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                  <text>REBATES UP TO $2500*
FINANCING AS LOW AS·2.9% APR~ .
ON NEW·CHEVY TRUCKS
3.9%, 60 Month Financing on all New Chevrolet Can
Best Inventory
Best Hours (5 day work - k , 1 week off &lt;Nery 2 months)
Best Adverllsement
Best Ccmmlsslons (Average $40,000 per year)
Best Ccmplete Banaftt Package
·
We need 8 of the BEST car Salespeople who are wiiUng to
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·510 EXTENDED CAB
LSIW:KAOE, AlA, ALUM.

'M EIUMORE

$1'3• ~,,

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will be hired ...
West Virginia's L.arg,st Chevrolet and .Oidemoblle
Dealer Will be hiring a few profeslfom!t .....
people. Any previous sales experlene9 ·~
helpful but will not be essential to bbtaln a positiOh.
C&amp;O Motors New Car Showroom · ' '""
ASK FOR STEVE NICHOLS

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ASK FOR DAVE CARNELL OR DAVID SETSER

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2854

Buckeye 5:
. 8-10-15-26-33

Sports oo Page 4

Mottly cl.. r tonight,
Iowa In
mid
201 •
Weclnead•y, tunny, hlght
In mid 40t.

.

Yol. 41. NO. 170
C11117, Ohio v.lley Publllhlng Compa~

2 Sections, 12 Pagea. 35 A Glnn.tt Co. New1p~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 16, 1997

Middleport Village Council
adopts budget for ·new year
•

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1

NEW97GEO

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• USED TRUCKS • USED TRUCKS •

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
The 1998 budget adopted by Middleport Village Council at last night's
meeting lists anticipated expenditures
of $1,148,779 from expected revenue
of $1,250,691 next year.
Anticipated revenue and expenses, listed respectively, from the various funds, are as follows: general
fund, $501,706, $499.422; street
f4nd. $72.000, $69.520; fire equipment, $34,900, $34,600; fire truck
fund, $47.000, $46,000; refuse fund ,
$100.000. $83.,437; water system
fund: $237.155, $21 8,800; sewer
system, $197,280, $191 ,800; recre. ation fund, $17,000, $17,000; ceme·
LONGnME COUNCILMAN HONORED • Longtime Pomeroy
tcry fund, $17,900, $17,900; and
Collncllman William Young, left, was recognized for his 24 years
meier deposils, $5,000, $5,000.
on .Pomeroy VIllage Council Monday night. Here, Mayor Frank
Other sources ofrevcnue listed in
Vaughan.presents Young with a plaque.
the budget include $3,000 from miscellaneous and collection of old fines
in the law enforcement fund; an economic development fund of $9,400;
and a law block gram of $8,350. The
· only other expense listed was
$10.300 from the COP Fast fund.
According tb the current financial
. statement presented by Bryan Swan,
clerk-treasurer, actual revenue
Mayor Frank Vaughan suggested received so far in 1997 totals
By JIM FREEMAN
an additional public meeting to allow $1,324,320.03 while disbursements
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy Village Council, meeting inpul from all members of the fire have totaled $1,198,853.03, leaving a
in .(ll&amp;~lar ..se~ion. Mo~, _qi&amp;ht, departn)el,'l ;a!QII,!I...JIO:I!h members pf balance in_all ftmdo at the end of
~-··second teaclinJ,of 1111 ordi- the general publi•• •before fin;ll · No.vember ·of·s490,174.4t.
nance Concerning the village's vol- approval of lhe ordinance. Officers of
As for next year's budget Mayor
unteer fire department.
lhe fire department have already Dewey Horton and Swan compliThe ordinance, which has been the examined the proposed ordinance and mented the depanment heads for their
subject of some revision. concerns llffcrcd their input. it was noted.
assistance in coming up with ways to
membership and membership - There· is slill lime to make rcvi·
requirements, appointments and sions to lhe documenl before final
tenns of office, officers' duties. com- approval, council membcrs stressed.
pensation of m~mbers, training, driA special public meeling was sci
vers, discipline, m.cctings and asso· for Dec. 23. 7 p.m."in council chamciation formation.
bers lo discuss the ordinance preced- By JIM FREEMAN
· Firelighter Howard Mullen poini- ed by a hearing 01\ insurance bids at Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Board of Comcd out several things thnt he wnuld 6:45p.m.
like to sec revised including the
In other business, council missioners Monday afternoon opened
classifications of lirelighters. a lime approved scparale resolutions a bid for a new ambulance and
limit on how l&lt;)ng peoplo can leave approving a cooperative purchasing approved the purchase Of a new fire
·
the deparlmcnt nnd still fl'tum to agreement with the Ohio Dcpanment truck.
Acting
on
lhc
rcquesl of the
active slutus. and 1hc formation •11' of Transponation. placing outstandChesler
Township
Volunteer Fire
· associalions -- which he said docs not ing checks in escrow, adjusting 1997
Department.
the
board
approved the
involve the village.
appropriations, raising the salary of
. The ihree-pagc ordinance. if the chief of police to $25.000 a year, purchase of a new pumper truck for
. approved. will consolidittc a nne-page and establishing Christmas bonuses the fire department at a cost of
$155 .294 from Finley Fire Equipordinance approved in. 1991 with for village erriployees.
:addilional sections ihat have since
Council also merwuh Bill Quick· been added.
C..:ontinued on.page 3

Pomeroy Council OKs
second reading on fire
depart.ment ordinance

d~crcase

next year's expenses while
working to generate extra revenue in
their respective departments.
Carol Cantrell, tax administrator,
discussed the difficulty in keeping
track of new r.esidents who should be
·paying the village income tax. She
presented a revised application fonn
for village water service which would
alert her to new residents with household income. Council will have the
application reviewed by the village
· solicitor lo be sure there are no violations of legal rights.
No action was taken by Council
on hiring a purchasing agent despite
the mayor's recommendation of Linda Broderick, an employee for the
past year. now doing similar work .
He spoke of her qualifications and
experience, as well •• her flexibility
in working in various other village
dcpanments. a requirement of the
new position .
•
Harlan reported that several
applications have been received for
the job. Council decided that some of
the other applicants should be interviewed and set up a commiltce of the
mayor, Swan, Bill Browning, village
administrator. and council members,
Rae Gwiazdowsky and Sandi
lannarelli, to do that
Council awarded a refuse collcc·.t~ eoniract for three yean to Rump.. k~ •of Wellston, Of. tho three bids·
received, Rumpke had the lowest of
$6.50 per household with a reduced
charge of $6 for senior citizens.
Other bids were from Modem Sani-

LAST MEETING • For John Neville, left, and Eric Chambers,
right, Monday nighfs meeting w•• their last •• members of Middleport VIllage Council. Just before leaving councll chambers,
they posed for e picture with Mayor Dewey Horton. Neville completed one four-year term.·Chambers wea 1ppointed earlier this
yeer to fill the term of Mlck Childs, who rea!gned.
tatiO!J, $6.65 reJular and $5.98 senior
citi1.cn; and General Refuse, $6.69
regular, and $6 senior cilit.cn.
A spokesman for Rumpke said
there would be no limit on the

•

amount of refuse collected, 1ha1 bulky
items would he Iuken. and that they
would work with the village if they
want to start u recycling program.
Continued on page 3

Commissioners OK fire truck purchase

ts CIIV. WIILVIUIO

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5 SPEED, AIR, V.. ENG., P/WINOOWS,

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-'18,577
WAB$30 ......................- -

ITDP BY
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2 OOOR. 5 SPEED. AIR. PIWINDOWS, PILDCKS,

-'11,444

ts
CII¥Y 111101
4X4, 2 DOOR, oWTO, AIR, MO ENG.,
P{WINOOWS, LOADED EXTRA SHARP.

'!'AII27........................... -

'25,330

'2t,lt0

VIIIT
UTiliTY liT

3 EXPLORERS _.
5 TAHOES ·
2 SUBURBANS 16 S-1 0 BLAZERS
54 RUNNERS
3 JIMMYS
6 GRAND
2 TRACKERS
CHEROKEES 1 BRONCO
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4 CHEROKEES 1 PASSPORT
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2 WRANGLERS 1 AMIGO.

mcnl, McConn~lsvillc.
Commissioners opened the sole
bi,t from Burgess Hearse •&amp; Ambulance Sales of London ville for a new
ambulance for ihc Meigs County
Emergency Mcdi~al Service at a cost
of $57,085. Commissioners tabled
accepting the hid pending further
review by EMS oOicials.
The board accepted the sole hid of
$3041rom Eher Pickens. Racine, for
the purchase of the old Rutland
squad.

Concerning propnscd road ahandonmcnts and dedications. the hoard
will· view a mud in Salishury ToWnship. located nil' Lc:lding Creek Road
ncar Middlcpon. on Jan. 26 ut IO:JO
a.m. for pos.&lt;ihla dedication. Hearing
on ihe dedicalinn will he lhc same
day at I :30 p.m. at the cnmmissicmers' oflice in the Meigs County Courthouse.
In addition, commissioners will
view Phillips ~oad in Scipio Township on Jan. 19 at II a.m. for pur-

poses of dedication. Public hearing
on the matter will the sam&lt; day at I
p.m. in the commiSsioners' oflicc. ·
The board will view Smith Hill
(Rockhouse) Road in Salishury
Township Jan. 26 at II :311 a.m. for
purposes of abandoning the road.
Public hearing on the aloandonmerit
will he held 1he same day I p.m. at
Ihe commissioners' ollicc.
In other business. the hoard :
.. Approved membership of thC
Continued on pace 3

Arrests made in school break-ins, robberies·

Mason woman said ·:
kidnap victim at Kmart
Gallipolis Cily Police arc continuing an invcsti~ation in10 the abduction of a Mason County. W.Va .. woman Monday from the parkmg lot
of the the Kmart on Upper River Road.
The victim told ofliccrs she had paid on a layaway at the slore around
noon and left the building, returning to her vehicle. She was ihen confronted by a man who entered the vehicle and told her to drive him lo
Kanaugn.
The woman informed 11ITicer:; she was phl:skally assaulicd du~jng
this time, nccording lo the reporL
.
.
.
The victim eventually drove the nmn to Or I Hol,low Road on Addrson Township, where they mel with another ,vehicle. Before cxitin~ the
victim's car, the suspccl grabhcd the woman s sunglasses from her lace.
Officers said the woman had some apparent discoloration lo the right
side of her jaw, and there was evidence of scratches on her neck.
The victim lcli the scene and filed u report wuh the cuy pohcc r.nvestigator. The repon did not indicate if the man took any of Ihe woman's
belongings or cash.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Three school burglaries and two
robberies were apparently solved following 1hc arrest of three JUveniles
and three adults over the weekend .
The six were arrested by deputies
of the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department f,lllowing a week-long
investigation of a Dec. 8 rohbcry
involving Reed's Country Store in
Reedsville . according to Sheriff
James M. Soulsby.
It was durin~ questioning of one
sutijcct that ofllcia.ls learned of u con-1
ncction with' three earlier school
break-ins and an utlomplcd mhbcry in
Washingtmi County. Soulsby s:rid.
· The common ihread in each incident. m:cording to Soul shy and Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Lcntes. was '17-ycar-cild Mike
Snloicski from Long Bott&lt;tm . He

pleaded guilty Monday morning to
three counts of hrcaking ;,md entering.
one count of vandalhan and Lwn
counts 11f n•hhcry and was sentenced
to u to1:1l of fnur years.
Lcntcs said Sobieski had good
grades ut Eastern High School where
he was a student. Family members
said Sohicski cmmuincd the ac1s after
hcing turned dnwn ror mcmhcrship in
thL' sehnol's chaplcr of the National
Honor Society. &lt;aid Lcntcs and
Soul shy.
Also charged were:
John Myers. 18. of Long Bottom
who was chilf!,led with breaking and
entering into Riverview ·Elementary
Schml and with the Reedsville robbery. He is being held in the Meigs
County Jail in lieu of$100.000 b&lt;md .
Robert Dalton, 18. of Reedsville
who was charged in the Reedsville
1obbcry. He is hein~ held in the

Meigs Counly Jail in lieu of $100.000
bond.
Matt Barnhan, 18, of Reedsville
who was charged with hreaking and
entering into Riverview Elcmenlary
School .
Jerry West. 17, 'of Rcedsvi lie who
pleaded guilty lo two juvenile counts
of robbery in the W1shington County and Reedsville robberies and one
~ounl of breaking and entering into
Riverview Elementary School. He
was sentenced to two years confinement.
Sevenlccn-year-old 'Daniel Murphy, Reedsville, was charged with
breaking into Meigs High School
from where he was earlier expelled
and Riverview Elementary School.
He was also charged in the Reedsville
and Washing1o11 Cnunty nJbhcrics.
Lentes said Murphy has live prior juvenile felony convicticms and

added that he would like tel try him
as an adult in this instance. depending if the BB gun used in the
Reedsville ruhh&lt;:ry can he classified
as a lircarm.
Eastern High Schc•&gt;l, Mc•gs High
SchcM&gt;I and Riverview Elementary
Schc•&gt;l ncar Reedsville were the
schCNlls targeted with Sohicski.acting
alone in the EHS hrcak -in . In addition. Phyllis Reed , owner of Reed's
Counlry Store in Rccd.&lt;Ville, was
rnhh&lt;:d while members of the group
were alsn arrested in the Washington
County robbery of a pizza delivery
driver.

The criminals thai rohbed Mrs.
Reed allegedly used a realistic·
appearing BB gun to facilitate the
robbery and sprayed her with pepper'
spray, according to rcporls .
State law allow' juvenile dcfen·
Continued on page 3

House Republicans offer $100 million more for schools

days until
Christmas
---

COLUMBUS (AP) - House spending plan, most agencies would
Republicans slaricd ihe bidding on still get more money, Johnson added.
The extra money would be
the next school funding plan at $100
divvied up among Ohio's neediest
million.
That's how much more Ohio's districts as lawmakers lay out lhc
poorest school districls would share · stale's education budge! for next
under legislation GOP lawmakers year. Because of the uncertainty over ·
plan to introduce today, accordiqg to school funding when !he Legislature
Rep. Tom Johnson, R-New Concord .. debated !he stale's two-year budget
The proposal would trim up to 3 . earlier this year; lawmakers left the
percent from most agency budgels for second-year educa1ion budget in one
the budget year beginning July I, lump sum totaling about $4.5 billion.
Johnson said he hoped the House
Johnson lold reporters Monday.
would
finish work on the budget by
Some areas of the state budgetlhe
end
of the year.
including higher education and prisThe
additional money is wei·
ons- would face smaller cuts. Welfare spending likely is also off-limits. come, but hardly cno11gh to comply
And because of increases already with the courl decision, said !he head
built into the budgets over this ye,ar's of the coalition that successfully

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challenged the funding system.
ate Republicans planned to discuss
. The $100 million - if spread the proposal Tuesday.
across all school districts - would
' two or
'There arc, at this point,
raise the state's basic subsidy by less thfl'e plans on lhe table," Ray said.
than $100 per pupil, said William One or a combination could be the
Phillis, executive director or tire Ohio · plan the Legislatuf'\! ultimately agrees
Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy of ·on.
School Funding. But Ohio's basic
But, given the political realities of
school aid is about $2,000 less per
an
election
year, Ray said the House
student than Michigan's.
The Supreme Coun gave the Leg- plan probably was the best that could
islature one year - a deadline that be hoped for in 1998.
Earlier this year, the Senate went
expires March 24- to come up with
a new way to pay for public schools. · along with a plan backed by Gov.
It ruled the current method does !lOt George Voinovich that would have
guarantee a quality education to all asked voters 10 approve a penny-per·
students and relies too heavily· on dollar increase in the state sales tax.
local properly taxes.
The plan, which would have raised an
Sen. Roy Ray, R·Akron, said Sen·

extra $1 . 1 billion annually for
scb&lt;&gt;nls, was rejected aft~r DemO\:rats
and House conservatives refused to
go along.
Both Ray and Johnson said they
expected to consider some fonn of
tax increase eventually.
"I think the governor's proposal
was very reasonable," Johnson said.
In the meantime, Voinovrch whe stands by his plan - suppons
the House budget-cutting proposal,
said Mike Dawson, Voinovich's
spokesman.
"This is just a piece of the puz- ·
zlc," Dawson said.

�•

. Commentary

:. T'*«iay, December 16, 1997

· Today's weather forecast

;

The.·Daily Sentinel
'EstablisliLif in 1948

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT

Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW

CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Controller

General Men-.r

What
is in a. name?
.

By MIKE GLOVER
Associated Press Writer
DES MOINES, Iowa -They're as divergent as the politicians who created them, sort of a fashion statement from candidates engaged in a bit of
self-labeling.
'
They are the political action committees created by those engaged m the
delicate business of running for president.
While it's too early to actually join the race. testing the waters isn't cheap
and somebody has to pay the tab. That's where PACs come into play, and the
way they're structured and named says a good deal about a campaign.
Missouri Sen. John Ashcroft- founder of The Spirit of America PAC" gets downright misty when he talks about naming his creation.
"I hcheve the American spont is what makes this country different," saod
Ashcroft, a Republican. "Ultimately, that's the kind of character that defines
America."
Others are a bit less serious. Ohoo Rep. John Kasich, also a Republican,
has The Pioneer PAC, and .confesses only a fondness for the word "ptO·
neer.n
"It's a cool word," said Kasich. "I like the imagery."
Beyond what a PAC's name may say about a candidate, the committees
can he a ticket to the campaign trail.
I?ACs are almost always formed to advocate for causes, or to help other
candidates friendly to the cause. The one thing they can't do is directly
finance a presidential campaign.
"They can only contribute $5,000 per election. just like any other committee," said Kelly Huff of the Federal Election Commission. But they also
can pay for the travel and expenses of their creator, who runs around the
country on other missions.
·
Hence their popularity with potential presidential candidates looking to
get around the country and become better known by activists.
Minnesota Sen. Paul Wellstone, for example, has The Progressive Politics Network. This allows him to travel and work to "return Democratic contralto Congress. recruit candidates and to giv~ Paul additional opportunities
to articulate his progressive agenda," said spokeswoman Linda Marson.
House Democratic Leader Richard Gephardt has a very serious-sounding
The Effective Government Committee, but aides stress that it has been
around for more than a decade.
.. We're a \ittte sensitive about it Said an aide.
Having tl.: panel in existence for more than a decade would, of course,
date roughly to the last time Gephardt ran for president, in 1988. Since
Gephardt spends a lot of time try in@ to convince other Democrats to run for
Congress, he can also rely on the_ Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee, which works to elect Democrats to the House, to pick up some
.. of his expenses.
Some can afford to sniff at the whole PAC deal.
"It's too early to set up a PAC for 2000," said Ginny Terzano, a.spokes·
woman for Vice President AI Gore. Gore's hectic schedule leaves lottie tome
for thinking about running for president. she said.
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Letters to the editor
Residents may lose home

~-:' There are nine days until Christmas, then 15 days and no room at the inn
• · {county home).
~ • As, in Jean Grueser's letter to the editor, as of Dec. 31 this one blind
~; woman, and many more will lose their home if the commissioners close the
...... county home.
This blind woman, and the others help with their income all they can.
;:• ·they j~st need a little help from us, being in the county home for 37 years
;: ·and no training 'of any kind and blind. Can you. after all your life. in one
• . place, and is being told, up and move?
·; : . If she moves to a new home, number one, she's lost, she's gomg to need
Jot of help, are the commissioners going to see that she is !allen care of'
i: .As for the other residents there. The change is going to he very llard on them.
'; I don't know how they are going to do it. I have hcen up to sec them a lot of
:: times, they are a very happy family now, but not for long if the commis:1 sioners have their way. Like Jean said, it's like putting a small child out in
: ; the world on it's own, _on a wmtcr day of 10 below ..
~
I do ask everyone on the county to send the rcsodents a Christmas card,
!'! may be this would ease their pam some. This is the first time that I have not
seen Qld Santa on the rooftop. or manger out on the lawn as it saddens the
., residents' hearts, and my heart, it is so dark , and gloomy on the out side at
;:: the home.
.
..:; , 1 know on Christmas day and New Year Eve, my hean is going to be very
1:) lad for them.
•
As for they levy, we the people of Meigs County can do better then this.
~ for the home less, and elders of Meigs County. Just think, someday we could
.l lose everything, and someday we may need a place to lay our head down.
: So. let try and keep the councy home and he proud you done something for
, the home-less and keep the family residents together, and happy. Instead no
~ ' roliday joy at the home let there he holiday joy at the hnme for years lo
. come.
. I. believe we the people, and the Meigs County Commissooners can work,
:; this out to save the home.

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The last Democratic president to
serve in the White House believes
campaign finance reform is an ethical must-do.
His remarks on the subject came
to us at a time when the Democratic
Clinton administration continues to
imply campaign finance refarm is a
partisan Republican issue aimed at
embarrassing it.
,
'
Former President Jimmy Carter.
however, spoke candidly with our
associate Dale Van Atta about the
issue. He didn't mince words about
how strongly he felt about it.
The "soft money" that has
become so crucial to the financing
of political campaigns is nothing
more than "legal bribery," he contended, and needs to be curtailed or
eliminated· by Jaw. Soft money is the
unlimited funds that individuals and
corporations can gove to party organization ·- like the Oemocratoc
National Committee .. which allow
them to circumvent hmits on donations to individual candidates.
" I think, nowadays, just assum-

'.

ing that peomake a contribution to democracy seeks to do, might also come with
ple in this
and freedom and peace and human unintended consequences. ,If parties
political age
rights. They expect something in were no longer allowed to collect
are just as
soft money, the money would likely
return.
honest as we
"And they get something in he funneled to other "front" groups
we&lt;e, and
return in that, quite often, their voiee· that run so-called "issue advertis·
just as intel·
and their argument, which might be ing,.. which are usually thinly .disligent as we
quite persuasivl:. is the only one guised campaign ads.
were
heard. If you had a lawsuit, or a trial,
Carter; meanwhile, was -not
which
I
and 'only one side of the !Ul!Ument adopting aholier-than-thou attitude,
think is a Mol11r &amp; AnderiOII was heard by a jury, they would but comparing the way campaigns
good . prealmost invariably vote with the per· were financed and run in the late
sumption •• the thing that has debil- son that they listened to. And thai's 1970s to the way they are in the Iate
itated various politicoans and forced what happens in Washington these 1990s.
many of the best ones out of Wash- days." .
He observed that one ofthe uninington is the soft money that goes
Despite the scandals that grew · tended consequences of the soft
into campaigns, " Caner said, out of the 1996 campaign, there is a · money suppon is that it greatly
"which I characterize legal lukewarm appetite on Capitol Hill encourages the very thing that
bribery."
for reforming a system that's served Americans claim to deplore: negaThat two-word description is not most members extremely well. A tive campaign advertising.
a harsh one, the former president reform propusal authored by Sens.
"There are restraints on soft
e~plained in detail:
Jo~n McCain, R-Ariz.. and Russ money," he explained. "With it. YO!!
"When a corporation or a labor Femgold, D-Wos., went nowhere can't he self-promotional, You can't
union or a foreig~cr or whatever, a this fall •• even though polls show a · take soft money and say, 'I'm
private individual, comes and gives ~ajority of A?Jericans favor its pro- Jimmy Carter, I'.m running for pres·
(Senate Majority Leader) Trent Lou vosoons. It woll be taken up again idcnt. I hope you'll vote for me.'
or the vice president, no matter who next spring, but the results are likely You can't do that.
it is, $150,000. they ' re not doing it to he the saine.
.·
"But you can tear down the charror altruislic motivations, Carter
Restricting soft-money contribu- actcr of your opponent. So this ha.'
said. "They're not just trying to lions, as the McCain-Feingold bill created not only what I still call legal
bribery, but it's also created a major
foundation of negative advertising.
That never did exist when I ran
against either Gerald Ford or, later,
against Governor (Ronald) Reagan.
They were always 'my distinguished
opponent."'
In his campaigning days, Carter
added, "If I, or any of my advcnisemcnts, had personally castigated
Ford or Reagan, or vice vcn&lt;u, it
would have been suicidal, because
the public and the news media
would have said, 'There's a mean
candidate. He doesn't deserve to he
elected.'
"Nowadays, it's an accepted
thing. And the most effective thing
that anyone can do now to·get elected is to destroy the character or reputation of one's opponent. And you
can do it one step away by saying.
'Well, I didn't have anything lo do
'with that. That's just somebody else
· running those ads."'
III'AH
. And.all of it is accomplishc4 with
soft money.
Jack Anderson aad J1111 Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndint" Inc.
II

l::orna...Wendt's·victory·is· not complete·
By Sara Eckel
The divorce case of Lorna and
Gary Wendt has sparked a national
debate about the value of a stay-athome wife's work.
And the conclusion appears to be
that it's worth quite a bit. A Connecticut judge granted Lorna Wendt
half of all the hard assets of the
union. estimated to be about $20 .
moll ion. Gary Wendt, . GE Capitol
Services Chairman, argued that his
ex-wife should not receive half of
the marital estate because he was the
one who brought home the bacon.
But the judge rejected this argument, and recognized thai Lorna's
contributions to the family -7 such as
·pulling her husband through business school. raising the children and
hosting corporate dmners .. were of
equal value to Gary's.
This recognition of the value of
traditional women's work is
extremely hoartcnmg, especially as
it appears to have elicited wide
acceptance from the puhhc . It
appears that the stereotype of the
stay-at-home wife who lounges

around · watchband earns after a divor&lt;c he paid to
ing soaps and
his ex-spouse? After all, the mareating Oreos
riage is over and the former spouses
may he .on its
should he free agents, as It were.
way out:
Here's lhe problem: M.ost women
But there is
aren't ending their marriages with
another, equalgolden parachutes worth millions of
ly important
dollars. So Jet's forget about the
i_ssue
that
Wcndts for a minute and bring this ·
needs to ,he
issue into the real world. Consider a
addressed. Many
Eckel
couple that is dividing up thousands,
believe
that
.
rather than millions, of dollars after
Lorna's 'ictory was a partial one, a 30-ycar marriage. Merely dividing
since Gary was granted the right to the assets in half might .scem •fair
keep all of his unvested stock until you consider the position that it
options (though Lorna receives pay- puts a traditional wife in: After three
ment for a portion of his vested de'cadcs out of the workforce, she
ones) as well as his entire 401 (k) now faces the daunting task of not
retirement plan. The argument was · only finding a job but also of buildthat Lorna should not be entitled to ing a retirement fund ,
Gary 's future earnings.
And th~t 's ~he point that is so
Now, no one is going to sob into often missed: By staying home, a
their pillow on Lorna Wendt's traditional wife is not only denying
behalf. and indeed, overall she is herself present-day income, she is
satisfied with her settlement. How- also denying herself fut~rc income
ever, the issue of future earnings is in the form of retircmcn( savings,
one that should be eKplored.
Social Security and, perhaps most
Because on the surface ·it makes important, earning power. A 50sense. Why should the money a hus· year-old woman entering the work-

force for the first time will ncveo
come close to matching the income
she would have earned if she had
been working for the entirety of the
marriage. Similarly, denying a wofc
the henelit of her eK-spousc 's rclorcmcnt plan and other deferred payment" rests on fallacious reasoning
that the family breadwinner earns
this income on his 65th hirthday, as
opposed to over the course of his
entire career.

