<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="9938" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/9938?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-05T01:01:46+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20378">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/af177e8d734740f0ef8a22b4fb5fba27.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8365102193dda4bb83b9f3e832a7d0ce</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="31792">
                  <text>- _........... -.

- ·-·· ~ ·

--.

•
•

•·

..

'

A

•

-

6

~~

./»

#o -

~ '~

-

_. . ... ....... -

,......... .... -- - _t"". .. '\. ....

':''t; •"t•'o&gt;f

0 ,. .. "'' ',:'•'

'••

\ ;

.......... , - '

•, " •

..

~-

,.. •

'

,' ._ • ' '

' \-

&gt;

...
•
Friday, December ·2, 1994

Conflict erupts between
judges over O.J. w~~~~ss .

that oMdllls have ·not ruled out a poalble conspiracy In tbe ldiUng of IJUDate Jeffrey Dahmer
earlier thb week. (AP)

CONSPIRACY POSSmD.ITY - Columbia
Coaaty (Wia.) Sberlrr James Smltb, rlgM,
aDSwered queatloDS alona willa Lt. Vem Gove
durin~ a Tlaunday neWI confere~~ce. Gove laid

Report: authorities are hunting
more Dahmer death suspects·
By ARTHUR L. SRB
A-oclllted Prell Writer
PORTAGE, Wis. - Authorities
are Investigating whether more
than one illmatc wu Involved in
the 'bludgeoning death of serial
killer Jeffrey Dahmer and a second
m..-daer, according 10 a published

repcrt.

The Milwaukee Jou11Ull today
quoted an unidcnlified prisoo official as saying that "surprising"
facts have yet 10 be dbclosed and
thal tbe killer did 1101 act alone. He
did not elaborate, the paper said.
Dahmer, who admitted 10 killing
17 young men mid boys, died Monday after being f9!JIId in a pool of
blood in a gyuuwlmn bathroom at

the Columbia Correctional lnstitution. He was assigned ·10 dean the
·bathroom while on a wort detail.
Another inmate, Jesse Anderson.
· died Wednesday of injmies he sustained the same morning.
Corrections Secretary Michael
Sullivan said he didn't know if lhe
Journal's report was accurate.
.
"We' re not making the invesu~ation," he said. "I know nothmg."
Sullivan had peviously said that
the only suspect in the slayings is
Christopher Scarver, 25, wbo is
serving a life term for murder.
The Journal quoted the source
as saying that a conspiracy isn't
thought to involve prison employ-

ees. Rather, other inmates are being
investigated, including two brought
to the gym for a recreation period
when the bodies were djscoven:d,
the source said.
Columbia County Sheriff James
D. Smith said Wed.nesday that
eight people were in the prison's
recreation area around the time of ·
the attacks, including two guards, a
recreation director and other
Inmates, and be badn 't yet narrowed the list of suspects.
"I got two victims and I got
three inmates and that's where I'm
going to leave it," Smith said.
Smith wasn't available Ibis morning for further comment, a secretary in his office said.

By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Aaoc:llted Pnu Writer
LOS ANGELES - No sooner
did a defense attomcy try 10 CJUCil
one war of words in lbe O.J. Sunpson case than another debate rzupt·
ed involving judges on different
coasts.
A New Yort judge ordered one
of Simpson's DNA lawycn, Barry
Neufeld. 10 appear in biJ court for a
murder trial despite an oo1cr by tbe
Simpson judge for Neufeld 10 be in
Los Angeles.
Tbe order Tbursday by New
York state )udge Harold Rothw~~~t
·included dtgs at Neufeld and the
Superior Court Judge Lanc:c 110.
"I'm out of sympathy for Mr.
Simpson and his attorneys," said
Rotbwax, who claimed that
Neufeld's problems were his own
fault and that Ito had waited too
long to order the lawyer 10. appear
at the Simpson trial.
.
Roth wax's order came hours
after lead defense attorney Robert
Shapiro said the Simpson team
would stop talking to the press
except "when we feel there Is a
necessity."
.
.
"In the spirit of trying to
accomplish what we all want, we
are going to take the high road,"
Shapiro said outside court. "We no

Holiday business cheers retailers
By JOYCE M. ROSENBERG
The sttong start 10 the CbrisbDBS
season and the return of cold
weather brought IICDie relief 10 the
nation •s retailers, who overcame a
weak start in November 10 fmisb
with mixed results for lbe month as
a whole.
Analysts said sales figures
IDlOIIIICCd today bode well for tbe
Cliriitmas season since consumers
showed at the end of November a
strong appetite for shopping.
.
Many retailers bad the experience of Spiegel Inc., which report·
ed clothing business at it catalog
operations and Eddie Bauer stores

•.

started off poorly. ''However, as
the month progreSSjld and cold
weather took bold, demand for
t~ese it~ms improved,'' S~iegel
vtoe chairman Jobn J. Shea satd.
This trend reflects the fact that
consumers no longer buy what they
ex~t 10 need at the start of a season; they wait for the weather to
turn and only then go shopping.
Many analysts were still predicting a 6 percent sales Increase for
the holiday season.
The Christmas season is the
most critical time of the year for
retailers, who expect 10 make half
their annual sales and profits dur-

... .. .... .... ...
... ... .... ... ... .... .... + ........
... . ......
.... ....
...
'1;-he 'lJailtt Sentinel's
... ...

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

Annual

.........

...

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

.

....
....

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

...

....

....

...
... ... ..
.. ..
...
..
--•-.... ..

- ~ -· -

....

.... ....
+ ,
....

.....

....

.
.
...

... ... ....

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

.

.

------\

.
.• •
at 992-2155
.. .. . ... . . I. . . ...
.,

....

...

.... .I

...

..

... ,

•

...

..

...

...

...

. ..

...

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

Oetall•
on Page A2
'•

I

A Mu1t1medi a Inc .. Newspaper

Mtdd leport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant. December 4, 1994

RelianCe
Electric:
Company became .trophy in merger battle
,

'

CLEVELAND (AP)- Long before Reliance Electric

~ · became the trophy in a coast-to-coast acquisition

"It "" •lw•p been •on of a low·profll• t:OmfMny
battle, it was a quiet, unassum- '*fau•aof lilt·~ of m•rw,.mtnt •ntl n. product~.
ing- butsuccessful- inter-· · ,., nor In IIWIY vtslble marlrer•. The nun~~geii!Mit /lilt
national business.
nul'flllwd lh•t 1tyle and
110111 •bout lt. bll.lne••·"
Scott Cowan, Weatherhead School olll-oement
Reliance man~gement last
Ceu Wnlem RMei'VI Unlveralty
month was pressed to pick
between a planned $1.4 bil•
lion siOck-swap merger with
Either way, 90-year-old Reliance was destined to be a
General Signal Corp . or cog in a much larger business.
Rockwell , International
''If you want to be global and don 'I have a lot of internal
Corp.'s unsolicited $1.5 bil- growth opportunities, a company like Reliance is very
lion cash takeover offer.
attractive,'' said Scott Cowen, dean of the Weatherhea\1
Rockwell, based in Seal School of Management at Case Western Reserve UniverBeach, Calif., upped the ante sity.
to $1.6 billion and won .
"There's general movement in the m~rketplace now

II••

Bosnian Serbs agreed to meet ,
today with lOp U.N. envoy Yasusbi
Akasbi in Pale, their stronghold
east of Sarajevo. On Wednesday,
they refused to meet U.N. chief
Boutros Boutros-Gbali because he
insisted talks be held in Sarajevo,
capital of Bosnia's internationally
recognized government
Tile Serbs agreed to today' s
meeting after Lt Gen. Sir Michael
Rose, the U.N. commander inBosnia, traveled to Pale fot talks
with Radovan Karadzic and other ·
Bosnian Serb leaders . .
But that session produced no
apparent narrowing of differences
to raise hopes of an end to the 2
112-year-long war, which has left ·
200,000 people dead or missing.
Serbs again denied U.N.
requests to supply the 70,000 civil- .
ians trappe4 in the Bibac enclave .
with food and other necessities.

Reliance President
John C.• Morley

toward consolidation in industry, a movement
back to bigness
rather than smallness, and to find
a strategic fit,''
Cowen said.
Rockwell , a
conglomerate
known for B-1
bombers and .
space shuttles,
earned $634.1
million, or $2.87 per share, on salesof$11.12 billion in its
1994 fiscal year completed in September. Rockwell Chair·

l

Vol. 2S, No. 43

t

man Donald R. Beall said the results
reflected a shift from U.S. govern~
ment contracts to commercial and·
international markets.
Duff &amp; Phelps analyst George
Podtasky said Rockwell became'
convinced Reliance Electric would
fit with its Allen-Bradley segment
that Rockwell acquired in 1985 ..
Allen· Bradley makes sensors, con·
trois and other high-tech devices for
industry.
Cowen said the takeover tug-ofwar has plunged the usually lowkey Reliance Electric iniO an unfa_miliar limelight.
,
"It has always been son ora low ..
proftle company because of the style
of management and its products,' ~
Cowensaid. "lt'snotinveryvisible
markets.
:
"Tb!: management just nunured tba(
style and·has gone about its business."
ContlnuMI on page A2

U.S. 33 connector: ·:

Mf/gs EMS recognized

Lifesaver award·:

Bids for 2.25-mi/e section
set for opening Dec. 20

Prompt response, teamwork nets
honors from Grant Medical Center

•

..

"

...
*
WHIT~~··

Mild wind•

tm.es-

•

~ (OMI ON OVIR TO BOB'!

..

PINE•

•
•

'•

TJf.l MOST IIAIITIIVI.I.ILICDON OP 1'11.111
IN 1'111 Tm.COVNTY ARIA!
5.a•ct Prom
a.autffull' IJNaNd Pra1fn
"TU lltt." In C:fnistnuu TNa" or
l'rdftioul Whtt. Pin• au leeteh Pia

••u..r

All trees are perfectly shaped and reasonably priced.
Sizes range from 6' to 10'
Suppllu of talllrees are liml1ed ...So, Shop Early!
All varieties retain needles well throughout .the holiday! scorcH "'.~E

,_

0
.

·"

'

.

.
'

~·

••

·-

Fresh,....,..,,. CNaahouu

Area's Best Selection of
Poinsettias·
~The

Tradltioul

Christmas llower"
Discounts Available for Churches
I Other Organizations

GOOD MORNING

Available
ln ...
••. Red
••. Pink
.•. White

rate at 2G-year I.Qw
COLUMBUS~ Ohio (AP)-

••

.... ..

'

Candy (Over 30 Varieties)
Be sure to check our prices before going elsewhere on Florida
Citrus Fruit Including:
•Indian River Grapefruit •Tangerines
·
·
"-J'Vll"''l
•Tangeloea •Aieo Waehlngton State Red
&amp; Golden Delicious Apples

Y. Mile ·North of P0111ror Bridte, Mas011,
(304) 773-5721 ., (304)173-5900

GATT enemies line up
to-challenge-trede pact ·

p~ ~nem~loyment

...
.. ....

Advertising Deadline:
...
.. .. Monday, December 19th, 5 PM .. ....
...
.. ... .
.. ...
... ... To Place Your Greeting ... ... ...
....
...
·Call Dave or Bob
... ...
...

'

•

..

...

....

... :··

.J·ames Madison.at Marshall -Page c1·

demg has ex-wtfe and her fnend _
Ronald Goldman on ,June 12. ·
Opening statements aren t expected
until mid-~anuary ..
In the Judge '!lspute, Rothwax
rebl!fled Neufeld s renewed effort .
to delay the New York trial ofa.
man charged with murdering a ·
police officer. That case Is 10 begin
Monday; a c:rocial bearing on DNA
evidence In the Simpson case.
begins one week later ciD Dec. 12.
''You are, as you say,in a diffi. ·
cult position but It's a difficult
position of your own making,"
Rothwax said. "If I bad been IO!d
early that you wouldn't be available, then maybe we could have
e.~dence.
done sometbin~."
; Denise Brown's emotional aa:uHe also aiucized 110 for issuing
sations continued 10 affect the trial a belated order for Neufeld to
Thursday. Three more prospective appear at the DNA bearing.
altemate jurors were bounced after
"It's inexplicable to me that
tltey sllid they bad beard or been . Judge 110 would issue an order that
IOid of her TV interviews.
he refused to issue two weeks
"I think I beard Simpson' sister- ago," Rothwax said. adding that be
in-law say he was going 10 kill her believed Ito had done so at
... Nicole," one prospect said.
Sbapiro'srequesL "It's clear lOme
Simpson appeared astonished, that what Mr. Shapiro is trying 10
turned 10 his Iawr,ers and asked, do is put Mr. Simpson's interests
"Did she say that? '
before the interests of the people of
Three prospects who bad beard New York."
of Ms. Brown's comments were
A court spokeswoman said Ito
dismissedWednesday.
bad no comment on Rothwax's
Simpson is charged with mur- remarks . .

