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

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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.
~~~----~------,

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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.

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Meigs downs
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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
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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

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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)

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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
.

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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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·c ommenta
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Land-~ine

The Daily' ~entinel

Br Jeck AndersOn .

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and Jan MoHer

It was not a noble day for the
United States in Ottawa last week,
when Uncle Sam was consptcuous
for his absence among a host of
countries that came together to sign
a treaty banning the producnon and
use of anti-personnel land mmes.
But ii was not an ignoble one
etther.
'The effort to ban such land mines
has become a cause celebre of late,
given the efforts of recent American
Nobel Prize wmner, .grassroots
acttvtst Jody Wtlliams, and the late
Princess Dtana For many years, this
column has also called for such a
ban.
The reason for our outrage and
that of others is stmple:
There are more than 100 million
acuve land mmes scattered throughout 62 countries of the world The
human toll of these tnstdtous htdden
killers is large -- some 26,000 people, mostly innocent civtllans , arc
killed or maimed every year. Onethird of that number are chtldren.
The tragedy is horrific.

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-9124156 • FIX 992•2157

A Gann.e tt Co. Newspaper

'

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubiiiiiMr

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Man1ger

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller

'Global warming debate
.generates much heat
' GBy DONALD M. ROTHBERG
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (APl - It is a plot agamst Western ctvthzauon. It ts the
·greatest danger faced b~ future generauon&gt; around the world. The global
warmmg rhetoric is ovetheated and n01 e&gt;en sctenusts can agree on the
, extent of the problem.
,
But the ambtguittcs m v.hat ts.kno,.n about dtmate change aren t stop,
" ptng advocates for and agamsl_qutck acuon from frammg thetr arguments on
the basts of wor.;H.:ase scenanos.
:. . Opponents to any a•recment lh&gt;l would commit the United States to
sharp reducuons m em;sstons of carbon dtoxtdc and other "greenhouse"
gases argue that n would fon:c rad1cal changes tn U.S. lifestyles for no rea' son .
The proposed treaty would place llmtts on the usc and production of en~rgy. "the lifeblood of mdustnal ctvtlt7Jlllon.'· {he Competitive Enterpnse
, Institute

~ -~ ~ 1ltflffl#at~ ~l.fiN .IAif;t/
~~~f:~Jh.

argue~

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..:~:;;Hot-·.... &amp;4--•• 1117 ~ wu.. lnt

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Blanche Dubois - A STREETCAR
NAMED DESIRE by Tennessee Williams

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Letters to the editor

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priorities misplaced
••• Holiday
Dear Editor,
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Reno is not fit for her· position:
By Joseph Perkins •
Her decision could have been
announced a year ago. It was then
that Attorney General Janet Reno
decided that under no circumstance
would she seek an mdepe11dent
counsel to mvesugatc campatgn
hnance lawbreakmg by htgh-rankmg members of the Clmton admtntstratmn. up to and mcludmg the prcs!dent and vice prestdent
It was the unspoken pact she
made wtth the prestdcnt as a condt ·
uon of bemg rcappomted 10 the JDh
she chenshcd. Indeed. 11 was no
secret msidc the Beltway that Cllnton was ready to ktck Reno to the
curb hccausc she was nm the " team
player" he had hoped she'd be during hts first term (as cvtdenced. the
Whttq House felt. by the live independent counsels she sicced on vanous members of the adhlmtstrattOn.
tnclud1ng the ftrst couple)
But Reno could not &gt;tmply and

other htgh-ranking members of
the
Clinton
adm 1mstration
did
anything
whatsoever to
warrant appotntment of an mdcpendent counsel.

or

cials and to prevent, as I have said.
the actual or perceived connicts of.
interest."
,..
NQw contrast those remarks with
Reno 's , statement this past April,
after refusmg to name an outside
counsel to tnvesttgate the Wh1tc
House lund-ratsmg scandal. '
The independent counsel statute,
sa1d the oncc-mscrutahle attorney
gcncral .

rcquuc~

week: "The dec1s1on was mme" ,
and, m c,ontradictton to h~r previpus
statement to Congress. hers alono0:
Now if Reno had ~onduetc~ a
vtgorous and eredihlc mvcsugallon
ol the White House fund-rai~rng
scandal, her contortions might not
ollend qutte so much. But the attarney general has gone out of her way
1&lt;1 limit the scope ol her mvcstiga-

her to seck a spc-

Nov. II! 1l1c eleventh IJlODth. ttl&gt;: eleventh day. the eleventh hour and
the eleventh minute. ThiS·~ the day hostilities ceased endtn~ World War I.
Since that day it has been called Armtstice Day. and later. Veterans Day.
It ii the day we pay tnbllte to the veterans and patriots who have dcfcndod our rights and ways of ljfe; some even made the supreme sacnfice .
Now, these are ideals wbtch the younger generat1ons need to be
informed of and what they mean.
What bothers me is that It is treated as any other day of the week by our
aclloOI• and work as usual.
And yet they can procl~m the first day of deer season as a holiday.
Aro our priorili~s mtsplaced?

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Virgil Walker
Racine
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By TONY SNOW
On the tssuc
for the portability products."
Creators Syndicate
of cost, the
Part of the problem ts that ConWASHINGTON -- Good umes GAO
wrote :
grc.s never bothered to thtnk about
provide tdeal condiuon: for political "Premiums for
costs when It drafted the btll. Mcmmtschief, especially on heart-rend- . some portabillhers were too husy drooling over
mg issues such as health care.
ty products may
pub he-opinion surveys md1caltng
Bill Clinton lately has expressed he substanttally
that people want guaranteed insurhis desire to install. through a scncs higher than lor
ance at low pnccs
of small n'tca.&lt;urcs. the equivalent ol standard prod~ut m JU&lt;t one year, premiUm
hts 1994 CltntonC&lt;re scheme. Yet uets. Of the ftve
prices have nsen 10 times more
mountmg cvtdence shows Amen- d1fferent earners
Snow
raptdly than expected. Merrill
cans were nght wh&lt; n they rebuffed whose rates we rcvtcwcd, only one Matthews of the, Nauonal Center for
the prcstdcnl 's mttta ! plan.
charged the standard rate (to people Polley Analysis says the first-year
- · constder the pre rmmary return s who chose " portabilny " policies htke 10 ''portabtllty" prcmtums is
on the Kassebaum-l:cnncdy health- over " regular" coverage). The averaging 25 percent to 30 percent
care act of 1996. That measure remamdcr charged or antictpatcd and that 10flation wtll increase as
mcluded a Chnton fJvornc: "porta- charg10g 29. 40, 85 and 125 percent healthy people nee. leaving only the
btltty." II people moved, switched . above the standard rate."
stck and poor in the increasingly
JObs or fell 1010 the ranks ol the
The report further noted that pnccy portability policies. The
unemployed, they would keep thctr "these arc the standard rates that result . The bill seems destined to
health-care coverage Dtlto tf they apply to generally healthy md1vtdu- infltctthc most pain on the very peocontracted horrendous dtseases.
als ... carrters may charge htghcr pie it was supposed to save.
Sponsors prcdtcted the measure premtums to tndtvtduals because
The GAO update also warns that
would grant Americans tremendous they are unhealthy."
·•portability" creates a freeloader
peace of mind at a mimmal cost -'The wave of h1kes renccts eco- problem. Some federal programs
only 2 percent to 3 percent more nomic and medtcal reality. Suppose k1ck out rectpients whose income
than previous health-insurance rates. you're about to lose a job or fear that exceeds a certatn level, but the new
Wrong. The General Accountmg a health problem w1ll worsen dra- law forbtds that sort of thing. People
Office delivered a one-year assess- mattcally. Chances are, you'll Jump who can afford to pay full fretght
ment of the program m a Sept 2 let- mto a "ponabtllty" program, know- thus wtll remam tn substdtzed proter to Sen. James Jeffords, chairman mg nobody .can k1ll your coverage.· grams, where they shove the £osts
of the Committee on Labor and ·
People who choose the portabtli- onto Amencan ta.payers
Human Resources. Concluswn : ty option generally cost more to treat
Stmtlarly, the legtslation forces
Kassebaum-Kennedy' has innated than healthy cittzcns As a result, the insurers to give applicants the same
costs, rcstncted care and generated law has set off "an increasing spiral benefits they recetved under pcev1tons of unforeseen problems.
of poorer risks and higher premiums ous plans. regardless of deductible

IND.
• • • ••
••

•
r

•

•

••

• IColl.lllbusl36· I
•• • ••
••
••

Charles E. Hayes

W.VA.

,,

Today's weather forecast
Ohio

.

Tomght...Showers likely Lows in
· the mid 30s. West wind around I0
, ., mph. Chance of rain 60 percent.
)
Thursday...Cloudy with a chance
..of snow showers . Temperatures
· ,steady in the mid 30s. Chance of
snow 40 percent.
Extended forecast
Thursday mght..:Cioudy wnh a
chance of snow showers Lows tn the

upper 20s.
Friday.. .Mostly cloudy wtth a
chance of snow showers. Highs 10 the
upper 30s.
Saturday... Mostly cloudy wtth a
chance of snow showers. Lows in the
mtd 20s and htghs in the mid 30s.
Sunday. Partly cloudy Lows in
the lower 20s and lughs m the lower
40s

· Rain will continue
:·:across Ohio tonight
. By The Associated Press
The National Weatlicr Service
·• says enough moisture will remain tn
the state tonight to allow for contin·
.. . \ted precipitation
· Scattered snow showers were
forecast for western Ohto, wtth a
mixture of ram and snow changmg to
snow expected across tbe east. Accumulations will range from I to 2 inches in the nonhem part of the state to
less than an inch elsewhere. Lows
wtll be in the low 30s .
The chance of snow will continue
Thursday, especially across the nonheast snow belt regiotls. Highs will be
lh the low to mid 30s.

A wtnter weather advtsory was tn
effect dunng the day for extreme
northwest Ohio. Enough cold atr was
sttll in place in that area to allow a
mtxture of ram and snow to fall during the overnight hours.
Enough warm atr had entered
mto the southern part of the state .
ahead of a low pressure center over
western Kentucky, to keep the precipttation from changmg to snow.
Early morntng temperatures ranged
li'om the lfltd 30s across the north to
around 40·tn the south.
The record htgh temperature for
thts date at the Columbus wcatlicr
statton was 72 degrees tn 1971

'}roday's livestock report.
COLUMBUS(APJ - IndianaOhio dtrect hog pnces at selected
buymg points \Yedncsday as provtd~d by the U.S. Department of Agn. culture Market News:
· Barrows and gilts· mostly steady;
demand and movement moderate.
US. 1-2. 23().260 lbs country
points 41.5().43.00. few 43.50; plants
'43.00-44.50.
U.S 2-3. 230-260 lhs. 37.50. 41.50; 210-230 lbs. 34.50-37.50.
Sows: unevenly steady.
U.S: 1-3 300-400 lbs. 30 00-32.00,
· few at 29.00; 400-500 lbs. 32 00,34.00; 500-600 lbs 34 00-36.00. few
'over 600 lbs. 37.00.
Boars: 29 .00-31 00.
Esttmatcd receipts· 33.000
Prices from Producers Livestock Association
Hog market trend for Wednes-

The absurdity ol this was best
captured hy Rep. Boh Barr. ihe
Georgta Repuhltcan. dunng Reno's
last appear;mce he lore the H&lt;&gt;u•.c
Judiciary Committee.
Buttf &lt;&gt;nly Rcn&lt;&gt; had hcen mv'estig~Hmg a mere 50-car collision
rather than a Whtte ! house scandal
that ranks wtth Watergate
A more c&lt;&gt;nsctent~&gt;us attorn~y
general -- &lt;&gt;nc who owed no deht to
the prcstdent who grudgtngly reapp&lt;&gt;tnted h&gt;:r. wh&lt;&gt; acknowledged the
ohvmus con llu:t or interest in lmlcstigattng her hoss -- would have
turned the matter over t&lt;&gt; an mdependent counsel in whom the puhltc
could trust.
Janet Reno has trreparahly sullied
her rcputatton lur Independence and
tntcgnty. She 1s no longer fit t~ he
attorney general ·
Joseph Perkins is a colum·
nist for the San Diego Union·
Tribune.
.·

levels. This loophole let• pe 6 ple
swttch from cheap plan• to cx(icnsivc ones without having to pay; for
the dtfference m benefits. Jnsutl'rs,
the GAO warns, could dtscourngc
• this sort of gaming by cuttlng tiack
on benelits -- i.e., rattonmg care~
In addition to these compljcauons, the. law makes 11 vtrtually
impossible to ktck anybody oui of
the system, includmg goons who
"physically or verbally alnt &lt;c
health-care provtders " The rej.on
says, "One HMO offictal told: us
that such occurrences arc comrflon
. ... " In other words, Congress nas
created a Mamac Protection Act.:
Ltke any federal program, lhts
one stnvcs mighul~ to prevent
fraud, wa,tc and abuse .. pnncip.illy,
~y making tnsurcrs and healers ifill
&lt;&gt;,ut reams of foi')Tls. But federal aqditors dtscovercd -- surpnse! •• that
the paper-pushmg costs tons ; of
money wtthout providing mucl\ 10
the way of useful informatton .
We 're getting all three. So; a'
Congress hegins pondering new bills
that promise " free " and "expaMed " care, beware: When tt comet to
cheap salvation, you get what ;cou
pay for.
,
:
Write Tony Snow, Creatclrs
Syndicate, 5777 West Cent~ry
Blvd., Suile 7110, Los Angdes,

. Emma Louise Seabolt Devore, 67,pf 4'795 Eagle Ridge Road, Racine,
dted Thesday, Dec. 9, 1997, at the Holzer Medtcal Center, Gallipolis .
Hom on Jan. 16, 1930 in Jackson County, W.Va., she was the daughter
of Jerry and Hazel Starcher Seabolt. She was a member of the AARP and
was a protestant.
' She is·survived by her husband, Jack 0. Devore of Racine; daughters,
Betty Harvey of Chicago, Ill. and Linda Marks of Palestine, W.Va.; sons,
Ken!!Cth Neville of Marietta, Timothy Neville of Chicago, Ill., and Jobn
Neville of Belpre, a stepdaughter, Kate Johnson of Mineral Wells, W.Va.;
a stepson, Steven Neville, of Columbus, seven grandchildren, eight greatgrandchildren , three step grandchildren, four brothers and four sisters. She
was preceded in death by her parents, a son, a daughter, and a brother. ,_
Funeral services will be held Thursday at 1 p.m. at the Roush Funeral
Home, Ravenswood, W.Va. The Rev. Darrell Johnson wtll officiate and burial will be in Independence Cemetery, Sandyv11le, W.Va Fnends may call
at the funeral home for two hours, II a.m. to I p.m precedmg the service
time.

.-

tum us much as p&lt;lss'ihlc

course, to arnvc cml prosecutor only tf "there " a
at thts lindmg, to potential l&lt;1r an actual eonllict of
do the btddtng of the prcstdcnt who iniCrcst. rather than merely an .·
reappomtcd her. Reno had to contort appearance of u conllt,ct ..
hc~&lt;cl r tn ways that would make
Reno stmilarly dtd a ptr&lt;&gt;ucttc on
Olympic gymna&lt;t Kcrrt Strug wmce consulung wuh FBI dtrector Louis
with pain.
Frcch on seeking an independent
Ltkc her somcrsauk on the mdc- counsel. In un appearance hch&gt;rc the
jlendcnt counsel law. Back tn 1994. House Judictary Commtllce in Octowhen Congress renewed the law. her. she prorntscd "Dtrcctor Frech
Reno t~stificd : " It ts absolutely und I will jomtly approve any invcsessential for the public to have con- ltgattons dosc-&lt;lut before tl is clo,scd
lidcnce tn the system. and you can- nut."
not do that when there ts a conlltct
Ant.J lest lawmakers lhdn "1 catch
qutckly dtsmtss hrazcn vtolattons ol (of tnterest) or an appearance ol a her pntnt the liN tnnc. she added·
campmgn linance and federal clec- conlltct nf mtcrest m the person wh&lt;&gt; " We wt II not close out the matter
lton laws That would be too ohvt- ts. tn effect. the chtef prosecutor."
ugain. I reiterate. unless Director
otis lor a woman who enjoyed a repAnd lest she failed to make her- Frech and I stgn off on 11."
utation -- undeserved. u turns out -- self perfectly clear to lawmakers, the
As it turns out. Frech felt there
for being " mcorritptablc ...
attorney general added:
was ample cvtdencc to warrant
She had to pretend. at least. to
"The tndepcndcnt counsel statute appointment of un independent
conduct a thorough invcstigatton of was meant to avotd even the appear- counsel. and he made thts plain to
these crimes before announcing thts ance of impropncty t.il the constdcr- Reno.
week that neither of her bosses. the atton ol allcgattons of mtsconduct
Yet. the attorney general overpresident and vtcc president, nor any hy htgh-level executive hranch offt- ruled the FBI drrcctnr. declanng this

~o~srscddent~poned

Emma Devore

day: steady.
Summary ofTue~day 's auctions at
Eaton, Farmerstown. Lancaster.
Wapakoneta and Caldwell
Hogs: I 50 lower to 1.00 htgher
Butcher hogs 28 00-46 25.
Cattle: steady to I '50 htgher
Slaughter steers chotec 60 0069.75; select 55 00-66.00
Slaughter heifers· choice 60 0068.50; select 59 00-64.50.
Cows. I 00 lower t&lt;l 1.00 htghcr:
all cows 43.50 and down
Bulls: 2.00 lower to 2.00 htghcr:
all bulls 46.00 and down.
Veal calves. steady, chotec 65 .00
and down
Sheep &amp; lamhs 4.00 to 5.00 lower; chotec wools 70 00-82 00; feeder
lambs 95 00 and down; aged sheep
49.00 and down

·syracuse receiv~s...
Continued from page 1
It was ann-&gt;unccd that Santa Claus

"'II he at the ftrc station on Dec. 21 .
2:30p.m. with treats forthe youngstcrs. Donattons arc needed. 11 was
'Tcportcd.
The mayor'• report showed $952
'" recetpts for November. Clerk-

Beware, you get what yqu pay for

•

••

TaleW!a ~ /Jf~

0

'' Wt\OE.'IE.~ YOU AREl t\AVE ALWA'(S l&gt;Ef&amp;lt&gt;ED
0~ 1't\E K\1'-tl&gt;NE.SS OF
. -, Barry's STAAN&lt;:JERS."
•••
,
.- World I

•
•

countries' in regional hotspots like
the Middle East •• where Israel and
most Arab countries, including Iraq,
refused to stgn. Russia also chose
not to sign.
The United States, meanwhile ,
has imposed a umlateral moratonum
on the transfer of land mmes to other
countries since 1992. For U.S. military use, the Pentagon has been producing mines that self-destruct or
deactivate after a specified period of
time. They are more expensive,
which explams why the United
States can't persuade Chtna, Russia
and others to move to this . more
"humane" technology. Currently,
they can sell land mmes for anywhere from $3 to $30 aptece. (And it
costs, on average, S I ,000 to remove
each of them in pain-staking, liferisking work.)
Accordi~g to Pentagon offictals,
there are still places where the use of
anu-personnel land mines makes
sense for U.S mtlitary policy. Their
usc in the Gulf War against Saddam
Hu'ssein provtded an important
defense for our troops. Alllerican
officials also say they're needed tn
the Demilltartzed Zone that separates North and South Korea.
The mihtary offictals who spoke
wtth us ane some of the same ones
who persuaded Vtce Prestdent AI
Gore -- who, m turn, persuaded the
prcstdent -- to turn htS back on a permanent hail. In doing so, unfortunately. they also assured tha~ the historic treaty stgncd last week wtll
hardly be worth the paper it's pointed on.
We had hoped that the Canadumled effort; whtch hcgan !1st yqar.
would be the begmmng of''thc end
for these perntc1ous k1llers. Bu1
wtthout Amencan partic1patit&gt;n.
that's unlikely to be the case For in
the time it took to write tht~ column,
one anti -personnel mme has been
removed -- but 25 more have been
laid.
.
Jack Anderson and Jar Mo.ller
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Ine.

~_eatv ~ 1/fVf/MJl

' On the other side are environmentalists who contend that fatlure to
· reduce such emissiOns would rat sc the temperature on Eanh. ,Sea levels
would nsc. makmg humcanes and other storms a greater threat. They ctte
cvtdcncc that the Earth tS gctung warmer but ignore contrary indtcations.
For example. Bnttsh scienttsts declared upon arri&gt;o;ing at the current global warmmg conference m Kyoto, Japan, that 1997 may he the hottest year
oorero~
·
· ,
But the U.S. Nauonal Aeronautrcs and Space Administration says that
whtle 120 years of ground temperature records "seem to show some warmmg." 15 years of data on the middle atmosphere "show no long-term trend.''
The automobtle ts often the vietim or villam tn this debate.
A conservauve view offered ~y James . D. Johnston of the Amencan
Enterprise Inst1tute suggests that adheren~e to tougher standards could lead
to "no-dtive days, no-drive zones. park10g charges and llmtts, employer
trip-reduction plans. road-butldmg limits."
Concludes Johnston· ··seriilus dangers lie ahead for personal mobthty.''
He also chides Vice President AI Gore for taking the cnvtronmentallst
vtcw tn his boOk "Eanh in the Balance," that the impact on the environment
'of automobiles "is posing·a mortal threat to the security of every nation that
IS more dca~ly than that of any mihtary enemy we arc ever agatn hk~ly to
conft'Qnl."
. But Johnston omits the context, In that sectton of hts book. Gore was
· argumg for the need to lntild more fuel-effie tent vehicles. . .
Gore has made the environment-.. &lt;enlerptcce of hts pollttcal career He
ncw 10 Kyoto over the weekend to address the mtern~tional conference convened to constder ways to toughen the 1992 Cltmatc Change Treaty. Gore
also ts trymg to win delegates over to the U S. postlton of more modest
reductions than Europeans arc advocattng
·
He has one strong point he can make The Senate .. whtch would have to
approve any treaty change, recently vmcd 95 -0 for a resolutton. dcclanng .•t
would not agree to any change that dtd not commit Chma and lndta to JOin
tndustrial nauons'" reducing cmisstons.
·
'

•

- then returned with his new artifi·
cial leg to the same ditch and. in two
weeks, lost the other leg when he
tripped a land mine. He knew the
danger, but had no other way to feed
his family besides farming.
Examples like these make the
need for a worldwtde ban obvious,
and that explains why 125 countries
signed thdi'Ottawa treaty last week.
1be treaty is a laudable effort to
achieve this ban, and may eventually succeed.
But in its curren! form, and consideling those who didn't sign, there
are many who believe it did not
behoove the United States to climb
aboard.
As one Pentagon expert told us,
the Ottawa treaty was not signed by
any of the largest producers and
· exporters of antt-personnel land
mines •• China, Iraq, Iran and North
Korea -- whtch "senously erodes its
value." Chma ts once again the'
worst of the lot, manufactunng millions of plastic mmcs that can't be
found by metal detectors and
removed when a connict is over.
Nor was the treaty approved by

--Local briefs-----.

Nell~ fONCIII fr.- daytime condllioat IDd

treaty is.n 't worth much as is

In
Bosnia.
for
instance,
some shoe
stores sell
shoes one
at a time
because so
many
Bosnians
have been Moller &amp; Anderson
maimed by
land mines.
In Cambodia, one out of every
236 citizens is an amputee because
of mine blasts. That's because an
esttmated 7 mil han to 9 million land
mines are scattered throughout the
country, laid by the Khmer Rouge,
· the current government and other
warring facttons.
In Afghamstan, there are 10 milhon land mines sown which severely llmtt the amount of arable land
whtch can be farmed to feed the peopie We recently learned from a
British observer there that he met a
man who was cleaning an irngatton
ditch, htt a land mine and lost a leg ·-

W&lt;'&lt;IIIH'r

Tbanday, Dee.ll

•

~ ·.

'E.stai~tf i111948

OHIO

Wedneedllr, Dlcemblr·10.1997

...

The Daily Sentinel
t USPS lU-OOGJ
Pubhsh~J e\l~ty aneraoon, Mllnd~y through
1 ruJay. Ill C'ourt S1 .. Pomeroy, Oh1o. by th~
OhiQ Valk•y Puhhshmg C'umpan~/Ganlll.!lt C'o.,
Pomero~ . Ohto 457h9, PI! 9?2·21 ~6 Second
\:IIISS postagt patd II Pmncroy, Ohio.
Mtllber: Th!.! J\ssoc:la!~d Pr~s" and 1hc Oh1o
Ncwsrap.."f 1\!isoc:JaiKJn.
POSTMAb,'ER: Sttul addreu ,,:(lm,."CIIUn ~ II•
Th&lt;' Dall~ Senlmd Ill C'tlurt St . Pon'k!ri'Y·
Otuo 4~7ft'J

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

By Carritror Motor a....
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One Monlh
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Substrtbersaot dcstfi"JJ; IIJ pay the camer mny
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on athrec,m or 12 monlh bllll. Credu wilt br

•iven can~er uch wed; .
No aubacuphon tty tn11l permlucd tn
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1ru1

hblts..er reservesrhc naftt 10 adjuJt riles dur·
ina tttc' allbKriptioa period S•bsaipttOft rate
clunau my bt tmptcrnen1ed tty charaainJihc
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MAILSUISCRtPTIONS

w.... . . ...............
lakk Mdp COtiiiiJ

ll
2ti Week• . .... .... .

$27](1
U3 H2
.. ................s t&lt;l! !6

.

.

...

!2 w.cu . .... .
Rata O.flidto Mtl&amp;l Co•aty
1l w.cu . ... .. . .. . .. ...............1:19 2l
,l6 W..u... ... .. . ...................... 1,61•1&lt;
!2 -....
.. . ' " .... $1&lt;1912

Treasurer Janice Zwtlling's ·report
showed balances as follows: general
fund, $33.302.46, street construction,
$17,361.96. h1ghway, $3,305.48, fire,
$4, 159 81, water, $8,864.59; pool,
$5 ,374 23;
guaranty meter,
$3,119.73, cemetery, $95 65 ; wuh a
total all funds, $75,583 .91 .
Also attending was Kathryn Crow,
counc tl member.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ......................49'·

Akzo ................................ ......86'/a

AmrTech............................... 77~.
Ashland 011 ..........................47'•
AT&amp;T ..................................... 58'1.
Bank One ..............................56'7.
Bob Evans............................21'1•
Borg-Warner .........................47';,
Champion ............................. 18';,
Charm Shpa ...........................
City Holding ............................~1 .
Federal Mogul ......................39i\o
Gannett .................................59'1.
Goodyear ......................... .....64'1.

5,.

Kmart •..••••..•.•••••...•••••. ~ ..........12'Kroger ..................................35\,
Lands End .............................37'1.
Limited .................................... 25
Olk Hill Flnl ............................22

OVB ......................................... 35
One Valley .............................40'1.
Peoples ................................... 42
Prem Flnl ..., ........................... 25~.
Rockwell ...............................50'1.
RD/Shell ...............................53'/.,
Seers ..................................,.46.,_
Shoney'l ...............................3"1•
Star Bank ............................. 5&amp;~•
Wendy'a ...............................22"1.
Worthlngton, .........................17'!.

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30
1.m. quotaa provided by Ad~at
ol Galllpolla.

Charles E. Hayes, 58. of New Haven, W. Va ,died Tuesday, Dec. 9, 1997.
at Veterans Memonal Hospital emergency room.
·
A laborer, he was a U.S. Air Force veteran.
Born June 4, 1939, m Middleport, he was a son of the late Arnold W.
"Red" Hayes and Nettie Mae (Badgley) Hayes.
Survtvtng are his wife, Bertha M. (Smuh) Hayes; two daughters, Beverly J Hayes of Pomeroy, Ltsa D. Hayes of Mtddleport; a son, Charles E
Hayes. Jr of Chester; three stepdaughters; Bambi L. Hansen of Austm, Texas,
Kim M Regenold of Pontiac, Ill .. JoAnn Wagner of Athens; a stepson, John
Elias of Corunna. Ml; three brothers, Robert A. Hayes of Syracuse, Walter
A Hayes of West Columbta, W. Va .. William K Hayes of Rutlqnd. a ststcr, Helen Pauley of St. Albans, W. Va; 19 grandcfuldren and two great-grandchildren.
A memorial servtce wtll be held at the convemence of the famtly. There
will be no visitatton. The Foglesong Funeral Home of Mason is in charge
of arrangements.

