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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

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on Page 4
\

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THE 4TH LARGEST USED .
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ASK FOR STEvE NICHO.LS·

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fear. '

~.48,N0.115

~~

ASK FOR DAVE CARNELL .OR DAVID SETSER

2 Sections, 12' Pege1. 3S cenll
AGennett Co. New1p1per

Pomeroyddleport, Ohio, TuQsday, December 9, 1997
.
I ,,

411111, Ohio v.ttey Publishing Company

Meigs deer gun harVest up from 1996
'

Meigs Counly deer hunters killed 3.486 deer during the six-day deer gun
season which ended Saturday. according to an unoflictal count by Metgs
County Game Pro1ector Keith 0 . Wood.
.
The figure represents an increase over the 3.271 deer tagged dunng the
1996 deer gun season.
More than half of the deer taken. 2.018. were harvested during the first
two days of the season with the day-b~-day harvest reponed a.• foll?ws: Monday- 1.149; Tuesday- 869; Wednesday- 449: Thursday- 228: Fnday- 296:
Saturday- 495.
.
All deer legally killed were checked in at one of Meigs County's 14 check
stations, shown with total number of deer checked: S&amp;W Gun Shop,

Third
school
break-in
reported
USED TRUCKS. • USED TRUCKS

...........

~~.NilOWS,, P/lllCKS.

5 SPEED, AJR-:J ENG., P/WINOOWS,

~=:~ ~

•t8,577

-*15,771

w.. sn...........................

STOP BY
5
2
5
6

tsCIMT. . .

4X4, a OOOA, NJTQ, Alii, 350 ENOi.,
PfMNOOWS, LOADED EXtRA SHARP.

wu .................... _.,:...

lEW

TAHOES
3
SUBURBANS 16
4·RUNNERS
3
GRAND
2
CHEROKEES 1
4 CHEROKEES 1
2 WRANGLERS · 1

UTiliTY lOT
EXPLORERS .·
S-1 0 BLAZERS
JIMMYS
TRACKERS
BRONCO
PASSPORT
AMIGO

•

•

MattheW ' liilrrlnger, 7, wa1 ona ot many '
ReedeviiiHI'el children to meet Santa Claul
"and recalva 1 treat courtaay of the Olive Town·
ship Volunteer Fire l)epartment on Monday
night. He Ia the eon of EIOb and Joan Barringer.
Santa arrived at the Reedsville Community

¢hrll,tmll Tree
il flretlruck:
tift, located 'II the
Locke and Dam,
Ia decoratad and
annually by the
Riverview Garden
David Hannum, pastor
at the Church of Chrlat at Hickory Hills delivered 1 Christmas devotional.

Me,·gs Comml·ssl·one"'s re''l·ew
road .aban.d[J·onm.e,nr·proposaI
·

1 1

1 I

1r 1

notify adjacent property owners in .Ius of the association's restoration
these cases, because tn most cases. ctfons at the Chester Courthouse.
the owners arc no long~r known.
According to Powell. new winAlso to he abandoned is Rock dows for the building have been
House Road (Salisbury Township ordered and arc expected to arrive
Road T-2o:l). The abandonment nf before .Christmas. The windows
thai roadway will require the notiti- should be inslallcd soon after the new
calion of adjacent property owners. y,ear, she said.
who wtll reclaim ownership after the
Windows arc being "sold" for
abandonment is approved.
.
$500 each, which will help 10 defray
Eason also proposed the dedtca- part of the cosl of their installation .
tion of three new roadways in Salis- For 1hc donation. Powell said. donors
1
c
hury Townshtp: Bradford cmetcry will have their names placed on u
Road. Rocksprings Cemetery Road, plaque recognizing their contribution.
and Me ires Ro&lt;td.
Powell rcqueslcd that the comPublic hearings and inspeclions of missmners set aside $20.000 from lbe
these proposed vacations and dedi- 1998 budget appropriation' to help
cations will he set by lhc board after meet the need of$44.000 required to
further (Onsuhation with Euson.
complete the restoration of the buildMary Powell . speaking on behalf ing. which is owned by the county.
·
1 h ld
·
ol'thcChcs.·tcr/Shudc Hislorical Asso- The association a so o s vunous
cialion. presented 1hc -.:ornmis~ioncrs
fund raising uctivitics lU bclp raise the
wilh a summary of lhc financml stuContinued on page 3
·

Zealey sworn in
as U.S. attorney

'25,330

shot at a decoy deer, and two for transporting loaded firearms in a motorvehicle. Four citations were for untaggcd deer und other citations issued for
hunting after hours, lakin~ lwo antlered deer and stream littering.
A lwo-day antlcrless deer gun season will be held Friday and Saturday
in 58 Ohio counties including Meigs and Galli a counties .
Hunters in G'\llia County tagged 3.557 deor last week compared to 3.313
in 1996.
•
Hunter charged
ZANESVILLE - A humcr face s more charge:&lt; after the motorist he
allegedly shot died lhis weekend. th e Muskingum Counly Sheriff's Oflicc
said.
Brian Mahle. 28. of Zanesville , was charged Monday with invnlunlary ·
manslaughter with gun specifications in the death of Belly Hankinson, 73,
of Muskingum County. Ms. Hankinson was shot while driving Thursday
afternoon and died Saturday morning .

Sheets reappointed to
State Board of Education

else was reponed missingNmhing
.
in g. La&lt;~ week the school's P'ID held
ils Sanla Shop fund raiser at the
schooi.Ncighborsrcponcdsccingor
hearing nothing t1t lhe school during I 1
;the weekend with the exception of
·basketball game" held lhcrc Friday By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Naws Steff
:and Saturday nights.
· Lasl·wcck, classes at Meigs High
The dedication and abandonment
School were canceled l&lt;&gt;llowing a of several township roads was begun
breaking and enlcring there.
when the Meigs County CommisThe building was entered by pry- sioncrs met in regular session on
ing open lhc kitchen door. according Monday.
·
to Meigs ~ounly Sheriff James M.
County Engineer Robert Eason
Soulsby. The inlruders hrokc the and David Spencer of the Meigs
glass and entered the office in· the Counly Highway Departmcnl met
kitchen area. and broke window glass with the board to propose the abandonmenl of ponions of several roads
in other doors in order to gain entry.
Soulsby said thai the ·burglars • which arc no longer used hccause of
also aucmpted to gain entry inlo the . thi; improvement of stale highways.
concession stand through the sliding
According to Eason. lhe proposed
&lt;th,indonmcnts will not affect travel in
doors there ·and damaged vending
any way. because the sections arc no
machines.
The gltiss in the main office door lon~cr in usc. and in some cases. arc
nol~vcn rC(U11 ni1.ahlc as roadways . A
was also knvckcd out and a desk rano
complete list of the roadway sed ions
sucked. Soulsby said that principal
will be advertised as a legal notic·c in
Fenton Taylor reported the I heft of an
undisclosed amount of cash.
The Daily ~cntincl .
,
Eastern High School sullcrcd simProsecuting Attorney John Lcntcs
. h n~ncd that it was nut ncccsst~ry tn
ilar damage in November, at whIC
lime computers and window glass
·were broken and a small amount of
cash stolen.
Soulsby has asked that anyone
with infonnation about the incidents
CINCINNATI (AP) - Sharon
to contact his office. The shcritrs Zcalcy has been sworn in as U.S.
dcpanmcnt and the Bureau ~ Crim- attorney for southern Ohio.
inal Investigation arc continuing thci'r
The fonncr lrial attorney, assistant
investigation into the hrcak~ ins.
U.S . attorney and deputy Ohio atlorncy general will be responsible for
managing all federal prosecutions
and civil cases involving the federal
government for the southern lwothirds of Ohio. including Cincinnati,
Columbus ;md Dayton,
She is the tirst woman and lhc first
hlack to S!!fVC in the post. Tho U.S.
auorncy for norlhern Ohio also is a

z

tsCIIV.W._

,------Meets Santa-----.

Thieves this weekend targeted
Riverview Elementary School near ·
Reedsville in the third school breakin reccnl weeks.
Eastern Local · School District
Superintendent Deryl Well reported
the break-in early Monday morning
after head teacher Cindy Chadwell
unlocked the building and found
windows busted, according lo a
Meigs County Sherifrs Depanmcnt
report.
Classes at the school were canceled Monday.
Classrooms and the office were
entered, tbc report 'st~tcd.. A cash bo•
containing a Mllull amouni'lof cash
was &lt;~olen from lhe !)fficc.
Entrance was made through double doors ' on the nonh side of the
building. The thief or thieves
knocked the glass out of the door,
reached in ~nd unlocked it, the repon .
said . The incidcnl occurred between
Saturday evening and Monday morn -

•

Pomeroy - 109; Twin Oaks Convenience Store, Five Points - 173; Baum
Lumber, Chester .. 383; Foiked .Run Slate Park, Reedsville- 168; By The
Way Store. Langsville- 115; Chancey's Food Man, Syracuse .. 68; O'Dell's
True Value, Pomeroy - 186: Eber's Citgo, Racine - 438; Jeffs Carryout,
Pomeroy - 217: Hawk's 76, Tuppers Plains- 588; Sun Fun Pennzoil, Racine
.. 72; Joe's Country Market, Rutland - 532; Pick-n-Shovcl Grocery; Salem
Ccnlcr .. 31-7: Karen's Greenhouse, Ponland .. 120.
Wood said three hunting fatalities were reponed statewide wilh no 1"\'al
injuries reponed .
He reponed issuing 20 citations, with nine of those being for hunting on
privmc propeny wilhout pennission. Two cilations were issued 10 people who

degree from Capital University. She
Pomeroy alloris currently practicing l~w in the
ney
• Jennifer
finn of Lillie, Sheets and Warner.
. Sheets has been
Aclivc in communily affairs, she
reappoinled 10 the
· serves on the Pleasant :Valley HospiSlate Board of
tal Foundalion Board, the Meigs
Education for a
County
Council on Aging Board of
tenn ending Dec .
Trustees, is treasurer of the Meigs
31.2002.
County Community Improvement
now
Sheets,
Corporation, sccrclllry/trcasurcr of
serving as board
the Meigs County Bar Association.
SHEETS
president, was one
and a member of the Middlcponof four receiving
rcappoinlmcnts 10 the hoard Tues- Pomcroy Rotary Club and lhe Meigs
day by Gov. George V. Voinovich . County Chamber of Commerce, .
Sheets served on the Meigs Local
The others were Richard Baker of
Hollansburg, Dwighl Hibbard of Board of Education from 1975 to
Cincinnati. and Joseph D. Roman of 1978.
The family resides on a fann ncar
Fairview Park.
Appointed to the hoard in Augu&lt;t Harrisonville. Sheets' hushand, lim.
__ IWS •. Sheets wa1 elcclcd prcsidcn\ · is a tc:u;hcr at Meigs liigh School.
und they huv'c three sons. Jared and
in.Junuary. ror a two .ycar term.
Aaron
arc both enrolled in lhe Ohio
She is a Pomeroy High School
Stale
University.
School of Mcdi ·
graduate, received her B.S. and M.S.
degrees ·in home economics from cine . Their youngest &gt;on. Adam . is a
Ohio Stale University. and her luw student al Ohio Univcr;ity.

ReedsviUe business
woman is targeted ·in
Monday night robbe.r y
The Reedsville community was
the subjecl of a manhunt following
the armed robbery of a residence
there Monday shonly after S p.m.
Klare Kimes , an employee at
Reed 's Country Slorc in Reedsville .
had Just delivered the daily receipts
to store owner Phyllis Reed at Reed 's
home when a man wearing a darkcolored jacket &lt;ir sweatshirt and a
dark ski mask. c..-:1rrying n long-harrcllcd revolver. approat:hcd and

demanded the money. accordmg to a
Meigs Counly Shcrifl's Department
report .
When Reed pushed the robhcr's
hand away. he then sprayed pepper
spray in her eyes. grahhcd lh..:: money and ran off. Cash. checks. fond

_ _ _ _ ..J

••

...

with several other nllit::crs. arrived
and searched lhc area with the a~ s i s­

tancc of the Ravenswood. W.Va ..
Police Department which responded
with ils polit e l.log . In addition , sev-

eral local residents hdped in the•
scan:h. to no avaii.
The suspect wa.~ dcsnihcd as

about 5-fcct. 5-inchcs·lall with a
stocky huild wcming a dark jacket
and ski nwsk .

Columhus prcscrvatl(mists wanted
COLUMBUS (AP) - Demolition
at the old Ohio Pcnitcnliary began . to keep the five remaining huild1ngs
hours after a judge rcjccicd a last- from being torn down. They "' ~cd
minute effon to spare the buildings. FrJnklin County Municipal Judge
Richard Pfeiffer for a temporary
restraining nrdcr to hlnck the domolition.
But Pfcillcr rejected the rcque, t,
saying the City Council operated
legally.
Demolition bc.gan around 6 p.m.
Monday.
An arena for Columhu..; ' NHL
expansi on team i' 10 he hu1h ncar lhe
"'c of tbe old prison. The lund will
he cleared tn make room fur the

building and arena parking.

One-vehicle
accident reported

AFTERMATH OF AN ACCIDENT- An emer·
gency worket vlewa the damage to a pickup
truck lhttl eraihed Moncllty on Old State Route
7 at Five Polnta lind aent Ita driver to a Columbua hotpltal. The Gallll Melga Poet of the State
Highway Pllrol aald Jeffery . C. Roll, ~&amp;.
Lucaavllle, waa aouthbound 1111r the lntaraection with. Sallabury Townahip Road 202 (John-

.

)

•

the rerun .
Kime s heard the rohhcr yelling t"
Reed and started to run O\lcr to assist
her when he di sappeared into the
darkness. lhc report stated.
Shcrill' James M. Snulshy, along

Ohio Pen demolition underway

woman .

Judge Nalhaniell,t Jones, a senior
judge for the 6th U.S. Circuit Coun
of Appeals. administered the oath of
office for Ms. Zcaley on Monday.
Ms. Zcaley. 38, replaces Edmund
A. Sargus Jr., who became a federal
judge last year. The U.S. Senate confinned her nomination in September. '
A nalivc of St. Paul, Minn .. she
received her undergr11duate degree
from Xavier University in New
Orleans and her law degree from 1hc
University of Cincinnati .

stamps and WIC coupons were
among the items stolen. a~.:~.:on.ling to

(

eon) 1111:10 a.m. when the vehicle went off the
right side ol the road and into a ditch, end
atruck an ernblnkment. Roll we• transported
by MedFIIght to Grant Medical Center, but his
· condition w.. unavailable bttfore prasstlme
today. An lnveetlgation Is continuing Into the
accident, the patrol uid,

•

No injuries were reported follow;ng a one-vehicle accident on Ball
Run Road ncar Peach Fork Road- in
Bedford Township Monday around
9:54 a.ni.
Trinia L Bachtel, 26, Pomeroy.
was eastbound when the 1989 Ford
Ranger pickup truck she was driving.
slid on a patch of tee. tipped over and
came to rest on its lOp olf the stdc of
the road, according to a Meigs Counly Sherifrs Department report.
The vehicle was disabled in the
incidenl and no cilations were issued.
,- ......

-

�Tuee~y.~ber9,1997

·c ommentarr
••

w

.-

Accu~

.

.

in one of
Src•en AflerJood of lhe highly
the governrespeclid Fedention of American
ment's most
, Scientists,. notes thai a "conservesecretive
live" estimate holds thai there are
agencies?
currently more than I billion pages
Why, a 'reply
of historically valuable documents
to the rest of
thai are more than a quarter-century
his long-forold, yet which are still waiting to be
gotten FOIA
declassified. This despite a directive
request.
from the Clinton administration that
After sevall classified documents created
eral years, Moller &amp; Andereon longer than 2S years ago be
the
NSC
re•iewed for declassification.
office had finally gotten around to
1'\ftergood told us there are
ruling on the balance of his request. "probably an additional couple of
But that wasn't much comfon to billion" documents . -- including
Lake. Nearly every document more recent ones -- that are classi·
request he had made was denied by lied, e•en though many of them
the agency.
hkely have no national security
Partly in jest, Lake exercised his implications.
right to appeal the NSC's denial. As
Uncle Sam's obs~ssion with
Lake related to a panel of journalists secrecy has become ali expensive
and researchers last week, he was proposition. The federal government
asked to state the grounds of his spends an estimated $5.6 billion per
appeal.
year keeping its secrets. That
"You have to because you work includes the cost of conducting
for me," Lake said. Unfortunately. security clearances, plus the cost of
that wasn't good enough. Lake was actual security details whose job it is
denied again.
lo make sure the secrets don 't get
Lake's delay and difficulty nava- stolen.
gating the federal government's
To be sure. the Clinton adminis-·
classaficallon system is hardly out of ' !ration has made some progress in
the ordinary -- and at's no joking shedding the veil of secrecy that
matter.
cloaks much of the federal govern,-----------------·- ---------+_.:._____·_, mcnt's
work.
While
there arc
many
lcgitimale reasons for
classification ·such as
guanding
military
secrets or
protect,
·
ing ~he
identity
of intelligence
opemtives
millions
of docu·
ments are
classified

-·or

brcMd,..,.

tho....,.,.,..

State inspecting
old fire towers

The Oh10 Dcparunenl of Naaural Resources is mspecting seven fare towers scaucred around OhiO's forests to see af they still are safe enough 10 sup-·
port people.
The towers. daung to the 1920s, used to be staffed by department spotters but no longer arc '" usc The department now rehcs and aircraft and the
public to repon fires
.
.
The towers could be used as a draw for hikers or famahes mtere ~lcd man
unusual picnic ij)Ot, said Jerry Reed, the mspecuon project manager ..
The state Controlling Board last week approved $149,350 for the mspection of the seven towers, plus nine ODNR radio towers that still are in use.
The fire towers, which range from ISO feet to I00 feet tall, are an the Moha:
can, liocking, Blue Rock, Scioto Trail, Tar Hollow, Shawnee and Zaleski
state forests.
The towers are made of steel, wath wooden steps and landings leading up
to glass-endoscd "cab" at the top. The cabs arc closed to the public because
only one or two people can fit inside, saad Ed Parmer, a program manager
wath ODNR 's Division of Forestry.
The department wants to test the mtegnty of the bolts, steps and landings
The landmgs arc perfect for picnics and other uses, Parmer saad.
"We've had several occasaons were people have gotten marned on them.
especaally the tower at Mohican "
When the towers were bualt, much of the forests had been harvested for
puildings, strip mmes and other uses. ·
;,. "Oh 10 dunng that era must have been completely deforested," Reed said.
~~ Whale the forests grew up around the towers, spotters were needed to
-~ccp fires under control. They were used until the 1970s, when the depan:fncnt ocemed them unnecessary because of new spotting and lirelighting
4echniques, Parmer said.
~; The department tracks lircs in Ohio's heavily forested southern and
lloutheasaern counues. About I ,000 fares destroy a total of S,OOO acres annu~llly. Panncr sa irl
;; The pubhc is allowed in the towers, but the mspecuons are necessary
•because of the towers' age.
:: The inspections should be completed in a few months. then the depart: mcm will detcrmme whether to keep them ope~ to the pubhc. he snod.
:·. "They do make a good vantage point You c-al&gt; see over the lop of the
' whole forest," Parmer said.
•,

•~~·----------~----------~·------------~--------.---""1
u'

•••
•

'

~

Barry's World

HI "'PS ·.
lE'fS PLA"t Wf:APOWS
I

INSfi.C.r&lt;&gt;&amp;S. I'VE \-\lDPEN
SAR,I"l, ANT\-\~. \AO&gt;&lt;tN,
VX. 601lJL.\N\.lM, R\C.t~ A~t&gt;
SMA\..\.f'oX. N'OW, VOO ~'(
To riNt&gt; rr.

\

A11'HE
U.N.
~

.

each year for the simple reason thai
to release them publicly would
cause embiiiTIIlsmcnt 10 the authors:
In a final insult, Lake might con~
sider himself lucky to have sent his
FOIA request wben he did. Had the
same request been sent today, the
NSC would qave the legal 'righl to
file his request in the garbage can. In
1995, a federal coun ruled that the
NSC -- since it serves under the
White House ·- is not a full-fledged
federal agency, and thus not subject
to the FOIA.
'
POWER STRUGGLE -- The
high-stakes · lobbying war over
deregulating the electricity industry
has spawned some rather silly
rhetoric.
As big utilities battle .it out for
their share of this pie, which is
wonh $200 billion annually, man,)''
have formed loose-knit "coalitions"
to lobby their cause. One of these.
Cita~ns for State Power, is fund~
in pan by big utilities that fear wh~_l
deregulation would do to thear bottom line. But rather than altacking
their direct competators -- who aa;c
lobbying in favor of deregulation -the group recently set us saghts on
one of the smallest players in the
field: renewable energy providers.
An ad titled "Flower Power, ..
which ran in several Washingtonarea puhlications, charges thai
"many Americans believe renewable energy is cnvaronmenlally
benign. It's not!"
.
Curious; we called conservative
activist Craig Shirley, the frontman
for CSP, to ask what asn 't bemgn
about wind energy, for example. It
seems the trouble with wind enerzy
is that birds have been known to gel
killed when they get stuck .in tbc
blades of the windmills. Kind of lil$.e
the thousands of birds that died
when the Exxon Valdez spilled its
cargo into Alaska's Prince William
Sound a few years back.
Says an official at Americans ~or
Clean Energy, . a renewables trade
association: "There are some w"o
are always going to play in the g~t. ter."
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

.than 2S .Y~ after hi_s untimel.Y
death he s stall the Elvas of preSI·
dents.
·
Maybe that's ":hy th~rc have
been so many negauve responses to
Seymour Hersh'S new book, "1be
Dark Side of Camelot." There's not
much in the book that hasn't been
mentioned before, but he put all the
bad stuff between two convenient
covers-- and named his sources.
It seems to me pretty indisputable·
now that President Kennedy was
indeed a bimbo-wrangling, drugaddicted, self-absorbed, unhealthy,
mobbed-up lazy fool, with an overfondness for attempted political
assassinations.
(Mr. Hersh has said in interviews
that he thought Lee Harvey Oswald .
acted alone. but you may come away
from his book believing that if a
cabal of fed-up CIA agents, Cubans
of every political stripe and the
Mafia had killed the president. you
could hardly blame them .)
But JFK's seedy side has actually
enhanced hiS glamour! More than a
mere president, he's now a rascal, a
rogue, a Rat Pack wannabe, a Vegas
high roller. Maybe this is why
rumors of President Clinaon's philandering haven 'I done much dam·
age to his populanty. Maybe he
started the rumors himself to create
the illusion or a charisma he docs
not possess.
In reality, Clinton's idea of a

good time is to curl up_with a polic.y,
report. (Sexy') For mstancc, has
administration calls his Chma stnllc,gy. "constructive engagement,"
whach means (I thmk): Get the Peopic's Republic of China hoodlums In
buy our stuff, and only scold them as
we're making change The words
"constructive engagement" arc llfll
the dashing words of a roguo.
They're lhe words of a middle rna,-.
agcr at a success scmonar.
·;
•'
For all our worry about "doversity," what we really want in a for,eigner is a shck dude who can sar
nothing 10 unaccented Enghsh (Ne.ntaRyahu, for instance) and doesn:a
look awkward on camera. Not like
those iconoclasts al ' Tiananmcn
Square The idea! Trymg to St\)p
tanks with their bodies' They shoulil
have been honing their public relataons skills They should have be~n
saving up for Hong Kong suus
They should have engaged constnidIavely. They should have gone to
Vegas.
(To receive a complimentary Ian
Shoalcs newsletter, call 1-800-91!9DUCK or write Duck's Breath, 408
Broad St., Nevada City, CA 95959.)
Ian Shoales is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterpri~
Association.

h
•
t
'
•
0 day In Is Ory
By The AIIOCieted Pres•
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 9; the 343rd day of 1997. Thcre,arc 22 days left
in the year. . . . .
Today's Haghhght 10 Hastory:
.
..
On Dec. 9. I 854, Alfred, Lord Tennyson s poem. The Charge of the
Light Brigade," was publoshcd on England.
On this date:
In 1608. English poe! John Molton was horn 10 London.
. .
ln 1907, Chnstmas seals went on sale for the farst umc. at the Wllmmgton. Del.. post office. Proceeds went to fight tuberculosis.
.
In 1940, Brnash troops opened thear first major offcnsave 10 Nonh Atnca
during World War II
In 1941. Chona declared war on Japgn. 9_crmany ~?d Italy.
.
In 1942. the Aram Khachatunan ballet Gayane, featunng the surg10g
·:Saber Dance. " was farst performed by the Karov Ballet. .
.
In 1958, Roben H.W. Welch J&lt;. and II other men met 10 lndaanaP'l115 to
form the anu-Communost John Barch Socoety.
.
.
In 1965, Nakola1 V. Podgomy replaced Anastas I. Makoyan as presadent
of the Presadaum of the Supreme Sovoct
. .
. .
In 1979, Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen, the rehgaous broadcaster, doed on
New York Cary at age 84.
.
In 199S, Rep. Kwcoso Mfumc, D-Md. wa~ cho~n lo head the N.AACP..
Ten years ago. On the second day of thear White House summn, Presaderit Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev grappled wnh daiTer·
cnces over Afghanastan and cutbacks m long-range nuclear arms.

..

story of the seven
paign writing churches to ask for
little white babies
help. We got no response," Lynda
born in Iowa. The
Bugg of Sastcrs in Touch told the
intense attention
Washmgton Post. Indeed, it was
the McCaughey
only after thas dosparity was brought
septuplets have
to light that the Thompsons started
· rccei ved -- the
to rcccavc comparable assistance .
nightly updates
One might argue that it was not
on thear progress,
race that worked against the Thompthe outpounng of
sons. hut rather the simple fact that
generosity from
Eckel
they didn 't break a~y records. The
corporate America
firsl scl of surviving American sex-- says a lot about the two-tiered tuplets was born in 1993, and smcc
nature of American compassion.
then two others have come mto the
Because in Washington last May world. But these babac• -- the scco,nd
there was another mitacle -- one that and third sets of sextuplets ·- also
occurred without the aid of expen- enjoyed a hagh amount·of commumsive fertility drugs. A group of sextu- ty and corporate largess. The Haynplets was born to an African-Ameri- er se.auplcts. horn m 1996, were the
can couple. The parents, Linden and fortunate recipacnls of a Ford van,
Jaqueline Thompson, saw a brief bit free baby formula, a year's supply of
of media attentiOn after the babies free diapers, and a year and a half's
were born, but it quickly faded 1be worth of Beech-Nut baby food . The
Thompsons were then left to raise: Bonicllo sextuplets, born last March,
their five babies (one was stillborn) prompted the donation of a minivan,
in their small apartment, on the,. diapers and a free college education
income from' Linden Thompson's for the brood.
·
two jObs. A group called Sisters in
But pravare industry did not see
Touch tned to generate donations for public-relations opportunity in the
rhe family, but with linle success.
Thompsons. Just as my editor did
"We had a letter-writing cam- not think that her magazine's readers

a

•

Jeffrey Stephen Werry

•••
••

INO..

•lcolumbUsl46•

'

I

Today's weather forecast
Ohio
Tonight...Rain. Lows in the upper
~Os. East wind 10 mph shiftmg to the
south. Chance of rain 90 percent.
Wcdncsday... Rain likely. Highs
45 to SO. Chanct of rain 70 percent.
Extended fom:ast
Wednesday night. .. Rain or snow
likely. No snow accumulation eKpectcd. Lows frorn the upper 20s to Ihc

lower 30s.
Thursday... Mostly cloudy. Highs
m the lower 40s
Fnday... Mostly cloudy. Lows in
the upper 20s and highs,m the l.owcr
40s.
Saturday.. Partly cloudy. Lows in
the upper 20s and highs in the upper
40s.