.

r

' 'J,.-

longer are going 10 be talking 10 tbe
press on a daily basis.... We~
everybody else takes the road With
us."
Tbe self-imposed gag order
appeared 10 be an attempt to calm a
feud between the defense and sane
felatives of Simpson's slain exWife and her friend.
Shapiro and attorney Johnnie
Cochran Jr. have accused Nicole
Brown Simpson's sister of orcbestrating an effort to deny Simpson a
fair trial by repeatedly accusing
him of being the ldller. Prosecutor
¥arcia Clark responded that the
families were fed up with defense
attempts to discredit witnesses and

U.N. armored carrier back into
Bosnia. The United Nations hasn't
heard from the peacekeepers since,
Ivanko said.
Tbe observation post is now
occupied by the Serbs, which
allows them unimpeded movement
of equipment and personnel from
Setb-held parts of Croatia Into
Bosnia. Serb rebels from the two
countries have joined in an offensiv~ 10 drive Muslim-led Bosnian
government forces out or the Bihac
region.
The fall of Bibac would allow
rebel Serbs in Bosnia and Croatia
to join their territories. Croatian
Defense Minister Gojko Susak
warntd Thursday that his country
would not let that happen.
"We are monitoring the situalion, and if Croatia's judgment is
that Blhac is about to fall, Croatia
will intervene," Susak said in
Zagreb1

· - HI: 501·
Low: 40e

r1

Serbs to meet with U.N. envoy

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegov·
ina (AP) ..:.. Bosnian Serb leaders
agreed to meet a top U.N. envoy
today even as they Ignored
demands to free captive U.N.
~keepers ,and allow bumanitarliD aid 10 be. delivered to trapped
civilians in northwest Bosnia
The United Nations has pressing
issues 10 discuss: Attempts 10 calm
fighting in the Bihac region In
northwest Bosnia, where Serbs
· forces have overrun Muslim vii·
!ages in a U.N.-desigated "safe
ing that time. The ftrst weekend of area"; and the fate of more than
the season bore out predictions that 400 of its soldiers being held by the
home and gift items would sell Serbs as insurance against NATO
well, but that apparel would not do air strikes.
as well.
Seven more peacekeei;!Crs were
Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the seized Tuesday from an observanation's largest retailer, said sales • lion post in Croatia. across the bor·
from stores open at least a year der from Bihac, said Alexander
rose 5.4 percent from last Novem· Ivanko, a U.N. spokesman. Bosniber, while IOta! sales were up 21 an Serb units entered Croatia and
percent
lOOk the Ukrainian soldiers and a
These results are narrower than
the monthly retail sales report from
the government, which includes
sales from supermarkets, restau·
rants and car dealers. Those ftgures
'
will be released Dec. 13.

.

Aid to area 'educators ·Page E6

"

-

I

'

..--·
'

.,

- -r··

Ohio's unemploJment rate feU
0.2 pelt:e!ltage pqint to 4. 7 per·
cent in NovcmbQr, its lowest
level in 20 yearsj the government said Friday.
The nation's jobless rate
dropped to 5.6 percent from 5.8
percent in October.
Ohio's rate bad llot been 'SO
low since August1974, wbeo it
,,
was 4.4 percent. 'f.)tc rate in
October was 4.9 pelt:ent
" .OVerall, Novcmllcr's estimates reflect elllplpyment
AP
erowth and a continUed dow11.
ward trend of the tlllllllployment r_ate over the year," said Debra R.
Bowland, administrall:lr of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services.
' The unemployment rate in November 1993 Was 6.5 perecnt OYer the
year, the number of Ohioans '\'Orking has increased by 183,000 to 5.1
million. The number unemployed bas decreased by 97,000 from 359,000.
NovembCr''s warm weather likely reduced the number of\ICISQIIallayoffs,
she said. Seasonal hiring is expected to increase in retail and other industries
for the Christmas holiday.
In November, the number of Ohioans with jobs reached a higb of 5.3
million, up 54,000 from October. The number of people unemployed was
262,000, down from 274,000.
Ohio's civilian labor force included S.S9 million workers in Navember,
liP from S.SS oiillion.
The share of the .,orting-age ,population in the labor force was 66.2
percent, up from 6S.8 pe~nt in October.
.
Ohio's Nove,nber ra1e was among the lowest of the lllargcst states. Only
Michigan, at4.6 percent, aJKI NorthQrolina, 4.1 percent, bad lower rates .
California bad the bigbci!, at 7. 7 percent, followed by Florida, 6.8
percent; l'lew Jeney,6.6percent; New York, 6.3percent; Peq~lvania,5 .9
percent; Massacbusctu and Texas, 5.5 percent; and Illinois,,J;l)·perceot.

~I .,

Today's Times-Sentinel
t9-5mlom~t68-l'ap

WASHiNGTON (AP) - Huge Busiaess
Dl
trade deals have given P!fsident Calendars
81&amp;4
Clinton his two biggeSIC9M~fCSSional
DJ.7
triumphs. but the victoril!!fhave not Oassilleds
come without costs. Opponents are Comics
Insert
already prom is ing to seek revenge at Editorials
M
the ballot box.
·
AJ
· 'Tbe anger is directed not only at Loall
Clinton but at Republicans whose Obituaries
A6
votes the president needed, ftrst to Sports
Cl-6
win approval last year for the Nort!
Bl
American Free Triade Agreement and Aloal the River
then last week in securing congres- Weather
A1
sional passage of GATI
Three men - Ross Perot, Jesse I
Jackson and Patrick Buchanan -see
Columns
the GATI trade deal not as a triumph
for America but as a defeat.
Jack Alldcnog
They are tapping into the resent- Fred crow \
ment that middle-class voten feel JlgSuda
about being left behind in the new
global economy. In their view, low· QpckStotc
wage foreign workers are stealing
millions of American jobs.
..__ __ _ __ _ _ __,

Congressman-elect names chief of staff
WASHINGTON, D.C. • U.S. Congressman-elect Frank Cremeans, lGallipolis, announced Friday that Barry Bennett will become his chief of
staff for the Sixth District of the House of Repr~ntatives .
·
Bennett, a native of Scioto County, was dcsc~
'lx ~"-prepared statemeat
as "a longtime activist in Republican politics' H\9-,.as worked with a
number of the state's key political figures .
·
Dennen joins Cremeans after having serv as campaign director to
Ohio's U.S. Senator-elect Mike DeWine.
·
Cremeans takes office Jan. 4. Bennett will split his time between Washington and Ohio.,
~-

�•

P~g• A2 Sundar Tim• sen11ne1

,,

Accu-~fcncut .
MICH.

Continued from Pill' A1
Morris said he has bad a lot to be ·
thankful for this holiday seaSon.
"Thank God there arc people out
there that do wbatthey (EMS volunteers) do. They deserve a pat on the
back."
Since the accident, the upbeat
Morris has lost sight in his left eye and
·still bas occasional weakness in his
legs.
"l'mdoinggreat,"he said. "ltcould
have been a lot worse." ·
On Nov. 12, Morris, Meigs County
EMS representatives aod LifeF1ight
personnel met at Grant Medical
Center's Hugenberger Auditorium for
the award presentation. Also attend·
ing was Morris' parents and grand·
parents.
Th~ a~,Vard reads: "For outstanding
service and commitment to the safety
and well-being of the community."
"I'm extremely proud of the work·
ing relationship between fire and EMS
personnel," said Emergency Services
RECEIVE AWARD - 0. lllllld l'or l'eCIIIpt
director Robert Byer. "It takes all of
or
the Melp CotmtJ E-rpiiCJ Mediclll Seruse to do the job."
vice•
Grmt Medical Celitu ur-ver Award
"EMS's response to the accident
were,
l'rom left, B....._.
LlreF11pt ftlald
was a good example of people work·
none;
Robert
Byer
eiMI'IIIICJ
anlal dlJ-..
1
ing together," he added.
tor; Wilma Davlcboa, Ratlu4 EMS; DorH1

o..a.

011Mio1Acco;Wollllor, Inc.

Rain possible by Monday
. , Tile Allodated ..._

SUDday wUI ·be mostly cloudy
statewide. wllh a chance of rain
showen ac:roas all but extreme
IIOIIbeo'D Obio. Hip wiD be l'nxo
.ss to60.
.
lxt.elllledfona!IC

ByJAMESI\UCIIARD
AIIOrl...., ..,_ Writer
COLUMBUS - Less than ODC
11100th after RepublicaDs woo all
major statewide races and took
COIIlrOl of the H01110, pMiy leaders
ba~~e started ptamtng for the 1996

CIIIIIJIIiSD

Memb'en of tile GOP' a state
cQmmluec, whidl IDclucloa reproscntadvcs froiD througboul Ohio,
mel on Friday for the first ·time
slnc:e the Nov. 8 general clec:tiOD.
They revdled iD their vlcUldca and
diSCUIIed what went wroog iD their
few defeats.
State ·party Chairman Robert
. Bennett c:illed the Election Day
showing " a great pvaall victory"
for Republlcus. "It was a team
effort !Ill the w-.y."
·
. Republican candldatea won all
major statewide racea. They also
captured 10 Democratlt House
aeau, giving the GOP a S6-43
majority when the 12ht Legis~twe CIOII\'CIICS In J111oary. Republl·
cans also kept control of the Sen~ale, 20-13.
· Sam Van Voorhis, who dlrecled
the party's Ohio Houae Campaign
Commillee, said the party beDeflled
from increased lunding, wbic:il was

c6LUMBus &lt;AP&gt; -

Reputill·
c:an lellden ~ dec:ido in Juuary
wbcther to keep Robert BealeU 11
·c:balrmiD of the Ohio RcpubHcan
·

.

1'bc )Jiily'slllle IXIIII!iiace met
on Friday to dilc:uu the Nov: 8
elec:tion llld to start planning fOJ
the 1996 ampelp. Tbe cmunitire
will clecl ofllcas at Its Ju. 7 meet·
IDS.
· · , ..
Party represcnta~ves .•.tdtln
thrould¥1ut Ohio make up ~
~

· BeDDCtt said be w.iU meet with
Gov. George Voillovida ocxt weeit
to IJUD discuss the· aovemor'a
c:oacems about the state pany''a
fi"'Ddll miDP::;'!. Bcmetuald
he apecd wi tbc 1ovemonnd
thatataft'cutaiiiClodier&lt;XIIl·savillg
is plaJmcd.
.
ToiiiM""d iliiiJ lifl~
lhla weelt tO k1P RepubliCans that
hla rc-eiectloD Ampalp pve away
about $3 ,mllliOD to OCher ~bD·
cua. ltlcludina $700,000 ~ tile

'
·'

Tbomu, Mlddleport .lll••d and ftre ••part··
meal; Joe Struble, Pomeroy sqaud and ftre
department; wnck W:tlm MaUMw Monti ad
LlfeFUpt medic. Mike NulL Also presellt wen
BID I.amhert, Rutb Spallllad Dr.llk:Urd Pat- .,
tenoo.

wamln•

JJmkf .,_,. Jadiaw·
(VINI~

'

lUNDAY ONLY

IIUIICIIPI10IC IATII

. IJCirrlor•_._ ·
0:. Wtiot..~--· ......... ............... :_~..;...go,

a.tw.1 :.._•. _...... -~.......... ~ICI
IIIIClU ClOPI' l'tiCI

D::IJ·----··-·-·----·-·----SI.OO
lit I '

---.:::;a";oi;;;;r.:;n;~~=

•'** ~-..-- 11-

----~~,......,,_
--wllliillk..;..

- ,_,.,__li_
.
.

:
~

t

t

r·"\

Accident leaves three injured

:
:
:
'

GAUJPOLIS - A Friday ICCident at the intaleCIIoa of CeoteIIII'Y and Vaneo roads in Green Township aeot tluee people to Holz·
er Medlc:al Ceota' with injuries, the Gallla·Mdp Poll of the Swe
Hiabway Patrol reported.
Taten to HMC by the Ga11ia County Emergency Medical Ser·
viee we~e Amy L. Hemby, 19, 2124 Neigbbcxhood Road, Gollipolia; Charles B. Yost Jr., 20, 328S Morgan Lane, BidweD; and Don·
aid D. Craso. 19, 58 Pine SL, Gallipolis. Crago was a passenger in
the car driven by Hemby.
All three WCie treated 8lld released, a hospital spolcesperson said.
Troopers said Hemby was eastbound on Vanco at 3:Sl p.m.
when abc au~ to IWD right 011to Centenary 8lld collided with a
car driven by 011, who was SOU1hbountl 011 Centenary. Both cars
were moderately cJamaaed, IICalfding to the rcpmt.
Hemby was cited for failure to yield and no aeatbelL

,

!

Theft from residence reported
G~LIPOLIS

'·

. Route 141, Gallipolis, Gallia County sheriffs deputies were
informed.
.
.
Syrus told deputies the iQcident occurred while abe was
from bet home between 11:30 p.m. Thursday and 12:45 a.m. Fri·
day. Tbe items were removed from a pocketbook In the kitchen,
aocadlog to the rcpolt.
· Tbe Incident Ia under lnvestisatlon.

.-t

IGallia authorities jail seven

•
I

,,•
r

t

ll

f

...

'',

GAlLIPOLIS - Seven IIICII were booked into the Ga11ia Coun·
ty Jail Friday 8lld eaiy Sa&amp;urday, including:
·
Russell F. ChristiaD, 34, Mount Tabor Road, ViniOII, charged
with disorderly by lntoxic:atlon by Gallia sheriff's deputies, ll:SS
p.m. Friday; OliJ R. Porter, 27, Columbus, cl!araed with assault,
menac:ing and dlsmlerly after WlrDing by deputies, 2:58 a.m. Saday; Scott A. McGuire, 26, 833-1n Second Ave., GJ)Upoliil,
charged by Gallipolla City PoliCe with disorderly by intoiticalioo
8lld criminal damaging, 3:01 a.m. Satunlay; David J. Mooney, 27,
9141bird Ave., Gallipolis, charged with disorderly by lntodc:atioQ
by deputies, 6:16 alii. Saturday; and Clifford 0. Willlu, 60, 914
Third Ave., Gallipolla, T011y L. JohnsOD, 22; 914 Third Ave., Gal·
; lipolis, ud Larry E. Martin, 27, 617 Fifth Ave., GalUpolls, ·an
; char&amp;!"i by deputies with disorderly by intoxicalion, aU booked into
. the jail at 7:50 a.m.
. Saturday. .