Burnie Ross
Burnie Ross, 67, Pomeroy. died Tuesday, Dec. 9, 1997, at Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital m Parkersburg, W.Va.
A former mamtenance worker and government certified welder, he was
born March 2, 1930, m Henlawson, W.Va., son of the late Arnold Frank Ross
and Mary Vance Blake. He was a member of the Freewtll Baptist Church;
Survtving are hts wtfe, Simania Muncy Ross of Pomeroy: two daug(jters, Diane Ross of Pomeroy and Nillie Caplinger of Columbus; a son, Hillard
Ray Price of Columbus; eight grandchildren and three great-grandchtldren;
a sister and brother-m-law, Helen and Ed Bennett of Columbus: two broth·~ and sisters-in-law, Sherman and Gloria Ross of Columbus and Floy&lt;l and
Edtth Ross of Pomeroy; several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by a brother, George Frank "Bud" Ross .
Servtces wtll be held Fnday, 10 a.m . at Ewmg Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
wtth John Elsworth offictating. Burial wtll follow in Metgs Memory Gardens, Pomeroy
Fnends may call Thursday, 2-4 and 7-9 p.m at the funeral home.

.John F. •freddie' Thabet

A Pomeroy man was cited followmg a two-vehicle accident at
Prospect Hill and Wehe Terrace in Pomeroy·around 4: II p.m. Tuesday .
Mark Reitmire was backtng from a driveway when he baeked into
a car driven by Mtchelle Ramsbura. Pomeroy, causing moderate dam·
age to her car.
•
No injuries were reported. Reitmire was cited on a ~harge of fail·
ure to maintain assured clear distance.

One-car accident reponed
No injuries were reported m a smgle-car accident on West Mam
Street in Pomeroy Tuesday around 9:45 p.m.
Hazel Mtlam, Portland, was eastbound when she drove off the right
side of the road, stnking a uttllty pole support wire near the JUnction
of Ebenezer Street, causmg moderate damage to her vehtcle.
No citations were tssued
I

Delegates vote to restrict
AMA product endorsements

•
I
••
•
th~t

DALLAS (AP) -The Amen can man, chairman of a pane I
Medtcal Asso9iation has banned brought the resolutions to the AM~
product endorsements in an attempt btennial conference.
r
to heal its image after an ill-fated
"There was some re sidual padcommeretal deal with Sunbeam Corp. nota that some stones weren't turned
The AMA's legislature also voted over. so let's have a commmec satisTuesday to create a committee to fy Itself that nothmg dtd happen. that
mvesttgate how the group got hasn' t heen dealt wtth," he said
mvolved with Sunbeam m the first
The 150-year-old AMA IS the
place. The AMA board of trustees has natton 's largest orgam7.atton of physisaid II was unaware ofthe deal appar- Cians. representing JUSt more than 40
ently made by lower-level executives percent of the country's doctors. The
••The AMA is against product AMA House of Delegates. whtch
endorsement and thts orgamzat10n mcludes 475 members from its stale
has made a move to make sure soctcttcs, adJourns today
everyone knows that," said Dr
There was some confusiOn TuesThomas Reardon. chairman of the day over the status of the ban after a
trustees
commlltce report showed that it had
The commutec will invcsugatc all been referred to the new mvcsttgativc
aspects ol 1hc Sunbeam afTatr as a panel. However. deeper in the report
way to restore fatth 10 the AMA's wa.' a contradictory ttcm, saymg the
mtegrity, said Dr. Ralph E. Schloss- han was approved

Truckload of toys reported. stolen
CINCINNATI (APJ - A scmitratler loaded wtth $1 million worth
of toys has dtsappeared, pollee satd.
The toys were in one of two tractor-trailer rigs stolen from D&amp;B
Leasmg Co. late Sunday or early
Monday. police said. The toys
belonged to a customer of Hasbro's
C10cmnati-based toy-design operatton, foi')Tlerly known as Kenner
Toys, said Hashro spokeswoman

Holly Ingram
The company hasn 't determined
where the toys came from or where
. they were headed. The types of toys
stolen were unavatlablc.
Thtevcs broke mto the fenced -in
business through a wmdow. stole
keys lor two trucks and drove t~cm
away, pollee satd They apparently
used thetr own tractor to steal a thtrd
' tratler, pollee satd.

.Meigs announcements

John F. "Freddte" Thabet. 81, of Mason, W. Va., died Monday. Dec. 9,
Santa to visit bank
1997, at the Overbrook Care Center in Mtddlepon.
pital.
Santa Claus wtll vtstt Peoples
Born Sept. 9, 1916, in Point Pleasant, W.Va.. he was a son of the late
Nimer M. and Jenny (Thabtt) Thabet. He was also preceded in death by six Bank to Pomeroy Saturday, I p m. Lodge meeting set
Chtldren wtll have their pictures takbrothers and five sisters.
Regular mccttng of the Shade RIVCo-owner of the ABC Dry Cleaners m Mason. he was a member of the en with Santa compliments of the er Lodge 453 , F&amp;AM . Chester,
Thursday. 7.30 p.m at the hall
Mason Umted Methodist Church, Masomc Lodge A F. &amp; A.M., Chapter 19 bank.
Refreshments .
of Point Pleasant, Loyal Order of Moose Chapter 731 of Pomt Pleasant, and ·
DAR
to
meet
Moose 25 Member Club Legion of the Moose 123 of Point Pleasant A U.S.
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Fellowship to meet
Army veteran of World War II and the Korean War, he was a member of
The Women'S Fcllnwshtp wtll
the D.A V. Chapter 14. Smith-CapehartAmencan Legton Post 140 of New Daughters of the Amencan RevoluHaven, and charter member. of the Stewart-Johnson V.F.W. Post 9926 of tton, Saturday, 10 a.m. at the meet Thursday, 7 p.m at the MtdPomeroy Ltbrary, program on dolls, dlcport Church of Chnst Dexter
Mason
'
past
and present, wtth Rae Gwiaz- Chun:h wtll have devouons There
Survivmg arc hts wife, Mary R Thabet; three daughters, Joy Faye Thadowsky
to speak. Members are w1ll be a dtsplay hy Mtll Street B&lt;x1ks
bet of Tyrone, Oklahoma, Susan Kay Thabet of Gallipolis. Jenny Lou Thabet Clendenen of Pomt Pleasant; a son. John Farris Thabet of Mason; sts- reminded to take ttems for the veter- and tnstallatton of new ollkcrs•.
ter-m-law, Vica Jane Abbott of Pomeroy, and two brothers-in-law. ans Chnstmas at the Chillicothe HosLawrence B. Foreman of Mason and Lester W. Foreman of Thunderbolt,
Ga .
There will be no scrvtce or visttatton. Arrangements arc under the dtreclton of I he Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason.
Umts of the Meigs County Emer· Valley Hospttal.
2:06 p.m., state Route 124,
gency Medtcal Servtcc recorded four
calls for assistance Tuesday Umts Reedsvtlle, Sherry Authcr.&lt;on, O'Bicness Memonal Hospttal .
responding included·
6.25 p.m., West Matn Street,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Pomeroy,
Goldie Little, Veterans
8:31 a.m .. Overbrook Nursmg
SANFORD. Fla (AP)- To hear eral agent posmg as a htt man was Center. Mtddlcport, MafY Catron, Memorial Hospttal.
prosecutors tell tt, the Rev. George captured on vtdeotape and audto Holzer Medtcal Center;
Crossley hated George "Butch" Wal- tape. porttons of whtch were played
I0.55 a.m., North Second Avenue .
do so much that he wanted a hH man for JUrors as the tnal began Tuesday Mtddlcport, Lisa Hayes, Pleasant
SPRING VALLEY ClfiEMA
"I want htm to start feeling the
to kill the husband of his former
446·4524
.
heat a httlc because u's been the othlover.
But whether Crossley actually cr way around, " Cros..o,;lcy smd on one
Veterans Memorial
looked for a ktller or whether he was of the tapes.
Tuesday admisstons- Emma K.
Lawyers for Crossley, a 56-yearegged on by a friend ts at the crux of
h1s murder-for-htre trial mvolving old ordamcd mmtstcr who was the Owens, Pomcmy.
Tuesday dtscharges - Mary Lauhost of a show called ··central Flortsex, 1mmsters and v1dcotapc .
da
Ltve,"
satd
he
was
entrapped
dermtlt,
Pomeroy
Crossley's alleged offer to a fedHolzer Medlral Center
~ontinue~ from· page t
Discharges Dec. 9 - Christy
Tackett, Linda Hall, Betty Rtch·
He satd revitalizing clUes lessens mond, Phyllis Hendrix. Sheila Ross,
The linal versiOn makes the planmng
process voluntary hut mcludcs some the tendency of famtlles to move to Daisy Sayre. Mattie Jarrett, Okcy
new suhdiv1s1ons on former farm- Buzzard, Kathryn Campbell. Charles
state pressure .
.. You can lead a horse to water. land
Durst, Michelle Young.
,
Krebs and Logan drafted the bill
but you can 't make h1m drtnk."
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Krebs sa1d . .. However. yo" can salt durmg a sertes ol ctght public mcet- Vance, son , Hamden.
tngs lrom July 1&lt;~ November. All
the feed.'
Birth Dec. 3 - Mr. and 'Mrs.
Counttcs that don't do c!lmpre- groups and state agcnctcs represent- Bryan Campbell . daughter. Btdwell.
hensivc plans wtll nol he eltgiblc for ed on the farmland task force were
(Published with permission)
state fa1mland prcscrvat&amp;Jn rnoncy represented m the drafttn g sesstons.
and ccrtatn agncullural lonns. Such
counties .tbo would lmJ i harder for
thetr htghway .111d other d• vclopmcnl
proJCI.' lo,; to move ~p on the state s
fundmg pnoruy ltst. he sud.
Krebs nnd Logi.ln satd the state I:"'
lost ng 70 acres ol larmlar sl each day
to non-farm uses Bcstdc s the livestock and crops produced by farms.
food-proccsstng bus10csscs 10 communittcs ncar larms tmprovcs local

Meigs EMS logs 4 calls ·

Broadcast preacher on trial
in murder-for-hire scheme

7

Hospital news

OhiO /awma kers..

from the

cconomiC!'i

Farmland also pays more in property taxes thah H rcqutres tn public
scrvtccs, whtle rcstdenttal property
often does not pay for ttsel r. accordIng to studtes that Krebs and Logan
ctted
The bill also would encourage
urban redevelopment by gtving sales·
tax breaks for matert als used • in
inner-city reStdenttal rehabtlitatton
" One of our greatest assets ts our
existing bousing stock in thiS state,"
Logan satd. "There ts a connection
between the urban perspecttve and
the rural perspectiYI! "

HOLZER HEALTH HdTLINE

Aoler m.Jical e.n~., wi:jl...:j
a
lwlida'l
and a new 1}ear ftii.J wifk good lwaltk and happiM:ji!
IIVIIrtJOIU

:ISQ.:jOn

jOIJOU:j

�...

•

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Page1

December 1 1997

Meigs boys beat
Southern 84-57
to stay unbeaten
Mctgs outscored Southern 28-8 tn
the thtrd penod and went on to defeat
the Tornadoes 84-57 m Tn-Valley
Conference basketball acttan Tuesday evenmg at Larry R. Momson
Gymnastum
The win is the tir;t by the Marauders over a Southern basketball team
tn stx tnes, Me•gs is now 2-0 on the
young season and 1·0 tn the 'fVC
under ftrsl year head coach Chns
Stout Coach Howie Caldwell's Tor·
nadoes fall to 0-2 overall and 0.1 tn
the TVC.
Meags took the early lead when
sophomore Steve Beha dratned a
three poanter 54 seconds into the con·
test 10 gtve the Marauders a 3-0
advantage.
. Jerrod Mills hit a bucket tn tbe
~amt for Southern wuh6:11 rematqIng to cut the lead to 3-2 But Beha
came back and hll a runnmg Jumper
m the patnl and added another three
·potnler to give the Marauders a 8-2
advantage wtth 5:29 left
But Southern came clawtng back.
Adam Cummgs hll one of two from
the Ime, Adam Wtlliams dratned a
three pomter and a bucket by Mills
ucd the game at 8-all wuh 3:35
remammg
But Metgs was able to pull away
to take a 19-13 lead at the end of the
penod on a bucket by Colltn Roush
&lt;J!!he'lhree secane mark.
Troy Hoback btl back-to-back
JUmper; to start the second period to
pull Southern to within 19-17. But
'the Marauders went on a 8-2 run and
took a 27-19 lead on a pair of J T
Humphreys free throws with 4 381eft
[n the hall
Southern pulled to wtthm 31-27
wath 2·34 left m the half on a buck~~ m the lane by Cumings. But
¥etgs scored SIX of the final mne
lpoints of the half and took a 37-30
lead m the locker room at the half
when Way ion McKinney scored wtth
'30 seconds remaining
The Marauder; took thetr first
double dtgtt lead m the third penod
when Beba drained another three
pomter from the right wtng wtth 7 07
,..left putttng the maroon and gold on
l top 44-33
~
A three point play wllh I 28 lclt
1hy Beha gave the Marauders a 20
; potnt lead (59-39) Two Beha Ireo.
' throws wuh 14 seconds left gave
: Mctgs a 65-39 ad yantagc hcadmg
mto the final cagHt mmutes The
: Marauders outscored Southern 19-18
1m the linal period to post the 86-57
' wm
"Gtve the ktd's all the credit,"
i Marauder Coach ChriS Stout satd.
: "They have been worktng hard smcc
day one, and 1thtnk they showed that
: on the lloor Thts was a (otalteam
j cllort nght down to the last guy, the

,

kids have a lot of pride They totally
believe that they can beat anybody."
Stout went on to pnuse his semors.
"Collm Roush. Brad Davenport, and
Scan O'Brien all wanted to be m the
game, every time I took them out
they wanted to go right back tn. This
ts their wtn, you have to gtve them
credtl. Southern play hard, they have
a lot of hean We went on the 28-8
run to start the third period and they
couldn't get back tn to 11. thatts hard
for anyone to overcome." Stout coneluded Southern heud coach Howte
Caldwell declined comment
Metgs placed three players tn
double figures and nme out olten that
dressed m the sconng column Wayion McKinney came olf the bench to
lead the Marauders wuh 23 pomts,
Damel Hannan had another outstandmg ntght wtth 20 and Steve
Beha added 16.
The Marauders hal 28 ol 56 lrom
the floor for 50% mcludmg three ol
seven from three pomt range Mctgs
went to the ltne 42 umes htllmg 25
for 60%. The Marauders pulled down
30 rebounds with Hannan grahhmg
seven and McKinney and Bcha gctting fave each. Mctgs had three
blocks wuh Hannan gellmg two.
they turned the ball over 14 ttm'cs.
and were called tor 27 louis
Mitchell Walker led Southern wtth
12 potnts, Wtlh I0 of those commg tn
the second pcnod. Troy Hohack
added 10. Southern htt 19 ol491rom
the floor includmg one ol nme from
three pomt range lor a cool 37'if The
Tornadoes went to the line 34 tune s
and htt 18 lor 53 % Southern pulled
down 22 rebounds w1th Hohack gettmg five and Pete Sasson four Malls
had four of Southern's caght steals
and Southern turned the hall over 25
umes and "'ere called lor J2 louis
Meags made tl a clean sweep hy
defeatmg Southern m the reserve
game 52-35 Chuck Stanley led
Mctgs wtth 17 pomts, Grant Ahhott
added 10 Ntck Bolm led Southern
with 10. Coach Pat O'Bncn's
Marauders arc now 2-0 overall and 10 m the TVC Coach Scott W~ekhne's
Tornadoes drop to 0-2 and 0-1 tn the
TV C.
Metgs wdl travel to Alexander on
Fnday cvcnmg, whtle Southern wall
_ hos! Mtller. The Tornadoes wall play
Saturday alternoon at Ohw Untverstly's Convocatton Center agatnst
Cmcmnati Madctra at 4 15.
In other .TVC actton Belpre
defeated Eastern 82-36. Wellston
defeated Tnmblc 65-61 . Alc~andcr
beat Waterford 64-50, Vtnton County sltpped past Millcr64-59 .tnd Federa I Hocktng beat Nclsonvtl)e-York
69-64.
Ouarterl!!lllb
Southern
IJ-IK-X-IX=57

Belpre boys bla~t
Eastern 82-36
By SCOTT WOLFE

Sentinel Correapondent

PASSES TO TEAMMATE- Melga guard Angelo Rodriguez (21)
passes the ball to teammate Steve Beha (15) as Southern's Pete Sisson guards Rodriguez during Tuesday night's TVC contest at Meigs
High School, wher the Maraudera won 84-57. Beh• finished with 16
points. (Sentinel photo by Dave Herrle)

!
j

l

j

j

l

We thank thts was an arbnrary ami
capnc10us action We hope to turn
that around
"There's rcally,only been one side
out there. Tlus man really was
depnvcd ol any ktnd of due process
Nobody heard from hnn at all. That's
not the Amcncan way," added
Cochran, who was at Sprewell's
side, along wi\h hts agent Arn Tcllcm
and NBA players assoctatmn head
Btlly Hunter.
Also aucndmg m a show ul sultdartty wtth Sprcwell were Warnors
players Muggsy ~ogucs. Bamho
Coles, Felton Spencer, Bnan Shaw,
David Vaughn and Joe Smtih Robert
Horry, a member of the Los Angeles
Lakers and a former teammate ol
Sprcwcll at Alabama, also was there.
Carlcs1mo 1 who has a rcpulatlnn
for an ahrastve coachang style, and
mher Warriors oflictals decltncd tO
comment, al:m because ut upcornmg
legal pruccedmgs
The players unwn has It led gncvunccs agumst the NBA and the Warnors, nrgUtng lhc pcnalt1cs were

excesstvc. And Sprewcll hnr.scll satd
he never goi a chance to tell hts stde
of the story, a potnl the NBA dts·
pules The case wtll be he,lfd no
sooner than Jan 4 bv arhnrator John
Feenck, dean ol Fordham Law
School.
Meanwhtle, Houston Rockets forward Charles B.~rkley sUid Tuesday
that some players mtghl boycon the
NBA All-Star game or the World
Championshaps an Greece 11 the
league doesn '1 ease the pumshmont
"llhtnk I'd have great support fnr
a boycott," Barkley satd. 'T ve talked
wtth several player; about 11 If we
don ' t make a stand, tt's gotng to be

Quarter mt1Ji
Eastern
2-8-12-14=36
Belpre
22-18-21-21=82
Eastern: John Dnggs 0-1-0=3,
Man Bissell 1-0-0=2, Jeremy Casto
1-0.0/2=2, Jeremy Kehl 0-0-112= I,
Steve Durst 4-0-212=10, Enc Smtth
1-0-0=2. Joe Brown 4-0-518= 13.
Totals 12·1·9117=36.
Belpre: Jim Randolph 4-1·
0/0=11, Bnan Bartlcll 5-2-J/5=19,
Kyle Bradford 2-5-0=19, Carltse
Curry 6-0-0= 12, Murk Wtlcoxcn t.().
0=2. Josh Strothers 4-0-0=8. Chad
Gregg 2-(~!1=4, Zack Ketlh J.().(l=2,
Steve Hcaidcrson 2-0-112=S. Totals
27-8417=82

Meigs girls get by
Alexander 59-58

PUTS UP SHOT- Sou1hern's Troy Hoback (41) pu1s up a shot
just outs ida the paint as Meigs center Daniel Hannan (right) tries to
block the shot during Tuesday night's game on the Marauders' court.
Meigs claimed the 27·polnt victory In pirt because of Hannan's 28point effort. (Sentinel photo by Dave 'iarrla)
Metgs
19-IM-2X-19=X4
Southern: Mttchcll Walker 3-06= 12. Russell Reaber 1-0-1 =J. Adam
Wtlltams 1-1-2=7. Ntck Bolm 2-0J= 7. Adam Cummgs 2-0- I=5, Jason
Allen 3-0·1"7, Troy Hohack 4-02=10. Jcrrod Mtlls 2-0-2=6 Totals:
18-1-111=57

Meigs: Br,td Davenport 1-0-0=~ .
Steve Bch.1 2-J-J= 16. Angel"
Rodngucz 1-0-4=6. D.uuel H.uman
X-0-4=20. J T. Humphreys 1-0-~=~ .
Colltn Roush 2-0-4=K. Se.tn O'Bnen
1-0-0=2. Wuylun M&lt;Kmn&lt;')' lJ.().
5=2J,NctiGtlcsO·&lt;~I=I Tolals:25·
3-25=114

::. Sprewell apologt·zes for chokl. ng •. net· dent
By DENNIS GEORGATOS
OAKLAND. Cahf. (AP)
Latrell Sprewell apologtzed for h~&gt;
; one moment of anger that led htm to
' auack his coach. That smd. the han·
: oshed basket bull star mude 11 dear he
heheves he's a victim. too
"I am a good person and I've never had any snuauorl hke thts come up
oclore." Sprewcll suad ala news con; lercncc Tuesday. his lirst smcc losing
i h~&gt; Job w11h the Golden State War' nors and hcmg suspended for nne
year by the NBA fur chokmg and
) thrcutenang cnach P.J. Curlesuno dur·
.
: mg practa&lt;c Dec I.
"I feel 10 years of hurd w&lt;..k
shouldn't he taken away for one mas·
: take . My career didn't hapjlcn
~ ovcmi,t!t and I don't fcclttllllould he
~ taken away ovcmiJIII."
.
'
Sprewell rend from i lllatemcnt
and didn 'I lake queatiOIIA bectllllle of
; pendmg litigDiion In the c~. but. sa.id
J he apologized to Carle.. mo an a
phone call Sunday, and he repeated
; the apology in public.
'
"'I know this conduct as not
. 1I acceptable m soeaety
.
' . I
and pro.esstuna
~ sports I accept responstbthty for
r what r vc done... he satd
Sprewcll's confrontation with
1 Carlestmo. which has sparked nat ton; al debate over sportsmanship, play·
~ er·couch relations and profeostonal
II athletes' standing in society us role
modes, led the Warriors to term mute
, the three-It me All-StilT's contr~ctlast
; Wednclday. The move cost htm S2S
' million. and the sub~~equent NBA
: bamshment, the longest nondrug suspension in league htslory, prevents
htm from playtng for another team
for a year.
:
"The questton here is about fun; damental f'irncss to Latrell
• Sprewell," satd Johnny Cochran Jr..
: the attorney who successfully defend·
l ed O.J. Simpson agamsl murder
l charge•.
~ "Is the penalty consistent with the
!miatake that he made? We thtnk not.

Host Belpre took advantage of a
22-2 first period tally and raced on to
an 82-36 Tri· Valley Conference victory over the Eastern Eagles Tuesday
night in Belpre. Eastern ts 1-1 over·
all and 0.1 in the league, while Belpre ts 2-0, 1·0.
Everyone knew Belpre was one of
the league Goliath's, however, last
yw Eastern's 'David sleuth the rising
gtant. After a state semtfinal run, last
year, the TVC Gohath was well prepared and took no prisoners.
Kyle Bradford and Brian Bartlett
each had 19 pomls. combtntng 10
drain seven of Belpre's etght three
point shots. Carltse Curry added 12
and Jimmy Randolph II.
Eastern was led by freshman Joe
Brown with 13 points and another
good noor game, while Steve Durst
added 10.
Eastern coach Tony Deem satd, "I
think ouryoong kids were mltmtdalcd by Belpre and were forced to do
thtngs they couldn't do. It's JUS! a mat·
ter of being young, we're lookmg lorward to the rest of the week "
The lirst two mmutcs ofthc game
hinted that Eastern mtght gtvc Belpre
a run litre lust year, but from that
potnt on and several turnovers l,ucr,
Belpre had broken open the game
decastve 1y. The ftrst period 22-2,
then Belpre turned 11 up a notch to 401oat the half.
Eastern htt only 13-51 from the
field, 1-5 threes and was 9-17 at the

.

li,nc. Eastern collected 24 rebound$
(Brown 6, Jeremy Casto five); had
six steals; three assists, 29 turnover&amp;
and 10 fouls .
.
Belpre hit a scorching 3S-62 fqr
56.4 percent from the field, was 8-16
from three-point range and 4-7 at the
hne. Belpre grabbed' 28 rebounds
(Wilcoxen 5, Strothers 5, Gregg 5),
had 23 steals (Randolph 7, Ban1en S,
Curry S), 12 turnovers; 23 assists
(Randolph 8); and mne fouls
,
Belpre won the reserve game 7649 led by Mitch Parsons Wtlh 14,
Brad West II, Mike Allender II. and
Kevin Thomas ten. Jeremy Coleman
led Eastern wtlh 15, and Josh Wtll
had fourteen.
Eastern hosts Federal Hocktng
Fnday '" an tmportant Tri- Valley
Conlercncc match, then hosts South
Gallia Saturday.