By Joseph Spear
Thanks to a painful downsizing.
you haven 't heard much lately from
the Spear Foundation. This does not
mean we haven't been hard at work.
Unlike the affluent thmk tanks with
whoch we compete, we cannot produce,studoes and reports at the pace
we once dod, but we have hcen striv·
ing to keep up the quality. .
For example, our Idea Assess·
ment Team, which is sort of a clearGuy Hysell - inghouse for concepts. has surveyed
Pomeroy the idea literature and is ready with
an update. Herewith, a half dozen of
the finest notions to come down the
pike in the past 18 months:
( I) Cut candidates out of the
political
market. This superb idea,
ly The Auocllted Prna
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 16, tbe J~h day o( 1997. Thcrt are I days left in the year
thought up by visoonary columnist
Today't Hicfllighl in Hi!ilory·
,
"
Dave Barry, is premised on the fact
On Dec 16. 1773.1he BOlton Tea Party took plact ns Amencan colomsts boarded a British
that
our elected officials are routine- '
ship and dumped more than 300 them of tta overboard to proteu tea ta:~~es .
ly purchased by wealthy campaign
0n mi• .....,,
·
In 1633. Oliver Cromwel1 beellme lord protector of England. Scotland and lrel:md.
donors, and we the people get nary a
In 1770. compo&amp;er Ludwig' van Heetlloven was born in Bonn. GCnnany
cent of it. Barry suggests that we
In 1809. Napoleon Bonaparte was divorced from d1e Emprt$$ Joseplnne by an act or !he
remove the names of politicians
French Senate.
from the ballot and list instead the
In 1903, the entcrtmnment trade pubhcallon V:mely came out with tis first weekly issue.
In 1916. Orecory Rospu~in, the monk who had w~elded powerful inOuence over the Ruu- donors who are buying the govern~ cowt. was murdcn:d by ll group of noblemen.
ment. When we pull a lever beside
In 1944. the World Wor II Banle ol ohe Bulge beg31l as Gcnnan lorccs bun&lt;hed a surpnse one of their names, cash would come
counkrallack aaainll Allied force! in Belgium.
r. 1950, Presidear Truman proclaimed a n::.uonal state of emeracncy m order ro fight out of a slot in the voting machine.
Communist imperialism."
.
Thos os a radical notion, an~ it

Tod·ay in hi ory

may take a
while to catch
on. As an interim step-, I
would suggest
that political
donations be
taxed. at the
rate of, oh, 10
percent, and
that the proceeds be dis·
Spear
tributed
to
those of us who cannot afford a
member of Congress. Call it a
Deserved Earnings Credit or some
such thing.
(2) Mine the sky. University of
Arizona professor JohnS. Lewis is a
pioneer on this one. Asteroids and
other heavenly bndies are in fact a
vast reserve of minerals. Mining the
iron alone, says Prof. Lewis, would
provide $8 billion for every person
in the world. Mining the gold, platinum, silver and ocher minerals
would provide more than SIOO bil·
hon for each person on Earth. We
could even pay off the national debt.
(3) Eat insects. Think of the crops
that could be saved and the poor
who could he fed if bugs could be

eaten instead of sprayed and
stomped. Actually, they can be. Here
arc the highlights of a ' recipe for
"Spicy Crickets," published by the
Department of Agriculture: Freeze
crickets for eight hours. Bake at 325
degrees for one hour, or until crisp.
Remove legs and marinate in a blend
of olive mi. lemon juice, parsley,
thyme, chives and hot sauce. Bake
again. Can he eaten warm or cold, as
a topping, as a meat or as a ta.~ty
snack.
(4) Develop lands and worlds in
Nevada. Investors are saod to he
scHrching for property in Nevada on
wJJ!ch they can build a "Holy Land ~'
theme park. This is a divine idea
and, one hopes, the start of a major
new industry in the Sagebrush State.
'
Regular readers will recall my
proposal that Nevada, most of which
is owned by Uncle Sam, he walled
of( and turned over to nativosts,
moralists, anarchists and people who
like to tool around in camounage
clothing. I suggested the state then
be renamed the Nation of Fruitcake,
but there is no reason this couldn't
be done on a smaller scale. Let's
have a Flake Land and a Wonderful
World of Wackos, some places like

•

A second reading to a new water
deposit ordinance wa$ postponed
pending further conlact with Attorney
Linda Warner about a "cap" on the
amount of deposit. The ordinance
given a first reading at the last meet·
, , ing provided for a maximum deposit
to he detennined by averaging water
, . bills on a property over the past 12
months and then ndding 30 percent.
Dave · Bumgardner who owns
rental propeny in Middleport asked
Council to postpone any action for 30
days so that he can stu~y the ordin~lldP ~·J~.PfO~ts l¥dlor\ls,
- He ·also complained about the way ·
Arnold Johnson, Middleport village
.. ' inspector, is handling some problell)s
:". with people Jiving in properties he
owns. He asked that he he contacted
'.;. and allowed to accompany . the
in~pector when he ~oes into the

-

·-·

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"·--------...!.-- - - - - - - · - - - - - - ' - -•

•

SYRACUSE
9:25 a.m., State Route 681 West,
Corbett Ratliff, Veterans Memorial;
4:32 p.m., Vine Street, Don
Manuel, Veterans Memorial.

Announcements

Llghlinl
CODtat
Judging of the Racine Community Christmas home decorating contest
will be held from 6:30•to 9:30 p.m.,
Wednesday.
The area judged will include all of
Racine Village plus homes within a
two mile radius of the village corporation signs. Residents in the designated area are asked to have their
lights on promptly at 6:30 p.m.
Prizes to he awarded are SSO for first
place; $30 for second and $20 for
third.

Lavina Brannon
Lavina Brannon, 87, Reedsville, died this morning at Mansfield. Arrange.·
ments will be announced later by the White Funeral Home in Coolville.

Charles W. Hedges
Charles W. Hedges, 73, Coolville, died on Monday, December 15, 19&lt;.17
at St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
_
He was born in Chillicothe, son of the late Emmett and Ora MacD~n6
Hedses. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army during World War II and a 'ted
maintenance supervisor for Dayton Power in Dayton. He was a mem r of
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053.
Surviving are his wife, Juanita Hedges of Coolville; a son, Charles
Hedges, Dayton; a daughter, Polly Hedges of Coolville; a brother, Paul
Hedges of Coolville; a half-sister, Edna Marshall of Columbus; a half-brother, Leroy Hedges of Columbus; and a grandson.
He was preceded in death by a daughter, Caroline Hedges.
Funeral services will be held on Thursday, Dec. 18, 1997, at I p.m. at
the White Funeral Home in Coolville. Burial will follow at Coolville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 6 to 8 p.m.

J,

Ella J. Roush ·

.,

, .. el who has been operating the sound
system for events on the Pomeroy
Riverfront Amphitheatet. Quickel
asked council to purchase additional
items for the sound system at a cost
of$1,014 which will be paid from the
downtown revitalization grant. He is
currently u.&lt;ing his own sound system
during events at no charge to the vii·
!age.
Council also approved leasing the
downtown mini-park owned by J.B.
·· O'Brien at a cost of $355.76 per year
-' the annual tax liability on the propeny.
Vaughan commended long-time
Councilman William Young who is
leaving council after 24 years of service. Young was presented a plaque
commemorating his time on council.
Clerk Kathy Hysell presented the
following report: general fund ,
$(&gt;5,039.79; safety, $6,28 I .28; street,
$11,127.05;
state
highway,
$7,500.45; fire. $23,994.40; cemetery, $7,688.65; water, $28,950.22;
guaranty meter, $19,766.90; utility.
$9,258.21; insurance retainage. no

The Daily Sentinel
tVSPS21J-)

.,

Margery Ellen Roush

rental units.
In other action:
Margery Ellen Roush, 87, Racine, died Sunday evening, Dec. I4, 1997,
·-Coun~il approved the mayor's
report of $4,186.75 and payment of at the Charleston Area Medical Center, Memorial Division, Charleston, W.Va.
A homemaker, she was born Dec. II, 1910, in Snowden, W.Va., daughbills;
--Noted that trash pickup will be ter of the !ale Albert and Eliza Miller Hill. She and her husband of 62 years
on the Saturday after Christmas operated farms in Letan Falls and Portland and were active in the Racine
rather than the usual day which is Fri- United Methodist Church and the Meigs County Farm Bureau.
She is survived by her husband, Harold G. Roush, whom she married on
day;
--Decided to ask the police depart- Aug. 21, 1935, in Point Pleasant. W.Va.; a daughter and son-in-law, Nadine
ment for better enforcement of the and Robert K. Euler of Pinch, W.Va.; a son and daughter-in-law, Norman
two-hour parking limit on Race H. and Janet Roush of Charleston: five grandchildren; eight great-grandStreet, and to consider a handicapped children; three brothers and sisters-in-law, Harry and Katie Hill. John and
Erma Hill and Dallas and Donna Hill, all of Letart Falls; three sisters-inparking spot on the street.
•
law,
Pauline Hill of l.elall Falls, Inez Hill and Ora Hill, both of Racine; sev_The ~·· Krio Robi-. gave
·
prayer to open the meeting attended eral nieces and nephews:
by the mayor, clerk treasurer, and
She was preceded in death by seven brothers, Sl. Clair Hill, Joe Hill, JerCouncil members, Eric Chambers, ry Hill, Albert Hill Jr., Julian Hill, Clifford Hill and Dale&gt;Hill, and by two
Iannarelli, Beth Stivers, Gwiaz- sisters, Violet Grimm and Doris Hensler.
Services will be held Wednesday. I p.m. at the Racine United Methodist
dowsky, Steve Houchins. and John
Ne.ville.
Church with the Rev. Brian Harkness officiating. Burial will follow in the
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. from 2-4 and
7-9 p.m. -Tuesday. The body will lie in state at the church one hour prior to
the funeral service.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Racine United Methodist
balance; ·perpetual care/cemetery,
$7,313.44; cemetery . endowment, Church.
$38,446.59;
police
pension,
$5,449.98; building fund, -$159.21;
overtime grant, $6,779.86; recreHarry Harold Tipton, 92, Middleport, died on Monday, December 15,
ation, $4.~60.74; FEMA I, $61.70;
permissive tax, no balance; law 1997 at his residence.
He was born on July 23, 1905 in Walnut Township in Gallia County, son
enforcement, $6,479.94; COPS
of
the
late Leonard F. and Alta Allbright Tipton. He was a retired conducFAST grant, $8,435.23; FEMA III.
$30,878.44; downtown revitaliza- tor for the New York Central Railroad, and was a member of the Middletion, -$5,699.52; totals, $332,204.27. port Masonic Lndge No. 363 for 50 years and the Meigs County Se~ior CitPresent were Vaughan, Hysell, i~ns. He attended the Victory Baptist Church in Middlepon.
Surviving are h~ife, Clara Butcher Tipton, Middlepon; an aunt, Lilcouncil President John Musser and
lian·
Monroe. Patriot; and several nieces and nephews.
counci I memb•rs Geri Walton,
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by two brothers, Clarence
Young, Larry Wehrung and George
and Wyman Tipton. and a sister. Hazel Campbell.
Wright.
Graveside services will he held on Wednesday, Dec. 17, 1997 at 3 p.m.
at the Neal Cemetery in Gallia County, with Rev. James Keesee officiating.
Friends may call 'at the Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home on
Wednesday 'from 12 noon until 2 p.m.
Am Ele Power .......................!~
Memorial contributions may be made to an organization of the donor's
Akzo ........................................85
AmrTech ...............................79%
choice.
Aahland 011 ...........................49}.
AT&amp;T .....................................5&amp;}.
continued rrom ease 1
Bank One ..............................56'1.
Bob Evans...........................-21 'Meigs County Depanment of Human Dec. 8 meeting.
Paid weekly bills of
Borg-Warner .......................48"1.
Services in the Meigs County ChamBroughton ............................. 16~
$350.542.06 consisting of 576
her of Commerce for $125 .
Champion ............................. 18~
·-Approved a request from Trea- entries.
Charm Shpa ..........................4~
surer Howard Frank to transfer
City Holdlng ..........................40~
$10, I88 from the county general fund
Federal Mogul ......................... 40
Gannet1 .................................60';..
to the auto, license and gas tax fund
GoodyHr .............................&amp;&amp;'}.
for the interest earned in 1997.
Kmart ....................................11'1..
-- Accepted the minutes of the
Kroger ...................................34'1.
Lands End.............................37'1.
umllad .................................. 24~
Oak Hill Flnl ............................ ~
OYB .........................................35
Holzer Medical Center
One Valley ...........................40"1.
Disc:harges .Dec. IS - Jacob
Peoples .................................41'to
Shuler, Clinton Craig, Connie Jones,
Prem Flnl ............................... 25'h
Connie Miller, Mrs. Rodney Bush
Rockweii ..............................S2''1.
and daughter, Yolanda Masters, Mrs.
RDISheJJ ...............................s4"1.
n
h W rd d
B
Till
Seers....................................44"i•
nliot y a an son, etty 1 ey,
Shoney's .................................3~
Sandra Watterson, Mrs. Bart Davis
Star Bank ..............................57'1.
and son, Mildred Withee, John Bar·
Wendy's ............................ ;.. 23'1.
tels, Charles Morgan, John Staten,
Worthlngton ......................... 16~
Jesse Keller, John Shriver, Chelsea
-•-•- h
Young, Jay Canter.
Stock reporta are 1 1 10 : 30
Birth - Mr. and "rs. Christoa.m. quotee provldld by Adveat
•••
of Galllpolle.
pher Denham, daughter, JacksOn.

Pomeroy Council.~:nlin•edrrompa(!el
.

'

Publithed every" d1ernoon. Monday throwah
Friday. Ill Coul1 51., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the

Ohio Valley Publishing Comptny/01nnet:1 Co.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457ti9, Ph. 992-2156. Second
daupoiiiJC pa1d 11 Pomeroy, Oldo .

twa.ber. TM Auoclaltd Press, 11nd thr Ohio
Hc~r Aaoc::iation.

,.

fOSTMAS'TIIb Send addreu oorr«ht&gt;nJ In
The Oally Sendnel, Ill Court St , Pomeroy,
Qlr.to 45769.

'·.
'·

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
BJ C1rrlrr or Motor Ro.lt
Chic 't\lack"""""'" """"'""""""""" .........•..... SlJIJ
One Month ................. .............................. Sit70
One Ycr1r ........................................... ,$11)4.00

,.

SINGLE COP¥ PRICE

O.ily .......................... ................ ....... 3~

..
..
..,

Cent•

Sablcribcn DOl dcllrin11o pay Ute c1rrier m•Y
mall ill adYIDtt: direct to ftle Dilly Senlintl
on a1lmo.1i11 or J2 month b111i1. Crcdil will be
pen earner ed wttk..
No awbstripUon by ma11 pennincd in •rc••
tel'olta it available .

Harry Harold.Tipton

Stocks

Commissioners...

~====:;;~~~;;~~(~Pu~hllshed with permiaslon)

'

Mfiallrr mcn-01lhe riJhl to adjull rattl dur~

n..,. •..... -.blaiption period. Sclbaeripeioa rale

..,..

ch•p• may be Implemented by chanaina the
dllndDRnfthe~iplion .
f

..... ,..c....,

MAILSUISCatPTtONS

.,},
tl

PLACE WREATH· Mason County Comml11ion President
!Ia Arthur, Gov. Cecil Underwood, and Point Pleassnt Mayor
sell Holland, from left, placed 1 Wt'811h In the IITillll memorlallllflc
at the former base of the Silver Bridge following a memorlll - vice 118t nlghl Monday marked the 30th anniversary of the collapse of the Sllvar Bridge thst linked Point Pleassnt to Glllll
County. Gov. Underwood said the tragedy was the stsrt of 1
national bridge Inspection program that calls for detslled span
Inspections every two years.

BDdy of Portsmouth woman found In woods
PORTSMOUTH (AP) - The
body of a 73-year·old Portsmouth
woman missing since last month
was found in a secluded area of
woods in Scioto County, the sheriff's
office said.

The death of Nellie Evelyn
Howard is beong mvestigated as a
homicide.
Deputies wouldn 't say how the
woman died or specify where -her
remains were located

. · Obituary2JI'IUII'I.. •r• plld ennouocemanto llt'r..,gad by local tunorel hOfHIObltull'lill era pUilllahed M NqUaeted to - m o d l l l t - dtall'lng ~then le provided In 11M ICCOmpenylng DHth ....-.

Margery Ellen .Roush
Margery Ellen Roush, 87, Elm Street, Racme, died unexpectedly Sunday evening, Dec. I4, 1997, in the Charleston Area Medical Center, Memorial Division, Charleston, W.Va.
A homemaker, she was born on Dec. II, 1910, in Snowden, W.Va., daughter of the late Albert and Eliza Miller Hill. She and her husband of 62 years
operated farms m Letart Falls and Portland and were active in the Rar;ne
Unoted Methodist Church and the Meigs County Farm Bureau.
She is survived by her husband, Harold G. Roush, whom she married on
Aug. 21, 1935, in Point Pleasant, W.Va.; a daughter and son-in-law survive,
Nadine and Robert K. Euler, Pinch, W.Va., and a son and daughter-in-law,
Norman H. and Janet Roush. Charleston, W.Va.
Five grandchildren survive, Rob Roush, Bambi Fisher, Oaren Roush, l·.ori
Stump and Mike Euler. Eight great-grandchildren survive, Jeremy Fosher.
Jessica Fosher, John ,Fisher, David Roush, Adam Roush, Jacob Stump,
Danoelle Stump and Luke Stump.
Three brothers and sisters-in-law survive, Harry and Katie Hill, John and
Erma Hill and Dallas and Donna Hill, all of Letart Falls; three si"ers·in·
Jaw, Pauline Hill, Letart Falls, Inez Hill: Racine, and Ora Hill, Racine; sev- ·
era! nie,ces and nephews.
'
She was preceded in death by seven brothers. St. Claor Htll , Joe Hill, Jerry Hill, Albert Hill Jr., Julian Hill. Clifford Hill and Dale Hill. Two .sistcrs
·preceded her in death, Violet Grimm and Doris Hensler.
Funeral services will he I p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 17, 1997, at the Racine
United Methodist Church with the Rev. Brian Harkness oniciating. Burial
will follow in the Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, from 2-4 and
7-9 p.m. Tuesday. The body will lie in stale at the church one hour prior to
the funeral service
The family suggests memorials he given to the Racme United Methodist
Church m Margery's memory.
·
Active casket bearers arc Wayne Roush, David Hensler, Denny Hill, Dale
Hill, Clarence Hill. Max Hill, Arthur Hill and Paul Hill.

Arrests...
Continued from page 1
dants to be troed in their county of res·
idence instead of where \he crime
took place. Adults to be charged in
the Washington County robbery will
face charges there.
Soulsby commended deputies
Rohen Beegle and Scan Trussell for
their investigation of the Reedsville
robbery, along with the Reedsville
residents and members of the Olive
Township.Volunteer Fire Dcpanment
who assisted the officers.
Soulsby saod $400 to $500 taken
from Mrs. Reed was recovered and
identified by serial numbers on the
bills.

Hosp1'tal news

wt.ett bomr: c:arrier

w..u ..............................................Sl7.30

26 W..u ................................................ m .Hl
52 W..u .............................................. IIU5.56
Relet 0 . - Molp Cooo17
13 'Moeu ................................................129.:!5
26 ..................... -.......................... $36.61!
52 w..u .......................................- .....1109.72

~

Wednesday night...Cleor. Lows in
the upper 20s.
Thursday... Panly cloudy. Hi&amp;hs in
the lower 50s.
Friday... Partly cloudy.

:. Middleport

Send comments to tl)c author in
care of this newspaper or send her c·
mail at saraeumaol.com.

•

Exteaded rorecsit

Ella J. Roush, 88, of New Haven W. Va., died Tuesday, December 16,
1997, at Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
Born November 17, 1909 in the Broad Run Community, she was a daugh· .
ter of the late Richard A. "Dick" and Susan E. (Roush) Grinstead. She was
employed by the Community Action Nutrition Center in New Haven, was
a member of Broad Run Zion Church, Broad Run Community, and American Legion Smith-Capehart Post 140 Auxiliary, New Haven.
. In addition to her parents, she was also preeeded in death by her husband,
Fred R. Roush; a son, Richard D. "Dicky" Grinstead; step-son, Robert J.
Roush; four sisters, Mary F. Aumiller, Helen 0. Knapp, Iva Fry and Sarah
Grinstead; and seven brothers, Harry, Clay. Thomas, Richard, Walter, Robert
Scout leaders to meet
The Big Bend Service Unit of Girl and Bryan Grinstead.
Survivors include sons and daughters-in-law, Danny F. and Norma J.
Scouts will meet at 7 p.m Thursday
Roush
of New Haven and Ralph T. and Sheila E. Roush of New Haven;
at Trinity Church for a holiday par. ; RACINE
daughters
and son· in-law, Kathleen Roush of New Haven and Shirley Jean
9:49 a.m., Manuel Road, Eva ty. There will he a SS gift exchange, and Robert M. Johnson of Racine; sister, Alice G. Miller of New Haven;
rededocation and investiture.
Lawson, Veterans Memorial.
nine grandchildren; six step-grandchildren; 12 great-grandchildren; and 13
RUTLAND
step-great-grandchildren.
12:03 p.m., State Route 689, Eastern board to meet
Service will he 1:30 p.m~ Thursday, December 18. at Foglesong FunerThe Eastern Local Board of Eduassisted by Central Dispatch, Southal
Home
with Pastor George Weirick officiating. Burial will follow in Broad
em Ohio Coal Company, Ronald L. cation willl)leet at 6 p.lfl. Wednesday Run Cemetery.
in the Eastern High School Library.
Bunlette, Holzer Medical Center.
Friends may call at the funeral home Wednesday from 6to 9 p.m.
In
lieu of flowers, the family requests contributions he made to the Broad
Council.~o:tlnued '"'m page 1 Run Zion Lutheran Church, Rt. 2, Letart, W. Va., 25253.

Sara Eckel Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprir.e •
Association.
·

,.

•

. .•. CENTRAL DISPATCH
8:34 a.m., South Front, Middle·.•
pan, Harry Tipton, dead on arrival;
9:06a.m.; South Fourth, Middle- .
pon, Viola Rumfield, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
3:05p.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, Dan Saylor, O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital;
6:27 p.m., Rocksprings Road,
Shirley Stephenson, Veterans Memorial;
7:00 p.m., assisted by Tuppers
Plains, Betzing Road, Edgar Pullins,
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital;
II :46 p.m., Kingsbury Road,
Hazel Arnold, treated not transponed.
'o
MIDDLEPORT
9:55 p.m., Mile Hill Road, auto
fire, Mitchell Meadows, owner, no
·· injuries.
POMEROY
8:34 p.m., Pomeroy Police
Department, Chorlcs Bartels, Veter·
ans Memorial.

Once again, 11 i• dclinitely reassuring · to sec slay-ul-homc wives
receive some much deserved recognition for the work that they do.'
However, we must continue to
ensure that women who choose to
stay home with their families can do
so without jcopardi7,ing their future
security.

that.
(5) Eliminate real sex. No more
teen-age pregnancy. No more sexually transmitted diseases. Robotic
sex partners will accomplish these
things says Joel Snell, a teacher at
Kirkwood Community College in
Cedar Rapids, Iowa. It may not he
long, he wrote in "The Futurist"
magazme, before "an entire genera·
tion. of humans may grow up never
havmg had sex with other humans."
(6) Find new uses for chicken
?'anurc. Is this an idea or a plea for
odcas' Oh, well: On the Eastern
Shore of Maryland, where 1 am
from, as well as in other parts of the
~ountry. chicken farming is a big
mdustry. But there is an attendant
problem: The mimurc is spread on
fields and the runoff might be killing
fish. They arc already composting
the stuff as a potting 'mixture but
there is an acute need for more ~olu·
lions. Barbecue briquettes, lawn
ornaments and garden gnomes, per·
haps.
.
Chicken doo will be a gold mine
for somebody. Go for ir.
'
Joseph Spear is a syndlc.;ted ·
writer for Newspaper Enterpiile
Assodelion.

morning. Mostly sunny in the afternoon. Highs from the upJter 40s to
around SO.

:Me.igs EM.S has 12
.,: calls for· assistance

S.F thinkers haven't gone in the .tan·k

1 • . ..

' ..
,-'

mlnfORCMt
TOI!ay...Sunny. Highs in the low·
er and mid SOs. Winds becoming
10111hwest S to 10 mph this eftcmoon.
l
Tonicht. .. Moslly
clear
.. early... Becoming partly cloudy after
. midnight. Lows from the upper 20s
, to the lower 30s. Light west wind.
Wednesday... Panly cloudy in the

Carter laments soft money's tai·nt
By Jack Ander1011
and Jan Moller

111 Court SII'Ht, Pomeroy, Ohio
1114-992·21541 • FIX 992·2151

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

3011' VI eng., tuto., PS, PB, llr. IIH, cruiM, PW, PL, A~ll alaNo - · · caet
elum. whHit, til terrlln llrat, bedllner, chromo rttr atap bumper. Only 33,000
mllea. Locll ~ owner. Nice clun truck!.
•

FRONT LOAD
SOLID OAK 36"
DOUBLE DOOR
CURIO

SOLID OAK
ROPE TWIST
ROUNDED GLASS
CURIO

SOLID OAK
ROUNDED GUSS
CURIO

�Sports

The Daily Sentin~!

.~eigs
. girls record victories against N-V
~

.By DAVE HARRIS

Tuesday, December 11,11W

lhiillllll Colrt~le~lll:p1C10.111"1Cietdetn!ltt
Meiss erased a one-point half~me

Rice returns to 49ers''lineup, relnjures knee

=4eficit by outscoring Nelsonville:Yort 32-21 in the second half a.&lt; the
·"arauders defeated the Lady Buck:tyes 49-39 in girls' Tri-Valley Con:~nce basketball action Monday
:evening at Nelsonville-York.
&lt; 'The Marauders played the contest
:fiithout their outsUIIIding junior Tri:~ia Davis, who has been troubled by
back injury.
·. N-Y's Adams sparked the Lady
:tluckeyes to an early 12-11 lead as
she scqml eight first period points.
,Brooke Williams sparked the
Marauders in the period with four
feints.
, 'The second period both teams had
)rouble scoring as each team scored
;!iX points and Nelsonville-York went
into the locker room at the half with
• a 18-17 advantage.
: But the Marauders came alive in
the third period, Jennifer Shrimplin
ilnd Tangy Laudermilt each scored

San .F rancisco downs Broncos 34-17
By DENNIS GEORGATOS
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Jerry Rice wasn't around to talk about
his dramatic return from a se'ere
· knee injury. He was huning too
· much.
Rice, playing for the first time
since tearing two tigaments and damaging canila~ in his left knee on
Aug. 31. caught a 14-yard touchdown
pass for the San FranciSj:O 49ers' first
score .in a 34-17 win over !he Denver
Broncos on Monday night.
But he banged his surgically
repaired knee after Steve Atwater's
hit sent him crashing to the ground in
the end zone.
49ers officials described the injury
as a bruise, but CNN•SI and The
Press Democrat of Santa Rosa,
Calif.. quoted team sources as saying
Rice has a cracked bone in his left
knee and will miss all of the playoffs.
" I just kept saying, 'Get up, Jerry. Get up , Jerry. Get up. Get up,'"
San Francisco coach Steve Mariucci
said. "Then he got up and jogged off
and said, T m 0 K. '"
Rice didn't play after the secondquarter touchdown catch. and he
avoided reporters after the game.
General manager Dwight Clark said
Rice had an injury to his knee unrelated to the previous .injury and
would undergo an MRI scan sometime today.