: City police ticket two
• GAlLIPOUS - Cited by Gallipolis Qty Police Friday were
: Randy E. Mannie, 29, Newark, for improper lane usqe, and Tracy
: W. Wolfenbarger, 35, Point Pleasant, W.Va., for passing 011 the
rigbL

gCIICial ~g.

• A)IJJIOved the.foUowiDg DOD·
certified substitute personnel:
Lyletta Deu, educational aide;
Lorrie Lipovic:JI, c:afctaia, custodl·
an, educ:ational aide, seaetarialBDd
switchboard; Mllte Massey, bus
driver; 8lld Palrlcla Vernon, educa·
tiooal aide.
• Approved supplemental COD·
tracts f01 Charles llarper, James
McCarley 8lld Sheila Oebler.

c:lnnln' system In the country.
Ctms-1nd deodorizes-the way

professionals do, at a fraction
ollhe cost!

-·

. 9.98 per day

LANGSVILI..E - A stereo system and tools were am011g the
· Items listed miss=! the reported burglary of a Langsville ·
man'srcsldciiCIC W:
ay.
.
Paul Council repotted his hOme was brotal Into betWeen 9 a.m.
and 2 J.!.m., ace:~ Sheriff James M. Soubby. In addltioD,
Council's do&amp; waa
iD the bathroom.
An lnveatlptioo Ia CIOIItinuing, said Soulsby.

Monday thru Thu r1day.
Regular ratll apply

O'Dell Lumber Co.
Vine St. &amp; Third Ave.
446· 1276

Gldlipotis

6~E.

200 MAIN IT.

286-5075

24HOUR
CRISIS UNE

404 Second Ave.

MainS:.

Pomeroy

Gallipolis, Oh. Jlk ·-··

992-5500

CO FUSED•••

CHAINS
IIOW

ABOU'r SA,ELLift 7.1.?

50%
OFF

POMEROY-'- A Clay County, W.Va., man 10t1gbt by Meigs
officialJ In aJDDCCtioo with a aeries of thefta Ia being held In the
Lorain County Jail in Elyria, the Meigs County Sberitr1 Depart-

TAWNEY
- JEWELERS.

· mer!m~bbins, 20, fidiirged with one coun!Of atttJaptea . :.
agpavated burglary 8lld with twO rounts of aggravated burglary. In
addition, be faces two cQuota of disrupting public service for
aUegedly cuaing tele~ liDcs at two residencea.

424 SECOND AVE.

GAWPOUS, OH.

,

••CAU THE EXPERTS•
,.

'•.

-6 {)10.PeArcnennutaalg~l
.

·

-,(

Yield

, ··
0
.

:7~
,

,

&lt;

'
,.

l
;-

'

•

Minimum Deposit: $2,500.00

. · ~.

.

WHO'VE INSTALLED llOO's!

...,.

oCIM II'IPIIIII..... .

llllj•;;;;:..

hand-finished, lacquered
gift box which can be
used as a jewelry valet:

Vall~

o·-

J!L __!.
OUOW

a duck motif diat,
matching knife, and

Renting RINSENVAC saves you more

-much more! This remarkable ca r ~ e t
clean ing systen1 actuall y does the job
professional cleaners charge up to
a hundred dollars for .

GOLD

Suspect held in Elyria jail

The excitem eht' o{ times ~! is captured in this
classic vignette. The g;ft set katures a Swiss made
q uartz pocket watch with

Save $5 o"ff our regular
14.98 per Jay rale

All
141

Deputies probe theft

Time from
the
Great Outdoors

The No. 1 do~lt-yourselt carpet

..

Q.,.ooAioi.P:ago,..
W~u~c:an-.y,....._ ·
-O..r.MI~
oGIIIIoMitgoll I I
otlf!IIWIG"'"-Ior
cow-.
- · I IOif'llitiiMI
~~~~~IIIJIIISI
Em"
MEDICAREoM~DICAIOoTITLE
FEE SCALEoCERTlFIED BY STATE OF OHIOoEVENtNQAPPTS. AVAIUBI E
ofiHr.Elo.IJIIq...,._

-

,· ~ ·

'

·' .....:11goal'l:lltt

.

.

- Cub and food stamps were removed by

UDkDowo persona l'nxn the rcaideDce of Sandra Syrus, 4095 State

lute tcschers: Kelly BarcleUe, COS·
metolotlY: Elizabeth Gee, comp
communlcatlona/budicap K -12
and off. campus; William Gee,
business educ:atloo 8lld oft'-aunpos;
VIrginia Graves and RoRer Hauck,
off-c:aDJPUS: Deborab Moore, cosmetolOJY; and Michael McDonald,

·~ if1tooifcintf Centers, Inc..
J.'•

,

,

.

RIO GRANDE - Coones of
study In production agncalture,
auto body 8lld madJinc abop WCie
approved by the Gallia-Jacbon·
Vinton Joint Vocational Board of
.Educallon during Ill recent meeting .
at Buckeye Hills Carett Center.
The bolld alao gave ill pennia·
sion to apply for participation iD
the Dwigbt D. FJsenhower Mathematics and Science Education
Grant. The donation of a V·8
engine from General Motors wu
aiao tii:Cepted.
The donation was made In
recognition of Alan S. Walters, the
BHCC auto mec:bmlc:sstudent who
was the Ohio CODiealaotin the auto
mechanics contest at the 1993
VICA U.S. Skill Olympics in
Louisville, Ky.
.
An aiii"'KKed Board Polley 6300,
~ing with purchaseS subjec:t to
bid, and Board Polley 6400, pur·
chasing at first readings , were
approved.
In Adult Divisi011 buaincsa, the
board:
• Approved budgets for real
estate CIOIIJinuing educaliOD.
• Approved the following part·
lime appointments: Becky bay,
ABLE aide; James Collins,
bydraullc:s Instructor; DtureD Detty,
real dlllte instructor; Richard
~. fire extinguisher traiDIDg;
Betty Finney, ~LE and PETE
insiiuctor; Helen Higgins. ABLE
ioslr)lc~or; Belly Jordan, ABLE·
aide; Uli ~oush, PETE program
c:oardiDd:wfLorcaa Saylor, ABLE
instructor, L~ Sboolt. PETE program clerk, and Cindy Wilson,
PE'IEllfOBilUD aide.
• Amoved the following substi·
tute instructors: Etta Williams, ·
clerical and computer; Patricia
Reese, clerical; and Roxie Underwood, bomemakioglcoosumer edu·
calioo.
. • Accepted the rcsignatlou of
Catherine Wood as MRIDD dis·
abilities awareocss ioatruciAll'.
• .A:ppointcd Rebecca Stump as
acting;coordinator of the practical
oprsing )l'(lgiam in December.
• Approved the following substi·

RIO GRANDE - Tbe bloodmobile from Tri-State ~ Cross
Blood Services will be at the UDivenlty of Rio Gmnde's Rhodes
Studalt Ceottr 011 Moaday l'nxn 9 a.m. until3 p.m.
. Tbe Red Cross Ia urging people to gi"YC blood, particularly during
the l!ollday 1C81011.
.

•

·

to three courses of study

Bloodmobile at Rio Monday

I

Declassified records·.:show even
CIA wearied of Cold :War tensions

u.s..aa

~·

;'

''••

RECEIVE ROYALTIES -Melp Coaaty
Colllll1lalonen FrldaJ neel'l'ed royalties from
tbe Ollie DIYilloa of r-try r~L-:.!eu. ill
Sbade River State ron~t. J of tile

S 8 oaru
,., gives
•
approva1

Tr1-County Briefs:

;

Monday ... A cilanc:e of rata.
Continuedf rom p1g1 A1
land suburb Mayfield Heights, Reli· of strong orders that speaks to the only Reliance Electric Chairman H.
Lows 45 to SO. HJps in the 40s.
But keeping focused hasn 't been ance Electric employs 14,000 people organization's ability to maintain fo- Virgil Sherill, with more than 1.1
Tuesday ...A .cbao&lt;:e of showers. easy in recent months, said Reliance in 44 plants or sales offices in 10 cus.•·
million shares, controlled more oflbe
Lows in the 30s. Highs from the Electric spokesman Stephen Van 055. nations. The company makes motors,
Reliance
common
stock
rose
from
company's
stock as of the annual
mid 40s to mid 501.
"To
say
there
bave
been
no
distrac·
drives
and
controls
for
telecommuniabout
$20
a
share
in
August
to
just
meeting.
Sherill,
a former president
Wedllcsday ... A chance of allow·
tioos.
would
be
misleading.
We
've
cations
equipment
and
a
wide
range
over
$30
in
November.
VanOss
said
of
Prudential
Securities,
has been
crs. Lows in the 30s. Highs from
pretty
much
been
able
to
confine
it
to
of
manufacturing
uses.
at
least
27.5
million
Reliance
Electric
Reliance
Electric's
chairman
since its
the mid 40s to the mid 50s.
our headquarters. We've been taking
The industrial segment produces shares have been traded since the emergence from Exxon. in 1986.
care of the day-to-day running of the about 73 percent of Reliance Electric General Signal mergerannounccment
business, and that's a tribute to the sales.
Morley, 62, bas been Reliance Elecorganization," Van Oss said.
A Reliance Electric merger with tricprcsideotandchiefexecutivesince ·
Reliance Electric began in 1904 as General Signal, which ma~s high- 1980. He was an executive with Exxon
a maker of motors for machine tools. tech equipment for industry, would from 1958 to 1980 and was president
used for polling and campaign The company has grown steadily, with have created combined sales of $3.6 of Exxon Chemical USA.
advertising. The campaign commit· projected sales this year of at least billion.Thetwocompanicsannounced
According to the company's proxy
tee produced 60 commercials and $1 .6 billion.
their merger agreement Aug. 30.
documents for this year's annual
101! pieces of direct mail for GOP
Exxon Corp. acquired Reliance in
But on Oct. 20, Rockwell jumped shareholders ' meeting in April,
Member New York Slock EJichange
challengers, and· 40 mailings for
MemberSIPC
1979
for
$1.2
billion
and
kept
it
as
a
in
with
its
cash
oft'erofS30persbare.
Morley
received
a
base
salary
of
incumbents.
·
Republicans lost three hotly subsidiary until 1986, when a Reli- Reliance was already forming transi· $567,000 in 1993 and a bonus bf
OFFERING: '
contested House races - for scats ance Electric management group led tional committees with General Sig· $260,000. Various other benefits, pri·
that Demoaalic Incumbents Karen by Jobn C. Morley paid $1.35 billion nat, based in Stamford, Conn., when marily a retirement program, were
•Stocks
.valued at $424,974.
Doty, Wayne Jones and Jerry to once again make it a stand-alone Rockwell interceded.
•Corporate .Bonds
Morley owned 806,525 shares, or
Rockwell's unsolicited bid tossed
Luebbers held - by a total of company. Public trading of its com·