"Evcrythm~ is geared toward the

arbllrauon," the players unum ch•cl
satd. "I'm hope lui that someth1ng
mtght happen where we could leverage eno~gh pressure to where the
league mtghl he open 1\trevtcwtng tl.
But I don'tthtnk ,mything will hap·
pen until the urhnrauon."
Tcllcm would nut reveal the stmtegy lor the arhttrauon heuring
··No one comJoncs what L:ttrcll
dtd, hut 1herc arc real qucst111ns tl
there arc ~ny ltmtts what,, cn.tch can
dn und .JTc there .my nght' lor the
player." he satd "In othor Jllhs. the
employee can seck other employment Here, he can not. The comtntsstoner has dcn~ed hun the rtghttu

work. lor one tuh c.llclkl.n \c,u lll.tl
h:ts tremenduus tmpltc.tttun' ..
Watncsses s:ud Sprcwdl gr.Jbtx·d
C.Jrlcsmut hy the tl~ru.ll .md tlm·.tt
cned 1&lt;&gt; ktlllmn d11nn~ I" .tctt« '"' ,,
team tlhll bcg.ltt the sc.tsllll I-ll
Ahoul 15 nunures httet. Spll'll&lt;'ll
tcturncd to pr.tdtn• .m.l .tg.un ,.,, .
lmntcU th~: ,;u.tch. who w,1s h.·ft \\ 1th
.t J-mch red nt:trk on has n&lt;e~
Senne TCflllTts h,l\ll' s,1ul !'pll'\\l'll
threw a punch .11 C.trkstmu .tu 1111 ~
tlml second encounter, uml NIIA
unnmiss111ncr D.tvtd Stern l.thek.t
tll.ll confmnt:llin~ ,, "dc.JTiy premedttatedass.lult"whtlc.mnnuncm~

the suspcn&gt;aun

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correlpondent
Sophomore Jenntfer Shnmplin
made a patr of free throws with si•
seconds left to gtve the Metgs
Marauders a thnlltng 59-58 wm over
Ale•ander tn girls TVC basketball
aclton Monday cvcnmg at Larry R.
Morrison Gymnastum
Alexander took thetr second lead
oflhe ntght at 58-56. (the other being
2-0) on a bucket by Kelly West wtth
12 seconds left in the game But Tneta Duvas was fouled wtth caght seconds Icit. the JUntor hit the firstlmll
shot, hut tn~&gt;sed the second one
Shnmpltn grabt&gt;ed the rchound and
nussed the follow-up. but once agatn
Shrimphn cleared the glass and was
fouled . Titc sophomore calmly hit
hoth lrec throws to g1vc Meigs a 595~ lead
A despcr.tllon shut at the buzzer
hy the Lady Spartans btl the nm and
the Marauders were able to escape
1111h the "Ill.
Aln.mdcr lllok a 2-0 lead to start
th~ g.nnc. hut Mcags hehmd the
s«'rtng ol Stmmplan .:.nne back to
t.tke ,t 15- lc io1d ,11 the end or the
I'•''"'" knmf,•r sutred ctght to the

I'&lt;'Til'"
p:te&lt;Sp.m:ms
Mdgs. Wllh
Natalte
lcd llw "'
Ltd)
si•.Bol&gt;o
.\k\.md~..·r

\\ 11h ll\c l,!lrls S4,.'ormg
mth~· :-.:~.·~md J'h.'n,xl outscn~d Mc1~s
I~ - 1 c '" pull I&lt;' II nhtn ~7-26 .11 the
h.JII K11sl\ Jo;mg p.1ced Alexander tn
tit,· P•'"''l "nh li\ e. 0,1\' ts led Metgs
'"'h '"
nw ~l.tr.tudets U&gt;ed a h.tl.tnced
.ttt.~&lt;k tuottt&gt;eoreAicx:tndcr 17-'1 tn
tlw tlttrd perhllilltt.tkc .t ~-35 lc.td
hl'.lthn~ 11\ltl lhl-' 1111~11 c1ght nunutcs.
l\ut) .t Mtlkr l'racy Colley und
1).1\ Is L'.llh sL'''I~J l'•ur and Cunssn
A&gt;h ,(nlk&lt;l .t three pmnter tn pace
Mea~'

llut Kelly WN sp.~rkcd a Sp:lrt.Jn
cnm,•h.tck tn til&lt;• lnurth pcnod West
semed mne fourth period pnmts •"
Akx.andcr outscored Mctgs 23-15
But Shrunpltn's two pressure packed

free throws wtlh sax ttcks tell on the
clockand that wa., the dtlfc.once us
Meigs posted the one poml victory
Davts scored a game htgh 17
potnls to lead Meags. Shnmphn
added 16. Meigs hat23 of 50 Irom the
noor tncludmg one of two Irom three
.poml range for 46%. Mctgs was l2
of 17 from the ltnc for a warm 71\1..
The Marauders pulled down 27
rebounds led by Shnmpltn wtth seven. Meags ha.d 15 turnovers. 15
asstsls Wtlh Becky Smith domg ami
outstandtngjob Wllh mnc. Metgs hitd
seven steals led by Mtller wtth three
Kelly Smath and Nutaltc Bobo led
the Spartans wtth 15 points each
Alc•andcr htt25 of 59 Irom the noor
mcludmg lour of20thrcc pointers for
43% The Spartans went 10 lhc ltnc
eight tames hittmg lour for 50%
Alexander had 28 rchounds wtth Jcssacu Rohmson and Knsty Kmg gel·
tmg stx each. Alc•ander turned the
ball over 14 limes, and had I X"''""'s
led by Boho wtlh four
Coach Dartn Logan's reserve team
posted thcar lirsl wtn olthc year wnh
a3!l-26wanovcrAicxander Shannon
Prtce led the way wtth 10, TtiTany
Halllttll added seven and 10
rehounds.
LtsuKubachkaledAicxander
wllh 10
·
Meigs w1ll hnst Waterford un
Thur!day cvcnang and lhcn Wllltra\'cl to Potnt Pleasant on Saturday
Quarter mt1Ji
Alcxun,tcr
12-14-9-23=5K
Metgs 15-12-17-15=59
Alexander: Kelly West 6-1-0= 15.
Natuhc Bobo3-3-&lt;l=15,AngelaJewell 2-0-Il=4, Mundy Thompson 1-00=2. JmHc Curr 3 ~0~ 2=K, BohhiJO
Davts 1-0-!1=2, Kttsty Kmg 1-02:;X, Jcss1ca

Rclhln!&lt;iOO

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

AP Top 25 men's basketball action continues ·

J\lliami,
·Northern
Iowa post upset wins
.
.
By The Alt1oclated Prell
Xavier barely had a chance to
enJOY its htgllesl ranking m 39 years.
Wally Szczerbiak scored 29 pomts
and Miami of Ohio withstood a late
rally by the seventh-ranked Musketeers for an 80-72 victory' Tueldly
ntght at Oxford, Ohm.
· Xavier (~-1) ente~ed the game
ranked No. 7 for only the second lime
in school history and had receaved a
first-place vote for the firstttme. The
Musketeers also were seventh-ranked
tn December 1958.
They didn't live up to their lofty
status, whtch only served to bnng out
the best in Mtalnt.
"We have to understand that,"
coach Skip Prosser ~aid "We haven 't
been through that (ranked so high).
This is maybe a leammg process.
some growmg patns m dealtng .wtth
tt. We have to understand that it's
only going to increase the effort of
the other team "
Damon Fnerson added 23 pomts
and John Eslick had a career-high 14
for Mtamt (5-1). But it was the 6toot-8 Szczerbtak's shoonng that
was the dtffcrence for the RedHawks
'After Xavter tnmmcd a 23-point
second-half dclicit to 71-6S Wtlh 2:17
·left. Szczerbaak htt a Jumper to blunt
the comeback and set up Mtamt's
first victory over a Top I0 team stnce
11 beat sixth-ranked North Caroltna m
•1973.
' "We dtdn't lind an answer to

:

'S APPL

lilY CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Basketball Writer
. When the planners at the NBA
office were makmg thts season's
schedule, they probably fagured
they'd have a mutchup between the
top two teams in the Eastern Coqlercncc on telcviston on the second
Tuesday m December
Liule did they know t~at No I vs
No. 2 game actually would be played
tn a college gymnastum.
On a ntght when the Chtcago

*~

*:

Glllory - · .

•Side·By·Side Frigidaire Refrigerator with water
and Ice maker, whlte/almond ...................... $879.00
•Side-By·Side Frigidaire Refrigerator with Ice
maker and pure source filter ...................... $979.00
•Electric and Gas Ranges .......... Startlng at
•Frigidaire Washer and Dryer Sets............,.. $719.00
ASK ABOllT FRIGmAIIlE'S l:ASU

bad "

Barkley dccltned to name the
players he contacted
Hunter said there has been no
movement by the league toward a
compromise or a reduehon tn
Sprewcll's pumshment.
I

I

.If J.. l!t:L

'

II

I~

7

717
667

lill

'• New Yurk •

·~t

II

Wushmgwn

7 II

Rm;ton

Ph1laddphm

1X'~

(\

7H9
MJ

1

l'elilrlll DhbkJn
Adant .J
CU VELAND

12

7

Cht~U~U

II

'ChMlillh!

7
7

II
II

lmlt.m.t
~hlw . tulL'!:

lktrml
' I Ul'llnl!!

1
1'
1'
~

I 19

-·-

bll

7

1)

0~1

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midw..~l Dl'l!iion

' I&lt;ttm

.If I. l!t:L

Ut.th

•

12 I
12
10 10

HtiUShiJI

S.mAttmnm
Mm•tc ~ul,l
V.u~~:uuYcr

• ,.
II

7

.

• llall&gt;ls
lkn.,cr

,."

70:'i
MMl
'i(l()
421
111

2(11

Ill

I
1

'
•
7

10'

,..
•
16
1"2 ,,
'""
""'
"
"16
t2

Pllldfi('Dnblun

LA. LakL•rs

~

Scallk•
l'h• "":ni'

7fl'!

2

I

2'

t1
7

Ponl.md

S,tdl.lllk.'nltl

111

~

I. A Ch~pt.'T!:

2

Gokkn. t.ll~.:

·~

200
IlK

Tuesday's scores
Wa~hmf!_tron

110 N&lt;"w

ll'h~ y •)4}

Clmrltmc 1J~ 1'urmuo }1.2
MMmiiJ7. All.mt.!ltl

lktruu92 llcnvL'f Ml
Chu.:.tp:o 100 Nc:w York M2
:-ir.:tlllll' H»C Mlnlk;SUI1 1)1)
Huu•tun lt'Ni Sun/\nrnmtl 7K
0:~11.1~ t):!
V.m~uuYt"l K~

LA Chppt.!n ')I}

Phucmx 107,
S.k.'nttnCUIII II~ . Ut.lh 101

Mtlw,mkt.~ .11 nu~hln 7 I' n1
Tttruncn ,,, Plul kldphl.l 7 10 11m
Om .t}!n at Ofl,uulu 1
W.tshm~mn .11 Ot.~rlt•ltc
li.J p m
Ot.•nv~....- .11 CLrVII.ANU ., top m
l. A l..;tL:t'rH a! Gnkk 11 Sl II~ Mr nt
LA ('hppL'tS tt S.ut Anlul\hl K 10 Jllll
ln..lmn.• tii1&gt;Ktl.mr.J Ill p m

:l{)l'"'

Thursday's ~~:ames
Mmm:~ol,t.tl

Nt:w Yurk 7 \0 Jill I
New J~rs.:y ,,, lktrl,ll 7 lOp 111
CU VII AND ,tt M•lw.mh.,.• 1'1 lO p111
Orl.ullltt.ttll.lllas K \() pm
Atlnnm.u PlnlCmll IJ 1' m

NCAA Divi.sion I
inen's scores

lui"

TIGHT DEFENSE - Xavier's Darnell Williams (left) piiYI tight
defenae agalnlt Miami forward Wally Szczerblak during the flrlt
of Tuuday night's game in Oxford, Ohio, where the host RedHawkl
won 88-72 In part becauae of Szczerblak's 2~1nt effort. (AP)
the Bulldogs (6-2) erased a 73-71
deficn
Lorenzo Hall and Ray Hamson

decadcd the game. The reserve guard
slipped behind the Atlanta defense
lwtce for layups. hn a short basel me
shot and connected on a Jumper Irom
just instde the three-point line
· P.J. Brown, who had 20 pomts,
limshcd the run wtth a dunk that
made it 89-72, sendtng the crowd ol
9,156 at Georgia Tech to the extts
mtdway through the final penod
The Hawks wtll play most ofthetr
top opponents at the Georgta Dome,
but the game agamst the Heat was

scheduled lor the 9,300-seal Alexander Memorial Cohseum because of a
Rolling Stones concert at the larger
arena
"Atlanta has the best rccoru," saad
Lenard, who had a season htgh m
pomts (22) for the second mght m a
row "They may be the ocst team m
the NBA. When you play the best,
you want to play your best. We did
We ran them out ol the gym "
In other NBA games, the Bulls
dommated the Kntcks I00-82, Hous-

ton trounced Sun Antonto 108-78,
Sacramento surpnscd Utah 113- 101,
Seaule beat Minnesota 108-99, Chtlrlouc defeated Toronto 95-82, Wash·
mglon downed New Jersey 120-99,
Detroit beat Denver 92-83, the Los
A~geles Clippers topped Dallas 9992 and Phocntx crushed Vancouver
107-85
'
Bulls 100, Knicks 82
At Chicago, Mtchael Jordan
became the lhtrd-leadtng, score· rn
(See NBA on Page 61

Antcn~.;,m U 72 Loyt'l.t MJ M
lkl.tWIIfl.' 6K row lUll Ill OT
H.trUord IW Nl'w H lnljl~IIIN 71
Mmutl St Mary '5 MJ 69 Clllumht.t4'!
Pnn.:twn n.l, rlut;knt:ll 'i!
Rhode blnnJ 611, Prtwhklll( :'iK
Mut11en !'!~ Dcluwafl' Sl fiil
Sl.·h•n H.tll t'tJ I mrll'1gh IJ1 ~ kut s,m b~
Sl J(lhll s Ml Cnlgml.' '; 1
Tcntpll.' 7b Fn•sntl Sc 61

•

AI.LbmnuSt MU TruyS1 71 .
Arknmu1s 100. Lou1ntllc K\
C!tudd ~ Winthrop "i6
CH:ufgu'l Stll.lt~m 72. Mt:rcl.'r 71
MulllnNI Sr 71 App:1lal;hmn St 61)
SlJU!hern Mtu ~2 . South Alllbi.lm:l 47
Tennc:r;lll.-c 74, St Ju~ph s ~
\lllndcrbillll~ AIll ·B•rmnsham 7-1

Midw..t
lntlin!WI tl" Evnnsvdle 11
lfklmna Sr 74 W1s ·M11wuukee62

B~.tll~vtlle

·,.

•
.,

•

"2

Southwest
Hous10n ..4. Cuhfurmp 'I
Tc~as !{~. Aondil Hl
Tc~n• Chritllalll II~. Nonh T.:uJ74

I~

71
79

Hockoy

"',. .."
~t

11

7K

2'!
2&lt;

72

NalkHwl Hodtey Lt'aaut
COLORADO AV 1\L/\NCHE Rcu~s •~ncU C
Dnn HnKHc lmm Hcr~ hcy uf 1hc 1\HL tu C)sh,Jw 1
ot lhc OHL
I
NASHVILU. PRI-01\ I Olf:)i Antmun~.;cd ,,
wurl.r.lttp.ltl!I'\.'Cilll!t\1 wtth M!IWallkL't' ul tlk' IHI. d ·
fc~•~~e lur chc II.JlJ" 91J sca'illl!
NEW JI.RSEY I)J: VII ~'\ Hc ·~•~nl'tl D s ~ utt
St~v~ns tn untulhy~ tr ~~~ltlr.tcl

Arnrnc~~n Hodi.«&lt;J IAMpt

AHI. Su~pr.: Utktl ~.11111 lnhn ll.m-..·1' D f\l..'llh
M ~ (.' unllf•d):~ lnr ntll. ~.unc for ,, ~ l.l~lllllj!
\11.'11 til )' I'll Ill.·~ 7

m."d'

Collet=e

(ON II Nl NU US/\ N mk:d lmtl .t Jc~pcn
dtn.'ch•r ul ~·un• ~1'\l~o:cs

~·

77

7'i Sh,w.Jy~•do.: 'iK

Dt:ll.urr.: St Jnhn~ 7~ RriUj!l..'flltM 7~ (4 01 I
Rclpn: K2 Rl-cd.wlllt li.IMtrn \f'l
DL'Tim Center WcSicrn RcM-'fYC 4"i ~tonn~ ~
lkrlm H!l.mtl7fl Str.t)tlurp \J
'
Or.:, ley K'i Martoct·fmnkhn 7"i !01 J
Cttc~htrr.: RtYL'f V tl 47 GalhiKt ll~ 41
Cl:tymnb.t!'!l. Stcuhl:n'&lt;'tlk hll
Col Brookhaven 6H Wl.'stcr~ttlc N 'ih
Cui West M Col lk'l:dl~;rllll 'iU
Cmnk~YIIk b2. W Mu~km~tum '\H (~ 0 II
l),.y P&lt;ntcrsun 02. Yellow S1lnnl!' "ib
lkl.1w.u·~ 6K Olent.•n1y li2
Lluhltn Cnflmun?t, Cui Cl.'nt~.•munl ~K
U P.lleNIIIll.' fll. Muhontn~ Spnnt= 1"i
E.tstcrn p;kt: Ill. rr.tnklln Furn.IL'C Grl..'\:11 77
l.lmwuod 77. M1llllury L.nlic 71
L11mn!Jd B.&lt;pl K1 lkttntll ~· "ito
I .nrl.mll !I\ S G.tlll.l -'Y
!l.'tkr.tl Hnd.1n~ tl'J Nd~t\11 \111~· Y1•rli 6-4
I n.•munt Rul'iS 70 rnl W,\111.' M
rmnttcr 92 H.mmh.tllttva 7~ '
G.ll11ntn.1 71. WhttdJ.tll "i4
(o,lflidd7-' Ntll.'•l!(CifJ
Gt!lm,, tt7 K.1&lt;htts U1ku1.1 'ill
GlcnwnoJ 67. PunMnuuth I. ~..
Gn.'I.'III.."Yir.:w 70 Mr,nm JJ,M~ fl 2
Grtlh"
llf'•. Ft.m~ltn Ht~ 'i!•
Huwl.md f't W.trrr.:n t'h,Ulllilllll h!
lnJ'''" Cn-.: I; 71 n~ JYI.'r I u~.tl f•.J
J.u.:Jmm Ccmcr f1K ltnusuk: ~·J
J,rdosml M•hun 41) I oni!\I!•WII ~)
K.lllll.t "i7 /\II~ II I 4l
I .t ki.'Ytcw "iK llmhll ~7
I m, uhlll.tpt 114 M.tmn.lth 1Chr !tl
LuwL'ihtlk• M Yttu Ch ltk')' .jl,l
M.1plt'WiKll.l Ml 8hl\tmhdil (1()
Munclt.lb-4 J,ll.k ~t•n4K

'-"l

M ltfllll~ I ary hb Umun Lu~.tl ~11
M,t)'S\tlll' ft~ W..rs.tw ltivcr Vtl'W ~K
M~'&lt;:l.un HU H•lbtMwt• 'i7
M~l&gt;crn11 • U NW (~ WhL'1.:It:r~hlll\l (,l
M~Dtort1IJ b!'! St•u•lun)llt&gt;n ( halk~·r ~-'
M~t~s "~ R.~ t lk' Suuch..·rn "i7
MmlnrJ 72 O.tk H1ll6l
N Untt•n
W L1111.'r1y S.1lcm 'iM
New l.c'tn!:h•n Ml Slk·nr.J,,,, b I
Nt:.W III'k (:uh 6'i N.:w Alhan y "i1
Nt.· w~'tll\\o.'tsi\ IW II !IX, ltnhm H~·nt '1-'1.' "i•J
N~wtmtl· til~~() W,KI.'rltk• 21'1
Ntlf'lb.'u.kCl•r Kl ()Ju••lk.tft\1
Ot~L·~n Ml Nnrlh\H~III "ill
Plllltl 7~ J••hn (oklllt ~ l
p.,rt~mttuth Cl.ty 7" Pm'l~nkttllh Nntrl'

Pacif1(' Division
lti 7 K

Cnlmudo
Lu~ An»elc ~

J lll

An.thclm
EJnwnltm
Still Jnsl.'
V ,U\~1111\ l'f

II 14 6
IJI~ 1
10 IK 2
IJIM -1
7 IK 7

Cul~.lt)'

IY.mt~

~ R•tl~c-l'hr ~I

Vmwu Cu M. H,·m!•~~:k M1lll'r N.l
W.1wrly tiK.I.tt~,tHIIk V tl h!
W~;jlsllln M 1 nnthlc hi
W,•riJ Hal'\~t lJH We l~liln :n

urne

~'i

Cui Llliih:n·

M..,Kinlcy 11
Yi•u L.1hert 77 Glrwl.l 'i~
Yt•u MtlOitcybK BrookriclJ-ll
y \)U ur"utcne :'io. K~neJr (Pa 1Chr -11
Yoo W1lsun 62, C:mtpbel :'i8
lark'svtlh! Rnse~:mns 81. Bu~:by.: Trutl ~\

Hockey
NHL standings

79
Kl

,,, ...••

..

2&lt; 7'
22
22
Ill

11

'"
Kil

F~~~~

Jon

Tuesday's scores
C'ulgary ~ N Y Mumlm l
Dctnm 7 V.m .. uuvcr 'i
Pmsburgh 2 I.A•~ Angeles I

OUT OF

Tonight's games

IIOLIDAY 91FT

lluflll:L ,u C.trnlm.t 1 1(1 p m
S1 I um~ .11 Muntn.;.tl 7 :10 I' m
ltlj.:.try ,,, N Y M•• u.-~-r ~ 7 \0 r m
' l:.dmun h•ll .11 Ncy, kr'l.: )' 7 11) p m
(ulnr:t1lu ,, I ••mnho 7 lU p m
Phncmx .11 C'lll • ·'~" X l{) \1m
' '1,111111,1 ll .1y .n D.tiJ.t, X 1( p 111
W . t~lun~tnn 11 S.tn J,,. 10 ~tl p m
Ptthhur):h .tl 1\n.tht:un 1(1 lU p m

'

Thursday'• games
lhtlt.dn .tl Umhtn 7 10 1• m

Sr I nm ~ .11 Ou,,..,,, 7 lUI' m

Transactions
NY

l ~ l . ul,k:rs

at l'lu!.\lkiJ1ht t 1 10 Jl m

DEl MOll rlt, r RS 1\j.:rn•t.l tn lt:rnt~ wllh Of
I ills (oonf,tkl nn .1 IW •t )'t.'.lr ulnff,l(l l&gt;l'~t j!IMI ~ tl
1
RHI B1ll Hur st lur .ts'lfll111t.'lll
OAKI.ANI) 1\THI.LliCS 1\grn·d 111 c ~ rm s
wnh RHI' I um C.mthutll 1111 ,, IWtt·yc.u ~umr•..:t
I 1\MI'/\ BAY IJl VIL M.,\ YS A;crl'Ctl ltlllrllb
Wtlh 18 W.Ilk Bllj!j!~ oil\ ,1 unc y~,: ,lf cnlltntll
II XAS MI\N(,Jits Aj:rc~d m1~rms wnh INI'
I.LU ~ ,\hl'l•••mt.l 01 Rilllt:nu t.:clly
IOI{C)N II) I!I.UI . JAYS A~trccJ lu tc:rm~
With KHI' l'aul C)u .mtnll un ,, twu·y~ , lf ~ •'llfrtl(t
,m,t RHP B1ll k1'&gt;k)' 1111 .tulll•)'\ tt cnntr.10.:1 N.ttnt.'\1
h'fr)' lk vl nj!hlll 111 llt.t)lcr 111 Symcnst.• ul dil lm l'r
1\oi!I IIIJ.iii.L',\j!tll

Munrn~ ·Cenlr;tl

.47
~1 1 nng C:uhuh~.; b I 1\l.'rtlllll R1tl~~ 'iff
Smuhcr~ H7 Hullh.LrU 7K
Symnw~Val \:!, Oint &gt;V,J l thr 11
ltllm t'nhlrl K'i Uantlury LaLn tr.IC' -14
l• •l Whtun,.-r 21J l ul ~tilt1 ~4 Hfl )
1 ul WnotlllllM'\.' ()'i Eu.i!Wl)tlll ~,.,
llli'UI\111 bl W~o•ll ~\lllc ~6 H&gt;Tl
l'n· V.1 lley H7, Murp.u1 ~)
ln.tJ (J! lhnt.mnn l .o.•~m -1:!
I Uli~llr:tWil~ ('tilt ttl'~ J.:wcu.s .. ,., "i7
UmullhlWI\ L.tl.r.o: 71 ALrnn N fl7

~ urlhlllt:lm

~I
)I)

J.o.,IJ:UC

W IC"i S Wd&lt;Mcr ftl
RldlllMKtJ r~.h~··n :'Iii Si~Uhl;nvllll.'(.'nh .JK

107

'"292K ...

Bas• ball

~lMSIIIIIUtil

v.~.wryC'hr

~

Amrncun l~taaut&gt;
I~OSl ON 1&lt;1 D SOX Anmmn•cd lhL 1\:~ l!! ll t·
" 11 11 11 nl Kcv 111 Ctllllllllllj!~ j!l'IILI'otl ma111~1'( ill
S.tr.\~111.1 Ill lhl Flltrttl.l St.lll.' I C'li~!IC \II h~\ 11 11\C .L..
MS1,UH g~'lk'r,tllllolll,II!Cf lur Mnlt1k 1•f !he Suuthcru

n

Mmm1 (~10) J'O. Xavkr 72

N luw111W, Iowa 7K
Te~us reo.:h79 SWMIIII)UnSI 71
W11 ·Grt:ei18ay 00 ValjlllrtUID
WIS~:on•m 71, Tok."dn 6ti. OT

7K

S1~ncd CO Ocn o rse Mo~lcy lroJm rhc pr .l~,;ll t;C:
Si.JUNI ,md S Bmlll WalkL'f
NEW V.ORK JETS Sr~:ncd T Jnhn Clark
W,uvr.:d DT R1•mnc Du.nn
TAMPA 81\Y BlJCCANEI.RS Sqptctl TL
Amlrt'!W Jnrtlan Wat~c:tl WR Bn~c Hunh.T Sil!IILU
~8 Su~w l..e.: In the rr.tCliL l' squ.W

Akrun Cuvc:rmy 80 Doyl~.uuwn ChiJifiCWn 7-1
Alr.:.~:amlcr &amp;4, W111L-rfurd ~
Alltcn~ 4l. Wum:n l.ol.;;d 11
Aunmtnwn-lih.h 4b Polaml 4l
DnrJIC~.,tllc H~ St Clmrntllr.: fl~

Sllt'nlllduih l'H

South

"

-

21

, ,.
"
' 10 "74
12"
' 72"

-·-

Ohio U.S. boys' scores

•• "K2

1Y
lK Kll

blvl~lon

. . . ,, fl

Bultnlo

H.ttlf.~,.~~l\1 Kl M.IIVlnt h4
!" tlwl,'!olntt Sl "if! Slll'lllj! Ntorth..: l~ t•rn -IH

Eust

"i 11,1 -1

C.~tolma

Nutrc: D;unc 91. Marathon ()II KI

,

17 10
17 10 4
.. n 12
1\ Ll 4

M.~rltn)ltun71J C'url~y ~

Tonight's gamn

4

II '

Y 12 II
12 ~~ -1

Nonhnst

Exhibition

I

•• "" ,.'
• "" '
' ·~ 204 •
"12 ••
611
"'
•
' 11 42"' ,.

II
II

t'h:w Jc~y

...

N Y R.tng~·t~
NY l~l n n~rs
Flunda
Tnmp.18,1y
Pnaburgh
Monrrcotl
Rl•ston •
011nw.1

New Mc:~r.1~o 62. New Me111'-v St W
W .t~&gt;hillt~.tnn KJ Dr•~ll'\l Youna6~

Allalllk Dl'&lt;'ltlun

· J)rlnnlkl
~.

:

JIM YOUNG, OWNER :
985-3581 or 992·5335

second half, we kepi playmg hard "
Voshon Lenard scored 22 points to
lead stx Mtamt players m double ligures
The Heal, leadmg the Atlanttc
Dtvtston at 14-5, pulled away an the
linal period after the Hawks (15-4)
cltt a I 0-poml halftime defictt to 7166 alter the third quarter
All five Heat starters scored in
double ligures, buttt was Ertc Murdock who provtded the offenstvc ·
punch during an 18-6 spurt that

Gl!llr£••• 84 ColoruJn 71

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12

NBA standings

SALES ·&amp; SERVICE :

"SERVING OHIO SINCE 1953"

Bulls and New York Knicks met on
nauonal 'rV, the Atlanta Hawks and
Mtamt Heat bauled at Gcorgm Tech's
a(ena m the true - hased on the
standmgs - marquee matchup
The Heat walked away from II
wtth a 97-81 vtctory and a message
delivered· Mtami maght be the Ea.•l's
powerhouse thts season.
"Wow, that was a really good
one," satd Heat coach Pat Raley.
whose team looked fresh even though
11 played the previous night "In the

Te11,1~

Basketball

Totals: 21-4-4=511
Meigs: Cunssa Ash 2-1 -0=7.
Becky Smtih 1-0·3=5, Jcnntler
Shrtmpltn 6-0-4= 16, Tnnya Miller J.
0-0=6, Tncta Duvts 7-&lt;~3=17, Tacy
Cnlfey 2-0-1 =5, Am her Vtntng (.().
r=l Totals: ll-1·li=59

NEW SHOWROOM AT 114 W. 2ND ST.

Northern Iowa, which had lost seven
No. 20 Temple 76
straight to the Hawkeycs.
No. 18 Fresno SL 61
Ryan Bowen $Cored 17 points and
At Philudelpht~. 11 wasn't long
Ricky Davis had 16 for Iowa.
after the pohltcians and dtgnitaries
No. 14 New Mexico 62
cleared the court on opcmng nrght at
New Mexico St. 59
The Apollo of Temple that the Owls
At Las Cruces, Royce Olney's 4- (5·1) hud their 2-3 zone defense
poinl play snapped the linaltie of the working and the Bulldogs (3-2) total·
game, and his two free throws wtth ly frustrated.
13 seconds left secured the l:obos '
Temple had an 8-3 lead withtn the
Wtn.
first two minutes and coasted to the
Olney's scored all mne of his win
pomts m the final 3:18 for New MexLynard Stewart had 16 points and
Ico (6-1 ).
a career-high 15 rebounds for the
Kenny Thomas had 23 potnts and Owls.
12 rebounds to leud the Lobos to thetr
Rafer Alston hud 17 points for the
stxth stratght wm over the Aggtes (3- Bulldogs.
3) and dented NMSU coach Lou
No. 22 Princeton 64
Henson a victory in his I,OOOth
Bucknell 52
game
At LewiSburg. Pa., Brian Earl
No. IS Arkansas too
scored 19 points as the Tigers (7-0)
Louisville 83
used a 22-7 run early m the second
Kareem Retd made a three-potnt· half and tmproved to 7-0
er and scored two baskets off midJames Mastagllo added 12 for
court steals during an early run that Prmceton, off to its best start stnce
hfled the Razorbacks (7 -0) to vtcto- 1990-91. The Tagers wtll play host to
ry at Louisville.
No 2 North Carolina on Saturday
Arkansas IS off to tts best stan
J Rl Holden led Bucknell (3-6)
stnce the school's 1994 NCAA cham- wtth 21 pomts.
pions opened with 10 stratghl wins
No. 23 Georgia 84
Louisville (2-4) lost its fourth conColorado 73
secutive game, all to Top 25 teams.
At Boulder, Colo., G G. Smtth
Retd fintshed wuh a career-htgh made t;.,o layups to trtgger a Geor~ta
25 pomts and Pat Bradley made stx rally in the final two minutes as the
three-pomters in sconng 20 points
Bulldogs scored the game's final 13
Cameron Murray and Alex pomts
Sanders each scored 21 pomls for
Smtih scored 17 of hts 20 pomts
Loutsvtlle.
m the second half, mcludmg stx as

Scoreboard

2~0~()=4

**
.. MAKinG FRIEnDS AnD :~::.:,..~-;,.. "" *
~
*
GOOD DEALS SinCE 1953!'' ··~0 DAYS :

••

Szczemiak," Prosser said. "When we
made a mini-run m the first half or the
run at the end, he made the big shots
for them. That's what great players
do.n
Elsewhere in the Top 25, tl was
Northern Iowa 84, No 10 Iowa 78;
No. 14 New Mexico 62, New Mexi·
co St S9; No. I~ Arkansas 100,
Louisville 83; No. 20 Temple 76. No
18 Fresno State 61; No. 22 Princeton
64, Bucknell 52; and No. 23 Georgia
84, Colorado 73.
After the final buzzer sounded,
hundreds of Miami fans wbo had
chanted "Over-rated," at Xavter,
stormed the court and surrounded
Szczerbiak and hts teammates.
"I wanted this one so bad," said
Szczemiak, who fouled out with 42
seconds left "So dtd everybody on
our team It was tough being on the
sidelines for the last 42 seconds.
"So far in my career at Mtamt and ·
m my ltfe,this ts the greatest wm To
have the No 7 team come into your
home and defend your court ltke we
dtd today means so much "
Mtamt has won 22 tn a row at
home and 43 of tls last45
Northern Iowa 84
No. 10 Iowa 78
At Cedar Falls, Iowa, Chris Burdme scored 17 points, and Northern
Iowa (4-1) used a pesky man-to-man
defense to upset)owa (6-1)
Danan DcVnes fimshed with 13
pomts a•d TyJuan Finley II for

Heat get past Hawks 97-81;

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

$

The Dally Sentinel• Page 5

NJ&amp;tlonul LrllljlUI.'

