YlNIIIonrl.
Trud!l, 414'1. EIC.

Alhtno U...lllcll Soltl: Sptlcal
. Foil F - Clll Soli: So..,.,
Nauambtt Ullh. 1 P.M. C.... Aoo
. . . lllrlng Friday At 4 P.ll.
Haullno Available, All Conalg,..
mento
11 .. 112-2322,

440-7444.

&amp;lledlcat Transcriptionist lor Or's
olfic:a in Pt Pleasant Send re·

tl-10·97

• 7
• AKJ 9
·t K Q 8 4

31 Venllll1led
408wlla
mounlaln
41 o.42 W,.... Looa
411 DtMiond, e.g.
411Roman3
48 Receive
IDW.-y
52 Tale al
actventuno
53 Dine
54 Actor Novello ·
55 Plelntlff
58 Arid

I

Tuesday, Nov. I I. 1997 · ·
In 1he year ahead. you could
move around more 1han usual. A
change ofresidc~ce is even possihle .
as well as .more shon-lenn travel.
Enjoy your journeys.
SCORPIO (Oel. 24-Nov. 22)
Today. you could feel resdess if you
do nol have a full agenda. Do n01 be
afraid 10 take on two projects simullaneously. Amo-Graph year-ahead
predictions make greal Christmas
slacking sluffers for all signs of lhe
zodiac. Mail $2 for each to AslroGraph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
I 7S8, Murray Hill Slalion, New
York. NY 10158. Be sure to stale 1he
zodiac signs you desire.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2~ - Dcc . t)lhCrs.
GEMINI (May 21-Juuc 20) Dn
21) Do not fe~l guilty wday if your
lhoughiS arc ccnlcred un wuys lo .nnt acccpl cundilions oday thai
· Slimulale personal gain. Evcryhody arcn'l to your advanlage . You have
gels u turn 10 he scllish.
1hc wherewithal tn mak: posilive
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . I~) changes; usc I his edge . ..
Your more enviahlc qualilics wi II be
CANCER (June 2I-July 22) In
cvidcnl I&lt;&gt; others 1&lt;&gt;&lt;lay. Make your partnership arrangcmenls t&gt;day. your
presence fell. and things will start lo cohort might be able lo 1o ccnaln
happen. Relish your pep.
things more effectively lhan you. but
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fch. I~) you' ll still be a team.
You could he fortunalc tod:ty in lhat
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You may
cvcrylhing will fall inln place with- nol be happy 1oday if your hands,
nul too much efforl on yi&gt;ur pan. Usc mind and hean aren't engaged in a
all lucky lurns In your advantage.
meaningful endeavor. Focus on
PISCES (Fell. 20-March 20) If 1hings that can funhcr your ambitious
you're planning something social intercsls.
today. be sure lo include a sensilivc
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpl. 22) Today
old friend. He or she will appreciale you 'II be well rccci vcd all around and
being remembered.
good things could come from soctal
. ARIES (March 21-April 19) In a endeavors. If you can't be ncar lhe
competilion today, you could be folks you love, love lhe folks you're
acknowledged as a shade or 1wo bet- ncar.
,
ter lhan your rival. If you win, do so
LIBRA (Sept 23·0cl. 23) Severwilh class and a gracious manner.
Ill loosely structured mailers can be
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) concluded 10 your salisfaction today.
Have fnilh in yourself and your abil- You arc aware of these priorities
ilies· loday, because il will serve lo already, so move on lhcm drly.
molivale you and inspire you lo help
\

You are cons1dered an e~pert if you know how lo avoid
MISTAKES

NOVEMBER10I

•

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