mon stock on the New York Stock " uncertainty on everyone's table,". 1.6 percent, of Reliance Electric's •U.S. Treasury Securities
about 2,000 votes, be said.
common stock as of the company 's •Mutual Funds
Van 0ss said.
"That would have taken us to Exchange began May 6, 1992
S9 (House Republicans), but we
Reliance recorded earnings of $25
"Reliance has always been very annual meeting last April. At the
•Insured Tax-.Free
need not get greedy," Vu Voorhla million in both 1993 and 1992, $34 good at rising to the occasion, Rockwell final tender offer of$31 per
Municipal Bonds
said, provoldog laughter from the million in 1991 and $46 million in though/ ' he said. "Salesarcstillrun- share, that would be worth about $25
audience.
•Insured Money Market
1990.
Ding high, and we had a very good million.
Candidate recruiblleot for those
Among individual shareholders,
Nowwith headquanersin theOeve- month in Octbber, continuing a trend
Accounts
thn!e aeats will begin immediately.
"We illm to defeat those people iD
•IRA's
1996," he said.
Contact: ·
Rep. Michael Fall of Hamilton
Jay Caldwell
~ Van Voorhla for his work
this year 8lld during the 1992 elec:·
Account Executive
tiOD in which Republicans gained
.
.
eight House seats.
441 Second Avenue
tiooal sl8le of the SUJieiPOWU' arma thole in cbarge of the ill· filled Bay·
Bt
ROBERT
BURNS
Gov . George Voinovich said
competition.
That
report
said
the
Gallipolis, OH. 45631
of Piss opeta!IOD .lalew the analysts
·earlier this week that his rc-elec:tiOD Allocllded rr- Writer
tluee aeplCIIia of the U.S. wx:lear believed Castro was too.JlOIIUW to
CAMBRIDGE,
Mus.
Even
campaign gave away about $3 mil·
Slrike force- bombers, lao4·billecl be overthrown.
(614) 446-2125
of
!Ill aprca- mlssllca
lion to other Republlcails, inc:lud· wbile It 8lld sca-l•nncbcd mlulles
Manias
at
the
time
was
dllef
of
sive
Soviet
Duclar
liUIIdUp
durllli'
iog $70Q,OOO to the state party's
1·800-487-2129
the Cold War, the CIA secretly - muld each dealroy 70 petcent of staff of the CIA's Board of Nation·
campaign.
the
Soviet
economy,
even
after
.....
--~-------~
it
Estimates.
·
lament~ the scemlnaty endless
U.S.-SoVIet arms race, according to absorbing a Soviet flnt strike. .
The newly declassified CIA
newly dcc:lassifled government
reports
abow that the intelHgence
.DR.
TODD RAGAN
...
record&amp;.
analysts
held
coosls'tendy
to
a
lotelligcnee analyall who puz!\·-"•~
zled
over Soviet mllillry inlentiODs belief that whatever the size of the
.
OlYI'OMETRIST
.
,
its chalnnan."
Soviet nuclear force, It wal not
Benncu, who bas led the party saw that the nuclear anna CDDpeti· inteDded for a deliberate auact 011
NOW OPEN' FOR BUSINESS
li!Jo
bad
gODC
beyond
111ythiDg
that
since 1988, earns $110,000 annual·
the United States. IDstead il was for
AT 458 SECOND AVE.
ly and his benefits include a could rc3SOI!ably be explaiDed by deterrence
- the same rationale
the
legitimate
security
needs
of
$24,000 housing allowance and the
that u.s. leaden used to jusdfy the
either Moscow or WashingiOD.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
use of a luxury automobile.
American buildup.
•
'The
weapons
competition
VoiliOvic:b did not ask for Bcn(Form~rly Dr. George Davis' Office)
nett to be replaced, but the letter nowadays is largely a techDOloglcal . The repons cov~ the period
• Complete Eye Exams
surprised many GOP leaders and race," U.S. analysts wrote in .a top 19S4to 1983.
The CIA reports played an
led to apcculatiou about possible secret ieport dated Nov. 24, 1910.
• Adult, Infant and Children
su~~easora, including Alex. ' 'Each side Is ImpeDed to press for· Important role iii fonnlng Amerl·
C8D llralegic DUdea" policy during
ward
...
lest
It
be
left
behind,"
~If.~ of the Sum· rcgardleas of milltary needs.
• Contact Lenses -All Types
the Cold War. But ihe Harvard
!D*County Republican Party.
The U.S. and Soviet arma pro- conference made clear that in at
• Large Selection of Eyeglasses
. Anbinkoff said after the meet·
duclioo
progiiDis
bad
attained
"a
leasl
ooc
audal
episode,
the
CIA's
ing that while "this Is not an offace
• Tre&lt;atment of Eye Infections
. you run for," be probably would momentum of their own," pushed analysts WC~eleft out iD the c:old.
Willard
Maaiu,
aloo&amp;llme
CIA
relentlessly
abead
by
an
"imi!JCMC
• Foreign Body Removal
ac:cepl the chairmaDship if the posiapparatus" of government 8lld mil· officer, said in u interview thill
lion was offered.
• Treatment of Glaucoma
I!Ot libel iD
"If they came in and said itary organizatioi!S, lnslallatioi!S, agency analysll 1961
to
estimate
how
th~
Cuban
employees
and
"vested
iotaesla."
' Would you like the job?' I
• Evaluation of Cataracts
Tbis expression of doubt is population would react If a CIA·
wouldn't say 'no,"' be said. "I'd
. .
• Most Insurances Accepted
probably say 'Yes. I'd llke it.' But unswprising today, iD the aftermath Inspired insumc:tiOD ~ lannclJed
we' ve got somebody and be's of the Gold W&amp;t. But II the time It against their new lcadet, .Fk!cl CM.
doing a fairly. fine job and be's try· ran counter to the prevallias U.S. tro.
He
said
it
was
clear
no
anaiYii·
government view tbal the iums·rac:e
ingto move things ahead.''
.
446-2236
was the only way to CIOIItaln Soviet cal report wai rcque'atcd because
communism.
The reports are among 80 ocwly
declassified National I~':!:!Jenc:e
'
Estimates that were re
at a
Contlnuld from page A1
conference lhis .weetend II part or.
tor, the Columbus consulting firm of a CIA effort to m'alr:e public Ill
URS Associates is finalizing envi- rcpons 011 the S~ UDIOD.
ronmenlal studies. Additional enviIn a spcec:b tO tile confercnc:c
~(I liE~~ I I'IUE88ICIIAI.IIENrAI. HEALTH AllENCIES IISClii!£ASTatiQIIO
ronmental work on the remaining Friday, Stansfield Tomer, who was
.· 11' • 14 Collin IIIUftllollln poll IIJ lllo Go... lo I
; !lllgl-- or
phases becarpe necessary when Co·, CIA director dui'lna the Carter
-.Drug •••a•a nlnllllll:*l- 11ntooe
lumbus Southern Power decided to administration, asserted that both
allow ODOT to build the highway Mpscow and Washingtm had fool·
isbly , sq~aodered resources by
across power company property at overbUilding their nuclear arseoall.
Great Bend.
"We were conned by the
PRIVATE
PAnENT
RESIDENT
Also when ODOTwas able to pull , Department of Defense," Turner
the. phase from Rock Springs to Five said. •
t.ISURA!IICE
CONFIDENnALrry·
PSYCHIATRiSTS .
Pomtsoutofthcwholecorridor,addi·
Turner noted IbM he t!JIIli'Owd 1
PLANS ~RQCES$ED
.. PROTECTED
PSYCH.OLOGISlS l
tional.studies were required to show National IntelligeiMlc EStimate Iii '
,
.
.
·
·
SOCIAL WORKiaRS
bowtbenextpbaseswillconnectwith December· 1980 lilt lhould have ,
(l+tfr.CIIIII.Rrnttrdll
.
&lt;
{e•••M
·
••
.........,_torllllkMriiiFI
~..,...
·.
the new road at Five Points.
alerted. him and .....__ the' .....
..,_
.
Ctu!M.ITI:IIIpJ
&gt;4'1Pl~
iEwloillon&amp;r...g
..
,, ~.• to
u1~

R.

By J1M I'REEMAN
accepted appropriations · of
"1beec people
to call klllg
Tl" B•IIDel Stair
$2,526.96 to the emeqency modi· distance· for county acrvlc:cs," abe
l'OM~ROY - The Meigs cat stivice bucJaet laclo$5,907.37to said.
·
County BOIId or OnmiukJDCn in the proaecutiog llllm!CY'a budget
Thornton said PUCO would
regular IICUion Friday received 111
The board also aareed 10 pay require petitiooa. akJDg with allied
shlw or royaltiell'nxo D1111ra1 J11 $2,01S to the Ross County Sber· complaint, before It would CODSider
weD&amp; In the Shade River State For- iff's DeparttllelllBDd $1,732 to the .tllemaaer.
est iD Olive TOWD&amp;hlp.
Middleport Pollee Department for
In· other buslneas, the board
James Milliron of the Ohio housing of prboom,
.
allowed the Meigs County 17Sth
l&gt;et*bileill of Nalulal Rcsoun:ca'
Meigs C0111ty Economic De"Yel· Annlvenary Cclmqllta to bury a
DlvlaiOD.of Forestry p-eaeoted the OpDICIIt Diredor Julia Houdaabe1t· 2S·ye&amp;r lime CIIJIUie 011 the court·
board with a checlt for $1,758.01, Thornton aald abe bad contacted bouse grounds In Juuary,
to be divided between the county · the Publlc Utillliea CommissiOD or. IIJIPIOved the millolel of the Nov.
8lld OBve TOW!IIbtp, $879.01 8lld Obio to detamine what ateps occcJ,•: 2S.m¢11ng and paid weekly b1D1.
$87\l ft!IIICCiively.
to be tabD to e&amp;labllsh local calliDg .' Commlasioners present were
IJrolhcr financial matten, the between the Pomeroy _exchange ' ~Ideal Fred Hoffman, Vice Pres·
board ajlp'oved transfers of $5,000, and exchanges in Tuppers PlaiDa, 1dent Janet Howard Tackettud
$306.98, $290, $72.9• and Cheater, Albany and Reedsville.
Robert HarteDbadl. Alao preaent
$4,179.19 within the emergency'
Currently, calls from those was Cleric of Commission Gloria
!Dedlcal services, IIller control, ellcbaoges to Pomeroy, the IC8l of Kklea~
. ·.
.
JUVCDile couaty, park distrlc:t 8lld county government, arc l011g dislmiiUia''s buda:ts. CommiuiODers tance.

Saturday and Evening Hours Available