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Jt.•ll Hl.tu M:r 1111 .ttwn y~.1r ltllnr.t•l
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nut II~ ltJ .mJ ll.N' runmil}! ~ ti;&lt;Lh
HOUS I ON ASTROS 1\~roe~d to ll!rm~ w11h
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hst
CHICAGO BlJLLS A c ii Y III~tl G Steve Kt:rr
lmm lite mtured It s! PI.I!.'Cd G Rusty LaRue nn the
II!JUI'Cd h ~ t

Football
N11kN'Ial ··ootheM lAIIW
CHICAGO 8EAR8. S1gntd RB Runnte HM·
mon untl RB Jt\mu Allen S1gned RB Mlt:hnd
Hrcb frum tl~~.: rr.-:tl~1: ~INII.I Wom.-d C-0 Evnn
P•lancn Pl:t~::L'\1 RH R.l)'Ok.IHI H.m s uu nuun:d n:-

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DENVI!R BRONCOS Slgncd WR Slr Mawn
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DitVId G.tmbk•
JACKSONVIllE JAGUARS S11~ 0 Murk
Nnrtntf 1hc: Pm~burgh Stt.~ler, rrocttce squud
MIAMI OOLPHINS Releoxd 0 Kdrh Sima
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�Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 10, 1997

Manning, Moss. stand among AP all-Americans .·
{i;, RICHARD

gan 's Charles Woodson and Mar- had 17 tac:kles for losses, 8 1(2 s...:ks
shall's Randy Moss.
and forced three fumbles, while Peter
Woodson, the Wolverines' cor- had six sacks and two fumble recovnerhack-receiver-punt returner. may eries.
have been the nation 's most exciting
Three schools - Florida State,
player this season. He had seven LSU and Washington- each pl...:ed
interceptions and four touchdowns- two p!ayers on the AP team. .
two on pass receptions, one on a 33The running backs were Ricky
yard reverse and the other a 7~-yard Williams ofTexas and Curtis Enis of
punt return against Ohio State.
Penn State.Williams, despite playing
~oss, the flashy wide receiv.er for for a 4-7 team, led the nation in rushthe Thundering Herd, set an NCAA ing with 1,893 yards on 279 carries.
record with 25 roue. hdown catches He also had 2S touchdowns and led
·
the nation in scoring with 152 points.
this season. induding three 1~ last Enr's ran for 1•363 yards and 20
week's 34-14 wtn over Toledo rn _the
Mid-A merican Conference t1tle touchdowns. He also caught 25 passgame. The 6-5. 21&lt;(-pound sopho- es for 215 yards.
more caught \10 passes for 1.647
Joining Moss at wideout was
yards_ an average of 18.3 yards per Florida's Jacquez Green, who caught
.
61 passes for I ,024 yards and nine
catch.
.
Also making the team were !llrto touchdowns. The tight end was Alon·
of Nonh Carolina defenders- end ~is~~f"tsh~f 2:~~~Y~? ~~~~· ~~~
Greg Ellis. linebacker Brian Simmons and cornerback Dre' Bly. The games with a separated shoulder
threesome helped the Tar Heels fin- after catching 29 passes for 424 ·
· ish with the nation 's second ranked yards and seven tou&lt;;hdowns.
defense. hchind Michigan.
Taylor was joined along the offen. Ellis had 17 _rackl_cs for losses and sive line by LSU's Alan Faneca,
and
ntn&lt;O SaC k'S. W hII C S1mmons C h1pped · Washington's Be·nji Olson O}'
in wilh 119 tackles and three sacks UCLA's Chad Overhauser.
tn
and Bly added live interceptions.
Kreutz of Washington was the center.
Nchmska also placed three playTim Dwi~ht of Iowa was the all&lt;rs "n the team - guard Aaron Toy- purpose player. The 5-9; 185-pound
lnr and d~lcnsivc linemen Grant senior. returned three punts for touchWistrom and Jason Peter. W1strom

~SENBLATT

'! NEW YORK (AP) - Peyton
Manning spent two fun-filled days in
Manhattan.
.,: On Monday, he threw a football
-ross the street into aq open thirdtfoor window during the taping of d1&lt;:
''Late Show with David Lettennan.
:· On Tuesday, he . became Teniiessee's first quarterback to be select0'!1 for The Associated Press' all,.
· t
.,m.enca earn.
,; "It's a great honor 10 be named to
lhe all-America team," Manning. tHe
Vols' first AP all-America quarterback, said. "It's the team everyone
!alks about and J' m proud to he part
•.f . ..
SJ
; II.
Manning, who opted to play Ius.
~nior season rather than jump to the
~FL directed 'the third-ranked Vols
:1&lt;&gt; a~ 11 -1 record and an Orange
ftowl matchup against N''· 1 Nchras·
\a, teturns io town Saturd:•y as the
'l'avoritc 10 win the Hcisman Tn1phy.
'-' The 6-foot-:\. 222-pound S\\11 of
nncr quancrhaL·k_Archie M;ullli!•g
.t:Ompfetcd 287 ol ~ 77 pa&gt;SCS Ior
~819 yards and ~1\ tnuchd"wns a' h&lt;
~came on\~ the third Di.-ision 1-A
'quancrback 10 ra» lor 111''"' than
~11.000 ,·arcer yords.
~ · Manning was joined on the ,_
,·am
'y a pair of ~ame-hrea~er&gt; - Mrdu~
_....:.tC:;.:'.:::'"':.::in:,:::ue::::·d..!:fr:;::or::.:.n.:_:Pa~gc::_·5::!.J_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
lb.

=tJBA games...

" history. almost got into a hrawl Mario Elic had 12 and Mall Maloney
if:IBA
'l!Jicr Chris Childs threw the hall at shot 4-for-4 on three-pomters and
:~im , dislocated his right indc~ f!ngcr also scored I 2. Reserves Eddie John.:Ouring a full to thL.! floor and l1mshcd son and Rodrick Rhodes added 13
and 10, respectively.
iWith 29 points.
!• Jordan , the NBA·s nim~ + limc scnr+
Kings 113, Jazz 101
At
Sm:ramcnto,
Corliss
Jng cllampron. has 27.432 points in
,867 games over 13 seasons. Mo•es Williamson scored I'I of his careerMalone scored 27,40\1 points in I.O·l.l high 27 points in the second half. and
somes during hiS 19-ycar career. Mitch Richmond added 2J points.
It was the Kings ' second straight
O:aving Jordan No.3 hehind Karccm
tlbdul-lahhar and Wilt Chamhcr- victory over Utah. The Jaa. entered
this seuson with 14 straight victories
h_lin .
over
Sacramento.
• Jordan and Chris Childs had an
SuperSonics 108
.!kcrcation after hauling for rchoundTimberwolves 99
ing position. Jordan elhowcd Childs
Gary PayJon had 21 points and II
ill the back of the head. Childs threw
/!.lc basketball at Jordan and the two assists to lead Scanlc to its NBArccord 26th consecutive win over
~changed chest humps and words.
Minnesota.
~ri~ h was assessed a tc~.:hnical foul.
Detlef Schrcmpf added 19 points
and Childs was ejected because it
as the Sonics linishcd a live-game
Jllo., his second of the night.
· ·;, Toni Kukoc scored 20 points, road trip, their longest of the season,
@Oing 4-for-4 from three-point range by handing Minnesota its eighth loss
4!ld 6-for-ft overall, in helping the in 10 games.
Hornels 95, Rapton 82
~ulis to their lirst four-game winning
At Toronto, Bobhy Phills scored
ieak this season.
13 of his 20 points in the founh quar•
Rockets 108, Spurs 78
ter,
helping Charlotte extend tlit
:f At Houston, Clyde Drexler led six
!\layers in double figures with 17 Raptors' franchise-record losing
streak to 17 gaines.
·
p~ints and II aS&lt;ists as the Rockets
Glen Rice finished with 19 points,
'il,on their ninth straight game.
••• Kcvm Willis added 16 points, and Anthony Mason had 15 potnts

..

and II rebounds.
Wizards 120, Nets 99
Tracy Murray scored a seasonhigh 26 points and made a careerhigh seven three-pointers as Wa&lt;hington stayed perfect at its new arena.
Washington has won four straight
overall after losing seven of eight.
The Wizards are 4-0 in the week-old
MCI Center after losing all five of
their _home games at US Airwa~s
Arena.
Pistons 92, Nuggets 83 · .
Brian Williams had 21 points and
Jerome Williams led a second-quarter comeback with 12 as the Detroit
handed Denver its ninth straight road
loss.
The Nuggets. starting three rookies, have won just two of their 18
games.
Clippen 99, Mavericks.92
At Dallas, Darrick Martin scored
18 point~ and Lamond Murray added
17 as Los Angeles won for only the
fourth time this season.
·

•

downs and led the nation with a 19.4yard average on 19 returns. He also
~ught 39 passes for 653 yards and
etght touchdowns and completed
both of the passes he threw for 86
yards and a ~ouchdown.
Compleung the offens~ was
Kan.sas State p~acelticker Marun Oramauca, who hit 19 o~ 20 field goals
and 37 of 38 extra pomts. Gramattca
won the Lou Gro,za Aw~ on lUesday as the natton stop kicker.
The defense has an Atlanbc Coast
Confere
11
'th d A d
Wadsw ~ av?r• Wt en
n re
0
.and Hnebacker ~am Cow:~~nflonda State and hneb~ker
.
Y Stmmons ofClemsonJOtn·
mgh th• .threeb Carolrna Pl":yers. ·Th,e
ot er 1me acker was Ohro State s
Andy Katzenmoyer.
,
Wadswonh, the_ACC s player of
t~-1e~,led
the n~tlon wtth 19 sacks,
w 1 e. owart, V.: ? was out 1ast se~­
son! Wtth ah klnle6e IDJkulry, led the Semrnoes Wtt
. tac es.
. Ahn thony kS •mmons 1fed the ACC
wu 13.7 tae 1es- 20 01; 1osses - .
abdledsed. stx sacks and caused two fumKat
,
kl zenmoyer had a team-hr~h 93
tac _es- I~ for losses- two rntcrceptr~n~andka blocked puntm helpmg 1 e uc eyes to a ,I0-2 record. .
D The. other defensive backs were
B~novLrn Dar1us of Syracuse and
nan ee of Wyommg. Dan us, the
Big East's defensive player of the
year, had seven interceptions, while
Lee led the nation with eight interceptions, one for a touchdown.
The punter was LSU's Chad
Kessler, who led the nation with a
50.3-yard average on 39 punts . .
Bly, who last season became only
the fifth freshman to make tbe AP allAmerica team, was one of four
repeaters from the '96 team. The others were Woodson, Wistrom and
Olson.

juniors and 14 seniors on the team.
The sophomores are Bly, Katz.en·
moyer and Moss.
_ __
The all-America team was selected by a nine-person panel of AP
member sports writers and AP sports
writers: Tony Barnhart (Atlanta Journat and Constitution), Lee Barfknecht
(Omaha World-Herald); Jon Wilner
(Los Angeles Daily News); Tom
Luicci (Newark Star-Ledger); Doug
F
erguson (AP-Jacksonville); Nancy
Annour (AP-South B'end); Dave
Droschak (AP-Raleigh); Ken Peters
(AP-Los Angeles); and AP college
football writer Richard Rosenblatt.

WASHINGTON (AP) -More
than a month after eating a salmonella-tainted dish, Martha McNeely is
10 pounds lighter and just beginning
to feel like herself again.
"This bout of food poisoning has
really been a jolt to my system," said
Ms. McNeely, a 51-year-old Washington lawyer who also copes with
multiple sclerosis. "It has set me back
a lot."

The salmonella that sickened Ms.
McNeely, her 15-year-~ld son and her
!;on's friend came from a ready-made
lasagna dish they ate for dinner in late
October. hospital officials eventually learned.
The culprit? Unp'*teurized eggs
used in preparing the lasagna at a
local deli were tainted with a virulent
sahnonclla strain that survived baki~g in the oven. "It was a real shocker," Ms. McNeely said.
The bacteria that caused this isohitcd case and other dangerous
microbes in food kill 9,000 people
cyery year and sicken millions more,
according to the federal Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. The
number of salmonella illnesses alone
has doubled over the past 20 years.
· Doctors arc getting better at diagnosing and reponing food illnesses:
Other factors in increased cases of
fQod poisoning cite.d by the CDC
i~clude: more people eating out,
consumer ignorance about safe ~an­
dling of food, and an increased

RANDYM9SS

Police arrest OSU's Jackson
on marijuana, traffic charges
Police said Jackson will be summoned to appear in Franklin County
Municipal Coun at an unspecified
date.
Jackson could not be reached for
comment. There was no number given under his name in the studcnttelc- ·
phone directory and directory assis- ·
tance found no listing in his narn&lt;&gt; in .
either Columbus or Ironton.
Genry Emig, assistanlspons infor- '
mation director at .the university, ·
said he wasn't aware of the arrest and
deferred comment.
Athletic director Andy Geiger and
coach John Cooper were in New '
York on Tuesday for an awards ban- '
quet und could not be reached for
comment.
·
However. Cooper told Th&lt; Colum;
bus Di.1·parch for a story published
Wednesday that he would have no
comment until he got back and spoke
with Jackson.

P:""''F·JI¥·.....- -P: 'F ·' ~-·•F ,. .,, J{,i~(q

WASHINGTON (APJ - Congress should raise the price of cigareucs by $1.50 a pack, restrict access
to tobacco and stress the dangers of
teen-age smoking, witncss~s told a
House subcommittee.
But a price increase alone would
do little to reduce youth smoking, two
of three expert witnesses testified
Tuesday to the House Commerce
subcommittee on health and environment.
''There is no single magic bullet,"
said Leonard Jason, a DePaul University psychology professor. "The
best approach is a combination of
tools. including restricting access
and advertising, school-based pro•

..

•

and animal manure containing E. coli
touching fruit during picking.
One disturbing trend is that some
microbes are developing resistance to
antibiotics used to treat ill people,
partly because antibiotics are frequently given to livestock to prevent
disease, serving as an unintended
inoculation for the bacteria tHat live
with the animals.
In Britain, a strain of salmonella
called DTI 04 has proven resistant to
many antibiotics, triggering a jump in
human illnesses, said E.M. Foster of
the Food Research Institute in Madison. Wis. More than one-third of the
people infected with DTI04 were '
hospitalized and 3 percent died, Foster said.
"These figures are very unusual
for ordinary salmonella infections
and indicate serious problems
ahead," Foster said. The strain is
~r:nerging· in the United States ..
Food safety experts say the
world's governments and private
industry 'must spend more on research
into the causes and prevention of
food poisoning, from the fann to the
dinner table, and on identifying how
the bacteria arc gelling into the food
system.
In the United States. a new surveillance system called FoodNet is
being set up to monitor outbreaks,
Also, scientists arc able to usc DNA
to trace microbes that sicken people
in many places back to a single
source.

-~

Our special page(s)
"For Children Only"
(16 yean of age or younger)
Will be published

Tuesday, December 23rd

.

m

The Daily Sentinel

-ONLY-

grams and price increases."
Several members of Congress
The $1'.50 increase was not part of
Economic studies csumatc that a have introduced bills that would the settlement. President Clinton has
10 percent price increase would raise prices by $1.50 a pack, and anti- called for raising prices gradually if
reduce adult smoking by about 4 per- smoking groups have taken up the teen smoking doesn 't drop significent and teen smoking .by 7 percent, call in hopes that Congress will act cantly over ·10 years.
said Michael P. Eriksen, director of next year on a proposed sculement
The tohacco industry has said the
the federal Centers for Disease Con- reached between tobacco companies June agreement by itself would cause
trol and Prevention's office on smok- and state auorneys general in June.
cigarcuc prices to rise by at least
ing and health .
Under the deal, tobacco compa- $1.50 a pack over I0 years.
A third witness- Howard Bcnls, nies would pay $368 billion over 25
Beals said the single most impora George Washington Universiiy pro- years, curb their advenising and pay tant factor in teens' decision to begin
fessor who has worked as a consul• fines of up to $2 billion if teen smok- smoking is the behavior of their clostam for RJ. Reynolds Tobacco Co. ing, which has increased through the est friends.
-disagreed. He said the most effec- 1990s, doesn't drop 30 percent in five
"The odds that a teen whose best
tive approach would be educating years. In rct\tm, they would be pro- friends of the same sex all smoke arc
teen-agers about the consequences of iected against future lawsuits and win more than ~ix times higher than for a
~moking and imposing penalties for
limits on government control of nico- teen with no smoking friends," he
tobacco use.
tine.
said.

(CHILD'S NAME)

Per PicturePrepaid

Parents' or
Grandparents Name

Please enclose self-addressed,

sramped envelope to rs:turn your
' photo.

White House diary:

.,.

Rare glimpse ·at campaign-- pressure·, cynicism
I

.

: WASHINGTON (AP) ..,. Two meant to be public. is in notes belat·
weeks belorc Election D&amp;y, across the cdly turned over to congressional
hall from the Oval Office, presidcn- investigators - an infonnal diary
rial advisers are fretting over an iiiaf provides a rare glimpse at the
cmcrging fund-raising scandal. pressure-packed and·sometirocs cyn"What do you think will come of ical world of White House politics.
this ?" chief of staff Leon Panetta
The .200 pages of notes were
asks.
wrincn by presidchtial records manNothing, comes the smug prcdic- ager Janis Kearney. member of a
ti'!n of one aide. The Federal Election long-respected Arkansas family with
Commission "won't be able to finish deep political tics to President Clinan investigation before (the) clcc- ton. Her husband. Bob Nash. is ·
tion...
White Hou~c personnel director.
The remarkable exchange, never Administration officials said she

J'

MU.S l lii•JWjjl

. PICTURE YOUR ·CHILD
AMONG THE •••

Higher prices only·part of anti-smoking drive.

---~~

The Mavericks fell to 1-2 under
coach-OM Don Nelson, who took
over on the hench alier lim Cleamons
was fired last week. Dallas has lost
14 of its last 16.

"The huge epidemic was the
chance of illness among the growing
numbers of the elderly and people result of a basic failure on an industrial !ICale to separate the raw from the
~ith suppressed immune systems.
cooked,"
said CDC researcher Ro~rt
such as AIDS sufferers. •
Tauxe.
·
Increasingly, experts say the effiA single day's production at a
cient global food ' system that gives
modern
ground beef plant can tum
grocery shoppers more choices and
otit
hundreds
of thousands of pounds
lower prices carries the troubling cost
of hamburger, which is then quickly
of an upsurge in food poisoning .
The way outbreaks occur also is trucked all over the country.
changing.
'
"That means any single problem
In the past, most cases originated that happens can be spread very
in restaurants or at events like church . quickly and cause massive illness
suppers- caused by mistakes in Jhe before we even know about it," said
kitchen. Such cases still happen Caroline Smith DeWaal, food safety
one person died and 750 were sick- director at the nonprofit Center for
ened by salmonella at a Maryland -Science in the Public Interest.
church. outing last month.
Along with the industrial food
But now there is a bigger problem: processing system, Altekruse said the
Food sometimes is tainted during trend toward large-scale livestock
processing at the growing number of operations in which thousands of ani- .
huge food factories and is widely dis- mals are crowded together is anothtributed before atlyoQe 'gets sick.
. er reason for increased problems
"Industry consolidation and mass with bacteria.
distribution of foods may lead to
In 1945, for example, about 500
large outbreaks of food-borne dis- birds were in a typical henhouse. By
case," Dr. Sean F. Altekruse, a vet- 1995, houses contained· as' many as
erinary epidemiologist with the Food I00.000 hens, which can spread saland Drug Administration, said in a monella through their eggs and in
new CDC report on ·emerging which microbes .can quickly move
microbes.
from animal to animal.
For example, about 224,000 peoFood poisoning from imponcd
ple in many states were si'ckcncd by and ' domestic produce such as cansalmonella in 1994 because tanker taloupes. strawberries, raspberries
true ks used to hau I thousands of gal- and tomatoes also has increased
lons of ice cream previously had been recently. The CDC repon identified
used to transpon contaminated liquid several causes. including use of coneggs, accordmg to the CDC.
taminated water to spray the produce

'

The Dally Sentinel• P-ve 7"

Modern food system contributes
to rise of harmful bacteria in U. -S.

'There are three sophomores, nine

COLUMBUS (AP) - An &lt;'h io
,State football player was taken mto
custody on marijuana and traffic
charges, police said. ·
Officers arrested reserve tailback
Jennon Jackson after a traffic stop
around 2:20a.m. Tuesday, said Alonda Hairston, a police clerk. He wa'
charged with misdemeanor drug
abuse, driving under suspension and
hav·ing no operator's license.
He also had two outstanding trafr.c warrants.
·
The senior from Ironton, who primarily has been a backup player in
his college career. was ~d-shirted
·this season because of an injury.
Police said they pulled over Jackson just cast of campus after he made
an illegal U-turn. Ollicers allegedly
found a ~uantity of marijuana in his
possession and took him into custody,
Ms . Hairston said.
He was released after paying the
lines on his outstanding warrants . .

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

l

•

Official .
Entry

•

'began compiling the notes in 1995 as
The president and vice president
an inf'onnal supplement to the prcsi- arc called "the principals." Clinton
dent 's archives.
doesn't meet with contributors, he is
Angry Republican investigators$ "doing a coffee" or auending "monreceived the notes Monday night. cy coffe~s." Guests ar~ sometimes
months after all Whotc House fund- identified not just by name, but by
raising documents had heen subpoc- financial conditipn- "millionaire"
nacd.
.
or "major supporter."
In lean. undecorated language,
The staff is ordered "not to
Kearney details the presidc.nt's sched- respond to media inquiries" about
ulc. summames news rtcms and fund-raising allegations.
records private staff meetings. And
Even the president doesn't entire- .
rc~cals a staff seemrngly hardened by ly escape Kc=ey's edgy analysis.
controversy and campa1gn pressure.

Form

·-=

Meigs County land transfers
CHQI~TMAC)

,••.••.....

CQEETING EDITION

The following land transfers were S. Cundiff. Sutton parcels;
.V. lmhodcn. Suuon. 2.1020 acres:
recorded recently in the oflicc of . Deed. George J. and Willard L.
Deed. Patnck Land Julie bawson
Meigs County Recorder Emmogcnc Moore to Richard Eugene Under- to Larry J. and Kristic A. Bar,nes.
wood, Lebanon parcels;
·
Hamilton:
Columbia:
Deed, David M. and Marilu EnterDeed. John David and Jacqueline
Deed , Francis K. Harvey Trust to
line to John W. and April M. Wells. Gillogly to David Wayne Gillogly. Jerry and Bobhy Runyon, Syracuse:
Columbia, 40.47 acres;
Columhia;
Deed. Earl and Darlene Dill to
Deed, Hanry S. Yarbrough to KenDeed, Bernard V. Fultz to Scott T. Marlin E. Goff. Salem, I. 169 acre~:
neth Ray and Tammy R. Searles. Rut- and · Lynn M. Curl. Middleport
Deed. Southern Ohio Coal Comland:
.
pa"cls:
pany to Gordon and Marilyn K.
. Right of way, Ci~i?.cn; National
Deed. Emmett R. and Dorothy D. Huhbard. Salem . .624 acre:
Bank, First Huntington Bank. Bank Edwards to Roscoe and Sandra 1.
Deed. Cross Pointe Apartments to
One oi West Virginia to Tuppers Mills. Salishury pared. 10 8/11)() Allen Michael and Nancy Faber
Plains-Chester Water Distri.r and a~ res;
Cmss. Salisbury tracts:
Carol W. Cline, Olive;
Deed. Frank Herald Jr. to Robert
Deed. Allen Michael and Nancy
Dec\!, Mary Jane Grngan to Lar- Edward and Sarah Elit.abeth Kuhn. Faber Cross to Edward A. and Judith
Ornngc:
ry G. Grogan. Middlcpon lor:·
A. Crooks. Middlcpon tracts ;
Deed. Arlctta Vanover t{1 Jerry W.
Deed, Michoci-R. and Charlollc A.
Deed. LISa Lilley to Jeffrey MayKincaid to Michael R. Kincaid Jr.. and Barhara M. Colmer. Salishury nard, Pomeroy parcels.
parcel;
Lebanon:
Deed. Patricia Pl'ice Jordan to JefD.:ed. Larry D. and Anna Ruth frey C. and Dchorah M. Harris .
Deed . .Mabie M. Grimes to
Carpenter to Randall R. and Peggy Lebanon parcel ;
Grimes Family Trust. Orange:
Deed, Danny L. Holliday to Ann Carpenter. Pomeroy parcels:
Deed. Charles E. Stevens to BriDeed. Mary V. and Samuel H. an J. and Shelly R. Thor! a. Lchanon .
Eugene H. Hhlliday. Salem. I!lj
;.u;rcs;
Simonds to Grover Land Priscilla R.
11.9 acres:
Deed. Eugene and Fontdlc Holl - Riddle. Salishury. 21.24 acres;
Deed. V. Leroy and Joyce Ann
Deed. BcttyAnn Jewell to Myrtle
iday to Danny L. Holliday. Salem.
:! I .51 acres;
Deed . Homer Prnflitt to Rosen&lt;
and Sandra J. Mills. Lchanon parcels:
COUPON Deed . Phillip A. and Sally A.
Thompson to Beverly K. Campbell.
Salem parcel :
will H give• In •las/Gallia Counties by
Deed, Phillip A. and Sally A.
Thompson w Gloria J. Grahn. Salem .
parcels :
•
Deed. Guy E. and Linda Bing to •
Dtcellllt~r
Raymond L. Goble, Syracuse parcel : •
Deed, John Sheets Jr., deceased. •
JaC~IOtl
''
.and John Sheets to Gregory Sheets. •
Salisbury: ·
·
I
Deed, Roben and Hyllia Eblin to :•
9:00•NOOB
Monty R. and Paula L. Hart, Racine •. Col Tol FrH 1-800-634-5265 far •I•••••• appolllllelt, •
parcels;
•
Deed. I. Renee Richard to I. •
TH tilts wl ..
lry I Uc•lll Hlbiljj Aiii-Spedalst •
Renee Richard, Lebanon parcel;
• Anyone who has !TOuble hearing or undellllnCiing conversatiOn Is 1nYiled 10 •
Deed, I. Renee Richard to Lcleua • have a FREE hearing tastiO '"lllhls problem can be helped. Bring this ··
K. and Terry L. Ottman, Lebanon;
coupon wilh you for your FREE HEARING TEST. a $75.00 value.
' •
Deed, William and Janelle Har- •
ARMCO, UAW, AND ALL OTHER
•
mon, Janelle Williams to James M. •
INSURANCE PROVIDERS
and Linda K. Hannon, Sutton;
•
WALX·INI WELCOME
•
· Deed, Connie L. Cundiff to Todd • • • • • • • • • IIi • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • t

Wednesday, December 24th

..,............
.. $11
,~

WUII w ....ntl1111 of llnll,· n••• •••1Ntl•t41tr. NhwkhtJ&amp;N hun• by
tiKa fire and ttleeHM .IRIIkrt.f 'd Wltlt !IIIIOW• t:hriNtiiiON
•neu~r" warmth nnd .r•HHI eh-r RH
•llt"rl111h the
hlt'lllflln_.. we'"• Nhn~ tltl111 pn!lll y4"nr. t'ttP liN ll mra11N
Nn,·ln~&amp; "thankll" to ytnl. our mnny lrh-ndN. old amel new.
"'hm... klnd-Nuppetrt wt""llalwnyN '""n"••n•. lhdn•
bmdn~ wltll you 1111 our Jll't"ntP!IIt plrnsn.,.z

w•

A• ESIS

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

Ovp~.Jb:n.