"We're going to do some imaging clinched home field in the NFC
and see if we can figure out exactly playoffs for San Francisco (13-2) and
what it is," Clark said.
also gave Kansas City the home field
With Rice standing on the side- over Denver (11-4) in the AFC.
lines watching with ltis knee wrapped
"We've completely turned around
ma bandage, the 49ers defense took from what happened in Kansas
over in the second half. forcing John City," said 49ers guard Ray Brown,
Elway into three turnovers leading to referring to San Francisco's 44-91oss
17 points.
to the Chiefs three weeks ago.
Menon Hanks' 55-yard intercep- "That's the first thing I thought
tion return for a touchdown broke .a about. "
17-all tie in the tltird quaner, Lee
Denverlost its second straight and
Woodall's 55-yard interception return heads into the playoffs as a wild card.
set up Oary Anderson's second field
Rice's touchdown on a pass from
goal and Kevin ' Greene sacked Steve Young proved to be his last
Elway, forcing a fumble ·that he play. He spent the rest of the second
returned 40 yards for the final score. quarter talking with team physician
"They're not a blitzing team, but Michael Dillingham, who operated
they were tonight," Elway said. on Rice the day after he suffered'the
"You've got to be able to adjust to it. injury in the season-opening loss at
!just made too many mistakes throw- .Tampa Bay.
ing the ball."
.
Rice, who had three catches for 40
Elway, trying to carry the team yards, was greeted by a wild ovation
after running back Terrell Davis went when he ran onto the field during
out in the second quaner with a right pregame introductions and another
shoulder separation, threw 41 passes, rousinJl cheer when he entered as the
but completed only 16 of them for third recei,eron the third play ofthe
150 yards.
..game.
" We didn't want John to just sit
"I wanted to get him the ball as
back there and pick us apart. We quickly as possible," Young said.
wanted to go after him," linebacker
On San Francisco's second offenGary Plummer said. "Give the cor- sive series, Rice caught a 16-yard
ners a lot of credit because they were pass from Young and then made a
in man coverage most of the night." diving 10-yard catch during the 92The win, on a night Joe Montana's yard march that Young finished by
No. 16 was ret~red by the 49ers. threadtng a 14-yard pass to Rice. He

made the catch between Atwater and
Darrien Gordon for .S111 Francisco's
first touchdown with 6:~3 left in the
second quarter.
"I Wnk people thought he would
get a couple of token IOSfCi, 1011 of
save himself for the rest of the playoffs, but he came out aggressive and
attacked and he scored a touchdown," Brown said. "That's still
amazing, that he's back'and able to do
those things."
The score was Rice's !66th career
· touchdown. an ongoing NFL record,
and gave him 1.000 points for his
career, the first non-kicker to reach
that milestone.
With Rice applauding from the
sideline, Terry Kirby scored from a
yard out with 22 seconds left in the
second quarter and San Francisco
went in front 14-10 at halftime.
Vaughn Hebron, playing in place
of the injured Davis, took a pitch and
cut back across the field for a 46-yard
gain to the San Francisco four. He
scored on a fourth-down run from the
l,givingDenvera 17-141ead . .
Denver scored the game's first I0
points, getting a four-yard scoring run
from Davis two plays after lheanyi
Uwaezuoke muffed a punt that was
recovered at the San Francisco 6 by
Dedrick Dodge. Jason Elam also
kicked a 49-yard field goal.

:a

•

•

radio spons talk show on Knoxville
station WNOX. "This is the talk of
the lown."

.

The Downtown Athletic Club in
New York, which presents the trophy,
received a flood of angry faxes and
phone calls Monday. Many of the
messages were abusive, a spokesman
said.
Indeed, Tennessee fans haven't
been this upset sinc'e 1956 when the
Volunteers' Johnny .Majors lost the
Heisman to Paul Hornung of a 2-8
Notre Dame team.
"What were the voters smoking,
anyway?" Tennessee devotee Darrell
Bailey of Simpsonville, S.C., asked.
"They drag Peyton ·up to New
York one more time just to slap him
in the face, while some no-name
comes out in the eleventh hour and
gets it. Who was Woodson last year?
Where did he finish in the balloting
last year?"

The Eastern Lady Eagles evened
up their record with a 67-36 Tri-Val- .
ley Conference win over the hapless
Miller Falcons Monday night at Eastern High School.
· Ea~tern (2-2 overall &amp; in tbe
tJocking Division) was led by anothltlr double-double effon from 6-foot~ junior center Valerie Karr, who
)latched a game-high IS points and
grabbed 13 rebounds. Karr has established herself as one of the premier ·
players in the league, along with side-

I

·Southwest

Basketball

i

Tc~as-EJ

Far West

i NBA standings

L

i

Ponland 79, Stephen F. Au1tin 64

EASTERN CONFERENCE

I

Allantk Dklt6on

•rum
w
Mintui ............ ;.............'......... l!i

1. r&lt;L

Iii

6 .714
K .667

Ir 0.1..00
................................ 16
New Yortr. ............................. IJ

',
2'~

9 .S91
New Jmcy ........................... 12 10 .SO
Bolton .................................. /0 12 .•ss
1 Washia~on ........................ 10 14 .411
: Phi!D phi1 ............................6 IS .286

I
I

CmtniDI\'Woft
. ... 18 •S
1 AUlllll;~ . ......... .
f Chlltlon~ ............................ 14 7
t CleolclaOO , .......................... .14 1

I hxliDna ................................. I"
I O.icDf,O ....... ,....................... .14
! Milwuu~ ............................. /1
J Detroit ...... ..................... ...... / I

East

1'~

BethMy.W.Va. 76, PinsburJ,h ~9

ft' .

BridgcwMer.Va. 71, Roonoke 6J
St Thumas Aquinas 60. C.W. Pou :n
Sltllen Island n , Hu111cr 46

~·.; .
9

Sooth

9

.609

II

.SOO
.47R

Ttwonlu .................................. 2 21

.OK7

Albany, G11. M, Kentucky St. 48
Arn"'rong Adaruic ~9. Flori&amp; T!!..:h 47
AuaiiSta St. 69. Nonh Flaridn 65
EmmDn~l 88, Clayton S1. 86, OT
Oeaf,cin Sl. 76, N.C.· Asheville 6J
libt;rty RS. S. Curolin' St.~:\
Couulan.1 Tech 97, NE louisianD. 4J
lynn 6t Florida Mernorial46
Mcn;er 77, Brewlon Pnrker 4.~
Nicholls St. 77, Samford 64
Sf'lrina Hiii64.. Miu. U. fOJ Women 48
West Florid.1 IOii ,' Columhu~ Sl. 101

.I

.667
.661

,1
J'·~

K .6:\6

-·-

NCAA Division I
~" women's scores

. 7tl~

n

4

,.. ·~

,.
7

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mklwtll Dlwlskln

w

Iua

) HI'lUSiill\ ............................. .' 12

Doll» ..

I. !&lt;I.
7

.6J2

IJ
10
12

.;'i91

. ......... 9 14

U1nh .........
.. ...... 1.~
San Anumio ....................... 12
MlnM!IOIII ........ ,................. ~

Vaa&amp;:ouvet ...... .. .

............ ....... ,. '

!7

I Dtnvrr ..... ............................. 2 19

!1 St:aulc........

1 LA. L;Pc:ts

Pacifk Dhbloe
.... IR ~

......... 17

~

'.,

. S..~

1',,

.429

4

.:WI

~

. 09~

.7M3

'
3't:

.77:\

"

7 .6~
!! 8 .619
Sacra~~~enro .............................7 16 .:\04
I Golden Slale........................... 4 16 .200

.•
'

',.I

I

I

19

far West

•
"
. 14

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

~ L.A. Ctippcrs ............... ........... 4

Midwest
ClcVchmd Sl. I02, Akron SO
Elmhursl 66, Rod.Jord 44
Ferri~ St. 91. Madonna62
Gosht!n 112, Rochc:llcr 56
llli!'ni~ Weslyn 75, Aurora ~5
Purdue-Cnlume~81 . 1klhcl, Ind. :'iK
Sounl l..uui5 71 . Evansville M
St:. Frunci ~. Ind. K7 , OetiaJK:c 6:'i

"'"

.227

, Phoenix .............................. IJ

I

P11.10 78. SE Louisian.:. 64

Cent . Washing1nn 72. W. Ba('lli~t ~ 1
W. W11~hingtnn IOJ. W. OreJon H2

1 2'~

.174

Tournaments
Coronu1 Cool Clauic.flnt n.td
We~l Te~M A&amp;.M fl3 . Atuumption ti2
8u:arC1iffY7. Malonc40
StonclJIII .'W, Clarinn 47

MonciiiY'•ot..,..
Bosron 100. Philadrlphiu 83
lndiruwl JOB. Toronto 101
Wuhinaton tit!. Ut&lt;lh 86
Chi~PJo 111, P,boenix 104

:«

Letlonin 62. South Rang~ 60
Lemon- Monr~ Sot. Dny. Stebbins 411
Lima C:~lholic 73, Columbus Grnve 2M
Uabon 67, WC~~tcm Reserve 26
Lucusvillt Val. 81, Portsmouth W. .fJ
MIU'itua 80. Alheas 67
McComb 69, Tiffin Cal\lert ~J ·

MeiBS 49.
Miami

N(lsonvii~- York

Weaem OMolon
•
lwll
I.
l-Sanfrnncisco ............... .l .\ 2 0 .K67 J66 227
~Jmcy ..
.. .......:.22 IJ
Camlin&gt;~ .............................. 7 K 0 .467 247 2114
Phil1atklphiu.. ...... ........ 19 9
Allatllu ................................ 7 K 0 . ~7 2\14 ;\)2
Wa:diinlltnn .................. 1:'1 11
New Orleuns .......................fl 'I 0 .400 224 :102
N.Y. l~lomlkr1 ................. 1.11.\
St. Louis ..................
4 II 0 .267 lMI .\41 ,
N.Y. Rom~rs .......... ,. ........ .Y 14
I·Wt\11. divisioo tille
, Anfillil...
........... II 17
y·t;lint:hal playotlbL'fth
Tampu Buy ................ ... b 21

39

El._, 61. Min.isslmtwa Vnl. +I

Mi&lt;~misburg

63. Odord Tal;1w;mUa 47
Milk'ml Ridge 40, Southing1on Chalker 37

Monday's fiCore
San Fr.tnt;ilil:o J.l,

Minford 96, Mc0trmo11 N011bwe~1 40
Moc!ldore 66, RootSiown ~~
Moaodore Field 6!1. Sn-ett~boru )4
MohPWk ;'!I. North BnlliiTIOI"e 14
Ntw Miami $4, Cin. Landmark Chr. 4~
Newton Falls64, You. Ubmy60
Nonhtastem, Ind., 73, Tri-Villap: ~1
Nonhmont70, Tecumseh ~I
Ot!IIWil Hills 72, Tol. Ubbty 42

Pwmll61. St
~nisvillc

Augusti~

Sotunlay

~I.

· The Southern Tornadoes played '
storm of a game, but a 15-8 Waterford third period deflated the Tornadoes 49-43 Monday night in girls'
yarsil~ basketball actio~ in Racine.
Sout!)ern is now 1-3 and 1-2 in the
league. Waterford .is "3-2 and 2-2.
: Cynthia Caldwell led the Tornadoes with a great night !'rom the floor,
.hitting several key buckets in scoring
a ganie-high 13 points. Kim !hie

Toalpt's g'amrs
Utnh 01 Miami. 7:;\0 p.m.
rhoeniJL at Ckvelalld, 7:30 p.rn.
~1mit at New York, 8 p.m.
L.A. Lakm IW Mi~n. 8 p.m.
V:tn~.'W'o'el' at HOlUton •.SJO p.m.
San Anmnio !It Denver.~ p.m.
~le .r LA. Clipper~, 10:.' 0 p m.
Onii:~~.U Ookkn Stat!!, 10:30 p.m.
Portland al Sacr:unc:n.;n. IO:JO p.m.

Wednaday'sgalllft
,.iami n1 WlllhinJIOn. 1 p.m.
Bo~ton

aa Toronto, 1 p.m
New YtJI'k ar lldiau, 1 p.m.
Delroie 01 New Jel'lty. 7:30p.m.

"

Minnctotilll Philadelphia. 7:Xtp.m.
,.ilwaukeear a-tone. 7::\0p.m.
C'Jevth\AdM AIIIUIIa, 7;)0p.m.
LA Lak&lt;nMCbi-. !p.m.
VML'OU'Im' at San AIIIOfLiO. 8::\0 p.m.

NCAA Division I
men's scores ·
Eut
W-76. St. -~ NY 71

South
E. Ttrww:uce Sr. 75. Limnlonc"
McNeese St. 8:L Norfutt Sl. 74
NE l.ouiliMI 90, Art.·Montk:tllo 70
Nnt Orleuf 88, Soorllenl72
Ttftft. Ttrnple 7•. 'TCftiiiCUCie Tech 66

Alexander 64, Wellsloo26
Amehll M. Western lkown 56
Anlhony Wa)nt 41 . Tol . Rog~u _
,(l
Aurora 57. l.aurel42
Auljmluwn-Fil~h Sb. You. W1l~on 4'.1
lkllaire 56. Zaoesvillc 33
lk1hd 49. Oay. Nor!hrid~.: 4H
Bethel Tate 49, 83tavin 47
Buckeye Trail61.1..akel;md JO
Cun!Jlhell Mt~mi4K. Lowcllvil~ 3K
Carti~ JO. Middldown C'hriati;m 26
Cin. 1\ibn 41, Cin. Weatl!m tbl\~ ;t.1
Cln. Glen Estc 65.l.Alvtlllnd 1'12
Cin. Hills Ow. Acnd. M. Cin. N. Cullqe Hill

Cin. l.uckland ~I . Cin. Chrislian 29
Cln. Taft ~9. Cia. Walnlll Hill1 ~I
Cin. LII'AIIioc ~~. Cin. Norrr: Daine 41
Cot Cemtanial ~9. Col. Briqs 42
Cl'd. W~ulMd S~ . Col. Eutmoor 40
Columbi11111 Cn:s"iew.Sl. You. El1~t 2K
Dllltbury Lakaidc ~='. Pon Ointon 22
Day. Carroll70, EdJewood 38
Day. Colonel While 78. Day. Jeffenon ~ ~
E. Cltvebnd Shaw 83, Cle. Soulb 40
Eanttn Pike 66, Glenwood 19
Faitfteld Union67, Hamilton Twp. 29'
Fayeneville64, Ripky 27
Fedenl HodUnJ 44, 'trimble 16
Felil:it)' 70, Willillnlburr47
'
Franklill47, Middlct~n Fenwick 29
Gallipoli1 4$, Lop! -40
Garf1tkl Hts. 71, CJe. Kennedy S I
Gtllet Milk Gilmour !W, Regina J~
Georgerown 56. New Ridlmond 47

Hannibal River 4.5, Fron1ia' 27
Hilhbotvl2. Clermont HE 39
lndi.. C...t 60'. E. Li"'J''OI 3'
Jacbon 6.5, Point PkiMIM, W.Va.•1113
KttleriiJ Ahcr 63, Day. Panmon ~
KttleriJII foif'IDOOf 62, W. Carrollron :tO

Midwest

AluM II, Loyola. m, l2
Ohio St. 89. CS Nonhridte 81
Younptowll St. 103, Cent. St., Ohio 6.~

l.dl;'lle 79, Hubba(d ~$

•

42
40
.17
)2
29
2fl

4
II
.'i

Toolpt'•lllllll&lt;!l

7ti •
tXJ 91
H7 1&lt;7
H7 9.~
H2 102
!'i1 J 02

97

9:'1
103
M6
M3
K7

71&lt;
94

140

M9

f

W L I £11.

.............. 22 Y 4
lli..'1Rlil ................. .......... 19 K ft
St . l..nui~ ...... ................... 20 12 )
Pht.:ni~ ............................ 1:\14 6
Olil:liJII ............................ 10 Itt 6
~

Tnrotllu .......... ................... IO 16

Uuffuln at N.Y. blm1tler,, 7:30p.m.

Kl'!
M4

lin!~~ttn 111 Tmlljla Bt~y. 7:30p. DI .
N .Y Rat•tcn.lll Aurid.a, 7:Jtlr m.

IJctn1it :11 Cuk1wUn. 9p.m.
Vuncuu'Q..-r at Phucoi.t, I) p.m.

(11icn~o a1 f~monhm, 9 p.tJL

Torollltl nt Anaheim, 10:.10 p.m.

:11 Sc:lllle, Hp.m.

....... IK K IJ .

· U.15 Anp.~:lc11 ................... 12 14
Am1hcim ....................... ,12 I~
l~mnmun ...
.II ](,
S1mJm;~ ................
.121M
Culg~uy
..........9 I H
Vun~:uuver
.... 10 It}

Monday, Dtr.ll
New l!nttland 01 Mit1n1i, I) p.m.

Hockey

75

43 101

MO
Ill

]2

KM

92

2ft . 69
fl7

M2

l.'i

K4

4~ ~~~~

1111

6 30 'Jl

94
6 31) 76 1}~
1 ~ H2 flU
·' n M2 111
7 2~ H7 102
4 ·24 IJK lift

Monday's scores

Transactions

{if ~

4K I lol
... 110

hdflc OhllkMt
Cnlnnulo .

llaRbaU

·A.Merken Lt..IM.I.TIMOkE ORIOLL::S; Agre«l'd to tertft•
With I.HP Nnrm Olllrllnn 1m 11 minor·lc:II-UC Cmllm~:l .
•
CLEVBl.ANI&gt; INDIANS : A~rccd lu terms
with .l 8 Tmvi~ Fryman un tl fivt:-YClW' oontmct. ,
KANSAS CITY R(&gt;YALS: AJfted fo lcrtn'"
whh ,,H Ocan P..tlmcr 110 a otw·year coo1ruc1 wilh
l 1;11ri~· k

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AtllntkOM-..

IA:ruHJn.

Nollonol Lcoa..

CINCINNJ\Tl RI:US: AmKmnct.'tl Ihe n:!ligna·
lion nr Julinn Mock, scouting dii'C\:Iur.
''
FLORIDA MARLINS: Tnu.lcd H:HP K~:via,
Bruwn In lhc S:an Diego Padre• ftw RHP Kurucl
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NFL standings
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eblem Diwilion

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New Enaland .................... 9
Mi;ami ................................. 9
N.Y. Jc11 ............................. 9
Buffalo............................6
lndi!UU190Ii1 ....................... J
•

lA

211
6 0 .600 327 313
-6 0 .600 3JH 274
9 0 .&gt;400 234 3J6
12 0 .200 2M~ J62

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y·Jack10r1ville ................... IO !1i 0 .667 J74 :109
Teaneuee ...........................7 8 0 .~7 317 · 304
8llltimorc ............................6 II I .4JJ ~ll 329
CINCINNATI ....................6 9 0 .400 l39 391
Wtt1tr11 DlwWon
l·KAMUCily ................... l2 J 0 .800 )~ 219
y-DeftYtr........................... JI 4 0 .733 434 284
s..n1o .................................1 s o .467 m m
Oaklond ............................... II 0 .267 l!l :199
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man 6) and 10 fouls.
Miller had 25 caroms (Planl 5), 7
steals, 23 turnovers, 8 ·assists (Plan!
4) and 21 fo11ls.
Eastern won the reserve game, 41·
13, led by Danielle Spencer with It
and Juli Bailey with seven. Heather
Compston had six for Miller.
Eastern hosts Meigs Thursday.
Meigs is 5-1 and 3-0 in the Ohio
Division of the TVC.
Quarter ll!lllll
12-13-22-20:67
Miller
Eastern
4-6-12-14=36

•

the Tornadoes carried some momen- (Skinner 10), 21 ' steals (Greene 6),
seven assists, 24 turnovers, and II
tum inlo the half.
Southern played a steady third fouls.
Southern won the reserve game
period, but Waterford held close at
35-33, but a more intense Waterford 27-221ed.by Katie Cummins with 15
delcnse gained the Wildcats momen- and Tammy Fryar with 14. Heather
tum . Waterford outscored Eastern 15- Dailey had 14 rebounds for Southern.
Mgoing down the stretch to claim the Kelley Yambor had eight points for
49-43 win.
Waterford.
Southern had 28 rebounds (Sayre
Southern hosts Alexander Thurs·
II), six steals, eight assists (Caldwell day.
three), a costly 24 turaovers, and 15 Quarter l!!!l!h
8-21-6-H=49
fouls . Waterford had 30 rebounds Southern

Meigs: Cari&lt;sa Ash 1-0-4=6, Jennifer Shrimplin 2-0-0=4, Tonya
Miller 4-0-4= 12, Tricia Davis 0-16=9, Tracy Coffey 1-0-0=2, Brooke
Williams 0-0-2=2. Tangy Laudcrmilt
2-0-1=5. T'Otals: 10·1·17=40
Point Pleasant: Missy Roese 0-11;4, Amy Doss 7-0-2=16, Ca,;.,ic
Newell 2-0-0=4, Aml&gt;cr Oliver 5-03=13. Totals: 14-1-6=37

Miller: Be1h Lanning 2-0=4,
Anna Braglin 1-0/1 =2, Kris1en Plant
2-112=2. ,Jennifer Browning 3-0=6.
Darcy Cook 2-212=6, Angi Lucas 21-0/0=7, Jaime Brunton 2-0=4,
Christy Halasz 2-1/2=5. Totals 16-14n=36

Eastern: Stephanie Evans 3·
3/4=9, Valerie Karr 6-6/~18 , Juli
Hayman 4-3/4= II . Jessica Brannon
6-113= 13. Kim Mayle 8-0=R.
Daniellc Spencer 0-112 = 1. An!ii
Wolfe 6- 112=7. Totals 26-!t15/24=67
•

Waterford
16-7 ·11-15=43
Southern: Cynthia Caldwell 5-10=13, Jenny Friend 1-U-1/3=3, Kim
Sayre 2-0-0=4. Stacy Lyons 2-01/2=5, Kim !hie 5-0-0od 0, P:•lly
Lawrence 1-0-0/1=2. Nicole Benson
2-0-212=6, Totals 18-l-4/lli:43
Waterford: Danella Arnold 1-01/2=3, Lori Milner 2-0-3/4=7,
Tiffany Arnold 5-3/4= 13, Alccia
Huck 0-0-3/4=3, Katrina Greene :t-0.l=IO. Tisha Skinner 3-0-7/8=13
fotals 16-0-17/22=49

.

times," Utah.coilch Jerry Sloan said.
"We just weren't on the same page
1Q comP.te."
l&lt;arl Malone scored 26 points lor
the Jazz, who have lostthrcc.straight
road games.
··Each individua~ has to look at
himself and get ready to play," Malone said. "We're professionals ....
When we're ready to play, the team
·will come together." .
Elsewhere ·in the NBA, it W'l-'
Boston' 100, Philadelphia 8~; Indiana
108, Toronto 101; Chicago Ill, .
Phoenix .102; and Atlanta 99, Portland 90.
Celtks 100, 76ers 83
At Boston, Ron Mercer scored 20
points a.' the Celtics beat Philadclphi a, which played without suspendcd star Allen Iverson.
Iverson was serving a one-game
suspension for missing a practice.
and the 76crs couldn't handle the
Celtics'press. Philadelphia committed 28 turnovers, including II during

the . decisive third quarter when
Boston took control with a 21-3 run.
Jerry Stackhouse led Philadelphia
with 25 points.
Pll(ei'S 108, Raptors ~01
Reggie Miller scored 22 points
and t;eserve Jalen Rose had IS points
and seven assists as Indiana beat
Toronto for the lOth straight time.
The Pacers have won three in a
row overall and nine of th~ir last II .
Marcus Camby sc\)red a seasonhigh 28 points for the Raptors, who
fell to 2-21 with their lOth slraight
home loss.
Bulls 111, Suns 104
At Chicago. Michael Jordan
scored 31 points. Dennis Rodman
grubbed 21 rebounds and the Bulls
used a big second quarter to heat
Phoenix.
Toni Kukoc scored 23 points for
the Bulls. and Jason Caffey added 18
points and I0 rebounds, both season
highso

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'

..

Ealltm DI"W.. ·.

A-N.Y. Qiants ....................9
WDihinaton ........................7
. Phi!Adtlpbia ...... ~ ................ 6
Oa!l,. ................... .............6
Aritona ...............................J

Amy Doss led Point Pleasant with
16 points. Amber Oliver 11dded 13.
In the reserve contest Meigs
jumped out to a 33-0 halftime lead
and coasted to a 49-8 win over Point
Pleasant Tiffany Halfhill led the
Marauders with 14 points. Marjorie
Bratton added 12, Shannon Price
eight and Stephanie Wigal seven.
Amber Curfman led Point Pleasant ,
with five·.
Meigs (4-1 overall and 3-0 in the
Ohio Division) will travel to Ea'tem
Thursday.
Quarter 1!IYii
15-15-4-6=40
Meigs
6-8·11-12=37
Point Pleasant

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---~------------------~------------------~·

FLUSH COOLING SBTEM

· Waterford hit a meager 16-60 for
27 percent overall and was 17-22 at
the line.
'Waterford jumped out to a 16-8
first period lead, behind strong efforts
from Greene and Tiffany Arnold.
·southern fought back in the second
q11ancr to take tl;le lead at halftime,
29-23. Caldwell, Sayre, lhle, Lyons,
and Benson mixed up the scoring as

t:

I
I works
I
I
:r.:.,••·- C..~tobet..a
• tr"''ICCion. 'Wild • ow 9eNice DlpMtliei.'llto aPfwt ~-., IMfYW Of rtpllr. ~ 1101 bt UHd to apply 011 prey10u1 cn.o-_...
1.:
• Don TIM Plrtll SeM::e. Elcplf.. Mfih 31. 1M

Freelnepec:tlor)t of Belt A HoaM

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Iua

I
I
I

added lO.
Wa)erford was led ~y · 13-point
effons from Ti!Tany Arnold and Tisha
Skinner. Teammate Katrina Greeno
added 10.
.
Southern blistered the nets from
the two point 'range with a red-hoi 1836 night for 50 percen!. led by C~ld­
well's sharp-shooting and good shot
selection. SHS hill-6 fro111 the three
point line, and hit 4-8 at the line.