COLUMBUS (AP) - IndianaOhio direct hog prites at selected
buying points Tuesday as provided by
the U.S. Department of Agnculture
Market News:
Barrows and gaits: mostly 50 cents
lower; demand hght to moderate on
a modemte movement
U.S. 1-2, 230-2150 lbs. country
points41.50-43.00, few43.50: plants
43.00-44.00. few 44.50.
U.S. 2-3, 230-260 lbs. 37.5041.50; 210-230 lbs. 34 50-37.50.
Sows: mostly steady.

. ;-:. . .Obituary

~charles

(

.

Bailey Edwards

.

'

.

According to Bolin, $1.3-million
has been collecicd Ihrough the program which has n~t been approprialcd for the reclamation work $3.2
million has been spunl on those proJCCts .
In Ohao alone, Bolin said, 75.000
acres of abandoned slrirt mines
rcmam unrcclaamcd .
"The lund is not bc10g used for
what 11 was started li&gt;r." Bnhn smd.
The commissioners approved I he
appropnauon of $2.656.50. pending
certification by the budget commission. tn the hudgct of the Meigs
County Board of Electaons. The
amount represents stale reimbursement for printmg and publication
costs lor the state issues on the

Novcmhcr hallol.

•
The board also approved the fol·
lowmg transfers of funds : $46,917.99
and $3.8~6.66. Emergency Scrvaccs:
$1.040 71. and County Court:
$345.99. Clerk of Courts.
The commissioners als'o approved
payment of bills in the amount of
$~74.~58.61, with 87 cntnes.
Present were coR) missioners Janet
Howard. Jefl'rcy lllOrnton and Fred
Hoflman. and Clerk Gloria Klocs ,

The Daily Sentinel
Published every afiCf'tiOOII, M onday through

Ohlfl Valky Puhhshtn,: Company/Ganntll Co.,
Pomeroy. Ohto 4~769, Ph 992·21!ih Stcond

class po111KC jlltd at Pomeroy. Ohio
Mflllllrrl The Aswc::mted Prcss. amlthc Ohto
Newspaper ASIC'IetaUon
POSTMASTER; Send address

cnrre~;ttuns

lu

The Datly Scn1lna:l, Ill Cnur1 St .. Pomeroy,
Ohio 4~7(,9

8Ua5CRIPTION RATES
ly C1nifr or Motor Ruulr

a.- Week

•.• . . ..... • • ..

' .....

' JJ (Ill

Morn h...... • • , ......... .. .... ..... SM 70
OM Ytar ... ....... .. .................. $1H4 UU
O~~e

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Da1ly . .....

.. .....

. ........ ..... 3~ Ccntt

Suhtcr1~fS no1 dea~r•na to pay 1M c11rt1tt may
rem11 •n adv•nct dlrttl to The Da•ly Sentinel
t'ln •three, tilt or 12 mooU.1 baaiiJ Crtdit wdl he

•Jivcn carrtcr each week
No sublr:nplion by mall permlucd in 1teU
•WIM:rc bome canler ICI"'Ii« 1111111U1bk

Mllsher reteMI the nptto •djull ratet dur·
' hll lbc tublct~pUon period Sublcr.pll~n 11te
tfJMpt nuy be 1mphmcnttd .tO- c:han11n1 the
WraiH1t1 or the IJI.IbKriplion.

.

MAILSUISCRimONS

luldtM•c....,
ll..,.cks .......... ......•.............. ...127 311
:1&lt;1 Wcckt.. .....•. ...... .......•..... ......• .... m HZ
iZ Weeks .................. ..........................11113.5&lt;1

--MclpCooolj'

I~W..ks ............................... $29.25
111 Weeks. ....... ... ... • .. ... .. . .... $5&lt;1.1111
J2 W..ks ··•···· ... . . ..... . .....•• ....$1119.72

DONATION PRESENTED- The United
locel5311
at the Phillip Sporn Plant hll donated
to the Gellla Melp
Community Action Agency's Title XX program, which will uaelhe
fundi to aaelat 33 lndlvlduela wllh Christmll glfll end other ho'ldey expenditures. The program oflara parent education, family
stability and parllntlng akllls, and nutrition and budgeting ecfu.
cation. The check wea presented to Susie C11to, right, by RIOk
Gilmore and Stava Kinzel of the union.

'I

U.S 1-3 300-400 lbs. 30.00-32.00,
few at 29.00; 400-500 lbs. 32.0034.00, 500-600 lbs. 34.00-36 00, few
over 600 lbs. 37.00.
Boars: 29.00-31.00, few 32.00.
Estimated rcccapts: 33,000.
Prices from Producers
Livesloek Association:
Hog market trend forTu~sday : 50
cents lower.
Summary of Monday's auctions at
Hallsboro and Creston·
Hogs: 1.00 )ower
Butcher hogs 41 00-44.25.

Land transfers recorded

The followmg land transfers were
recorded recently in the office of
Meigs County Recmder Emmogene
Hamilton :
Deed, Laurence Yeaugcr to Gordon K. Amsbary, Sahstiury;
Deed, Lenna M. Chase, Frances
M. and Roben E. Johnson, LoUJs R
and Virginia A. Conner. Joan Lorenc
and George Nance. Bedford:
Deed. Charles T and Landa K.
Schoeppner to JeffWcstcnhargcr and
Ginger Schmalcnbcrg, Bedford,
3.4325 acres;
Deed, G. Bruce Teaford and
Walliam and Sharlcy Arthur,
announced today.
Pomeroy:
Deed, Chnsly Kay and Walbur
Christmas program planned
Hillside Baptast Church located on Leo Ward Sr. to W1lhur Leo Ward Sr.
State Route 143, just off Route 7, and Marcus Levi Ward. Rutland
Pomeroy, will have its Christmas Pro- tracts ;
Right of way. Tuppers Plams
gram. Dec. 21. 10 a.m . All Sunday
School classes will be participating. Regaonal Sewer District 10 Tuppers
AI II a.m and 6 p.m. the young adult l&gt;lains-Chester Water Distract.
class Will present "Chnstmas Come Orange. 56 345 acres:
Right of way. TPRSD 10 TPCWD,
to Bethlehem. Dr. James R. Acree,
Orange.
3,603.H7 square feet:
pastor, mvltcs public . .
Right of way. TPRSD to TPCWD.
Ollve, 2.500 square feet;
Senites set
Rigl)t of way. Mark Russell to
The Faith Full Gospel Church at
TPCWD,
Lebanon. 3.776 acres;
Long Bottom will have special serRight
of way, Thomas J and
vices Fnday, 7 p.m. The Williams
Famaly, Lisa and Ted, will be the Su1.annc Kabhlc to TPCWD. Chester.
singers. Fellowship will follow. Pub- 24 acres;
Right of way. Brian A. and Moshe invated by Steve Reed, pastor.
chclle L. Beeler tu TPCWD. Chester.
.763 acres;
Post to meet
Right of way. Bnan A. and MasThe Tuppers Plains VFW Post
chelle L. Beeler In TPCWD. Chesler,
9053 , will meet Thursday, 7:30p.m.
1.60 and 2 acres;
Refreshments, 6:30p.m .
Deed, Mabel Michael to Patricia
Arnold, Evcreu Junior Machacl,
Paula Gaul and John Michael, Salis·
bury parcels:
Deed, Helen J. Green to Pamela
I 49 p.m., state Route 681,
Reedsville, Judy Puckcu, Veterans Steele, Olive tracts:
Deed, Burl and Bonmc Putnam,
Memonal Hospital:
9·18 p.m .. Mount Ohvc Road, Burl and Bonnie Putman to Burl
Long Bottom, Elizabeth Barloe, Leon Putman Jr., Ohve;
VMH.
Deed, Wilma J. Buckley 10 RayREEDSVILLE
mond and Kimberly S. Martinez,
8:19p.m., Rye Road, Sue Powell, Meags parcels;
St. Joseph's Hospital. ·
Deed, Bonmc A. and Jeffrey J.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Unruh, Sandra R. and James A. Car4.36 p.m , slate Route 7, Rubal nahan 10 Charles R. and Belle J.
Caldwell. HMC.
Sloane, Sutton;
Deed, Faccmycr Lumber Company, Faccmycr Salmons Lumber to
· George K. and Theresa M. Churc,h.
wuh permission, $30 plu,; costs:

Stocks
Am Ele Power .............. :........49'!.
Akzo ......................................86'4
AmrTech .................................76
Aahland 011 ........................... 47~

ATI:T.....................................58'1.
Bank Ona .............................. &amp;&amp;~.
Bob Evana ............................ 21 ~.

Borg-Warner ..................,...... 4$~
Champion ............................. 18'!.

5,.

(;harm Shpa ...........................
City Holdlng ............................41
Federal Mogul ....................... 40~
Gsnneu ....................... ,.. .-.....59~.
Goodyear .............................&amp;s.,.

Kmart ..................................... 12~

Kroger ...................................36'.1.
Landa End ...........................37"1.
Limited ................................. 25'1.
Oak Hill Fin I ............................ 22
ova .........................................35
One Valley ............................. 40'-'
Peoples ..................... .............. 42
.
Pr~ Finl ...............................
25 ''Ia
Rockwell ......., .......................49~.
RDIShell ................................ 53"1.
se.ra ........:...........................46\1..
Shoney'a ...............................3"Star Bank .............................sn.
Wandy'a ................................23'4
Worthington .........................17'1.
-•-•-

I

Stock raporta ara the 10:30
a.m. quoiaa provld1d by Advaat
of GllllpoiiL

CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:45 · a.m .. Overbrook Nursing
Center, Middleport. Maxine Owens,
Holzer Medical Center;
10:02 a.m.. motor-vchaclc accident
on Old State Route 7, Five Points.
Charles J. Rose, treated at the scene.
pending transport to Grant Medical
Center via hchcoptcr ambulance,
Pomeroy squad and volunteer fire
department assisted;

County Court cases settled
The following cases wcrc.seulcd
recently 10 the Meigs County Coun
of Judge Patrick H. O'Brien
Fined were : Gerold S. Eblin,
Pomeroy, failure 10 control, $20 plus
costs; Alice J. Kaut1. Pomeroy,
speed. $30 plus costs, James F. Reed ,
Com mg. speed. $30 plus costs; David
M. Lamhen. Rutland. assured clear
distance. $30 plus costs: David A.
Park, Pomeroy. p0sscssaon, $)0 plu&gt;
costs; Danny W: Rohmson, Middleport, dasorderly while antoxicated,
$100 suspended w $25 plus costs. sax
months probata on: Harold W. Brooks,
Rutland, dnving under suspensiOn,
$100 plus costs. 10 days Jail suspended to thn.''c days , one year probauon: I ailurc to dasplay valid plates.
$10 plus costs: Karen Workman,
Alhany. passing bad checks. $25
plus costs. rcstllullon ordered:
Edmund Gollium. Pomero~ . $30
plus costs. speed: seal belt. $25 plus
costs: Guy Bmg. Middleport. assault.
$500 plus costs, SIX months jail suspended to 30 days. two years probation. rcsaituuon . Brian K. Harris.
Albany. overload, $I 26 plus costs;
Wa!lla!ll. R. Capehart Ill, Pomeroy,
scat belt. $25 plus costs, Terry
Romanc. Maddlcpor1. drivang under
the mflucncc, $850 plus costs, 30
days jaal suspended to 10 days, one
year OL suspcnsao~. 90-day vehicle
ammobahzauon, one year probataon:
Robert Russell, Long BoCtom, reckless operation. $100 plus costs; seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Gary L King Jr.,
Middleport, scat belt. $25 plus cosos;
Donald L. Waller, Columbus, hunung

Donald E. CundaiT, Ashville, hunting without permission, $30 plus
costs; Kandy S Hammack, Clifton,
W.Va., passmg bad checks. $25 plus
costs, rcsuauuon; Danny Robmson.
Maddlcport. $50 plus costs, 10 days
Jai I suspended to one day, one year
probation; Chnsty S. McWilliams,
Nelsonvallc, scat belt, $15 plus costs:
Joseph M. Pitre, Nelsonvallc, no
operator's license, $150 plus costs,
live days ,Jail and $75 suspended if
valid OL presented wathm 60 days.
one year probation; scat \Jolt. $25 plus
costs; Kresha A Crawley, Racone ,
theft, 30 days jail suspended to 80
hours community service, $100 plus
costs, awo years probataon;
•

We Give M•ture
Drivers, Home
Owners •nd
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.
Our statrstics show that mature
drivers and home owners have
tewer and tess cosily losses
than other age groups. So it's
only fair to charge you less lor
your insurance. Insure your
home and car with us and save
even more with our special
mulli-D&lt;IIicv discounts.

•

Oh vc parcel;
·
Deed, Tina Justus, 'Tina Justice:
Ronald J. Justus. Ronald J. Justice te
John W. and Belinda K Dean, Salisbury:
Deed, Jerry and Donna Bentley to
Susan Mane Pullins. Bedford, 2.004
'
acres,
Righi or way. Walter and Nellie
Huggy to Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative, Ru~and ;
Right of way. Emmeu Turner to
BREC. Salem;
Raght of way, Diana Phillips and
Alfred Duff to BREC, Columbia;
Right of way. Slanlcy D. Gibbs to
BREC. Rutland.
Right of way, Rodic R. Hatfield fo
BREC. Rutland:
Raghl of way, David Woolen to
BREC, Salem;
Deed: Charles W. IV and Debra K.
Cochran to Alex 0 Thao, Scipio;
Deed. George and Margaret BuckIcy to David R. and Connie S. Elick.
Ohvc:
Deed. Charles D &gt;1nd Brenda I(
Jeffers to Everett J. and Sh~on M.
Michael. Salisbury. 5.408 IICres;
Deed. Maxine Price to Jeffrey C.
and Deborah M. Harris, Lebanon parcel;

The Light
Toacb

.,

Dave
Grate

of
Bottle
Gas
Sign in department store:
"Five Santas, no waiting".

***

Joy of motherhood : that
wonderful feeling that hits you
when the kids ara all In bed . '

***

Those who realty want lo do
something lind a way. Others
find an excuse.

Mary J Stover, Racme, passon£
bad checks, $25 plus costs, rcsl •tution: Timothy W. Morris, Rutland.
spothghung, $75 plus costs. Carl T.
Kauff, Middleport, spotlighting, $75
plus costs; John L. Bass, Dex1cr. faa lure to control, $30 plus costs: Mmdy
M Sampson, Coolv•llc, speed. ~ IK
plus costs; Linda K. Crishp, Maddie ·
pon, passing bad checks, four coums.
$25 plus costs on each, reslllullon;
Tim M. Jernagen, Pomeroy, passmg
bad checks, $25 plus costs. resuaution: Harry R. Butcher, Pomeroy. das orderly conduct, $30 plus cosls

***

Heard about the young fellow
who was so lazy he called a
singles bar to ask it they
defover?

***

tnflatlon is when a man has to
pay "!Venty dollars for a flveqollar hair~ut that he uaed to
get for a dollar when he had
haor.

Warm-Up With
· On• Of. Our "-··
New In Stock
Heaters, ·,
Gas l:oaslld
•

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Dec. 8 - Ernestine
Niben, Blanche Shuler, Annabelle
Hudnall, Mary Storms, Raymond
Caldwell, Ella Will, Bernice Ratliff.
Eli White, Virgil Michael, Elizabelh
Vaughan, Tami Taylor.
(PubHshed wllh permission)
I

Will Close·At
4:00 P.M. Today
For Employees
Christmas Dinner

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY ·

992-6687
A.u&amp;....O..,,..,..I,uurance

Life Home car Business
fl. lf', /),.JI,' "-~&lt;TM

•I

••
•••

Meigs EMS logs 6 calls _

:C ommissioners...
Continued from paae I ·
needed funds
A second public hearing wa.&lt; held
em the New Horizons grant apphca'
tion being tiled by the Meags County Fair Housing Office. The monies.
If awarded. would supplement fair
housmg funds required under the regulations of the Commumly Development Block Grant pmgram. The
i:ounay will apply for $15.000 in New
Honzons fund10g to be used for hillbOard and brochure promotiOns to be
u.OO to offer fair housmg information
hs well as information relating to the
l'.mcncans wllh Disabilities Act.
· · In approvmg the appllcalion . the
commasswncrs also pledged $7.000
I~ CDBG lair housing funds for the
flrogram .
The board approved a resolulaon
submitted hy Joe Bohn of the Soil
and Water Conservation District
relating to the suppon of continued
lundmg of a progrp!Tl provadmg money for abandoned mine reclamatoon.
Bolin said that I0 cents as collected as a severance tax on each ton
of coal mmcd in the country, which
11ocs mlo a spucial federal fund for
reclamation of deep and strip mines.

•

Me.igs announcements

Southern at Meigs
. Meigs wi II host Southern Tuesday
'evening (tonight) in varsity boys' basketball action. It was inaccurately
reponed
in Monday's paper that the
Obllulirlea are pilld •n~ounceminta arrenged by local funeral hom••·
.IObttu.rt- njiUbNihed u NqU...ecl to -moclall .,_ cllolrlng more game would be held at Southern
lnlom hn IIWo Ia pnlllkla~ Ill the -panylng Death Noac,..
Dance to be held
A round and square dance wall be
held at ihe Tuppers Plains VFW hall
c Charles W. Bailey Edwards. 53, of Long Bottom, died on,!iunday, Dec. Saturday, 8 to I I p.m. Music will be
by the Happy Hollow Boys. J. B.
7, 1997 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
Wilson
will call .
_,. He was born on September II , 1944 in New Matamoras; son of Gordan
ij. Edwards and the late Helen Elizabeth Gray Bailey. He was a carpet
Sorority to meet
installer.
·.
·
'
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
Surviving arc a son, Charles W. Bailey, Jr., Reedsville;, ~ daughter, SanSigma
Phi Sorority, will meet Thurs:
dra L. Coy, The Plains; and step-chil&lt;lren: Earl Goode, 'f.ma Slater, Todd
day,
6:30
p.m. at the Stowaway in
~ode, John Goode, Jackie Rice, Lee Ann Goo,de, Eric Goode, Susan
Gallipolis for a dinner party. Items
Castcvcns and Mackey Goode; a special friend, Qclores Ann Goode, Long
are to be t11ken for Serenity House.
Bottom; six grandchildren and 24 step-jlrandehildrcn.
.
. Funeral services will be held on Thursday. Dec. II. 1997 at I p.m. at
Road to be closed
' Ewmg Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Rev. Keith Rader officiating. BurSugar Run Road (Township 155)
aal will follow a~ Rocksprings Cemetery.
.
wall be dosed Wednesday and remain
Friends may call at the funeml home on We~ncsday from 7 to 9 p.m.
closed through Dec. 19 for road
&lt;:Cpliir, the qac•tcr,To&gt;.WIJI!Ittp,T~•
•
,,.

Priday, Ill Coun St .. Pomtroy, Ohto, tly the

would be interested in a biad
woman's tragedy, corporate Amcr1oo
did not thmk that consumers woulil
be impres.ed with ils sponsorship'•f
a black family.
,
And thas begs the questaow -'f_re
they right? Is II true that we arc more
.mtcrcstcd 10 while bubacs in th~
heartland than black haboes m tht
city'! Is it true that we care m&lt;Jre
about a crime victam when she 15
whole'!
•
Afier all, these producers and cda•'
wrs and sponsors arc only trying te
gove .us what we want, to tell us th~
. stories they thmk we want to hear.
And so 11 as up to us to either te~'
them that they arc wrong -- to SJI
that they have underestimated us ,
their assumption of our racaal baasor else admit that they arc n_ght'
Because, as the old Alcoholic~
Anonymous saying goes, you cali'C
solve a problem until you admuahat
you have one.
1
Sara Eckel is a oyndltaiecC
writer Cor Newspaper Enterp'*C
AISOCiation.
,~
Send comments to the authG ... r.4
care ollhb newspaper or selljl he~
e-mail at saraeumaol.com•

Jeffrey Stephen Werry, 46, Pembroke Pines, Fla., formerly of Pomeroy,
died Sunday, Dec. 7, 1997.
.
.
A resident of south Florida for four years, he was reured from the Ohao
State Teachers Association , was a member of the TKE fratermty, a football
coach a1 Lakewonh Hagh School, a football and basketball coach at Logan
High School, and a football coach at Marshall University 10 Huntington,
W.Va.
He is survived by !lis wife, Corky Werry; a daughter, Candace Werry; a
son, Brandon Werry; parents, Jean and John Werry of Pomeroy; and a brother, Mark Werry of Pomeroy.
·
·
.
.
Services will be held Thursday, II a.m. at Pancaera Memorial Home m
Hollywood, Fla., with burial following in Hollywood Memonal Gardens,
Nonh.
,.
·
Friends may .call Wednesday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Today's livestock.report

••
••

4

•

Burnie Ross, 67, of Peach Fork Road in Pomeroy, died at Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital early on Tuesday, December 9, 1997.
Arrangements will be announced by Ewing Funeral Home irr Pomeroy.

·;

Media should .a dmit its racial bias
By Sere Eckel
"Make sure she's while and middleclass"
·
That's what an cdator once wrote
on a story proposal of mine. 4 had
pitched a profile of a woman who
had been lhe vicum of a crime and
now'helps others on simil.ar situations After many discussions with
- the ·magaziOe , I was on the verge of
gcning a contract. There was JUSt
that one final caveat. She had to be
whue
.
The comment struck me like a 2by-4. though I really shouldn't have
been surpnscd. I had always know
that racaal bias existed in the media - .that there is a general assumplaon
that the public is niore interested in
stories about white poople than
about otber races. However, I had
never heard it expressed quite so
explicitly. The story was a go
because my subject was whtte. If she
had been black, I would not have
received tho assagnmcQt. Her story
would not be considered wonh
telling. Because she was black.
I am remanded of that conversation when I see the way the media
and the nation has responded to the

Burnie Ross

•

Wei Jingsheng:Too much charisma? _.
By len Shoeles
of_ hii life in
The San Francisco Chronicle
pnson, after
recently had an editorial (by S. Chen
all.
That's
and Wen Huang) about Wea Jingbound to have
shcng, the diSsident released from
an effect on
Chinese prison.after nearly IS years
your
social
and exiled to the United States. Poor
skills. Plus, his
guy. he as now the frail container for
teeth could use
every dream of democracy on China.
some work, he
Why?
smokes,
he
Well. accordang to the editorial.
doesn't speak
the Chmcsc dassadcnl muvcmenl as
English.
in disarray. China's new nco-capital·
He
asm seems for many to be cquavalcnl
knows what to
of not equal to democracy. so why do
say, m other
wc need dissodcnts? (DassenSJon words, hut he maght not have the
from whar• Shot up and shop!) And necessary charisma (or charismatic
thc dassident movement use if as spill translator) to make people perk the
mlo factums .
heck up and hsten.
Moreover, says Time magazine.
Thas highly outraged mdiVIdual,
when dissidents arc exiled. they face outspoken, courageous, "feisty," to
potential "irrelevance," because the use Tames magazine's condescendChmesc government has such a light mg adjccuvc. v·ould seem to be the
hold on mformatoon that ihcar mcs- poster boy for freedom, but he may
sage can't get through "Even now," mstead be doomed to a lifclamc of
Tame wntcs. ··most Chinese dbn 'I carpang on the sidelines because he's
know who We a as."
· not as cute and aggrcssavc as Iackie
The Chronicle's cdotoriallsts Chan.
claim that Wei's "high profile status
Granted, leaders should not be
wall temporarily inJeCt new life into boring.· In the unlikely event that I
I he movement. " He maght even pull ever leap walhngly 1n10 a world of
a Mandcla. usmg has own persecuted hun, at'll probably be at the hehcsl
stature to hring human rights lo of a leader who more resembles a
Chma.
young Bun Lancaster than dull midHowever. "hagh expectations die-aged AI Gore.
among has lollowers could translate
But we may rcquarc perhaps too
into disappomtmenl when they sec much charisma from our public fighim in person" He has spent a thard urcs. Take President Kennedy. More

MICH.

,_

NSC head was denied secret NSC documents

By Jaclc Ancleraon
end Jan Moller
A few year!l before former
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
National Security Adviser Anthony
614-982-21541 • FIX 992·2157
Lake joined President Clinton's
team, the longtime foreign policy
hand decided to write a book about
American policies an Nicaragua.
Lake any chronicler of recent
A Gannett Co. Newspap~r
American haslory, Lake filed a document request with the National
ROBERT L WINGETT
Security
Council under the Freedom
Publisher
of Information Act. In the process,
he came to learn first-hand the terrible toll that government secrecy has
MARGARET LEHEW
CH.«RLENE HOEFUCH
on the free flow ofinformaexacted
Controller
General Manager
tion in America
'
Mopths later, Lake received a
reply from the N'SC. It notafied him
Tht StMIMI wtc~ ,.,..... to 11M Nlfor from ~ on •
of toplca
Short-. (300
loN) ,...,.
oll&gt;oltlll ~· ~pod lolthat one of his requests had been
,.,. .,. proterrod Mid oil moy be od/IWd. E.., ohould Include ll/fltlllllfO, oddgranted.
But mther than receaving a
Mid ..,.,..,. phono number Spe&lt;lty I II,_ .. I , . , _ to I ptOo#Oul · or Mtt.r. Mall to; uttn .ro rtN Editor, TM Stntlnel, 111 Court St, PiNMtoy, Ohio
stack of papers that might shed light
.U7U; or, FAX to 514·912·2157.
on this sensitive pohcy area. Lake
received a stack of documents that
had mostly been "redacted" -- government-speak for censored. So
Lake went ahead and wrote his book
anyway. wathout the benefit of the
NSC pocuments
Years later. Lake left academia to
head the Nataonal Security Council
By JOHN McCARTHY
for Bill Chnton. So what does he
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Lookmg for 1hat perfect picnic place! The state might receiVe once he's safely ensconced- with )op-secret security clearance •
have one , and you won't have to worry about the ants.

'£sta5fislid in 1948

The O.lly Sentinel • P-oe 3

OHIO Wciltl1cr
Wedrad1y, Dee.lO

P•ge~

..

-

The Daily' Sentinel

.

.

•

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

Fireplace~,

Rutland Bottle Gas
Rt. 12Uwll .. Ol

742-2211

�(
I

Sports

The Daily Sentinel

PomerQy • Mlddl~rt, Ohio

Page4

Southern girls get past Miller 45-44

Tuesday, December t,,1997

Panthers defeat Cowboys
23-13 to kill Dallas' title reign

'

By D£NNE H. FREEMAN
IRVING. Tcm (AP) - The
young Carolina Panthers put two
crushing losses on the old Dallas
Cowbdys twice in one .year. The end
of an era may be close at hand.
Carolina whipped Dallas 23-13
Monday night to end the•Cowboys'
five-year reign as NFC East champion. Only longshot mathematical possibilities keep Dallas, winners of
ttiree Super Bowls in the 1990s, in
the wild card race.
"There's no question it's the most
disappointing game we'·;e had," Dallas owner Jerry Jones said. "It's
extremely disappointing. We'll have
to examine some things in the offseason. We made too many mistakes.
We didn't give ourselves a chance to
win."
Kerry Collins threw two touchdown passes and Fred Lane rushed
for 138 yards as Carolina stayed alive
in the NFC race.

FH-Eastern girls'
game results
unconfirmed
Results of the Federal HockingEastern girls varsity basketball game
nad not been reported to the newspaper by press time, however, Federal Hocking reportedly upset Eastern 62-52 in Stewart.
The important Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division match-up
leaves Eastern at 1-1 both overall and
in the league. while Federal Hocking
ha• an identical 1-1 mark.
Federal Hocking lost a 48-29
decision at Nelsonville- York last
Thursday. Eastern won 61-48 over
Belpre. Federal Hocking also won.the
reserve game.