~~~

Sunday Times·Sentinel/A3

natural gas well .royalties
.
ave

·Reliance Electric: trophy in a merger battle

Bennett's fate as Republican
chief to be decided irt January

Regional

M~igs corllmissioners get

Election over, state GOP
plans for 1996 campaign

Party.

~mber4, ~994

Lifesaver award

OHIO Wea th er
Sunc1Jv,Dec.4

•

OUR PROS HAVE OVER 17 YEARfOF EXPERIENCE IN
. SARLLIO SALES &amp; SERVICE TO ANSWER YOUR
QUESROIS AND END THE CONFUSIOIIII

Annual
Percentage
Yield
•

•

Minimum Deposit $500.00

NORTHSTAR SATELLITE

.These CDs are automatically renewable, Penalty for early withdrawal.
A.P.Y..is available as of the date of this issue, bot is subject to change.

AND TELEVISION · /

ll-:....:'-~~111.14

. 111LIMUS, 0110

· --·--·---- ....;.;.__ .u,q,.,
II ~--o;;;w,1Wi.-~. JI4.16

~~~
•

. I
I •

•

'

r

�,.'

... .•. .... ' • .. • 4.

;.

,

·-·- ·~·-··

..

~ .-

.

... . . . . . . . .

-

-

.... · -

·

. . .· - ··

- - ·. . . .... .

... . . ' · -

. . . ...

..

4

.

. .

... .

-

.

.. ..

.......

..

- -

...

•

'

••

~

•

. _ .....'

~.

.'

\.
'I

Commentary

December 4, 1994

WASHJNGTON - 'lbc m:e~~t
American mlssl011 to wbiat bombgrade uranium out of tbe Central
Asian n:public of "ezelrhstan Ia not
meeting with accolades from all

~tC.
ll5 TbJrd A.... G•Dipolk, 'Oblo
(614) 446-Z341

111 Court St., Pomei'VJ, Olllo
(614) lln-2156

Sunday Times-Sentinei/A4

aa:ess to it.

"We may have sel a precedent
for paying an exorbitant llmount,"
a top Department of Energy ofrJcial

::e;:; ra~"~s3r.J'J:::." By Jack And,rson

an:rn;

for 600 kilograms - may well
have set a rccord Auaerk:a will be
unable 10 maida in t11e fularc.
Michael
•''lbc milliDa. aJdc-Damed Pro"'
jecl Sappbirc, wu no jewel of a . familiar witb the lteaJ told our assodeal," one Pentagon official ciate Dale Van Atta. "H tbe same
price holds for Russia, they'll be
q~ucl. . expeau we lalked to able
to balana: tbcir budget by sellan: worried tbal die United Swes ing enriched uranium to us into the
won't be able to aft'ord the price of next miiiCIUiium. We oopll to have
peace. 'lbc U.S. govmunentla cur- coocems about that,''
rently trying to arrange the purLast month's deal came about
chase or SOO melric IOns of highly after Kazakb officials told the
enricbed uranium from Russia. If American ambassador that they'd
the deal with Kazakhstan is any be willing to sell their n.uclear
indicati011, it' 1 an offer we might material to tile VJ!ile!! Slate&amp;. Kazahave to refuse.
kb officials say they have no iDler'lbere is, naturally, ooly oue rea- est in maintaining tbeir own atomic
son for America to buy nuclear arsenal.
materiala from Russia or KazaDuring a private meeting in July
lcbslan - to recJuce the stockpiles, with American officials, Kazakh
often poorly' guarded, of bomb- Science Minister Vladimir S.
grade malerial to prevent terrorists Sbkolnik made clear bls country's
or unfriendly natlons fi'lln!_!ainlng stance on nuclear proliferati~n.

mstf"'ln

ROBERT L. WINGETf

Publllher

MARGARET LJW)!W
CoatnJUer

A MEMBER of Tho Auoc:iatcd Pross, and tbe Americau
Newsptper Publiaben Association.
LI!Til!RS OF OPINION ue welcome. They abould be leu than
300 warda. All !etten arc subjec:l to editing and muat be aigoed with
name, addrela and telephone number. No unsigned !etten wiU be
published. Letters should be in &amp;ood lute, addreuing iJsuos, not

penonalilies.

The lamest ducks
B1 WALTER R. MEARS

APSpedld~

.
WASHJNC:m»f -- 1'111'111t about lame clucb - tb1a DH•J!laldc fiotk
bad dipped wlnp 1110• .
It was lib a·WIIb, oue « tbaa Rlllllbd. 11n1:e tbe }IOIIICrlpt seas1on
ofCciapaa Wll tbe I11UIIe befcn tbe R"9'JNkan tabover 01i Jan. 3.
Tbe symbda lbot••irwl
'J'll= lalnelllto 10 ICIIIIIIiorllllll "a day lie cped in 11011algla"
.for oue or tbc 114 Houle '*""ben w11o wm't be blct, but got ooe llat
voee, 011 tbc Galcnl ~ Oil TlrUI'a IIIII '!'ride.
Then tbero wu IDOit d tbc 73 DOW Houae Rcpublkana jDmcd iniD a
CIIJCIII nlllllllror a day or brtefinp and boliUJdlea. Tbe 13 Demoallllc
newcameu wm't iiCetl to blre a balL ·
A Democrldc nemesis of tbe tobacco Industry coilveacd oue more
bearing, but II WIIIIO matdl for tbc twnmtd pediJI'IIIIIIC'ft of tbc pasttbe c:uporaiC dllcta wbo ouce QIIIC 10 be reliukcd declined to show up
tbla lime.
.
The clefealecl,lp""Jrer « tbe House offered a poallalpt lalute to tbe
GOP 1eadet wllo ndred 011 tbe-eve of tbc majority rule be never enjoyed.
So Rep ..Robed Mldlel of DUnols did geliD rap the apeairu' I gavel. One
time.
Sweet victory, be'd !Old inawnlng Republicans. "I've been around
here 38 yean llllloeva- did .m idi your &amp;talUS."
"An awtwlnl lay," llid Rep. Jim Nussle of Iowa, in charge of the

HAVE Y()U
AN&amp;UI!iHED

OVE~ EVE~THI~

INTNE

PAPER,YET?

aaiil Rep. H•ry Hyde. "This Ia a lOUgh '""ineaa."
-'hie lOIJ8b t.-•Pne'l It band, of course, was tbe wodd trilde agreement,

COLUMBUS - A prison supervisor who bid in a 1e1tr00111 cellinll to spy on a female guard went beyond "reasonable aurvenIance" and invaded tbe woman's privacy, the Oblo Court ofCialma
has ruled.
Judge Russell Leach said earlier this weel that altbough walchiog employees is "an acceptable investigative tool," Capt. Leroy
Payton went too far. Payton bid for seven hours in a aawl space
above a staff restroom at MadiSon CorrectionallnstiiUtion in London, Ohio.
The state was ordered to pay guanl Theresa Speer $7,SOO in
damages.
.
Payton staked out the restroom on Feb. 12, 1989, 10 lnvCS!igate
allegations that Speer was having personal relationships with pis-

onen.

Wanlen ~ge Alexander reprimanded PaylOD for exceeding
bla authority and Speer for :tleing away from her post without per:
mission. He did not fmd that Speer had relationships with lmn•tes.
Speer sued, then resigned in 1991.
·
1be judge said Payton's actions met crireria for invasioo of pivacy, but added tlul personal pnblems added to Speer's streSS.

COLUMBUS - Scbools around Ohio will be able ID use more
state money to help tesch elementary school students bow to resolve
contlicts peacefuUy. '
.
Statewide, 130 grants are available to suppon such programs in
elementary schools.
.
The Ohio Ccmmlssion on Dispute Resolution and Conflict Management and the Ohio Department of Education made the
announcement Thursday.
-'lbe Alaoclated Press

Ohio, W.Va. lottery numbers
By TH Associated Press
Tbe followioa numbers were
chosen In Friday's Oblo and West
Virginia lotteries:

*olllce

:aw

•·'Ji0 d. ay .·I•n. .' hI•sto ry.
'

:kft

.

fC:h:

nished by impartfal John Thomas, · since it appeared that Pomeroy
Also the Beep cblldren were in
manager or the Valley Lumber of would have easily won this tug of their infancy in tbe earlier pictures.
Middleport. (Seaetly, we all know war contest. The Middleport team Toby and Natbmiel were about tbe
be's a Panther at heart). All mem- followed Captain Riley's lead and same age as Crockett, age four and
really screamed and carried on Wil, age two, at tbe preienl time.
Fred W. Crow
wben Artie Foo declared the con- When you think of it you wonder
teatoverandticd.
·
bow time can pass so quickly. A
But
It
was
the
Pomeroy
team
considerable
number of years .
bers of each team spent some time
which was unlucky that tbla deci- passed through the Beegle camera ·
going through warm-up calisthen- sion was rendered. It is certain that 1n order totlresent this film of · ·
ics. The next ilem of business was
A. Riley and Ike Neal were not . memories. · y only regret about
10 tlip a coin to see wblcb team was T.
In any shape for a tug of war. Crow tbe film was that the voices were
going 10 have the wind at its back. bad been worting out for the past not audible. 1bia would have made .
Before tossing the.colo, the referee six months and after be got a shot it even more enjoyable if yoil could
~~I~~~~=
of oxygen, was ready to rumble. have beard your loved, deceased
However, "pride goeth before a ones speak one more lime. we ail
before it landed Captain Crow of fall." Next year there will ~""'"ly -'"-·'" think of our ""-"" to--' .
Pomeroy protested without expla- b
a1
f
b,....._
"""""'
_,........, •.., •
. A"- 11. landed beads
e a re tug o war w en much ouea more oftelllhall we do.
·.
lllllloo. '""
• which younger athlete's compete against
Jed Meea, tbe former OSU bas- ::
was called by Middleport, Crow one another. The planning of.tbla kethall star wbo graduated from .
stated tbat the· coin should be event will start much earlier and PHS, h now living at 1034 ; ·
tossed three times and that it should ..........,_Middleport will be able 10 Che~noe Meadows, Katy, Texas &gt;,
have been a two out of three deal. ...,......,.
fJeld a competitive team. Pomeroy 774 . His phone number is 713; -.
Referee, Artie Foo, would have will have its tb{ee piece alumni 395-8722. Jed bas called me on ::
DOlle oftbls and stated that Middle- band there next year. If we can't Thanksgiving day each year for •
port bad the rigbt to choose its outpull them, we'll outplay them,
approximately 20 years. He is ::
goal. Middlepmt took the goal with
On Friday night, Unda and ber interested in people living In Meigs :
the wind • its back. Naturally Cap- family came to visit with me and . County. It Is always nice to bear :•
taio Crow replied that this was wi.tb the exceptioo of Crockett, and from Jed and his voice always :
going 10 be appealed to a higher Anne Lowry Casci, all of my cbll- stimulates my memories of bla liv- :
court. Nevertheless, the referee dren and grandchildren were pre- ing In ~emy.
.
ordercdtheiUgofwarbestarted.
sent. My areat grandson, Bruno
- Finally, I talked 10 my brother, ·!
After assumii!J tbcir places 011 Casci was not present. During tbe Cbartes Richard Crow, in Wtmen. ,
the line, the memben of the two eveninll, Linda showed a film she He is in bid shape physically with :
teams imempted loiplck up the bad put together wblch consisted of cancer, emphysema and~ circu- :
rope. The rope, although not heavy Christmas and otbet events wblch lation. Out&amp;ide of that lie is doins :
by most standardl, was too heavy occurred earlier in lime. It w.aa a fine with bls two birds and one pig. :
~ismpresenembet!to!: 'd:trca~ strange-feeling to see yourself--Richard's family was wJthJllm ~
, when you were fifty two yean or when the call was made. He is tbe ·:
problem for the referee, Anle.Foo, age. This was twenty seven years only person that the wrilel Imowa :.
who decided that since ne1ther _ ago.
wbo bas ever dived off the ·:
team could bandle the rope•. die t~s
In the earlier film I was much Pomeroy-Mason Bridae iuto the :.
of war. conu:st sbould end m a tie. heavier than 1 am now . .1 noticed Ohio River.
·
Captain Riley blow his stack . tbat my weight bad ballooned
up
111 God we trust.
;;

·

":le:

CO: :lf:::"!:

•,

, lJIIII1 BUl CliniOII'' htnnillatins
Elthr.r paib, William Jeffersoti
atpidlatlon at the polls~ lllever Clinbi"' pi'C,alcleocy 11 beaiDtllna
~ what three ievolutiou- to wind lown. The "comebaci
lrlea were really' talklua about kid" may Jiaw nm"oot of r1111e1.
~ ~in, Giant and Wibon
4
' w pulitlcallll!beavall.
· • Chuck
. ;#d,ftnt bluab, all lbrce seemed " _.....;::;.:.::.:::.::::..::~;;.;,;::..._
10 be llll,klos a cue for the vloleDl ' Only lbe Gecqe·~ of the
OfU*ow of 111'-elllatinglY,IIDDy. world II'C IIIIo 10 .-..in a lmoclJlllllle)' ICIIIIIIy were wanlna lbll oai pilacll1fliea tliev're on ·the
CCIIvallive chanJea fadlllalicd ~ ·
. A
,.._
1. ...._._
0111
dte va~~~ta-boutt.~
·
·•
~~
llle •peGple ~lieve
ovenBut tbc= can. That's Why

Stone

.::J':l:;: =; ........

-~~ - -

•ni-i:IPldOII

government that "suits tbem better" - even if It means getting
down into tbe dlrtleat sewer witb a
retromingen~ lite larmllng Speaker of die HdUae Newt Gingncli.
Nothing Iamore QllllRISive lllen
a government
mikes it almost
impossible for the average.famlly
to survive because Df heavy tax
burdeoa llld ~ govamnent
reg11IMIOIIs.
·
In tlllowing tbc IIIICala out, v'olera aimply subatiiUJe!! f new set«
nucall. ·That' a fiD6. ln a clanoaa-

·

m.

.I,.:Jk, ~~?jbfJ~:nJ!! cy,catbar&amp;laif,l.forthe~