"From the South's point of view, · son was Tennessee's cornerback, you
lighted up.
. , "They couldn't even do their the bottom line is that if Manning was would never have heard of Woodshow because of 2 112 hours of calls Michigan's quancrback and Wond- son." Keith said.
about Peyton." Keith said.
Througbout his career at Tennessee, Manning has endeared him~lf to fans. Whether rcadin~ to children at a public school. signing autoJI!111?hs for hours, buying pizza for
~ents waitin~ in line for footb~ll
::lickets or leadmg the UT band m
~~ocky Thp" after victories, he has
~come a legen4 in the state.
: · Not incidentally. Manning has
~written Tennessee and Southeastern
~onference record books. He threw
•far 3.819 yards, 36 touchdowns and
~only II i"terceptions this year. His
~eam won the SEC championship, is
franked third in the country and plays
.tJ.Io. 2 Nebraska in t(le Orange Sow!.
If No. I Michigan loses to Wash;-;ngton S~ate in the Rose Bowl and
' trennessee beats Nebraska, the ·Voi;::Untecrs likely will be national cham- ·
'
\l:l•ons.
·
:• , All that has Big Orange fans ask~ng: How could Manning l~se _the
!lleisman - and lose so convmcmg-

.
SEI\"I"I'LE MARINERS: A~111't11U tLTnts wuh
(.' Mick Wilk111x un ''one-year Ctlllllilt;l. lt~:ll:a!&gt;Cd
INI•' Hreut Glllcl nnd or U..~ Tin.~ky.

2
Philndelphia 3, Montreal I
Ounwa ~. St Loui• I
Da!IUJI M. BuiTnlu4
CaluruJo 3, Tonmto 2 •
Vtm~:ouver 7. l.mi An~:ck:s 0

Marauders in the period with five
points each.
The Lady Marauders increased the
lead to 30-14 at the half on the
strength of a 15-8 scoring advantage.
But the Lady Knights refused to die
as they charged back. aided by ice
cold shooting by Meigs in the second
half.
Amy Doss led 1hc comeback
attempt with 12 second half points.
Meigs on .the other hand was able to
hit only three of 16 from the floor in
the half for an frigid 19%. Meigs hit
17 of26from the line for65 %.
Tonya Miller had an outstanding
game for Meigs leading the way wilh
12 points and 12 rebounds. Tricia
Davis added nine points and 12
rebounds as Meigs poured down 42
off the boards. Jennifer Shrimplin
added seven boards and Williams six.
The Marauders turned lhe ball
over 28 times. had eight assists led by
Becky Smith with live, and 10 s1cals
led by Smith and Davis with three
each.

Manning... ~&lt;C::,:on:,:ti:,:nu:c:d.:.:.fr:::om::.:.:Pa::~e:.4_:_:&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;_ _ _ _ _ __

:111 t~»tun .
OAKt.ANI&gt; ATHU~TICS : R~:lea~1:d OF•

lln~tun 6, t-lori~

NHLstandings

'

Wedni'"Ciay'•!lllme•

II(J

-*-

In non-conference action Saturday
evening. Meigs operled up a 30-14
halftime lead and then held off a
Point Pleasant come back attempt to
defeat the Lady Knights at Point
·
PI easant ..

Point Pleasant was able to cut the
lead back to a one point contest in the
final minute, but both times clutch
foul shooting by the Marauders was
the difference.
The first time the Lady Knights
were able to cut the lead to one they
foul Marauder junior Tricia Davis.
Davis, aggravated a back injury on
the play and had the leave the contest.
Sophomore Brooke Williams came
off the bench and calmly sank both
free throws to make it a 38-35 conlest.
Point Pleasant came right back
down the coun and scored to c'ut itto
a 38-37 contest. This time the Lady
Knights fouled senior Carissa Ash
with five seconds remaining. Ash hit
both free.throwstogive the Marauders a 40-37 advantage.
·Point Pleasant then missed a three
pointer at the buzzer and Meigs
escaped with the three point win.
The Marauders jumped out lo an
· early 15-6 lead after one period as
both Tanya Miller and Davis led the

kick Jessica Brannon, who had 13 led by four points from Karr and sev- the Eagles with six straight points,
points and II rebounds.
eral break-a ways off the fast break. then Mayle added a siring of eight off
Julie Hayman had her best offen- ·Eastern's run -and-gun fast break the break. Karr and Brannon, meansive output with II points.
accounted for over half their points as while, handled the boards, a 42-27
Miller (1-5 &amp; 0-4) was led by Juli Hayman, Stephanie Evans and romp in that department. Angi Wolfe
Angie Lucas' seven points.
Kim Mayle all turned in good pass- . carne to life for her career best offenEastern hit 26-74 from the field ing games to ~it the open man filling sive game and key rebounds.
for.35 percent, was 0-3 on three-point •the lanes at cash-in time.
·
The Eagles pushed. to a 47-12 third
range and was 15-24 at the line.
Eastern rolled on to a 12-4 firsl period lead and 67-36 final.
'Miller shot 15-67 for a meager 22 period lead as Miller limped to a
Eastern grabbed 42 rebounds
percent and was 3-7 from three-point slow-paced offensive style. Eastern · (Karr 13, Brannon II, Wolfe 8), 6
range with a 4-7 night at the line.
led 25-10 at the half.
steals (Amber Baker three), 16
Eastern took an early 10-2 lead,
In the third frame,.Evans sparked turnovers, 19 assists (Wolfe 4, Hay-

;

·By·The Anoclated Prn1
" A new arena has given the Woshington Wizaids a new home-court
advuntage.
-~ The Wizards lost their firSt five
~ome games this season at US Air:Ways Arena in Landover, Md. Then
ihey moved to the MCI Center in
downtown Washington, whe~ they
:improved to 5-0 Monday night with
an 88-86 victory over the Utah Jazz.'
Juwan Howard scored 21 points
and Rod Strickland had 13 points and
13 assists for Washington, which
recovered after blowing an '11-point
rourth-quaner leaq.
'
"It was an ugly game," Strickland
said. "I don't know if we played that
great, but we were able to sustain our
e!Tort and play tough on the def~nsive
end."
:: Despite shooting only 35 (l\!rcent
'from the field, Washington snapped
a three-game losing streak and
improved to 8-0 against Western
Conference teams.
, "We let them get inside too many

TlllllJin Bay :)1 Pittlibur~oh. 7 p.nL
N.Y. blandL'I'!I at Wllllhin~oeon, 1 p.m.
Ot1;1Wa l\1 (.'grolilaa. 7:30 Jl.m.
N.Y. Rn11a:~'P 111 N~:w Jt.-rllCy. 7:JO Jl.m
(:.1u~"~·~ 011 C;al~~wy, II p.m.
·
I)!:tn1it Ill Sun JuS!:. IU:.lU p.m.

Cmtr.l Divlllion
~llus .. .

'

Meig.o" Bec~y Smith 2-0-0:4,
Jennifer Shrimplin·5-0-0: I0, Tonya
Miller 2-0-2=6, Brooke Williams 30-2=8. Tangy Laudermilt 3-1-0:9,
Amber Vining 2-0-6=10, Melissa
Werry 1-0-0:2. Tolala: 18-1· Ul:49
Nelsonville-York: McClelland 02-0:6, Dalton 2-0-1=5, Shafer 3-0D---6, Dalton 4-0-0=8, Adams 7-00:14. Tolala: 16-2-1-39

.W_izards g~t past·Jazz 88-86;
Celtics, Pacers.,. Bulls also· wln

You. Mooney~. you_Uuuline J2

Ohio H.S. girls' scores

Atlanta 99, Ponl1111d 90

N.rthu!i Di"l....................... JK 10 b
Mmun:ul. ......................... IK 0 4
8o!Oiun ........................... 16 ll 5
Onuwn ......
.. ....... .14 l.'i- 4
Carnlin~~. ......................... 12 16 ~
Bullalu ........... :.................. lO I~ 6

Iulll

San l&gt;iqn lltlknv~. 4jJ.m,
Frund~u

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10
liJ
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WESTERNCONFERENCE

Sto....y. Doc.ll
Billlimore 111 CINCINNATI. I p.m.
Chicago 111 Tunlpl hl1y, I 11.111.
lndian"f''Oi~ at Mlnnc101a, I p.m.
New Orlc;ms at Kanw Ci1y. I run.
N~w Yori GiMII all Dall;u, I p.m.
P1lii!Mklj1hi;~ at Wmbingtoo, I p.m.
PiniburiJ! 111 Tcnlkllii.'C, I p.m.
Atlunmm Aritnn11, 4f1.m.
Jucksonvi11c at O.kllllld. 4 p.m.
New York Jctsu11X1n1M, 4 p.m.
Sao

44

fl

·-·-

Buffulu 111 Green B11y. 12:.10 p.fll.
Sl. Louis Ill Carolinu. 4 p.m.

46

6

l'iullbur~h

17

Week17slate

52, Tof. Christian J4~
Pikttoo61, Wuverly43
Portsmouth E. 43, Punsmuuth None Dum!: 411
Ravenna SE 61. Garreltsvilk 45
Reedsville F..a.s1em 67, Miller 36
Richmood Edison 64, Buckeye I.Ak:ul63
Scbrina: ~Kinley 54. WmTen Kennedy l~
Shenandoah 63. FQf1 Frye 62
South Charlestoo SE 74, Urbana 35
Southeastern 74. Urbana 3!'i
SprinJ. Cn1holic 6). Grecnon J I
S1. Mllt)''s Sl. Delphos Sr. Jnhn44
Swanton~. Tol. Wailc 43
Sylvania Nonhvicw 57, Clay -12
Sy~"JVT~el Val. 4~ . Portsmouth Cl;1y .15
Tol. Start :\~. SpringlidJ 4tl
Union Local R2. Monroe G:ntml43
\liiiiOfl Co. :'19, Belpre 55
Wuh:rford 49, Rll'ihC Sout~rn -l.l
Wnu5eon 63, 1\yenville 1M
Weir! Gil M&lt;ldonna, W .V:1. 66. Bn\lg.:p!lr1 47
W~ir1on . W.Va. M. S1eubenvillc Cath. _
\0
Wen Jtfferson 54, Meeh:tnic.'iburp. .U).
West Union ~7 , Mam;heucr J2
Wheelcnbur&amp; 7$, South Web5tL'f 71
Windtlnm ~7. Crestwood 441
·
Wondridac

lA-nv~o'f

~

I £11. {if
11 44 Y4

point~.

In the reserve contest the Marauders jumped out to a 13-2 lead and
rolled to a 35-12 win over the Buckeyes. Shannon Price led a balanced
Meigs attack with eight points, Amy
Hysell added seven.
Ouarter lllllb
Meigs
11 -6- 14-18=49
Nelsonville-York
12-6-6-1 5=39

Waterford girls rally to· notch 49-43 vi·c tory over Southern

The same attitude was refl~"Cted in
At Knoxville Center mall, holiday
CATCHES TOUCHDOWN PASS - San Francisco wide receiver
irate calls to radio talk shows, angry shoppers crammed department stores Jerry Rice cllt~hea.a touchdown panln the aecond quartar of Mancolumns in sports sections and graf- with television sets to watch the pre- day nlght'a game llglllnet the visiting Denver Broncos, Who loet 34fiti on the UT campus. An editorial scntation. They booed loudly when 17. Rice, playing hla flrllt game of the 1888011, didn't return to eetlon
canoon in The Chattanooga Times .the winner was announced.
after cracking a bone In hlaleft.knft when Denver safety Steve Atwa;depicted sports writers as "The HeistIn the aftermath, several full-page ter hit him In the end zoo. following thle catch. (AP)
'•
men."
ads ran in The Knoxville News-SenEven Tennessee Gov. Don tine!, including one Sunday from a _ _ _ _.;..._ _ _ Sports briefs-------Sundquist was irked.
.local bank declaring: "We've always
Hockey .
two-hour workout in a 9&lt;-degroc
"I think it stinks. I think the Heis- believed Peyton is the best. We still
CALGARY, Alhena (AP)- Cal- room dressed in a rubberized wet suit
man award ~as been diminished," he do."
gary Aames goalie Rick Tabaracci when he collapsed Dec. 9, said Dr.
said.
Graffiti reading "Peyton got signed a contract extension that will Bader · Cassin, chief Washtenaw
In Knoxville, UT students were screwed" and including disparaging pay him more $700,000 this season County medical examiner.
glued to ESPN on Saturday night, comments about Heisman voters and $1.2 million in 1998-99. Tabarac-'
Basketball
•
watching the presentation from their appeared Monday morning on an ele- ci was scheduled to make $600,000
NEW YORK (AP) -- The NBA
dorm rooms, fraternity houses and at phant-sized boulder on the UT cam- this season.
has discarded the slam dunk contest
nightspots along "the strip," a row of pus. By noon, school maintenance
Wresding
fo~ All-Star Saturday, replacing,_it
eateries and bars next to campus.
workers had painted over it.
YPSILANTI, Mich. (AP) _The with an event called "2-ball'1 ;
"When t~y announced ,\Y.l!Qll~;.,
- ,_.,.."'0~. ,.wNQ2!.1~e.JQomt!ll. Jbo~•lb ·l!f ..-..J.Iai,..aily or Michigan
; Basketball ~- .., ,~ ·...,, .,
son's name, 11 w.-s like a l!uge ciil- t. noi'fuillfdlscuSies polittcs, reh- wrestler last week was ·caused liy
BOSTON (AP)- The Philadellective gasp. Everybody went into gwn and other current events excessive training while trying to lose
phia 76crs suspended guard Allen
shock," said Tausha Carmack, •ice assumed a~ tmpromptu sports talk too much weight too fast, according
Iverson for their I00-83 loss to
president of the Student Governtnent format Monday when the phone hncs 10 autopsy results.
Boston for ,missing practice a day ea~;Association.
(See MANNING on Paae 5)
Jeff Reese, 21, was engaged in a lier.
I

!

four points as Meigs outscored the
Lady Buckeyes 14-6 in the period to
take a 31-24 lead heading into the
final eight minutes or action.
Shrimplin's six points and Tonya
Mill~r and Amber Vining each scored
four in the fourth period. as Meigs
outscored the host team 18- 1S to post
the 10-point win.
Freshman i\mber Vining and
sophomore Jennifer Shrimplin paced
the Marauders with 10 points ,each.
Meigs hit I9 of 49 from the floor
including one of five from three point
range for 39%. The Marauders went
to the line 14 times hitting 10 for
71%. Meigs had excellent bench
scoring as 29 points came off the
bench.
Meigs pulled down 33 rebounds
led by Tanya Miller with II,
Williams added six. Meigs turned the
ball over IS times, had 12 assists led
by Tangy Laudermilt with four and
Becky Smilh with three: ·
Adams led the Buckeyes with 14

&amp; Point Pleasant

Karr, Brannon,. Hayman l·ead Eastern girls past Miller 67-36

Infection in knee ~ospitalizes Manning
By MARTA W. ALDRICH
NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP)
Adding injury to insult, Tennessee
quarterback Peyton Manning was
hospitalized while his dazed fans
pondered why tbe NCAA's thirdhighest career passer was passed
over for the Heisman Trophy.
Manning was hospitalized Monday because of an infection from the
ruptured bursa in his right knee. He
was to receive bed rest and antibiotics
for two to three days, and likely will
resume practice after Christmas to
prepare for the Orange Bowl.
Meanwhile, his fans were dumbfounded while the rest of the country
gleefully embraced Michigan cornerback Charles Woodson . as the
nation's' first defensive player to win
the Heisman.
·
"There are more theories on this
'than the Kennedy assassination,"
'said Mike Keith, who plays host to a

The Dally Sentinel • Page 5

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

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• "My own personal theory is that
jinany of the national media just got
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:ftories about Peyton Mannong, Ket;,th said .
.' ~ Keith said the choice of Woods~n
~ds weight to a Heisman-sized ch1p
oon Tennessee 's shoulder. Mannmg
:t&gt;ecomes the fourth Volunteer to fin:lsh second in Heisman voting, fol;lowing Majors, Hank Lauricella and
'tleath Shuler.

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�•

Page 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,Decernber16,1997

Iraq ridiculing U.S. dec.ision to inoculate
troops
against
anthr
ax
ha~e
T~"ay
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - The
·
1eft
ch1.er u.N. weapons mspector
Iraq today after faahng to. persuade
Saddam Hussem to open h1s palaces
to a search for clandestine biological.
chemical and nuclear weapons pro·
grams. . .
..
•
Iraq nd 1culed the U.S. mohtary s
decision to inoculale American troops
· anthrax. saymg
· 1t· d1'd nut posagamst
sess "even one gram" of the ~eadly
b1oiog1cal agent.
Richard Butler Oew to Bahrain en
route back to New York, where he
wall report to the U.N. Sccunty
Council on Thursday on the outcome
days of largcly disappointing

gaining access to an unspecified
· · sues,
·
he
number of other sensitive
sa1d the talks y1elded no . breakthroughs on access to preSidential
palaces and no genuine information
on suspected germ warfare program•.
"I the b' I . I
I
n
Jo ogJca ~rea, am sorry to say, Iraq sa1d they have
demoyed everythin~:· Butler soid
Mon day. "Thatts
· not quite
· whal our
·
d h
· f
m obrml auhon s~~s ... so we o ave a
pro em ere.
Fears that Iraq may have hecn pm·
h d ·
h
ducmg ant rax unng a recent I ree~
week forced halt m the U.N. weapons
searches prompted the Umtcd States
vaccines for 1.s million

satd Monday that Iraq could
prixluced
enough anthrax
to fill sax
, .·
.
m~Ssale warheads dunng the standoff.
Baghdad mocked the ~ontenuon,
sugg~stm(!"that Cohen_might own a
vac~ane firm and be trymg to drum up
busaness for u
"'
. . .
.
.
.
Iraq ... tssaymg agam that II does
not possess even one gram of thM
b Jog ·a\
ate a\" a un dento
r aod · f'" ...· m ·n· 1• n k ' ·
tcld mh ormf"auon mrmsNry spoAesman
to t eo'!"'"11raqt ews gcncy.
Anthrax 1~ one of the most lethal
· d
be f 1
·
gc_rm agents an can
at a even .'"
m•croscuptc amounts. _Iraq, Russta
•

and as many as IOothercountries are
bel'aeved. to have the capab'l'
aaty to ~sc
antluax m ~eapens..
.
Asked 1f Iraq's tntrans1gence in
the latest talks will trigger another
crisis with the United Nations,
..
.
k
AI
mspecuons .~po .esman an Dacey
sa~d today, I thank no. As ofThursday, it is going to be in the Security
Counc1'I' s han ds 10 ....,;tde."
~--·
The Se~urity ~ouncil has insisled
that sanct1ons 1mposed af1er Iraq
invaded Kuwait. in 1990 will stand
.
.
.
unul counctl !"cmbe;.; arc satisfied
Iraq has ehmmated tis weapons uf
•

mass destruction.
•
The talks were Butler'~ first with
the Iraqis since Saddam triggered the
three-week standoff by orderin
American weapons inspectors out o1
Iraq.
·
. Bullerthen withdrew lhe remain·
In@ inspectors in protest raising tensions ilhi-~risis t'•t had• 'the Un'ated
,,.military pre"•
States bolstering its
-nee
in the Persian Gulf.
·
After Russian mediation all of the
ins""ctors returned Nov 2l,and there
· •- ·
· .
h_ave· hecn no major confrontations
smcc.
·

Whi\o Butler reported prngrc&gt;&lt; in

Defense Secretary William Cohen

ITHACA. N.Y. (AP) - Peter
Lallas a:greeiJhat drinking is a principal activity at many fraternities.
That doesn't mean, he says; that fraternity , leaders are the biggest
drinkers on campus.
·
, "Like anything else. there are a
· few (fraternities ·and members) that
give all of us a bad name. There's
more to fraternity life," said Lallas,
a junior who is president of the Sigma Phi chapter at Cornell University.
According to a national survey
released Monday, researchers al Cornell am! Soulhem Illinois universities
found 'that nearly three of every four
fraternity~aders engage in binge
drinking, consuming an average of 14
drinks per week.'

The study found that sorority
\cadets drank less, with 55 percent
involved in binge drinking while
averaging six drinks a week. but were
still higher than the general student
population.
"Fraternities arc social organiza·
tions and any time you get a large
group of people under one roof in a
social setting for a pany !here's
going to be drinking.'' Lallas said.
Only 42 percent of male students
and 26 percent of female studen1s not
involved in Greek organizations
reponed binge drinking episodes 'in
the l\lfO weeks before they were surveyed. Binge drinking was defined as
,having five or more drinks. in a row
in one sitting.
"We found that the leaders of