Cf&lt;iJ.TE
Adult
Dru• Sets

•359

•

95

· •Layaways
· •Gift.Certificates
·: •In-House Financing

'

""
I

..... St11t/UJ &amp;
...
•

il

••••••••••••

FREE HEARING TESTS

992-215()

Yorkville

BRIGHT IDEAS

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR DAVE OR DON

•

SPEC::It\L HOLIDAY
HOURS
Mon., Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat.
11 AM to8 PM
Tues. &amp; Sun. Noon to 5 PM

1111141~

~-- HEARING AID CENTER

TilE DAILY SENTINEL

Friday,
12, 1997
"'n Dr. A.
lalles' OHice
224 East Main, Po•eroy

/

;v.

AtHENS lULl 593·3991
1·800·982·7636

HRS.: 11 lm-8 pm Mon., Wed., Fri., Sat. 11 am-8 pm;

Tuea. • Sun. Noon to 5

I

·-0
::2

s

·-~

Cl.

.c

·-1111

~

[¥·

·-u

.t'

SLEDS
Flexible Flyers
42·~··s4•-1o- ·

il

••

Sides by Pl!fs
Speedy

1

~

e.
1111

z

3ft.

-l!!
~

-==

~

~

E

••
•
••
•

Pnc•

Sautcrs to Timothy \'aughan Sauters,
Bedford parcel;
.
. Deed, l'aul E. Green to Ishmael
Jeffrey and Donna Kay Smith, Meigs
parceL
.
. .
Deed. Nina Robinson to Roben H.
Robinson and Nonna J. 'Robinson
Swam. Orange;
Deed. Lawrence W. and Teresa
Stcwan to David and Cheryl Ann
Fishc&gt;, Rutla&gt;ld, 2.993 acres;
Deed . Earley W. and Laura J. Hill
to James R. and Richard L. Hill. Scipio parcels:
.
Deed, Charles D. and Brenda K.
Jeffers to Charles D. and Brenda K.
Jeffers, Middleport:

~

Deadhne: Friday, Dec. 19 at 3 p.m.

PICKENS
HARDWARE

Mall or bring the entry form:

The Daily Sentinel

MASON, W.VA.

773-SSU

111 Court St.

. ·

. Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

..•
~

4;

.41 ~

hu-fititfififi·'&amp;MM , .

�•
•
•

Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

.

Wedneaday,
December 10,1897
.

PEPSI &amp;

......,...,.

Children should be taught responsibility - at-·every age

PRODUCTS

Sullday
IAII·IO PM
298 .SECOND ST.

Dear Ann Landel'li: A leuer that
appeared in yourcohimn in February
1986 has been on our .refrigerator
ever since. My husband and I raised
our three sons using the principles set
forth in that column. Our first grandchild is no~ I year old. Will you
please run that column again for a
new generation of parents? h is a
proven formula for prooucing decent
children and responsible citizens.
Today's parents need all the help they
can get.-- Grandma in Connecticut
Dear Grandma: With pleasure.
It 's excellent advice, and I'm glad ·
you asked. Here it is:
Dear Ann Landel'li: Everyone
wants their kids to succeed, but how
many parents are willing to expend
th~ energy and spend the time to
make sure they have the prime ingredient? It is responsibility.
Responsibility · must . be taught
from the time a 12-month-old can
throw a toy into the basket until he or
slie leaves the nest. As a parent of
three children, 9, 6 and 5, I find it a
daily challenge to teach my children
to be responsible for their actions. It
would be easier to let things slide, hut
it is MY job to teach them to be
responsible human beings.
"Who left the light on? Come and
turn it off."
·
"Wipe up the milk you spilled ."

24 PK CUBE ·

Accepts Credit.Cards

WE
THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD THRU DECEMBER 13, 1997

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

PEPSI &amp;

·SEE

MT. DEW
PRODUCTS '
2 LITER

fRESH CHICKEN

.

.

,

Breasts •••••• ~~...... ·

MIXED FRYING CHICKEN

Frying ·Parts••L:-.•• 49

JIFFY. CORN
C MUFFIN MIX·

$

PORK BUR STEAKS.OR

119
Roasts ••••••!~.•.....

$19·9

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Top Round

FRESH CENTER CUT

Pork Chop~••••~...

St~ak.••·

$139

FRESH COUNTRY STYLE

$ 99

1.

Ribs ••••••••••·········~ ~. , . ~
LAY'S BREAKFAST

Bacon••••••••••••••••
-

$119

Sausage ••• •••••••

$ 39

.

12 oz.

c

9·9 C

3/$
LUCK'S
PINTO
BEANS·

.

Lb.

$199

Potatoes ••••• !~'!~.. .
BORDEN SKIM
'
$
19
.
9
•lk
·
MI •••••••••••••••••• .
BORDEN AMERICAN CHEESE
2/$
·
3
·
•
I
S1ng es ••••••••••••• .

39-44

P~ST COCOA.

Fruity Pebbles~.:~

$219

DAIRY LINE

_

.Ice Cream.::;:••••

6
9
C
Cheese•••••••••;::...
.
~UFT MACARONI &amp;

·

$319

UMIT 6 PLEASE
ADD PURCH.2/$1

JOY LIQUID
DISH
DETERGENTS

~

UMIT4

LIMIT 12 PLEASE ADD 'PURCH 39¢

PLEASE
PURCHB~

UMIT 4 PLEASE

* Special Orders

$5.99

Call/As

* (jift

··Certificates
* Poinsettias and
other "jlorals

Bortz Flavored
Canes

s 41

8 cl. pkg.

Gilliums Old Paduke ..Barber Poles 2/99c .

Lb.
"

t

Fresh Gum Drops and

Armour Meat

Orange·

Hot Dogs · 12 oz. pkg

Slices

'

age
Bell

'

'

11 az. pkg.

United Valley Pure Water 2 Gallons s1 .•00 French Onion Dip or

Lb.

$149

Sour Cream
FL&gt;OD LAN D SPECIAL COUPON #l?o
EFFECliVE 12 7 TO 12 lJ 97

2202.

FOOD LAND SPECIAL COUPON 111 ;q

EFFECTIVE 12 7 TO 121 l Yl

MONDAY
LETART
Letart Township
Trustees . 6 p.m. Monday al ,,fficc
building.

I 10 lb. bag, U.S. No. 1 W1sc,onsln

:
I

:

Keeping produce fresh
.
Too many people allow thw produce to become uneuihle and rancid.

This Week
Powell's Super
Value

$700
Free Caihl
Stop In The Store
For Details '

I

There 's an easy, inexpensive wny
to double the life of your produce.
Purchase rerrigerator bin liners ro
prevent spoilage "!'d bruising and to
retain prodw,;c cnspncss. A set ol
four (10 inches x 13 inches) cos ts
$11.94. They arc foam washable
To ordor item No. 1208 , call 1800-499-6757 or write Wh:ncvc r·
Works, Earth Science Building, 74
20th St., Brooklyn. NY 11 232.

Russet Potatoes
Buy One Cet Oae

· FREE •
limit one free w/coupoo.
Good only at Foodland.

•

I

l
1
l
1
1

·

64 OZ. PKG

48 oz. btl.

Peak Pinto Beans
Umit one tree w/coupon
Good
a1 Foodland.

'

46

Grape

Foocllancl Conola or

B1y Ou Gat ORa
FREE

Jelly

\'egelable Oil
llf Olt Itt 0••
.
FlEE

L---------------~~-·-·--·-·~---·-··-~

I

.

llf Olt Ott Ou
FREE

oz. can

24 oz.

II
.1 I

l•y Olt Ott Olt
FlEE

. EASTMAN'S

II
II

Boy Dot Ott Oot
FREE .

Big Bend

28 oz. pk9.

Mountain Top
8 inch
1
Pumpkin Pie :

Mountain Top
Aunt Jemima Waffle•
8oy Doo ·Got Doo

FREE

· Apple Pie
llf 011 Ott 011

llf ho Itt On FlEE

00
SUPERMARKETS

:

~-·-·-~~~==~~~---~~·-··-;~~.ft~~~-w.~~.~pon·---~
Thru

O.C.

19117. USDA Fond

&amp;WlC

btl

Foodland Tomato : : Foodland Pancake &amp;
:1
Juice
: 1 Waffle Syrup

U":!~':~."!.'~~'!'~:...J L..J.ilnii.Qt1L~·-J L_::_":~!~~~~~:..J L_::_m_! one free

·,
•

Valley BeD

.,

·:Whole Hams

Ca~;.- .

1

· EAST MEIGS -- OAPSE Christmas dinner. Saturday, 6 p.m.
Riverview School. Meat. drinks and
rolls provided. Take cove red dish, $5
gift exchange. take gifts for auction.

BANKROLL

14.25-

Choose for your neeas

POMEROY -- The Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District, December board meeting, Saturday, 7 p.m.
at the-Colonial Restaurant in Jackson.

Win A

15.25 oz

* Party ((rays

Dinner Bell Semi Boneless

I

c

Maae to Oraer

Asst. Hershey Kisses
and Hershey
Minatures

I

oz.

..

SATURDI\Y" .
POMEROY-- Burlingham Modern Woodmen Christmas dinner, Saturday, 4 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. at the
hall. Potluck .

.

BOUNTY
PAPER TOWELS

90045

]or any amount

.LONG BOTTOM -- Faith full
Gospel Church, Long Bottom, special
services, 7 p.m. Friday. Singers, The
Williams Family. Lisa and Ted. Fellowship to follow.

Gallon

120z.

e

Premeir Chocolate·
Covered Cherry
Cordials ·

FRIDAY
RUTLAND-- Rutland Church of
God, outdoor live m·usical nali vity
reenactment 7 p.m. Friday and Saturday, on church lawn . Public in vited, refreshments.

oz.

Send questions to Ann Landers. Cre·
ators Syndicate, 5777 W . Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif. ·

* "jruit rJaskets

21b.box

TUPPERS PLAINS •• Tuppers
Plains VPW Post 9053, Thursday,
7:30p.m. Refreshments, 6:30p.m.

GENUINE #1

said, ''Thank you for your thought·
fulness," and left it at'that . Cross that
ham-handed clod off your list for
future baked goods.

'

Select . . "
Boxed Chocolates

POMEROY -· Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, Thursday, 6:30 p.m.·al the Stowaway, Gallipolis, dinner party. Items
to be taken for Serenity House.

POWDERED ·.
LAUNDRY
DETERGENTS

1M. Lol All,.. lima
¥4 Crutoo
S,..Jkate.
Sylld~ea~e

ome

Max~ield All AmericanS

POMEROY -- A.A. meeting, 7
p.m. Thursday, Sacred Hcan Church,
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.

SAUCE

Ann
Landers

pen to be an honest person . I'm sure
most people would have thrown
these brownies out and told you they
were wonderful, but 1 am returning
them. " She then hung the bag of
brownies on my front door knob. •
Was this honesty or what? I felt
insulted and hurt. Incidentally, my
children and I enjoyed the bmwnies
with a gla;"S of milk. They wercn ' t
bad.-- No Name in Pa.
Dear Pa.: Your neighbor was
extremely ungraciou s. If she didn ' t
like the brownies, she should have

FOODLAND

THURSDAY
. TUPPERS BLAINS -- St. Paul
United M'thodist Church Thursday,
7 p,rn., with Coolville Community
Choir to present Christmas cantata,
"Everlasting Light." Public invited.

CONTADINA

ies that was described as "yummy."
The recipe called for a devil's food
pudding cake mix. I am an excellent
baker and usually bake from s.cratch.
However, I also have many quock and
easy cake-mix recipes that can be
thrown together at a moment's notic~.
so I decided to try that brownte
recope.
I gave my chocolate-loving neigh·
bor six brownies and was stunn ed
when she phoned to say they were
"flavorless, not sweet enough and
just plain awful." She said, "I hap·

'for

. POMEROY -- American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39.
to meet at noon at the hall to wrap
gifts. Vegetable soup will be served.

c

rious no-shows, can't be depended on
to keep their word and have wonderful excuses for everything. Look
around at the men and women who
are successful, and you will find they
have one thing in common. ll is a
sense of responsibility. -- From the
Old School in Greenwich
Dear G.: Your little sermon was
right on the money. Too bad that old
school in GreenWich doesn't have
more graduates.
Dear 1\nn Landel'li: I recently
read a simple, fast recipe for brown-

EASTMAN'S

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meeting
and special events. The calendar is
not desig~ed to promote sales or fund
raisers ofany \ype. Items are printed
as space pennits and cannot be guaranteed to run a specific number of
days.
WEDNI.lSDAY
MID[)LEPORT -- Mike Warnke.
Christian comedian, will speak at the
Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church,
Middleport, Wednesday, 7 p.m. .

-

BALLARD'S .PORK -

··call your piano teacher, and tell
her you' re too sick to go to your les-.
son. I wgn't dq it for you."
"OK, guys, you and your friends
clean up the mess you made in the
basement. Remember, that was our
a£reemenl. "
It 's much easier to pick up after a
kid than to keep on his case, but choldren DO learn, even thouah they
gripe and grumble. They get themessage. It's exasperating to 1 work with
people who show up late (or nol at
all). We all know folks who are noto-

Community
calendar

8.5 oz

15 01.

Page9

Wednesday, December 10, 1997

• DEW

STORE lOllS

The Daily Sentinel

Not

tor

•

'

�J

•

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Methodist women learn about founder of Methodism
Cfmilp
edicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor·
ofFamily Medicine

•

~Ax for holiday

·-·:vegetables: roast 'em

·~ In preparation for the holiday sea:Son, I've dispensed with my usual dis·
!cussion of human illness this week.
.;For the last several years at this fes·
:·tive time, I've given the recipe for a
: food I like to prepare for my friends
·.and family. and I'll do the SIII'De agam
'·this year. The following recipe isn't
:strictly holiday fare •.but it will be on
:my family 's holiday table.
• The time for the luscious fresh
.'summer produce has passed. The
· tomatoes and 'sweet corn now in the
- grocery store don't have the same
.·delightful navors as those from my
:summer garden or the local farmer's
'market. My solution is to 'do something special with those supermarket
· vegetables. Sure you can mash pota·
toes. candy sweet potatoes and saute.
, onions. but slowroasling them does
,.• wonderful things for their navors .
: This is how I do it.
. The basic process of slow.roa&lt;ting
: vegetables is simple. Choose the
: vegetables you enjoy, clean them,
slice into about onc·inch sized cubes,
· toss with a mixture of olive oil, hal: samic vinegar, salt and other season·
;. ing of your choice. and roast in a 450
·; Jcgrcc oven, nipping them over
: occasionally, until they are done .
Firm vegetables like potatoes .
.; sweet potatoes. onions, carrots, win·
:i ter squash. turnips, mushrooms, beets
· and rutabaga need about one hour of
: cooking time . Softer vegetables like
~ eggplant. garlic, okra. bell peppers.
" zucchini and tomatoes only take 30
·'! minutes of cooking tirnc. Corn. peaS,
·' and even asparagus take the least •
;' usually 15 to 20 minutes.
• My family and I like the follow:. ing mixture best.
:- 8 oz mushrooms
:· 3 stalks celery or bok choy
'
2 medium red potatoes
I0 garlic cloves
I medium sweet potato
,
I red and I green bell pei!P"r
•',• 2 medium onion

I yellow summer squash
3 medium carrots
I . zucchini Heal oven to 450
degrees .
Chop all vegetables into chunks
about one inch sqUIII'C. Peel the sweet
potato, but the red potatoes can be left
with their skins on. Toss the chopped
vegetables until aiiiii'C coated with 3
tablespoons of olive oil, I tablespoon
of balsamic vinegar, 1-2 teaspoons of
salt and I tablespoon of chopped
fresh rosemary.
Place in a large baking dish so that
the vegetables form a single layer.
Bake for about 30 monutes. then stir
or Oip the vegetables. Add any faster
cooking vegetable. lij&lt;e peppers or
zucchini, and return to the oven. Al
45 minutes total baking lime, stir the
vegetables again. The dish is complete when the vegetables are done to_
your desired tenderness, they have a
bit of caramel ization on the surface,
and the aroma fills the house. The
vegetables can be served hot, or at
room temperature as part of a holiday
buffet.
Be aware that vegetables in the
cabbage family ·cabbage, .broccoli.
cauliOower, and Brussel ,sprouts don't do · well with roasting. 11\ey
become bitter instead of sweet. Also
be aware that ihe quality of lialsamic vinegar makes a huge difference in
the final Oavors of this dish. I'd suggest a 7-year-aged product, or older
if you have it.
I hope you have an opportunity fa
try roasted vegetables this holiday
season or later this winter. I also hope
that you and your loved ones have a
delightful Yuletide filled with good
food, good friends, and abounding
love.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni-

"John Wesley--the founder of
Methodism· was the program topic
presented by Marilyn Bogard when
the ~acine United Methodist Women
me• recently.
Wesley based his mmtsuy on
scriplurt, tradition, experience and
reason. Scripture was given from
Corinthians and the hymn "0 For A
Thousand Tongues to Sing" written
by Wea;ley and a sdtandard hymn in
the Methodist hymn book, was sung.
Words adapted from Wesley's Gen·
eral Rules were written on cards and
placed where everyone· could see.
Markers with responses were read by
members and the program was closed
with his Covenant Prayer.
Lee Lee opened the business
meeting with everyone repeatinj! the
Lord's Prayer and then all read the
"Litany on Purpose" with the leader.
The UMW song was sung.
Chris Hill gave the secretary's
report and a thank you note was read
from the Meigs County Senior Citi·
zens.

The treasurer's report was given
by Clara Mae Sargent and she
announced that all pledges must be
paid this week. She reported on the
monthly donation s made to various

organizations. Monetary donations

••
•

'
. •
were made to RACO for Christmas dent; Maraie West, vice president;
Refreshments were served bf.
treats, Redbird Mission iq Kentucky. K11ren Walker, sec.retary; aara Mae Sh11r0n Hall and Melissa Harknessr
Good Works in Athens and an extra Sargent, treasurer.
Get well cards were sig~ durin~
donation to Meigs County CooperaThe annual Christmas party and this time. The next regular meetini
live Parish.
dinner will be Dec. IS, 6:30p.m. at will be Jan. 19. Auending were Opat
Melissa Harkness bought hats and the Methodist church. Reservations Diddle, Martha Dudding. Chris Hilit
mittens ·with the UMW hat and mit- must be made by Friday by calling Clara Mae Sargent, Margie West•
ten fund and they were given to the Alice Wolfe, 949-2216. Crows of Alice Wolfe, Cindy Winebrenner:
Southern elementary schools for dis- Pomeroy will cater the meal. A $S gifi Karen Walker, Eua Mae Hill~
tribution.
exehan1e will be held and prayer Margery Roush. Sharon Hall. Mari•
The Shoe Box project is ongoing · partners will be revealed. Bogard and lyn Bogard, Melissa Harkness an&lt;£
as well as the Angel Tree, 50 angels Lee will co:chair the program.
•
••
Lee Lee.
·
were requested, and the gifts should
11!1!!11!!1!!11
be brought to the church by Dec.-14.
The hat and mitten fund was taken.
By meeting all of the requii-ed mis·
sian obligations to the District the
group has met its goal in becoming
again a "Five Still'" in Undesignilted
Giving .
1998 Program books were ordered
and have been received.
' The Christmas Bazaar was termed
a success. Bakegoods, lunch and
crafts were sold. Several local
crafters were in attendance.
Margie West and Lee Lee auended the recent District UMW Leader· ·
ship Day in Athens .
The slate of officers for next year
Sofas &amp;Chairs • Hide-A-Beds • Lane Action Recliners
were presented by 'Martha Dudding,
Swivel ROC:kera • Glide Rockera • Children's Recliners
chairman. They are: Lee Lee, presi-

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

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Bedroom Sultea • Chesta • Headboards • Wood Table llo
Chairs • Metal Dinettes • Hutches • Bar Stools
Gun Cabinets • Tables • Lamps

Mon. thru Sat. 9-5

Ph. 446-0322 ·

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•

•1 0·12 lb. Turkey • freshly prepared (on or off the bone)
•2·Lbs. Sweet Potatoes • Homemade fresh In store
•2·Lbs. Hoftleftlade Dressing
•..
'
•1·Lb. HoMemade Cole Slaw
•I·D~z. Fresh Rolls ·'freshly·baked in our own bakery
•1·1 0 Inch Pumpkin Pie • fr11hly baked hi our ~~n bakery

WAMPLER OR TOWNSEND

BOneless/Skinless
Breast

Arc Thankful" and "Thank You God
For Everything.' The devotions were
concluded with Thunkgiving prayer
and group singing of "How Great
Thou An.''
Finger foods were enjoyed by the
those named and. Nancy Wachter.
Margaret Grossnickle. Grace Weber.
Frances Reed. Maxine Whitehead.
Nola Young, Gladys Thomas. Janet
Connolly. Marlene Putman. Theda
Haskins. and guests. Erin Wchcr and
Sarah Wactcr.
The next meeting will be a Christmas pany on Dec. lSi at the Whitehead home.

,.

,."
'

~chool board merger ~iscussed

.
• The Athens County Educational the merger of the two educational ser:!service Center and the Meigs Coun- vice centers - is invited to contact
•iy Educational Service Center met either the Athens County Educationlast week to discuss issues regarding al Service Center, Supt. Virginia
May, or treasurer, Sandi Hurd. at 593~heir future merger.
8001.
or the Meigs County Ed•tca; The two boards discussed name,
tional
Service
Center Supt., John D.
~ocation, governing board make-up,
Riebel , Sr, or treasurer, Carole
'!lmployees, and jobs.
Gilkey,
992-3883.
~ Anyone with questions. regarding
~

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Breast

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MediciDC, G1'05veaot Hall, Atbe~
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with a family touch!

•

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Gr.
a
nge
.

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LAYNE'S FURNrrDRE

:~ Holiday activities

•

.

We do not ship in our Christmas dinners our dinners are

versity College of Osteopathic

writing entries going 10 National
Grange Convention for competition.
Also certificates were presented to
Chelsea Montgomery. Eric Montgomery, Jcimy Bolen and Stacy
Macomher for safety posters which
were entered in the state contest
An jcc skating party was
announced for Dec. 23 at 7:30p.m.
for the Junior Grangers.
Linda Montgomery reminded
members that she still has plenty of
pecans, English walnut•. black walnuts, cashews, mixed nuats butter tOf·
fee peanuts, Spanish anuts and
honey roasted peanuts fo sale. Any
one interested in purchasing any of
these for holiday baking needs can
contact her at 669-4245.
· Opal Dyer announced that the new _
State Grange Cookbook is now avail·
able. Cost of the cookbook isS 12 and
may be purchased from her. 7422805.
Practice for the Founh Degree
Team was set for Dec. 18 at 7 p.m. al ,
the Grange HaiL Next regular meeting will be Jan . 3 with a potluck supper at 6:30p.m. followed by meeting
at 8 p.m.

UGBA 'S

UGBA 'S DELl
ILL PR
E YOUR
CHRIS AS Dl ER

held for
:]Christmas -necklace

• Plans for the annual Christmas
: dinner and caroling party were made
·. when Star Grange 1#778 mel in rcgu•
.
• lar sesston rtccntly.
; The Christmas dinner will be on
'. Dec. 20 at 6:30p.m. at the Grange
~ HaiL Ham will be provided by the
, Grange and those attendmg are asked
~ to bring a covered dish.
• Christmas caroling and delivering
•of fruit baskets was set for Dec. 29 at
~ 1 p.m. The list of those to visit _will
: be finalized at the Christmas party.
·! Janet Morris. women's activities
•chairman. announced winn~rs of the
; baing contests: subordinate, apple·: sauce muffins, Janis Macomber. first:
I. Janet Morris. second: and R~ek
! Macomber. third; youth, peanOt but·
~tcr brownies. Rick Montgomery;
: young adult. cloverleaf r~lls .
:.women's division, Palty Dyer, hrst;
~ Opal Dyer.. second. and , Janis
~ Macomber. thnd: and the men s diVI·
~ sion. Rick Macomber. first
Janis Macomber gave a safety tip
!on car care for the deaf rcpon.
~
Awards were presented to Stacy
~ Macomber and Chelsea Montgomery.
~ participation ribbons for their creative

'

FRO

:i Workshop

:; A Christmas workshop. directed
:. by Marilyn Hannum and Ruth Anne
:: Balderson, was held recently at the
: Reedsville Church of Christ.
: Each member made a Santa nc~k:• lace. using ribbon and beads. ·
•!
Members brouht gifts for
: the patients at the Rocksprings Rcha:. bilitation Center, Pomeroy.
:: Plans were made for the annual
:Christmas tree lighting. The meeting
;. was conducted by the president.
:: Delores Frank. Roll call was
-: answered hy members displaying
:; symbols of Thanksgiving.
:, Devotions were given by Ella
:: Osborne. They were "For What We

The Deily Sentinel• Page 11

.•

•

•

•6·6·Lb. Haftl · fr11hly prepared (water added)
•2·Lbs. Sweet Potatoes • Homemade fresll in store
•2·Lbs. Green Beans
-·
•I·Lb. Homemade Cole Slaw
e1•Doz. Fresh Rolls.· freshly baked In our ~wn bakery
e1·1 0 Inch Pumpkin Pie •freshly ·baked In our ow11 bakery '
•