dccille ,are ..
by Jbelr govctll- wbetbcr tbe ldb1 belong&amp; to be1e8-

~1)' l1aue Clintoa IDI!II

'*"·~·now. _, the lnt ~ JIJid' to . . . up aild abalre'Uft'' guered w~te ~n. Cbrlatian CODc:ndc ~ ·ill J996 Ia wiiiiiW •tbe eillllhJ&amp; JO'idnmeauacl "lelld- servadvea, plllitlcal rlgbt-willgen,
!L
.~
~or·-~~~~~
. .:;,•:!.' ufl.- ~
-·
Jillt matteri'' by formlos 1 new · reaurrecled racists,·closet aexists,
1
Ica.c.
alin!_eted~Demoaats. anti-abortion-

•r
·{

ists, schOol-prayer advocates, wet- ·tbelr coulral:t oace they Jose coafi- ·
fare·reform zealots, ram-limitation deuce in tbe admlniltratluo.
supporters or illegal-immigrant
But BW Clinton hasn't been u
oppooents.
ner.toua a prealdeDt u tbc trlplo-R
Yet, if you sat most or these cabal (die racial radio riftlll) bu
elccta'ai change agents down and IIUnted him. He can·point: afew
asked them If they wanted to eut leglalative vldodea that beoeftted
federal funds to education that the IJCOI))c.
would deny financial aid for tbeir
His biggeat falling 1a bla style,
kids' college educations, or cut which is bubrlatic, garrnioua and
medical aid to their elderly lllOlben Olp-..._y, ·
and fatben, or 'get rid of stJbsiclie• ·
E-;;ey time Clinton ran into a
for their farms, the protest would cria1J, be'4 blre a DOW ap1mne11ter
crescendo l~tto a deafeolna• · (remember David Gergen?). 1be
"NIMBY!" (Dot In MY bad; WhlteHOIIICII&amp;ftandbiuppoiDt·
yard).
me,nts ttimcd over 10 fast and so
That's both lllldCnt.,CSable illlld , . oftea.:tbat they looted llke revolvforslvable. More impoitant WI! ' ina c1oon in a wborellouse, • • .,
the voters/ COIIInldlctory beba'fior· · ·As for Hmy Truman, indecilllou ,
, ls.tbclr collective ablllty to revoke was alien to blm. HE"bad style.

"With the cooperation of lbe
communities, we will accompliall
Ibis goal IIIII provide a true II&amp;Vice
to the C101111111Diity," Carter said.

located at the corner of Elahtll and Vlliad
streell. Seen Ia tlte dadlo are; from left, Prosnm Dllec~
81111 Genenl Manater Grqory eart.r.

RlciJ.....,

DON'T MISS THESE CHRISTMAS BUYS AT
1
HASKINS·TANNER
THIS
MONDAY,
DECEMBER
5'
.
\

_

REG.

lEVI'S ST. lEG &amp; IOOTUG.=::. '23"

PRE·WASHED LEVI'S••••:.::~~:- •••• 125"
VALUES TO
FASHION STONE WASHED, ETC •••':!::••• '35"
ALL LADIES LEVI'S ••••••
'36"
REG.
S
,.LEVI'S DENIM JACKETS •••-.••••• 49

LeVIS

:aaa:......

LeVI'S

$1400.00 In Gift Certificates
Register for the Following:
12/03 A $200.00 Certlncate
12/1 oA $300.00 Certificate
12/17 A $400.00 Certificate
12/24 A $500.00 Certificate
4 Gift Certlflcates...$1400.00

:.~1£\YoW"J

Haskins Tan•er•••
The Place to Shop

Buy 3 pair Levi's Jeans
Get a FREE Levi's
Sweatshirt

33" x 44" COLOR
CLOTHWITHS

~ens

CRAYONS.

(Ages 3 and up)

RetJJil Value $1.19

9FT GREEN

· Sweaters

GARlAND.
RetJJil Va lue $3.99

_:'.__Jlal to rlS.CO- . -

Hanes
Undenvear

20o/o off ,.

'
Buy 2 pair
Levi's )uns
Get a FREE Levi's T-ahlrt

Mem Dockers
Haggar
Free
Casuala
-

Mens
Pajamas
Reg. 18.99

'15992Pr.

Vallo 38.00

30.00

$499
TRIPLE
BYZANTINE
CANDELABRA.

oa

Retail Value $29.90

~~'f!0!: f:'IJ!-~6:: ~

21 'h''

::

More Important, be baclguts anc1 ::
itleologlcal couslatency. He was .;
nowhere near as bright 11 Clinton, :but the people re-elected him .:
because lbey believed In blm. ;.
Other than the moat paulonate :
J)emocrats, wbo believes io Bill '
Cllliton?
:
Lyndon Joluuon also suffered ·
from the cou-manlmage. The Viet--:
nam War crippled bla re-election :
bid IIIII he attnuNed out of the New ·
Hwnpahillc Jrililary, bumUiated by ;,
c:bal~ Sen. EUaeoe Mc:Cirtb , •
Tbal'.dybeqult.
1
(Por lnlor•tlon 1111
1o '
CH11D,MDiea.. eleelrntiCeU, wlflt,7,
tlala col••llt _. lidttn, con· l
tact·America Nae b' ~ 1• ,
IGt m~ at.l311.)
:

Carter said.
"Our goal at WBGS and WBYG
Is 10 bring the issues and concet111
of Mason County to the forefront,"
be starecl.

·MONDAY SPECIALS ONLY•••

~
a- .

BIRTHDAY
BETSY
PORCELAIN
DOLL
Retail Value
$34.90

fOr Clinton, new course of political action becomes .·necessary .:
.,

ON THE AIR - Point Pleaunt'• WBGS1030 AM wiD be on the air Uve IJeainniD8 Moaday, Dec. 5 with tlte "Get Up and Go Show"
with Rlcll Lacey. The IO,IIM-watt station Is

.. .....
cr.
~

Carry 011.
. ·i
· Edl.or'• notwe • Lona-timt ~
Altorn11 Fred • Crow II tla•·.
contrlktor of a weekly col- ~
lor Tlae Slmilay Tlmu SentineL
Riaden.wiiWna to applaad, crtt-'·1
kiD or mmlllfat
an1 iilbJed ~
lnareallllllne'll'lt-JIII'•

lcs aa well u aoaie Wahlma HIP
School and Hannu High Sdloof
coverage will be fCIIIftd. AcaJrd.'
iog to Carter, tbe local co~
will hopefully kick-off with tile
D.A.R.E. Basketball Tour~~Uat
Dec. 16-17.
In yeara pall, coverage of
Mason County by tbc radio media
bas been a secondary coDcern,

Cliristmas (jive-.!tway

r::.

because be wanted one more victo- 27Jl pounds. Most of this weipt
ry. Pomeroy was 1 liltle bit handi- was fat. Also my hair was coil
capped_..._ · f I pia
bad black. A sttange reeling overt.1111C
w ..... ooe o II f ayers
me when I saw
wife, El
to bow out because o a lack .o r in the film Also,
. anor.
oxygen. A ha~ty exit to his ~ar two films itw showed~=
~:::uC~£r
Maud Crow, being pre~nt.lt ti
This was a biuer dlaappoiDtmenl 00 hard to.delcribe bow I feltiD see
tbeCaptain,ofthe Pomeroy team, tbcsetwoladles.

Wben tbe FM goes 011 the air, basketha!J games will also be broadcast, Carter said. WBGS and
WBYG an: tbc 27tb IIICI28tb aftilillea with TIIN, wblcb is bmlllcaat
In four Slates.
NASCAR racing will also be a
part of the station format as an
affiliate of tbe Motor Racing Networt (MRN), Caller llid.
"Auto racing is the nation •1
Dumber ODe spcc!llor aport and tbia
region hal lllliiiC of the moat loyal
fans in the country. We're excited
to offer NASCAR JII'OII•nmlna to
our listenera," Carter said.
Local sports will abo be a part
of the station's forma~ Carter said.
Point Pleasant High School atblct-

&amp;bow.

: According 10 Carter, the StatiOII
is tied into the National Weather
Service and will provide up-to-tbe
minure reports.
Lacey. the program director,
will also conduct ail hour-long
"Tradio" show, The call-in format
for this se11ment will be for those
wisllingto buy, sell, do or have
done as long al they are not in
business for tbemselves, according
to Lacey. Participants will be able
to list up to three ilems during their
time on tbe alr. Tradio Ia scbedulcd
to begin 1n acouple of weeks.
An eight-year radio veteran,
Lacey bas worked for WQBE
Super 102 and WVNS In the
Charleston market, and most
recentlyWCEF.in Ripley, W.Va.
"Tradio will give Rich a·direct
line to the public," Carter said.
"His (Lacey s) Vll$1 experience in
different types of on-air situations
will malce him a great asset to a
growing radio &amp;tatiOII."
Another upcaning program will
be a daily hour-long local affairs

THE SHOE CAFE

:SJD:

10

progiiiD.

coon:

$1,711,4Sl.
In tbe other daily game, Pick 4
Numbers players wagered
$371,986 and will share S2S2,800.
The jackpot for Saturday's
omo
Super Lotto drawing was $8 milPick 3: 8-8-6
lion.
Pick4: 3-7-1-7
WEST VIRGINIA
BuckeyeS: 10.15-23-29-36
Daily
3: 2-S-1
The owner of one Buckeye S
Daily 4: 1-8-1-S
ticket witb tbc comet five-number
Casb2S: 1-9-16-18-20-24
combination. mar claim an Obio
Lottery prize Qf'$100,000, tbc lottery IIJIIIOUIICed SllliUday.
The winning ticket was sold at
H U S H P U P P I E s•
the laland Variety store in Toledo.
SHOES YOU CAN LIVE IN
Sales in Buckeye S totaled
$S63,899.
Available In
The 184 Buckeye S game tickets _
Black &amp;
with four of the numbers an: each
Antique
worth $2SO. The 6,038 .with three
Brown
oC the numben an: each worth $10.
The 63,300 with two of the numbers are eacb worth $1.
M ALL.. WALKER SMOO TH L EATHER
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$290,322 to winners In Friday's
Laflyette Mall
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales
Gallipolis
in Pick 3 Numbers totaled ·

Thanksgiving events were hectic

: WJdi,m.

Cilrter said this program
will be a c:all-ln format reaturina
local leaden and deal with topics
of interest in the era.
.
Wben 6,000-watt WBYG-99.S
FM goes 011 the air in mid-Decembtl', Caller said tbc morning show,
Tradio
and local affain proaram
~MICJIRI R CARTER
wiD switch to FM. 'lbc AM allllon
I
S•tlael stair
will then switch to gospel mu&amp;ic
POINT PLEASANr, W.Va. and
Cbristian talk llldio. .
The larJeat AM
radio Illdon between Qpdoo Oblo, and
Accordins to Carter, tbe FM ata. Wbeelins, W.Va., will lite 10 tbe tiOII will be 01124 hours a day. The
airwaves witb a Uve mornlna allow =-~tatiOII Ia on ~g clayilpl
Monclay, Dec. 5.
Tied into tbe Thundering Herd
The llllliou, located ll ~ ~
of Eighth and Viand str"ta, Ia Networt, WBGS Ia already carryowned by Big River Radio .Inc. ing Manhall University football . .
Vernou Bater of BlacbburJ, Va.,
Ia the cblef executive omcer.
The stati011' a general manager,
Gregory Carter, said WBGS will
offer listeners a pulse 011 the IICWI
and views In Point Pleasant and
Mason County.
"We want the region to know
we are here as a voice," C~r
said. "We plan to be Involved in all
~ts of the community involvinft
filii'S, festivals and apordng events.
Carter said the morning show,
bosted by Rich Lacey will be an
"upbeat" pmgram featuring games
.and giveaways 10 help gel tbc clay
· started. Local sports, news and
weather will also be a part of tbe

FM stilt/on plans
to be on airwaves
by mid-December

Conflict resolution grants given

Featare Syndicate, Inc.

As usual, Thankapvin~ and Its
activities were hectic. Fli'st of all
there was the family dinner which
occupied a great amount of time.
My son, Rick, (Fred W. Crow, Ill),
and daughter-in-law Cathy, bad tbe
Crow family dluuer. Linda, her
three sons, Toby, Nathaniel and
Carson an d husband, Ted• drove
from Columbus and stayed with
Ted' s Moth er, Loretta Beeg 1e.
They lllrived Wednesday evening.
On Thanksgiving, ~ Barbara,
my son Carson's wife, was home
taking can: of Crockett. Crockett
bad a brief illness wblch prevented
him and his mother from attending
the din
Also .,_,,_. tbc din ·
ner.
a...........g
ner were Canon and Morgan, Oris
and Pat Smith, Helen Hayei, Grace
Crow Eicb, George and Dorothy
Sayre and yrun truly. We bad tbc
1 in mea1
. us ua1 ............
,.....,..g1vms
. cons1sllog of tulby, clreialng, yams, cnmberriea, ·pumpkin pie and other
desserts.
During the aflernoQn there were
several college and pm .sames on
relevlslon and a liUie later the boys
from Pomeroy went to the MiddJc.
port field· In reDOW the Micldlcport
rivalry and to co-mingle with the
ghosts of the past. Since the day
;=· ~
was cold, Pomeroy did not .arrive
on the field unt114 p.m. Moat of tbc
&amp;boats stayed boote that aftemoou.
._,:.JI!!B l'!!t .\lsodaCeciPI'ell .
However, !)loae'tbat knew him uw
,
1
: YTodaylSSiliiiilay, JJeC. 3, ilie337iboay of 1994. lbere are 2811ays eAnverl•.eLawiL11ter,)'.inafteg_r.ountlthe
...~_bjl·n·.g_oaaf
in the
--.
!' Today'rnfgbl·lft"t in '~~'•'""":
hand by all those preaent, a wg of
~~"'
·~~
war betwecin Pomeroy and MiddleOn Dec. 3, 1967, a team ·of sutieons in Cape Town, South Africa, port 11artcd. 'lbc memben of each
· jlelded by Dr. Christian lla"Dal'd, perf~ the fu-sl human heart ttans- team bad graduated from their
plaDL Louia"WIIhJransty lived 18 ~ys with the new heart.
respective blgb sebool. Tlie Mid:t'm:t~~':!.nJ!tmM the 2-lsug, , . ,,· . . ,
~~~~ team
Ike Neal, T.
; 1n 1828, ~ JPaOII wu elected president of tbe United Statea.
~xiol=~iya:!.ai:lbih~o~o:!~YY
•In 1833, Oberlin Colle&amp;e In Ohio~ the' first truly coeducational
High School team at this lug of
ldlaolofhilberleami!ll' in the Uuitcd Stares-opened its doon.
.. Ia 1894,100 yean qo, author Robert Louis Stevenson died in Samoa
war. Pomeroy wu represented by
l8l!W, CoiiC•rto-ilt F, by George Gershwin, bad Its world premiere at Captain Fred W. Crow, Jr., Terry
New Yixk's.Camcgle Hall, wi~ ~rsb~ himself 11 the piano.
~lin::~T=g.:i~
1n ,l947, the Teunessee Williams .play A.Stmtcar Named DtJirt Foo.
• a.,
· ,!ii!1 dOIIBIOIICiway.
,.
A large heavy rope was fur-