Greek societies were among ·the
worst ulfendcrs with respect 10 binge
drinking," said Philip W. Mcilman,
director or counseling and psychological services at Cornell and one of
the researchers involved in the study.
"These arc the very individuals
we would ~ope would be the most
concerned aboot liability and legal
issues and those that would be the
most responsible. But surprisingly,
we found that lhc more involved a
person is with Greek life, the higher
the drinking level and lhe greater the
adverse consequences.'' said Meil·
man.
The
researchers'
findings
appeared Monday in the January
1998 issue of the Journal of Stljdies
on Alcohol published by Ru!ge~s

~~~;o

:~"'~~~cr

New mandate for
Bosnia force tops
NATO agenda
BRUSSELS. Bclgaum (AP) Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
and her NATO colleagues se t to work
aoday devising a smaller, m•lre ncx 'hlc NATO-Jed peacekeeping force ·
for Bosnia after the current force 's
mission expires.
Alhl-ight and her 15 counterparts
from NATO nations, meeting: in
Brussels for two days, were expect·
cd to approve a proposal to give military planners four options for extending the pcut:c mission hcforc it
expire~ in June.
The generals will then assess the

'

'

military consequences of each and
report back ncxl month.
There seems to be no political will
for maintaining the current so·callcd
"Saahilizauun Force" · of 34.000
troop,, about half the size of the force
that hegan deploying in Dccemher
1995.
"All of the options will involve a
rcd~ction in force levels." said. a
NATO oflocial, on condition of
anonymity.
In the United States. the Clinton
administration has promised that the
K.500 American troops now in Bosnia
would be home by June. Keeping
U.S. soldiers in Bosnia will be a
1ough sell in Washington. And major
U.S. allies say they will leave. if U.S.
troops arc withdrawn.
But the allies agree some son of
force is needed in Bosnia if the 1995
Dayton peace accords are to have a
chance of succeeding. A withdrawal
is certain to lead to a rc;umption of
war, civilian and military expcns sav.
The major question is how much

suppon the NATO-led forces will be
c&lt;pected to provide for civilian
implementation of the Dayton agreement.
Among p0ssible options: carrying
out the same mission wilh fewer
troops, perhaps 18,000- and strip·
ping the NATO-led fo~ec of all civil·
ian responsibility and concentrating
solely on the military mission.
Some have suggested an "overthe-horizon force," highly mobile
troops based outside of Bosnia, ready
to rush in as needed. But the generals say the idea is too expensive and

the in ·pectors drove out of
•
' in a silt-car
·
their""
hcadquaners
convoy
to continue ins ctions. but on I at .
sites that Ira hr: ke t 0 n
y
Iraq says ~he :o.d:td fa1~es des· ;
'gn ted ff-l'm't
k-1
I
a
o I IS are s muv s o
national sovereigncy that can never be :.
b· 1 d t0
·d . t'
"
su D:JCC.e
_oduBtSI 1 s~ru '."Y:
.
acey sua ut er s massoon was
nol a comp 1etc r,a,'Iurc
" There was some ·success in it, .
Th ·
. 31
1h h ·
1 f
.t ere was a at ohprogrcss doubg ·
1 was not as muc as we wante ut
we must .report !hat there was some :
progress made," he said.
·
·

y

Survey f1nds fraternity leaders are heaviest college drinker.s

University's Center ofA\cPbol Stud·
ies.

The survey questioned 25,411 slu~
dents at 61 colleges and universities
· nationwide. The results came in the
wake of two highly publici1.cd al~
l)ol-rclated deaths since August .. ~f , \
students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Louisian~
State University.
.
The researchers did not look at the '
question or cause-and-effect.
"From 1hc data we cannot say if
.. . heavy drinkers arc attracted to •
Greek life, or if Greek life prornolcs
heavy drinking practices." said Jcf·
frey Cashin, a Southern Illinois
. researcher involved in the survey.
.. Common sense and observation
would suggest that a combination of
both factors is involved. "

Another idea is bringing in a
large police force, such as France's
gendarmes. to reinforce the U.N.
International Police Task Force. The
unarmed force essentially is a train-

ing and monitoring group.
But neither the military nor the
police like the idea of putting police
under military command.
The foreign ministers also plan to
discuss NATO enlargement and
approval for the reformed internal
command structure.
Turkish Foreign Minister Ismail
Cern allayed fears that Turkey might
attempt to block NATO's expansion
in retaliation for the European
Union's rejection of Ankara's candi·
dacy for membership.
··It has nothing io do with
·NATO," Cern told reporters just
before the foreign ministers' meeting
began. "We are not threatening any·
one. The governm~nt has committed
itself to NATO expansion, and that is
our position."
·

Closing arguments to
·resume in Nichol.s trial
''

.
'

Ann
Landers
19117, 1..1111 Antclel Tilnel

Syndlule •nd Cruwrt
SyndicaLe.

Dear Ann Landen: This letter is
for "Mom in Arizona" and anyone
else who believes that troubled teens
do not belong in the military.
My brother was one of those
teens, constantly in trouble at home
and at school. He even had a few
brushes with the law. A year ago,
after receiving his high school diplo·
rna at summer school, he joined the
Marines. The next time we saw him
was al his bool camp graduation.

A·uxiliary
A his1ory of Lewis-Manley Aux·
iliary Unit 263, American Legion,
organized 60 years ago was present·
, ed by Margaret Bowles, historian, at
the 'annual Christmas dinnet party
neld at lhe Mt. Moriah Baplist
Church.
.The Auxiliary was organized in
1937 at .the home of Susie Manley,
Middleport, and receive its name
from Charles Manley and George
Lewis, both World War I veterans.
It was noted that the Post had
been organized a few years before
that with Campbell Harper being the
first commander and Arza Bryant,
the first adjutant The auxi~ary was
chartered from headquarters on
Anra ~ IQ~R with \6 members.
Alice Broughton was the first president, and Lula Hampton, the first
secretary. She is the only surviving
chaner member.
It was poinled outthat since there
is no aclive legion post, that the unit
is called a "widowed'' unit.
Also presenled at the meeting
was a hislory of "Old Glory." Helen
Culmer said that the United States
O~g is the oldest of the national standards of the world. It was first
aulhorized by Congress on June 14.
1977, with that day now being
observed Flag Day in America. The
decree was that there should be 13
sttlp,e$ fu,r-thc1int 1a states.
Tbe colors have heen explained
as red for valor, white for purity and
libeny, and blu~ for the color of
heaven and for' reverence for God.
The white stripes, according to Pres.
Washington, showed a country sepa-

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Annual
Christmas dinner pany, Wednesday,
6 p.m., Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion. Shon business
meeling with planning for Santa to
give treats to children on Christmas
eve, 5 to 7 p.m.

(Hint. .. Hint. .. Hint. .. )
owatch

D

DRing

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Yellow

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Sterling Silver

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Bracelel

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RUTLAND - Rutland Township Trustees, year-end meeting,
Wednesday, 6 p.m. at the Rutland
Fire Station.

White

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Colored Gemstone

Length

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drivers and home owneis have
fewer and less co~tly losses
than other age groups. So Irs
only lair to charge you less lor
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RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conservancy District, · meeting
change · from Christmas Day to
Thursday.

Woi-Mort 304/424-6912

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t 98 Wawr!y Plaza 614/947-8226

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POMEROY - Middlepon Child
Conservation League. home of
H.elen Blackston. 6:30p.m. potluck,
Thursday. Take gifts for needy fam·
ilies. An ornament exchange to be
held wilh secret. sisters to be

a

Dear Sbloeky Nel&amp;bbors: I
don't know how many hammocki
there arc among the pine trees i~
KnoY1lton. Wis., but you may have
blown your cover. I am interested in
knowing if your neighbors recog;
nize you as the author of this letter.I'm betting they will. If sci. it
could be a good thing. SometimeS:
people don't know they are annoy~
ing you unless you tell them.
Gem of the Day: If your brothei
hits you, don't hit him back. Parents
always catch the second person.
Send questions to Ann Landers, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.
90045

LIVINGSTON, N.J . (AP) - A
half-hour before closing at the Livingston Mall, Karen Glevis surveys
the damage- the misplaced belts,
the missing gloves, the mismatched
pile of hastily folded sweaters.
"It can take 45 minutes to refold
a table of sweaters," sighs the assis-'
tant manager at Sears, anricipa1ing a
weary night of picking up after
messy shoppers.
At the Disney store, baseball caps
ahd discarded Winnie the Pooh dolls
litter the carpet. Compact discs have
fallen waaay und.er the racks at Sam
Goody. And after enduring the footsteps - and food droppings - of
several hundred children, the Santa
CLEANING UP THE MESS • Store employees eae·tll• Chrlatmas set needs a good vacuuming.
1111110n as more work, more cleaning, and more picking up after
The holiday season usually
frantic shoppers.
means more store hours for shoppers. But it can add several hours to
a mall's after-hours routi'ne, as
employees stay into the night . to
regroup and restock · for the next
morning.
It can be an exhausting bummer.
"We have had to stay until 2 ·a .m.
before,"
Ms. Glevis says. "We don't
The Alfred United Methodist Genrude Robinson, Melvin Tracy.
leave
until
it's ready for tomorrow."
Church hosted its annual holiday Joe and Pat Mayhew, Katie Ho&lt;sie, ·
The longer holiday hours dinner at the church Saturday, Dec. Russell Archer.
many
stores stay open until 11 p.m.
6, with the Rev. Sharon H.ausman
Marlene Donovan, Lloyd and
and
reopen
at 8 a.m. - give
giving the blessing.
Ruth Brooks, Debbie Barber and
employees
less
time to get orgaAttending were Nina Robinson, T')ller, Nellie Parker, Pam Michael,
nized.
And
the
extra
business adds a
Sarah Caldwell, Marge Guthrie, Gary and Brenda Johnson, all local;
ton
of
paperwork
at
the end of a
Charlotte Van Meter, -Doris and Mary E. Jennett of Florida, Steve
Lloyd Dillinger, John Taylor and and ~aren r:ollrod, Katie, Bryan and night, Sam Goody assistant manager
;,Betty Bow, Dave and Mary Jo Bar· Brapdon of Athens, Eleanor Boyles Earl Hall says.
Not every store has to spend
ringer, Richard, Florence and Tim of ·Belpre, Eric, Jackie, Erin and
hours
cleaning up after shoppers. At
Spencer, Thelma Henderson, Victor Jody Brooks of New Marshfield,
San
Francisco Music Box Co.,
the
Bahr, Clair an'd Osie Follrod. Kathy Steve, Joyce and Stephanie St. Clair
and Stacie Watson, Marilyn Robin- of Lancaster, and Bill and Rose Foil- crammed with knickknacks, assistant manager Karen Lamanna says.
son, Susan
Dan, Shelia, rod of Athens.
"I just vacuum, count the money
Kin, Danielle and
and get out."
But for high-volume stores. or
ones where customers can easily
pick things up and put them somewhere ~lse. it's a ni2htmare.

Alfred UMC enjoys
.Christmas dinner

"It's horrible," says HallmarK
cashier Tanya Senior, "All the card~
are on the Ooor," she says. "People
take them out and don't put them
back in the right place."
•
Other stores sometimes revamp
their fioors at night after closing. AI
II p.m. last Friday. an army of
employees at The Gap, The Limite4
and other clothing stores busily
replaced that day's outfits with new
ones.
Nearby, Brenda Haas, who has a
day job in the mall's marketing
depanment, delicately tossed white
"snow" under a 37-fool Christmas
tree, making sure the phony drifts
were Oaw\ess.
"It's my job to make sure that the
center looks great for the weekend,"
she says, "If the snow doesn't look
perfect, then I'm not happy."
At Sears, one worker replaced a
half dozen belts onto the rack,
another searched for lost mates to
shoes, while still others restacked
and refolded piles of khiki pant~.
sweaters and lunlenecks.
Ms. Glevis, stuffing leather wallets back into their bo.es, found an:
empty box from Isotoner gloves sbe:
assumes were stolen.
The mess will only get worse as
Christmas gets closer.
"As people get more frantic and
they can't find gifts, they tear
through the depanments rapidly."
she says.
After cleaning up, Ms. Glevis
isn't through. She has to put up sale
signs for a weekend special between
8 a.m. and 10 a.m. the next day. A
new crew will come in two hours
early to restock.
"It's just basically picking up
after people," Ms. Glevis says. "I
tell you, when I go home I don't
want to fold anything."

312 GIFTS

Sentinel
Classified&amp; .

992-2156

The Light
T

FOR THE PERSON WHO HAS EVERYTHING
1 YEAR. GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TO
THE DAILY SENTINEL

By
·Dave
Grate

of

Bottle

52 WEEKS

Gas
Tt\e bluebird may bring
happiness, but the stork
brings tax exemptions

***
only thing that'll

The
falling hair Is the floor.

FOR ONlY
saa.40

stop

***

The generation gap doesn't
worry most of us as much as
the wallet gap.

***

Things turn out best for the
people who make the best of
the·way. things turn out.

***

ln cenain parts of the world
people pray in the streets. ln
this CO!Jnlry they're called
pedestrians.

fl wry
Mwry Christmas

SALEM CENTER
Star
Grange 778 fourth degree team
practioe, Thursday, 7 p.m. a1 the
Grange hall located on County Road
I north of Salem Center.
Qllil

valued at $1,100

We Give Mature
Drivers, Home
Owners·and
Mobile Home
Owners Special
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THURSDAY

Hope all your wishes come

IUDg

FRIDAY
COOLVILLE- Live nativity on
lhe front lawn of 1he Coolville Unit·
ed Methodist Church Friday and
Saturday, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. each
evening. On Saturday, the Waterford
High School Brass j:hoir under the
direction of Andrew Sigman will
perform. ·
·

EAST MEIGS - Eastern Athlot·
ic Boosters. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
All coaches and parents of athletes
to attend.

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revealed.

SYRACUSE - Third Wednes·
day Homemakers Cl.ub, Christmas
potluck, gift exchange, noon, Syra·
cuse Municipal Building .

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rated from 'the mother country. Stars
have been added as states have
joined the union. Culmer also noted
that a law is working its way through
Congtess which will make desecra·
lion of the nag unlawful.
Hampton, poppy chairman. gave
a brief history of th~ 'poppy, the
memorial Oower for American War
dead.
The poppy program began in the
years f()llowing World WAR I. Veterans relurning home remembered
the wild poppies growing in France
and Flanders. It became a living
symbol of their dead comrades on
Nov. 10, 1918 at the First National
Convention of the Amtrican Legion.
On Oct. 1921, it wiiS adoo1ed as the
American Legion Auxiliary Memorial flower.
Poppies are made by disabled
'veterans as a way -of giving them
recreation and earning extra money.
Poppy Day is usually observed .during the week before Memorial Day.
Lorrene Goggins presided at the
meeting wilh grace boing given by
Risden Miller.
Several veterans, their wives and
o1her guests' were present atlhe dinncr including veteran Barbara
lames, who was recognized. Hamp·
ton gave a spec1al tnbute to the vet·
erans and noted that from 1975 to
1978 .florence.. .alii~. a· me~,
was E1ghth Dastnct president. .
Tu~ey, and ham donner wllh all
the tnm_mmgs were served. Chrtsl·
mas carols were s~ng, and James
Bowles had the ,closmg prayer.

for the sprinklers. Enough already!
It would be really nice to be able
10 lie in the hammock and enjoy listening to the ball games on the radio
or just have some peace and quiet
No such luck. On nice days in the
sumiJler, we are forced to si t inside
with the windows shut and the air
conditioner turned 9n just to hear
each olher talk.
We spend minimal amount of
time mowing dpwn the weeds, and
we encourage the moss 10 grow ,
beneath the pine trees because there
are better things to do in life than
mow lawns and contribute to noise
pollution. They probably refer to us ·
as ,. The Shlocky. Neighbors in
Knowlton, Wis :

Cleaning up the mess
of holiday shopping -~

history _

reviewed at dinner

POMEROY - Annual Christmas party of Drew Webster Post39,
American Legion, Tuesday night, 7
p.m. Senior Citizens Center, for
legionnaires and wives.

rrlie Wisli List

Tuesday, December 16, 1997

Gone were the hunched shoulders promoted to the rank of lance corpo- fayor by mowing his lawn'! And you
called him generous? Decent' Try
and attitude problem. There before ral.
annoying.
As
another
pan
of
his
reward,
he
us stood a tall, proud Marine. He
We purchased a lakefront home
achieved more in one year than was allowed to go home for 30 days.
in
the
woods, thinking we would get
He
never
made
it.
On
his
way,
he
many_people do in a lifetime. But
away
from
the overly zealous weekwas
killed
in
a
car
accident
in
Tenmost of all, he achieved self-esteem
ena
Lawn
Rangers,
to no avail. Our
nessee.
He
was
only
19.
••
Grieving
and self-respect. The Marine Corps
two
new
neighbors
have this golf
Sister in Beaufort, S.C.
turned his life around.
Dear Sister: What a hean-break- course mentality. which is positively
Last July, my brother and anolher
Marine saved the life of a 2-year-old er, but it was good of you to write maddening. One in panicular spends
. boy who was drowning. 'fhe two and let us know what the Marines every minute using some kind of
motor-driven
brought the boy to shore, called for did for your brother. It was a splen- monstrous-sized
device
to
rpaintain
his
lawn. If it
did
final
tribute.
Though
it
took
the
help and applied CPR until the paraisn'
t
the
lawn
tractor,
it's
the weed
medics arrived. The child survived Marine Corps to bring it out, there
whacker,
the
leaf
blower,
the
power
with no brain damage. My brother must have been a Jot of· good basic
mule her, the lawn vac or a chain saw
received the 'Navy and Marine Corps material in that young man.
to
get rid of the trees that block the
Dear
Ann
Landers:
Why
does
Achievement Medal, which is the
sun
and drop leaves or pine needles.
"Keeping
Up
With
the
Joneses"
highest non-combat commendation
And
then, he runs his water pumps
think
he
is
doing
his
neighbor
a
given. He was also meriloriously

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Auxiliary FOE.
7:30 Thesday at the hall.

After prosecutor Beth Wilkinson
wid jurors Monday that there was
more than enough circumstantial evidence tn justify a ~uilty verdict, the
defense tonk ai1p at the government's case. from the searcli for
Nichols to the work done at FBI labs
and the ncdibility of its "tar witness. ,

Page7

- Mari~e Corps turned troubled teen ar~und - only to have life end

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing t&lt;i announce meeting
·and special events. The calendar is
not designed to promote sales or
fund raisers ,of any type. Items arc
printed as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to run a specific num:
ber of days.

lions .

·

•
•

Community Calendar

deadliest act of terrorism on U.S. s"oil .
hased on "woefully lacking" evidence.
The defense was expected to wrap
up closing arguments today. Pr9SC·
cutors will have the chance for a brief
rchultal he fore jurors receive instructions !'rom U.S. District Judge ·
Richard Marsch and begin dclibcra-

Tigar. wh1lc Woods insisted that
Nichols cannlll he executed l'nr the

By The Bend

°

impraclicalto implement. .

DENVER ( AP)- Hammering at
everything from witness credibility to
FBI- standards, attorneys for Oklo·
homa City bombing suspect Terry
Nichols fought for his life by suggcstmg he was the fall guy for a
botched case.
With their client facing a possible
death sentence if convicted, defense
attorneys Ron. Woods and Nlichael
Tigar told jurors the government .
mishandled its investigation and
molded evidence to fit faulty conclusions.
··The Marine Corps builds men .
The FBI huilds witne&gt;Ses." 'aid

r·

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Pomeroy • Middleport,

Ohio

Tueeday,

December 16, 1997-.

,.,_..h

Tim~ Out For Tips - how to shop for a computeri

BY BECKY BAER
Melge County Extension Agent
Femlly and Consumer Sci·
encesl Community Develop·
ment
Do you have a computer on your
Christmas list thi s year? Have your
children or spouse been aski ng for
one? How do you know what to look
for when fmdingthe right compulcr
for your family?
According to Eva Rrad shaw,
Managing D.irector of Computer
Applications Center for the Department of Consumer and Tex tile Sciences, the first thing you should do
is identify your computer needs.
Decide what you want to do with the
computer. You may have already
recognized several potential use!'! finishing work at home. educational
games for the children, or recording

family finances.
List se~eral possible uses before
purchasing a computer. This will
help you to select a computer capable of performing those tasks .
Today 's computers can do just about
·everything but empty the garbage.
You can use your computer to pay
bills electronically, chec~ the weather and headlines, communicate with
friends, or plan your evening meals.
After you have decided on your
needs, you can stan identifying what
kind of computer you want. For
example, there are desktop models
that stay in one place and have full
size keyboards and monitors.
Portable computers provide Oexibility in where you use them, but there
is a tradeoff.
Keyboards on portables are more
compact and screens lef!d to be
smaller and harder to sec. If you
need to be able to take the computer
with you to various locations, look
·.t laptop and notebook styles. However. remember portability comes at
a higher price than desktop computer&lt;. To lit everything into· a smaller
size , manufacturers have to usc
more CXJ&gt;C:nsivc techniques. In addition, portable computers arc made to
be more durable to withstand the
wear and tear of travel and this also

""'ro
'""""·
Are you
going to

f~ro

f• space
"""""'
""'•
"""'"
ne¢ to share extra
for uses
which
you
information from your computer haven't yet discovered.
with others a! your offi~e? You may
Ano_ther variable in b~yin~ comneed to cons1de( the kmds of com- puters IS the speed at wh1ch 11 runs.
puters used trere. If your computer Of course you will want to pureh~
IS not compatible w1th the1rs, you the fastest system your budget will
may not be able to easily transfer allow, but what is fast enough? CPU
information from one system to the clock speed is measu~d in Megaother. Furthermore, there. may be henz (MHZ) and var1es from one
other groups of people w1th which computer to another.
you want to share information on
Don't get stu~k in the . waiting
d1sk.
.
. game. If you c?nllnually walt for the
If you are plannmg to type an1- latest generatton of computers to
cles for the church newsletter on drop in price, you w~ll never buy a
your computer or 1f the children computer. There w1ll always be
want to take data to use on their something faster coming onto the
school's computer, you will want to market. Realize that you cannot stay
rind out what type of systems they ahead for long. Buy the most speed
use. You must remember to find out you can afford and need for the
what d1skette SIZe and capac1ty the1r . types of programs you plan to run .
"omputers can handle, too.
You . may find . some . software
As your hst of computer tasks apphcat10ns, espec1ally games, that
grows, so does the cost of your com- require a cc~ain class of a com~uter
purer. Each apphcat10n or program to run. Th1s IS one reason why It so
requires space on your computer's important to know the planned uses
hard dnve. The larger the amount of ofthe.computerbefore you make the
information you have to store or purchase . . If your application.
nc.ed to rind, the larger your har:ct requir~s a Pentium processor,. be
dnve needs to be. For example, Ills s~re that you buy a ~omputcr that
not uncommon for a full-featured has at least that capability. ComputWindows word processing program er technology is advancing at a
to require 50 Megabytes of storage tremendous speed, and any system
space. Also, you will want to plan you buy today will be outdated in

..---For. . .

GenH11111111 -110 Colopoo ......

o.."""-- n..r... ,.,. c""""""'~-•'"l

ing upsradable computers can help er information before making yoor
extend the lifetime of your system.
pun:hase. Mapzines and news
Along ~ith hard drive capacity articles can provick both adve~seand processmg speed, there are Olher ments with prices and compan~
considerations when buying a com- of different computers. Librarit~J
purer.
have popular computer magazines,~
The memory or RAM included Talk with friends and co-workers tell
":ith the computer can make a huge see what trey like about their com-!
difference tp how fast your coniput- pulers and where they purchased:
er runs, espeo:;ially when using Win- iheir systems. Remember sales· per..
dows-based applications. Again, the sonnel cari provide information. butl
more RAM the better. You will it might be biased.
~
probably have to pay extra to have
Other considerations when pur-: ·
more than the standard. amount of chasing your cQmputer include tfilio
RAM ·loaded on your computer. If video or monitor size and quality;
you are not sure how much RAM to and exlras such as a mouse, mode~
buy, you can always buy the stan- for electronic communications and!
dard amount and add rnore later software that will be included.
when you see the need f&lt;lr it.
While printing is generally a func-:
Alternate sources of co,mputers tion you want, buying a printer is
exist. There are mail-order compa- separate decision and the main con1;·
mes and local retailers each having sideration is making sure your com'•
adv.anlagcs and . disadvantages . putcr and printer arc compatible. ::
Ma•l-ordcr companies generally
Once you decide what types ot!
offer low prices but service and sup- functions you want your compute~
port is less personal than local pur- to perform, take' the time to chcclot
chases. If you need to have quick several sources of information andj
response to questions or feel uneasy determine how much money your
about opening your · system. you can spend. You will be able to sclcc(f
might be more comfortable with a a computer that will fit your family'~'
local store. Be sure to find out if needs now and in tho future.
support is free or provided at an
·'
hourly rate.
'!

W.lio &amp; Frlendahlp. Send Aelllln To: CU. 338, c/o GaiNpolle
Deity Tribune, 125 Thin! - ·
Cllllpol._ OH 41&amp;11.
LONELY?

CONNOLLY'S t
. oa1\S
. c,.~:,
8

.

20 Yra. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie JO(Ies

a:

J

CHRISTMAS TREE$··
IUD FORD'S

•

Cut Your Own
Fresh Cut
Any Scotch or White Pine· $15.00
Wagon Rides on Weekend&amp;
Rt. 33 to Darwin, Eest on Rt. 681. 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd., 1 1/2 miles to tree farm, Follow signs.
Dally 10 am til Dark
Nov. 28 thru Dec. 21 t1/2-CIII7 1 ,.;. pd

'

CHRISTMAS CRAFTS • Children get the opportunity to meke Christmas crafts as part of the annual
Christm8s with Santa It the Meigs County Museum which took placs Saturday. Here, Helen Dayls of
Pomeroy aulats Zlkk Pennington and Kayle McKnight with handmade Christmas cards.

'

~

Easy to add tree lights trim the work

. .'

.' :''

..
'' .
'

'.

..
.
...'.'
''

•,.

..
I

'

'

'

_
By KATE LAWSON
The Detroit News
If your household is like mine.
the term tree-trimming is .apt to create anxiety rather than anticipation.
I'm usually the designated tree
picker-outer and it's .my job to get
the
Christmas
dccorati_ons
unpacked. These little chores I don't
mind.
. What I do have a problem with is

Named to Dean's List
were taken for a lctrcr grade.
Anne Brown. Pomeroy. has heen
Brown is the daughter of Harold
named to the Ohio University and Lynn Brown. 210 W. Main St..
Dean's List for summer quancr Pomcrny.
1997-98. She is a sophomore premed major.
To he named to the list, a student
Kendra Marie Norris. daughter of
must oovc earned a grade point aver- Mr. and Mrs. Gary P. Norris of
age of 3.3 or better on a scale of 4.0 Racine. has been named to the
(straight A's) for the quarter and Dean's List at Ol!crbein College for
tiave earned 16 hours, 12 of which the fall term .

.

· About 2D'k of the student body
appears on the Dean's List each
quarter. A student must be full time
with a term grade point average of a1
least 3.60 to be named to the list.
Otterbein College, an independent, liberal arts institution affiliated
with the United Methodist Church,
is located in Westerville. Ohio.

Ghester D of A
honors member

Autumn Nicole Pot1er

.

It's so simple I can't believe
someone didn't think of this before.
Now putting the lights on is as easy
as draping a square or cone-shaped
net of clear or multicolored bulbs
across old Tannenbaum.
The 4- by 7.-foot rectangular net
and cone-shaped nets (to fit a 6 to 8foot tree) have 208 bulbs pius eight
replacement bulbs. Cost is $35 ,per
net.

----~society Scrapboo~k----

'.'

.,

)hat after I' vc put the carols on the
CD ~layer and gotten the rum but·
tered, I have to tackle the. tree lights.
And. let's face it. perfect light placement is crucial to a well -trimmed
tree. You can·i do it alone (unless
your arms are 7 feet long or the tree
is under 2 feet tall).
" Joy'" said I when I spied the net
or lights in a recent Brookstonc cat·
alogue.

·TURNS ONE· Autumn Nicole
Porter, daughter of Mlrk and
Mlaty Porter, cellbrlted her flrat
birthday with 1 party at her
home, Dec. 11, 7 p.m.
Tht theme wea Sesame
StrHt. Rmllhmenta of eau,
let cream, cttt,. and punch
wreserwd.
Altalldlnfl were her ptrenta,
her grandparents, Miry Porter
111C1 Mlchlll lnd Cindy Swisher;
aunts, Kelly Swlahlr, Dlent Clr·
,..,..,, Anita Musser, Charlaae
Knight, 1nd couslna, 1&lt;11'1 King,
Craig Knight, P1lgl end Wyatt
Musur, end frlenda, Ju1nlte
C:hrlatiln end Kevin Fillda.

The charter was draped for Goldie
Krackombcrgcr when Chester
Council 323, Daughters of America,
met recently at the hall .
Esther 'Smith, councilor, presided
al the meeting which opened with
pledges to the Christian nag and
scripture reading. A report was given
on the Past Councilo" Club Christian P,arty .at 6 p.m. at the Racine
. Restaurant. It was reported that Zeta
Ritchie had fallen. A card was read
from the Frederick family.
Nominatio~t of officers was h61d.
A district meeting wa~ announced
for Feb. 21. and March 21. Quarterly birthdays were observed and honored were Sandy White. Charlotte
Grant. Opal Hollon. Deloris Wolfe.
Ella Osborne. Matt1e Teaford.
Kathryn Baum. E;sther Smith. and
Thelma White.
Others allcnding were Gary
Holter, Mary Holter. .Ella Oshorne,
Shirley Beegle, Doris Grucser. Julie
Curtis, Elizabeth Hayes, Marcia
Keller, Kathryn Baum, Opal
Eichinger. Margaret Amberger.
Goldie Frederick, Laura Nice. Jean
Welsh, jl.lary Jo Barringer, Erma
Cleland. Everett Grant. Charlotte
Grant, and Mattie Teaford.

By CHRIS SWINGLE
Rochester Democret and
Chronicle
Dad probably doesn't need
another tie. Mom has plenty of
sweaters.
You aren't really sure what your
out-of-town siblings already have.
And the nieces and nep)tews are
heyond the age for LEGOs dolls.
So how are you going to come up
with another holiday gift ro delight
them?
First, relax. If these folks are dear
enough to get a gift, you probably
know something about their interests and preferenc,es.
No? You might stop and consider whether you really need to
exchange gifts.
"Holiday shopping for my fami ly can be a nightmare," says Tricia
Campbell, a free-lance writer and
State University College at Brockport (N.Y.) student. "Everyone has
·such specialized tastes and doesn 't
usually 'need' anything in particu-.
Jar."
Maybe it's time to stan a new
gift-giving tradition. Some families
opt for drawing gift-recipient name•
out of a hat instead of 'gelling gifts
for each person, or they chouse to
pool money ·that would rove gone
for presents and take a trip or do
something else together.
"My boyfriend and I' have prohlcms buying each other gifts," says
Carolyn Parker of Webster. N.Y:, a
53-ycar-o:d accounting analyst.
."For Christmas, at Xerox we have
an Angel Tree for children from St.
Joseph's Home and we each pick a
name and buy gifts for that child,
since this will be all the Christmas
they will receive."
Over the years she ha.&lt; come up
with practical gifts for her parents
who live in Florida: •. year's [iass to
Sara.«lta Gardens, where they like to
walk and sec the · flowers; a magazinc or newspaper 'subscription; a
car alarm; and even a year's .mcmbership to the American Automobile
Association,
·
For the hard-to-buy-for, one solu·

tion is to skip stores altogether. One
way to do that is to give of yourself.
"Parents, and especially grand·
parents and great-aunts, uncles and
so on, generally 1enjoy spending time
with"Children and grandchildren and
nieces and nephews more than anything else," says .Mark . Preston of
Perinton, N.Y.
The 42-ycar-old financial analyst
and his girlfriend have given canal
boat rides - with them _;_ to various relatives as birthday and Christmas gifts.
At this time of year, you could
give an 'IOU or a gift certificate for a
summer boat ride or fall foliage train
ride next year. Or just take them out
to lunch or dinner, to a spons event
or a theatrical production .
"The ideaS arc endless,'' says
Preston.
Girt certificate• for just about
anything .. anywhere, have become
incrca.~ingly popular since .they let
the recipient pick just what they
want.
A new. national husiness will
even let you send gift ccnilicatcs
from a variety of places without
leaving home.
Calling itself I (800) PRESENT
(800-773-7368). the service offers
· gil'! certificates from more than "
dozen retailers. including Barnes
and Noble Booksellers, Bloomingdale 's, Orvis. The Sharper Image
and Victnria's Secret.
For the 24-hour order-from-home
convenience. you ' ll pay a $9.95 scrvice fcc that includes a gift box and
UPS delivery. Gift certificates arc
only available in increments of $25;
minimum order is $50.
Nice gifts aren't necessarily
expensive.
Linda ·Whilc of Rochester, N.Y..
came up with a great idea one year
for her grandparcnls, Mike and
Dorathe Farrell of Greece, N.Y.
She gave them a couple of photo
albums with a note promising tn
help them sort through their boxes
of photographs, label with names
and approximate dates and a.rrangc
in the albums.

Have asafe and happy Holiday &amp;ason! :~

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Tha viHog• roo1r111 the

r. ••

by 13th of Jan.
. Sic
ftii1D, 11, 12, 15, 11,
blda

Public Notice
...... County
OhiO EPA PT1 No. Ge 5DII
Ohio Envlronmontol
P1 ole cion Agency

Dm1 Permit to IIIIUII

PUIUC NOTICE
Oralt Pormlt to lnlllll lor

ed to proioot oquotlc llle
ond humon helllth, HI forth
In Ohio Admlnletiottve Code
(OAC) 374S-1-CI7, wilt not be
exc...Sid.
In oeeordonco with OAC
3745·1·05, Ohio EPA will
Public Notice
provide on opporlunlly lor
pubtle eommonto con·
48772.
corning thlo project.
Name •nd . Addre .. of Comment• racelvod ehlll
Foclllty Where Dlocharge bo conoldered by lhe
Occura: Eootern Local Drr.ctorbelore!Mpermltlo
School, 31111111 Stole Route . laauod •• ftnol. Arrr peraon
7, RHdavllle, Ohio, Chatter may aubmtl written
Townlhlp.
,
commenlo on the droll
Rocelvlng Woler: .Eaat permit ond admlnlatrotlve
Bronch trlbutory 10 Shode record and may raqueot •
Rlvor.
public h01rlng. A requeat
Public notice ta horaby far public hoorlng aholl be
glvon thot Ohio Environ- In writing .,d aholl otot• the
mtnlll Protection Agency natura or lhe 101uoo to be
(Ohio EPA) • Dlvlalon of roleod. In oppraprlote
Surfoce W81er (DSW) hoe •••••· Including coo ..
laauod a droll permit-to- where there la olgnlllcant
tnotatt (II.TI)' lor 1111 public lntoreat, the director
conetrucllon dl the moy hold 1 public h01rlng
w11towater tr01tment on • dtell permit olpormlto
worka/dlopoeot eyatem lor priOr IO flnallaauonce ol the
tho above referenced· permit or permtte. Written
project. Ohio EPA hu made I. c••m•ner•ll ond/or public
o determlnotton thot tho hearing roquaata muat be
waotewoter dlocharge from received by tho Ohio EPA,
thle propolld raelllty would Dlvlalan of Surfoea Wiler
roault In dogredotlon to ·or no toter than 30" do yo from
lowering of tho woter the dote or lhlo public
quollty of Eaat Bronch nollco. Comment• end/or
tributary of the Shode River. public hearing requ1111
Arter conalderlng· the ahould be delivered or

!w-tewoter treotment oncll
at dla!IOIIlractlltloa
Ohio EnvlroniMnlll
PI ot.otlon Aioncy
Permlta IICtlon
tiDOWotarMark Drive
P.O. lax 1041
Columllua,,Ohio 43216-0141
technlcel, economic, and
1114)1144-2001
Public ·Nolleo No. OEPA aoclol oopecte or lhle
project, the Director of tho
117·12-047 m
Ohio
EPA hoo decided to
Dote or loeuoneo of Public
ltattce: DIICamblr 1t, 1W7 make the prellmlnory
Nome ond Addre01 or detOI'JIIlnalion ro ollow lhle
Appllcent: Eaolern Local degradation. However, lho
khaot Dlatrlct, 31800 Stele chem!cel-opeclllc water
'Route 7, Raedavtue, Ohio quollty otondorde develop·

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SoutheaStern OH &amp; WJ
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Happy
Birthday
Brenda Jinks

Umestone,

From

614-446-94t8
OH

~· • Entertain~ ~,
Call 1-900-285-8.13
18 + $2.99 Uin.
Ext3278.

4

30 Announcements ' , ·
llcCoy'o Cu~otfty Shop 1 ','
221 Main Sl. Open Monday ttwu
Saturda~ 12-ftpm . Books, craft~
&amp; suppll11. Candles 20% off.
Several In shop spec:lali. Cr.tf·
iltmlsold on contignmenL
1·1.

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Giveaway

Black lab mi~ed puppiM, ....~
&amp; 1110ltf ID go, 810~140.
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Boarder CoiHe Crouad, 'Male
Dog, 2 Yeart Old To Good Home
(61~) 682--6519
I I·
Free RoiW'ieler Puppies (6U}
379-2282

BOB SNOWDEN'S LOT

Top Soli, Fill Dirt

At. 124 Rutland, Ohio 742-3051

614-992~3470

OPEN NOV. 23· 11 to 9:00

,,_

Terrier Puppy To Give Away
1614}448-2820
Two, 10 Week Old Male Mixed ·
Puppies, One Small Female,
Mlaed Tarrier Puppy, K i ttens ~
long and ShOrr Hairad Ltales and ~

Females. liner Trained, Indoor \
Pets Only Call 6U--441-0292-Af- ~
tlf 7 pm Only
.
Young black Femakl dog. G~lte
needs a good home. (614) 446·

9476

50

Happy Ads
LONLEV?

CALL

TONIGHT?
HI00·285-ll077

Ext 1969
$2:99 per min.
Must be t8yn.

serv-u (6191645-&amp;434
60

Lost and Founci

FOUND:Bastcm Terrter on 5th St;
New Haven, Fr iday 12112197 ~(;
6:30pm. Call 304 -882-2692 . W11t,
deliver 10 owner!
. •

·

Gravel, Sand,

Part German Shepherd Pup!&amp;. :
Gl111aaway To Good Home (11~) .

-2

•

$10 &amp; Up

.

, ., ~

Start dating tonig~tt Have tun,
~..,., dating oamt. , -100-_.
CE. tlltlnlion 7484.
•~

CHRISTMAS TREES
Wreaths- Swags &amp;
Grave Blankets

• ·-

MOYHtl, HotOICQPIJ, Ftnal'ldal l ••

•Room Addltlono
•Now Garage•
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roonng
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
AIIO Concr81e Work
(F{IEE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
1192-6215 .
Pomeroy, Ohio

FTH Estimates

WICKS
HAULING.

Box 128, Coalton . Ol'llo .t5S2, &lt;

0128.

·. YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVIa

*2800 a month

I

MMt a matt. E•Ming adult cootact aervlct! F.ree adsl D•taill~

992-sn&amp;

Heat Pumps ln•taned''3800 a month

Sa•~na

01U.Sol434.

For the loved ones
Grave blankets, sprays,
wreat~s. &amp; vases.
'Ao honor Goldtn Buckrye Card.
Open Dally 9-5
Sunday 1·5

- Easy Bank Financing ;..,

FOUND : Chik1s glasses at W~i~
peri~

Pines Tree Farm. 304·6-!!\

4878.

• -'

Found: Small black Female Oag,
Found ln The Area 01 Sm111 Ro ute 775 A-nd ,,.,, cau (614) ·~
9476
.. '
lost- &amp;mall black &amp; brown dog.
also black Garman Shephetttr,

Kingsbury Rd . area , 614-9i2t

Eugene, Eddie,
Butch &amp;

35$1

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

Public Notice
Agency, Southaaal Dlatrlot
Office, 2185 Fronl Stroot,
Logon, Ohio 43138.

Custom Homes

Comment• rlctlvld after

thla dote moy nat bo
conoldered by the Director
before looulng theltnll droll
or thle permit.
.
Coplae of the droll PermH
to lnetoll end lechnlcol
oupport lnlormotlon moy bo
mailed to both of the reviewed and/or copl ..
!allowing locatlona: 11 Ohio modo 11 Ohio EPA
Envlronmenlol Protection South1111 Dlatrlct Office,
Agency, Dlvlolon or Surlete 2115 Front Stroot, Logon,
Wator,' Permlta Proceulng Ohio 43138, Ohio, by flret
Unit, 1800 WatorMarlt Drive, celllng (814) 3S5-1501, lo
P.O. Box 1048, Calumbue, me•• an appointment.
Ohio 43216 ond 2) Ohio (12) 18, ttc
Envlronmenlat Prolocllon

9115-4422
, Chester, Ohio
10125/9Mfn

Remodeling

;

LOST: Black female German

Shephard , vicinity at

.• M&amp;J

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE
Agricultural Lime,
Llmeatone • Gravel
Dirt· Sand

304-675-55118.

lost: Female 5 Yeara Old Auatra- 1•
lion Shtpilo&lt;d, MiK, Giay Willi Bit •

"Build Your.Dream"
1998 Martin Street
Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769

Black Spots, Red Cellar, 19S8
Count~ la!) Number 25, Name:
Pandy, lost Oft Of &amp;rkhart ~· ·
Rewardl614·446-9700
Loat: Gra~ Haired Fluffy Female .
Dog, .Poodle I Schnauze~ Mix:
w.. nng Red Collar, Antwera To
Name : Maxie, Vlcinlt~: Rio
Grande, 125 Rewardl 614~2-45-

Hartwell House
I00 East Main, Pomeroy

VItamins, Harbal
Supplements,
Natural Weight Loss

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

Products,~1t ll

Cut &amp;Wrapped

. skinning

'"

Happy Holidays
From

CHEVALIER'S

CARPET CLEANING
$19.95 per rH•
Min. 2Rooma

614-992-oon
Offer good
Nov. 20-Dec. 20

11/11/t7 1 mo. pd.

11

BACK HOE"
SERVICE

No Job 10 SmaU
Landscaping
Septic Tanks
Water Linea

992-6305
. ..

~·

7/22/lfn

:·....-~=~-~
- ~
- -;;;;.;j
·

SAYRE

i

'Rue.KING
Hauling, Excavating
&amp; Trenching .
Umestone &amp; Gl'llvel

Septlc Systems
Trailer &amp; House Sites
RNIOI!Ib/e RilleS

Joe N. Sayre

•t.c.. .· .. ·.· •
" '
y..., Ooll'l H- To loo.l 1"'

ro Spy 1no 8os1 BIIYS In

Ci\RPENTRY
VInyl Skiing,
Replec-1 Wlndowl,
Deca,Porcllea,
Kltchlna &amp; Ba1ha
Some Concrete
Roofing, Plumbing

tlw

•1111

nil,

111111 •

682·3921
121511 mo. pd.

Absolule Top
VIr Anel Gold
Diamonds, An1ique
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S.

S""ling, EIC. ~cqu i~bons

· M.T.S. Cotn Shop, 151

A""""'· Gallipotrs. 61

~n1iqueo , 1op prices poid, RiYOfine Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Ruu Moo re owner, 614·112-

25&lt;8.

'

Mli&lt;\u••- no llem 1oo largo ., 11!6'.
small. Also eUoloo, opprolaahi:'
~~~~~~o. cullom OldOII, 114- .