'
.
"We're still in it, we're still in it,"
Lane said. "This was big for us to
beat the Cowboys on Monday Night
Football. We were confident we
could run the ball, ind we did."
Carolina evened its record at 7-7
while Dallas dropped to 6-8. With
two games left, the Cowboys have
only a remote chance of malting the
playoffs for a seventh consecutive
year.
"The NR. is funny in that you can
hit rock bottom one week, like we did
last week, and reach the top next
week, " Collins said. "We · go to
Green Bay next. The road doesn't get
any easier. "
The New York Giants have an 85-1 record in the NFC East, and Dallas can't catch them.
" It's frustrating for everybody.''
Dallas coach Barry Switzer said. "It's
frustrating on the coaches, on Jerry
Jones, on myself. Fret! agency has
h;oughl about the end of an era. It's
happened to every team."
Swit7.er lost his third game in a
row for the first time in his career as
a rollcgc and pro coach - a span of
359 games.
" It's hard to watch this team
become average," Dallas quanerback .
Troy Aikman said. "Nobody is willing to concede that we had a good run
early in the decade and now it's over.
Something has to be done."
Carolina knocked Dallas out of
the NFL title contention last season
with a 26-17 victory on Jan. 5 in the
NFC divisoonal playoffs.
"We have a legitimate shot at the
playoff~ now," guard Greg Skrepcnak said. "We just played our best
game of the year."
Carolina coach Dom Capers·
agreed .
·
"We really bounced back and

By SCOTT WOLFE
Southern led 8-S after the first
Sentinel Correa~t
frame, but as a consequence got in
The Southern Tornadoes' girls early four trouble. CotiCh Allen Crisp
rode into Miller last night and came said, "We got in some foul trouble,
home with their first win of the sea- but the bench came in and did an outson, a 4S-44 Tri-Valley Conference standing job. This was a great team
victory over. the Falcons. A last sec- . win and a real confidence builder.
ond shot by junior Kim Sayre pro- . We did an excellent job on the
vided the winning basket. Southern is boards against a much bigger Miller
now 1-1 overall and 1-0 in the TVC team."
Hocking DivisiQn ,
, ~
. Southern out rebounded Miller
Southern was led by senio( Cyn- 3S-27 despite giving up 5-6 inches all
thia Caldwell's 12 points and Kim the way across tht line-up.
lhle's I I. The balanced altack was
At halftime, Miller, behind an ISone of the main ingredients in the big point second. period, pushed to a 23win.
20 lead over the Tornadoes. 'CaldMiller was led by Beth Lanning's well's offense, sparked the offense
nine points and Kristen Plant's sev- along with key buckets from lhle as
en.
SHS wrestled to stay in the game.
Southern, in a reloading year after
Southern came back with its startthe loss of Renee Turley and Brianne ing five and several hat~· ime adjusiProffill, and Miller's improvement ments to take a 35-33 lead. The
over.last year made for a tight came remainder of the game went nip-and
throughout the duration.
tuck to the finish.

played a tremendous game," Capel'$
said. "We've still got a playoff
chance."
Collins, who threw a IS-yard
touchdown pass !o Rae Carruth in the
second quarter, guided Carolina on a
69-yard drive to open Che second half.
Collins put the Panthers ahead 17-6
by hitting Scott Greene on a one-yard
touchdown pass.
John Kasay kicked a 40-yard field
goal to stan the fourth quarter, making it 2().6, then added an 18-yardcr
with 53 seconds left to finish off the
Cowboys
Aikman hit Michael Irvin with a
52-yard touchdown to pull Dallas
within seven points with 6:33 .left
However, with a fourth-and-one
on the Carolina 45·, Aikman rolled to
the right, got in trouble, circled back
under heavy pursuit and finally fell
down for a 25-yard loss with 3:27
left. Safety Chad Cota got credit for
the sack.
..
" I was just trying to make something happen," Aikman said. "It was
a busted play. I rolled out but they
covered it well, I couldn't get arouhd
the corner."
· " If you can't make a fourth-and one, then you don't deserve to win,''
Switzer said. "We just have to try to·
win the last two games. 'They arc pros
and they get paid."
.
The Panthers dominated the first
half to take a Io,61ead over the Cowboys, who lost run~ing back Emmill
Smith in the first quarter when he
reinjured his left shoulder trying to
make a block. Tight end Eric Bjornson also fractured his left shin.
Collins, who fmcturedajaw.in tbe
preseason and sullered a concussion
last week, hit Carruth for the touchdown aft~r Kasay had kicked a 34yard field goal.

I

NBA standings

Army 7-1,

!i-'li"...,
GETIING A GRIP on the baaketbaU Ia the ob!IICIIve of Kansas for·
ward T.J. Pugh and Pennsylvania's George Mboya (13) and tummate Garett Kreitz (14) In the aecond haH of Monday night's con·
solation round of the Franklin National Bank Clasalc in Washington, D.C. The third-ranked Jayhawks won 89-71. (AP)
&gt;

tu.
Mlam~ ---·······

......... IJ
Otlando .....•,. ......................... l-1
~w J~'f'UY ....... .................... 11
~\lew Yot\ ............................. 11

~

122

~

. ~79

\ttuhift@.IOO ..... .... .. .. ..... R II
....................................7 II
'1'Laddphi;a ............ .....

·..
Mlani;L .. . . ...

· ·----- ~

r:!

Ctnlral Dlvislen
... I~
.l

CLEVELAND ................. 12
(hi~opn

~19

.............. ;................ ll

"This is devastating," special •
teams star Bill Bates said. "It's been
a long time since we had this feeling
in the locker room. We were gunned
up and ready to play, hut we made too
many mistakes - like we hav~ all

season." ·
Defensive tackle Chad Hennings
"This is something this team

a~ded:

••

1 .bll
7 .611
7 . ~!o!K
K . ~79
.400

T.-nn~u ................................... l

Ul

.05J

WESTERN CONFERENCE

•..

Midwest 01\'l"'-rl

=LIIl

..... ~

~7 .612
~

Utah ................................ 12
!ienAntnQtu .................... ..... 10

~rh: ~Mia .......................... ..K

.:'26

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V~uU\'L!f ......................7

Ollla.~ ........ ............................."i
Dtn~'t"r .................... ..

IJ

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........... 2

IJ.A. I..;Lkcrs . .........

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4

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Pt.nl:mJ ......... .,.
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.. .. 12
. .6

6

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.............

u,,.,._.rs.. ..

•_.

...

.7~0

Tournaments ·

Ohio H.S. 'girls' scores
lkUai n: fJM. Hannihal Kh-.. .'1' ~fl
U~U :u rc St. J n lm · ~ ~K . !lritl)!l'lkrrt .H
' lldprc 51 . Nchnnvilk:.Yurk -4!
llcthl'I-T:IIc 611. Fdi~'lly .l l
H1H llk: Cuunly I Ky I .J-1. Cm ·S..:t1111 .1.\
C.mlicld ~~. Huhhmll ~~
C;mton. S fl7 . Our l.: ~e ly ul Urn~ l7

,.

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15K

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IlK

12

~

fJrhlndo 9~ . Phil*lphia K6
• .Mirami 10~. Na:w k'rscy Y7

Uttih IIW.. hklii~A:I ~.n
~ Pt:"'lmMIIO~. ~\!r~~

:

Tonixht's games

2~

, NL"W JL'f51.")' Ill wa.~hirr~ltHI . 7(1.01.
~ Ch;~"lt~lc ;II Turuatn. 7(1.m.
• Minnn Dl Atlarnil. 7:."\0('I.m.
'"' llcnVL'f al o.itntil. 7:J0 fUll.
• !lk'W Vt'l'k ill ( 11it..:ut,tu. Hp m.
" S&amp;!ntlk: at Mianc:tota. Kr.m.
•: I.. A. Cli('IP..T~ a! l.)allus. !UO r m
, San Amunio ar Hnuswn. !L\U (l m
• Vm.:uuvcr 31 Ptaucnil;. 9 p.m.
' Utuh ;It Sanumcnlv.

IU: .~

.
Transactions

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0 ~2M6 2~11

I .607

l)l\lillkM1
.12 1
t'mnlina . ...
...7 7
fit lama ...................... ... h K
Nr..·w UriL!an~ ... , ......... ...... 5 9
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K-wun Jivisiun lid...
y·t:llitd~~.:&lt;l Jllayufr hcnh
x-Sunt=r:m~isql

J~lt

Mike Feu~"' nntJ LHP Ron Villolll".
01\KLANO ATHLliiCS: Tr..UCU RHP Steve
Km~ay to the Clcvd:md lndhut~ rnr RHP Mik ~ Ft..1·

N•llonal Football Lea111t

. K~7
. ~00

J:t2
237
A2'J 274
..l'n JlJ7
.21«1 2~9

2.~1

2Hl

C'tn Cnuntry llay (, _'\, Nl'W Mtarm 17
Crn Hill!&lt;&gt; l'llr. A~o:;a/ :'.~ . C111 l.u.:kl;ull.l 2-1
Ctn Mu\uky h-1 N.llrcl);mll'll\y . J~ J
C111. M ~N LdK• Iil\ flO. KcnennJ,: 1\lt~·r q .
Cut S1. lkr1t1rJ .~0. Cm N c~ , IJq:c Htll 2Y
C111 Summu Country J);,y 411. t 'm. Sewn Hill~

'

I-~

Sund~y. Dt-c. 14
I&gt;:,IJas "'CINCINNATI. I r.m.
l).:tl'llil:11 Miamcsnht I p.nL
T~ntJC,or..~'l' ;II llullimut~ . I p.m.
J;l(k.'tnnllilk! ~u Buffalo, 11'-111Mrmni ntlntli:mOJpuli~. I p.m.
• 111ilatJdphin :II Alhmtot. IJ•.m.
Tmlljla Uuy :u N~,.-w Yurt JL!t~ . I p.m.
1\ri;,-.nnu 111 N.:w Urlcotllii. .f tun
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Km1 :;.1 .~ City al Sanl&gt;icl!,u 4 fl.m.
Scnt11t: at Oaklm~ . 4 1•-lll.
Chil.:ajeu 011 St. l~tui s. K(l.m

~1

l2

NHL standings
F.ASTF:RN CONFF:RF:NCF:

l.hllt\ Sh;rWII\:1' ~7 . Si lfiii.'Y ~·)
Luna Tt:tn(ll~· ('hr. S2. Wurl&lt;l lbrn-~1 l"hr.

nre the Tup H t~·nms in the A ~ snd:ue~l
Pl\!111 ~;nllcJ.C bnskL!lhall poll. with lir~t·pla-.x• Vttl~· s
in. _J'll'l:ndii:!IC~. t:urrcm ·rcwnb "~ 11 1' S"!1K.Iay. lilfitl
fliiiQII bit!iCtJ llQ 2~ f'IUint.~ fu r a lir~t fl) llt:L! VII I~·
thr.lUJih 111\\: point lor 01 251h pla(t: vvtc. mid l a~l
wttk 's li n:.~l r.1nking:
H~te

l.ltM

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I. OuU(-'91.. ............................. K·O 1.72/i
2. Nooh C.-oliR;~ ( IIJ) .............. IJ-0 1.694

:\,

.lKan:o~astt• ................................ M-1 1520

2

,fKI!ntud:y ...... .- .• .'.................... 6-- 1 1.4~\1

I

7

Carolinu ... .. ..................... ~..O 1.-W'.I

S

6 AriWfW .................................. J -2 1.-'2-1

4

7. XIIvin(l) .............................~-0. 1.261J

9

~ . South

K. Pu-........... .......................... 6·2 1. 166

6

9. 1Jeah ..................................... 7-0 1, 137
IO.Iowa ......................................6·0 1,119
II . StanfonJ .................................. S-0 1,'"2 ·
12. UC'LA. .. .. ..................................1.1 1U9
Cot~liL:U'-. .......................... :'7-1 9().J
1-l Ntw Muil!o ........................... ~- 1
KJC)
15: Ar\anm ..... ........................... 6-(J 71:!

II
10

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15
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16. FloridA 51. ...............................6-1

57~

19

17 . Clenuon ................................ ~-2
IK. frtJno St. .........................,,, .. ,, J.I
19. Maryland ......... ,............ ,......... 4-2

~'-'

17
16
23
20
14

20. Tcmp~ .. .................................4-l

21 , Miulslippi ..............................-4-1
22. Pritulon.................................6-0

S-48
480
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2J .o..r,;a ...................................5·2

J84
271
171

2&lt;4. QeoraiaTQ .................... .'..... S--1

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Vinl&lt;.111 County 67, W!! ll~tmi.W
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.. .. ................. 17.1'0'" 4
Piu~hnr)!h ...................... lfl 10 ~
l!n!lhltl ....................... .1.\12 ~
O!l:~wa ............................ 1.1 1.1 4
l ';mLh llil ...................... 12 14 .~
llullalo .................... :....... 9 1.1 6
Mnulfl'&gt;~ l

-·-

Football

Iwu

lt.,ll.t• ..

Z...

Eutern Di•lMn

:W L I flL ei: fA

New England .....................9 -~ 0 . 64~ H -1 2!0
Miltm1. ..............................9 ~ 0 . 64~ ~27 272

THE DAILY SENTINEL

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lilmumun ,... ....
SmiJnlk."
... ,.. 10 IK 2
Vant..:uuvlT ..................... IJ 17 -'

Monday'•I&lt;;OI'fl
, Mllt\lfi!lll4, Col\ll:lllo 2

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

•

( 'entnd DiYWDn

Cul~lfY ....................... _fl IK 7

NFL standings

•'

WFXfERN CONFERENCE

Anaiii..'IILI ..

21

aonz.,, 2. Mumoy St 2, W"'h-

l•,tt'lftlBall St.~ , lndiana I, South Alabama I.

Mt:IJ.!.~ ~J.

All•llr Ulvi.W n

Iwn

l'h•l : ~eklt1lua

Marlin~:t ntl ~6 . 1-'airlc~-~ ~ .\

25

22
15.W.Fomt ...........................6-l 127 1 24
~
Otlrltn retehl., w..e1: Rhode hland K2.
Syracute 19. Teo~ Owislian 71. K;iwni• 61 , tdi£~.mt
(AI.) 60, ManMne 46, fwlicbipn Jl, Slim Loui1
29. TeMellil!le ~1. West VitJinin 19. Oklahoma St
17, MiHaOta 16, Louisville I:'I, Miuinippi St '"·
OftlltlorM II , Colomdo St. 9. Telu 9. Arizollll St.
6. IJNLV 6, N. Carolinn St 5, M moc hu~us J,

CINCINNATI 2,

lk&lt;W-'1

Maut1k't: V;tl l'nmtlry l):~y ~I.

College
NORTH CAROLINA ; NitmL!d Carl Tnrhu sh
fntUhnlll'uadl.

saa.4o

Hockey

I~1Uf~IC hO. NLb McKinl· y .\2

·AP Top 25 coilege poll

Natiun;~l Ha.&gt;it~thull AsSU('Iution
ORLAN IX&gt; MAGIC: Plul·cd G Jlcnny Hur"J .
away t»l thL! injured list.
UTAH J/\ZZ: A~tiv:tt~'tl G Juhn Stud tun rrnm
the injlll\'tlli~l . Piltl'l!d G Tmy Hudsml tJIL'thc m·
jun=tJ li~l.

\'

NUW WRSI~ Y [)GVII.S : 1\Nsil!nt:tJ F K~·tJ
Simj}!Oiln 111 Alh:111y ul"lhc AHL
ST. LOUIS BLUES. lk-,;:1lk:d t= l'hrh K~·n : ~~oly
frun1 W\lr~o:l.!st c r of1I1L! AHL
SAN JOS E SHAKKS Ri!~:•lk~l ll Andrd
Zw-u1.iu fmm K..-nludt:y tlrlhc AHL

FOR·ONlY

&lt;iH:.IIl'n "if1 l krmuul Nunl-...·,Jsh.:rn .II

HrllsNfn (II). Hutll\"ia ~~
lndinn r~d; +4. ltu~l.cy~·lo~-...·af :w
Jnlm Gk-nn ~7 . 1"..;\ucn·ilk .~ II

Basketball

l&lt;c'l,~·

52 WEEKS

Fun Fr)'t' M. CIIUwdl "'M

Galhlll'h~ 71. Rud, Hdl 4~
(i...·ur~~'tl • wniJl Wtllmm~hur~ .1K
£irl~lll!\" ll' W-l2 . Sj&gt;rlll~. Nunhr.·~~l.:m

.

I&gt; Van

Salurday
W:t shiiL!(hlll tll N.:w York Giilnh. 12 ..ltJ p.m.
l'in~Pur,11h at New Engl:u1tJ. 411.111.

Mond•y, Occ. IS
l).·nv..:r at S11n Fr:.ulCi.o;co, ~p. m.

bl)ICrtnn hl h!y.:u.: lt1
! ctk·r;tl H, .... km~ (•2. R~l,INvilk Enstcrn

H.L!~ :tiiL!J

Goluhnv11ky frnm Adimndai:k uf the Alii.
~ignr.'\1 D Jt1n CoiL!1m10 hJ AtJinontJur..k.

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• t11h:aa:o ul Ori:~Adu. 7:11) !1.111.
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l~nvF.'f Ill CI..-WiumJ. 7:.'KI p.m.
,. L.A. l..o~ken at (}{1klcn State, K p.m
• I.. A. Cli('I'IL-r.~ m Sun Anwniu. tHOr .n1.
Indiana &lt;~I Purthmtl. I0 p.n1

Hod&lt;•y

National HtM;key Lt•aau~

312 GIFTS

,\ I«J

2~2
.\2H

CINCINNI\TI BENGALS : Placc.d LB ltm
TL!rry nu injUI\'J 1\'servc. Si~t~d S Cu1y GilliurJ
uff the New ()I' lean' Saims' jlf:IL!IkC: ~1u:W .
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Footboll

DETROIT H. I~[) WINGS :

.

American Leaauc
CHICI\GO WHrrt: SOX: Clnink..\1 211 Scr~u1
Nu1k.'Z ulf w:uvl!'rs Irum the: Kan~:&amp;~ City 'Rt)yals
CLEVElAND INDIANS: Agn:..-d tn u:rms
with OF K~nny Lutinnttn a lhh'\!·ycur ~onti'Lil1 and
RHP Dwll!ht (inotJcn on i11Wt,.Y'-'af 4.' tllllr;u.:l . TraJ·
l'l.l OF M:anjuis (lri~snm und RHP kiT Judl!n In tilL!
Milwa_ukt'L! IJI'I.'WL!ts for RHP lku MdJnnaltl. RHP

2.~7

. ,

with I B Jl:u\1 Snrn:llloJ un ·a ntk'-yeOJr cwmnct.
11~XAS RANGERS: A~rettltn t..:rms wtth SS
KL!\IIIl [l~tl!r 'llll "Ulll'· yc:~r mntr.u.:l .
TOIWN'I'C) BlUE JAYS i AvcL!d In tt:rLm
with C Mil.c St:mll!)l 111~ a two-year l'ontr:u:l :mJ 2U
Tnny FcrmmUcz till a nne-yL!ar Clltllmcl.

Baseball

:!-tl&lt;
I S\6 2X2 217
I .46-$ 26K ,117
0 ,429 27.\ 26:\
0 .214 2.U J~~.

0
0
II
0
0

NY. Rolfltu:n .l . Phtll:tll" I
Torc•nttl .l . IJ:dlas 0
51. l.oui• -~ . Vancouwr I

2M

70

69
74

76
79

83

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Tonl~t'•J!IImes

go home."
By JOSEPH WHITE
Rogers also had lour steals, was 7WASHINGTON (APJ - With
Kansa' and Maryland in tlie field, of-16 from the field, 7-of-S from the
George Washington was everyone's free throw line and wa~ named tourthird choice to win the Franklin nnmentMVP.
.
National Badk Classic.
"II means a lot to me, the btagII would have seemed like a sound ging rights," Rogers said . "I was
prediction. especially given that the looking at The WashinRton Post the
Colonials had been blown out by pre- other day. I saw &lt;;Jeorgelown in bold
viously winless Texas Tech a few print. I saw Maryland in bold print.
days earlier. But it was that defeat I didn't see us in bold print. We're a
that forced GW to regroup, and it hometown team. We deserve
paid off with a 70-66 victory over respect."
~o . 19 Maryland in Monday night's
Yegor Mescheriakov had 19
championship game.
points; while Koul finished ·with 15
In Monday's consolation game, forGW.
No. 3 Kansas bounced back ils loss
Laron Profit led Maryland with '15
to Maryland a day ~arlier to beat points, eight rebounds and four steals.
p.;nn 89-11.
Like .George Washington, Kansas
"What helped us more than any- (9-1) found a way to rebound from a
thing was losing to Texas Tech after tough loss by using its bigger,
three lousy practices," GW coach stranger. frontcourt to beat Penn ('3Mike Jarvis said. "The kids went 4).
Raef LaFrentz had 25 polnts and
b;~ck and looked at the team compact
they had drawn up and decided they II rebounds for the Jayhawks, who
weren 't living by what they said they failed to win a regular season tourwere going to do."
nament for the first time since 1992.
• Jarvis said the compact lists sev"The good thing about basketball •
eral goals, and "one of those things is, that you can come back quickly
U.volved coming to work every day, and play again the next day sometimes and make yourself feel belter,"
¢very practice."
· "It was like a New Year's resolu- Kansas coach Roy Williams said.
tion," he said. "They rededicated "I'd hate to be a football coach and
themselves to try and live up to the have io wait scv~n days be(ore playing again."
principles that they had set up."
· Maryland coach Gary Williams
Billy Thomas added IS points.
will now be looking for the same Paul Pien:e had 14 and T.J. Pugh 13
kind oi' rededication from his learn. for Kansas. The Jay hawks were able
ltfis players confessed to suffering a to punch the ball inside early and
letdown after the emotional victory often, shooting 57 percent and outover Kansas, an excuse that didn't sit . rebounding the Quakers 35-28.
"Their size overwhelmed us,"
well with the coach.
: "If we're going to be a good team, Penn coach Fran Dunphy said.
we have to learn how to g&lt;1 out, back- "LaFrentz. Pierce and (point guarA
to-hack each night and play well and Ryan) Robertson. Great team. with an
play with emotion." Williams said. inside-outside comb'inalion."
··we didn't do that. Sometimes a loss
Gal'l!tl Kreitz led Penn with 17
like !his is a pretty good leaching points.
.
t&lt;lOI."
'
No. 6 Arizona 83, Baylor 68
In the only other game involving
The Wildcats (6-2) completed
a.rankcd team on Monday, No. 6 Ari - their two-game sweep in Texas and
zpna beat Baylor 83-68.
ended a three-game, seven-day road
The victory for (icorge Washing- trip behind the 20 points of Miles
ton (7-2) avenged the loss to neigh- Simon. Mike Bihby added 18 points
bor Maryland (4-3) in last year's title for Arizona, while Bennett Davison
game. The Colonials were led by 5- had II points and IS rebounds.
foot -4 Shawnta Rogers. who stole the
Patrick Hunter led Baylor (3-3)
ball from former Baltimore high with 19 points as the Wildcats shut
scllool rival Rodney Elliot to set up down senior center Brian Skinner,
a crucial four-point play in the final . who entered the game averaging
19.0 points and 12.8 rebounds. He.
lwo. minutes.
After George Washington took the was held to 10 points and seven
lead 63-62 on Alexander Koul's 14- rebounds.
Arizona led by as many as 23
footer off the glass with 2:07 to play,
Rogers stripped the ball from Elliot points in the second half and the
in the paint on the Terrapins' next Bears were never closer than 13.
possession.
Elliot immediately grabhcd
Rogers for an intentional foul. Rogers
hit one of two free throws and the
Colonials rctai.ned possession. with
Seco Camara hitting a three-pointer
to make it 67-62 with one. minule
rem;tining;
"Rodney Elliot's a good friend of
mine," said Rogers. who led GW
with 23 points. one shy of his career
high. "It's bragging rights when we

.

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204 w. S.Cond s.... 614/9'12-7070
Portsmaulh
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"

MOREHEAD, Ky. (AP) -After floor in ·becoming Morehead's first
rallying from '3 20-point deficit to victim of the year. 65-50, Monday
nearly pull off a stunning upset over night.
Aaron Knight came off the bench
Massachuselts over ·the weekend,
to
lead three Morehead players in
Marshall appeared to have some
momentum as it headed for winless double figures with 16 poinls in what
was also Morehead's (1-6) firsl vicMorehead State .
But Marshall (2-3) came out flat tory under first-year head coach Kyle
and shot only 33 _percent from the Macy.

0 lip "•

..

•

.L-

8H

H

Quprter l!!ll!h

Southern
8-1 2- 15-Hl=45 :
Miller
5-1~- ~-13=44.'
Southern: Cynthia Caldwell2-2,...
212=12, Jenny Friend 3-0-212=8, Kim
Sayre 3-0-0=6, Stacy Lyons 0-1 215=4, Kim I hie 1-4-0/3= II , Nicole
Benson 2-0-0=4. Totals 3-15·
6/12=45
Miller: Beth Lanning 4-0-112=Y:
Anna Bragline 1-0-0/1 =2, Kristen''
Plant 2-0-3n=7, Jennilcr Br.owning&gt;l
2-0-0=4, Darcy Cook 1·-0-114=3,.
AngieLueas 1-1-0/0=5, Briteny Mer'·
ckle 2-0-0=4, Christy Halesz 3-0' ·
4/4=10. Totals 1-9-S/14=44

Knight added a team-high nine
rebounds, while Hezzie Boone had
II points, including three threepointers, and Chris Stone added nine
points.
The Eagles led 43-28 at halftime
and by as many as 21 points in the
second hal f. Marshall cut the lead to
10 with 17:08 remaining, but the

''
Eagles responded with a 9-0 run to~
put the game out of reach.
·,.,'
Marshall also shot only 40 percent
from the free throw line.
:::;
loda Burgess had a game-high Ill"
points for Marshall - all on thr~
point field goals - while VonDale·
Morton and Terrell McKelvy addcit
eight points each.

GW defeats No. 19
Maryland 70-66;
Kansas also wins

Week 16slate

!lclta 5 1. Ill~)!" ..J7
I;, C.mtun f,tJ. l.l.r...•rnnia 57
1 ~. t'hnllm ~~ - Uhmc hc~ k· r .\.~
1: ti.uo~ ~(,_ L1r~i11~ V:~! ~t(

Wodnetiday:s ga""''

I \

lhl'l!e games in a row during a 7-9:
season.
·
•
There hadn' t been three ICJSscs in
a row since. Until now.
•
"It's been a great run tbrough the:
1990s," Bales said. "We'll find out
about some of the pcoplc on this team
in the next lwo weeks."
:

SEA.l'f'lE MARINERS: 1\g.n:cd tn tcnrL~ wuh
C Jt~m M;ti7.:LIIU un ;t minnr- lca~uc L!unlr:Lct.
TAMPA Dh Y UEVIL R/\ YS : Ap.I'I.'I:J 1111crms

St. Loui~

Monduy's scnre

Crn ···i!117h. Day Jl'flc"'''l 21
Col. H:u1l1·) 72. Col. Walnut Niti~L! ~S ,
l'olumhtillta Cr..:~h· h.:w M l.u11idh ilk.· -1 ~
Cu, ho..:lun ~.I. Tu'ol;;lf:IW:l\ Val. H1
Dd:1w:uc Chr. ~·l . l .l~rl)' Cl1r I 'i

p.m

florida ;JI Caroliml. 7)0 p.m.
m Muntn:al. 7:30 r.m.
Calgary~~~ N.Y. Rangers. 7:.l 0 p.m.
Ednl!lntun al New knoc:y. 7::\0 I'm.
Colorudu ar Toronto. 7JO p.m.
Phncni ~ at Chkngo. 1=1:.10 p.m
Tnmra Bay at Dallo:uo. K:30 Jl.m.
e\YtL\bington at Sun lt1S1.'. IO : J(~ r.m.
Pittsburgh at Anahdm. 10: ~ r.m.