_

0/flcial's 'surveillance' rapped

r.

happy bu'ine'a.''

.

COLUMBUS - Oblo State University is soing abcld with plana
ID bay a 1ra1:t of land nmbwest ot Akron tbat the former dlldnnan
and chief executive ofllcer
. of Fireltone Tire &amp;: Rubber bcciucf'hM
Tbe land was appraised at SS million in 1987 wbea 'Raymond
Fireatone wrote bla- will, and likely Is worth mce now. llut he
allowed Oblo State 10 buy tbe 1,503-acre site CcJ: SS mlllloa.
On Friday, Ohio Saue UUIICCI approved the deal, wblch lhould
be completed in JIII!IBy. Ohio State plans to sell tbc poperty for a
profit in a year or two. ·
Firestone, 86, died in September. Since then. neighbors of bll
SUmmit County estate have organiZed 10 fight developnent efforts.
Wesley IAnmoo, 38, wbo lives on 88 aas adj11001t 10 tbc prq~­
erty, copteods FireatoDe dld!l't want to see bla land ~eloped iniD
houses, shopping centers or mporate omces.

m.

lriDSitiOII tO Rtplblialll rule.
.
An Clld IIIII a bealaning, mother Republican oiJeerved. "lbia Ia not a

: overwhelming!)' llppiOVCCl by tbe House 011 Tuesday, facing a more dllli' cult teat in tbe SeD8fe lnday. Once that's done, soIa the 103rd Cottgreu,
· tbe II th to meet in Jame.duck, poll-election aesai011 in tbc 61 yean since
they were M'tomatic.
' Such ICISluol are nely lanovadve, though 111 extnordlnary.noti011 did
·gop up in tbc Scaato oo w~..C:oklng• intra-Jlll!ly SPat that
stOod out in a week uC m•m: ftld
•.
llllllrtcd wbea OIIC 11'11•101' said the trilde debate, 20 repetitive hOlD'S OD
; iuuea that have been -sued off llld on for a yc~r; ·might actually delel:mine wbetber he'll vore yea or no.
And be wanccd to be asaured d IIOIIIC time to discuss it bimsel[
. But Sen. Hnteat Hon1naa; who· sprang the parUamentary trap that
•fon:id tbc msiiJ!IlD the first p1lce, laid he bad no time to cede to the
;~. "They can lialen,"
.
: Sen,.JIIDel F.xOD of Nebraska, aletlow Democrat, found that arrogmL
• , "'l'berc are those of us who reserve the rigbt to mate up our minds
:during the debate," Exoo said. "I know that Ia a revolutlooary idea 10
; lillie~ in the Unilcd Swes Senate."
:
~· the times an: revolutiouary. Republicans an: taking run
•COIItrol.
'd bad six """"·in Senate power= Rouald Reagan's.
· the House,
:J]I'elideDcy, 10 the ICDaC of•-·
upbeava1 tbeR didn't
that in
:Democratic slnce -t9S4.
. 1bat prompted the wake-lite almoaph~ Rep. Bill Richardson, re·elcctcd from New Mexico, dlacerDcd -a bla De.moaatic co~Ica&amp;ues.
: While GAlT was tbe 1M11ineas,goodbr.' was tbc word
: "This is my laat preaa conference, ' said retirin~ouse Speaker
.......__ Fole .... 18 ori'""•l line· a bi"- "-~
M N'
,• ...,.._
y,""'
•
._, ~
· Ilion
'speD It anJrily ID 1962. But Foley SIX*e II with "a ICIIIC d satisfaction.
:and Jlride"ln lila 30-year J{OUIC career, regret~ notWithatandinJ•
, Undl1933; dlln wu a - ..cb:t se,.ton every e1eCtiOD year. 'lbc vot:en 'rl -'1111 a new Con&amp;reaa·in ~vember,, but didn't get oue 111111 Man:b 4
,_.~ ... "'folio-~-.-. Until tben,·tbe old Con-ss 'stayed in power,
"'' "'"'• 'dDcb
- tbe \'Qia'Sha!tbearen. .... !lbch"l'll
tbc'laille
ofteD led oo1y to .utna,·it laalcd until tbe "lame dtd"
-caUdtutl"''aa ainelldment,wu ratified tbe year Franklin D. Roosevelt
~ clftk:e,IO tbal new Ctloirea):a
in January.
:· .J)ulllle old way ~-'01\t ~ t1!1!fo ,fDR~a Hundred Days_of bills
:to poelht the Depreulon bad 10 walt.out ibe lame dudes.
,
:.
OR'S NOTE- Wlllter R. Mean, nee prllldeat 81111 celaalor Tlae A-wW Preu, .., reported on Wa•hlnpon alld
·
pGiitlcllaraa'8tu.3t,._.. '

tiSU plans property purchase

Despite the glad·banclinl over :
the auccealful mlaalon, IC&amp;Ukb
oftlclala now uy the aWerlal we ·
bought may DOC be as deadly as
American officials augeat. IWakh
ofllclals have lllid
Ollly IIKJut S
percent of tbc 10111 - or 30 kilo- ,
grams - Ia d tbc blabiY eorjchcd,
bomb-pade \'lriety. 'fbi Jell of tbc
payload. they claim, Ia llf lower
quality, aome of It mixed with
other alloys that made it far leu
valuable. If that's correct, then
America just paid more than 20
times the IJIIIItct value for 30 tii(Js
of bomb-srade material. Tbat
might atill be a gOIId deal if It wu a
ooe-time-purdwc. But by all indications it 1m'L
.
Several years a11o, Congress
pissed a law apoosored by Sens.
Sam .Nunn, D-Ga.• and RiChard
.Luaar. R-Ind., that authorized the
fecleral government 10 spend more
than $1.6 billillo 10 help the fOIIIICI'
Soviet Union turn Ita nuclear ·
swords into plowshares. Part of tbla .
money was to be used to buy at
least 100 metric tons of blgbly
enrk:bed uranium from Russia.
Tiuee years after the NunnLugar JeglslatiOII passed. the price ,
of pe.:e has gooe up CODSidelably•.
Considering what we just paid for
600 ldlopams of uranium (or per-:
haps 30 ~of acwallKmb- :
rade material), the purchase of·
00 metric lOllS would nm Amerl- ,
can taxpayers at least SS billion. ·
Buying SOO metric lOllS would pre- ,
'
sumably
rost five limes as much. ;
Ia It worth It? That's a queflloo :
that will have to be answered by ,
Congreas - and the American ;
eople. One American official ·
nvolved in the neaotlatlona:
Jammed it up belt:
·
:
"Certainly the Russians wilL
take buge advantage of this new :
pricing. But you could look at it·
and say, 'What Ia It worth to us if It
keeps this stuff out of the black
martel, or the gray l)larket area?
Remember that Saddam Hussein
could be out of earshot, offering ·
more than we're willing to pay."'
Jack Andenon and Mkhael
Blnateln are wrlten for United

According to the notes of one
attendee, Sbkolnik uld: "We want
,to be an example 10 the rest of Aala
on .lJow you should bandle your
nuclear weapons. We wanliD have
everydliDg that we do with nuclear
materials out in the opeu."
But such coopcrati011 carried a
price. According to ooe All1frican
official, the Kazakh government
originally wanted SSO miW011 for
its uranium, while aootber source
claims the original asking price
was dose to $100 mllli011. At tbe
request of die Kazakll govemmetll,
the final figure has not been made
public, thouRh ooe Kazakll official
put the q!I!Jber • ''Dim tban $10
miWou, but not many tall of mll110115."
.
One source familiar with the
deal uys tbe final price was in tbc
_nelgbborbood of'$30 million In
direct aid and incentives, which
also happens to be the 8piiiOlimale
DUdet value for 600 ldlopams of
highly enriched uranium. When
sold to R'I}JOIIsible governments 011
the open market, highly enricbed
uranium hal a fair llllftet value of
about sso,ooo per kilogram.

Ohio/W.Va.
Mor,nin,g-show to introduce WBGS'
Sunday Tuncs-Sentinel/A5

Ohio News in Brief:

Kazakh buy wasn't such a hot ~eal·

'
ADMdonof

December 4, 1994

SETOF2
&amp;"CAMEO
ORNAMENTS.
&amp;tJJil Valut $12.90

/

lOCATION: 300 SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
'HOURS: MON.-SAT. 9-6; FRI. 9-8
SUN. 11-5

••w r· ..

.

'

We accept
VISA and MasterCard

,.
I

.

•

I

-

•

Shrrts
Vallo 32.00

Vallo 35.00

Quilt ·lined
Flannel Shirts

Gp. Western
Snap Sport.

Val to 35.00

Shirts
VallO 25.00

Gp • .
Florsheim
Shoes

Levi:, Denim

Vnlined ]ackeu
Vol. •• sss.soliow '49. 99 ,

Storte!C6&amp;1a lined
Val. 175.00 flOW '63
l'loi!MI &amp;: Fl~•ce """'114
V.I. f9S.OO '79.

• Free Gift Wrapping • Fr.ee Alteration8 • Layaway8 Welcome

OPEN
EVENINGS
TIL I:OO"PM

"

·

W'mter Jackets &amp; ~r- Men l
· AU Weather Lev&amp; 5 &amp; Haggar
Dress Slac ks
Coats

20Yft) off

$499
_
SHOP EARLY.
SOME QUANTITIES UMITED.

Snap Denim

$2499

'2500

$}}88

•·

44" DIAM.
SCOTOI PLAID
TREESKIRT.
RetJJil Value $7.99

GaUipolis
Sweat
Shirts

$

�.

,..
4

...

.•

GAlliPOUS- Elma Gladys S= Bunu, BS, 1737-1/2 C)atham
Ave., Galltpolil, dlecl Friday, Dec. 2. 1 at bet reoldence.
Born June 30, 1909 In GalllpoUs, dauJhter of die late Cltlrlea llld
Edna Berridge Sigler, abe redred from Holzer Medlcll Cater after 27
yean or servU:e w1tb lbe Q:anJ Service ~L Slle - a~~~m~bet
of the Cburdl of a.iat ID Cbriadlll 'llllkm~a.
Sbe was also prcccdcd 1D death by ber bu"-1, C1areDce Bunu, 111
1989.
Surviving an: eight claugh1C11. Mildred Daft. C1n Wolf, Wilma Sayre.
Linda Kiudtlllld Carol Bunu, all or
'lbelma llalriDJUlll
Columbus, Cbriadne Kilt of MicldlcpM,
Sue CbMiey of QuerJil City,
Texas; ~ SODS, Rollert B~n~, Cllreace BIIIDIJr.lllll J - B~n~, all
of Gallipolis; 42 pllldclailclleD 48 JRit-p•oXf!ll•ha aad Ill*·
great-gnuvkhildren; aod alliater, Bllllchc Hlllman PalriDt.
Also pn:c:ccliDg ber ID death wac a aoo, W'lllilm BllrDI; IIIRle lzvlben
and IWO sisters; and six Jlllll(lc:blldr llld 011C SRil...,......,.Ud
Services. will be 1 p.m. MODday ill tile Willls Fuocral HOlle, witb tile
Rev. LelaDd AllmaD llld tile Rev. David Hopldoa (&gt;IDclatins. Bmial wtn
be iD tbe Centeaary Ccmclery. FriCDds may c:allatllle fliDcnl bomc SID!·
day from 2-4 8lld 7-9 p.m.
Pallbearers are Herb Harriogtoo, Myroo Davia, MelviD Biln. fiDI Harrison, Jolm Born llld Keitb Ebiio. ·

of

o:t'"'·

of

Warner E. French ·
WORTiiiNGTON - Wamer E. Freocb, 73, Wbrti!IDifOII, a former
Meigs Couoty l'eSidcllt, died 111nnday, Dec. 1, 19M ll ~ reoi4kllee.
He was a SCIIior code eafCM( IDICIII ofticer for die city of CoJombus, I
ba1ber at Glacelllld Didier Sbop, IIIII ...,Kied Grice B,jdni Oluldl.
SurvivlDg are 1111 wife, ROIIIie Fleacb WortlllqtoD; a;:.!.,
Freoc:b; two clauaiJial, Plmela Cultlno llld Saadla lllpp; llx
dren llld two peat-gnadcllikkell: llld aliiUI', Velllla.Roulb.
Servlcea will be 10 LDI. ~..r: lbe Rulbaford-CcabiD FUDelll
Home, WCI'IIIinitoo, wltb Plla
Fclnelt o"ldadng. Burial wiD be
in lbe Walnut Grove Cemetery. Frleodl may call between 2-4 ~ 7-9
p.m. Sunday at tile funerll bollle.
.

of

'Madam'
may move
to prison

Myrtle R. Goetting
1

•

Reggy J. Prl~e

r=ld,
lltiiiiOie.

Milton E. Roush

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

:fi

"oombtt

llflldute, recently paaecl tile law bci.nb 111111
II,IIIDal IIIII
A Unlvenlty of Dell'olt Law . :
School gndute, be DOW abo wvrlrs for tile pivale ~ llrm ofLitde Slleell a Wlll'llll'.

lice-.

New York judges remain firm
on appearance of DNA expert

no California lawyen capable or
mmP,'fCDI to undentand, present,
APt~&amp;ti'fT~
or refUte fonmk: evidence. Includson's lawyen IICI'IIllbled to keep ing DNA evidence," Duffy said
their S1ar DNA lawyer on b01ri fm Friday in a ruiiDg lasned willlout a
a lccy evldeocc IICaring aftct a New llcaring.
Yod: judge ordered 111m to stay 011.
Ito suggested laler !bat be mlgbt
tile East Coast to wort on aoolber bave to delay tile DNA bearing.
murder case.
Simpson's lead attom~y. Roben
U.S. Dislrict Court Judge ICcviD Shapiro, said be would offer the
Duffy said be saw no "bumlag judge an alternative schedule on
necessity" for DNA specialist Mo,nday.
.
Peter Neufeld to be ID Lua Anaclca
"We do want him. We want
on Dec. 12 - tile SIIIIC day lie Ia 111m very mudl," defense attomey
set to represent a murder trial Jobnoie Coc:bran said Friday nighL
Simpeon II charged wllb ldlling
defendant in New Yod:.
Superior Court Judge LIDc:e Ito 1111 ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson
wants Neufeld to appear at a DNA and her friend Ronald Goldman.
bearing for Simpsou. ·
Opening statements·are lilcely !0 ·
''It is lwd for me to believe lbat beglD ill mid~ to Jate_JBDaary.
Judge Ito would bold tbat tbele 1re

Simp-

10:42 i.m.Thunday, Barefoot
Hollow Road, Huall Tbompson,
Veterans Memorial Hoellital.
3:4 l a.m. Friday, IlaUey Run
~Ubur Rllcy, lrealrid at lbe

=

nieces ad...,_.
Servic:es wiD bC Tueaday at 10:30 a.•• ill tile FOgiCiong Funeral
Home, Malon, W.Va., with Tla!otlly V...... llld Rlndy Wilnmer oflia.dng. Buri1hrill be ill diD Orilla Ccn II ry wltb tun miliJiry 1Joa:on
·' .
by tbC S~wllt·1obn!JQ6 Pott 99Z6 of'llle Veterans of F~lp Wan, · R ~2::.=Y· Anne Slreet,
MisOD, au4.1bc SIPI'b-CI&amp;' rlwt Foil 140 oflbe AmeriCIII LegiOII, New
u1 26
Frida; 1b M

~ w.v-,.==7~aulleCuDenJIIDineSundayrrom7-9p.m. ~:.v~Seu:.,~~

~M~

. ··

p.m.