~~61.:,;4-~7;;42~·2:;1:.,;38::;:.."""" I.TIIICkO,
Smith

='

TIMDEEWS

•• J•• ...

&amp; Monda-r

Gravel, Limestone,
Topsoil, Fill Dirt,
Sand. No Minimum.
&lt;••-nalllaR.UI).

985-4473
•..

~~
Pomeroy,

. 992·7074 .

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

L.

·· l

mS,.CALL.

11!21/97 1 mo pd
.
...
ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

edition • 2:00p.m.

WILLBAUL-

·

'

QEADL!tli: 2:00p.m.

the der bolofolho ...
le to run. Sunday

Advance. Deadline : 1:OOpm

949-2115

949-2734

.U,VordSoloo ....
Be Paid tn Advance.

day before the ad Is to

(C-30) Morning Star Rd.

Racine

Gallipolis
· &amp; VIcinity

All Yard Sales Mual Be

SUE'S
GREENHOUSE

MAPLEWOOD lAKE

Yard Sale

10

Middleport ·
&amp; VICinity

Wreaths • Swags •
Roping .
Grave Blankets
$5.00 &amp; Up

$35.00
$5 extra for

White, In Worgan Lane Area , 111

'151h, Rewardl 614...t~·9«2 AW
4:30P.M.

UPS
Shipping
a Available

PatAmold
Independent
Distributor

DEER
PROCESSING

·;. ,\

loat; Male Beagle Black, Tan &amp;

Pat's Herb Corner
Located 81 Dan's
290 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport, OH

Clinton favors lim ired affirmative
civil rights division.
· But Sen. Patrick Leahy. D-Vt .. thc action; his official policy is to "mend
senior Democrat on the Judiciary it, don't end it," although not even the
Committee. said resistance to Lee president can spell out just what that
will ·wane. Hatch's doncdncss entails.
Encouraged by California's 1996
notwithstanding.
"Most people will sec, after he 's initiative. Proposition 209, which
been there a few months. that he's a exorcised affirmative action from
good choice, he is a good person. state policy, opponents say the polithen they can have another shot at the cy is obsolete and creates discrimi·
whole conlirmation . if they want," nation against whites and men .
Since then, anli ·affirmativc acti(m
Leahy said. "I have a lot of Rcpuh·
licans tell me privately'' that they lever has spread, emboldening politiknew (Lee) was thc·wrong person ·IO cians who used to be skiuish about
even questioning a policy that purpick on."
Addressing an Oval Olficc gath· ports to enhance job, education and
ering that included Vice President AI . husincss opporlunitics for clhnit: ·
Gore, Auorncy Ganeral Janet Reno minori1ics and women.
Now. il's aiTinnativc action oppoand a sprinkling of civil rights leaders. Lee did not mention affirmative nents who shy from challenges.
'oction or the difficulty his nomination When -a.white teacher charged lhc
Piscataway, N.J ., School Board .with
has had.
Rather, he pledged to enforce civ- choosing a black teacher over her. the
il rights laws "without fear or favor" local NAACP helped finance a set·
and spoke solemnly about the tlemcnt. !Caring the courts would rule
against the board's affirmative action.
nation's quest for equality,
Conservatives maintain the policy
"It is a path haunted by the ghosts .
of slavery, civil war. Jim Crow and is anathema lO most Americans.
internment," said Lee, the son of Indeed, a recent New York Times Poll
Asian immigrants. "A path littered showed most Americans oppose affirwith desecrated churches and syna- mative action as a policy but approve
·
gogues. persistent intolerance and of its objectives.
bigotry."
•
Marrying those polllf positions has
·Lee's mppointment comes as race been a vexing challenge for Clinton
relations are riding the public con- and a wide array of public officials.
sciousness and conversation. largely
because of the continuing debate over
affirmative action policies.
Two weeks ago, the president
clashed with an affirmative action
opponent in Akron, Ohio, where
Clinton's race advisory panel conducted its first public hearing.

Jaffer~

Ave has red collar, child's pet.

5944.

l
I

&amp;"""'

• Poinsenios, oil colors
S1.2S-S9.9S
• PoinseHio bolkell·
$6.9S-SI2.9S

.flltMRifll ,/1 '

Clinton skirts Senate opponents
by appointing civil rights enforcer
By DEBORAH MATHIS
G8nnett News Service
WASHINGTON - Defying ScoatC Republicans who oppose aflirmativc action, President Clinton
Monday named a longtime defender
of the policy to hcad ·thc civil rights
division of the Justice Department. at
least for the time being.
Bill Lann Lee, 48. who has championed affirmative action as a lawyer
for the NAACP Legal Defense Fund,
will be acting assistant attorney general until the Senate takes up his permanent nomination - if it docs. In
the last session, the Senate Judiciary
Commiuee held conlirmation hearings, but Republicans held up a vote
on the nomination.
"I'm not sure anybody could have
been confirmed If the test is that I
have to appoint someone who disasrecs with me on affirmative
8l.1ion,'' Clinton said. "(Lee's) views
on affirmative action are my views on
affirmative action: No quotas. no discrimination, no position or bene lit for
any unqualified person."
.
Clinton said he would resubm1t
Lee's nomination early next year. suspecting opponents will change their
mlnda once they have seen Lee in
action.
,
But in a statement, Utah Republi·
can Orrin Hatch, chairman of the
Senate Judiciary Committee, said
further committee action is unlikely
because the committee has "thoroughly considered" I.:ee already.
· Hatch took issue with the tempo. rary appointment, calling it "a mistake which will undermine the credibility and the effectiveness'' of rhe

Now Open for Chn.tmM

MobUa lama Furnaces
and Baal Pumps.~::.

Furnaces

1-IICI0-285-IICI77, Ext. 8302, U .ll8
Per Min. Mu14 lie 11 Yr~ Serv•U.

• Uvewreoths- 510.95
• (ut trees· S\0.95-$15.95

Delivery Avall"ble

Public Notice

lflht to a-.ot or reJect ony

Owner Operator

3171/TFN '

Ed Hupp (61~) 843-5235
Jon Sargent (614) 992·7312

LOVE

AWAITS~

Roger Coates

New Homes • VInyl Siding New

992-5042

Qump C.3G, $5011 min. bid.

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

GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, Oh

209 South 4th Street,
Middleport
Private Care for ·
Elderly •
Handicapped
Dally or Con.t rlct

The Rutland Vlllogo It
aocepttng blde far
IHkhae-IIG Coao Conet.
ICing 12800 min. bid.
bump Truck • 71 Chevy

Sandblasting
. Antlqvt TractGrs, C.s
&amp; Etc.

HUBBARD'S

ELIM HOME

PUBUC NOTICE

OH:

n.e.

IUPP LANDSCAPING

SSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Under New
Management

Public Notlct

POMEROY,

614·992·5479

OPEN EVENINGS AND WEEKENDS

If you're worrying over wha~
to buy, just get creative ~~
•
It was a chance to take n chore off•
of their hands, but also to spend timC:
hearing their "great stories," sayS:
White. a 35-year-old business ana-;
lyst at Xerox Corp. and MBA stu-:
dent al Rllehcstcr Institute of Technology,
•
Photos themselves can mak(
meaningful gifts.
·:·
Beth Neely rounded up 12 photo.of her relatives and took them to a~
local copy center to be turned into I(!
·personalized calendar ($30) for he~
parents and graridparcnL~.
"They have a lot of things the~
need," laments Neely, who's gelling
her master's degree at University of
Rochester and works there as a pub-,,
lications editorial a.&lt;Sistanl. ~·1 thinht
they'll be sort of surprised."
.I
Family photographs were thc.
ba.&lt;is of low-budget, hut personal 1
· hofiday gifts Campbell gave lasl,
· year.
.
,
The 30-year-old Rochester, N.T.i!
resident put phi&gt;tographs of herself'
with individual relatives into frames
that suited each recipient's tastes ..
"On the Nick (,f the frames in fcs-,
live gold ink I wrote a special note u
memory shared with the pers~&gt;n in
the photo with me. It was a hi·g hit
with each of them," she says.
One last idea: Take some ideas
. t'rum gifls you've been given.
,
Tum Elston of Rochester. N.Y.. •·
~7-year-old cdiwr· at ZiiT-Davis:
Education, ._,ked his sister tn hring
him some hlacksand fruni .Hawaii. a:
place he's always wantcJ til visit. .·.
She pul snrnc in a beautiful•
spherical huulc filled with water that:
becomes a whirling cloud of black,.
red and white specks when shaken . '
A couple of years later, Elston•
asked a glassblower friend if he
could make some ornaments using:
some of the sand, which he did,:j
Elston, then .a poor graduate stu&lt;lent ,
at the Eastman School of Music,
thanked his friend by composing a~
Christma.~ carol for him and presenting an clahoralc manuscript copy. ~
The ornaments hecamc a gift for·•
Elston's sister, who Was delighted. •

CELLULAR
PHONES
t

Coli Tonight! 1·800·

215-IICI77 Ell 4511, 11 + 12.111/
lotin., Serv-U 01W.Sol434.

rltt Clonlfieds.

ANNOUNCU.1ENTS

005

Personals

Can't Shop &amp; Wa1ch?? ? Soap

o..

lolt Model Coro
1990 Mod••• 0• Nww
I Pontiac, 1000 Eltt:'
ern IWenuo. GallipoHL
' · ':

J

a 0 Aulo Pana. Burine ,

wrecked or aalvaged v•hlcl...
A.i10 bu~ ing junk autometit-...
lranvniulons. ~713-!i033,

Non-Workin(l Waahtr, Drrera,:;
Stoves, Re1r l~ators, FrNz....., •
Air Conditioners, Color T. V
:a.. ..
VCR'o, Alao Juno Cora, 014·2!ili-.~

•.••
Updalea Nowllll 1-1100-263·5900, 1 238;_
Ext 3310, $2.1111 l'w Ml'l. Mull lie
18 Y11. Old Sorv -U (80&amp;) 845· Wenlocl To lilly: Sllndlng Timber
ll43ol.
Big. Dolrlll" ,, . . . ''"'

rot Pogt11 Ac:IIYiulon Require&lt;
1....,.11311-1774.

W. Bur Junt&lt; Auto's In Any Con~lion.

Call 014-3111-11002. 01

448-PART.

014-

�Tuesday, ~ber 16, 1997

P • 10 • The Dally Sentinel

OOP

BRIDGE

NEA Cro11word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

EMPLOYr.11:N1
SERVICES

Eern UO ID $200 in one cloy. llwltt yout l!lenda - ID your home
t&gt;r a po&gt;leealonol glomOur portrlll
party. Call 800-&lt;1187-5787 or 800·

11185.

5 Rooms &amp; Bath In Crown City,

428-8&lt;1113.

Help wanted

2 story, 5bedrooma, 2bathl, lot
lilt 120X100 . t35,000, 304·773-

New Carpet, Hew Furance,
$22,000, 81ol-258-12711.

I DRIVERS I
Fbr Dedicated THm Run, Home
W-y. No Toudl Ro•, COl Required 1-1100·711·2573

For Sale Or Rent: 3 Bedroom
Hoult, Galllpolla, OH , Chestnut
Street 81-4-441-1335, Before 2:30

30 Acree, ClaN ta Town On

5 Acre Tract • 7,500 1 15 Acrtl
Wilh Wllor &amp; septic $22,500.
OWn., FIMneing Available. Located On Teena Run Rd. 814·

511&amp;-5707.

P.M.

410 Houses tor Rent

Kitchen, dining room, 2 bedroom,

2 81 d oom Kitchen, LA, 238 Re.f

Stick Buill

&amp; Manufactured

Galipotil baiiy Tribune, 825 ;Third

" - GaiipoliS: 01-145831 .
Awn S8 ·t181Hr, No Door -To.
Door, Quick Caah, Fun &amp; Relax-

--5.

Ing, I-I00-361.()4U.

New Year With New Career, Gmd..
Fl. Opp. 7 For P.T. For lnbrnwtian

CIIII614)J79-2136 Or Join Ul

AVON SB-S1Sihr. He Min . Order,
No Door-To-Door, No lnYentory. 1·
ind/llslrep.
AVON . 18 ·S20' 1Hr. No Door To

Ooof. Ouldt Cash! 'Bonuses' 1·

Friday DeCember 19, At 7PM
Holiday IM, Golipol~
VENDING: Lazy Mana Dream
Few Houra Big I . Priced Right
Free Btochure, ~782.

•••••••••••••
VICICII KEN

1110·29HI311.
Busineaa office secretary need-

ed, bookkeeping l Jyping e•pe&lt;lenc:.e required, al10 previous job
reterance required, must know
hOW 1D ,... thl public. Send ,..
tume ta P.O. Bo• 125, Pomeroy,

Olio4578Q.

Orivwl
1\&gt;u'\10 Tried The Re~...

,,. Tlltir Own Bo1101, Work On
Their Own c~ At Home
. Less Than 1 5 Hra IWk,

Making 0.0..

ST,IIGGPER~

Proeesslno Dental &amp; llectcsJ
Insurance Claims. No Selling,
CliENlS PIIOIIIDED
· 800-937-4821 Ext994

••••••••••••• •

IIOtl DRIVE FOR mE BESTI

VIClORY' EXPRESS, INC.
lEW PAV PfoC1(AG£

Pf(lfesslonal

230

Services

Experienced Drivlfa
IINQLE!I Earn Up To
36 •I12 Cer&lt;s ""' Mi~
.IEA115. Earn Up To

NO CDl? NO PROBLEM?
lroop'd D-1 Eorn Up To
....IOPorDiy

'. fnile Trainilg. Start Claase~
11o1D1e 1212MT And Eatn

Tap- Cla11 Sizes Ate
llmltodliO D0KT DELAVI

SlminOII~in:

-.UIP.II.

All real estate adVertising in
this newspaper is sWject to
the Fedftral Fair Housing~
of 1968 Whlcn makes it Illegal

Unable To Attend?

PleaaeCall:

1-100-543-5033
II-F. a A. II. -III'M. EST
EOE

Mrf

bperlanced Auto Body Man.
Send Ruumt To: ClA 502, c/o

Gatipolio Doily Tribune, 1125 mrd
Mlnuo, Gollpoi' OH 451131 .

to advertise ·any pmlerence,
limitahon or discrimnlation
based on race, color, religion,
sex familial status or national
orig1n. or any intentlorl to
make any such preter8nce,
limitation or discrimination.~

Experienced Hair Orassar, G14·

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept

441-1810, 61 25&amp;-8338.

E.llparlenced Ti

r Cutter (614)

812--6402
lnsUuc:IOr Need l;tgll T«mmnology Secratartal Swdlea, Typing,
Shorthand, Record.• Managerntnl, Send Rnumt fa: P.O. Box
542, Kerr, OH 45143.

Ook Hill, Ohio BaUd Trucking
Ia s.tng Eoporioncod
OTR Semi-Trac10r ITI'll ill' Drivers. Excellent Pay I ln,ul'lnca
~

~. Cal614-1182-eel3.

0R &amp;teu (oopootoncod RN'o
Wlnltd For Mewty 0.1iaplne
Nln/nflllofi&amp;OV. SeiiSchtdullng
1/otwJ ~ConiPOIIIIIon.
P!Mae Fb~pouciTo :

P.a Box 1128,
Uorinll, OH 45750.

advertisements for real estate
which IS 1n &lt;Jiolation ot 1he
.law. Our readers are hereby
lrtformed that ak dwellings
actvertised in this new-spaper
are aYaiW.ble on an equal
opportuni1'j basis .• .

llr·..-~---;,.~
REAL ESTATE

1-::-7

-:-:---:-----

0 Homes tor Sale

IUV HDIIES AS LOW AI

$4,000 I ·5 Sdrm., local GOI/'l l
Bank Repo's Call 1-800·522·

2730. X 11011.
CDIINTR\' NOliE

Sec:rtlllty needed kJr local otflc-e.

ON I ACAES1

faperillflCe whh MicroiOfl Office

ICOI ICMN. OHtO.

dellred. llull hovo good pooplo
Milia. Submit re1ume with refer.
_., 11J Decornbor 1g, IH71D
loa CW·11, '4Pt Plaaaartt Reg·
ltltr, 200 Main SL. Pt Pteaunt
YN-. AMOE

Mlleo
. Fl.

ProciDvlllt, 3,400
Area, 2 Storr. 3
Bolho, Finlohod
Lilli New, 4
814 -643·

7795.

Washers, dryers, rtftlg:IIIIOfl,

inaidt, 614-7&lt;t2-1345, 814·992·

2 Bedroom trailer lor rent In Mid-

Most Furniture. Man -Fri, Hrs. 10·
4.

cl-" OH. 304-882-32117.

Two. 3 bedroom homes lor sale in
Village of Uiddlepart; also two

2 Bedroom tralltr

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

- · · 304-755-5588.
Dtacaunt Mobile Home Parts &amp;
Vinyl

Skirling

$2G9.05, Anchors SS.OO, Awn·
inga, Doors, Windows, Plumbing
Supplies, Water Hesler&amp;, Furnacflb11glau Steps, Call 614·
448-9418 Bennetra SUpply. 1381
Safford School Rd, Galllpolla,

e•.

DOll!lE WIDE DISPlAY SAlE
$1199 DOWN

SAVE SIOOO
Free Deliwlry &amp; Setup
OAKWOOD HOliES. NITRO
304-766-5885.

FIRST TillE BUYERS
E-ZFinarcing ..
2 or 3 Becltooms

Around $200 Por llonlh
i-800·251-5070
Firat Time Buyers E·Z Financing
2 Or 3 Bedrooms, Around 12001
Mo., 1-80Q.25t-507Cl.
FrH air, free lklrt, 14X70 3 bed·
room, l1,0551do'!Vn, $196/mo.