'·

�•

The Dally S•ntlnefe Pege13_

~P.a~g~~~1~2~•!n.~~~~~S~I~ii~UnM~----------~------------------!P~~~m~~~~~y~·~M~Idd~Mport~
- ~~~~O~h~~~----------------~W~ed~n~l~ld~M¥~·D~*~c~*~m~~~1~0~,1~98~7~:

~lbright: U.S. must share some blame for genocidell
a¥ LAURA MYERS

·

.Aaeoc:IMecl p,_ WI I...

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia - Secretary of Slate Madeleine Albright
c:JI&gt;clared Tuesday that the United Swes and 01he1 "'!ions must share the
bjame for the recent genocidal atrocities in central Africa.
.
The West waited too long to respond to Hutu massacres ofTutsis in Rwan·
d~ in 1994 that left 500000 people dead, she said. Some of the fighting
iavolved HuiU5 who~ themselves from U.N. refugee c;unps funded
·;. cost of s1 million a day.
a1
:"We the international community, should have been more active in the
e~ly st~ges of the atrocities in Rwanda in 1994 and calle~ them what they
,olere _genocide," Albright said in a speech to the Orgamzauon of Afncan
lAJity, whose delegates applauded her words.
• .
" Albright promised the United States will carefully control future fundmg
·1o ensure that humanitarian aid is not used to sustain armed camps or to
s~pport genocidal killers, to find more effective ways of preventing conflict
:n\d reconciling former adversaries, to achieve-justice and accountabthty'"
tile aftermath of large-scale human rights violations and to resJSt.the emer·
gence of new tyrannies."
.
,.
.
~ "The United States has made a strong commnment to superv~se our
refugee assistance far more closely and to work to keep humamtanan aJd from
f~lling into the wrong hands," she pledged.
.

S. Korea ·

inducing
toreign
.investment

Albl'lght. on 1 weekloog tOIQ' of Africa. announced thlt the U.S. govern·
AlbriJht Cllled tbr formerly wlrrina naliOM.I*Iicularly in Ccnll'll Africa. :,
ment would help.rebuild Congo, bul only if President Laurent Kabila main· to reconcile their differences.
tains a commitment to democratic reform. In May, Kabila's military ousted
"The cycle of violence will not be broken 11ntil citizens can pursue their • ··
Mobutu Sese .Seko, ending nearly three decades of corrupl rule th11 made goals ""?"' successfully with ball~ta than with bulle~ and until investors ·
the late leader nch and left hts country m tatters.
replace tnsurgents as forces for soctal transformatton, she wd.
1
Albright said the United Sta!Cs wHI contribute SIO million to a World Bank·
Albright carried her message of hope to a group of Ethiopian stndenls a1
fund to suppon reconstruction projects in the former Zaire. and she promised ' EniOto Secondary School, sitting in a circle of chairs and answering their ,
to seek unspecified new aid for 'Congo from Congress.
questions for more than half an hour. The two dozen pupils were members 1
The Clinton administration also is promoting a $30 million aid package • of a civic education club studying democracy.
.
'
for organizations working in the Great l;akes region of Congo, Rwanda and
Maria Wondwosen, a 16-year-old sitting shyly a1 Albright's side, said modBurundi, panlyto train judicial and police officials.
.
. .
em Africans wantlo solve their own problems.
. Prestdent Clmton must first centfy to Congress that Kabtla has tnslltutAlbright agreed that the days of outsiders controlling Africa is over, sayed enou_gh reforms to approve th~ aid,_a U.S. offidal said.
..· . ing for too lo~g "they told you what to do and how to do it." Instead, she
Albright, who meets wtth Kabtla.thts week, p.rwsed htm for expresstng a promoted Afncan pannerships with developed nations.
1
commitment to eco~omic recovery, holding democratic elections and for
"There's a big.difference between advice which is accepted willingly and· ·
allowing U.N. investigators to look into allegations his troops slaughtered orders which are given from the outside," she said.
.:
refugees. But she satd he must follow through.
. .
In meeting with Ethiopian Prime Minister Metes Zenawi, who came to ~·
. "The end of Mobutu's represSJv&lt; retgn has opened an hJSt~nc opportu· power in 1995 elections that were boycotted by opposi!ion groups, Albright :
mty for the Congolese po;op~e to.~htev~ the de!"oc~~cy, pros~ty and peace told the students they discussed how change takes time.
1
they have been so long demed, she satd, addtng, The Kabtl~ g~ve~nment
"We talked aboutlhe difficulty of being able to completely change a gov- J
has a great dtstance to travel to meet these goals and overcome JUsllfieo skep- emment after so many years" of authoritarian rille, she said, explaining that r
tic ism."
"democracy is al_ways something in progress."
:

l

By CHARLES J. HANLEY
AP Special Correspondent
KYOTO, Japan- Haggling over
chemistry, calendars and the future of
Eanh's atmosphere, European and
U.S. negotiators worked through the
mght and into early Wednesday to
save a historic deal to control fuel
emissions across the industrial world.
The U.S. ·delegation to the global
warming talks in Kyoto eased its
'position by offering deeper gas reduc·
tions. but clung to features of the pro·
posed agreement that the Europeans
called "loopholes."
Despite their remaining differences , both sides sounded determined to succeed as the 9-day-old
negotiations headed toward a deadline late Wednesday.
"We still have filr to go:· said Stuart E. Eizcnstat, the chief U.S. negotiator. "Nevertheless. we are hopeful
that ... we will be able to bridge Jhe
gaps."
"I think we arc making genuine
progress," Britain's environment
minister. Mi&lt;:hacl Mcachcr. said after
key talks broke up about 2:30a.m.,
to resume later in the morning.

Earlier, Japanese Prime Minister
Ryutaro Hashimoto telephoned the
leaders of Germany. Italy and Britain
to ask that their delegations take a
more flexible position in the talks,
Japan 's KyndQ news service reponed.
It said Hashimoto also planned to
call President Clinton.
If the disagreement between the
· United States -and Europe is .settled,
an overall deal would be presented to
the !50-nation conference Wednesday fm consensus approvaL
The accord would wrap up two
years of negotiations to strengthen the
1992 Climate Change Treaty by set·
tin2 le2allv bindin~ limits on 34
industrial nations' emissions of such
greenhouse gases as carbon dio~ide
and methane.
·
It could help set the energy course
for much of tlic world well into the
21st century, from how we generate
electricity to what we drive.
Governments are expected to take
steps such as convening coal-fired
power plants to gas .. encoura~ing
development of more fuel-effictcnt
automobiles and.lifting subsidies that

8y PAUL SHiN
~ssoclatecl PntP WrHer
SEOUL. South Korea- Struggling to shore up its ailing econoJilY, South Korea suspended five
more merchant banks today and
imnounced measures lo induce foreign investment.
"The government expects that
the measures will help ease spreading concern in the financial market," Finance and Economy MinIster Lim Chang-yucl said.
But analysts said the measures,
c•pected for days, may fall shon of
ex.pcctations.
" I don't think they will have
any significant effect. What we sec
now is the whole banking system
crumbling," said Cho Il ~han, an
analyst at Boram Securities Co.
"The government must become
more actively involved to inJect
new liquidity through such measures as issuing: state bonds." ·
In accepting the International
Monetary Fund's record $57 billion bailout of its economy last
it believed the Vaiican still has the
By FRANCES D'EMILIO
week, South Korea agreed to overgold.
Aaaoclatecl Pntss Writer
haul its inefficient finance industry
"Regarding the gold looted by the
VATICAN Cl'I'Y- The Vatican
and drastically open its stock murdenied Tuesday that it had received Nazis in Croatia. searches done in the
kct to foreigners.
·
gold loote,d from Gypsy concentra- Vatican archives confirm the inexisUnder tbosc ineasures, the limtion camj, victims and stood hy it~ tence of documents rcUtted to the sub~ on foreign ownership of stocl\s in
refusal to open archivi'S covering the ject and thus refute any kind of sup'listed company was scheduled to
posed transaction attributed to the
.
rise frotuthc curnint26 pet;centto. Nazi period.
Holy
Sec." Vatican spokesman
As~erting it could ''look to the
· ~0 perccni on Saturday. The limit
past with serenity," a Vatican JoaqUin Navarro-Valls said Tuesday.
on individual fbreign ownership
In July, the Vatican dchicd an allcspokesman
said the church's own
also was to increase fmm 7 percent
g~tion
that it held for safekeeping
to 50 percent The government is -search of the documents found nothabout
200
million Swiss lrancs that
ing to back accusations that Pope
now moving up the schedule by
Pius XII failed to usc the church's had been plundered from Serbs and
two days to Thursday:
moral and diplomatic clout against Jews by the Nazi puppet government
The finance minister said govin Croatia. The money would be
the Nazis.
.
ernment-held bonds will be conAt a London conrerencc on Na1.i worth about $170 million today, plus
vened into cash and depi&gt;sited .
gold last week, a delegation of Gyp- hundreds or millions of dollars in
with securities companies and
sies, also known as Roma. said gold accumulated inlcrcst.
banks so that they can invest in the
Jewish · groups repeatedly ·have
coins and rings worth nearly $2 mil·
stock market. 11le tOial amount of
UfJ!cd
the Vatican to open its archives
lion had been sci1.cd from Romu peothe cash infusion, he said, would be
ple killed in Croatian death camps from World War II.
several billion dollars.
and sent to the Vatican.
·
Navarro-Valls maintained TuesGovernment officials suspendThe group pmvidcd no evidence day that after "exhaustive perusal of
ed the five merchant banks. or
for its daim and did not say whether the pertinent documents" church hisfinance c'ompanics, after inv~st?rs
withdrew more than $1 btlhon
from them in the past week. lea•·
ing them vinually insolvent.
The suspension will freeze all
deposits at the banks until the government has reviewed their
OSLO. Norway (AP) - A day told The Associated Press the group
finances. The banks have until the before accepting their Nobel Peace slrould he reorganized.
end of January to improve their Prize, Jody Williams and key mcm"Jndy i~ nnw a Nohel laureate.
financial structure or face shut- hers of the IntcmatiQnal Campaign to That's very different from being staff
down.
Ban Landmincs grappled Tuesday to a campaign," Muller said.
Nine merchant bank~ were_sus· with what to do next to advance their
The ICBL will meet in February
pendcd last week and have untd the cause.
lO assess its role and Williams' place
end of this year to tmprovc their
Although the group has racked up . in the campaign. he said.
financial structure.
siunoing succ.css as a driving force
. Muller hired' Williams lo coordiThe finance minister said tlic
bchind the treaty signed by 1,22 nate the ICBL in 1991 'aflcr the group
Bank of Korea will provide $1 bilcountries to ban land mines, it still . became frustrated with the burden of
lion in special. low-interest loans to
has high hurdles to clear- includ- helping land mine victims and decidhelp some of the remaining 16
ing persuading the United Stlltcs, cd to seck an all-out ban.
merchant banks under liquidity
China. Russia arid·lndia to sign.
The Oslo newspaper Aflcnpostcn
strain.
.
Williams. of Putney, Vt., is coor- reported there were internal dis)1utcs
The latest ,ovcrnmcnl acuon
came as Soulh Koren's financial dinator of the campaign. which has over how to handle the U.S. refusal
1.000 member organi7.ations in 60 to sign the treaty and ·ovcr the allenmarkets continued to sink. .
countries.
lion paid to Williams dver others,
Today. currency trading was
At a news conference. she said the such as Canjldian Foreign Minislcr
hailed 40 minutes after the won
quickly dropped by its daily allow- campaign's goals arc clear: prcssur- . Lloyd Axwonhy. He started the ban
ing holdout nations to sign the treaty talks 14 months ago.
able limit to 1.565.90 against the and
persuading at least 40 countries
•
dollar. The won has shed 85 perto take the next step and ratify it.
Williams, who shares the prize
. cent of its value this year.
which the treaiy needs lo become with the ICBL as a whole, played
• Share prices opened sharply
down repons of strife within the camlower in early lroding, but the gov- binding.
But Bobby Muller. the Vietnam _piiJgn.
ernment announcement later vctcrnn whn started lhc campaign.
helped boost the be~hmurk Korea
Composite Stock Price I~de~ to a
3 percent gain. closing at 399.85.
rr---------------------~
But dealers said market uncertainty still prevailed bccau~ smaller company shares conunued to
plunge amid concern that more
companies will go bankrupt.
The stock index has dropped 41
percent this year.
At least eight conglomerates
have collapsed in the past year. The I
lillian's 12th-largest conglomerate,
Halla. wenl under Saturday with
debts of $6.4 billion.
The New York Times reported
today that given the erosion of
inveslor confidence, Lim called on
the United States and Japan to proSUN. ·SAT. 10:00AM ·10:00 PM • 1112·25511
vide $15 billion they promised as
1
part of a $20 billion p~M:kage of
backup support.

tprians affirmed "there is nothing to
add to what has already been published."
"Thus the Holy See can look to
the past-with serenityi" in evaluating
its effons during "that very sad historic periOd 10 alleviate the ill)mense
sutTering of countless persons," he
said.
Pope John Paul II has strongly
defended Pius XII. saying .the

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Grave Blankets

OPEN NOV. ~3- 11 to 9:00

a.
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Happy Holiday•
From

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Treat yourself to a Holiday Loan.
Peoples Bank is offering this speCial rate for
new loans of $1500 to $5000 for up to 36 months;
Payments will be made automatically through direct
debit from your Peoples Bank account.
We wish you a joyous holiday season and all
the good things this time of year brings.

.. } "t

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... . - Ailsllllll lloiJirroft Belpro Gallipolis Uddn!Counly t.r...u
m-31SS 59}7761 197·2006 862-4174 413·)Sl6 ~ 517·11909 1196-2369
Mlddloport "*"'r Rudaod 'lllol'lllns 11l00nly Bonk-By-PIIone
992-'661 ?n·I9SS 992·2133 742-2888 797-4547 376-7123 1-800-374-6123
'

;,

,.,,·".....
..'
. '··.

,)

. .

." ..

ElM~*: Atllnb' .. 111'1011111 ollf,OIO.OD llr • _.. "Ufl t.d
. . . . . . . . .. , -. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,. . . . 111

. "..
.,

'11U1. 11Aoi1Utl . . . . . . . . . . . . . ol . . .

., I

' "
•·

r
I.

' I

...

.uBACK HOE"
SERVICE
No job 1b SmaU

MobUe Home Furnaces
ud Beat Pumps

Landscaping
Septic Tanks
Water Lines

:-Easy Bank FinancingFumaces

992-6305 .

'2SOO a month

Heat Pumps lnataliecr':JSOO I month
FrH Elflmates

The family of lllaa
Swisher would like to
thank everyone who
brought food, 1tnt
flowera and card1
during her death.
Also, thanks to AI
Hartson for presiding
over the funeral, the
pallbearers, and to
Megan Adkins for
reading the article
which she wrote In
memory of her
Mamaw.
Thanks to Bruce
Fisher, James Acree directors and staff,
Jamie Anderson and
Pete Johnaon, lor all
their help and com·
passion at such a
sorrowful time. ·
We greatly appreciate the care given to
her by the stall
(especially Melinda
Ve'noy) at Overbrook
Center.
Thank You.
Son. Bill and Family
Public Notice

814-446-11411
1391 Safford School Rd .,
OH

110
Green

Help Wanted

TRUCKING

VInyl Siding,
RepltH:ement Windows,
Decks, Porc:hea,
Kitchen• &amp; Bathe
some Concrete
Rooting Plumbing
Ol.f t kl• 1 1111,

a

Senior

Community Service Employment
Program,

is

now

looking

for

c.a...............).

Job Training Is av.allable If needed

I00 Eosl Main, Pomeroy

assistance

with

Job

Search

Training. You can earn Income and
develop new skills or tune up the
old ones while In the workplace.
You must

be 55

years of age and

qualify with regards to income. If
you

are

interested

in

2 1/2 . . . •-... 0 f
I..
.....

Operations

coordinator,

UPS
Shipping
Available

Holiday Hrs. ..
Mon-Sat.1 0:4:30
1·5 Sunday

more
Mary

Anderson at the regional office,

614-286-6242 or State
free 1·800-338-7032.

Pursuant to Sec lion
121.22 of the Ohio R~vised

condition of employment to

Budgel Commiaaion will be

&amp;ooled Bldo will be bt obaorvtd, and not leoo
tho Stole provolllng
1he G1 Ill 0 •· then
received
by
wogo
rotoo, shell be pold
Jackson, Meigs,
VIRion
under
tho
contract.d s
Solid Waale Management
Dlotrlct. located o1722 Eool
Con1ractora on ubcon·
lOth Street, Sullo 1, troclora lor the Prolecllhall
Wollolon, Ohio 45892 ul)lll
ol oll llmeo comply with oll
l:OO P.ll.. Eollom Daylight
roqulromonto of the Ohio
Savlngo Time, Wednoldey, Civil Rlghto Act, ond oholl, H
December 17, 1897
requuted by governing
ond will bo publicly opened bodlea, oupply all roporta or
and red immediately olhor lnformlllon roquellod
lhorooftor ror 1ho lurnlohlng by them.

meeting on· December 16,
1997, 11 9:00 A.M. Tho
moellng will be conducted
In tho llolgo County
Audltor'o Office, llolgl
county Courthouao.
llolgs County Budget
Commiaolon
Money Porker Compboll,
Secretory
(12) 10 tiC

Office toll

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice Is hereby given
th•t the . Ueiga

882-3021

'l8

County

Commlaaionen

Office.
Nancy Parker Campbell,

(121 10 ,.••

~cretory

You'll build a big nest egg when
)'00 sove with rht daul(ieds

Jackeon,

CLASSIFIEDS!
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry WriJ!ht

.

• . Agricultur!'l • Industrial • Automotive
•Re-cores • New Radiators

Oxy •

Stick •

SUE'S
GREENHOUSE
(C-30) Moming Slar Rd.
Racine

949-2115
11/21/97 ' mo pel
(Ume StoneLow Rates)

WICKS

TONY'S PORTABLE WELDING
992•5583
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

R.e.

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE

32337 Bailey Run Rd
Poll)eroy, Ohio 45769
(614) 992-7546
Free Estimates

ESTIMATEES
985-4473

Roger Coates
Owner Operator

7/2211tn

·-------=~ -;:::==~· .
YOUNG'S

SAYRE
TRUCKING

Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Reasonable Rates

614-992-3470

CARPENTER SERVICE

•Room AddHions
•New Gcrages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing ·
•Roofing
.
·htterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting ·
At10 Concrete Wollt
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

Joe N. Sayre

614·742-2138

GREENHOUSE

BULLETIN BOARD
17" colu•n inch wttkdays
59" colw•n Inch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE IT 992·2155

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

90Q..28~9119

EXT. 9740

Only S2 99 Per M:nulc
· Musl Be 18 Vcars Old
Serv-U 6 t9.fi45 -8434.
Auent1on : JoAnn.e ·s Kut &amp; Kufl
4 7 Westwood o,.ve W•ll Not Be

Open 1Jn111 la te Januilry. I Am

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

Currendy Still Oo•no Bus•nen On •
Thud And P1ne Call For Chuslmas. Perm SJN"cial. JoAnne

'It honor Gold&lt;n Buckey&lt; c.rd.

Cheating Ohio Wives ..s 1·900-

We have crJ oxCJllent llloclioiJ of
Pm! 'I0.'20

l.ondsco,t 5todt
(Plant alit! Cltrislmas)
SpruceandWhiltl'lnt-

LANDSCAPE
NURSERY
Sat.'s &amp; Sun's tU Chrislmas
Sl. Rt. 325, Danville, Oh

FollinQe&lt;. 61,....wl·9496.

285-9077 En 4585 $2.99
1&amp;. Soni-U 619-645-8434.

IMin, '

Daily Horoac:ope Up To Date
Soap Aolllflo Coli Nowiiii1·213·SIOO Ext 1309, $2.99 Per
Min. Mus1 Be 18'Yrs. Setv-U 619JI45.8434.
Free Pagers ActivaUon R&amp;quired ·
1-888-936-9774.
Spofte • Entertainment

McMu, Horosccpea. Freancol

Call1·900·285-9413
18-t- S2.99Min.

En 3278.
SWW 27looking tor SWF 19 10
35 for LTR, I have a truCk and a
job, if interested call 304 -882-

3297.

30 Amouncements
ChrialrMa Plirty lor USWA local

-~···

DEER

PROCESSING
&amp; Wrapped
$35.00
$5 extra for

Cut

SEASON'S GREETINGS

skinning

FROM

MAPLEWOOD lAKE
949-2734

Complete your Christmas list
with Gill Certificates, Compact
Discs, Casettes, T-Shlrts,
Posters, Slickers, Leather
Jackets, Incense, Jewelry,
Used Compact Discs, end the
best customer service
around! II
Open till 8 p.m. nightly
46 Court St., Gallipolis, 446-3302
330 Main St., Pt. Pleasant, WV
675·1248
230 Broadway St., Jackson, OH
286·4772
Vrs" Us On tho Web AI
www.crlmlnalreco&lt;ds.com

• ,

O&amp;TELINC

• PoinseHia baslcel\ •

56/lt

CRIMINAL RECORDS!!!

SCENE? THEN CALL THE

SI.1S-S9.9S

lboaulfully"-«•~ tt111 op to I~

O'DELL LUMBER

ANXIOUS')

• Poinsellitrl, all (~

992-sns

Christmas
· J
Open House
"'
Grace Episcopal Church
326 Main St. Pomeroy, Ohio
Friday, December 12, 1997

Personals

TO MEET SO&amp;IEONE?
nRED OF THAT OLD BAR

\"\.':1.. '!1

Open Dally 9-5
Sunday 1-5

Creative

005

Syracuse. Oh

S6.95-SI2.9S
• Uve wreollt1· Sl 0.95
• Cut Ttm· SI0.9S·S1S.9S

LEATHERMAN MICRA
$19.99
ORIGINAL
LEATHERMAN $39.99
634 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY
740·992-5500

ANNOUNCEMENTS

HUBBARD'S

. Get Yowr·Messat• Across
Wltlt A hiiJ Se•tiltl

tiWII

Sandblating
Alllque Tractors, Cors
&amp; Etc.

Gravel, Sand,

· Limestone,

I '

ng • Aluminum Welding

Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching
Umeatone &amp; Gravel
Septic Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites

HAULING

.

'

Acceti Regulator Repair
State Certified Welder

3:00-9:00

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

,,.Pitt ••

OPEN EVENINGS AND WEEKENDS

121511 mo.

County

Recorda Commloolon oholl
meet December 16, 1997, at
3:30 PM. at the Melgo

1

0. St. lt. 7 161•) IINQ3

..

.

I

_.
CHRISTl-1 vAAS
TREES
'l8
1

information please contact Field

Recycling Center.'·
The atlentlon of the

°

Gravel, Limestone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.

Hartwell House

Bid envelope. "Bid lor

tho labor lor a "Recycling Meigs, Vinton Solid Waoto
Center", for tho Gfllll, Monogomont Dlotrlet
Jackaon, Melgo, VInton raaorvu the right to reject
Solid woo1e Monogomonl ony or oil bids. No bidder
Dlllrlc!, 10 bo loeotod on moy wlthdrow hlo Bid lor o
Now Hompohlra Avenue, . porlod of olxty (601 doyo
after the date ael for lhe
WoMotan, Ohio 4Ht2.
All Bldo sholl bo modo In opening thorool.
8YORDEROF
conformity with tho plano
THE GALUA, JACKSON,
ond opoclllcetfons obtolned
MEIGS, VINTON SOUD
from the ontco ol 1he owner
ond oholl bo on tha forme
WASTE MANAGEMENT
bound In the opeclllcollono
DISTRICT BOARD OF
DIRECTORS
ond prapored 11 outlined In
tho lnllrucllono to Blddtra
Llnco Wilton, ·
Executive Dlroctor
ond Supplemontory Gonorol (121 3_, 10 2lc
CondHiono.
Plone end epocllleetlone · ;_;..:.._P_u_b_llc_N_o-tl_ce
__
moy bo obtolnod lrom tho
own•r ot 722 Eoot IG1h
PUBUCNOTICE
Str..t, SullO 1, Welloton,
Tho Rutlond Vlllogo 11
Ohio 45112, for o twenty·
live dollor ($25.001 dopoolt now occoptlng blda lor
modo poyo!M to the owner. Bockho•580 Coot Conot.
Dopoolto will bo refunded King $2500 min. bid.
Dump Truck - 78 Chevy
upon tha rotum of tho plano
Dump
C·30, $500 mln.. bld.
ond opecllleetlono In good
condition, and wllh pootego · The vllloge rooorveo tho
chorgee propold, within ton right to oecopt or rojocl ony
(10) dttYI ofllr tho dote bldo or all bide by 13th ol Jon.
ora opened. The dopooll will 1891.
not bo rotundld upon rotum (12) 10, 11,12, 15, 18, 5tc
of doc:umento et a lot.r dllo
Public Notice
or In INJd condition.
Bldo ora to bo sooted ond
lddrooNd to tho Altontlon
PUBUC NOTICE
ol tho Executive Director,
Nottco 1" hereby given
The Gllllo, Jockton, llolgo, 1htt tho llolgo · County
VInton Solid W- Automlllc' Dolo ProctJollng
Boord llleH Jlllel Dectmber
llonogomont Dlotrlct, 7122 11 1117 et 4 00 a 11 1 th
bot 1oth StrHI, Sullo 1, llolgo
' Coull1y
•
: Commloolonr. ' n
Wollllon, Ohio. 45812. H .,. Ofllco.
lorwerdod by mall, tho
Money Pork Compbell,
Holed onvolope contolnlng,
S.C
the ltd mull be onctoNdln (121 10 110
· · rawy
onother envelope 1ddrae•
ad •• - · • · Blddora ohall
11... on tho ollllldo of tho

WILL HAULJilt CALl·.

workers . to fill positions. On-theor

.. J" '" •••"·
Wreaths· Swags Roping
Grave Blankets
$5.00 &amp; Up

9J2·7074

Ttiumb • Inc.,

t

'l8

~~~:·~·=·,=·~·sl
::RAD:=::;:::-U=-=·~:::
O=R=UP.===,A=IJI~
I CAIPDiif

111 1111 8 COOLIIII

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

Gallla,

R. L HOLLON

1OI2S.WI!fn

SeoOiinoSoulheastern OH &amp; WV

..

Wagon Rides on Weekends
Rt. 33to Darwin, East on Rt 681, 4 miles lo Cherry
Ridge Rd., 11/2 miles to tree farm, FOIIO'rlf signs.
Dally 10 am 111 Dark
Nov. 28 thru Dec. 21 1112411171 mo. pe1

(Paymemsbasod on approyed~~-~~~)=~~~~~=~~j

Card of Thanks

The

·

Any Scotch or WMe Pine· $15.00

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agrlculturel i.tme,
Limestone • Gravel
Dirt • Sand
985-4422
Chester, Ohio

.lllf!ftfla.

Code, notice Ia hereby
given tholthe Molgl County

of maletlal and performing

'1 .,

Ed

biddero 11 called to the
requlremonto as to the

Notice to Bidder•

~

•.

Rt. 124 Rutlend; Ohio 742-3051

Niesel Duvall·
Gerard
LQVE,
Erl(l,

I

For Details Call

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

I

lI

Custom Made for Your Loved One

BOB SNOWDEN'• LOT

I

•

•

$10 &amp; Up

.V. I

1

9

Qb--------------------~

CHRISTMAS TREES

"One must keep in mind that no •
wartime pope did much to save Nazi
victims. Pius Xll's defenders also aspect of the Holy Sec's activity, ,
argue that he believed he could be •including diplomacy, is separate from
more effective by maintaining tic~ its c~scn!!ally religious and spiritual
wilh the belligerents and not endan- miSSIOn, he satd.
gering Catholic or Jewish communiThus the archives deal also with ;
tics in Germany 'lind elsewhere. · • "'problems of religious character and 1
In his statement. Navarro-Valls delicate personal questions of con· • ~~
soughl Tuesday to defend why the science" of peop)c whose privacy
VatiCan's archives nrc open only "must be always be· respected. even
through 1922.
after their death." he said.

,

l.Mtl.'''''''''''''MI1'r'f' r'l''r A.M.; ,

1
JEFF WARNER INSUbNCE
J.

BEECH GROVE ROAD

I
=
I'
ADOLPH'S
'
If

. ........ ..

.~••'
•

•

3&amp;00 Communications

RUTLAND
AMERICAN LEGION

Nobel wi·nners grappling
with pext campaign step

I,

~· ra

CELLULAR PHONES

Remodeling

II &amp;J

keep fossil fuel prices low.
. sions by 15 percent below 1990 lev- holes" i'n the U.S. posilion, especial- ,
The treaty had set only voluntary els by 2010. · .
ly.tlle American idea of internation- ·:
goals for industrial nations to roll
The lrans-Atlantic argument over al trading of emissions quotas - •
back greenhouse gJIS emissions to targets and limetables dominated the allowing U:S. plants, for example, to :
1990 levels by 2000. Because few conference.
obtain the right to continue emitting. '
countries were meeting that goal;
by buying "rights" from countries· •
governments deciqed in _1995 to
The United States conlended its that underutilize their quotas.
:
negotiate mandatory cutbacks.
"zero" plan actually amounted to a
The Americans wanted to cover ·
The gases, mostly byproducts of 30 percent reduction from what U.S. up to 50 percent of tbeir emissions
fossil fuel burning, trap the Earth's emissions would be in 2010 if no cuts via such "offshore" reductions.
heat when they accumulate in the controls were imposed.
The Europeans wanted to limit trad-·. :
The Europeans objected that as the ed quotas to one-third of a nation's ~
atmosphere.
An authoritative U.N. scientific · world's biggest emitter of carbon cutback requirements. .
assessment in 1995 found global dioxide ;- 24 percent of the global
Another U.S. demand :.._ that
temperatures rose slightly in the past total ~America needed to do more. developing countries also submit It&gt; ;
century, apparently in part due tp
Vice President AI Gore, in a one· · binding reductions - met even •
human activiiies, and would rise up day visit Monday, authorized the U.S. tougher opposition.
'•
to 6 degrees more by 2100 if emiN· delegation to come off its "zero"
Throughout the years of talks. :
sions were not controlled.
position. 'By Tuesday, European developing countries have becn .• J
Suchwanningwouldshiftclimate sources reported the U.S. team was exempted from mandatory emissions ·
zones, disturb weather patterns and offering reductions of more than 5 cuts. But the U.S. Senate threatened . · 1
raise sea levels- because of melted pen:ent.
to withhold ratification of the proto- · ;
glaciers and heat expansion of the
The complex, highly technical col unless it extended the cutbacks 10 · ;
oceans - Oooding islands and low- talks offered negotiators many ways some Third World nations,
• ••
lying coastlines.
to adju~tthe balance nmon11 panics:
Having won few Third World '•
Clinton has proposed that 1990 lha chemical compounds to be cov- concessions hcre.thc CliJnon adminlevels be retained as the binding goal, ercd, the ycar-by-year timetables, istration is expected to try to later
to be achieved between 2008 and the "baseline" yeurs for measure- negotiate bilateral agreements leading
2012. The European. Union proposed ment.
to emissions limits in developing ,
a more ambitious plan: cutting em isThe Europeans objected to "loop- countries such as China.