1~ 2~

291\ 2K)
291 110
JON ~67

Ctnlr•l Divl1ion
--GI).-en ll:1y .... .... .... .. II J 0 .7Kh J(lCJ
Tamp:1 Bay ........................IJ 5 0 . h-I~ 2M
Minnesota ........~.
. .... !:! fl II .'\7 1 .\01
IA·trnit .. ......
......... 7 7 0 . ~lX) .\~2
t1Ul'U~tl ..
. . __, II 0 .21-' 2JS

Carnlin:1 J.l. Dallas

Ch:unpton IQ . AuMmlowu-1-it~o:h ~X
Ches hire K1vcr Val 71. nll!.~:l lll..'alu: .n

Monday's Sf.:ores

Jol2 270

:W L I fb. fE £.1

N.Y. Gianb
....... ~ ~
Washing1on
........ 7 6
PhiliidclJlhia .... ."~ .. ...... 6 7
O:tllas ............................. 6 H
Ariznna ...
..... J II

Fi-anklin N111ioo:d Blink Cht~~iNhampiun,hip
CA~1rgc Wmhmj!tun 711. M;1ryla nd lrf,
·
Third plan·
K:m"'"' 1\Y. 1\:nu 71

7~1}

I~

"'

,..

7

IlK

16
15

J

•,,

27K

Ium

Akorn St . ~2 . Ark .-PiJI\: Blulf M
1\riZllR:I 10, Haylur fiX
Tclas A&amp;M ~II . S.1111 H 11U~I••n Sl fri'l
Tuhal:ll Mur!!:tn S1 51'1

lil

1~

I~

Pacifk Divkion

1

hasn't experienced since 1990. It's
not a good feeling." .
The Cowboys lost their lirst eight
games and last seven games in IYK'I,
the first season ~fter Jones bought the
team and brought Jimmy Johnson in
as head coach. 1lmt.tcam finished l·
IS. A year later, the team twice lost

ICfS.

· Wodnestby's games

Eastern Di•l~lun

Southwest

~~ ·,

Culgnry a1 N.Y. Islanders, 7::Wp.m.
Vuncouvcr '" l&gt;euoit. 7:!'0 JUn.
PillJbt.lr!!h :lllm Angt:ks. UUO Jl.m

~62

·NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Midw•sl

4';

,,

St 6.'i. MARSHALL SO

Bradlt:y 6l Mkhi~:m 51t
lllmois KM, Mtline M
NE lllinoult2. Dtmlllll~ml . Ill J\1

-·-

:

-·-

S:m Dicgn .. ....... ......... .........ol 10

Ell!il Curolina67. SW louistana f..&amp;

,. .

.K)J

12

Ooldoo&lt; ................................ ao

Ccnt~:n~ry -69. NW .Louisinn:1 :'I'K
M(lf'W:I~;IIJ

274;

Waum Division
y·":tnsuCity ... .......... ... ,.. ll ~ 0 .'hl6 ~:!1 212
y·DcnYI:T .......................... ll :\ 0 .7t\6 417 2~
Scauk- ............. ,........!..........6 M U .-121:1 )(J~ JJl

lkhnoe111. Uberty Sl

. 2~

Dt1ru11 ..... .............................. .!!

r

East

South

All
.3\19

6 .1&gt;67

lltdi:tna ...... ...................... II
Chou-lult~ ................... ,........ I 0
Milw:Luk« ............................ ll

»

lil

7 .ft67
K

Cenlral Oivi!Uon
·Piusburgh ...................... IO 4 0 .714
aclaonville ........................ 9 ~ o ·.fHJ
Ttnncsk't ......... .................7 7 0 .500
, BahilllOI't ............. ,.............. :'i K I .1CJ1
CINCINNA.T1
.. -. 5 9 0 -'!'i7

Du~.jutsnr

Atlantic Di~ilion

:WLta.

Val~

Indianapolis ........................ ! 12 0 .14.1 244

fouls.
•
Southern won the reserve game
35-27 led by Katie Cummins with 2Q
and Heather Dailey with six. Felicil)
Paige had II for Miller.
Southern's next game is Thursdat
at Belpre.

Franklin National Bank Classic ends

POW! - Carolina · dafenalve lineman Les ter of Monday night's NFC game In Irving, Texas,
MIUer (left) hits Dallas quarterback Troy Aikman where the Panthera won 23·13. Aikman, Injured •·
after Aikman gets the pua away In the first quar- on this play, 'r eturned to action later. (AP)

Burfalo .............. ..................6 8 0 .4-29 220 316

6.5
7-1. W. Ke-nlucky b-l
L1fayettc: 81. Haverford 44
P.:nn Stl'l5. George Mason46
S1. Fr..tnds. NY 8-l. Lehigh 7~
Vermom 9~. Holy Cross 59

EASTERN CONFERENCE

~07

N.Y. Jcts ................. ., .. ........ S 6 0 .571

NCAA Division I
men's scores

Basketball

Trailing 43-44, Southern sent up
for the last second shot. The ball
came around the horn to Sayre, who
cranked in the game winner with just
2.7 seconds remaining in duration .
Time ran out and Southern came
home with the win.
Southern's shooting numbers were
down as they hit 21 -70 o.verall from
the field for 30 percent, 21-58 from
two point range and 3-12 threepointers. SHS hit 6-12 at the line .
Miller hit 16-46 for 34.7 percent, 1541 two-pointers, 1-5 threc-pointe.rs,
and 5-14 at the line.
Southern had 35 rebounds (Jenny
Friend 7, Kim Ihle 6); IS steals (lhle
4, Sayre 3); 10 assists (Caldwell
three); 23 turnovers, and 14 fouls.
Caldwell had both of Southern's
blocked shoK
Miller had 27 rebounds (Christy
Hnlesz 5, Beth Lanning S); eight
steals, 6 assists,25 turnovers, and IS

•

••

Morehead State gets 65-50 win over Herd

Scoreboard

,.

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

----·--

-

--~.

·-·

K~,.,.t.a Moll 30A/92S-2778
Sooltuidge Ctn!e&lt; 304/744-8511
215 Delowa&lt;e Avonuo 304/343-8686
305 Gn.o Teay. BNd. 30A/757-2516
tMIIk:W~cn

1315 Foo"" A'"""" 30A/522.2355
Hunlingloo Mall 304/736-8731
3509 Rt 60 Eosl 30A/736-2355
Woi-Mon Ro. 60 Eoll 304/733-4966
llploy
Ill. 33 w., 304/3n.2926
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Vienna
Woi.Mort304/ A24-0912

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17 Ma in StreetJ0• / 752-ll.U
Oan.,;tlo

IJon,;l\e Ploza 30A 369.S80A

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32 Elkhe&lt;n Srreel 30A/ 436-6692

Kon!uckx
Aohland
B17 Winchosle&lt; 606(325-23 55
Woi-Mon 606/324-2759

"

..

�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Po~oy • Middleport,

Ohio

By ,T he Bend

Indians trade Grissom to Brewers for three pitchers.

Three-year, $24M contract
brings Lofton back to·Tribe
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - Nine
months after trading Kenny Lofton,
the Cleveland Indians said, "Welcome back."
And they said goodbye to the man
who replaced him in a stunning post&gt;eript tO one of the year's biggest
trade&gt;.
Cleveland struck a rare reunion
with their center fielder on Monday.
signing Lofton to a S24 million,
three-year contract and trading Mar4uis Grissom to the Milwaukee
Brewers for three pitchers. including
Ben McDonald.
"I'm glad to be ~ack where I
hclong," Lofton said as he slipped
!lack into the jersey he wore while
lcrrorizing AL pitchers for five seasons. "Everyone knows I belong
here ."
Gnssom. the MVP of the AL
&lt;:hampi onship series who could not
live up lo Lofton's legacy as a leadoff hitter. ends up back in the National League with new member Milwaukee. The Brewers sent McDonald
and relievers Mike Fetters and Ron
Villone to Cleveland and also got
nght-hander Jeff Juden from the
Indians.

Cleveland immediately dealt Fetters to Oakland for right-hander
Slcve Karsay.
'fhc Indians also had a new team-

mate waiting for Lofton - Dwi~ht
Gooden, who ~igned a two-year contract worth $5,675,000.
"This is 8oing to be fun," Indians
general manager John Hart said
under his breath as he approached a
podium to make all these bnnouncements.
•
The nurry of moves amounted to
an unlikely reversal of the Grissomfor-Lofton ponion of Cleveland's
blockbuster trade with the Atlanta
Braves in spring training.
No one was more stunned than
Lofton when the Indians called his
bluff and traded him to Atlanta with
Alan Embree for Grissom and David
Justice on March 25. Lofton had
turned down a five-year offer from
Cleveland worth about $44 million,
saying he planned to test the free
agent market after the 1997 season.
Now Lofton and Grissom, two
center fielders who keep pa..sing in
the night, are inexorably linked agoin.
" It's like I was a ghost for a year."
a grinning Lofton said, "but now I'm
back."
Lofton, 30, helped Clev~land
shake it• loser image by leading the
Indians to their first World Series in
41 years in 1995. At a parade after the
·series, he shoiJt.cd to fans, "Cleveland, you ain't seen nothin' yet!"
But he became persona non grata
in Atlanta, where he was hampered

by injuries and batted .333 with only
27 stolen bases. The Braves did not
offer arbitration to Lofton, who found
only Cleveland and Milwaukee interested in him this winter.
Lofton's agent, Steve Zucker. said
he turned down five-year deals worth
· about $40 million from Cleveland
and Milwaukee. Lofton opted for the
shorter eontracl with all money paid
up fionl .
·:we had our sights set on Kenny
Lofton, but as that thing progressed
il looked like we weren 't going to be
able to sign Kenny," Milwaukee
general manager Sal Bando said.
"We proceeded to contact Cleveland
10 sec what they were looking for for
Marquis Grissom."
Grissom and Justice led the Indians to the World Series for the sec:
ond' time in three years, playing
major roles in straightening out the
once-volatile Cleveland cluhhousc.
On the heels of last week's lrade
in which Cleveland sent lhird baseman Matt Williams to Arizona, the
Lofton signing again sends the Indians into a season with a suhsluntially changed team.
Although Lofton patrolling center
licld at the Jake hardly seems like a
change.
"We missed him," Hart said.

"For a year."

·

II will be interesting to see what

PICTURE .YOUR CHILD
AMONG THE •••

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The terms of Torbush's contract Ellis, went to Baddour demanding
were not immediately released. Ath- that Torbush get the job.
lctic director Dick Baddour said the
"Yeah, it took a lot of guts," linecontract still needs approval from backer Keith Newman said of the Frischool trustees hefore becoming day meeting with Baddour he attendlinal.
ed in support ofTorbush. "But since
The decision marked the second I came here, Coach Brown pretty
time within the last two inonlhs the · much had an open-door policy and
Tar Heels have hired a head coach Coach Torbush had an open-door
from the ranks of its assistants. Bill policy. We just happened to catch Mr.
Guthridge, .a longtime baskelball Baddour as he was leaving a meeting
assistant, was hired Oct. 9 to replaco .with !he coaches and we asked him
Dean Smith, who had coached bas- if he had an open, time.
kctball at North Carolina for 36 seasons.
"He told us to come to his ollice
"Coach Guthridge has already put and ~c allowed us the I5 or 20 min·
me in a bad situation because he's ules that we a.•ked for, he listened to
still undefeated," Terbush said.
us real diligently;" N~wll)an added.
Torbush,~thc mas1ermind behind
made a decision on what he
North Carolina's top llefcn.es fle \holaPt -·bat f&lt;Jr tlw'uqivll,.ily,
past few seasons, is a man of con- but I also think a couple of things we
viction ~ho is well liked by North may have brought.up in the mcdiu
Carohna s players. He saod ot took muck him."
_him thr~e days.to write a short sumTorbush came to North Carolina
mary ot hos pholosophy m the North with Brown i.n 19K7 and has s~rved
Carolina media guide. agonizing over as defensive coordinator since 1994.
what to say about a school he said he · Under his loadership. the Tur Heels
loves.
·
·
linishcd lirst in the Atlantic Coasl
·'That's what I truly mean," Tor- Copfcrcncc in defense each of the last
bush said. "Academically, athleti- three seasons and led the nation in
cally and socially. Carolina is what I scoring dcfcnsc.in 1996.
believe in. That's the reason I stayed
Torbush has only one year of head
here for 10 years and plan on staying coaching experience at- the college
the rest of my life."
level. leading Louisiami Tech in 19K7
. A group pf six players, including to a 3~ H mark after serving as an
nil-American dclcnsivc end Greg ussistant there for four selisons. He

SynUicMII.'.

KENNY LOFTON

·I

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·Our 11peeial page(e) .

'·He

in

The Daily Sentinel

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(CHILD'S NAME)
Parents' or
Grandparents Name

· cARLTORBUSH

:.

Baylor, Southeastern Louisiana and
Mississippi,

Official
Entry
Form

•'

"I know exactly whal not to do
now." Torbush said. "Any guy that
becomes a head coach you arc going
to go through growing pains, and
when you're 3-8, a lot of growing
!iains.

•

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BY BECKY BAER
Meigs County Extenaion Agent
Family and Consumer Sciences/ Community Development

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Many times during the holiday
season the two words we mosl oflen
hear are not "Merry Christmas!" but
instead arc "Charge it!"
Because of the temptation to usc
plastic, we often end up with more
bills than we expected: We need to
think ahead and make out a budget
not only for buying the gifts, but
also for the entertaining that we do.
We should recognize what our family's iinancial limits arc and stick to
them . How do we do this'!
First we need to understand that

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RANDY MOSS
the attention loward his teammates.
But he may also he trying to avoill
the kind ofncgativc publicity that
came with his arrests and frankness.
He was sharply criticized in West
Virginia after he told Sports Illustrated and the Los Angeles Times thut
he did not like the state and w~nted
to leave as quickly as possible,
Moss also drew heavy criticism
wheto he said he didn't know much
ahout the 1970 plane . crash that
wiped out Marshall's tc.am in 197!1,
and while calling it a tragedy, he suod
it "wasn't nothing big."
Pruetl says he and Moss have nm
discussed the Hcismun or Moss'
future. But he thinks Moss will go to
!he NFL rather than return for his
junior season.
Moss says he has sci no timctahle
and has enrolled for spring semester
classes.. The Hcisman. Moss says
wilh a shrug, would be nice, but losing won't break his heart.
In fact, he 's weary of answering
questions about it. . .
.
"This Heisman thtng 1s not so b•g
to me . If the trophy comes, great. I
mean, it' it wouldn't hurt anybody's
leelings, I'd watch it on TV. I never .
really d~~ set any individual goals for J
mysell .
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IDeatlne: Friday, Dec. 19 at 3 p.m.
Mall or l)rlng the entry form:

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

•

more money wi II probably be spent
if purchases are charged. If items are
bought with cash, you can easily see
the money leave your wallet. But
when credit is used, you often don't
realize how quickly the sales are
adaing up_ To help you save money,
some stores will give discounts if
articles arc paid for with cash. Take
advantage of these businesses .
Another important thing to
remember is to pay off the entire
amount when the credit card bill
comes. By doing this , finance
charges are not added to the cost of
the purchases .
If you find yourself spending
more because of using credit cards,
pay with cash or checks. Don't take
the credit cards with yQu when you
shop..
.
If you arc shoppingiDut of town
and prefer to usc credib make sure
that you write down each purchase
and what credit card was used in a
small notebook. Store yilur receipts
and a copy of your holiday budget in
the notebook. so that yOil can compare · the amount spent with what
was budgeted. Tl11s will allow you to
keep a running total, so you will sec
when you arc approaching your
limit.

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TO BE AUCOONED - These dolls, beautiful coatumed by Bend
'rea women In the F•rmlllfa B8hk dress-a-doll c:ontaat, .will l;le sold
at public auction, 1 p.m. Saturday. Proceeds. of the sale will go to the
United Fund for Melga County..

Plans for a Christmas dinner to be' members signed u get-wei) tard for
held at the Iron Gate Restaurant in Kay Frederick's mother.
Point Pleasant were made when the
Thompson cxphtincd lfhcn to
Winding Trail .Garden Cluh m~t pick llowcrs an,J how to drr~ hem.
rel:ently at the Alice Thompson
A rcporl was given on ti~'-.:Ounty
t:uhin.
ChriStmns flower show
ld the
Thc dinner will he held on Dec.:. wcckcruJ hcforc Thnnksgi ing at
17 and there will he a $5 gii't Carleton Sclucul. Mcmhcrl:reccivexchange. Hoslcss was Peggy ing awurtls were Crane. th
firsl!-i .
Crane.
·~, scc.:nnd. and three thin.ls; IH!t.npFor ro ll call mcmOcrs told wh;tt son. 1hrcc firsts. ot second arld .a
kind uf-phmtmalcri:.tlthcy me usrng third; Gladys Cumings. fiv~ finas .
to decorah: for the lmridt~ys. with ;,md two thirds; Karen \VerT~ a first
most rc~ponding. CYcrgrccn, hox - muJ two sc(.:onds; Mdvn 'Q'a~y. :1
wouU or holly.
sccurul unU tWll thirds; pchhk
Officer!-.' n.;pons wen; given mu.l Mohll:r. :tlirst P:ttty Cook. tw~1 SCL'·

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THE WINNERS - For the second year, Mariana Staats of Middleport, second from left, took the
grand prize In the Farmers Bank dress-a-doll contest. Other winners presented savings bonds by Dot·
tie Musser, right, bank employee, were from the left, Louise Staats, Middleport, 1904 style dress; San·
dra Laudermllt, Pomeroy, crocheted costume; Bobble Reed, Reedsville, bride doll, and Doria Roberta,
character, whose doll Is displayed here by Tammie Zirkle, bank employee.

If you were an early bird and
charged some items in October or
November. their payments will be
due during the time when you are
making most of your purchases.
Make sure that you pay at least the
minimum on the~e accounts so that
your cards aren't canceled when you
need them the most. It would be
more beneficial, though, if you
could pay them all off when the bill
comes. This would prevent any
finance charges from being added to
your total.
Another op.tion thai some people
like to exercise is the use of ATM
cards ihstead of cash or checks when
shopping during the holidays. An
ATM card is safer to use than cash,
because. it can be replaced if lost or
stolen. You also don't have to show
identification and it is more easily
accepted than an out-of-state check.
Another benefit is that the ATM card
will also help you keep truck of your .
purchases in the fonn of a monthly
statement.
Whichever method you usc to ·
pay for your holiday purchases cash.
credit card, &lt;heck. or ATM card stay within your allotted budget.
Don 't overspend. You will t~ank
yourscl f later.

H'oliday party planned:by garden club

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or tucked under their arms.
The dolls , in colorful costumes of
satin and lace, calico and cotton,
flannel and noral s, were on display
at the bank until Saturday when I hey
will be auctioned ofT to the highest
bidders.
Racine auctioneer Dan Smith
will handle the auction.
Again this year proceeds from the
sale will go to the United Fund for
Meigs County.

-----Time Out For Tips

:

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All of the dolls have hair and
many have had it styled to harmonize wiih their outfit. One dressed in
outdoor attire has a short cut suited
to a summertime casual look, while
others in elaborate period and bridal
costuming have long curls and
upsweeps.
.
Many have elaborate hats, some
carry handbags and baskets, while
others hold umbrellas. A tew even
have miniature teddy bears and
other animals clutche;:lin their hands

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"If I had to pick out one liability
on· myself, sometimes maybe I wa.•
too nice a guy. There comes limes
you have to make hard decisions and
you' vc got to be able to separate
friendship from business."

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BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Middleport teenager Mariana
Staats took the grand prize for the
best overall costumed doll in the
Farmers Bank's annual dress-a-doll
contest judged last week.
. She took. the award in the prettiest category from the 57 dolls
dressed by Meigs and Gallia customers of Farmers Bank and judged
·on the basis of creativity and originality.
For Mariana, .it was a second win.
' Last year she captured . the lop
prize of a $200 savings bond with
her entry in the 1904 style dressattire of the year the bank was
founded- and a $100 savings bond
for winning in that category.
This year she won in the prettiest
category. Again Faimers Bank presented her the grand prize of a $200
savings bond, along with a $100
savings bond for winning in the .
prettiest category.
Other category winners recognized at Thursday's announcement
and Pl'l=Sented $100 savings bonds
were Bobbie keed, the bride doll;
Doris Robens, a character doll;
Louise Staats, a doll in 1904 style
dress, and Sandy Laudermilt, a crocheted doll.
The talents of Bend Area women
are well displayed in the colorful
and creative costuming of the dolls
provided by the bank, Many have
spent weeks making the outfits and
jl'-certliinly shows in the design ., and.
workmanship in both dress-up and
casual attire.

•

'Uncoverable' Mo·ss stands
as lone sophomor~ in race

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Heisman Trophy presentation set for Saturday.

By JIM VERTUNO
Moss look off across the fielll. faking speech communicalions classes in a
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) two linemen off their.fcct, still-arm- wor~-study program.
,
When Randy Moss showed up at ing another defender, hurdling yet.
Although Moss never played at
Florida State, coach Bobby Bowden another and. without losing a step, Florida State, Bowden was well
was almost giddy over his new wide · accelerating down the left siddinc aware of his talent.
receiver.
while the rest of the licld seemed to
"He's just got so many tools, lim"He can run. he can jump, hut be in slow motion.
itless tools," the coach said after
what he docs hcst is run like tt scald·
Already 'named the MAC player watching Moss practice,
cd dog ... Bowden said he fore Mc~&gt;s nf the year and a linalist lilf the BilctAfter his release from jail, Moss
ran afoul of the h.1w and was ~ ickcd nikoff Award given to the n:uion's walked on at Marshall and scored 2K
off the team.
hcst receiver, Moss is selling new toucl\downs. leading the Thundering
. A year and another school later, standards for receivers, having s&lt;.:orcd tfcrd to the Division 1-AA champiMoss hasn't stop running. And nn at least one touchdown in each of his onship·and a 15-0 record. This seaone can catch him .
27 college games.
son, Marshall (10-2) returned to
•· Nohody in America can cnvcr
But Moss says he would rather Division I-A after a 28-year absence
him ," Ball State coach Bill Lynch watch the Hcisman Trophy ceremo- and laces Mississippi in !he Motor
said after Moss caught five touch- ny Dec. 13 on his living room tele- City Bowl on Dec. 26.
down passes in Marshall 's 42- 16 vic- vision than in person. He i• one of
B.ut can a wide ·receiver in the
tory against the Cardinals.
four players invited·to New York for . MAC win the Hcisman'/ For that
The only sophomore among this lhc ceremony.
o
matter. can a wide receiver from any
year's Heisman Trnphy candidates,
"I think just for the fact that I'm . school win it'/ The last receiver to
Muss set the Division 1-A single-sea- coming out of a small school here in win it was MichigaQ's Desmond
sun .~ rpark with
2S rcccivilll'
wu~.:hHuntington, it would he very difficult Howard in 1991.
'
.
c
Jowns - fcvc cnvenng 70 yards or for me lo win it,,. Muss said.
- ::If the Heisman "I:rQJJhy is for the
more -and ha.• caught 90 pa.•ses for
" Hopefully it's not that big of a best college player who uoes the
1.647 yards to set a Mid-American factor, hut deep down inside I think most· for his team, I think Randy
Conference record.
it is."'
deserves • shot," said Marshall quarIn two seasons. he h:ls scored 53
Moss' college career ~as almost terback Chad Pennington. "When the
llluchdowns for Marshall .
over before. it began.
offense needs a bjg play, he's going
"He's doing this with people
One of West Virginia's most ccl- to make one almost e~cry time."
pulling triple covcr&lt;.~ge un hun," cbrated _high school athletes, Moss
Nonetheless, the award is cKpcct·
Marsha ll coach Bob Pruett said. was headed to Notre Dame hut the ed to go to players at higher-profile
"They doubled and triple-teamed Irish revoked the scholarship al'ter he programs such as Tennessee's Peyton
Randy, but he ulwuys seems to find was charged with attacking another Manning, Michig~n's Charles Wooda way to make big plays."
. student at DuPont High School.
son, or Ryan Leaf at Washington
At 6-loot-5, Moss is taller than
Moss pleaded guilty to battery and State.
most defensive backs and he's faster, was se ntenced to 30 days in jail. He
But one-by-one, Moss has made
with 4.25 speed in the 40-yard-da.~h. was allowed to defer most of the S.:n- believers out of each of his oppoHe 's also got an impressive 39-inch tence until after his freshman year in nents.
vcnicalleap and huge hand$ wilh ten- college. .
"I don't know about the Heisman
tacle! ike lingers that rarely drop
Florida State was quick to roll out Trophy because I'm 1101 into that. But
pa.•ses.
the welcome mat, but a year later anyone who can run !hat fast is speThe 1997 Randy Moss highlight rolled it back up when Moss violat- cial," said West Virginip coach Don
film begins with a 90-yard touch- ed his probation by smoking mari- Nehlen, whose team defeated Mardown ugainsl Army.
juana. A one-year jail sentence was shall 42-31 despite Moss' two touch·
Cradling ascreen pass behind th~ reduced a month later to time served downs.
line of scrimmage on his own live, after he completed algehra and
Moss has tried to detlcct some of

,.