Call I -800-119H7n.

FrH air, free skirt, 16x80 3 or 4
bedroom $1 ,350/dawn, $299fmo.

Call , -800-69, -em.

Good Uaed Recoodition Ulca Neo(
Mobi~ Homes For Sate, Call 614-.11175, :104-675-5865.
LarQS aelectian of used hornet. 2
or 3 bedrooma. Starting at 12995.
Quick delivery. Call 814-385:

9821 .

liiiiTED TillE DNLVI 4BR, 2
lATH Sl ,441 DOWN $241
IIONTH. Ffee air I o~rtlng. Only
at Oakwood Homea Nitro, WV
-7111-5845.

New 28x80 3 or 4 btdroam .
Free del ivery. 1-800-

on

I ·80fi.-3-IQ9.

60 acre

farm, clun, nice deck, 8m0
ioeH. $3CIO/mo. $300/depoai~ no
ineklo pill. 304-875-4.218.
2 bedroom, total eleclric, Cremeana Rd, Rutland, 1114·742·
Home In Parter Area, No j)ets,
You Pay All Utllltlea, Depoait &amp;
Reference Required, e14·388-

Sporting
Goods

Nor dlc Track 505 S4gQ New
!13011; Bolinger Trim Rider taii.OO
-$35. a,. 446 - Rernlngton 1100 Spociat Flold 12
For Rent: 12x65 Trailer 4 Miles Gauge Somi-Auto, 21" Vent Alb
From Chelhire. S25Moto., Dopo• Barret. Exctllont Condition I 1400,
Clll&amp;lol-251-8851 Alttr 7:00 P.ll.
81ol-367-o305.
In Nol At Home, Leave A Mas·
one bedroom apar1man1 In Mid·
clepor\ 114·11112·2178.
T.., bedroom nllot In lliddlopor~
614-ie2·50311.

._

440

'225.

1 and 2 bldr'Oom aparlr'ntntt, fur·
nished and unfurnished, sacurity
dapalil requirtc:l. no p111, 614·
ll92-2218.

Electric FUrnace 1395: 1 Gaa
Furneca 100,000 BTU •• 110, 81 4t418306, 1-800-211-GDIII.
16 FL Choll Type Frnztr 1 10
•-t ~
F
GE
Cu. F' • C,,..
•YPI' raazar, · ·
Automatic 3 Year
Old Washer,
AuiDmotlc Dryer, Frigidaire Rt·
lrigeralor Wilh k:e Makar, AU
Good Condition! 614-379-2720
After I P.M..
21 Cubic Foet Sell Delroot Craa•
ly Re~igo(aiOr $150, 75 Ford P.U.
$250 (114)387-o295 Call Allar 8

1 Bedroom Units Newest

&amp;

Cleaneat In Thl Area. Near Holzer $280/Mo., Plu1 Utllitlaa &amp; Se·
curity O.polil Rlqulr'td, No Petl,

81H46-N57.
2 bedroom

-tmen•
1n f'Vmoroy,
no
814·H2·

utilities paid,
511511.

pets,

2 Bodroom Aportmon\ With CAC,
fiflt Avenue, Gallipolis, $300/
liD., . Dopoei\814-446-1079.
2bdrm. apts., . tolal electric, ap·
· pliances furnished, laundry room
lacililiH, closa to ICI'&lt;&gt;ol In town.
Applications available at: I

Green Apia. N9 or c:aU • u.a~&gt;.
3711. EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Weotw&lt;&gt;od Drlvo
lrom 1280 10 $334. Walk 10 llhap
&amp; movlea. Call 014·441·2568.
Equet Houlling Oppottunlly.
Downatolrs

Apertmen~

4~

Water Paid, NO PITS, 1111 Cedar

s - 81ol-388-l 100
Efficiency Apertmonl Rio Grando
S240/Mo., All Utilities Included,

Deposit Required, 1·888·140·

0521 .

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartmtnta at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartment• tn Middleport From $236·$304 . Call 014·
99?:5064. Equal Houaing Oppor1\tnles.

In New HIYin 1br furnished apr.
depoail &amp; felarencas. 304·882-

25118.

Located In Eurtka On Stale Ro·
uta 7, Two Bedrooms, Gu Heat,

8:.1~4~
·44I..:.:,·:;IXIIII:::;O·-----­
Nice clean 2badroom, wid hook-

up. R•ferances. Depotit. No

WARII UP: High Efficiency Natu- 31 To 81 HP In SIDCI&lt;. 7.5'1'. Fl..,
Ralt Avolllble Wlm John Deere
Credit Approval. Carmichael's
Of. "II You Don't Call Uo We Both 'form &amp; Lnn, Gdipcjio, OH 814Loset· Free Ealimatesl Add·On -2412. 1-100-5414·1111.
Hoet Pumpe Only Sllghly Higher.
LivestOCk
Call Ua Today. 10t7 l1 The 630
Twent" Seventh Year In The
#
7 Year 112 Ouerler 1/2 Arabic
Heeling &amp; Coollno Bulinenl 814· Galding
81ol-2511-113114.
ral And LP Gas Furnacea. Life·
lime Warranty On Heat ExctuanQ-

4416U, 1-a:J0-291·0098.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gollon
Uprighl, Ron Ev.ns EnterpriJta1
Jaci&lt;oon, 0Na. 1-100-537-11528.
Tralltr $3,500 6'X12'
Splil Roor Otlvo-On
::P.;;,"'-;__--._ _ _ _ _ _ 1Jock, E•. Cond. USC. 61
3 Fork Ull O..rhotld Gulrdo 1110 1121111.
Each; Our Set 01 Fork• $125 : Waterline Special: 31&lt;t 200 PSI
Firewood 1814)3711-2855 Alttr 8 s21 .95 Per 1oo; 1• 200 PSI
: : . ; ; . ; - - - - - - - - - 1 $37.00 Par 100; All Braos Com3 Piece living roam 1ui11 •600. pooesion Fillr'Goln Stock
zo•Color TV wlremota S751 Mi· RDN EVANS ENTERPRISES
crowava stand 115. Call afear Jackoon. Ohio, 1-100-537-11528
~ or loeve meosago. 30ol-675~1110~7·-----~---1 We now have jerky seasoning;
30 bulb Wolr tanning
$2,000, original, terlyalsl &amp; cajun.
814-Sie2-3563.
t4.10aa. Cr•wtord'e ll.,kat,

or, car 101\ loll ol IDI'L

Block, brlok, -•r pl:r.•· wtnde Wlnt&amp;ro,
Beanie Babita, hard to Qet lport Ria Or•nda, OH C•ll OH•245·
card inHrt-, ~ra comic' hltd ., 5121.
lind action liJjuroo. Priced balow 560 Pets for Sail
currant nwklt value. Jult in time
lor ChriltrTIIL Call rot laiHt price
quotH and details, 614-e.t0-3008
IH¥8 mtlllt8 Detore 5:00pm. or

cau -

2 black female Cocker Spaniel
pupa, 4mas old, t150ea .
Recorda up 10 daM. good Ctultt·

5:30-g:00pm.
... -304-937-2733.
Boats Br RtdWing, Chippewa, 2 Mala Sh..1ie gMtnlarure Collie)
Rocky, Wol..,.rine, Sorel Tony Pups, 7 Weeka ld, Full BlOoded,
lama. Guaranleed lowest Prices No l'topero. S50. 6,.-4&lt;18-7e91.
Sl'iOo Colt, Galpo~L
2-rnr-old male Black labrador
BOTTLED WILL POWER! LOSE ~.. 10 good home. NetJterod, kidUp To 30 Pounds, 30 Day llonoy I&amp;OIIId
Back Gauranleel Natural, Dr. Rl~
comanded, 8~&lt;t·&lt;t'1 · 1182 Free A Groom Shop -Pet Groi)ming .

and_...,

~

Brand - 1 &lt;lroet Glkl CO/video

storage unit Black ana ch•rry.
NIMtf oul of bo1. $125. Holds up
10 840 dltet, 1110 holdl tlpal.
Call 614·112·0836 after e pm .
cos &amp; -not lndudlld.

pets. 304-675-5162.

...-111--..,

Once In~::;;;. Dolllll
IIIHOIMe

110111!-

Haga
2574.

rar

butchering, 740·0•1·

Rag. Angua Bulls, Cl ·'t Month&amp;
Old C.l&amp;lol-441-m~. Anytime. .

640

Hay &amp; Grain

Alpha &amp; Orchard Gr111 Mixed,
Phone: 814·446· 1104, 014·441·

0450.
Ear corn. Hoy. 30ol-273-4215.

•s

One alnqle ~draom apt~rtment
In · - Galllpailo, udlhiM

I'IOUH

pold, Ud por mon111, 614·U2·
2171·

Ge kart, 5 hp. modified angina,
_ , rollul\ 13110: .... trvcl&lt; ~
per1 for long bad amall lruck,

450

Fumllhecl

64 Actre11

Susan -

3 _

.......

,.tor

4 -118fde
5 Comtdlan

DOWN
1 Whole
2 Beotle
McCartney

:&amp;:.'::Madrid
7 Sixth_..

6

Weal
Pass

North
3 NT

-

Lll'f 111 IT'S

•

A "POP·VP•'

JOOIC.

•

'

I '

THE BORN J.OSF.R

.

~;\-8.J..,~TtiOYCIJ~.II 'V€." '

t MTI-\1-.VE.--.
(}Jf%-l.CtJIEI)

FIN\!:&gt;1-\EI&gt; I&gt;U. MY r-1~ ~ 1\'E.

5011£-rnli&lt;C.!

~'(~'(!

'

1977 Chny tl WO, 8 lnc:h Ufl~
Rebuilt Motor Trans, Less ThaQ
100 ...... Good ~. 350 FoW
Bolt lloln, .S2,1i00, oBG IMii'Sell
Do To Illness, $3,900 Invested,

'BIG NATE

814-368-«131.

1g81 Chivy Van 112 Ton, Loakl
Good, Runo Good, 11,1g5; 1986
Toyota Celica GTS Very Goad
Condilion,$2,1!15,610 u6 8981 .

SO FAA. SO r.OO!&gt; ...
TliE Ll c.l-lT~ ARE
LOW • 1'R ~ MOOD tS.
RIGHT...

1914 GMC Jimmr 4wd, good
oond. 12,200.300-875-1479.
.

1915 Dodge WISO 4 WD,
Shortbad , 318, 4 Speed, Goo~
Tirat, Dependable. t3.80D, 81~
448-4172, 61ol-258-161~.
198D Eddie Bauer Bronco lulk
aize, new engii'Ja, lots of new
parrs. heve all receiptt, ver.f
good cond Inside &amp; 0111. Asking
$5.500. Can afltr 6pm or Jaave

IRSe GUC Set.ri Cuatorn, $4,950

DID 6EETI-IOv'EN
EVER .PLAV
'' Jl N6LE 6ELL5 r• 7

814-446 1222

IDn\Biol-885-3581 olttrl.

,,

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

i.~

container

1. ~

full

id
S'l

01
purchloeo .~
21 Autllor w~e~M r
28- qUI non "~v
31 Hotwollon
' ~
food lllh
~'
32 UMI I chllr •'
33Eumlne
'
4-4C-c~ .
45 Nostril•
,.
46 Mllde I
I~
perfect

.core

~'

· 47 Aquotlc btrd.?
48 Aclor Roy . '.1·
50 Angry
t••
51~-(~

52 Smal

.

whirlpool

'

55 Wedcling· r..
wOrd ·~~
56~• wrne; :.
57 Su,.,..hre ; r
autnx
! ·~

"

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Ctpher cl'\'1)\ograme. are created !rom t:~\!Otal iOO$ ~famous people. pasl aod present
Each lellarln the ~r stands for ancll'ler. Ttld!ty'.t cioo · M equal! W

' .J RP ·

GZUZJ

J RC J
JT

XCM

TG

POPUSJRZiY

Z A

PGTXTYS

ZA

POPUSJRZIY

PXAP. '

UPXCJPE
-

."

LCUUS

B T H H T I· P U .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Luck is the by-producf ol busting your lanny ." (Pilcher) Don Suflon.
MFortune favors the bold .~ - Virgil .

T=~~:~' S©~cillA-~~trs·

- - - - - - NiOo4 lor CI.AV I . POllAN
Rearrongo lellerl ol 1ht
lour scromblod -ds bolow ~o form four simp'- words.

..

....

wo..

.' '

0

LORDEH

I· I I I I'
AWTEH

~, ~,'

=G=U:::=N=0=y

::1

_ 1~ I I I _:

I

FJCAPY

I ~.

.,.
,.

An old friend of mine was a

born diplomat. He sayslhattact ••

is knowing how far one may go

I .

1---..:15-i-1.::..,;:.1-T:-1'..:..,-1-i G

l't:ANU'I'S

~

~=bond

By Phillip Alder

•

tOE~- ''

11 Omotot

24 Gruaua

East
AU pass

How do you view advenising?
This is the opinion of a staff writer in
The Times of London : "The incessant witless repetition of advertisers'
moron-fodder has become so much a
pan of life that if we are not careful,
we forget to be insulted by it. "
Friendly fellow' A,nd I suspect he
owns one of those VCRs that cut out
advertisements.
This deal is also from The Times.
It was in Robert Sheehan's column a
few months ago. How should the play
go in three no-frump?
South opened with a weak notrump, showing 12' 14 points . This is
used by a(most all pairs in Britain.
However, it has never enjoyed much
popularity in the United States. (lis
main plus is noticeably grea1er fre·
qucnc y than the strong no-trump.)
Declarer ducked the first trick,
won the second with his heart ace,
and played the club king. East ducked
thi s trick , won the next, and returned
his last heart to dummy's king. When
South cashed a top club, what should
· East discard?
II is nonnalto throw the fifth card
from a suit . But knowing · declarer
would assume !his, East started hy
releasing the diamond two.
Now declarer could have won II
tricks , but he settled for I 0, discard·
ing the spade nine and diamond
three on the last two clubs. Was East
uniucky or wrong?
East was wrong. If he had count·
ed declarer's tricks, he Wl)uld have
found' eight: two hearts, two diamonds and four clubs. So, if South
has lhe spade ace, there is no ~efense.
And if West has that ace, East's
spades are irrelevant. .
I hope you aren't bored by my
incessant promotion of counting.

(lbbr.l
8 llocllino toal
9 Con's room ,,

19 Surpooa · 1:\
21 lrrtt.blllty 1~
23-·

Here we ·
go again

vans &amp; 4-WDs

Complele the

c~uckle

I ('"

quoted

•
•
_
_
•
by f 1lling in rhe missing words
L..-1-..L....JL-..L-L..-' you develop tram step No. 3 beN..

l-IE ~08A6LY TllOU6HT
llE WAS.TOO 6000 TO
'JIN6LE 6ELL5 ''

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Oddity· Front· Excel · Whaler· CHILDREN
'To understand a parents love,· my husband lectured
his bachelor friend, ·you must have your own CHIL·
OREN'."
1981 Buick C8fltury Aaklng $500,
Fair Condition, Cl14·256-1074.

ITUESDAY

KU80'l'MAN

U96 Honda 300 EX, Mony E~ ­

trlis ! Excellent Condition

614-

·,
1965 Chevr Suburban 4x4 446·31145.
$4,500, oao. 61 4-~:!81 .
1gge Honda CR 80, goad'tond /
1985 Pontiac Grartde Prix 2 t 1.aoo oao. "'" 300 Ex. tot's
Doors, 140,000 IIIIo&amp;, $1,000 of chroma, very fast, loti of ax·
... Call 004-882-3554.
080. 614-448-21124.
19$5 Subaru turbo·. 4x4, 4 Door'
Rebuilt Engine New WJL Tires,
New Bauery Looks New In /Out

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Acceuorles

BUDGET PRICE TRAN8111SSIONS, UIOCI !Rebuilt, AllYpo,..
1D87 Subaru GL whitt, below Acceu Over 10,000 Transmit·
averaQe miles, runs good, exc I Club:hos 61 ._245-!877 . .
Featuring Hydro Bath . Don interior. $1,000 080. Tatk to Doni
ShHta. 373 GeorQtS Creek Rd. ~meuage. 814-367-71211.
New gas l&amp;nks, '1 ton truck
e1.......a-0231 .
·"'·
wheels &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; R Au1o
19g4 Uercury Cougar XR7. Ex· Ripley, WV. 304·372·3933 or,:
AKC COiie Puppioe, Boeutilul Se· cellenr
Shape: Low Mileage; One 800·273-9329.
.
bles Wilh Ch•mpian Blaodllne&amp; Owner, Serloul Inquiries Only
Only $200 Will Hold For Christ' · Call 814-448-7527, Alter 8 :00
SERVICES
mu With A Deposit, Call e 14· P.M.

$2,500, Firm, Gl4-446-e873.

44~·1083.

1995 Saturn SC2, Automatic, Air,

Crul1e, AMIFM Canette, TrUnk
-ae. $12,000 Cefl Aher 5 P.M.
(Serloua lnq~lrlaa Only!) 614·
448-4015.
A Need A Car? No Cred it, Dad
Crtdit Bankruptcy, Wt Can Help
ReEstablish Crad il, Must Make
$150 Weekly Take Home, Down
Paymentt AI Low AI $99, To
Oualllr For Thla Bank Finan&lt;:ing,
614-441-o&amp;07.

810

HQme
Improvements

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

BASEMENT
WATERPIIODFIHQ
Unconditionallifedme guarantH
local reftrencea furnished.
rabl isha&lt;l 1975. Call (614) o446·

e.:

0870 Or 1-800-287-0576. Rogers

~

Waterproofing.

~

IUY CARS FDA ,100111
Na'!'l Brandt Over 25 Years Ex.
Seized And Sold Locally Thil pertence All Work Guaranlted, ,
Month. Trucks, 4lt4's, Etc. Being
Liquidated In Yaur Area Now, All ~~ch Clly Ma)'tag, 81 .. · 446~
Makn &amp; Modela Available. Call
Tol Froei00-522-2730 X4420.
C&amp;C General Home Maintenance· Painling, vinyl aiding, '
CARS ·FOR t1DDI Truck1, boatl,
dooro, .. bllho
• ·whHiera, motor names , furni- corpontry,
mobWt
~ r.,:alr and mort~. FeW
ture. tlactranlcl, computars etc. fi"H ndnwte call Chet, 81 ~r-982by FBI, IRS, DEA. Available your
area now. Cali 1-100-513-4343
Ekt. S-9388
Triangle Remodeling w11 onarY
(Stucco, Stone, Etc .) Carpentry ·
1994 Dodge Shadow ES, llln· fRaugh And Finish) , Tile (Ceramdard , air, sunroof, 3rit,OOOmi. , '~ Ell:.)llrywoU, Roolng, 014-3117- 1
good cond., S4,5DO firm. 304-1175- 7351 .
.I
1932 dayo or 304-875-7121
Mni""L
840 Electrical and
Refrigll'lltlon
190..., Mercury Cougar XR7.
Adult-Oriwn, Booutllul, l'lmpored Residential or COITII'nlfciel wl,tlng, • ,
loaded Wllh Ee•a, leatlttr

Wedne~day. Dec . 17. 1997

''"*

I

I '

T
I .'

.'' •

Impressive
accompli shmcn1 s
could come aboul through new tech·
niques you ' ll develop in the year
ahead. Your systems will work well
for everyone who will use them .
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec .
21) Today you might engage in a very
compelifive social game. Play to
win. but don' t make' it a matter of life
or:death. You will be respected if you
' enjoy yourself. Trying to patch up a
broken romance ? Tile Astro-Graph
Matchmaker can help you understand
what 10 do 10 make the relationship
work. Mai 1·$2 .75 to Matchmaker, c/o
lhis newspaper, P.O. Box 1758, Mur·
ray Hill Station, New York , NY

.q,

,

'.. _,
I"
;t

TRANSPORTATION

SIOO &amp; Sl 50: collocllon ol World
Cycle mag11inet, ner HYinty,
Ull50'•• 80 '1 &amp; 70'1, axctlltnt
condldon, SSDO !Droll; 114·247- Husl(y ·pupa, 7wlts old, 4·blue
Rooms
0201.
aytd, 2·darlt eyed. t50ea. 304·
Circle Motel Lowell Rates In
·~ "'304-175-78lll.
1-lfi0-~1-5070
OOLFCLIIIS:
Town, Newly Romodeltd, HBO,
Uaed Sell SIS.Up; TIA 155 f.IOO Ron Wtlltr Pups For Christmas,
Westwood Home Show Uatd &amp; Clnamalt, ShowUme .1 Dlanay.
Wookty Roles, Or Monlhly Ro... Rom lrono ).PW tl!OO: Tl Otlvon ShOll, Wormed, T•l11 Docked,
MW MtYice or fiPiir'l.
URopo Solo Aallnto Ao •50o.oo Conslructiort
Workera Welcome ttOO Up; Taylor Mlde, Berntr1 Dew Claws Removed, Yet Interior, Waii -Maintalntd Low cenled elactr iclan / Aidanour '
Down And 'I 50/Uo., Fr• DollvMileage
112,000.
Caii(81
..
)446-Electrical , WVOD0308 1 304·875-•so u~ 81ol-245-5747.
CI14-441-58SNI, 614..,.1 -5187.
~- $100, a, ol-245-5823.
or~ 1-«J6.2S1 ·5070.
7W, AllM D:DO I'll
1788.
WDTWOOO
Uaed &amp; Repo SeJo
Ao Ullo Ao ,1100 Down
And Sl 50""' llonth
FtoelloMry

21 WWII 1re1

30 Rush of wind
34 Vote atudento
35 Vllllln'o
e•ctematlon
36 Tonnls ployer
Nntaoe .
37 !!tuff In tho

Opening lead: • Q

WOULD TATER LIKE
TO HELP MOMMY
TOTE IN TH'
WOOD??

......... 304-675-1807.

Ground ear corn, your sacks.
oach. hundradl$e8 IDn. long BcA-

drywtl8p
38 Tonnlo pllylr
1 IRS tmployM,
Shriporhopo
39 ,_.,., e.g.
4 Photogrtpher 40 Fortunetelfer
41 Slngle thing
Ademo
8 Actor'o olgnlol 42 Direction
12 - de cologne 43 Apprentlcol
13 VIcedoctoro
14 Pt. of I:Sl
46 With the mouth
15 Llrgt
wide open
container
49 Out of the woy
18 Alter
53 - ·de-sac
17 Dreg
54 Goooe genus
18 Muolclon58 Cool! (slang)
John
59 Old ago
20 Shlpo' otHrlng 60 Singer DellitMChonlsmo
61 Conclude
62 Unclolm.cl mall
22 Said
26 Toto of
dept.
odventure
63 Dlvloiono

ACROSS

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
South
t NT

Appliance Pa•t• And Servi~,;a ; All

Ono bedroom oporlmont In lllddlepor~ 11 uaHIIH peid, fl!'IO fill
month, l100 deposit, 814-HZ·
7108.

DniJitO*

D

75-

Ownet moving-Make 2 PfiYRl«ltl.
move In, auume loan, no pal)'· Opportunity.
menttill February 1008. 1-304 -

sound tpll\kM.
S14I6'Doft

-~

....;I owo, llnlolo, etc. Clau

~4548:..;.:_·_ _ _ _ _ _ _

304· 862-3718. Shelh 1 George
St., Ntw Haven. !:quat Houtlng

TheEnlarllln•H•ArriMI
14ld1Cl :lllr, 2 ball,- wllh
2r TV, high 1iYo VCR, ourraund