Vatican won't ope·n records ori Nazi gold

~

Custom Homes

.

Negotiators work to save golbal warming pact

. .....

.

5171 Saturday December 13th
1997 1 1-&amp;pm. Hartford WV. R.riraes Welcome!

llcre4y'o Curlo,..y Sloop
221 Main Sl. Open Monday thru
Saturday 1 2·1pm. Booka, cralts

· I supplies. Candles 20% ott.
Severe! In thop ape&lt;:iala. Craft

~ lOki on conl9tment

Now opem Rllclne Vtritty Store.
329 Third Stree1, Rllclne. Oh.,

et.Q Ul 0&lt;111 Piggy Clllril.

40

Giveaway

Co11ch I Jenny lind twin bed
lroma,l14-llll2-1122.

Slabs I Firewood To GhiiiRJ,
114--1052.

60 Lost and Found
LOST: 2 Small doga-1 Lhasa
Apso. multi colantd, 1 part Chi huahua &amp; Ponwanlan (looks like

tin)' red fa•) childrena Ptts.
,.._..,, VB Ad, Glllipotia F«·
rr .... 304-S78-32ee 01 30&lt;-m

0181 .
LOll:

Gr11 Hotrod Fluffy FOIJIIto

Dog, Poodle &amp;. Schnauur Mi•
WH.ring Red Collar, 4ntwera To
Name: Maxie, Vicinity : Ria
Grondo, $25 Rtwordt 114-245--

511o44.

K._

Loot bllllold 1111111 ""'"" lor
ohlldNn'o
ChrllllNll
gllto,
.lriclnll'j, 110 qiJOit~l llkod, 814886 1183

'

1

�Wednesday, December 10, 1997

.Page 14 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeioy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally S•aUnel• Plge1S

rw

•
j
.,•
,..

NBA Cro11woi'd Punle
• PHILL)p

3tl0111oollr

••-IOPt&amp;u'a wPUI:IIe

40 .... polnllll

.ALDER

~ ·

41 .. CIIUI

Pt•...
===~
S11..cM'II'Mnd

_,.,_

u-..54
Cit

70

Yard

2 story, Sbedrooms, 2bllha, lol 410 Hou... for Rtnt
lize 12Qx100. $115,000. 30-4·77S.
V18!1.
2 Dad aom...,... 1=. AMI In ICa·
nauvo. 11......,.107. .
3 BedrOom Homo, 1 Botl1, c.,rrot
Gaillo SliM~ C,_, City, II+ 2 Bad~ HouN For Rant On
Grah11111 Bello~ Road, No Pe11,
UOO/Mo.. S t 50 Dtpollt, 814·

Plaaunt Valley Heme Health/
HoePice Services is looking for 1
CoordinaiDr. BSN preferred. Muat
have 5 years erparlence in IU·
pttYislon and managamenl ol 1
home healltl agency. Send reIUrM ro Peraonnel at Pleasant

sale

Valley Hospital, 2620 Valley Dr.

Gallipolis

418 "21

Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550 . AAI

EOE

&amp; VIcinity

2

Sales Engineer : So. Ohio HVAC
Company Hat An Opening For A

61,LYaniSaleaMOII

e.-loAdnnoo.
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m.
1he doy boloro lho od
• to run. Sunday
-·2;00p.m.
Fr!U)o. Monday ed~lon

Residential I Commercial HVAC

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homtl
From Pennies On 11 Delinquent

5alea Engineer. Candi&lt;llte Needl
To Have A BA Degree In t.le-

• 10:01 Lm. SltUiday.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VlclnHy

chanlcat Engineer Or A Minimum
01 5 't'eara EJ.perlence In H VA.C
Sales And Duct Design . We Otftf
Excellent Pay, Health Insurance,
Paid Vaealion, 401K Plus Fringes. If You Are Looking For An
Exciting Challenge Wit~ A Secure
Future, SeM Resume To : Sales

Tu, Rapo'a, RE0'1. Your A.r ...
Toll Free (1) 800-21111-GOOO EJt.
H- 28~ 4 For Current U.tings.

Engineer P 0 Bor 806 Jackson,

on II Run Road, 81tl houl8 on
lelt.
$85,000 firm, call
614-384-2097 or 81&lt;·1149·2838.

All Yercl S11e1 Uuat Be Paid In OH &lt;5840.
Advance. DMdllnt: 1:00pm the
day btlore the ad Ia to run, 180 wanted To

Home In country with 38 acrtl,
only 1 yeafl old, wllh 1wo btd·
rooms, living room, kitchen bath,

room, storage building, with
, one clr garage. Located

I

'

'

-.om Kitchen, LR, 231 -

Flr1t AMo. Gatllpalla, No.,.,,
~!IIIIa., Plus Oopoolt I Utlltlos,
81&lt; us 4928.
bedroom. $400/Mo. Otpoall .
30oH75-4e78,_._
3 Or 4 llodroorna, 2 Botha, ~I·
ton Road In Rio Grande, 1500/

Mo., + Depaall, Linda Horn, Call
71)8.M7·11833.

4 bedroom house for rent In Mid-

dltport, S375 per month, plus
$375 dlpooh, 81oi-llll2-31114.

4 Bedrooms ·In Grein Town1hlp
$425/Mo.. Call Afltr 4:30 P.M.
SUnday a Mondey tdlllon·
House and property, IPPf'Oll . ••- 8,::1&lt;:.:4::411:..:1144:::;::2.:._------Care For Elderly In There Home cres . Ideal atarter home. Beech :
1:GOpm Fridoy.
Uinl Farm And Large Uabllt
live In Days Or Nights, 18 Years St. Pomeroy OH. 30o4.a82-2Q77.
Home Patrlol Area, References.
E11per~nctd, Excellent Relerences, Call Collect For Becky, 614· 4bedroom house, 2 car detached Depooit Required, Shown By ~
80
Auction
•n-6969.
garage, full tlze basement, nk:e pointmant. 61oi-888-705l

anc:t Flea Market
Rick Pearaon Auction Company,
lull time auctioneer, complete
auction
aervice.
Licensed
t66,0hlo &amp; . West Virginia, 304·

773·5785 Or 304-773-5«7.

Wanted to Buy

90

Do

large lot 304-675·8885 leave

Furnlwre repair, rallnlsh and res-

message or 304.075-2081.

IOfation, alao custom orders. Ohio
Va lley Refinishing Shop, larry

Kitchen, dining room, 2 tJe:droom,
living room, front &amp; back full· 2 &amp;. 3 badroom mobile homtl
porches. gaa furnace, city $260-•300, sewer, water and
outbuilding, garage, 1!2 """' lncruded. 814·1192·2187.
of Rac ine, 814·9-49·
2 IIOdroom ~olltt S2751dopoalt,
$275tmo. Reftrfncta required ,
no peta. 30o4'875-4878.

Pnnips, 6) 4-992-6578.
Georges Porlable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mil! just caU
:»4-875-1957.

Absolute Top Dollar : Aft U.S. Sil·

ver And Gold Coins, Proofseta,
. Diamonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry McCoy's Construction, Commer• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second cial &amp; Resident ial, Free EstiAvenue, Gallipoli s, 614.......S.2842.
mates, 614-U6- 1923, 614-24551!94.
Anllques. lop prices paid, RiverIne Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio, Robyn's Home Cklaning Weekly,
Run Moore owner, 61•·992- BI-Weekly, E~tcellent References
2526.
Call Anytime, 814·4•6-2315, H
No ArlSWflf LBave Meuage. .•
All~ no iltm too large or 100
small. Also eatates, appraisals,
refinishing. cullom order a, 61 4·

1192-esi&amp;.

J &amp; D Auto Parts. Buying
wrecked or sat11aged veh it;le&amp;.
Also buying junk automatic

Two 3 bedroom homes lor sale in

Wanted To Buy: Standing Timber

We Buy JuNo. Auto'a In Any Con·
dilion, Call 814'318-11062, Or 61oi4&lt;1.ft\RT.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11 o Help wanted
AVON I All Areaa I Shirley
s-a.30oi-6J5.1.29.
ACCESS To Human Resource

Dovola-nt II A&lt;c:epting Appll·
cations For The Followinu Posi-

liDn:

Faclllllea Support Coord Ina- .
lor: Applicant• Must Have An
U-gqduaro OtotH In Related

Field. Prl¥1ou'a E:~perlenc:e In
Faciliit. . Planning, State And
Federal Regulation Pertaining To

Knowledge .Of OSHA
Rules And Regulations And
Malntalntd Ualntanance /Up
t&lt;eet&gt; 01 Foditlol. Begin"ng Rate
01 Pay" $14.00 /Hr.
Safetro,

Applicants For This Position

..

Ma~

Submit A Resume To Jeannie
Williams, Human Resource Manager, Access To Human Re-

eource Development, P.O. Box
318, Goltipolla, Ohio &lt;5831 .

T~ Deadline For AccepUng Ao·

pllcallona Is Friday, December

Depaoif.

320 Mobile Homes

2 Bedtoom trailer 1or rtnt In Mlddlopar1, OH. 30+882-32117.

61oi-9112·SIIo49.

on all sinQie sections
PH DOWN

on all multi sections.
Uoill!d Tin'e On~ I
FREEDOII-EBal Nltn&gt;;WV.
304-'122·7127.

Business
OpportunHy

No,.,., 61.....S.3437.

2 bedroom, luml1hed, an rlyer, In
Middleport, ulllillta furn ished,

$o19tDOWN

FINANCIAL

2 Bedroam Trailer Addison Pike,
$220fWo., InCludes Water $100

Village of Middleport: also twO
level lots for sale; $55,000 OBO,
614·992-2290.

for sale

tOXSO wlexpando, 2br, fuel oil
hea1, underpinning &amp; block.

INOTICE!
OHIO
VALLEY.PUBLISHING
CO.
11ansmisak:lns. Xl4·773-5033.
recommends that you do busiNon.- Workm9 Washer, Dryers, ness with people you know, and
Sroves, Relngerators, Freezers, NOT to send money through the
Air Conditioners, Color T.V.'s, mail until you have investigated
VCR'I, Also JunJoc. Cars, 61•·256· ""'oltetlng.
1238.
COKE !PEPSI II

lila $Dolano $181oi-:JIS.9906.

2 Bedroom Trailer $300 Deposit,
$300/Ma .. References Requlled,
814·317·7272 Or 614·387·08&lt;0
Alte&lt;6 P.M.

6116.

Will haul junk ot rrash away. $351
pdwp load. 30+675-503~

Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Uodela Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eas~­
etn Nleroe, Gallipolis.
21 0

420 Mobile Homes
· tor Rent

ready to move, 12.500 080, will
trade lor trvc1t 30oi-675-281 9.

2 bedroom, total electric, Crt·
meant Ad , Rutland, 81•·7•22803.

2 -oms &amp; 3 Bedroom Mobile
Aria, No Pttl,
You Par All Util.illes, Deposit 1

Home In Porter

Reference Required, 81•·388·

9162 . .

m

i'-.

MOdlum Size Woad 0oa HouM,
Clrcl• Molal Lowelt Rattt In -~ Built Gral For Clwlornu,
Town, Newly flomOdoiOd, HBO, Will Build By Orr!efa, 814·441·
Clnemu, Showllmo I Diana,. 0117.
- Y Aolt' Or llon1hly Aolaa.
Construction Workllrl Welcome Manumen1 Sale: Quitting Bull·
nual John'a Monumenro ·113 on
81~1 ·5e08, 81~1-51&amp;7.
Until Stock II Sold, 130 Bulavlllo
Sleeping rooma wllh caaklng. Fltkt, Ol''f Qlia, Ohio.
Also trailer space on rlvar. All
haak-upa. Call after 2:00 p.m.. Mrwlng Sale: FruntturaiAnDqutt,
Mandoy ·Friday. Aher 8:00 p.m.
:!0&lt;1·773-5651, MaoanWV.
WHkonda. 1821 Chalham Ave.
GolipoN&amp;(I14,_1180e
460 Space tor Rent
•
I ween
Mabile homo aile aYOIIable bot· Moving Slle: Queen Anne Sofa &amp;
Athtnl and Pomeroy, call Wlnv Choir, USO: Solo $&lt;0: 40
e1+385-43D7.
Ft. Aluminum E•renlion Ladder,
S12!i, 81•~247.
Naw Holland Special Doala:
:,;.:~~:;;.,::::.:::.;_,..----J3&lt;30 Ford 40 PTO HP. 1 valve
MERCHANDISE
:.:·...;:~:- TV unit, $20U, 614· raps &amp; conopy, 4Wd, 116,500.
472 7' hayblno $7,500', &lt;8B v·
ltayblno
18.500. 834 round btler
510
HoUNhOid
Nordic Track Soli Pr.polled 65011titct
•• $8,800. 8« n1und
taOO,
OrJvlnalhi
$tOO,
T,_.miH,
G~
boler 10001 aulD Uo $13,8110. &lt;51
01&lt;-&lt;48-748V.
~
T I~ mowers $3,050. 130 142
5 Drewer Chelt. American Drew,
84 manure apreader $4;300. 145
Cherrr Grave Collection, Like Pin ~~ Machlnu, 1300 To S500 177 84 . .nure - " " t $4,300.
Slo1 Machine ~:·J.f:Hd Ball 155 217 B4 manure sprtader
Now, $325, 8t4-24S.9587.
Gamel100, 814
7..•
2·Now Smldloy 11eor
Apptiancea:
ReconditlonH Pamtray Thrill Shop ,_ buying $4,900.
otullars tOO BU $750. 2 used
Wlsh«s, Drytfs, Ranges, Aefrt- Levi jean•, tDrl, children'• cknh-o $500 each. 8. 75% Financing
gratoll, 00 Day. Guarantee!
muat btln txeg!lenr Condi· avallobto. Keeler's Sorvlc,o Can·
Ftench City Maytav. 814·448· lng,
dan, Tu11doy thrDugh Frida~. ttr Sl. Rt 87 Phone 304-895·
7195.
814.tlll2.:1725.
.
3174.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Prlmtetar, ~ 70 lree .channel a 630
LivestoCk
Waahera, dryera, refr igerators, first month. Don't walt Oulck Jnrangeo. Skaggs Appliances, 7e S&amp;IIIaHon. (FrH bonus, ..1-800- e Y••r old pony &amp;. .saddle, •soo
Vine Street Call 614-&lt;48· 7398, 283-211&lt;0.
090, make nice Chrlatmas glltl
1·800-4V9-3499.
81ol-1102·3048.
.
R&amp;BFumHuro
Newer Waaht'r Dryer Set, t•oo.
- sau...T...ro
wv
61~1-1100, Al1ar 4:30P.M.
Buy,
7 Year 112 Ou1rter 112 Arabic
UIOd &amp; Amiquaa
Gelding 81oi-25U3!M.
'
Pollfo - • LMM , _ , . .
F..niture.
We,_- Anny Surpklalll
Athena Liveltack Sale1: Sptical
30oi-7'73-53&lt;1.
2101-AIIo.
rail FHdor Calf Sele: Seturday,
Oponlt.30CS:OO Man-Sat
Sola, 2 Chairs: 2 Laf11pa;2 Di· Docembor 131h, 1 P.M. Cattle A&lt;·
30oHJS.SOFA C7832)
nette 5111: All Vtry Nice CaN A~ cepted Starting Frldoy At 4 P.M.
101'5P.M.61ol-4-72.
Hllullng Available. ~fl Con•lon·
menl• Welcome. it4·592·2322,
Ao~Jvllllltor, Walher, Dryer, Color Somerville Army; &amp; Camouflage,
T.V., VCR $50 Each, 814·258· Jr. Slzea. By SendY"IIIe Poll 01· 61~08-3531 .
1238.
lice . Ahernoons till 5pm. 304 - Laying Hona 8 Mont111 Old, 81&lt;·
273-5655. Bl'!" Biba $11181.
25M214.

520

Sporting

Goods

2 Traittf's: Orte -2 Bedroom Two 3 Bodraam $250 ·UOtl/Ma., Bob Nordic Track 505 14vg Now
bedroom, 110Vt, rtfrig.,.klr, elec1300: Bollinger Trim Ridar Me.Q!)
McCormick Road, 8tA-U6 8811 .
tric &amp; gu wire ltiYS. $3.000, eto~Now$35,61H44HIM.
7.:!·21J80.
Clearance .On Used 12 And ,_.
Wide Mobile Homes. Kanauga Remingtan 1100 Spedal Fltld 12
1988 Clayton 14X70 3br, 1 bath. Mobile
Homes, Galllpolla , Ohio Gauge Semi -Auto, 21• Vent Rib
Excellent Locations $1,200 + hea1 pump, exc . cond. 30• ·675Borre!, EI{Co!ION Concllttonl t&lt;CIO.
8' 4-448·966~
Wkly Potential 100'4 Fin Avail., 3000. a.5.
Coli 81oi-258.ea!i1 Al1ar 7:00 P.M.
Must Have A- 1 Credit , 1-800 For Rant: 1211:65 Trailer 4 Mllea In Not A1 Home. Leave A M••·
617-e&lt;3l en.• s53A
11M Dou- Aoj,o
· From Chtlhl~e, $250/Mo.. llepollived in, -llrancing
lt Required, 614-387.(1304.
FREE
avaiablt. 30+755-5568.
530
Antiques
CASH
Three
btclroom mobile home, no
GRANllll
Diacount Mobile Home 'Par1a &amp;
Buy or sell. Riverine Antlqvea,
8toi-11112-5858.
College. Sctolarshlpo.
"ccesaorlea. VInyl Skirting 1124 E. Main Street. on Rl. 124,
Bu~ness. Medical Bill~
$299.95, Anchor• 15.00. Awn- One bedroom apartment In Mid· Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
Ings, Doora, Windows, Plumbing dleport, 614-992-2178. .
NavllfAooav.
a.m. 10 &amp;:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 10
SuppUes. Water Heater1, FurnacCaiiToll~reO
B:OO p.m. 61&lt;·9g2·2526, RuiS
es, fiberglas• Steps, Call 61•- Two bedroom trailtr in Mtddleporl Moore owner.
HI00·216·9000 Ext G· 2814.
&lt;48-9&lt;16 Bannon's Supply. 1391 614-992·5039.
Saflord School Rd. Gallipolis,
540 . Miscellaneous
Ohio.
- VICKil.KEN
440 Apartments
Merchandise
Ate Tlteir OWn Bo1181, Work On
for Rent
DOUBLE
WIDEDOWN
DISPlAY SALE
1 Electric Furnace $3VS; 1 Gat
Their OWn Com- At Home
• SIISII
SAVESlOOO
1 and 2 bedroom apartmenta, rur- . Furnace 100,000 BTUteaO, 81oiLeu Than 15 HII/Wk,
Free Oetlvory &amp; Setup
nished and unfurnished. 11ecurlty 446·8306, 1-800·291~
Making OVer
OAkWOOO HC::iAES. NITRO
depatlt required, no pats, 81AJ 17,100 PIR MONTH
304-?S5-S885.
992-2218.
18 Ft Cllell Type Freezer &amp;. 10
-ng Dental &amp; Medc:al
Cu. Ft .Chnt Type Freezer. G.E.
Insurance Claima. No SeNin;.
"E
1 Bedroom Unita Newest &amp; Automatic 3 Year Old Washer.
CUENTS PIKWIDED
FIRSTTIME BU' AS
Cleanest In The Area Near Holz- Autama11c Oryar, FriQidalra Rt·
800·93H621 Ext 9114
er S28AIMa., Plus Utilities &amp; Se- frlgerator With lea M1ker, All
2~-f:=~
Around S200 p., Month
curlty Clepaalt Required, tiD Pets, Good Condition I 614·37V·2720
61 ,._.48·2957.
After eP.M.
1.eoo.251-So 7o
230 Professional
services
Fitat Time eu.- 1 E·Z Financing 2 bedroom apartment In Pomeroy, Beanie Babl&amp;s, hard to gel ~part

-·

•••••••••••••

•••••••••••••

,....

°·

utllltlea paid, no pets, eu-ga2-

2M0r,3800
B•d2'"
• Around I200I 5858.
51°m
50 70

o.. • ·

brick &amp; atone work, 30 yt11r1 ex-

·

perience, ruaaonable rates. 304- Free air, free aklrt, 1•x70 3 bed- 2bdrm. apts., total tlecuic, IP·
895-3591 ahllf 6:00pm, no job to
ptiances furnlahtd, laundr~ room
055/d
$1••1
~~:..0-tsu..e;;n,
"'u mo. facilillet, erose to sc:nool tn town.
lrllllll or 10 BIG. W\L021206
''
App)ications aYOitabla at: Vlllago
v~ -ingston'l basement water·
Fret air, irH aklrl, 111x10 3 or 4 Grun Apll . 149 or call 814·~2~
proofing, 111 basement repairs bedroom S1,350/down, S299fmo. 3711 . EOH.
done, free estimates, liletime CaN 1-800-691-tlm.
guarantH. 1Oy" on jab ex peri.
•58 112 S&amp;cond Avenue, Galllpoonce. 304-675-21&lt;5.
Good Used Recondition like New, lis, 2 Bedrooms, AC, Appliances,
Mobile Homos For Site, Call 614· $425/Mo., 1225 Diopooll, Utllltleo
«&amp;.0175, 30..675-5965.
Peid, 61.....S.21211.

1g, 11197 5:00 P.M. For Additional
Information Call 81•-••t-3010,
8:00 -5:00 P.M.; Monday Thru Fri-

5 Room Aplrrnent $Q51Mo.• Utllor 3 bedroom• Starting at $21195. ltlto Peid, $100 Oopool~ No Pets.
Quick delivery. Call 814 -385· 1!81~4~4~48!:343~~7·_-~:---:-

Laroe s&amp;lection of used hamel. 2

day, Acceas' To Human Re·

card inl8ftl, -rare cornlc1, hard to

find action flgurta. Prlctd btlow
C"urrent markal \IIJue. Ju11 In time
for Chrls1n.s. Call lor latesl Pflct
quotu ond ciOIOIIa. 81&lt;·~tHve menage before S:OOpm. 01

Booll By Rodwlng, Chippewa,
Rocky. Wolverine, Sorel Tony
laml. Gu&amp;ranteed Lowest Prices

Shoo Coli, Ga~pali&amp;

EEoe~.

LIMITED TIME ONLYI 48R, 2
lATH

11 ......._2200.

Susinell olflce seCretary needea. oookMeping &amp; typing experience required, 1110 previous job
reterence required, must know
how to meet the public. Send reIUme to P.O. Box 125, Pomeroy,

this newspaper Is sUbject to
the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it itlegal:
to advertise •any preference,
limitation or alscrimination
based on race, color, religion,

17~

make any sucll prelefence.

limitatiOn 0t CliSCrimlnation:

41307.

knowi&gt;VY accept
attvertisements 10f real estate

Toll Free 1-100-487·5568 Ext.

whl&lt;:ll iS In \llolatlon of the

12170.

law. Our readers al'8 hereby

Exptrltnced Hair Dresser, 614 -

Informed tnat all ctwettlngs
ad\lertised In this newspapet

,..,_,MO, 01oi-25U3311.

·- • u

·

-

OIIU

N"D'T"~C'E

091.Sn7.

REAL ESTATE

NEW aaNK REPO'B QjJiy ~joltl

304-755-71g1 _

New doublewtde· l purchutd~

:!0&lt;1·722-7148,

.

bedroom, 2
bath , ltarllng at $1VV per mo.
3br llomt, t lcrt lot, located In CaM 1·800-e81·1Sn7.·
Gallipoll• Fe:rr, acro11 from 84
Lumber, Price rMucad, nice.
ONLY S..ie DOWN
:Jilol.t75.!1010- !lflm.
ON SEU:CTIVE SINGLE WIDE$
Ftet 0t11vwry a Sftlp
83 trailer, 35'· F l - """"· ,,.,.
OMWDOO -ES. NITRO
ahed, partly turnl1hed, on
30ol-755-see&amp;.
rented to~ Lalle County, Umadllo
Fio&lt;idl, $7,000, 81oi-Dea·2482.
Owner mewing.,..... 2 poymonll,
move ln. auume loin, no pay IUY HOIIII AI LOW AI
M,OOO 1 -5 lldrm., Local GWt. I mont till Ftbru11y 1fga, 1·!10&lt;·
Bank Atpo'l Call 1-ID0-122- 722-71,..or30ol-122·71&lt;0.
2730, X1701.
• WEI'nWOOD HOME IHOW
UIOd l Rtpo Solo
AILillltAI$!100Down
Andll!O Per Month
FreeD-,
___•..,.·800::_·;..2~..,.1..,.·50......_70_ _ _ .
WestWood Home Show U1td &amp;
Ropo Sete Aa Little Aa 1500.00
Down And $150/Mo.. Free Dollv·
ory, 1.!10Q.2S1·5070.
Oakwood 21156 3

Ook Hill, Ohio eued Trucking
Contpoll!&gt; '"-.a E~

OTR lemi·Tractar !Trailtr Otivere. E•oeUant Pay I. ln1urance

- · C0111oH82-el13.
Ohla 8el0d Trucldnv Compan~
lAalllllll For OTR Drive,.. Slrtvie
On T..,. DriVer•. Mull e. OYer
25 YHro Old Willi 2 Years Ex·
lo- And Good MVR. All

r.:

qulpment 11 Late Model Con vendonal Tractora With R~tfer.
WHkl:t Ply, Health lnaurtnce

"' r

t~ t..a-.-37-1714.

'

•o•

'

Simples.

Brand New! Grftt Gihl COI\rldeo
11oraga unit. Bla.::k and cherry.

Never out ol box. $12,5. Holda up
1apea.
Call 814-992-8838 after 5 pm.
to 94Q dlsca, atso .holds

cos &amp; ~Bpes rotinduded.

Brown corduroy over.aized rectlntr, good condition. $50 : brown
tlactric Hit chair, good condition,

FriVillllle dilhwalhor 1!10. 2 12tt

In New Haven 1br lurnl1hed •pt,
deposit &amp; rtferencea. 30.t·ll2·
258e.
'

wood ladderl 120. Part01 IIOVI,

Wodetn 1 Btdroom Apartment,

newly r.bullt, $350: two trltCk top-

814 446..()380.

ptfl fot lang bt(t ·amall lruck,
1100 I $150: colltcUon ol World

·

Klct clun 2bldroom, Wid hOok-

up. Rtltrencn Dopotlt. No
poto.304-87S.S182.
North :lid Ave In MlddiOI&gt;Ott, '"'
apt, turnlshtd or unturnlahed.
304 112 2!111.
Now Taklnv Appllcotlano- 35
Wilt 2 Btdraom TownhouH
Apartmonro $2115/Mo., 8t 4. 4.e.
0006·
OLD ASH VILLAGE APIIRT·
MENTS accop1tng applications.
HUO acc:epltd. 2br. Income llmkl do oppty, s-r, wa10r 1 ...n

lncfudtd fn rent. Man· Frl 10·2.

304·112·3718. Sixth &amp; Qoorgo
St. , Now Havtn. Equal Houalnv

Opponunily.

Square balft of a•cond culting
cl- mhotd hoy, $1.75 per bale,
81.4-8112-3701.

TRArJSf'Ofi TATIOtJ

Waterline Special:. 3/4 200 PSI
$21.95 Per 100: t• 200 PSI
$37.00 Per 1DO: All Bran Cam·
preaaiOn Fittinga In Sulek
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES.
Jactooon, Dnio, HI00-537·9528

550

1885 Mercury Cougar, Good

Building

Condition, Aakln9 $1 ,300, 614·

SUpplies

o448.Q531 .

Block, brick, ,...,. pipes, wind- 1985 Oldl Cutlau BJG, All Power
aws, ltruel., etc. Cl1ude Wlnttrl, With Sunroot 1 Keystone
Ria Grande, OH Coli 81&lt;·2&lt;5·
5121.
~11,295,81&lt;-«8-0524.

Cllt Iron $50. 30A-815-4421.

GG kart, 5 hp, modUitd engine,

Cyclt magazlntl, 0\l'et SIYitrUy,

1950'1, 80'1 &amp; 70'1, tlcollent
condition , S50D lor oil: 81•·2•7·
02111 .
~rubb'a Piano- tuning a repelra.
Problema? Need Tuned? Call tho
l!liono:;;;;.;;_;;Or;,;·;..
81""•-•;.;•;..8_4528.;.;.;._ __

"SCRAWNY''

DID .