Thesday, December 23rd

a

school, I would like to invite stu- form and enter them on the Internet.
Dear MiChael Rodriguez: keep a running total of the commit- al happening." Here's my contribudents across the country to do as Students don't need to have their Thank you for your excellent letter. I ted ac(s of kindness and justice cute· tion· from the London Telegraph:
many acts of kindness (helping oth- own computers. They can access the also received some additional ihfor- gorized by city and state throughout
A blind man in Edinburgh, Scoters) and justice (stand in~, 'IJp for Intern~! through their schools. One mation from Andrew Shue, board the two weeks of the contest. After land, bit his guide dog because the
what's right) as they can i~ he two of the acts of kindness that I did was chair of Do Something.
.the chall enge. students and schools man became frustrated at his inabilweeks before Martin Luth~King Jr. helping my mom around the. house
All schools in the nation, kinder- that have done the most acts in each r ity to make the' dog follow instrucDay, Jan. lj!.
when she sprained her ankle. As an garten through high school , arc state and in the nation will receive tions. "I was drunk," the man said.
Do Something, foundeo jn 1993, act of justice, I told one of my class- , invited to participate in the Kindness recognition and media attention.
The judge showed little mercy. The
is a national non-profit orjllnization mates that it was wrong to cheat on &amp; Justice Challenge. Each teacher
I think this is a tremendously marr may not own another dog f&lt;lr
that trains, funds, mobilizes and his test and that he was smart who registers will receive a kit with worthwh.ile pr9gram , and I hope two years.- Faithful Reader
inspires young people to be leaders ·enough to pass it without cheating. an appropriate curriculum that teachers and students everywhere
Dear Faithful: When a dog bites
who strengthen their communities. The next day, I found out that he includes two weeks of daily lessons, will ask about it. For more inrorma~ a man, that's not news , but when a
Do Something, along with doT.ens of passed the test without cheating.'
instructions for posting acts of kind- tion, write to: The Kindness &amp; Jus- man bites a dog, it's worth some ink.
national education and service orgaThe Kindness &amp; Justice Chal- ness and justice on the Internet, and tice Challenge, Do Something, 423 Thank you.
nizations, is organizing a nationwide lenge will gi,ve students the opportu- incentives to encourage participa~ W. 55th St., 8th Floor, New York,
two-week effort leading up to Mar- nity to show their respect for Martin tion .
N.Y. 10019, or access www.kjchal- . Send questions to Ann Landers,
tin Luther King Jr. Day, titled Luther King Jr. by making the world
Each school that registers for the lenge.org.
Creator.; Syndicate, 5777 W. Ceo"Kindness &amp; Justice Challenge."
a more. kind and just place. Please challenge can post the acts on a speDear Ann Landers: I'm a faith - tury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
Students should write down the help us get the word out. -Michael cial website. One of the features will lui reader in Seoul, Korea. Every Calif. 90045"
acts of kindness and justice they per- Rodriguez
be a map of the country that will now and then , you print an "un usu-

Farmer's Bank hosts dress- a -.doll contest

(16 yean of age or yo1111$er)
.
. , Will be published

Please enclose self-addressed,
stamped envelope to return your
photo.

also 10rved Jill 1011 -ioltlll'll _ . ,

Dear Readers: The following
Jetter was forwarded to me by Father
Theodore Hesburgh, who, for 35
years, served as president of Notre
Dame University. We have been
friends since he began his career at
1hat great 'school, and I happily put
my stamp of approval on anything
Father Ted supports. What follows
falls in that category:
Dear Ann Land~rs : I am a student at Ridge Street School in
Newark, N.J . On behalf of my

~'For Children Only"

Per PicturePrepaid

Page7
Tuesday, December 9, 1997

·Kindness and Justice Challen.ge offered to all readers
1\191, Lnli Anrele• 11~~
Syll\lic•le 11011 C'rellu•r~

North Carolina hires Torbush
as new head football .coach
By DAVID DROSCHAK
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) Carl Torbush accepted with open
arms what Mack Brown turned his
hack on less than a week ago.
"I can promise you the only way
the University of North Carolina will
get rid of Carl Torbush is they arc
going to have to run me ofT because
I am here for the duration." the former Tar Heels defensive coordinator
said Monday after heing named
Brown's replacement.
" This is home, this is where I
need to be and this is where I want
to he," added Torbush. " I thank you
from the depths of my heart for this
opportunity. I never in the world
thought this would be here live days
ago.''
Some players have spoken harshly of Brown since he announced his
decision Iasl week to take the coaching job at Texas. Torbush, though..
credited Brown with his sw:ces.&lt; as an
assistant at North Carolina.
"Withoul question. without him I
would not be here today," Torbush
said. "He made a very tough dccision, and he's been behind me every
step of the way."
Torbush, 46, will take over as
head coach immediately, coaching
the Nn. 7· Tar Heels ( 10-1) in the
Gator Bowl against Virginia Tech on
Jan. 1.

.•

Ann
Landers

role Lofton assumes on !he club after
sitting out the dramatic playoff run
that Grissom helped orchestrate.
Grissom, 30, a q'uieter, steadier
version of Lofton, batted .262 with 22
steals for the Indians. He delivered
invaluable leadership, outstanding
defense and a clutch, three-run homer
off Armando Benitez in Game 2 of
the ALCS against Baltimore en route
to winning series MVP honors.
Lofton's reality check came when
he had to watch his ex-teammates
play in the World Series.
"It was real hard," said Lofton,
who received a rousing ovation wben
he returned to Cleveland in a Braves
uniform for the All-Star game. "I felt
like I was right there with the guys."
Lofton played for the Indians
from 1992-96, leading the AL in
steals each year. He will gct,$7.5 million in each of the next three seasons,
and Cleveland has an option for 2001
at between $8 million and $9 million,
depending on his performance. If the
option. isn 'I · exercised, Cleveland
must pay a $1.5 million buyout.

The Daily Sentinel

nnds ; Apri l k~nhu~cr. a second
place: and Valerie N9t1ingham, a
first ~lace and a third place.
· Juiliors receiving awurds were
Jc:oisir.:a Icenhower. two first. nnd h~l
of show: Ethan Nottinghmn . a sc..:ond. and rc:o;rrYc ~sl of shllw; Josh
Mohler. a thirJ: Nathan Coi&gt;k. da
scnmd pi:H.'L'. Mcml'crs ui!&lt;O contrihuh:d 111 thl' l:trgc display nf
;.mgcls.
Anyone intl'I'L'Sil'd in joinmg thl'
1.: luh is invill'J to Gladys Cuming!'..
"Nl-71 J I or Vak'l'i~,.· N\•llingham.

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each of the

few year!'. . By ye;tr 's cml. 4 hi!·
lion catH..Ik!-. will he ~ol d in the Unitell Statco.;.
(';mdlcli~ltl. !'.n fe stive. is pcrf~:~.·t
lor this t.i111c
year. Out if lhl· only
t'andJc.., you ' w L'V\.'1' dn·tlf':ttcd with

,,r

'•

arc t;,tll totpcrs on the dining room
tahlc . l.'lliiSii.lcr the )o(l' illcas and
;ulvk'c from the Natiunal C~tndk
1\~St k.'i at it Ill :
- Turn your fin:plaL·~,.· into ••
··~,.·:uullcpi:II.·L·" hy filling it with l'~ln ~
t.llcs. Vary th~.!il' h~.·ighl hy s~tting
them on hri~.: lo. s or !-.IOIIL' hh li.· ~s •to
cr~.·.atL'

thL'

luu~

ul' ill!lowin~ . llam~.· .

- I'i ll snlall jars with dear. ,·ol ·
orl.!tl
marhks otnd ~~ L'OIIll.lks in ."i~.lc.
.
()r plan: a nllurml ~ sltapl'(\ . :andk 111

.

.

a

1wr~.·d:tin

CHQf&amp;TMA&amp; GQEETING EDITlON
·Wednesday, December 24th
tt'lflt "'renfltll or ltoll;t· nml ml!iith•t•••·· !iilm•klnr.f~'~ lnm• by
fill." rlre n11d -nes ltlmll&amp;l"fNI with 11111nv. Cltrll'lhiiRN
t•neo~••P•-" wnr111th n•-11 l(cmd elu•l'r liN ~f! c•herltdl the
ltlt"Mhl~ we've shn~ Cltl11 pn11t y•r•r. •'nr 11!11 If Alt'RIIN
Nn;.·ln,c "fi•••~IL"" to ;.·m•. nur mm•y frh&gt;ndN, nld mul ue'r~
\\'lllt!IIC" kind t'lllplmrt \n•'ll nlwrty!ll trenNin•c•. ltnl11•
lniNin~ol with yo•r Is 1111r ~rt·ntt•st plt'aNurel

Wish all your customers and ·
friends a very Merry Christmas
in our Christmas Greetings Edition
on l)ecember 24th

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR DAVE OR DON

992-2156

TIIE DAILY SENTINEL

howl o111d surwund tlw

l.'i.lllliiL· wHh fau' r~:arls .
- htr ;I I.'CIIIL'rpiL'L'!,,', lillL' liJl dtff..:rt.:lli ·Sil\.:'1.\

taper:-.

~.hm' n

tl11.'

c~.·nt..:r

of lh1.• l:lhk. thl'l.'l' 111d11.' S apart .
- For a smalk·r tahll· lkc~.Jratinn,

put nrw llu;Hing L'.llh..lk in a win~.·
glas!-. filll'll with WHil'l' And ah\'i.lys
u,sc unsl'l' I11L'd l':mdks at th~.· dining
tahh:; it':-; ll4:sttu kt th-.· .\l'l.ltn;t ~.,ftlh.'
tnt..'ill fill the :air.

I •

�••

PIK• 8 • The Dally Seotlnel

•

Pomeroy • Middleport,

'

·.,.r
•;J!
Tuesdly, December 9, 1997 ~
•

Ohio

The Dally Sentinel• P. . l

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

_,

Meeting ·the challenge of change~
::l

In tldd.ition, the annual cost-of·
living increase assures· that benefits · 1
...IUIOif, keep up with the cost of living. And !
Athene
·
when benefits are figured, the earn· :
ings in a worker's Social Security •
Most people who fear for the record are upgraded to reflect •
future of Social Security do not increases in average wage levels :
understand how it is structured io over the working years.
:
meet the challenge of change. They
Sociai ·Security has been changed •
do not realize that, in fact, the Social many times since the original act •
Security system is designed to provided retirement benefits to a '
change to meet changing conditions. limited number of workers in com· :
The question that emerges is, can merce and industry. Today the pro- •
Social Seeurity change to meet the gram is the nation's primary means '
challenges of the distant future and of providing a continuing income to :
still be Social Security?
a family in which the worker has ;
Social Security . Commissioner died, become disabled or has retired . . •
Kenneth S. Apfel says: "We must Some nine out of 10 people age 65 !
dispel the notion that Social Securi- and over arc eligible to receive :
ty will not be there for future gener- retirement benefits; four out of five :
ations. Social Security will be there. workers under age 65 can receive •
The only question is what shape will monthly disability benefits if they :
it take. It has evolved over the are unable to work; and nine out of !
decades to meet the needs of the cit· I 0 families would receive survivors 1
izenry. And the American people benefits if a worker dies. Medicare,
will decide, once again, what their too meets a critical need for health l .
Social Security program should care for the elderly and disabled. , 1
entail."
Perhaps the most recent example ,
Chief among these mechanisms of the program's capacity for change' :
of change is the Board of Trustees, is the 1983 amendments, which·
which reviews the financial condi· were ~csigned to strengthen the · ,
tion of the Social Security trust financing of the program for future ;
.funds every year for 75 years into generations. A bipartisan commis- i
the future. If the income and outgo sion made a number of changes that ,
arc not "actuarily balanced" during has resulted in a growing reserve in ~
' this period, it blows the whistle. The the trust funds to meet the needs of ~
last Trustees Report indicated that future generations. One important
the program is sufficieotly financed change increased the retirement age
to pay benefits through 2030.·
gradually from 65 to 67 by the year
Also imponant is the Advjsory 2027 .
Board , a seven-member bipartisan
Last year's trustees report indi- •
group established in 1994 to advise · cates that the program will need ~ .
the President, the Congress, and the · additional financing in the year 2030 :
Commissioner of ,Social Security on when the baby hoomers flood the •
all aspects of. tho: Social Security system. At that time there will he ~
system. Before this group was estab- two workers for every beneficiary
fished, an Advisory Council wa• rather than the three to one ratio of
appointed periodically to perfonn today,
.
• .,
·rhis function .
Will Social Security be up to :
l'hcn there arc the various over- meeting this new challenge? It is _ :
sight committees in the Congress. important to remember that the • •
They review the correspondence question is not whether the program :
from their constituents, the reports will meet the need for new funding, .. ~
of the. Trustees and the Advisory but how. Whatever step is taken, you ··. ~
Commtttees, and draft appropnatc can be sure that the program will be · · •
legislation designed to meet the . there for you .
.
&lt; :.
need.
,,!
BY ED PETERSON
Society hcurHy

·1111111
STATE ROUTE 124
Approxlmett!y 1.4,m11. . . . .t of Route 32.
WELLSTON, OHIO
814-384 8212

7:00 •.m.

Pop culture: Simpsons and sandwiches, towers and·teen rebellion
By :J'ED ANTHONY
AP.National Writer
;reen years "awkward" ? James
Dean wasn't awkward; he was
graceful. Elvis wasn't awkward; he
wa$ sexy. Anncllc Funiccllo cenainly wasn't awkward; she was blooming:bcauty incarnate.
13ur we were awkward. We all
we~ . And those stars were not really~mcrican teens; they were idealized American teens, packaged and
processed for the masses. The contradiction he tween the two images is
the backbcne of "Teenage Contidential" (Chronicle, $16.95, paperback). an illustrated history of the
American teen-ager.
Authors Michael Barson and
Steven Heller ("who spent most of
his teen-age years in detention")
ha-"' done what Chronicle does best
- 'assembled a melange of images
and , insightful text that tells the
strange history of American adolescencc in the 20th century, both real
and .fictional.
The tctm "teen-ager." coined in
the 1920s, grew by the 1950s to
encompass an entire adolescent cui:'
ture of rebellion. romance and. of
course. consumer proclivities. Andy
Hardy's innocence gave way to
Dean's cool and youth culture was
on its way.
Using everything from old newspaper articles to a wonderful 1959
yearbook letter from an Alabama
high school principal to his students
("the thing that matters to m~ most
is what you think of me 10. 20 and
:10 years from now " ). the au tho"
have produced a hcm,niful collage of
whal it has meant to he a tccnragcr

in the 20th century.
And remcmhcr that. according to
The New York Times in 1958.

gal" and "badge bandits " were
policemen.
Oh, for the innocence of that
rehellion.
Burger's story well-done
OK. OK. So it stretches belief a
lillie that the author of a hamburger
history is named Ronald L. MeDonald. And that he 's no relative. But
it's proof that the name maketh the
man.
"Who did they think I was Dave Thomas'" McDonald writes
of his years answering late-night
phone calls from people complain·
ing about the consistency of french
fries and other fast-food minutiae.
Duly harangued, he took matters
into his own hands. The result, "The
Complete Hamburger: The History of America's Favorite Sand·
wich" (Birch Lane, $18.95), is an
entertaining, if strangely recipe·
laden small volume about the sandwich that sated America.
The food is traced from its German and lunch-counter roots into the
White Castle craze of the 1920s and
'1930s and, finally, into the carhop
culture that helped !hc burger
dethrone the hot dog and set it on the
road to the nationwide franchises
Americans patronize today.
Given special consideration, naturally. is' the spread of the MeDonaid's chain. hrothcrs Maurice and
Richard McDonald. who started it.
and the eventual giobal diaspora of
Mickey D's created hy hurgcr magnate Ray Kroc.
Overall. it's a well -done ltttlc
culinary history Jhat culminates wiih
recipes - Israeli applo..!-hurger meat halls and tofu hurgers among them
-that only a true aficionado could
stomach.

"boast toaslic· · meant a "conceited

A guide to 'The Simpsons'? Doh!
Who knew that Kwik-E Mart
proprietor Apu's last name was
Nahasapecmapetilon? Or that Roger
Meyers Sr.. founder of Itchy &amp;
· Scratchy International, counts
among his top successes the "fulllength musical Scratchtasia" and the
"wildly successful Pinitchyo'' ?
Now you , lao, can know these
and the thousands of other dizzying
facts nestled in the dense mass of·
TV show that is "The Simpsons."
In an age where every .series has
at least one companion book, "The
Simpsons: A Complete Guide to
Our Favorite Family" (HarperPerennial, $15.95, paperback)
stands out. It is not only interesting
as a guide to Man Groening's hit
canoon program, but a wonhy book
that stands on its own.
Pan of this is because of the richness of "The Simpsons." Jammed
with an unremitting barrage of popular culture references and dead-on
satires that arc sometimes difficult
even for the most post-ironic 1990s
denizen to catch, it is one of the few
shows that actually requires a guide.
So the book, using the same
palette of mustard yellows and
oranges as the show, breaks it down
episode by episode. including wacky
plot synopses. "the stuff ~ou may
have missed" and thumbnails of regular and guest characters.
The latter,. of course, skewer
every stereotype imaginable. includmg Rabbi Krustofski (''special gift:
can solve any problem as long as it
is posed as nn ethical question);
Lunchlady Doris ("major vice :
smokes cigarettes and docs not
always watch where the ashes go" ):
and God ("quirks: uses roo( instead
of front door to c~tcr a home").
If you Jove '·The Simpsons." this

book is a must. And if you've never
watched it, this is a guide to a twisted suburban universe even more
bizarre than ''The X-Files."
All along the Watts Towen
Even today, no one is quite sure
what they arc. Are they an? Arc .they
kitsch? Are they architecture? One
thing, though, is cenain: The "Watts'
Towers" in south-central Los Angeles arc something that has intrigued
people for decades.
In "The Los Annles. Watts
Towers" (Getty, $24.95, paperback), Bud and Arlqa Paquin Goldstone examine the history and impli·
cations of these odd, cone-shaped
structures built by the Italian-born
Simon Rodia, a "con&lt;truction worker by day, anist by night" who spent
34 years, from 1921 to 1955, erect- ·
ing the towers dozens of feet into the
air with no machinery or scaffolding ..
In the sculptures (if that's the
word for them). he embedded all
sorts of cultural 'artifacts, from
Canada Dry Ginger Ale bottles to
small tiles to pastel Fiesta Ware coffee cups. Whatever he had on hand
at the time.
Once condemned and scheduled
for demolition, the towers arc now
one of only four National Historic
Landmarks in Los Angeles - testament to a work of a strange man
considered a hack by some and a
genius by others.'
But in his work. and in the pho.tographs and analysis of this book,
the question rings clear: If we arc
still discussing the struclurcs four
decades later, if they still have us
talking and analyzing ~nd mulling
and questioning. does it really matter whether they're art or not''

~

'

Community Ca,en·dar :. ll

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not designed fo promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space penniL• and cannot
be guaranteed to ruq a specific numberofdays.
TUESDAY
SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Cham her of Commerce, general
mcmhcrship luncheon, Tuesday,
noon, Carleton School. Candace
Hcer, Meigs County Health Dcpan·
mcnt. Youth Services division, guest
speaker.

speak at the Ash Street Freewill ..
Baptist Church, Middleport, Tucs- . 1
day and Wednesday, 7 p.m. •
· •
WEDNESDAY
·.:. !'
POMEROY - American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
to meet at noon at the hall to wrap .•.
gifts. Yeget!lllle ~oup will be ~ervcd lf.ll'!
THUitSDAY '
.. '·"'· ,. ,
TUPPERS PLAINS - St. Paul &gt;~
United Methodist Church Thursday, · :~
7 p.m., with Coolville Community ' ·;
Choir to present Christmas cantata, &lt;. ·
"Everlasting Light." Public invited.
FRIDAY
•
RUTLAND - Rutland Church
of God, outdoor live musical nativi•
ty reenactment 7 p.m. Friday and
CHESTER -Chester Township · Saturday, on church lawn: Public ::: :
Truslccs, Tuesday. 7 p.m. town hall. invited, refreshments.
: ::
SATURDAY
=:
POMEROY - Big Bend ComPOMEROY Burlingham : •
munity band under direction of Modern Woodmen Chri.&lt;tmas din - :-')
Toney Dingess. Tuesday, 5:30 p.m .. ncr, Saturday, 4 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. ~ ,
Senior Citilens Center after the din· at the hall. Potluck,
,1
•
ncr.
EAST MEIGS- OAPSE ChristDARWIN - Bedford Township mas dinner, Saturday, 6 p.m. :-:
Trustee&lt;, Tuesday, 7 p.m. Bedford · Riverview School. Meat, drinks and '
&gt;,.
town hall.
rolls provided. Take covered dish, , -·
$5 gift exchange. take gifts for auc- •' :
MIDDLEPORT
Mike tion.
Warnke, Christian comedian, will
\

By BARBARA ALBRIGHT
For AP Special Features
Whether it's because there is a little bit of Santa's elf in each one of
us, or because the smell of baking
cookies just mingles so divinely

.,

•

t

Apricot Thumbprint Cookies
have an almond cx.tract-scentcd
dough. They arc then rolled in
chopped almonds. Apricot preserves
fill the indentation in each cookie.
Meanwhile. Successively Exceswill1 the scent of evergreen. at 1his sively Crunchy Peanut Butter
time of year, even non-bakers dust Brownies, from Marcel Desaulniers'
off their normally unused baking "Death by Chocolate Cookies"
sheets.
.
(Simon &amp; Schuster, $30). live up to
In my family , it just wouldn't be their name. Desaulniers is a chocoChristmas without Cutout Sugar late pro and these cakelike brownies
Cookies. As a young child. I arc MUCH too delicious to make
" helped" my mother make these only for the holidays.
cookies. Sometimes this was simply
Cutout Sugar Cookies ·
eating too many scraps of dough. In
3 112 cups all-purpose llour
high school and college , I would
I!2 teaspoon salt
have cookie-making parties with
I cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter,
friends. As a young single adullliv- softened
ing on my own, with a nod toward
213 cup granu Ia ted sugar
sophisticated entertaining. I served
I large egg
wine ·and cheese at my cookic-mak·
I tablespoon light corn syrup
ing gatherings.
I tablespoon vanilla extract
Following is my favorite recipe
In a mcdium-si7.ed bowl, mix the
for sugar cookies. developed after flour and salt.
years of experimentation. The little
In a large bowl. cream the butter
bit of light com syrup·seems to make and sugar. Stir in the egg, then the
the do~gh extra-easy to work with. corn syrup and vanilla extract. OneIn this recipe, the dough is rolled out third at a lime, add the llour mixture
between two pieces of waxed paper until thoroughly mixed . Pat the
(not a floured surface). By using this dough into two disks, wrap in plastic
technique, you can ensure that the and refrigerate for I to 2 hours or
'last cookies you bake won 't have until firm enough to roll . If the
any more flour than the first batch. dough is too firm , let it soften at
(Excess flour can make the coo~ies room temperature for about 5 mintough.) If you have trouble transfer- · utes.
ring cutout cookies to a baking sheet
Preheat oven !O 375 degrees F.
without ripping or disfiguring them , Roll one disk of aough between two
place the waxed paper with the pieces of waxed paper, about 114rolled-out cookie dough on top or a inch thick. Remove the top sheet of
baking sheet and 'POP it in the freez- waxed paper and cut out the cookies
er for 10 to 15 minutes. This makes wilh ·cookie CUtters. Using a metal
the unbaked cookies firmer and stur- spatula, transfer the shapes to baking
. dier.
sheets, leaving abcut I inch between

•

l

cookies. Bake for 8 to I0 minutes or mixer set at medium-high speed. until coated and place on a prepared
just until the cookies stan to brown beat the huller. sugar and honey until baking sheet, leaving about I 1/2
lightly around the edges.
.fight ~nd flurry. Beat in lhc cg~ and inches between the cookies, Using
Remove the baking sheet to a then the almond extract. In three your knuckle or thumb. press a deep
wire rack and cool for 5 minutes. additions each. beat in the flour mix- indentation into the center of each
Using a metal spatula, transfer lhe ture. miXing well after each addition. ·cookie. Fill each indentation with
cookies to racks and cool completeShape the dough into balls that 112 teaspoon of preserves. Bake for
ly. Repeat the procedure whh the arc ahout I inch in diameter. Roll about 10 minutes or until the cookies
remaining chilled disk of dough. each hall in the chopped almonds turn golden. Transfer the baking
Press together dough scraps, form
into a disk and chill if necessary
before rerolling the dough. Continue
until all the dough is used. The cookies can be stored in an ainight container in the freezer for up to I
month and for up to 3 days at room
lemperature before you frost them.
Makes 12 to 50 cookies, depending
on their sizes. (Bake cookies of
about the same size at the same time
for even baking.) Pipe or frost cook·
- ies with frosting, if desired.

.

Apricot Th'umbprint Cookies
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
I cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter. ·
softened
114 cup sugar
1/4 cup honey
I large egg. at room temperature
112 leaspoon almond extract
,
I cup finely chopped blanched
almonds
112 cup apricot or other fruit pre-

.

sheet to a wire rack and cool for 2 · • ·'
minutes to 4 minutes. Using a metal
spatula, transfer the ccw&gt;kies to a · ··:
wire rack and cool completely. ·. ·
When cool, store the cookies in an
airtight container with waxed paper · .
between the layers. These cookies · .
freeze well. Makes ahout 40 cook- .'
ics.
"

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GLIDER ROCKERS OAK ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS
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sheets.
In a medium-sized bowl, stir
together the Oour, baking pqwder
and salt.
r
·In a large bowl, with an electric

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Remodeling

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TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING

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614-992-00n

Rt. 124 RuU1nd, Ohio 742-3051

Offer good
Nov. 20-Dec. 20
111111111 mo. pa.

OPEN NOV. 23-11 to 9:00

·r---~~~--~----------------~'
.
SOLID VINYL
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

R. L·HOLLON
TRUCKING

I00 East Main, Pomeroy

Joe Wllaon

"11q Courl St.
112-4118

20 Yra. Exp.

Pomeroy, Ohio
1-800-28t-seoo

wv 110?.34n

Garages • Replacement \VIndows

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Room Additions • RoDfil')g
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL

360° Communications

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l. JEFF WARNER INSUUNCE

Fr:IEE ESTIMATES

614·992-7643
(No Sunday Calls)
• 113 W. 2ND ST.
POMEROY, OH. ,
....
~--~-.-~~==72/1:::;.~~-- l
614-992-5479
In Memory

In fovin9 ~mor!J of m!f motlier, Milam{
",grllnnu• 'Wi{[ on wlillt wou{ti /Uzve 6un FUr 73rti
6in!Uia!f, 121919'1.
Ofi, mDmm!J, fiow I wisfi I fiati !JOU 6acf:.. lUre
Witfi ~. if on{g for a mo~nt. I ~ow !JOU're
fillpP!J w/Ure !JOU are now. 9{p one /i;Jlows wfiat It's
(~ tO {ost a parent unless !JOU 'Tie 6un tfp-ougfi it
gourstlf '11it pain is ullbeara!Jk. You fillve touclieti
anti enricMti so mang uves. ·
I wisli tlillt I cou{tf see gou, if onfg for a
momtnt. 'But I /i;Jlow gou are watc/Urrg Of/er us·anti
smiling tiown on us from gour !Uavenf!J fio~.
'l(nowing tliis maf:..es fiving witliout gou more
fleara!Jk.
I
I fove gou ?rfommu
Cfarina '6uzzu• 'IFiliss &amp; cfiiltiren.

Arthritis Support Group
Thur. Dec. 11. 3 pm
PVH Wellness &amp; Rehab Center
Spaker: Leslie lp, Occupatinal
Therapist
to

;,,ffifi'~·[
10 '.

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ftMDD.'I
CIRPIITIIY

,...,

Vinyl Siding,
Replacement Windows,
Decks, Porches,
Kitchen• &amp; Batha
Some Concrete
Roofing Plumbing

WILLUDL-

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992-7074

Olfl .1111 I

Grevel, Umestone,
Topaoll, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.

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111 1111111.

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882-3021

12/S/1

In Memory
In loving memory
of our mother,
ADA E. BISSELL,
on her birthday,
December9,
and our aunt,
·MAE E. McPEEK,
on her birthday,
November 24.
Happy Birthday to
the most precious
mother In the
world and a
wonderful aunt
who were loving
sisters to one
another.
We love and ml11
you both greatly.
We love you
always,
Tom, Janet and
Tommy

mo.

"Granny" MILDRED
VIRGINIA WIU.
Tha void you left
Cannot M flll*d
·No mtftlr whit wa do
. Although your soul
lanowatreat
Thlre'a no replulng
you.
The only comfort we
receive

Ia knowing thot oome
day

,

We'll

be

SAVE STEPS!
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r'l r•·-·: firSt!
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Former M.i r astronaut still sold
on need for ,space exploration

pm!.!ram.
'

.

"People were nervous," said j;:ul·
ber!Son. an asuon~ut and dccorl\[cd
Naval aviator. "We hudn 't done a surficientjob of briefing them ."
.
Working closely with their Russian counterpans in ways unheard of
j~st a few years ago, NASA managers
assessed the technical risks and
decided to press on.
"If we dumped the Russians, it
would haxe been a tremendous set·
back," Co lbertson said.
Despite repeated criticism from
Congress and other skeptics, NASA's
partnership with q former Cold War
enemy continues to grow, a relation-

ship that will continue to b&lt;: tested as
the more complex International
Space Station project begins in
earnest.
The first piece of station hardware
- built by the Russians ~ndcr contract with Boeing - is scheduled 10..
launch in June. A U.S.-built module
goes up next, but there are still questions about whether the critic:~ thin!
module will be ready in time. Russi:t
is building the unit but ha• cxperi·
enced repeated funding and schedule
delays.
·
NASA may have to ask Congress
for more money in 1998 to build a
replacement module if the Russia
Space Agency can 't dcliv.c£
·
Beyond the questions about I:J,S.··
·Russian cooperation in space, llltcr- .
est increasingly is turning towird a
mis~ion to Mars.
In addition to nil the science tllld
microgravity experiments to he P!;tfonncd on the space station once ~I~
up and running. NASA is now pl~­
.ning to test various tcchnologlfs
needed for a long duration mission 1\'1
the Red Planet.
Foalc said NASA Administrat!lf
Dan Goldin told him Mars missiot\
technology investigations will be
added to the space station 's mcn11.
These could include testing a new
type of inflatable habitation module
for astronauts.
Currently, NASA has no Mars
mission in its long-term plans.
Astronauts may return to the
moon before they go to Mars, Cui·
benson said.