I

1010 Cortlca, PIW, Tilt, CruiH,

~~~----~~~~~~~~~-------Building
Tappen olecolc rongo, goad
550
concli...,, $150, 814-lln8803.
Baby bad, druotng llbi;o:~ollSupplies

Cannon Color Bubble Jel Printllf,
BJC-210. Cannon Creative CD. AKC Golden Retriever puppial ,
Now Tak ing Appllcationa- 35 All Wanuala And Olska tncluded . Sl50aL 304-882-3650.
Oakwood 28ll58 3 bedroom, 2 West 2 Badraom TawnhOUH ' like New. Great Chrlatmas Gilt.
~ath , starting at SHIO per mo. Aparlmtnta $2G51Mo.• 814·448·
Can Ba Seen In Galllpolls614· AKC Golden Retriever Pupl,
247· 2032 (Evenings) OJ Leave Chriltmlill Puppie&amp;, Morher Pull
Call 1-800-61ll-e7n.
oooe. ·
Golden Retrievers, Father : UnONLV$41l9 flOWN . .
OLD ASH VIllAGE APART·
ltnM&gt; $25. 61 ol-379·2631.
ON SELECTIVE SINGLE WIOES IIENTS lccotilfng oppllcollono.
Fret Deliwry &amp; Se.,p
tiUD accopted. 2br. lncomo limOAKWOOD HOliES. NITRO
Ill do - s -, ,.,., &amp; lrl&amp;h
304--755--5885.
includ•d fn rent. Mon-Frl10-2.

722·71olll Ot:J04.722·7140.

.

.....

Your Area Dealer For John
'Deere Skid StHr Loaderl. From

1

1810 Pontiec Sunbird 4dt, au11,

730

•QJI083
East
•JB73Z
IQJI08 ' 5
• 9 8 3
• Q J
• 10 4 2
• 9 a 5
•At
South
• KQ 9
IA2
+98653
• K7 2

West
• A 54

'

273-4215.

540 Mlscelllneous
Merchandise

EEK&amp;MEEK

080;114-441-2511~

882-371 •

12-16-97

I K? 4
oAK 7

"'II""

NH grindlf mixer. Ford 10ft.
tranaport disc, good cond. 304·

1 &amp; 2bldraom furnished apartmenta. Maaon waa. Perfect for
relireu. :JJ-4-773-5188.

1MB Doclgo- ,,,1110, ....

448-18011.
1988 ll lllubiohl Galan! $3,000

E&gt;o.
30ol-5lli-21:M.
NADA, $3,250.00: our Price
Komatau Mini Excavator (Track
U,31i0.
Cook lloiDrL (814) 4~·
Now
Opon
Sundayl
1-4.
lion-Sat
Hoe~ Law Hour&amp; Good Condhian;
11-8.
Floh
Tonk
l
Pol
Sllop,
0103
Komotou Fork Lll~ 4,0110 f'Vund 241 S Jadl:10n Ave. Point Pleat·
15 Ft. Reoch Call Huntington ,
1g93 Whl• Cadillac DeYIIIo, Wtll
304·7111-411011 Or 304-525-5358 In~ 304-1175-2083.
Maintained
~w:b SarvicH,
Alttra I'M.
$12,800, a.l
I.
. '
Black l Whlta EngNoh Springer
11110 -111110 Ce" For $1.00111
Spenltl AKC·Roglotoroct, 1 Veor
McCulloch Eager Beaver Lear Old, E-onl Hunlllr Or Pot, .,.._
Sailed And Sold
Bklwer Vacuum, Electric $25, DP 387.05111.
locallyT~ollonlh.
Truc:Q, 4x4's, EU:.
~
IIDID&lt;I2od T-11. 1.5 HP Adjuo- Speed To 8 mph. 3 In- Dalmatian puppies, t125ea .
HI00-522-2700, X31101. '
cline Positions, Timer, Speed, Beeutilul apota. 304-937·2921).
Dlotanco And Colorleo Bumt Digl·
Credit Problemo? Wa Con Help.
tol Ponoi. Selo!y DIKonntcl And Fuii ~Btooded Auatrallan Healer Eur, Bank Financing Far Ua~
Hand Rallo, llko New Hardly Pups, $50 EICII, llol-379-211315.
Yah cles, No Turn Downt. Clll
Usad, Great Chri1tmas Glfcal
Vlcl&lt;ie, 614-4~7.
$200 Paid $350, Call Allor 6:00 Tllreo Jack Ruooall llrrler pupI'll. 304-675-1433.
pies, USO each; two mela minia· Need A Car, No Crfdll? Bl~
ture Collie (Shelll•a) puppiaa, Credll? Bankruptcy-? We Ca~
Holpl Roeotoblloh Cr•dll, Mu
Uavino Sale: ·Fruniture/Antiquea, $125 oeclt; 81 ol-742-2010.
11a1ca s1so Wlllk, Ta.._ Homo 1
llonday -Friday. Aller 6:00 p.m,
To 20~ Down 12 Monlhl f.
Weakancla. 1821 Cl1atham Ave
Galipollo. (614)....,-416011
.• .
12.000 )111111, Warranty Anilabl4
FARr.1 SUPPLIES
Thio Ia Bonlt Flnanc:ll)fl, 61 ol-4"4&amp; LIVESTOCK
Nordic Track treadmill, paid
8172, Or614-384-8042.
J
$400, loll lo&lt; $200. 304-875-IIIDO
&amp; 30ol-675-48lllleave moooage,
Upton Ueed Caro At. 62-3
Sout,h of Leon, W,V. Flnancin~
Pumeray Thrift Shop now buying 610 Farm Equipment
- " " 304-4511- I 01111, •
'
Levi jeans. tors. children's cloth·
Ina. muat be In tJcal!ant ea'f'ldi- 135 Massey F11guson 4 Cylin· 720 ltucks for Sale, :
tion, Tuesday through Friday, der, Gasalme, 4t New Tires &amp;
Tubll, Spin Out Wheals, 5 Ft. 1g14 F-150 Ford 300 6 CyllndOf
81ol-lle2-37~
Brush Hog, Good Condition, -·1,200,810 388 fll)l!e,
·~
Pool Tabla 8' Brunswick Slate $5,500, 304-a75-5687 AFTER 7
11117 41" Budlol •udl; 1981 Ford,
Top Excellent. Condition. With P.ll.
Acceaaorial i Caver, II 14-448diggllr - : Dlol-3711-8279.
Hydroultc oll· lowoot prlco In
8217.
IDWn. Von! lrH ... ,..,.,.. piO· 1087 Whito Chtwy S-10 With
Prllnaetar, 170 free channels pa.ne &amp; ,..,,., Dill. on ule now. 80dllnor, 4 Cylinder. 4 Spatd,
Rune Good, 81H49-3138, 614·.
llrat month. Don't wait Quick In· Sklor'o Equlpmont 304-675-7421.
441-1236.
stolllllon. (Free bonua) . 1·800·
New Farmer~ Union Tobacco
2e3-2&amp;10.
Warei'&lt;&gt;uee Rlploy, OH. Soiling 4 1188 Ford Ranger 11,200. 304"'
R&amp;SFumftUN
dayiiiWHk. Coli ~r llfiiiDintmtnl 87.... 4802 or 614-62-7659 or 304·
~.wv
Sell aame dar.. 1·888·84.tt·dG5 675-1012.
Buy, Sel, Tnlde
Ilk lor Otvil e Whalen or call
1088 Ford Rartger XlT E•tendld,
Uaed &amp; olnli&lt;Nts
Edleon llayoo :JOol-875-111511.
Cob, 6 Cyllndtr, P5, PB, PW, Aor,.
FurniiUre.
New Holland Speclol Dtols: AMIFM Coseelle. $3,500. E•cat·; ·
30ol-773-5341.
3430 Ford 40 PTO HP, 1 volvo llnl Condition, No Rust, 814· 4~~~
Rut til king Bubba. S125 OBO. rap1 &amp; canopy, 4wd, 118,500. 1619.
Call 304·882·2883 aher 9am. or 472 7' hayblno ,7,800. 488 g•
balo
haybino $8,500. 63-1 round bolor 11iif Ford F-150 4x• blaclllgotd,
=::n~:.::IOpm:=:7---:-:::-:--- 8501
tiKI lie $g,1011. II« round Eddie Bauer wlcamper top, IJ.il
balot lflDOiouiD lfa $13,!110. 451
Red and Pink
T l~kle ,_,. $3,050. 130 142 51,000 milea, hll lranslerable
PolnseHial.
84
manure tpralder $4,300. 145 Ford ESP extended S8f\lk:a pollola To Ch- From
I 77 B4 ...,..,. epreoder $4,300. cy, total coverage wt$0 daduel1114) 247-4032 .
'
155 217 84 ·manure apreadar lblo. $15,o0o. 304-112-21121.
E'M'ingl Or LeweUn ga
S4,goo. 2-Now Smldloy otoer 1g111 Ford Ranger XLT AMIFII
IIUifera 100 BU $750 , 2 used
$500 ·each. 8. 75% Financing C - . Autom&amp;llc. AC, PS, Pll\
Bod c-. Kopt In GOf
available. Keefer's Service Cen· Bodlinlng,
rogo,
Joi.OOO
llilt&amp;. $10,500, 81 ..
lar St. Rl 87 Phone 304-egs.
-2847.
.3874.

.Apartments
for Rent

Modern 1 Bedroom Apiirtmant,

New doublewide-1 purchased,
lit on my lot, m!Jat tell, will
dehver &amp; set·up at no charge.
304-722· 7148.

520

Clearance On Ultd 12 And 14
Wide Mobile Homes; Kanaug:a
UobUe Homea, Gallipolia, Ohio
614-448-D882.

NEW BANK REPO'S Only 3 leftl

wo~t

dar Very Good Condition, $100,
llol--7 Evonlngo.

9182.

fl91-6m.

304-755-719 1.

Red Sin) Bunk Bodo With lod·

Ro~igniD&lt;, W.ttoer, Dryer, Color
T.V. , VCR $50 Each, 814-2562 o.droomo &amp; 3 Bedroom llobilt 1238.

Rent $325 per Mon!h Dopoalt
Sl50 Cell 11oi-2Y.1DT2 Evonlno
Or61ol--nlleyo

S3U . ~95 .

Newer Washer Dryer Sat, 1400,
614-441-1100, Allor 4:30 P.ll.

2803.

Ohio.

1998 14x70 three bedroom,
1ndudes 6 months FREE lot renr.
Includes skirting, deluxe steps
and setup. Only $187 .08 per
month with '10.75 down. Call 1800-837·3238.

Galtipolis

Applianc.11 :
Rec:ondhlantd
Waltlera, Dryers, Rlngta, Refrigratara, 90 Day . Guarantee!
French Citr Maytag, 614· 446·

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

6118.

~ew

FREE-R
mullS., Dec."
lllliNOLIDAVINN
577 Sl RL 7 North

Goods

Moving Salol Uotd Furnllure
Store, 130 BulaviH• Pika, Galipollo, Ohio 50'1'. 011 Gilt Shop And

Amenca·s largesr factory outlet
Uvin~slan's basement water- hill&amp; purchased IDeal mobile
proofing, all basemtnl repairs home dealership. All inventory
done. tree eatimatetl, liletime mus t be sold within 30 days.
guarantee. 10yrs on job experi- Save thousands. Call now lor
ence. 304-675-2145.
info. FREEOOU HOMES of Nitro,
W'IIXI4-722-7127.
·

Attoncl Our

Grandt Blvd., $500 llonlll Relo&lt;·
encet And Depoait Required,
(814)-5EYinlnga

Housthokl

Three bedroom house in Syracuse, bastmenc, garage, new
windows, deck and all remodeled

HARTS MASONARV - Block, Mobile Home, 2 Garages, On lot,
brick &amp; stone work, 30 years ex· PD1sible land Contracc, 614-256perience, reasonabl4 rates. 304- 1744.
895-3591 after 8:00pm, no job to
N'O'T"I'C'E
small or to BIG. WV·021200

511·112 cemo ""'Mi~

51 o

3 Bedrooma, Fenced Yard Le.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
1260·1300, ltwlr, water and
bUll Included, Blol-62·2117.

Acce11d'rles,

!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rtcommenctt thai you do buli·
neu with people you know, and
NOT to tend money throu~ the
mall unlit rou ha\l't inve1t1gated
1he ofloring.
Long Ett. Card And Glh Shop,
Send Reaponee To: ~LA 503, C/0

MERCHANDISE

www.countrytyme.com

t-800-!13-8365

168 Dou-o Ropo
NIMrllved In, owner nrw.ncing

Business
Opporiunlly

trosh peld. locottd In Gllllpollo
Fwry. 304-1175·4075 or 304·675·
6335.

420 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

Lid.

Pll

21 o

Traller spaces lor -renl. Watlf I.

ranges. Skaggs Appli ance•, 76
Vine Srr..t. CaH 614·4&lt;46~7308,

19!11 Holley Pork Excollant Condillon (614)4411-25g8 Aller 6:30

FINANCIAL

3 Beci oom, 1 Both, - Corpot In
City, Very Nict Phone 614·44'8·
2003 or "..-. 1&lt;OIJ:J.g I'll

814~H42.

-7:12·7127.

I

614~.

Also Land AN OVer Jackaon Pike,
Roaa, Scioto, Ueigs, Athens
Counties FREE Maps Land Con·
tracta, 10% Down "nlhony Land

· 14egDOWN
on llilinglt M&lt;liona
IHIDOWN
on aJim.llli sacdonl.
Llmiled Time Only I
FREEDOII-ES ol - · WV.

814-4-48-836!iJ.

Firol A..,uo, Galllpolia, No Poto.

$325/llo., Plus Dopostt &amp; UtiNtiet,

North
.. 10 6

new engine. 12. 0~0 firm. 304-

AKC Si.btrlan Huakr- pup1, blue
~·· wm bt lwkt otd Chrisunaa

mobile

and Pomeroy, call

4 Bedrooms In Green Township
$425/Mo., Call Altor 4:30 P.ll.

ltwol lots lor sale; sss.ooo OBO,
6Iol-9112-2290.
.

Will Do Ironing In Mr Own Home,

1~h:70

lilt IVIIIIblt bal·

Homes 9.9 Acres Touching
Wayne National -Hunters Dream.

&amp;o.,

Construction, CommerResldentlal, Free Esti1f!'_~,•es . 61 4-441-1g23, 614-245_.

lo\ available lor

Hou~e lnd piroperty, approx. 41·
crea. Ideal slarter home. Beech
SL, ~OH. ~:!Cm.

NEW ON MARKET
8 llllto E Of Oak Hill
Jackson /Galtia Una Mini Farm Newer J BR. 3 Bath House. FP.
Vinyl Sided, lnground Pool, Ga rage With 30 Acres $125.000'
Great Deal ·Cuh EXTRA -- 16
Acres With Barns $100,000 Alao
5 Acre Country BuiLding LoiS

A'-

460 Space for Rlllt
home, no older than s,rs W/IJ..-d uoticalfan. lnqufro It K &amp;
k 304-1175'3000 -l-5pm.

RENTALS

bam, ~lng 100m. trom 1 bad&lt; lui·
length porch11, gas turntce. city
water, outbuilding, Qaraga, tt2
mile East of Racine, 614·94g .
2118.
.

AKC 911otland SI\Hrldoct1 IShtlpujlflloe lot .......biolwhke
Gtubb's Plai'IO· tuning &amp; rwpolr1. lloe)
bl _ , Will blue .-a, oholl,
PIObloma? Need Tunod? Cell lllo
wormed, vtt checked, dew ciiW
ploro Dr. 614-448-4525
rtmoved, excellent pedlar••·
1300·1350 each, 814-698·1085

Block Top Road, t25,000 11141
2M-e674

The Dally Sentinel• Page 11

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

burdens oil a friend 's shoulder. Your
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . ·. 19l · though1fulncss will strengthen bonds
You might have !he opponunily ' between you and your pal.
today to show a loved one how 10 uti CAN.CER (June 21 -July 2 2) The
lize his or her resources lo lhc grcal· fulfillment of several important
est advantage . You will. be of enor- objectives arc within reach today, but
mous help .
1hey won't be handed tO-fOU gratis .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fch. I'll If You must earn these victori es yourdealing with importanl issues today. self.
.align yourself wilh mature . e&lt;pcriLEO (July 23-Aug , 22) A soc ial
cnccd individual s. Their know -how experience of yours today could have
wi II give you a crifical edge .
a favorable impact on your pe rsonal·
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20 ) ity. It wi II expand your outlook and
Chances for personal gain arc impres- heighten your expectation s.
sive at 1his lime. Channels 1migh1
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. 22) Owin g
open for your causes; the wheels arc to your insights, you should be able
_grinding in your favor now.
to succeed loday in handling anolh·
ARIES (March 21-Apri119) Make er's serious dilemma that has this per·
a fresh cffon today to confacl a ·per· son completely perplexed.
son who is c ritical fo your immediLIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 23) Do not
afe plans . Make it your top priority to be reluctant logo to someone whose
reach him or her as soon as yoo can. intelligence you respect if you are in
TAURUS (Apri120-May 20) Oth· need of advice today. Two heads may
ers may join you today in a situation be s uperior to one :
where you felt .overlooked. Their
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Subinlervenlion will help you resolve ~ stantial career rewards could be in the
'dilemma that appeared to be unsolv· orting for you at this time , but wha1
able.
you hope to ge1 will be the result of
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Today your dedi cated elTon .
you might have an opponunity 10 lift

'

I

.DECEMBER 16 I

�•

• ...fll.l-1

UT.H

am•c•c•
IR.1·5

am•••
Buy·ATruck And Save Your D.ough
AtC&amp;O
IR.1·1

_____ ,.._

..... ,,

Ohio Lottery

Marauders
ppat third
ca·ge victory

••..fl. I-I
IIT.H

.,

••

Pick 3:

787

Plck4:
8482
Buckeye 5:
3-4-9-29-30

Sports on Page 5

Mostly clear tonight,
Iowa in upper 201.
Thuraday, cloudy, high• In
mid 50s.

•

.• .

..

·.

•

1998 CHEVY

·5·10

Restyled Front Grille, Instrument Panel,
Bumpers, and Jncreased Horse Power!!

AS
LOW

AS
*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

1998 CHEVY FULL-SIZE
EXTENDE~. CAB 414
Air, Tilt, Cruise, Chrome Bumpers, Chrom.e
Appearance Package and More!

AS
LOW

AS

1998 ASTRO VAN
ALL WHEEL D IVE
'

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

AS
LOW
AS

~

.... N0.171

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

AS
LOW

AS
*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel Newa Staff
The Clvistmas season of over 600
boys and girls and elderly men and
women will be a lillie brighter this
year, thanks to the organizational
skills of staffers at the Meigs County Depanment of Human Services,
and the generosity of Meigs County
residents.
Since 1991, the DHS has organized the Aqgel Tree project, through
which churches. school groups and
individuals purchas~ individual gifts
for the county's neediest residents.
While many ofthe families helped
through the program are on public
assistance, the program also assists
the "working poor," which includes
panicipants in the depanment's JOBS
program. All of the recipients arc
refe!'fed to the program by case-

workers in various departments of the
DHS. Ttlose caseworkers are knowl·
edgeablc about the families' special
needs, according to Mary Hobstetter, •
who spearheads the program for the
DHS'.
Determining the needs of clients
and distributing angel tags are the
easy part ofthe program. As gifts filter inta·the department's conference
room, the monumental task of sorting
gifts begins, matching the numbers
on the tags with the family name and
residence adaress. (Since conlidentiality of DHS clients must be
observed, shoppers who take angel
tags are told only the age and gender
of the person they are buying for.) ·
Gifts are then loaded il\tO county
vans and delivered to homes throughout the county -- to Pomeroy and .
Middleport, Racine and Syracllse,

More sentencings come
from July drowning death
Two people who pleaded guilty last mont~ to charges
stemming from the July 7 drowning death of Todd C. John·
son of Pomeroy were sentenced Monday afternoon in the
Meigs County Court of Common Pleas.
· Melinda Stanley, 27, of Pomeroy was sentenced on charges
of tampering with evidence and receiving stolen property
1 while Clifford "Boomer" Smith Jr., 22, of Syracuse wa5 sen·
tellfed on charges of attemptl.ng to obstruct justice and
receiving stolen property.
Both were sentenced to two-and-a-half years in prison by
Judge F:red. W•.Crow IU.
· ..
The charges stem from the drowning death of Johnson
who-wu a 30-year-old sthool teacher at Harrisonville Ele·
meatary School. Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney John
R. Lentes said that Stanley attempted to push Johnson's
pickup truck Into the water to make the Incident resemble
an accident while Smith lied to lawmen Investigating the
death, saying It was an accident.
The two also had p6ssesslon of Johnson's wallet at the
scene, resulting In the receiving stolen prope,rty charges,
Lentes said.
Jason Hysell, 23, of Pomeroy is serving 18 years In prison
after pleading guilty to charges of involuntary manslaugh·
ter and robbery in the Incident while Willie Kaurr, 20, of
Pomeroy is spending eight years in prison for felonious
• assault for his Involvement.
Hysell and Kaurr brutally beat Johnson at a swimming
hole on Leading Creek near Dexter. Kaurr kicked Johnson
into the water where he eventually drowned.

Rutland and Dexter, Chester and
Tuppers Plains, Reedsville and Long
Bottom, even to Vinton and Ewington.
According to David Dowler, the
department's building maintenanfe
supervisor, who doubles as" "Santa,"
the experience of delivering gifts is
interesting, to say the least The transient nature of some of the clients
forces him and Chris Shank to return
some gifts to "mission control," to be
rerouted to a new address, or a dif·
ferent family.
Especially grateful for the deliv,
cries are the elderly clients served
through the depanment's adult protective services, who are as grateful
for a visit as for the g1ft or gifts that
are delivered.
In addition to gifts purchased by
the general public, the program is
supplemented by cash gifts and mon· ·
ey from a trust fund. Those cash con·
tributions are used to purchase gifts
. for angel tags that remain at the DHS
or are returned by participating
groups -- each Client identified· as
needy is served by the program. ·
While the number of clients
Continued on page 3

A Mason County man who was
convicted Tuesday of felony volun·
tary· mansl~tcr could be spending
the rest of is life in prison i[ Mason ,
County Pr · cutor Diana Johnson
has her way.
Johnson said Wednesday morning
she ~Inns to file information on Tim·
othy W. Gibbs. formerly of HartfGrd.
under the habitual offender law.
Johnson smd this law cnahles prose·
cutllrs to put offenders in prison for
life after they have hccn convicted for
three felonies .
The voluntary manslaughter con·
viction was Gibbs' third felony con·
viction.in Mason County. He htts also
been convicted of two armed rob·
herics, .along with felony aggravated
robbery in Jackson County u~d
felony escape in Cabell County,
Johnson said. The prosecutor and her
staff arc working to get all the information together so it can be presented.

BIG TASK · ·Sorting and dallverlng over 600
Christmas gilts Is a huge task for 1he organlz·
era of the Department of Human Services'
Angel Tree project. Here, David Dowler, who

along with Chris Shank delivers the packages
throughout the county, sorts through bags of
gilts yet to be delivered.

Coal min rs approve a new five-year contract
CANNELTON, W.Va. (AP Miners at Cyprus-Amax Coal C .'s
Lady Dunn complex have all e
work they can handle producing coal
for area pilwe,r plan!~, l)ut thi!t know
that isn't the case in many U.S. min·
ing communities.
"We've been doing all right, but
the coal industry as a whole has tak.
en a really hard licking." said miner
· Jim Wells of Belle after voting for a
new contract with the nation's largest
coal operators.
"But maybe we 'II all get a chance
to retire with this agreement, even if ·
the global warming does get us." he
said.
Members of the United Mine
Workers union voted by a 3·10·1 ratio
Tuesday to approve a new contract
that will take effecl Jan. I. said union
spokesman Doug Gibson . The agreement will run until Dec . 31.2002.
The Bituminous Coal Operators

prosecutor seeks life rn
rprison term for Timothy W. Gibbs
A Wood County jury found Gibbs during the trial, the facts not sup·
guilty Tuesday following a week- paning the verdict, and other things.
According to Rardin, he felt when
long trial in Parkersburg in the death
he
first reviewed the case it Was a
of Jack Roush of Hanford in Scp·
tember 1995. According to Johnson. manslaughter case, not a murder
the jury began deliberating Monday case and the jury saw that Rardin ,
afternoon and continued Tuesday said it was a "waste of time and man·
morning. The verdict came around cy to try this as a murder case."
Following Roush's death. Gibbs
2:30 p.m. after approximately live
and his girlfriend Resa Sayre were
hours of deliberations, she said.
Voluntary manslaughter involves indicted in January 1996 for murder.
a killing committed unlawfully but He eluded police until April 1997,
without malice. On the charge, Gibbs when he was arrested in a homeless
faces three-to·l5 years in prison. shelter in· Nebraska. He has been 1n
the Mason County Jail since his
Johnson said.
A hearing on post trial motions arrest.
Sayre was arrested in Yuma, Ari·
will be held Monday in Mason Coun·
·
zona
in January 1996. She pleaded
ty, according to Johnson. She said she
anticipates sentencing to follow guilty to being an accessory to mur·
der after the fact and received a one·
sometime in January.
1
year jail term.
Gibbs' court·appointed attorney
Gibbs' trial was moved from
Bill Rardin said Wednesday morning Mason County to Wood County after he plans to appeal' the verdict on a jury could not be seated. Judge
grounds of prosecution misconduct Clarence Watt heard the case.

Association did not immediately
return a telephone call seeking comment.

The contract will immediately
increase wa8es40 cents an hour and
a total of $1 an hour by January 2000.
Average wages will go from $17.51
an hour to $18.51 an hour over the
life 'o f the contract.
The agreement also increases pensions for niiners still working by an
estimated 25 perc~nt
The proposed contract agreed to
last week by negotiators for the
UMW and the BCOA will make it
possible for UMW miners to retire
with full benefits if they have at least
20 years of service regardless of age.
The minimu·m retirement age had .
been 55.

The proposed • contract was including retired and. working minerS
reached Dec. 9, eight months before and those who arc laid off and sub·
the current contracr with the BCOA jcct to n:call . Under the union's con·
was set to expire.
stituLiOn, only those who work under
the agreement were eligible to vote
The contract agreement also was on it. The union did not estimate how
reached a day before a global waml ' many that might be.
ing treaty was ~nnounced in Kyoto,
Roberts estimated that reaching an
Japan. The treaty would require a early resolution of contract ncgotia·
reduction in greenhouse gases such as lions saved the union up to $115 mil·
carbon dioxide in the United States. lion, which he said would help the
UMW President Cecil Roberts union fight the global warming agree·
said the union and the BCOA, which mcnt.
represents the nation's largest coal
''I'm ready to spend every last
operators. did not want to waste time cer, of that money to defeat this
on internal disputes when faced with treaty and every politician who supratification of a treaty that could ports it ." Roberts said .
"eliminate" the U.S . coal industry.
BCOA companies produce about
The contract could affect more 250 mill ion tons of coal a year. about
than 100,000 UMW members. one-fourth of all U.S. production .

,.,

.
' :
: :
•

...--Christmas is... community ----.:· ·
1j

'

.

;

.

: !f. .•
Community as exemplified here by Dale Hart
of Racine with tha newest entry in 1he community's Christmas Village display at Star Mill
Park. Tha park will be the site of the village's

Christmas In the Park observance Thurscflv
evening. The small replica of the .Racine Barber
Shop, ptinted by Aimee Pyles of Racine, joins
18 o1her pint-size facades In the display.

Incorporation
process discussed by
Tuppers Plains residents
.
.

IODUIIIS

~

ALL PRICES INCWDE
REBATE TO DEALER.
PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE
DOC. FEES, TAXES OR
UCENSE FEES.

•2.9% RIAICING
ON APPROVED GMAC

CREDIT

MOTORS ·TOYOTA

AND

•..fll.l-1

lAT. I-I
lfTII CIIICI

••••••

A Gannett Co. Newapapet'

Angel Tree project helps over 600 needy ·

~Mason

*PRICE INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

2 Sectlana, I &amp; Pagn, 35 centa

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

C1te7. Ohio V.lleY Publllhlng Company

,·.

ST. ALBANS
·2921

&amp; LEXUS·

RT. 60 MacCORKLE AVENUE-ACROSS FROM SHONEY'S
.
WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 GM DEALER SELLING CHEVROLET AND OLDSMOBILE AND TOYOTA AND LEXUS
OPEN 8 A.M. TO 9 RM. DAILY-SATURDAY &amp;·A.M. TO 8 RM. -lUNDAY 1 RM. TO 5 RJII.

-

,.1

~·

days until
Chris tin as
•

By BRIAN J. REED
ed the new Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District,explained that he was
Sentinel New1 Staff
"Tuppers Plains is one of the few offering no advice on whether the
places in Meigs County that can commun1ty should . incorporate.
grow.:·
·
Rather. his information related to the
With those wotds, Prosecuting legal process required to incorporate
Attorney John Lentes explained the a vlllage.
steps necessary to incorporate the
Lentes said that preliminary peti·
Eastern Meigs County community at lions designed to gauge interest in
a public meeting on Tuesday night
mco'l'.?rat1on attracted approximate·
Lentes sa1d that he had recetved ly 90 SJgnatures m favor. Only the Cit·
several "unrelated" · telephone izens in the affected area can deter· ·
inquiries about the possibility of ~mne whether the community should
incorporating the community, which mc.orporate, although the decision is
is expected to be the target of de vel· ultmmely made by the county com·
opment in the years to come.
miSSioners. . • , "
Approximately 30 people attend·
. lnco'l'orat1on IS a long and com·
ed the meeting, held at Tuppers phcated process," Lentes said, "s~ it
Plams Elementary School. Lentcs, JS Important for you as a communny
who as a private attorney represent· to see if people are interested before
p

"

you proceed."
vote is not required by the residents·
That process, according to Lcntes, of the incorporated area as long as 51
involves the filing of an official peti· . percent of the adults have signed the
tion expressing interest in incorpora· petition and their signatures have
tion with the commissioners. That been verified."
petition ·must contain the signatures
After those signatures arc vcnlied,
of at least 51 percent of the adults .. the commissioners arc required to
not the registered voters-- of the area hold a public hearing to hear dissent
to be incorporated.
or other comments, or to hear chal·
An incorporated village must be at lenges to the petition itself.
least two square miles in size and
The board can then vote to incormust have an average population per porate the area in question.
square mile of 600 residents.
According to Lentes, an appeals
After the official P.,tition is sub· process is afforded through the Coun
mitted to the board of commissioners. of Common Pleas.'
the county auditor must certify the . Lentes also discussed some of the
total· land valuation for the area. advantages and disadvantages 10 r
including residential, agricultural , inco'l'oration. re.lating. the c?fuon
and industrial land use.
problem of fmanc1ng ser ces
"In most cases;: Lentes said. "a
Continued on page 3

•

ATTY. JOHN LENTES
I

••

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