SNUFFY
!:ALL
YOU?

1V77 Chivy 1 tan. 350, &lt; ap, 1ro
atee Rot, leoo titan 80,000 mllea'

on molar,

runs good, $1850, 814-~

2&lt;7·4292.

I

ford~

\

19V• F'ord F·150 4x• blecklgoil, l

Eddie Bauer w/cam~r top, eQ

1:

c:oncl
59,000 miles, haa lrantftrlb'f,

Ford ESP txttnded aorvlct poii,:1
cy, tOtal coverage w/SO deduct- '

; :

88 Chivy S.10 piclwp, Sap., runs! )'•
looks goad, w11a~ rack &amp; tool
box, will 1111 wlthlwlthou~. U71l9: l
85 Kawa11~ 185,4 - · good
condition, 4 new tlre1, back
brakes, NW ,_,Ia in mok»r, 1700,

304-ll82-392t.

,YO,' K£,

.

...

fi.QWZ~ (.£\Tit{ /It

\f.£ 1111\T UP e.N..M.~T!OCOF

vans &amp; 4-Wos

~-r

'83 Ford van, aeven pa11enger,
auiOmatlc overdrive, air, crulsa1
runs e•cellant, aoma rust, $800

firm, 61oi-IMV.2483.

·

1vn Chovy • WD, 8 Inch Lilt;
AobuN1 Mo10r 4 Tran., L"' Than
too Milel. On Aobuit Body Good
Sllape, 350 Four Batt Main ~
$2,800, Must Sell Do To lllnns.
1984 'Dodge truck, low mlleagei

1988 Chevy 4 WO, AuiO, EJcellent Condition, $8,000, 814-367·
7755,
19118 Jeep ChorOkee • Doora, Y.
8, AulD, AC, PS, PB, &lt; WD, AMi
FM Cauttte, 74', 000 Wlles1
$3,850, 080. 814-411·1318.
1187 Ford Aero Star E ~tcellen!
Condidon, $2.195, 8t&lt;-.oe87.· .

1V8V GMC 5afar1 CullOm, $4,9511
Oloi-4441-1222
1903 Ford Explorer, Loaded, &amp;1-.;

1993 linilted Ford Explorer, Ok.
Cranberry. Loaded. H,Ooo Ui'.

B1H441·T.ho

·

- t=Oil SALE •

auto;

,JOE

GA~A610LA

AUT061tAPIIEO 6ASE:8ALL

1 994 Ranger •wo 111and cab,;

low miles, loaded, RHse hltc:h.~
cargo cover, $15,000, eu.gg2o~
3112 !lfier 5pm.
·1

ALL I ~AVE
IS A DIME ..
WILL I 6ET
CI-IAN6E?

,,
'

61 ........0231.

.

Cocker Spaniel Female 2
Yea/'1 Chocolata &amp; White Hou18broktn &amp; Very Friendly '100,
81&lt;-258-61104.
AKC

446·18DO.

1989 Chevy Cavalier, 2 Doora, . 88 Jeep Wagoneer limited, • ,
Reel, Auklmalic, $1,400, 1114-379- door, ntw tiraa, aulD, 4J4, $4,98~

080, 81 4-742·3802.

1989 Mercury Marquia Er:cellent

740

AKC Collie PuppiH, With Cllan· Concilon. $3.1195, Uol-44a.0667.
pion Bloodline Only $200 Will 1880 Niasan STD Sharp Good
Hold For Chrlatmat With A Dlr·
Gat Miteaget&amp;t•-446-7278, 8t•poll~ Cei614-«H083.
38a.9082.
AKC Golden Retrlll\let Pupplea,
Reody To Go By Chrls.tmas, $250 1901 Buick Cen1u~y. 4 door,
f; $200M; Shota, Wormed, 61"-· 160,000 mllll, eJctllent running
condition. $2,000, call ar•r Spm,
37V-29111.
.
614-742·2187.
AKC mint Pinachtra, 5 _ , old,
grNt Clwiltmaa gllto, 10 _ , a t 1881 Euro lumina New Tires,
Chriatmas. $200, accep1ing pay- New 8raki1, PW, PS, P. Seats,
menta 1nd deposits, 61.t-9.t0· E•cellent Condl~on, 14,800, 81-4&lt;46-0519 Or 814·&lt;&lt;8·3407 Can
30215.
Ba sa.n 314 wtite Rood.
AKC Cho~olatt Lab puppiaf,
tl91 Plymouth Sundance Red, 2
$300, 814·992·5896.

570

Ooora, • Cylinder, 5 Speed, AC ,
Catsette, 7D,300 UUea, 12,050

OBO 8U·258·6340, 614·258·
6487.

1891 Thunderbird aunrool, new

lilctdl

11194 DODGE SHADOW $&lt;,&lt;gs,
Sill Stralgh Out Or Trade, 814·
Z4s.sen.
·

11194 Dodge Sltadaw ES, atan·
dard, 1ir, svnroof, 38,000ml. ,
good cond., $4.500 ftrm. 304-075Kimball plono SUOO. 304·871· ~~- di.IYI or 304·875.·7121
-··•
••74
-.
::K:-Imblt':':"-:P::Ia_no_B-:V..
__r_t..,.Did:-,..,.E-xc-ot:-. l1n• H~undol Etantro Runs
Grut, Look• Good, Dark GrHn,
$2,9115, AllOr 5:30, AIIUng $5,300, 81&lt;-4&lt;8-111118.

:m ;:.-::l•

f Allr.1 SlJPPI If S
1\ I IVf STOCK

Hond Mollo Clgora With Cuban

1110 Farm Equipment
35 M

F

'
u••r. trguaon 4 Crlln·
JET
dor, Quo! no, • Now Tlroo &amp;
AEFWION MOIORS
Tub11, Spin Oul Whttla, 5 Ft.
RoptlfiCI" Now &amp; Aobuit In SIOcil. Brush Hog, Good Condition.
Cal Ran • ..,.. 1.!10Q.537-1528.
15,500, 30&lt;-875-5887 AFTER 7
P.M.

19 " 4 Mercury Cauger )(R 7. E.r·
cenent Shape; Low ._.lltage; Ont

Owner. Serloui lnqulrlu Only
Call 814·&lt;&lt;8·7527. Allor e :oo
P.M.
1015 Saturn SC:l, Automatic, Air,
Cauene. Trunk

Cru11e, AMIFM

ReitaM. 112,000 Col After 5 ~M.
(So1toua lnqulrloa Only!' 814·
448-4015.

runs
groal, .laakl grft~ $2,500 080,
.
g.
ult
lor
Chuck.
814 84 2483

it

Sunblrd, 1 uto, ale, 2 door,

..

Auto Parts &amp;
Accnsorles

2-.2 Mon10r, for 1990 Plymouth.~

wheels &amp; radlatort. 0 1 R Auto,

Rlploy, WV. 30&lt;·37,2·3933 or 1·

IIOCJ.2J3.V329.

SERV ICES

Horne
. •
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPAOOFINCI

Uncondirionlllilttime guarant~·

Local references lur.nf1h1d. Ea·"
tabtlahtd tg75. Call (81&lt;) 448·
0870 Or 1·80Q-287-0578. R~tra
We~~
-• .
"'•
:--::---::------Appllonce Porta And 5arvlce: All •
Name Brandt Over 25 Years El-,. ·
parltnca All Work Guaranteed, ,
F
c
7'.!ns.ch lty Maytav. 11&lt;·«1· .
••
CIC General Home Malrtltntonce - Painting, vinyl 1tdm", ·
carpentrW", doof'l, windowt, baf'ls. ,
moblle horne r.pelr and fi'Dra. For lrH oaima• cell Chet, 114-V92· ''
·~.

tzc-pwt
tlllumpund
me••'"
Zl Corn

covwlng

Soalb

W~st

North

••

Pass

Pa68
Pa68

23 Bilk lltbilc

24C,_

1
•.
........
:ze
25 ::;:.,,

East
Pass
Pass

Point of orbit,~
In utronomy '

Opening lead: • J

21 -

Are you at your best first thing in
the morning? Or does it take you until
. midday O&lt; early afternoon -· or
evening! ·· to move into top gear?
I agree with Peter de Vries, an
American writer, who said, "I write
when I'm inspired, and I see to it that
I'm inspired at nine o'clock every
morning." Yes, all righc , I might wait
until 9:30 if rhere's som~thing par·
ticularly inreresting i.n the paper.
· Because no one plays bridge at
nine in the morning (except New
Zealanders), how docs chat relate to
this deal'? Well. one word points
coward the key card. How would you
play in four spades afrer West leads
rhe club jack?
You or I •• well. you ·• would
reach chrcc .no-trump, bu\ South
opened four spades because he did·
n't think he could make a slam
opposite a pa.sed pat;tncr and· he
wanted to shut out the opposition.
After West leads the club jack.
declarer plays low J'rom che dummy.
If Wcsc led from the king-jack- 10,
South would haxe had 011ly three
losers: two'hcans and.one diamond.
However. here East wins with the
king.
Did you sec thc necessary play?
You musr unblock the queen' As
West's lead marks him with Chc jack
and I0 of clubs. you must bj: in a
position ro finesse dummy's nine on
the second round. In this way, you
can get one of your hcan los~rs away.
(Alternatively, count your winners:
seven spades, one bean and two
clubs.)
Finally, whar if East decides to
switch to a hean ar trick two (a rea·
son able choice)? He should be care·
ful ro lead the I 0, chc so-called sur·
rounding play.
blum:If you are a new reader of
this column, you might like to buy
Phillip's book. "Gel Smarte~ at
Bridge," which was publish~ in
1994 and reprinted chis year. Th
order (autographed on request), send
a check for$ 14.95 payable to Plrillip
Alder to P.O. Box 169, Roslyn
Heights, NY 11577-0169.

rlclgM,'

2t Roman
lf11IMII'Gr

30 Ob11rved

·--·
32~

Electrical and
Rttrlgeratlon

ReliclenUal or comrnerclll . ~rlng. .,
new llfVicle or repalrt. Mater U· ~

VO,OOO mlltl, $2,995, 8U·742· conaod olocutclan. Ridenour
3802.
Eloculcot, WV000308. 30•·87517118.

- .
\e

38 Lola

41 Opere ._..,.. .
La.
42 TroplcaC nul "

43 .Aai--·44TI1y

48 Sit lor
• pew bill

"'-rr-+-~-+~~

....~·--­
_..

sol:~

52 Auto 1u1t

£
• ;ji

•
:

'.

'·

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~~ ~ml.,.crMt.dbum QUOWtionl byfamoulpearlll. put ..... ~

Each liMi in It'll Ciptler lllndltot anomer. rodlly'f e~ue: s equa;q B

•c z v 0
KVIIKUV
FXLO. N

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A K K VA X ·
VAKVT.W

wvvwz

EG

L ().
EV

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Wll

RON

'"...

OVLFZ,
PCLPZ

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'1.

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EG '

WRL U• '
K X L 0 T V. P P
R0 0 V.
;1,
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'A woman put forty should make up her mind to be ·~
'young - not her lace.' - Billie Burl&lt;e.
•,

-·~

'.

"

•''

'

•

~.

I
1

WHRATT

12 I I 13 I

I
I I I· Is I
NAPWR

-,
'"

...

...

.

I~~, Friendship is a word that by
6
1
·17
.
1
1
L~·==·~·==·::_~:,· lhe very ~I of which in print

I

0 I RT A

••

I-1..1_J.I'--~.1--~1--~1_·· Io ~~~m:: i~·~!:~~'==
will .. ._ the·----.

,..

MELPET

L

..J

you develop from 11ep No. 3 below.

I I 1 I i™~ I I I I I
Adjust - Aloud - Unwed - Reflex - UNFOLDED
Granny thinks thai children are not things to be molded
but people to be UNFOLDED.
·

""
"'

•
••

-·-

JJ

"'
'J
"'

~

Runs Groat! $250.00 Or OB0.1·
(81.) 256•1233
I
:8-::U::D::G::ET::-:P::R::IC::E::-:T,-R_A_N""&amp;M-IS.:
SION8, UHCI /Rebuilt, All TypN,.:
Acceu Over 10,000 Tran1mi1 ·1
;;lloni,.:;;;::..:&amp;:..:C:..:Iu;:IC;;,;ht;;;I:..:6;..1&lt;:..:·Z4:::.S.::5e:.:n;_,
' ;
New gas tanks, 1 ton truck'

810

I'NIIx lOr com

DECEMBER10l

Motorcycln ·

•..s..s.5.
760

t

IDH..-ry
II Tiny .,..tlcle

•

19M Honda 300 EX, Many EX~
!rail E~tcellent Condition 81411

r:::;..;.;.;.;:....-----1 840
11 Grarid Am LE , 4 door,

MAKE ME
AN OFFER

1982 Honda 850 CB 1600. 3D•'
875-3000. a.s. .
:

Urea, 3.8 V·l , axe. cond, power
brakes, p'ower windows, power
steering. 30.t-075·55eo Price re-

MUSical
fnltruments

Yamaha Eltctroruc Kevboard,
,
With Stone!. Excotltnt Condition,
Bonctt~814 HI 253

45,000 Milts, 11 &lt;.800, 81&lt;·2&lt;5•
1513.

215&lt;5.

(cuelord

dMnrt)
I HatJ1111

SCI•M LETS ANSWERS

Options, Like New, AT, AC, CD;

S11Ht1. 373 Goorgoa CrHk Rd. 19M Oadgo- 11,600, 61oi-

-iolllnd

By Phillip Al~r

1995 Toyota TlOO, 4 WD, Mano/

A Groom Sr.op · Pet Grooming.
Featuring Hydro Bath. Don

7

Up after dawn

1!111

i

2 Malt Full German

S VIIIIP'
I TNe Hudlllon

V.lllnefable: North-South
Dealer. North

'

19U Jeep Cherokee country;
4x•. 4dr, all power, hitct1.1
$13,200. 304-875-5428.

female Cocker Spaniel 080, 81 '-4-4&amp;-2e24pupa, 4moa old, $150oa. 1V66 ·Nova, 1985 Lazer, 1987
Recorda up 10.&lt;iltt, good Christ· Coralca, t979 Chevy Pickup,
mao~~pra;aen~t~304~·~93;.7~·2~733~.;;;;;-;;d; I 1154
1967
Oodgo Dakota, 81&lt;· 250·
•. .

canctr

4E-

• 2
• Q2

·'"'·-·

Prix 2
11.000

A 10 5

Saootb

Upton Uud Cora Rt. 82·3 Mil..
South of Loon, WV. Financing
Alloiloblt. :!0&lt;1·4511-1068.
•'
._
•cks
tor
sa••
•
•
720

730

3 AIW-dlnner

• Q 10 8
• K J 8 8
•11.754

• J 10 8 8

2 black

...,0 ,.,..
sa
1885 Pontiac Grande
;""~-.-:nn~;.;;S..;to~r;_,;.~le;_~ I Doors, ••o.ooo Mllu,

'SHd 422 5acond Avenue, Galli·

:potla,81......S.18t5.

t

1 Felobolllnd
2 Arrow pOioon

Ent

4&gt; A K Q J 10 9 8
• A J 2

Lilting&amp;

iblt.l15,000. 30-4-182-2821.

DOWN

•76

• 4 3
• K7 84

You; Area. Toll Free 1·100-21IJ
9000 Ell. A-2814 For Curra•t

&lt;wd. 304.075-11100.

-oon.wv.

West

E••r. e.nk Financing Foi \)led
v--• 101 N0 •
D
1 IC•••
~· c •
.urn own " • "
Vlcklo, lloi-4411-211117.
·
Nood A Car, No Credit? Bod
Crtdlt? Bankruptcy-? We Cen
Htlpt Reestablfth Credit, Mu•t
Moko $150 Week, 'Toko Homo 10
1i0 20% Do
12 M th 1 ..:
wn
an
'
12,000 MI-. W.r"'"tr Avail-.
Tlia 11 Bank Flnonclng, 81 4-4*
8!72, Or814-31U0&lt;2.
•
5alzod Cora From 1175. Patoch·
tl, !;odlllaca, Chovyo, BMW's,
Corvtttaa. Alia Jetpl, 4 wo·a,

1970 Subaru 300; rare Hnd,
360cc, 2cyl Wlolllnjecllan, runa
I drives good. 13,200. Must see

HaaS Chevy Suburban 4JAJ
$oi,SOO, 080, 81&lt;-25&amp;-8381 .

•Q7643

• A 9 3

Credit Problema? W. Can M.a,.

1987 48' Bucktt ~uck; 1981
dtggor-,81f.371H12'/i.

(Ztodo.)

IICI 'tex

• e 53

1118CHIIDOCIIIForl100111
Stlzod And Sold
LocalyTIIII Monf1.
Truci&lt;l, 414'' EIC.
l·lfi0.6Z!
. •2730, X3IIOt,

uu

Rontod
55 Not moving

12-10.1'7

• 52 .

,,so

sasoo heltecf, an 1t8&amp; 8031 .

10 opp. 304.87s.3000. a.s.

N

A Need A Cor? No Crodll, 8ed
Cradll Briruprcy, w. Con Holt&gt;
ReEatoblloh CrOdlt, Mull Mollo
wH kl1y •''k• Hame, uuwn
~
Paymenll AI Law Aa •Gv, ~
Qualify For Tills Bonk Financing,
•••-~1~7
~·-~_,.....::~:7':-'~ -:--:---:­
CARS FOR $10017
Trucl&lt;a. boata.
._.Wheelera, motor homel, IUrnl1Uro, otoclnlfica, camputon tiC.
by FBI, IRS, PEA. Avelloltle rour
oreo now. Call 1-I00-513·43A3
Elll &amp;e3e8

710 Autos tor salt .

1965 Milk VII Runs Good
11.000. 61&lt;·4441·127.8, 81&lt;·38119062.

$4.90ea. Crawford'a Market,

tunitlea.

l39,ggs _ Free delivery. 1-800-

WOrk days, waninga, weekends.
Cell ' ' '· 992-210•, ••tension
237.

Aequlr8d, 1311 Frilt Avenue, Rear,
Galfipols, lt4~2561 .

I Oroh1rd Grell Mixed,
Phone: 1114-.-..e·11.04, 814•441·
0450.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gollan
Upright. Ran Enna Enterprises,
Jocitlon, Ohio, 1·110Q.537.Q528. •

We now have jerky seasoning;
original, tari.,aki &amp; cajun.

Hay &amp; Grain

Alpha

loaat• Free Estimates! Add·On
H..t Pumps Onl1 Sllghty Higher.
Call Ua Today., 1997 II Tho
TWen1y Seventh Year In The
Headng l Cooling ButlnHII 81&lt;·
448o8306, 1.fl00.291.floal.

dtllvtt 1 stt·up at no charge.

800-837-3231!11.
New 28x80 3 or 4 bedroom.

opponunlty l)as~ .

Avail- Ailor 1218th, 1 Bedroom
Unturnro~d
... "·~art-·nt.
..... Ron-.
Rolrlgero10r, oriNt•t
• Disposal
Furnilhtd, Waler Sewage, Garboge, Paid, Oopooit &amp; Reltr"""""

Furnaces, Life·

won• lit on my tal, mull Hll, will

Includes aklrtlng, deluxe steps
and setup. Only $187.08 per
monrn wilh $1D75 down. Call t ·

lime ragillered x-rat technologist.

comended, 6U-4-41-1982 FrN

I=;:'!~~F~o~r~R~o~n-t
814 ue 8221. -:0:-n~F-1-rst

640

time W8franly On Heat Exchanger. "If "''ou DOn't Call Ut We Both

BEAUTIFUl •PARTMENTS •r
~
,.. $-400; 131~992-3821.
BUDGET PRICES AT 'JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Wtltwood Orlvt
BUY CARl FOR $100111
lrom 1280 to $334. Walk to ahap Seized And Sold Locally Thla
&amp; movlet. Call 814-446-2588. Month. Trucks, 4x4's, Etc. Being
EquaiHoullngOpporllmity.
Liquidated In Your Area Now. All
;:;:::;;.=.:=.:::.:.::::=.:::;:;!;____ Makel I Modell Available. Call
Downltairs Apartme.nt, " Rooms, Tal Free 800-522-2730 1 4-420.
AKC Aegietered Chow Puppies
Warer Paid, NO PETS, Vt Cedar
With Pepars $100 Or Trade 814·
Sreet,814-388-1100.
Child's kitchen ensemble: double 24s.06t3, 81&lt;-2&lt;5-5037.
Etflclencu A-•D'Titnl Rio Grandt stroller; double jogging llroller;
Australian Shepherd pups, 2
•• • ~
higl1 chtlt: 614-9112·58V5.
• 240/Mo.,
AU Ullll1iea Included.
NSDR fematts, ahots currant,
O•paah Required, 1-888·1140- Concrete &amp; Plattic Septic Tanka, wormed. will hold lor Chrittmai,
0521.
300 Thru 2,000 Galiano Ron $75, 61A-9G-2128weningl.
Evans
Entarpriua, Jackson, OH
Graclouali~n~~. 1 and 2 bedroom HI00·537-V528.
Three Jack Au nell lltrlar pup·
apartmantl .at--vtllaga Manor and
piN, $250 each: two malo minio·
Riverside Aparunants in MlddJe· Firewood, $40 A Truck Load 0• turo Calli~ iSholtloa) puppto ,
1
j)Oft. From $238-$304 - Call 111AJ· livered Call6t4-AJ48-43e2 No Antt25-: 814·7&lt;2-2050.
9112-506•. Equal Houolng Oppar· -Leave MM-.

New 1998 1~r70 thrte bedroomr
includes 8 momha FREE lot rant•

are available on an equal

tmmodla"' openng lor lull or part

$2U

Save thousands. Call now tor
into. FREEDOM HOMES of Nitro,
Wv -· 7~ 7127
~- "".
·

Tills newspaper wilt not

Eeay Work I Excellent Payl As·
1embl1 Productl At Home. Call

DOWN

America's large11 faclory outlet
haa purchued toni mobile
home dealership1 All Inventory
must be sold Wilhin 30 days.

origin, or any Intention 10

Ottecllve • Private lnvastiptor,
Traintll Gaod Wage• 814 -523-

$1 1441

Mob!~ H
2 Ganl- On Lo•
~ ome,
t •t• 2~"Polllbt.
Land Cont-·--·

se)( tamila! status Of naliooal

. Ol1la &lt;57811.

2

MONTH. Free air &amp; aklrdng. Only
at
Oakwood Home• Nitro. WV
:JOC..755-1115.

Natu·

PLUS 3C)ot..e75-aol.

80TTLED WILL POWER! LOSE
Bedroom apartment lor renlln Up To 30 Pounda, 30 Oar U~ney
Pt. Ptouant. 304·875·21 74 or Back GaurantHI Natural, D1. Roo

• All real estate advertising In

ral And LP Gat

Entclenc~

'-'-&gt; 5:3CHI:DOpm.

9621

Avon 18 -118 IHr, No Door ·To Dour Quic:k Casll, Fun &amp; Relulng, i.aoo-738.0168.

WARitf UP; Hl!lh

Pupple' For 5ale $75
81oi- 1987 Chryolor Fifth AvOnue: 19118
-7278, Blol-3811-2.
Lincoln Towne Car: 61&lt;· VV2·
51195·
5
Rod
Tick
Coon
Dov.
e
Weeki
Beautiful Buck Stove Instant Un.
ven1td Gas Fireplaces. Severt! I old. $50.00 oocll, Call Cl1&lt;' 258Models to chao•• from. PAINT 118511
ca~

eourct Development Is An AAI

·

Helaton 530-8001 round baLir

I7 ,DVS. Henton 540·10001
round btler 810,900. Henton T
hayblne $7,800. Round btlo Sl·
love wrapper M.CIOO. •r V pull
rake 14,200. Tye pea1Uro pieaHr
12 hoe 11D·till drill 18,800. KH1·
ofa S.rvlco Centor St. Rt 17
~ 304 IH 3174.
Hd
Y rau 11 c o 1l· lowtat price In
town. Vtr11 lree Qll - · pro·
pane &amp; ntltUI'II IIJI' on .... now.
Sidor'a Eq.ripmoni 304-875-7«11.
Ntw Farmers Union Tobacco
Warohouae Rlplay, OH. 5alllng 4
day.-ek. Call lor appointment.
Salt aame dar,. 1·888·144·•386
ask for Orvll t Whalen Dr c~ll
Edloon MayN30oi-1175-1858.

Rooms

1970 12J85 London trailer, two

HARTS MASONARY · Black,

Agco·AIIIa Troctora &amp; Har Tool
Sore: Avco·AIIIa • 880 2wd 52
PTO HP radial tlroa, 1 remolo
valve, 12 IPttd ayncha tran 1 ,
ropa. &lt;yr. or 4,000 hr. drlvo 1rotn
_, 001", world famous air cooled
•
diesel. 115,500. 4 Wholll drive
tqulppod 10018 way $20,900. ·

One bedroom Ojlllr11MIU In Mid· McCulloch Eager e.evor Leo!
dloport. aH Ullltiel paid, 11270 per
~ Yocuum, Elecrlc
0P
month, $100 llopoall, 814·U2· Motoriz.d
T
.
-••
'
·'
HP
Mo10r
Adju
7808.
8 mp/1• 3 In11 ne~I~TTa
8
c
•
t
ana,
lmtr,
TWin Rivera
naw· ~na 0 1 - And Colorloa Burnrpeed,
applications lor 1br. HUD oubokj: tat Penol. SofotyDIIIOOIInect DlolAnd
:~;r· for ltlderly and handl· Hand Rolla, Llkt Now Hordll
EOH :!O&lt;I.07!&gt;887V.
UHd, G(81t Chrietmaa Glftal
$200 Paid $350, Colt Aftor 1:00
450
Furnished
P.M. 3iloH75-!433.

. a

sure ~o slate

your zodiac

CAPRICORN IDee. 22-Jun. IY,-.••;... , he
Extravagant urges could ovcrwhdm valoc something told to you by one
ASTRO·ORAPH
you today if you lack finandal disci· who is nc\1 IIMIIrustwonhy.
pline. Be prudent in muncy mallm
CANCER (June 21-July 22) II is
and restrict your purchuscs lo essen- hcst nnrtu take financial risks today
BERNICE
in arctt'i in which you arc unfamiliar.
BEDEOSOL tials.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Cl·l'eh. 19) In Yrw wnn' t like it if youJJAVC co pay
order IO promolc good will 'll111111~ · fur another's mistukcs.
your peers roday. you mighl pmmise
· LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22' Not all
,more than you are able to deliver. Be ynur associales will abide by your
generous but alsn he pructicul.
lofty standards. Keep this in mind if
PISCES (Feb. 20-Man:h 20) It is you have to ncgllliate a maucr wich
k~~~!1;~aB:!Dec. II. 1997
impcrarivc rhac you di sringuish someone you don't know too well.
''
you have acquired hctwccn posirivc rhinking and wish·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepc. 22) You
chrough personal experience will be ful expectations today. The former will have a sharp eye for decails
pu( .to constructive usc in the year enhances success. the latt'er courts, today, bur your vision could . be•
ahead. Your new approath will offer failure.
blurred when if comes to seeing the
bcner resulrs and greater recognicion
·ARIES (March 21·April 19) big picture. Wear your bifocals.
at work.
.
Marerialtrends.could be very whim·
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Sched'SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. sical today and norhing of value is 'ule your time 1oday so that your
21) An interesting project mighC not likely to be gained if you take oppor. duties arc given prioriry over plea·
be as easy to execute as it appears on· tunicies for granted. Capitalize on surable pursuits. Without an agenda,
rhe drawing board. but do noc usc this your advantages.
•
productive hours might be scjuanas an excuse to call ic quits. SagillarTAURUS (April 20-May 20) dered.
ius, treac yourself ro a binhday gift. O~jective~ you can nonnally achieve
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Send .for your Astro·Graph predic· • wtth relalrve ease could prove to be Beware; you mighr base your judg·
tions for the year ahead by mailing $2 rather difficult Coday. In competitions, mcnts upon a faulty premise today.
and SASE to AsCro·Graph, c/o Jhis don't underestimate dissenc~rs.
Instead of mak.ing impulsive agree·
newspaP,er. P.O. Box 1758, Murray
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You mcnts, go on a fact-finding mission
HiH Station. New York. NY 10156. arc noc easily deceived, but today you first.
I

r

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