Pick up diiCirded
eppll-, batterlee,
tnlny metals &amp;
motor blocka.

Wt hm ..... llildlctl Ill
upiO

Prim 'I 0-'20
latttltmpe $todt

__

$6/ft
BA~IR'S LANDSCAPE
NURSERY

MINO UNCEr.1UITS

005

Penlonalll,

Sat. 's lit Sun's til Chrismas

AHIIIOUS?

St. Rl. 325, Danville, Oh

TO MEET IOIIEONE1
TIRED OF THAT 01.0 liAR
SCENE? THEN CALL TIE
DATELINE
100-285-1111 EXT.I740
Only 12.8111'11r• Mu&amp;tBo 18Vwa0td.
s.v..u 118 8t5 8'34.

Atlentian: JoAnne·• Kut l Kurt

e.

Open Until Late Janu•ry. I A(n _
· Cunently Stitl Doing BulinHI On
Third And Pine Call For Chrilt· ·

- Al\nolr, 814-4-96.

- Easy Bank Financing -

Heat Pumps

For the loved ones
Grave blankets, sprays,
wreaths, &amp; vases.

215-t077 EJt. 458!i U .81 1Min1

,.. s.v.u 81~.

lnstalled'~3800 a month

Daily Horoacope Up To Date
Soop Rttuno con Nowllll 1·100213·5tDO E•t. 1301, I2.DD Per
Min. Mull 8t 18 V.L S...-U 8!9·
845 8434.

Free E1fimate1
(Payments based on 8J)IlfOV8d cradi1l

\11: honor Gotd&lt;n Bucieyc Can!.
Open Dilly 9-5

Free Pagera AclivatiOn Required
1.ua.tl3tl.fl774.

BEAINI 8 CDOLIIG

Sunday 1·5

Southeastern OH

992-sns

.

ChHting Ohio Wiwoo l'o 1-100.· •.

I F~wna1cesl2800 a month

S6.9S-Sl2.95
•live wriGffts. SI0,95
•CutTr111· SI0.95-S15.9'5

.

614-992-4025i-a,.
... .._ ..

(Pitort aliw Ovlttmasl
5pruu .., Whitt Pinl-

mas, Perm Sptlciat, JoAnne

• Paimeffia basltlil •

Land
He'll waah our cora

away.
Sadly Mlsaed and Loved
b Pa Bud and Cookie

na

.lllttlfJIIIIM.

""'"""'
SI.2S-S9.95

united In God'a

11 13187 1 mo pel

614-992-3470

47 Westwood Drive Will Not

• PainsettitK, aH tolors

.

614-992-3220

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

MobUe Home Farnaca
and Beat Pumps

GREENHOUSE
Syracuse. Oh
Now Open for ChritotJnoo

GravellimestoneSand- Dirt

. Gravel, Sand,

Miles Se•t•
Pl•las
St.
667-3483
OPEN EVENINGS AND WEEKENDS

HU.BBARD'S

OUIIP TRUCK SERVICE

Limestone,

l CHRISTMAS TREES l
l..._. 2 1/2101 II. 7(614)of Tippers ~
'IJ

TRUCKING

HAULING.

a·

Crq~.s .

-·•

S&amp;L

WICKS

CONNOLLY'S l

I cra~s

In Memory of Our

- .. •. .. ·~ 11·

Russian station. NASA paid Russia
$427 million to send its-a•tronauts up
to guin needed experience before
joint construction of the International Space Station.
Originally scheduled for a Jan. 15
liftoff. NASA announced Jl1onday the
shuttle Endeavour launch will be
delayed until at least Jan.~·20. The
·rcusahlc spacc.craft was slightly damaged during servicing at Kennedy
Space Center.
When Foale was aloft this summer
it seemed as if Mjr might tumble
from the sky as computers shutdown
and power failed repeatedly. There
wa~ strong pressure from leaders in
Congress to end the shuttlc-Mir program and to jenison lhc Russians
frum the International Space Station .
ponncrship:
No one felt that pressure niore
directly th.an Frank Culbertson. progra~l manager of the shunlc-Mir

l

~

101251!18/!fn

(UmeStoneLow Ratea)

250 Condor Sireet
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
A Division on· Nlchilts Metal, INc.
. PhOne: 614: 992·2406
Fax: 304·773·5861

In Memory

on Hor Blrlhdoy,
December 11.

Jones

Big Bend .fabrication, ·
Machine.:S..Welding Shop·

.

.

~onnle

Available

Holiday Hrs.
Mon-Sat.1 0.4:30
1-5 Sunday

Complete Machln.e Shop Service Fabrication
Steel s.tes, Welding Supplies, Industrial Gas
Radiator Repair &amp; ReplacemeQt ·
Monday-Frlday • 8:00 a.m.· 4:30p.m.
Saturday • 8:00 a.m. • 12 noon

CELLULAR PHONES

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

• Ins. Owner:

..•
...

DUMP TRUCK
. SERVICE
Agricultural Ume,
Umtstone • Gr1vel
Dirt • Sand
985 4422
Cl\uter, Ohio

UPS
Shipping
•

•

•
••

992-6305

Hartwell House

"FAC'rORl'
DIREt:T
PRit:ES''
Quality Window Systems

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Since Foalc returned from Mir in
October, his replacement, David
Wolf. has experienced a virtually crisis,frce research flight allowing him
to focus on scientific expe-riments.
Next month. NASA's space shut·
tic is to ·deliver astronaut Andy
Thomas to Mir and return with Wolf.
Thomas will be the last in a string of
U.S. astronauts to spend time on the

Happy Holid6ya

:M VEARS IN BUSINESS

19ll8 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

By LARRY WHEELER
Gannett News Service
WASHINGTON - The astronaut who survived a harrowing mis•ion last summer aboard Mir wants
the country to know his four months
aboard. the aging Russian SJIOCe ~ta­
tion convinced him more than ever
that humans must expand their reach
by exploring space.
"Deep in my soul I feel we should
go into spa~c." said Michael Foalc.
the NASA astronaut whose ride
aboard the 10-year-old Russian outpost included a collision with a robm
· space tug. "The risks should not stop
us (from) doing things. I don't want
our government to say we arc wo
timid." .
There will be sethacks and delays
in the future - perhaps even tllta·'"Oflhic accidents such as the 19M
Challenger explosion that killed six
astronauts and a schoolteacher- but
ultimately the nation should push on.
said Foalc in an·intcrvicw with Gannett News Service and USA TODAY.
"Astronauts know this will happen again." he said. "You still fly.
There arc some risks we have to

Wreaths- Swags &amp;
Grave Blankets

4

•Ra-corea ·• New Radiators

"Jiufld
Your Dre•na"
I

take.··

. ·''
j'

•••

-

..

Turn on the oven and get baking -it's Christmas cookie time . .-;

Agrlcultu·ral • Industrial • Automotive

Hout'8: ·
thru 4:00
Mond-v thru Frldty .

Custom Homes

CHRISTMAS TREES

•

LUMP AIID STOKER COIL
H.E.A.P. VOUCHEU ACCEPTED
DELIVERY IVIIUILE

j

Students of the month are selected 'at the Latart Elementary School and given special recognition. The criteria for aelectlon Ia
based on academic achievement, citizenship, participation In claesroom InstructiOn and activities, behavior, and overall improvement.
September winners, pictured left, were front, Dale Teaford, left to right back, Brittany Maldaw, Daniel Lawson, Kyle Pierce, and not plctu~d. Talan Roush, Bethany Vance, and Adam Wilson. October winners were front, Stefani Johnston, and back, left to right, J. R. Hupp,
Stacy Black, Megan Day, and Miranda McKelvey, and not pictured, Louie Wilson.

RADIATOR REPAIR
•

&amp; WV

Sportt+E--

61~9418

Moviet, Horo""P'P. Fif&gt;lnciot
Coil t-900·285-11419

,OH

1a + S2.SKI Utn.
Ext3278

HUPP LANDSCAPING

Wreaths - Swage Roping
Grave Blankets
$5.00&amp; Up

Order Now for the Holidays
Custom Made for Your Loved One
For Details Call ·

(C.30) Morning Star Rd.
Racine

Christmas Plrry tor USWA Local

5171 Saturday Dec•mber 13th
1007 11-tipm. Hartford WV. Re-

We4corntl

brae~

•

~ Ul Ot/CI Foggy

40

Delivery Available

11/21/97 1 moP"

30 Announcements

Now OP:tnl Racine Variety Stott,
328 Trurd Stree1, Racine, Oh.,

(614) 843-5235
Jon Sargent (614) 992-7312
Ed Hupp

949-2115

job, if lnteretted call 304·882·

3297.

GUYE BLANKETS

SUE'S
GREENHOUSE

SWM 27 Looking for SWF 19 to
35 for LTR, I have a truck and a

CIMt

Giveaway

Black Friendly

•

Pup Needs Home

Far Chrlsrmu, 61 ........-Zit&amp;t

CHRISTMAS TREES

!

"BRADFORD'S

n.e.

!

Cut Your Own
..
Fresh Cut
Any Scotch or White Pine· $15.00 .
Wagon Rides on Weekends
Rt. 33 to Darwin, East on AI. 681, 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd., 1 1/2 miles to tree farm, Follow signs.
Daily 10 am til Dark
·
Nov. 28 thru Dec. 21 11124/97 1 mo. P"
..

.. .

~

WEBER'S
CHRISTMAS

TREES

"'hl I ll

;,
oi ...,,

I ,!l"lllilh
"ldl ,\

" l it I I 1·, . J' ·' I 1'
l.l tlh. l:,:rL,,

1l t~ II Hil PI

I. t I 'I I I 1 I I '.
( :dl ~ ~~ ~!1-' 1
I In

"'.til-,,,,

~~l l1

.... - ·

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCtiON

RU f I -'llJ.U H

11( &gt;:111 ..:1·,,

'

Eight week old pupprea, two

INlet,

Free cets. !hr.. monlhs·okf, 61499.2·6882.

32337 Bailey Run Ad
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(614) 992· 7548

Nice Christmas gifts, 7 black!
wttlte puppies, to good home
mother part black Terrier. Cali
~ ·112-3615 .,.. 5pm.

Free Estimates

Roger Coates
Owner Operator

.

-

985-4473

Pomeroy, Ohio

7122/tln

9t2-Q15 .

.• ' ' 0 .• '

- -..

CORPORAL
ELECTRIC

DEER
PROCESSING

RACINE, OH,

Cut &amp; Wrapped

614-949-3060

$35.00
$5 extra ~or

John Wllll1ma,

Qwntr
Uc:enaed ·
Electrician
Free E.ttm.tu
24 hr. emergtney
Ht'Vlce.

skinning

MAPLEWOOD lAKE
94g..2734

Four month ol~ male Siamese

814·992-1084.

One

SAYRE
TRUCKING
Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching.
Umeatorie &amp; Gr1vel
Septic System•
Tr•llar &amp; HouH Sltn
R~R.,_

Joe N. Sayre
61~742-2138

'

gray and one blade kitten to

glwi.. J8)1. 614-915-3504.

Slaba &amp; FirewDod To Gi&gt;t~taway
814-448·1052.
•

,: 60

"

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATEES
l --~

114-~5131.

tt- . •

Hutkyl Lab mite,

Sandblasting
Antlq1t Tractors, Cars
&amp;Etc.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Addlllono
•NewGarag"
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
•lntwlor I Exterior
P1tlnllng
Alto Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

I

one mate,

Lost and Found

FOUND: Near Salem Church on
u..ing Rd. male doil. pan Collie.
, ~ - 773-57781eave mes~.

lOST: 2 Small dogs-1 lhasa
Apso, multi colofed, 1 p11r1 Ch1·
·huahua a Pomeranian (looks like
'tiny red fox) c:hitdrent peta.
!Pituant View Rd, Gallipolis ftf·

r~----·~

Lost: Gray Haired Fluffy Female
0Dg, Poodlt &amp; Schnauzer Mil!
Wearing Red Collar, Answers To
Name : Maxie, Vicinity : Rio
.Grande, S25 Reward ! 614•245-

,~ 594~ .

lost· Ortni)e I White 5 Month
Old Male Cal Orange Uusrache
Marking Around Uouth Lilt
Seen Friday Nov. 281h , Plants
Subdivision, 614·446·1530, AI-..

4:30~1

70 ·

Yard Sllle

Pomeroy,
Middleport
" &amp; Vlc:lnlty
All Vt"' ltloe lluel It -

..

An-. IIMIIIIM: !:........
diJ belo,. t~t td to te rN,

•••• ., • ..••••, etlh....

L-~~~~~-Jt~F~

'- .

�Pege 10 • The O.lly Sentinel

r

: .tuesday, December 9, 1997

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

, ,,ALLEY OOP

~~:
~~
:0·.:
0

BRIDGJ:

.~~

110

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

t.lablle Home Spact For Rent,
814....a-38t7.

Ohio BaNd Trucking Campanr
looking FGr OTR Driv.,.. Sl"'lie
On Team Drivera. Mual Be OYer
25 Yaar1 Old With 2 Veatl E)C·
perlance And Good MVR. All
Equipment 11 Late Model Con·
vantlonal T,.ctor1 WUh Retter.
Waaklr Pa1, Health. Insurance

CI.ASSIFIEDSI
YlldSalt

r

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Trollor lot lor ran~ rofotencaa
OJ!Irod. 304-t7f5..1071.

Mlloblo ·~7 .. 784.

51

Wanted: Peraon That Can Do
Mechanical I Bodr Work On
Auto's, 614·446·8172. 614· 25&amp;·

180 Wlmted To Do
--Z:qop.m.

Auction

Care For Elderly In There Home
Uve In Days Or Nigl·ns, 18 Va8111
E•perlenced, E•cetlant Releranc·
as, Call Collect Far Becky, 814·
4n-6860.

and Flea Maillet

Furniture r&amp;pair, renn.ish and rea·

Frill.,. llondill tdMion
• 10:00 a.m. Satunloy.

IOfation, also cusiOm ordefs. Ohio
Valley Refinishing Shop, Larry

Rick P11raon Auction
full time auctioneer,
auction
•ee.Ohlo

Ptlllips,

814-992-6~76 .

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't

773-5115

hlul your logs 10 the mill just call
304-e75-1957.

90

UcCor'• Con&amp;uuction, Comm•rcial &amp; Residential, Free Eati·
mates, 8U-4o48-1923, 614-245·
5894.

1

'

.
Antiquu, tap prlcea paid,
ina Antiques, Pomeroy, Oltio, Robyn:• Home Cleaning Weekly,
Russ Moore owner, Ei 14-992 - BI·Wetkly, Excellent References

--------I CallAnswer
Anrtime, 61 ... 46-2315, II
leave Message.

·
:2526=:...

AntiQues· no item too large or too
small. Also estates, appialula,
refinishing, custom orders, 614·
992-1576.
Clean late Model Car.t Or
Trucks. t9QO Models Or Newer,
Smilt'l Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eatt·
em Mtw, GaMipolis.

No

Will .haul junk or trash away. S35J
~ckup

load. 304-1175-503~

FINANCIAL

210

J

Business
Opportunity

&amp; 0 Auto Parts. Buying
wrecked or salvaged vehicles.
INOTlCEI
Allo bu)'ing junk automatic OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
transmilaions. :IW-713-5033.
recommen(js rt1a1 you do busi·
Wanted To Buy: Standing Timber ness wilh peaple you know, and
NOT to send money ttlrough the
Big $ Dolors $1614·386-9906.
mail unlil you have investigated
lhe offering.
We Buy Junk Auto's In All)'
dillon, C~l 614-388-9002, Or

•••••••••••••

448·f11Rt

VICKifo KEN

Are Their Otm Bosses. Work On
Their Own Comp.tter AI Home
Less Than t 5 HrsiW~
Maki over
$7,500 p~ IION1H

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

~··I

110

8118.

Two 3 beclroom homots tor sale In
Vfllage of Micldltpon; also two
laval toto tor oale: 155,000 080,
614-~2-2290.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

230

ProfessiOnal
Services

HARTS MASONARY · Black,
brick &amp; atone work. 30 yee.rs tx·
perience, teasonable rates. 304~
8115-35g1 aher UJOpm, no job to
small or to BIG. WV·02t20e

1888 Clayton 14x70 3br, 1 bath,
hilt pump, &amp;ICC . cond. 304·8753000.6-5.

thlsnewspaperlssubiEtctto
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it illegal
to advertise ~any preference,
limitatiQn or discrimination
based on race, color. religion,
selt familial status or national
. . or any .1ntent1on
. to
orf4i1Kl,
uch 1
make any s
pre &amp;renee,
limitation br discrimination"

Avon $8 ·$18 iHr, No Door ·To·
Door, _Quick Cash, Fun &amp; Relax·
ing, t._..738-0166.
Cerllfied Chemical Dependency'
Counaelor To Work Wirh Juve· nHt Progam. Send Reaume. Rei·
erencts, And Salary Expecta·
lions To: Pika County Recovery
Council, P.O. Box •. Waverly,
Ohio45190. EEO.
'

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
adver1iSements tor recit estate
which is in violation of the
law. Our readers are hefe.by
Informed that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are available on an equal

DelBctive • Private lnvestlga10r,
Trainees Good Wages 614·523·
138T:

Eisr Work! Ex-cellent Payi As· I ,_""'oioppo-rt•un•l,.jty•ba•s•is.. . . . ..
aemble Produc::Ja At Home. cau 11
Toll Freo 1·800·467-5566 En
12170.
Experienced Hair Drener, 614·
«H880,614·25&amp;-8336.

310 Homes for Sale

Help With Eldarl~ lady, To :
CLAI501, cia Gallipolis Oail~ TrlbuM, 125 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
OH.t5l3 1.
- • opanir~~~lor lull or part
~ma regio- •·llr oochnologill
Work days, wtnings, weekends.
Call 114 ·882~ 2104, extension
237.
Need I ladles Ta Sell Avon Call
Bt444&amp;-33S8.

Oak Hill. Ohio Baaed Trucking
CGmpan)' ti Seeking EMparianced
OTR Stmi~Tractor /Tralltr Oriv·
era. Excellent Pay &amp; _Insurance
Packlgl. CaR'I14-882-8813.

ORIICUEx~lencedRN~ .

For HelMy ~

,.,"'::RapoVr. Salt Sc1100llling
·~ ~- ...... r -..lkx1.
..... """'1"*1111_".,...."
P.IIIAelponciTo:

Gallipolia· lour bedroom ranch
u.f~Boa.~oo.
"""oar goraoe, w~ land conoraci
_.....,
$00,000, 614-882·1064, 61Hf2·
Plea11nt Valley Home Hea!lhl 5333 · 814 ·•UG· l525 •a•nt with
Ho1p1co Sarviotl io loo!Ung lor a Dole E. Tljlor Roalty.
CoordintiOr. BSH preferred. Mull Hame in country With 38 acre 1
have !5 yurt experience in au- only 7 , ..,, old, with two bed:
pervlalon and management of • r~fTII. ltvlng room, kilc::hen bath,
homt htalrh agenc:)'. S•nd re- ut~11y room, storage buDding, with
aume 10 Ptraonnel at Pleaaant
one car gara11 e. located
Yalloy Hospital, 2520 Vallor Dr.
RIWI Road, Blh houM an

1~~~~~S~0~5,~000~f~lr~m~,c:•:ll

E

PEOE1
. Ptoasano. WV 25550. AAI

814-1148-283$.

!laiN Englneor: SO. Ohio HVAC
Company Haa An OPininG FGr A
Aoetdontlol l COmmercial HVAC

2 Bedroom Trailer For Renl, No
Pets, Deposit, Located: Jack10n
Pike, 61 ,_ 245-5582, Or After s
614-245-5690. .

GOOds

5
Choll Amartcan Crow,
Chtrrr Grove Collection, like
- · 1325. 814-245-lle87..
Appllancoa:
Reconditioned
Wuhort. Oryors, Reilgoa, Refrl·
gratort. 10 Day Guarantee!
French City Maytag, 814~448-

ms.

GOOD USED APPliANCES
Wuhera, dryers, relrlgtraiOfl,
ranges. Skagg1 Appllancta. 70
Vlna StrH~ Call 814•440·7386,

1-800 400 3100.
Magic Chof Gas Range, S35, 814388 81011.
•
Uovlng Sale! i.Jaed Furnilur•
Stare, 130 JI&lt;Jiavllle Plks, GallipOlis. Ohio 50% Off Gih Sho~ And
Most Furniture. Mon -Fri, Hra. 10·
4.

SpOrting
Goods ·

520

2 bedtoom. furnished. on river, in
Middleport, utilftita furnished,

614-11112·511~9.

Nordic Track 505 S481 Ntw

$300: Bofllngor Trim - . MQ.OO

2 bedroom, total electric, Crt·
meano Rd. Rutland, 814-742·
2803.
~Trailers: One ·2 Bedroom Two •
3 Bedroom $250 ·S3001Mo., Bob
McCormick Road. 614 448 eau.

for Rent

19~00WN

.1 and 2 bedroom apartmentt. fur.

SAVE$1000
Free Dali""'' &amp; Selup
OAt&lt;WOOil HOMES. NITRO
.304-755-5885

niahed and unlurnlahed, a.curlry
deposit required, no pete, 814·
oo2-221a
1 Bedroom Furniahed Apartment
9 Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
All Udlhies Paid, $2001110 .. Coli
614-4-16·3945.

FIRST TIME BUYERS
E·Z Flnancl~
2 or 3 Bedrooms
Around $200 Per Monm
1·800·251·5070
Firat Timt Buytrl E-Z Financing
2 Or 3 Bedrooms, Around $2001
Mo., t-'800·251·5070.
Free air, tree akirt, 14x70 3 bed·
room, $1 ,055/down, $196/mo.
CaU 1·(1)0.691·6777.

LIMITED TIME ONlY! 4BR, 2
BATH St ,441 DOWN $2CI
MONTH. fr&amp;e air &amp; skirting ~ Only
al Oakwood Homea Nitro, WV
304·755-58811.
Mot&gt;~

Homa, 2 Garages, On lo~
Ponible Land Contracl. 6H·25e·
1744.
N'D-T"~E

America's largest factory outlet
has purchased loeal mobile
home dealership. All inventorv_,
muat be sold within 30 days.
Save thousands. Call now for
Ink&gt;. FREEDOM HOME:.S of Nitro,
WV304-722-7127.
New 1008 t4x70 trvH bedroom,
includes 6 months FREE lot rent.
Includes skirting, dtiUXt steps
and setup. Only $187.08 per
month with 11075 down. Callt·
800--83 7·3238.
:.:.:..::.:...:::::;_ _ _ _ __
New 28x60 3 or 4 bedroom.

I $39,095.
Free delivery. 1·800·
1
_69__·6_77_7_
. ---'----NEW BANK REPO'S Only 31efll
304·755-7191.

------New doublewidt-1 purchued,
wonolit on mr too.
will
deliver &amp; set-up at no charge.
:304-:.:..:7::22:.·:..11:..:.S::·_ _ _ _ __

mull""·

s

COUNTRY HOME
ON Sl ACRES,
SCOTTOWN,OHIO.
g Uilet From Proctoville 3 400
Sq . Ft. llvmg Area, 2 Sto~y. 3
Bedrooms, 2112 Baoh~. Finlahed
Baamenl, Fireplace Uke New 4
Years Old I 17S,ooo, 6 04 ·643.
:!W4, Or 814·843-252?-

2 Bedroom trailer for rent In Uk1dlepor~ OH. 304-882·3267.

OOOBlE WIDE DISPlAY SALE

1993 48 • 28 with 2 car garage
ails on \' 2 level acres, 4 m.1181•
Oakwood 28x!i8 3 bedroom, 2
North of PPHS. $6¥,000. 304· bath, ttarting at 1'9 8 per mo.
875-758~
Cal 1·800-691-lln7.
3 Bedroom Homa. t Bam, Conoal
Air. Gallia Street. Crown City, 614·
258--6754·
3br home . t acre lot, la.cated in
Gallipolis Ferry across from 84
lumber. Price reduced, nice.
304·875-5010 aher Spm.

Household

-136,814 448 Btilfl.

Romlngllln 1100 Spacial Flotd 12
!lauga Soml-Auoo, 21" Vent Rib
Barrel, E•cellonl Candltlonl t400,
Call 814-25&amp;-8851 After 7:00 P.M.
In Nol AI Home, Leava A Mao-

oage.

530

Antiques

Bur or soli. Riverine Antlquoa,
1124 E. Main S~tal on Rt. 124,
Pomaroy. Houra: M.T.W. tO:Oo
Lm. 1o e:oo p.m.. Sunday t :00 to
8:00 p.m. 814~8g2~2520, Auu

1::''=::*:..::::::.:::;...._____

lliddl-" 540 Miscellaneous

91121 .

19, 1997 5:00 PM. For Additional
Information Call 814·44t-3010,
8:00 -5:00 P.M.• Monday Thru friday. Access To Human Resource Otvtlopmentla An AA/
EEO Ef'lliiO'Iet'.
·

2 Bedroom Trailer $300 Deposl~
$300/Mo., References Required,
614·3(!7-7272 Or 614·367-0640
After 8 P.M.

For Rent 12•85 Traitor 4 Miloo
From Cheahire, $2SOII.ta., llopooIIRequirod, 814-387-o304. ·
Tlvee beclrOOf11 mobile homa, no
Olacoufll Mobile Home Parts &amp; pall, 6t4-992-58S8.
Accessories, Vlnrl Skirting
$288.95, Anchors $5.00, Awn· One bedroom apartment In Mid·
inga, Doors, Wlndowa, PJumblng dlepor~ 014-002·2178.
Supplies, Water Heaters. Furnu:·
ea. fiberglau Stepa, Call 6t4- Two bodr:oom trailt&lt; In
•46·9416 Ben'nelt's Supply. 1381 614-it2·SD38.
Safford School Ad, Gallipolis,
Ohlo.
440 Apartments

Large"aelec:lion ol used homes. 2
or 3 bedrooms. Starling at $2995.
Quick delivery. Call 614-385·

All real estate adverlising in

2 Bedroom trailer 1275/apoall
t2751mo. References required,
no palO. 30oH75-4811.

t118Dou-Ropo
Never lived In, OWI"'8f finart:lng
avaitalll&amp;. 30-1· 755-5586.

Ftee air, frM skift, 18xBO 3 or 4
Livingston's basement water- bedroom 11 ,350/down, $299/mo.
prooling; all basement repairs cau 1-806-ll~t-6777
done, free estimates, lifetime
guarantee. 10yrs on job experl· Good Used Recondition Like New,
Mobile Homes For Sale, Call 614·
anca. ~-675-2145.
046.0175, 304-675-59115.

The Deadline For Accepdng AP·
plication• Ia Friday, December

ONLY $400 DOWN
ON SELECTIVE SINGLE W10ES
Freeo.rr..., I S.Wp
OAKWOOD HCiMES, NITRO
304-755-5886..
Owner moving-Make 2 r&gt;~rments.
move ln. usume loan, no pay ment till February 1998. 1-304·
122·7148or 304-722· 7140.

614-446-03110.
Nice clean 2bedroom, w/d hookup. Reference•. Depoth. No
paOL :J04.075.5182.

.

Now Taking App!icationa- 35

2 Bedroom Townhou••
Apartmonto ~Mo., 814·•48Wulwood Hamt Show Uaed &amp; 0006.
Repo Sal• AI linle Aa $500.00 One bedreom ap~~rtment In Mid·
Down And $t50111o., Fret Dolilr· " - ' - all uti- paid, 1270 par
ory, 1·81)().251·5070.
month, I tOO apoolt, 01•·912·

7808.
Twin Rlvtra T..... ,_ accoptli1g
apflllcations lor 1br. HUD aublidized apl. for ..derty and hindi·

OlfiiiOd. EOH 30-1..78-lell.

2 Bateau Home For Rem'" Kl- ~

nouga; 814-4411-4107.

9112-3888.

Nordic TriCk Stll Propelled
T'""mlll, uoo, Orlfltnattr $800,
81----7488.

Pin Ball Machlnaa, 11300 To $500

Somerville Army &amp; Camoullaga,
Jr, Slzet. By Sandyville Ra11 Of·
flee. Afternoons 1ill Spm. 304·
273-5655. Blue Bibs $t9ea.
WARM UP: High Eft~ltncy Natu·
ral And LP Gaa Furnaces, Life~
time Warranty On Heat Exchender. "if ~u Dan'r Call Us We Both
Loset• Free Estimates! Adci~On
Pumps Only Slighty Higher.
Ua Today. 1997 Is The
Seventh Year In The
Heating &amp; Coaling Busineatl 614·
· - · 1-800-2Dt.QOII&amp;
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evans Enlerprises,
Jacl\aon, Ohio, 1-800-537~~.

Walerline Spacial: 31-4 200 PSI
$21.95' Per tOO: 1' 200 PSI
$37.00 Per tOO: All Br1ss Com·
pression Fmlngs In Stocl&lt;
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackaon, Ohio, 1·800-537~g

550

Building
Supplies

Fumllhed

Roorna

2 Bedroom HOuM For Rent On
flchooi Road, No Poto,
$150 Dopoalo, 81•·

Orut Chrlatmaa Oihl Computer
Packard Boll CO ROM Fu IMo·
dtm $1,700 Software /Monitor
614•2SII-86ol7tEvonlngs,.
Grubb's Piano· tuning &amp; repaira.
Probiemo? Need Tu,...d? Call the
plano Dr. 614-446-4525
Hand Made Cigars Wllh Cuban
Seed 422 Second Avenue, GaiN·
polll, 614-«&amp;-16t5.

JET
AERATION MOTllRS
Reoairod, New l Rlbuit In Sloek.
call Ran Evans, , ,800·537·9528.

Four Jack Russell terrier pupplaa,
$250 eactl ; five Miniature Collie
Shelties, $125 each; wKI ~d until
Clvlstmas with deposit, 814·742·
2050.

o.. hahunda far
Special
Ct,rlatm... Hurry and take me
home lor tha.t special Chrlatmaa
glftl 13 week Registered AKC
puppieS. Silo~, WO&gt;rmed &amp; paper~
red in color, onl~ 5 leh. Must ' "
to appreciate. Ont lime special
only· .. St50: ma~s. 1125.
614-11112·326~

. 570.

Musical
Instruments

Kimball piano 11,600. 304-6758474.
Kimble Plano 8 Veara Old, EJcellent Condition, $2,995, A.her 5:30,
614·448~6565.

Yamaha ·Eie~tronic Keyboerd.
With Sland, ElCctlltnl Condition,
llonch Included, 814-4411-0253.

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

2 Bedooom Kitchen, LA, 238 Flrll A.....,a, Gollillallo, No Pota,

S325111o., Plus Dlpooi11 Ultitiao

li~~~~;::~~;;

81----.

610 Farm Equipment

3 bedroom. $400rmo. Dopoolt

304-e75-«s78-.

:...;.:.;.________
1

•

rna e•

lito
wHn Arhlnt and Pomeroy, call

et-1-385-43117.

135 Mauey Ferguaon 4 Cylln·
der, Guolme, -4 New Tires I
Tubea. Spin Out Wheels, 5 Ft.
Brush Hog, Good Condition.
$5.500. 304·675·5&amp;87 AFTER 7

P.M.

630

CARS FOR .11001 Trucko. b9at;.
4-wheeltra, motor homts, furnl·
tura, electrarUc:a. compute ..... tc.
br FBI, IRS, DEA. Avallable·rour
area now. Call t-800·51S·•IM3
Ext. 5-9388
11110.-tiiiiO cera For S1oo111 .
Sal:rod """ Sold
~llyTiil Month.
Trudul, .U4'r. Etie.
1·800·622·2730, X:IDOl .

•Q54~

256-11214.

Hay &amp; Grain

949:2754.
Square bales ol second cutting
clover miiUid hay, $1.75 per bata,
81 4·00:!-3109.

710 Autos for Sale

1994 Jeep Cherokee coun11y,
auto, 41C4, 4dr, all power, hit~h .
$13,200. 304-&amp;75·5429.
•
t99• Ranger 4WO e~etend c:ab
low miles, loaded, Reese hitoo:
cargo cover, $15,000, 61.&amp;·992·
3112 after 5pm.
,

1989 Chevy Cavalier, 2 Doors,

1g95 Toyooa TtOO, 4 WD. Ma~y
Options, Uke New, AT, AC, CD,
45,000 Miles, $14,600. 614 245·
1513.

2645.
1989 Niuan STD Sharp Good
Gas Mileage! 614-446-7278, 614388-9062.

740

Good Condition, 85,000 Miles,
$5,600; 1979 Oldsmobile leronado Good Condltion, .91,000 Miles,
New Tires IPa'int $2,000, 080,
614-082--6051 . •

MARE

1

'

~Q~~~~~~~~t;;;~f;i~ s:t~t,~~.

New gas ranks, 1 ton truCK
wheels &amp; radlators. 0 &amp; R AtrtO ·

ASTRO·ORAPH
,I

___1_m-:pro:.::::-v,:e:,:me:.:,;.:..:n.::ts:__
1

BASEMENT
1994 DODGE SHADOW $4,495,
WATERPROOFING
Sell Straigh Out Or Trade, 814· Unconditional Nfetime guarantee.
245-5677.
Local relarenc:es furnished. 1 .
rabUihed 1975. Call (D14J &lt;1.48_.
1DD4 Dodge Spirit 28,000 Aclual 0870 Or 1·800·287-0576. Rogers
Mllea, Excellent Condition, AC, waterproofing. .
Caaene, 81 ... 448-3548.
19g• Hyu"dal Elantra Run•
Great, looka Good, Dark Gretn,
Alklng $5,300, 814 441 • •
1995 Saturn SC2. AuiOnwtk; Air,
Cruiae, AM/FM Ca11•he, Trunk
Reiaa.M, $12,000 CaM Aller S P.M.
(Serloua Inquiries Only!) 61-t·
.:.-=-:40:..:15::_
. -~-----I

Appliance Parts 'And Service: All
Naf!1t Brands Over 25 Years Ell·
PBilence All Work Guatanteed,
~;:S.ch City Maytag, 614·44e-

CIC General

Home Ualntenence· Painting, vinyl siding ,
carpentry, doors. windows, bathS:
moble homt repair and more. Fo;
81 Gran&lt;! Am LE, 4 door, runa ~!!_tsllmate call Chet, 614•992_
groa~ lookl groat, U.soo 080, ~
61&lt;·9411-2463 all&lt; for .Chucfo.

840 Electrical and

,.

~~::iR~e~f::rlg:!:er:.:•:tlo:,:::n:.__:·.
;:;

.

Residential or commercial wiring '
new lltY'Ict or repairs. Ulster ll~ ,
centtd electrician. Rlden 09 ,
Etoctrtcol, wvooo3o6·. 3ou75 .:

------I , 7811.

•

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

••

e

West
Paos
Pass

North
It
3 NT

20 Prefix for
plane

Coup d'-

22 Chrlstmoa
23 Straight - -

East
Obi .
AU pass

arrow

24 Breathing

organ

26
27
28
30

Choir offering
Rofleva

DIU MOd

Ballet
movement
32 lnherHor

34 Some fllllnga
39levoto
40Actof

OIHIIng

41 Eagle'o home
42 Ran Into
43 Actor Arkin
44 Sticky atufl

46Hue
47

Fool part

46Geta50 Groove
52 Planlot

Cliburn

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos

.

'

Wednesday, Dec . .JO, 1997
. The present course you· rc steering
appears to be rhe righl one. Do not
make changes in ihc year ahead just
for the sake of change. Success is
indicated if you make every move
count.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dcc.
21) Your cha1'1 indicates thai your
work habits might nol he up to par
today. This is because your abilily to
concentrale mighl nol he fully operative. Trying lo patch up a broken
romance? The Astro-Graph Matchmaker can help you understand what
lo do to make lhe relationship work.
Mail $2. 7S 10 Matchmaker. c/o Ihis
newspaper. P.O. Box 1758. Murray

NY
-:.into ·action.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) If some overlooked naws mighl appear.
yourattiludeis"cllsycomc.c~sygo"
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) If
today. there. is a po~sihi_lity th~t y(lU'rc involved in u new endeavor..
somcthmg wtth potentoa! lor prultt he sure the procedures arc method•·
&lt;'oulu shp through your lingers.
cal and designed to wke thmgs ·one
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fch. 19,As SICf! at a lime. Rome wa.sllt built in
a salesperson today. you should he a day.
.
ahle to capt.ivate pn1specis with inter-·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Involve•\.':o.Lm~ stones ahnut yo~r mcrchan- mcnts with associ ales whose goals
disc. Try to he a good dnscr us well. arc not in sync with yours may not
PISCES .&lt;Fch. 20-March 20) work out today. Do not expect more
Today you moght he mchned W hlurt from your cohort than you have to
OUI things without lhinking . You
on'cr.
may repeal some confidential inf01:·
VIRGO (Au g. 23-Scpl. 22) Be
mauon 10 more than.one wrong ondt· patient and tolerant 1odny when
vodual. ,
.
.
working wilh people whose minds
. ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) Tlus don't work as fast as yours. It won 't
mtght not be one of your better days hurt you 10 repeat your presen1alion.
for vtStttng shops lhat specoahzc tn
pB~A (Sept. 23-0 ct. 23) Today
scUmg umque !llerchandose. You you might be a tit~ clumsy when han·
moght spend fooh~hly.
dling delicmc objcc1s Do not borrow
TAURUS (Apni20-May 20) Usu· any1hing that could get broken
ally. your tenactous quahues arc because you didn 't know how to use
qutle pronounced, but today you ir properly.
could waver as your enthusiasm for
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Do
your endeavors ebbs and flows.
nol be too hasty in making decisions
GEMINI (May 21-!un~ 20) today that affecl family members as
Revtew your flashes of msptratton well as yourself. More lime for
very carefullyloday before swi~ging
review might be essential.

r

Clllbfiey Ciphtr orwtoDI..,. .,. cnttt.d !rom quollllcln5 bJ lamous people. put IM"'d pteMm
EIIChlille,inlhttipt..-undlloranobtr Today".telue: A ~D
· •

·z

XHIZK

IZF P

.

EZGJ

WE

MHWKD

LHBJM

TPB

I R K A

.K H J

TPB

J .H

·GTHWYA

c

p

•

L Z N P.'

CRYYRP

CWSFP .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "You don'1 know what pressure is until you play for
five bucks with only two In your pocket." - Lee Trevino.

T=~~:~' s©~o{llA-"r..trs·
ltr CLAY I. POLLAN

WOlD
IAMI

l~lto~

Q Rearrange

letters of the
four Krombltd words below to Jorm four simple words .

I I'

JATUSD
2

I 1

I

I

I

· r-r;L...:U;..;A~O...::Dj........jl

. P 1~ I I .
-r;.N...:E;...W::..,:.U..:Dj........jl ..:,'
5

6

.r 1 I I 1 . ~
1...-1--1--1--L...J

I

E X R E L F.

I--TI7~,....8 :.:..,::14

Ie

1....:..:,1,........l

L-.1.-..J.L-....l..-.1.-.1.-.J

e

are~~~~~ln~~~~1~~~h!~eu~

people to be • - - • ....

Complete tne cnuckle quooed
bv tdiing in the missing words
you develop from s.tep No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED

lETTERS IN SQUARES

~ UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

~C.~SSIJ.=IEDS1

Broker· Fruit· Punch - De~a!e -BUCKET
One psychiatrist to another, "I take advice by the grain
but give it by the BUCKET."

·

'."'

. lrrtht

!TUESDAY

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1--:---.....:=:=:=:=:=
810
Horne

18 Welrdnoaa

SCIIAM-I.ETS ANSWERS

.

;

1991 Plymouth Sundance Red, 2
Doors, o&amp; Cylinder, 5 Speed, AC, Rtpter. WV. 304·372·3933 or 1:
Caaaeue, 7D,300 Mllea, $2,950 801).2~.
OBO 614· 258·8340, 814 ·258·
6467.
SERVICES

13~.

.Buyt ·S' all ·or Trade
.
'

BUDGET PRICE TRANSMts:
SIONS, Used/Rebuilt. All Trpasj
Acceas Over 10,000 Transmis ~
~~. &amp; Clulr::has 6t4·245-5677

1891 Lincoln Towne Car, loaded,
57,000 miles, D14·992·70U alter
5pm.

MtYant

8VenU._
9 Trudge

21

oon
"'~

2.2 Montor , for 1990 Plymouttt
Runa Greatl $250 .00 Or 080 1
(614,256·1233
I

1991 lincoln Mark VII Great
Shape 58,000 Milea Asking
$10,500,614-148-4044.

tO Parched
t2 Old • paving

7 -and me

5 E..-hapod

marathon

.,

1

760

4 Alty.'o ~·

Handle
with care

NIGHT·

Motorcycles

93 Honda 300 • wheeler, $3650
yardcou\ ISOO: 614-742-4205.

1991 Euro lumina New Tires,
Npw Brakes, PW, PS, P. Seats,
ElCcellent Condition, $4,600, 614·
o&amp;46 ·051g Or 614-•46·3.&amp;07 Can
Be Seen 314 Wl'ite Road.

A Hoed A Car? No Crodlt, Bad

HAVIN1 A

1996 Honda 300 EX, Manr :E~ ·
trul Excellent COndition 614·
4&lt;6·3945.

160,000 miles, exceltenr running
condition, $2,000, call afoer Spm,
614-742·2187.

••ceo• of

lnrpwcllenl

Opening l~ad: " 2

PAW tl YO'RE

1982 Hon~a 650 CB $600. 304·
675-3000. 8-5.
_,

1991 Buick Century, 4 door,

Credit Btnkruptoy, Wo Can Help
RaEalabllah Credit, MUI[ Make
It SO Weekly Ttkt Home, Down
Payments Aa Low AI $8D, Ta
Qualify For Thit Bank flnancilg,
.
:8.;.t4-;_44;;.:.H..::.l80:.;7:..

I

1896 Jeep Cherokee, Sport.
17,000 Miles 814-.c.&amp;-1 110.

t98G Otdsmobile Toronado Very

tGro~c~

2 In
3 Yearn

37 Chemlcaloullla • 8 Female

i

1993 Umited Ford Explorer,... Ok.
Cranberry. Loaded. 74,000 Mi.
614-046·7310
•

Red, AutomatiC, 11,400, 614-379-

~

36 UDIIahl

•

1~3 FGrlf E10Piorer, Loaded, 6i4448·4999.
..

1988 Dodge Shadow $1,600, ., ..
-M&amp;-,800.

DOWN

33 Lotion

!

· 1889 GMC Safari Custom, S4,950
614-448-4222

1987 Subaru Gl while, I:Jelow
average milea, runs good, exc
Olterior. SI.OOO 080. Talk to Doni
kNwe message. 61•·367-7128.

••NT

i' I

1987 Ford Aero Star ExceHtnt

1VB8 Nova, 1985, laz~r. 1987
Coralca, 1979 Chevy Pickup,
1987 Dodge Dakota, 814-256·
6544.

Soulll '

'jg~~(

V·

1985 Olds Cuoltll Bro. AH With Sunrool &amp; Keystone
_ , $1,2e5. 614..._524.

unlawfully
31-nlof

COffft

1988 Chevy ·4 WD, Auto, Excel·
lent Condihon, $6,000, 61•-:M77755.

Cor&lt;lllion. 13.005, 61H.S.Q687. ·

Jullul-

53 Sign of lhll bull
54 Engaged guy
55 Robin's home
56 Froctlono

G,•.,l&gt;ING !'4At.. T

s

1985 Mercury Cougar, Good
Condition, Asking $1,300, 61 4·
448.0531.

51 Balkelbllll'o

(lo)
22 Princeton's
Stuck

31 Pi. cit ESL

By Phillip Alder
Most · adulls can relale to lhis
observation by Mark Twain : "When
I was a boy of 14, my falher was so
ignoranl I could hardly sland to have
the old man around. But when I got
to he 21, I .was aslonished al how
much he·had learned in seven years."
T"~
In bridge, we have lhe Rule of
lA~
Seven.' If you arc in no-trump and the .
lead is in a suit for which you have
only
one top-ITick stopper (usually
tfOMt Of Ttte- .
the ace. but SOtlletimes ·1he king if
'OTTOM&amp;.e-SS TIP .1A~
your right-hand opponent wins the
first trick wifb the ace), you may use
the Rule of Seven to decide how long
·.
'
to hold up your winner. You sublract
'.
from seven the total number of cards
you have in the sui.t.J:&gt;etween your
hand and the dummy combined. and
hold up for that number of rounds.
r
So, after Wesllcads the heart two,
DID YOU &amp;€.1 'fOOi!.
NO ...
the Rule of Seven tells you to hold up
i{OLU::lf&gt;,'( ~N6
the ace for two rounds and win 'the
fi\I&gt;Df.
DQI.I€:,7'
~~~~IT!
third. But that isn'l righl here!
· You have eight lop tricks: one
spade, one heart, one diamond and
five clubs. The extra trick'will come
f
from diamonds, but the finesse will
¥
probably fail, given East's takeout
~
double.
Jr
What does the lead tell you?
!
Right . .. 1hat West has only four
L---------------~·L_~====~~----~~ heans. Therefore. if you win Irick one
and lake lhe diamond finesse, you
PLUS.!.. .
will lose at most four tricks: three
•Melli',·,· I'IU••c::H
:: hearts and one diamond.
I ~
~
N
~~~T~&gt; ~:i~~c;~::. • Whathappensifyouducklhefirst
•
fEW OOZEN
trick? A thoughtful East will .switch
to the spade king. Then, wh~n the
· OF THESE
~~~~· ;::'U diamond finesse fails, you will go_onc
TOO'THftCK! . down, losing three spades, one heart
---,,(at Irick one), and one diamond.
Apply the Rule of Seven when
you fear ihe leader has a five-card (or
· longer) suit.
blurb:If you arc a new reader of
this column, you .\Tiight like to buy
Phillip's book. "Get Smarter at
Bridge," which was puhlished in
I .JUST LII&lt;E TO
1994 and reprinted lhis year. To
STAND llERE,AHD
order (autographed on ·rcquesl). send
PRETEND I'M IIU'r'IN6
a check for $14.95 payable 10 Phillip
TWEM FOR llER ..
Alder to P.O. Box 169. Roslyn
Hei~hts, NY rl 577-0169.

1988 Chevrolet 112 ton 4x-4 plctt·
up, automatjc, air, V-8, S89QO,
_614·992·7014 after Spm.

1986 Jeep Cllerokeo 4 Doors,
e, Auto, AC, PS. PB, 4 WD, AMI
FM Cassette, 74,000 Milea,
$3,850,080,614-441-1318. . •

19HomeDIEve

211

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

!!

1978 GMC Pic:k· Up • Rebuilt
Tra.na., New Brakea, Tires. BodV I
Bed Fair Condlolon. 350 Engine.
Runo Good, $700, Call 6 t 4"'148·
4514. 614-446-3703.

t 985 Mark VII Runs Qood
St.OOO, 614·446·7278, 614·388·
9062.

K4

Saulll

l'LL DO THAT, MAW !!
LET ME DOTH'
PLOW IN'
!!

1985 Dodge Ramc:harger 31,,
•x4, 32in, super swamper tire1.
1,000 nag. 304-675-5754.

1985 Chevy Sui:Jurban 4r4
$4,500, 080, 614·2511--638 I .

. .. 7 3 2

' 'BARNEY

Ford Ft50 4M, 12200. 614992·5742.

1984 Chovy CheYtUe. runs good,
$400, 614-002·5529.

... 8 5

.·

19~

1970 Sui:Jaru 360, rare find,
360cc, 2cyl wloll injection, runs
&amp; drives GOOd. $3,200. Must see
to at&gt;f1304-e75-3000. 6-5.

39CommunJce.
7Kannoltlonl NIIIUie
11 O.V.Iop
42 T1la Gift of
121Aorer
the14 lluocle part
45 Tannll pllyer
15 Polet IJ.ghta
Arthur 11 llolgh- of
46 Sano&lt;tta'o aunt
Brazil (abbr.)
49 Ot*llva
17 Cooler
o-n

6KQI094

1977 Chevy 4 WO, 6 Inch Uf.l,
Rebuilt Motor &amp; Trans, less Than
tOO Miles, On Rellu~t Bodr Gqod
Shape, 350 Four Bqlt Mall\,
$2,800, Must Sell Do To lllnaoi,
$3,900 lnvtatod, 014-3118-8031. .

TRANSPORTATION

-to PhOenix

1Punua

0· 10 9

'83 Ford van, teven p~uerlgeir,
automatic overdrive, air. cruise.
runs excellent, some rust, $60(1
firm, 6t4·9411-2.S3.

Mixed square bales, $2.00, 614·

-•KJ63

• A 54

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs

0450.

7

•At07

304·882-3821.

Alpha I Otchatd Graaa Mired,
Phone: 814·446-110•, 61-4·441·

QJ

t

Credit Problem•? We Can Help •
Easr, Bank Financing For UMd
Vet't clea, No Turn Oownt, Oall
Vlcklt. 61~7.
'

89 Chovy S-10 plclwp. Sop., r"'""
looks good, w/ladder rack &amp; ·tOOl
boM, wllrsell IMI!1/wlohou~ $27o0;
85 KawaaaiU 185 .t wheeler, good
eonditlon. 4 new Urea, baok
brakes, I'KIW parte In rno10r, $709,

!Jirlng Hens 6 Months Old, 614·

K

• 6 5 3 2
I .

1994 Ford F·150 .ex• blacklgokl,
Eddie Bauer wtcaml)4tr top, etc
cond
.
59,000 miiea, has transferable
Ford ESP ••tended service poU·
cy, total coverage w/10 deduot·
,~ .. 115,000. 304-882·2821.
..

Athent Livearock Salea: Speic:al
Fall Feeder Call Sale: S.oura,,
Docomber 13th, I P.M. Callie k ·
cepted Starting Friday At 4 P.M.
Hauling Available, All Conalgnmenta Welcome. &amp;1,...5D2-2J22.
61.._.3531 .

•

31 By the 1lma -

rive I

East

• 6 3 2

ACROSS

25 Soak (llax)
28 Adriatic, o.g.
29 8elzot . , _

• AJ 6

. west

t9n Chovy , oon, 350, 4 ""·· t2'
otoet Hat, iHI than 60,000 m~
on motor, runs good, 11850. IJA·
247-42e2.

Geloi'Q 614·2Se~304.

" 9 8
OAQJ87

" ~EK&amp;MEEK

720 lhlcks for Sale ;

1 Year 1.12 Quarter 112 Arabic

1991 Thunderbird sunroOf, new
tires, 3.8 V-6, axe. c:ond, power
brakes, pow11 windows, power
.,..,;ng. 304-675-5596 Price r•·
4Jcedl

• 10 9 8

Upton Usad Cars Rt. 82·3 Milot
Soulh af LHn, WV. Financ:tng
--458-10811.

.Livestock

t2-o9-97

Nort

••so

6 raar old pony &amp; saddle, $500
080, make nice Chrlatmas girt!
814·002·3049.

640

1888 Mtrcury Marquia Exctl.ftt
Condlion, S2. tiS. 6t4-448.oe87. •

NHd A Car, No Credit? Bad
Credit? Bankruptcr? Wt c;n
Help! Reestai:Jiiah Credit, MUll
Make
Week, Take Home :•o
To 20%. Down 12 Montha &amp;
12,000 Miles, Warrantr AvalloiH,
This II Bank Financing, 814.448·
8172, Or614-384-6042.
••

R•s
Bur.

Allor I P.M.

Go kart, 5 hp. modified engine,
-'Jr rebuiiL .,SO: two ouck toppttl for long bed email truck,
1100 &amp; I tOO; eolteclion ol World
Cycle magazlnaa. ova1 aevanty,
1850'a, eo·a &amp; 70'a, excellent
condllipn; S500 for ail; 81,.·247·
0201 .

Agc::o·AIIIt Tractara &amp; Hay Tool
Sala: Agco· AIIIo 4860 2Wd 52
PTO HP radial tlrtt, 1 remote
valve, 12 IPted ayncho trana,
rope. o4yr. or 4,000 .hr. drtvt train
-.anty, worid lamoua air coaled
diesel. '15,500. 4 Whaol drlvo
equipped ••me way t20,800.
;Heaaton sao.eoo• round baler
$7,995. Heu1on 540· 10001
1round baler $10,i00. Hesston T
:harblno 17,900. Round bale Sl·
!age wra~par $8,500. 17' V pull
·rakt $4,200. Tye PIIIUfl pleastr
• t 2 hoe no-till drill 16,900. KHf·
.er'a Service Center St. AI 87
Pllona 304-8115-3874.

Slot Machlno P50, Spaad Ball ·Hydraulic oil-lowest price in
town. Veflt lree gas h....r1, pro.
Gamt 1100. 8t•-448-ae27.
pane I nalural gaa, on tala now.
Pomoror Tlvlft Shop now buring Slcle(s Equ~o304-675-742t .
lev! Jeanl, toys, cl'llldrtn'l clothIng, mual 'btll'l txet!!•nt condl· New Holland Spacial Dtals:
tion, Tuesday through Friday, .3430 Ford 40 PTO HP, 1 valvt
014·992·3725.
ropa &amp; canopy, 4wd, $18,500.
472 7' hayblno S7,800. 488 9'
Prlmtatar, 170 free channela hayblnt S8,500. 134 raund baler
flral month. Oon't wall. Quick in· 6501 aloe! tie $9,800. 844 round
atallation. {frH bonua). 1·800· .boler 10001auto tie '13,500. 451
203-2840.
7' oi&lt;l&lt;te , _ , . .,,oso. t30 t42
B4 manure spreader $4,300. 145
FumHuro
177 84 manure apreader $4,300.
155 217 94 manure spreadtr
- Sell,
.. Trade
WI/
$•,900. 2·New Smldley steer
Used &amp; Anliquol
stufrers 100 BU $750 . 2 used
Furniture.
$50_0 each. 8. 75% Financing
304-77:1-5341 ,
avculable. Keeler'• Service Cen·
ler St. Rt 87 Phone 304·185·
3874.
SOfa, 2 Ohalra: 2 Lamps: 2 Dl·
nena S.to: All Very N~o Call AI·
tar 5 P.M. 614-448-4072.

waw

w..t

410 Housea for Rent

16 Fl. Chell Typa Frtazer &amp; 10
Cu. Ft. Cheat Type Freezer, G.E.
Automatic 3 Year Old Washer,
Automatic Dr)'er, Frlgi~alre Ae~
hlgerator With Ice Maker, All
Good Condllionl 814·379·2720

Nt• Wob TV unll, 1200, 81 4·

s...,...

--25M..

RENTALS

1 Electric Furnace •395; 1 Gls
Furnace 100,000 BTU t690. 814il46.e:!OO, 1-800·2eHl0ll8.

au-

Moving Salt:
AMe s.11 &amp;
Wing Chair, USO: Sofa S40: 40
Ft. Aluminum Extentlon Ladder
St25. 814-448-0247.
'

Block, brick, aewer pipes, wind·
BEANIE BABIES 11,•·246-5332, owa. lintels, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 814 ·2451 Bedroom Unill' Neweal &amp; IB EACH Baldy, Bernie, Blaclde, 5121 .
Blizzard,
Bon81,
Bucky,
Cho·
Cleanest In The Ar11. N•r Hotz.
er 1269/Mo., Plua Utililles &amp; Se· colate, Crunch, Derby, Doby, 560 · Pets for Sale
curity Deposit Required, No Peta, Ears, Floppltr, Goldie Inch, JoUr.
Llzzr. Luctor. Magic, Myotic, Mol. 2 black lemale Cocker Spaniel
61H.S·2e57.
N!p, Palll, Peanuts, Plnchert,
pups, 4mos old, 1150ea.
2 bedroom aparlmltnl in Pomeroy, Pinky, Pouch, Ouaclcers, Ringo, . Records up to date, QOOd Chriat·
utilities paid, no pata, 81•·9D2· !lover. Scoop, Soollie. Seaweed; mu prellr'lt ~··937·2733.
5858.
Str. Snip. Snort. Stripao. Wrlnldoa,
Ztwr, Zlp.
2 Male .Full Garman Shepherd
2bdrm. apts., total electric, apPuppies, FOf Sale $75 Each, 61 4·
pliance• furnished, laundry room Beanie Babies, hard to get aport 046· 7278, 6I 4-366-9062.
facilitill, CloM to IChOoi tn town. card inserts, ri.t• comics, hard to
Applicallana availai:Jie at: Village find action figurts. Priced btlow 5 Red Tick Cocn Dog, 8 Weeks
Green Apta. 14D or call et•·~Ma2· current market value. Jull in dme old. •50.00 each, Call (61 4, 256·
3711.EOH.
for'Christmaa. Call for lalalt price 6859
quotas and details, 514-9-49·3098
45&amp; 112 Sacond Avonut. Galllpo· leave me11age befat'e 5:00pm. or A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming .
lis, 2 Bedroomt, AC, Appliances, calbolwNn 5:30-D:OOprn.
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don
$425/Mo., $225 OOf!Oalt, Utilities
Sheets. 373 Georges Creek Rd.
fleautllut Buck Stova Instant Un· 614-446.0231 .
Paid, 614-«&lt;l-212e.
.
vented Gaa Fireplacea. SI'V'erai
5 Room olpartment 1425/M~. Ud" Models to choose hom. PAINT 'AKC Cocker Spaniel F&amp;male 2
ilies Paid, $10Q- Depoai~ No Pelt, PLUS 304-1175-4084.
Years Chocolate &amp; White House·
614-446·3437.
broken &amp; Very Frien'dly 1 t 00,
Boola By ·Redwlna, Chippewa, 614-256-li04.
2 Bedroom apartment fOf rern in Rocky, Wolverine, Sorel Tony
Pl. Pleaaanl. 304-&amp;75!217• or Lama. Guaranteed Lowell Prices AKC Collie Puppies. With ChamShoa Cafe, Go~~L
pion Bloodline Only $200 Will
For Christmas With A De·
Hold
BOTTLED WILL POWER! LOSE
Up To 30 Pounds, 30 Day Molloy pal\ Cell 6I 4-44H 083.
Back Gauranteel Nsrural, Or. Re·
Avallabfo ~!lor 1 :1/81h, ' Badraorn · comended, 81-4-441·1982 Free AKC Golden Retriever Puppiet,
Ready To Go Br Chriaunas. $250
Unlurnlthed Apartment, Range,
F; 1200 M; .Shots, Wormed, 61.&amp;·
Refrigerator, Gartlage Otapoaal
•
Furniahtd, Wlter Stwage. Gar· Brand Ntwl Groat ~ftl CD/VIdeo 379-2081 .
bogt, Paid. Oa!oollt ' Refar- stofage unll. Black lnd ctllt'ry,
Aiquired, 138 frill Avenue, Rear, NeYef out al box. 1125. Haldl up AKC mini Pintcherl. · 5 weeks old,
great Chfiatmaa gifts. 10 weeks at
Gaflipolia, 614-«11-2581.
IO 940 diiGI, aJIO nofdl lapel. Chrlllmas. $200, accepting pay·
Call 81•·9g2·6836 after 6 pm. menls and deposits, 614·948·
BEAUTIFUL ~PARTMENTS AT COs l .,.. na!lncluded.
3026.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Woitwood Drlva
BUY CARS FOR ftOOIII
AKC Chocolate lab puppiea,
~om $260 to 11334. Walk to thop
Seized And Sold. Locally This S300. 814·002·!iflllll.
&amp; movlos. Colt 81 4·448·2588. Month. Trucks, 4x4'a, Etc. Being
Equal Hauling Oppomrnlly.
liquidated In Your Araa Now. All AKC Regiatered Chow Puppies
Uakn &amp; Models Available. Call Wltn Papers $tOO Or Trado 814·
Oownslllrs Apartment, 4 Roome.
245.Q61 9, 614·245-5037.
Paid, NO PETS, It Cedar Toll Free 800·522·2730 • 442C.
Snet. 81~-31111-1100.
Concrete 1 Plastic Septic Tanka, AKC Siberian Hu&amp;ki pups, blue
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons Ron eyea, will be 8Wks old Christmas
EH!ci-r Apartment Rio Orondo
Enterprises, Jackson, OH · Eve. 1225. 304-576·2134.
1240/Mo., ~II Ulilldos lncludo~. Evans
, -800-537-9528.
Depoatt Rtqulrod. 1·888·840·
Australian Shepherd pups, · 2
0521.
•
Firewood, $-40 A Truck load 0• NSOA females, shots current,
Gradoua livl.ng. 1 and 2 bedroom livered Caii614·4.S·43e2 No An· wormed, will hold for Christmas,
175, 814-949-2128 evenings.
spartments at VltiiQI Manor and - l - M n - .
Riverside Apartments in Middle- Fisher Price Pool Table S75; Gal Now Open Sundays 1·4. Mon·Sat
port From •238·$304 . Call 814- Pe-r Mini Bike $tOO: 20" Boys 11 ·5, Fish Tank &amp; Pet Shop,
gg2·5064. Equal Housing Oppor· Bike $-40; Hotpoint Waaher &amp; 2413 Jackson Ave. Point Pleas·
tuniries.
Drror, (SIIII Using Them) $100 ant, 304-6~2063 .
In New Haven 1br lutnished apt, Each. 614-«t-0486.
deposit &amp; refertncta. 304·882· Frigidaire dishwasher 150. 2 12fL Female Shih-Tzu puppy, 18mos.
25&amp;6.
wood ladders S20. Parlor atave, old, all shots, black &amp; white. 304882·2403.
Modern 1 Bedroom ~par trnenl, c:astlron 150. 30A·S75-4421.

North 3rd Avo in Mlddloport, tbr
apt, furnlahtd or unfurnlthtd.

WESTWOOOHOME..OW
Uaed &amp; Repo SM
Aslinle Al$500 Down
Md$t601'1rMonth
Ft'98 Oe!Mwy
t ·800-25Hi07ll • •

Merchandise

Mooring Sole: Frunlturo/Andquao,
llonoar ·Friday. Alter 8:00 p.m.
Wtakands. 1821 Chatham Ava.
ClalipoiiL (814) 4o45-9808

.... 123

Ens;r... ean-..-.

•

742·2fl60

•••••••••••••

Applicants For Thil Poairion May
Submit A Re&amp;ume To Jeannie
Williams, Human Resource Man·
ager. Acceu To H~man Resource Development, P.O. Box
316, Galipolis. Ohio 45&amp;31 .

E-ont
-AndPar.
Duct-lth
Daaipllnauranct,
WI 011or
Plolol Yacation, 401K Pfuo Frlng·
" · It You .Are Looking For An
E.wcftng Challango WMh A Sacurt
Fu111re, Stn&lt;l Resu . . To : Saloo
~=P 0 Box 808 Jackl'on,

1g70..-1 2x65 london trailer, two
bedroom, shMt, tefl:igetaiDr, eleclric &amp; gas wire s11)'1, $3.000, 814·

CUENTS PROVIDED

FaciiiiJaa Support C.oordln•·
tor: Applicants Must Have An
Undltf'Wioduate Degree tn Related
Field. Prevloua Experience In
F1ciliitt1 Planning, Stale And
Federal Regulation P&amp;rtalring To
SaltiYI' KnowltdGe Of OSHA
Rules And Regulations And
Maintained Maintenance· /Up
t&lt;aep 01 Fao:ilities. Baglnni"'l Rale
Qf Par II $14.00 /Hr.

-

10XSO wtexpando, 2br, luel oil
heat, underpinning &amp; bloc~.
ready to move. 12,500 OBO, Will
trade br truck. 30o&amp;--675-261 9,

800-937-4021 E&gt;t 994

ACCESS To Human Resource
Development Is Accepting Appli·
cations For The Following Posi·
tion:

To Have A BA Degra• In Me·
cllanlcll EnainN' Or A Minimum
01 &amp; Yooro E•porlonco In HVAC

on all multi sections.
Lirri!Od Tlmo On~!
FREEDOII HOliES of Nitro, WI/.
304-722-7127.

Insurance Claims. No S&amp;Hing.

Shirl&amp;~

2 .&amp; 3 bedroom mobile hom11
*280·$300, aewtr, water and
tJalh Included, 614-8112·2187.

2 Bedroom Trailer Addison Pike,
$220/Ua., Includes Water $100
lleposil, No Peos, 614-448-3437.

..II DOWN

P"""sal~ flemat &amp; Medcal

Help Wanted

AVON ! All Areas I
~.. 30-H75-142D.

tl

Thret bedroom house in Syra·
cust, basement, garage, new
windows, deck and an ramo deled
Inside, 114·742·1345. 114-e82-

-DOWN

.l

o

o-

on all single ~~etlons

'l

r•

r.l~ HCHA.' /f l!Sf

11251 .

80

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

........ .

70

The Dally Sentinel • Page 11

DECEMBER91

�I'

I•

'
I

IPfl

•..fi.H
· Ill. H

Ami

Ill.

I

B
r
Buy ATruck And Save Your Dough
AtC&amp;O

IPII-.• ..fii.H

lflllc.a
•. 1-1

S-.10

LOW

350
Pick 4:
8254
Buckeye 5:

3-6-12-25-33

Sports on

•

Viol. 411, NO. 166
C1997, Ohio Yalley Publishing Company

.·

.

$

AS .
*PRICE INCWDES REBATE TO DEALER

Meigs County ranks seventh statewide in deer ki.lls
By AARON MARSHALL
Gannett News Service
COLUMBUS--Meigs County had the &lt;evcnth-highcst number of
killed deer checked in the state this ydr with 3.4S6. an 18 percent jump
over last ye~r's 2.956 deer haggcd. This year wa&lt; the first time hunters
in II southeastern Ohio were allowed to take up to three d~er dunng the
week.
Gun-totine hunters stalking deer in Gallia County bagged 48 percent
more deer th;n last year catapulting the county to sixth place ill deer kill
totals among Ohio's 88 counties.
. .
.
In Gallia County, 3,557 deer were checked tn this year compared with
2,405 kills checked in last year. In fact . this year's county harvest total
trailed only Athens, Guernsey, Muskingum. Washington. and Jackson
Counties in total number of deer killed.
~~~----~------,

1998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
E-XTENDED CAB 414

'

•

Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chrome Bumpers, Chrome
Appearance P.ackage and More!
COUNTING ASSETS· Candace
right, of 111e Meigs Coun·
ty Health Department addressed the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce on t11e department's asset building program which
Identifies 30 positive assets a youth can possess toward avoid·
lng risky behavior. Meigs Middle School students Chrissy Miller,
-center, and Stephanie Barr shared the assets they possess with
the chamber members.

AS
LOW

AS

.Ohlo . lawm~ke.rs

1998.ASTRO VAN
ALL WHEEL DRIVE
.
•

Automatic, V6, Chrome Wheels, AM/FM Cass.,
Tilt, Cruise, Pwr. Windows &amp; Much More !I

Rain tonight, low1 in
mid
30s.
Thur1day,
cloudy, highs In mid 301.

2 Sectiooa, Ill PlllfiS, 35 centa
A Gannett Co. N o -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 10,1997
'

Restyled Front Grille, Instrument Panel,
Bumpers, and~ncreased Horse Power!!

AS

Pick 3:

litH

1998 CHEVY

t

Ohio Lottery

Meigs downs
Southern five.
for second win

author ·P,il' ·
aimed at protecting farmland

COLUMBUS CAP) - Two Ohio Farmland Preservation Task Force,
lawmakers have authored legislation - w!Uch .mct for seven months before
designc_d to protect the state 's farm- presenting liS _ findings _to Gov.
land from excessive commercial George Vo10ovtch 10 June. ·
·development.
'·Thi s .is nn j~~~c that tran sc.cnds
Rep. Gene Krebs. R-Camden, and geographic .. polH(C~! and . rcgtonal
Rep. Scan Logan , D-Lisbon. pre- houndancs 10 Ohoo. Krchs said.
scntcd their 106-page bill to reporters
Early Jralt&lt; ol the hoU looked at
Tuesday at the Statehouse Atrium.
rcLjumn g at! Oh~n cclunllcs lode velThe bill woultJ put into la.w most np cnmprl!hCm.l\1.! land"usc plans .
of the recommendation &lt; of the Ohio
Continued on page 3

The increased number of deer taken in southeastern Ohio was responsible for a 5.9 percent statewide hike in deer killed during this year's sixday hunting season which wrapped up on Saturday. Overall. Ohio hunters
rebounded from a slow opening day to kill 105.426 during deer gun «;ason, compared with 99.550 in 1996.
"I think hunting conditions last week overall were very good and we
made up a lot of ground in our deer harvest the final two days of the season," said Patrick Ruble. executive administrator of wildlife manage mont
and research for the Division of Wildlife. "Many hunters on Friday and
Saturday bcne£itcd by having some snow cover which makes il easier to
sec and track deer through the woods ...
Deer gun hunting is not over for the year. A two-day antcrless deer
gun season will.be Friday and Saturday in 58 counties across Ohio including Galha and Meigs Counties. A two,day antctless deer gun •cason also

will be open Dcc~mbcr 19-20 in Ohio's de signated urban deer zones
around Cincinnati. Columbus. Cleveland. Toledo and Young stown .
Three people were killed as a result of injuries received in shooting
incidents during Ihis year's deer gun sca~on. according to lh~ Division
ofWildlife._Ten nonfatal huntin.g incidcnb were reported hy the division
including' three self-sustained gunshot injuries.
·
Last year, one person was killed and 15 others were injured in deerhunting r~ latcd incidents. However. the division only counts victims
injured from the dis~.:hargc of a fire:mn or ~ow while hunting and not victims of falls. or heart attacks.
Deer hunting is big business in Ohio. Hunters arc estimated to generate an economic impact of about $200 niillion fur the state's economy.
much of it in rural communities where thC sport is most fKlpUhlr.

Chamber updated on •asset building• program
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Members of the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce were
apprised Tuesday of on-going projects by the Meigs County Health
Department's Youth Services Division and the Famil_y and Children
First Council.
·
·
Approximately 25 peopl~ attend·
ed the luncheon meeting held at Carleton School in Syracuse.
Robin Harris, intcrsystems coordinator for Gallia, Jackson &amp; Meigs
Family &amp; Children First Councils,
introduced guest. speaker, Candace
Hcer of the Meigs County Health
Department.

Hecr spoke brieny on the department's asset building program which
identifies 30 positive assets a youth
can possess toward avoiding risky
behavior such as drug usc and early
sexual activity.
She said . the average youth possesses 16 of the 30 identified assets
which jncludc family love and support, a rapport with parents and other adults. well -defined rules. boundaries and standards of conduct. and
inVolvement in school activities,
clubs and religious programs. Other
internal assets include a high level nf
motivation to achieve in school. concern about world issues and for other people's feelings, abstinence from

sex, good decision-making ski lls, ccrni ng the proposed Meigs County
knowing how to plan ahead and hav- Branch of the University of Rio
ing a high level of self-e steem .
Grande. Today's meeting is directed
Hcer was accompanied by two toward local teachers who may be
Meigs Middle School students . intcrcst'cd in taking additional eduChrissy Miller and Stephanie Barr. cation classes.
who shared the assets they possess ·
In add it ion. McDade said the
with the'chamber members. Both said . engineering work is almost complete
tbey have solid family support and do · on the Tuppers Plains lndumial Park
well in school.
with actual construction. slated 1&lt;&gt;
The goal of the program is to work hegin early next spring.
with the youths to instill a minimum
Chamber President Sue Maison
of 25 positive assets in their lives.
introduced new chamber board mcmMeigs County Economic Dcvel- her Linda Bondurant of General
opmcnt Director Ron McDade noted Refuse Services and reminded mcmthat a meeting will be held at 4 p.m. hers of the upcoming. March 14 dintoday at the Meigs County Senior ncr/dance which will be held at RoyCitizens Center in Pomeroy con- at Oak Resort.

Full-length movie .'Mothman' being filmed in Pt. Pleasant
By MICHELE CARTER
OVP News Staff
,POINT ~LEMt~N.T, W, Va. - Is
Point Pleasant coming soon to a theater ncar you?
Ir Los Angeles director Doug
TenNapel has his way, it could be late
next year.
For 10 days, ''Mothman." a full·
length feature film by Mr. Black Productions. is being filmed in Point
Pleasant.
According to TcnNapcl. the movie
starts with the legend of the Mothman, with the 1906 story of the Point
Pleasant Mothman sightings cstab-

lished .
The movie features a man. raised

in Point Plf~~nl, .~i~h the dre,al).1 of
being an animator for Wah Disney.
who thinks he saw the Mothman,
TenNapel said. The man is in love
with a waitress at a loc.al rcslaurant
and interesting romantic triangles
develop. TcnNapel said the modern
fictional talc also tics in with a government conspiracy and mystery.
With a $60.000 hudgel for the
lilm. TenNapel said coming In Point
Pleasant and filming for 10 days in
places such as the Lowe Hotel and
Harris' Slcakhousc has been great.

According to the director. it would
have cost millions in California to
develop, ~ set c~pclly like .Harris'.
"The people nrc great here," TenNape! said. "It's a lot cheaper to work
here than in Orange County. Calif.
The &lt;ets arc ready."
TcnNapel hccamc familiar -with
the Mothman tales through researc h.
He is an illustrator who develops
video gomes for Dream works , a
company co-owned by mega-director
Steven Spielberg.
According to TenNapcl . Spiel berg has agreed to watch his movie
when it is com~lcicd.

For now. TcnNapcl and hi s crew
arc keeping a very tight schedule on
this '10-day filming. He said some
days they woik from 8 a.m. to 2 a.m.
because there is a lotto do in a lim. itcd time . Already, the crew has
lilmcd for four days in Omnge County and have another day to complete
when they get home . ·
With new friends. including the
Finley family of the Lowe Hotel and
Carotin Harris, TcnNapel said work ing in Point Pleasant has been like
working at home. "It is very relaxed."
he said.

·FBI, Reno refuse to hand over document to group
AS
LOW

AS
·*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

1998 :BWER
4 WHEEL DRIVE
V6, Automatic, Tilt, Cruise,
AM/FM
Cass.,
&amp; More!
'
.

. .....
.,. ,

AS
LOW

1

tluc~u s ."
·
Reno :md Frech ngrccd that the

AS
*Dependoblllty boNd on longevity: 1B81·1tlle FuM line light duty truck reglotrotlonl. Excludeo other GM Dlvlolono.

IODW.ERS

WASIJINGTQN (APl - Attorney General Janet Reno and FBI
Director Louis Frech arc standing
together in the face of Republican
attacks in refusing to hand over a key
docuincnt to the House committee
investigating campaign fund raising .
Reno went against Frech 's recommendation lhat an indcpcnd'.!nt
counsel he appointed to investigate
rund-raising phone calls hy President
Clinton and Vic·e President AI Gore .
· Repuhlicans on the panel engaged in
several tcstv exchanges with the
attorney gcnCral Tuesday while seeking to capitalit.c on the disa~rcerncnt
between the two top law enforcement
officials .
"If I did not hclicvc very strongly in the rccommcmlation. I would
not have made il." Frech testified to
the HouSe Govcrnin~;nt Rcfonn and
· Oversight Comm ittcC:.
When Rep . Dan Burton. R-Ind ..
· chairman ()r 1hc committee. al:cusi.!J
her llf lryin g tn pmtr.::L:t the pn.:sident .
Reno shot hack : " I will mu~e the
dcdsions huscll on the cvid.;n~.:c ant!
the law nnd 110t nn ncwsp~lflCI' h~:ld­
lincs . ncw~papcr cdi tnrials. fl( Jib or

AND

MOTORS
ST. ALBANS·

BY KATHRYN CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
A $23.500 gran t has been
approved lhrough the Nature Works
Program for improvements to London Pool.
After receiving that word from
Robcn Wingett . grants admi ni strator,
Syracuse Village Council in a meet·
ing Tuesday night made plans to
begin the repair process.
Larry Lavender. Council president. advised members that water in
the pool is dropping due to a leak or
leaks and reponed that Bruce Bumgardner who operates a pool business
has agreed to "blow out" the lines to
determine the location of the leaks
and then repair them at a cost of

TOYOTA
&amp;LEIUS

.,•

I

·I

f

•

Icy. who was 'onvictcd of three
,·ounts of lying to hide $22.000 he
received from a~rihusincsscs in Mississippi that got $400.000 in federal
subsidies.
··There was ncwr any effort to
obstrw.:L his invl!stigation . And I
rcgrctlhat he even has concerns thm
there were ... Reno wid the panel .
Besides. she added. Smaltz "s suhscqucnt prn&lt;ecution of Blackley was on
different l'hart!cs than those tlmt the
Justice Dcparlmcnt dcdincd Ln pursue. she said.
Regarding the fund-ratsing prohc .
Burton tri ed to get Frech to ~~y that
he based his rc~.:ommcndation on the
belief that Reno had a conllict of
interest in invcsti~ating top administration officials .
lnstc&lt;.~d. Frech rcp~.:atcd several
time!-! : '·The re were seve ral bases for
my decision ...
He tried to assure skcplical
Republicans 'that " no area of this
investi~ation is closed." including
telephone lund r,ai si ng hy Clinton and
Gore. He said tho&gt;C calls like many
other. transactinns (:;Ontinuc to be
looked at under laws other than the
114-ycar-old statute that Reno concluded they did not violate. That

statute prohibits soliciting contributions in federal olfiecs.
"The FBI is not being impeded in ·
any way in conduct.ing thi.s inveStigation,"' Frech said.
Frech acknowledged that some of
his agents had expressed frustration
over the pace of inlcrviews in the
case, but he said, "That's a regular
part of any complex investigation."
He said these disputes hetwccn
agents and prosecutors had hecn
"resolved without tho investigation
being harmed or impeded ...
Burton castigated Reno 's invcsli- ·
gation and concluded, "Thi s has all
the appearances or an attorney general protecting tbe president."
When he suggested she was hid ing behind legal technicalities. Reno
hristlcd, ''I'm not hiding .... I'm try ing to do my duty.
Bur\on. whose own campaign
finances arc under inv~stigation hy "·
Justice Department task force. said he
would have no objection if Reno
rciCrrcd the allegation~ against him to
an independent counsel . "( have
nothing to fc~r from an independent
counsel." Burton said . "It is apparent the president docs not led the
"nne way."

RE,IO TESTIFIES • Atty. Gen. Janet Reno testifies before the
House Government Reform and oversight Committee hearing on
campaign fund-raising on Capitol Hill TUj!sday. At left, FBI direc·
tor Louis Fresh looks on while waiting to testify. (AP)

.

.

S·y racuse receives $23,500 grant for pool repairs

*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

.

All. PRICES INCLUDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
LICENSE FEES.

FBI dircdor's memo cxplotining his
rcc1nnmcndati!;l1 shou iJ n.:main
under wrap~ a..: they pursue i"nvcstigmivc lcaJ.., in lugh plm:cs.
Frech said his o1gcnts had never
hccn turned down in requesting to
interview top Clinton adrninislrution
officials. but he ~.:umplain cd there
have hcen many delays in getting
doL:um cnts from the White House.
' 'I'm not LonfiJcnt we huvc all the .
documents yet. " he smd.
Information in Frccl,.s memn
cou ld he helpful to potential targets,
said the att orney general an d the FBI
director. ·
The commi!lc~ i..;, fm:usi ng atten tion on the Justke Department in
unother probe as well. that of a l'ormt:r Agriculture Dcpo.1 rtrnent chief or
stalT who was convit: tcd in a case
brought hy independent counsel Donald Smaltz.
Smaltt · - who tcst.ifics today
after Frccb comp letes his appearance
- complained thm the Justice
Dcparttncnt dct:idcd nntl&lt;l prosecute
Ron ald Blackley. who was staff chief
for form er A~ril.:ullurc Secretary
Mike Espy. Smalt; al so said the Justi ce D!.!partmcnt oppl'1scd Smaltz'
t:our1 applic;1tinn.lo prosecute Black ~

between $1,500 and $2,000. Council he wants to. He also discussed the age.
agreed to go ahead and have Bum- . need for an addition to the present
Eber Pickens. Jr. suggc&gt;tcd that
gardner do the work.
pole building which was constructed Council consider hiring a full -time
Lavender reported that another last summer.
police . officer. He noted that t"c
meeting has hccn &lt;ct up with Burgess
Mayor George Connolly informed Department of Justice has a program
and Nipple to discuss upgrading the Council that plans call for a three bay where for the first year it pays 75 per·
water system. Councilman Bill equipment shed to be erected to the cent of the cost, with the state paying
Roush reported that a new water existing pole building at a cost of 10 percent. leaving the village with
pump had been purchased for the sys- $2,000, noting that the plans should only the remaining 15 percent. Needtem.
ed upgrades to the municipal buildbe approved early next year.
Roush also noted the need for
He also reponed that he and ing including new windows , doors ,
some guard railing, particularly in the Lavender had attended a Municipal paint, garage doors , and gutters were
area where it has been damaged by a League mayor's court session at the also discussed by Poekcns. The mayvehicle along Bndgcman and Lee Ohio University Inn, and found out at or said that he would need estimates
Circle.
that time about insurance which can · for the work before he ca n apply for
It was suggested by Councilman be purchased for the village through grant assistance on the work.
Mony Wood that village employee, the League: They will be meeting
Connolly announced that four
Mike Ralston, work for the water with Dave Hampton Monday to fur· electric poles will be added to Maridepartment on an as-needed basis if ther discuss village insurance cover- na Drive and the parking area ncar
.

•
•

'

•

there
Ehcr Pi cken s. Sr. fire chief, a&gt;ked
muncilto purchase four se lf-breathing masks at a cost of $25fl The
•
&lt;)cpanmcnt has already pure. ~cd
two and needs the additional one, ·,c
&gt;eid.
·
Police Chief Tim Gillilan report ed that he had investigated one complaint, served one warrant, and had
heard complaints about cats in the
village getting into vehicles and
under house trailers where they have
torn out insulation under the floor. He
said one resident asked about shoot·
ing a cat and was advised against that .
Gillilan said he suggested he capture
the cat and take It to a shelter.
Continued on page 3

- --- --- -

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