'

B.onnle L. White
,

POMEROY

.

s~~~~~~~':tcr·

1

Bonnie L. J~ WIJile, 32, Chatbem Aveane,
Gtflil ,..., died~· Dec. 2. 1994 at ber reliclmce.
'lorn J... 13, 1 ill PoiDt Plcaant, W.VL, lhe wu !be 4aaJbter Or
~ L.JolmiDII of Crown City, lind Nancy L. Anlllol!y JobniOII
OAIJ;.JPOLIS -

&lt;JI!Iilhor'l;

of

.

J~ rima Ire a c!aupter, Anaic JoiJDIDII of Gallipnlla; llld a aoo.

~L.IolmiOIIJr.orCrownCity.

~will be wo"Cedby llleWnuaFuarnl Hcane.

?.~' ·

.

~ ~

\ Deaths
of note elsewhere
~

.

.

.

·:t:.:.:.:_.. Paal Coapw

•
Ia 1992, lie waa lint pllce 1D 111
~uKIUeANE, W.VL (AP)- . ia1ea W' tW fi II 1 ClOIIIjldldOD
Patl Cooper, wl!o beeaae a ~W•«· Ada., fmlill&amp;llta at
PfWber.at 110 1411111 1101 flnf. Cltdldia Klaoola.

Mill
· 8:27 p.m. Friday, Second Street,
Mark Zielinski, HMC;

Hospital news

'I

=

VETEitANS MEMOIUAL .
'lbundayadmluloa4-11011e.

~
d!Km.&amp;:a-;:

Racine:

y;

By BD.L KACZOR
Alllodated Pr. Writer
PENSACOLA, Fla. ·
Moments after Paul Hl1l w~ ~­
Jeoced to life ID prison fm tllllns
an abortlob doctor and Ills clinic
esam, die esan'a son bugged an
anti-abortion acliviat outside tbe

.•;t;l~:;t,~~
' " •..! . f"';.

-. .J

..

.

.

llrcnled ball pilot

were justifiable bomlcide.

ELIZAtETH, N.J. (AP) Three mel! and a teen-age lirlwac
found dead Siturday Ia t1ae stairway of a aoYiCied downtown Qlb,
.apparen!ly crusbed I!! a_atemJICdc

.

11:47 p.m. Friday, Hill Stree!,
Etta Will, HMC.
•
SYRACUSE
4.47 a.m. Friday, Cbun:b Street,
Ml"?o Roush, treated at tile ICCDe;
7. 27 .a.m. Frida!, Syracuae,
~ Wmgett, -~· · __
s!S~~~
SIIIC Route 7•

=r-

1~:34 p.m. Friday, Pomeroy

Nursmg and Rebabilltalilln Center,
Opal Carey, VMH;
.l:S8 p.m. Friday, Cbun:h Street.
Milton Roush. VMH.
.26 RVTLAND
p.~~unday,

r

aqUIIds:!
=::,:
Tany':~un,' VMH;

R,0 ~~ ~

ac:d~

d:t,
Brian
Burt, Linda Pridemore, Andrew

~:c.=~atJncW;Midcllef«t

of
fnll.l!e~~la~~ple)

·

Oil

top

•

·-

By SRECKO LATAL
A•oellted Pr. Writer
· SARAJEVO, BOIDia-HeiZegovIDa- NATO jets stopped flyillg
over BosDia amid ve1Ied Serb
threats that they might be abot
down, llld a mialon to win tile
release of detained U.,N. peacelccepen ended Ill failure Saturday.
After ~splaying coatempt for
the U.N. mission for days, Bosnian
Serb leader Radovan Karadzic met
Friday with Yasusbl Absbl, tile
tol! U.N. eavoy Ill the region. He
sat~ the,Serbs and the United
Nauons are moviDg fast to normalization our relations."
But Absbi's visit, on tile lleels
of a failed peaoe llllsslon by U.N.
Secretarr-General · Boutros
Bouttos-Gbali, appareo!ly failed.
The Serbs held onto detained
peace~pers llld fighting surged
again m nort_
lnvest Bosnia.

of

·4.

Mala• County Dlaplay YMd Nur

"--v-M- Bllclge
KIIU. Mill•, .......

'i'

'\j

&lt;Wia County Dleplay YIAI

.·it

155MiolnSl
.layi.IMMoor., ........

I

7:27 p.m. Thllllday, Stale Route
124 at Langsville, N.-cy Barrett,1
Pleasant Valley Hoapifal.
7:4S p.m. Friday, Meigs Mine
31, RickyMetlleney, HMC. ·

......,

u
;,

1)

tuPPDS PLAINS .

•t

I

toO

"';,

of

ll

'

••

'

.

J"'
,,

'-'
.,

or

Rock Aflll otftra you a choice of 8 d"'-nt colored IJI'IInitel.
WM!e,.,. your l'lqUI-.tll lilly ba, compllll iatllfaetlcin II
IIIUred wlt1l Rock Aflll.
Hours: 9:CJ0.4:00 II-T·Th-F. Ot1MWa by appointment

or

583 8586 or 448-2327

'

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
'

152 llllrtl Awe.

.

I'll. 446-2127

Olt

JY.
~

4..,

'.,

·~ .

...

~

~

!,I

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP)
- Callxte Lenotte was one of
about SO,OOO Hal!ians who risked
tbelr iivelatseato escape Hald'~·fallin&amp; OL~'""ny and ill brutal, lawless
llld police.
On F y, be was among 2SO
men and women wllo returned with a badge - to be~ establisb
lbe rule of law ID Hal •1 nascent
democracy.
They and 7.50 more re:f:''"
JQl'lled-cops underwent w
of
~:nee tnliDIDg at the U.S. Naval
ase at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,
llld wiD augment lbe cuneot police
force now In a rocky transition
fum miii:-:Ti.IO civilian mle.
"I fled . d !w:omf: iaaecurlty. I have amte blldt Ill aive ~
C:ountty security," said Lenotte, •
a Pmteatanl palm wilo bad been at
Guanianamo Iince July. "I want
my cou:!f to change - to be
orderly
dlaclpllned. peaceful
llld unlled."
During die Jlllll Jbree yean of
lllilllary rule, diD lOlly, police llld
parunilllary tltuas known as attadtes ·. terrorized many Hiltians.
Returned refugees oftCD abembled
off C!Jas.J Guard cutters to tile
~~~mta or .........
Bat I _...llld lila fellow rOot· lc CDJII ~ J)IOUdly ubore Frt-

mm:z.

,,"

l:S 1 p.m. Thursday, Mount
Olive Road, Ellzabeib Banoe,
VMH.
R!S~.~~y, Wood Road,

~

wllpons. (AP)

=

•
"What tbe secretary or trans-

· ~~~~:bodod:fv!'

~

that some people .will live and
some people will dle," Dillow
aaid. "And tbe lltOIIIe wilo will die
will have DO clioklc - tbelr Uvea
ill be Jakea ill ~h-ft • s•t
:illion." '
ex-e ,..- .J
Tile government began IDvesliti th
k
ga ns e true s two years ago
after consumer groups petitioned
for a recall. Pena concluded tbat
tbe trucks are prone to caleb fire in
side-impact crashes because tbeir
fuel ··-"led tside !be
......a are moun
ou
rna~ JJaS ateadfas!ly maintained ,
die tnJcka are safe, and vowed to
figbt any recall attempt in courL
Some lnduJay analysts have said a
recall could have cost GM $1 bil- .

natives, DOl' gridlock" in respOnse
to the GOP agenda, and said
Democrats would "offer vigorous ·
opposition to extreme proposals
tbat threaten economic pt~sperity
of our nation's economic fUture"
.Pascble, like Dole, Is·a Mid- .
westerner llld career politician. Bul
be Is also a quarter-century
younser. more mUd-mannered and,
by ·virtue of bls relatively brief
tenure, less experienced at tbe
intense maneuvering that often
accompanies heated Senate floor
struggles.
'
Even so, Sen. David Pryor, DArk., said after tbe vote, "He will
not sby away from a fight if ocoesSNY ."

I

lionmmore.
On Friday, GM said its agreement to collabonlte with lbe government on safety programs is
"clearly in the public inlerest."
''Our ppaltioo bas never
wavered !bat tbese !rucks an: not
unsafe and do not pose an unreasonable rislc to owners who continue: to opetllte them,'' OM IBid in a ·
Stalamnt

OM wiD buy 200.000 child safety ·seata for low-inmme famUies,
finanoe a public education program
on seat belt and drunken driving
legisla!ion and belp lbe govemment
set up a fire safety. research lab. It
also will finance reseadl into bum
treatment, the effects of alcohol,
drugs and age on drivers llld devel- ·
opment of improved crash-test
diUIIDiieS.

Even as be souptto de-escalate flying outalde B06llian air space.
resumption of supply convoys,
the confrontation with lbe United
NATO sourcea ID Brwsels who U.N: spokesman Herve Gourmelon
Nations, Karadzlc warned that requested .lllonymity said aDied said there was no cbange Saturday.
NATO patrols of tile UN.-cleclaled planes bad 1ieeD fired on n1De limes
"no-fly zone" over Bosnia sbonld m recent days by Selb miuiles llld
stop.
were tarseted by radar ibout 1S
"If NATO is flyins around limes.
there is more risk of mlsunderNATO ·planes are autborlzecl to
standings and incidents," be said.
strike baclc If targeted.
Secretary of State Warren
1bc United Nations bas said air
ChristoplletandNATOcblefWill.y raids should be limited to attacks
Claes, in Brussels, Belgium, for a on weapons tbat threaten peaceNATO meeting, Insisted the keepers or NATO aircraft, or tbat
alllanre would COD!inuc: to enforce an: used to bombard UN..cJeclared
the no-fly zooe, meant to protec;t safe havens.
civilians from bombanlment.
1bc Serbs on Friday released 10
But in Sarajevo, Wina Cmdr. peacekeepers who bad been held
Timothy Hewlet, lbe U.N. director for a week but kept about 400
for air operations In Bosnia, said boslaj!e as ~IUlUICe against NATO
NATO jets have stopped flyiug strikes.
over Bosnia as pan of a "cooling·
Despite reports Friday tbat
orr• period. Jie said they would Karadzic bad agreed to release the
cootinitc to monitor· tile ~ wltb . remaining peaoekeepm--and allow
AWACS reconnaissance planes
•
.

Refugees ·return to uphold law

. POMEROY

VINTON

can leaden, tile pl'llldlllt Aid M WOIIId llfll•
any to C1dl tlaat lllllllt. tile badpt deftdt 111111
ftgbt any attempt to repeel a ban oD u•Dit

Serbs hold peacekeepers against air strikes

.

1824511

of

change tile way we do business
agenda when be is out of towa."
Dole laughed off tbe matter, here," Dole told reporters. "And
quipping: "I can atways adjourn .certainly it's lD IliA' lDierest, wbere
possible, to be to8edler."
1be Senate."
Dascble, who bas sotten little ·
But Gramm served notloe tbat
things wiD be different in any case. public atteolion .for his work on
"People wanted change " be said veterans and agricul!Ure, promised
of Lolt(s victory. '~ wanled a independence from Clintoo, who Is
more aggressive, forward, commit- blamed by some for tbe
Democrats' Election Day disaster
Jed leadership...
For his pan, Dole emphasized a tbat cost tbeui control of Congreas.
"We wUI judge all proposals,
searcb for comm011 ground witb !be
Democratic at!ministnuiOII after be wbelber !bey come rrom tile. presiand House Speaker-to-~ Newt dent or from our Rep1blican colGingrich, R-Ga., met wltb Presi- leagues, by tile test of bow well
they serve tile IDtereats of wod:ins
dent Clinton on Friday.
people
and their families," the
''I tbiok tbe president understands tbc7e is a lot of suppm out soft-spoken Dascble said shortly
there in the country :.. to try to after his selection.
He pledged "eonsauctive alter-

of

eacb other" ID tbe

are trying to get out at tile aeme
time- lbat's DOl goiDg happen,"
be said.
He said one of !be exits fum !be
semn~lll!l may_have been.
locked. Police 118iiTo--puU people
k:j~,the stairway to set 10 the
1bc dub bad been rented out for
a private party and police said tile
stampede may 'have been Jriggered
by a wild fight in wblcb bot!lelllld
chairs were !brown.
!'We understllld there was a
'fight of some smt. fislicuffs, and
peop~~ 1o Into a panic," ~:mlyla
said. 'I'IIcR ....wuaausb.
i~~w=ootwl!!!!fttA....,....Ia.te.,Jy

Ke••

AP

~
......................

and taken tD hosp!tals, said Lt
Mart Kurdyla.

I~

By MIKE Mc:EF.SSON
will add $27 milli011.
Aato Wrller
Transportation Secretary FredDETROIT- OJDonaer sroupe . erlco Pena, who bas said tbat tbe
vo~ed Jo continue tbe1r aunpalgn trucks' fuel tank design was
agamst General Moton. 11:a11ing responsible for at least ISO ftery
tile government of c:avlua ID by on- deatbs, praised die aa-mem and
!in&amp; a SSt miPIQn deal that ends 111 said It would save Uvea lmrnedf••
mvesdglliOII into OM' I lllesedly ly' .
'
fire·JIIODC picbp uucta.
"l'romlding wlth.lbe recall pro"A muldbiWOII..clollar conakn- cess would have taken yean in
erate bas esaeatiaily bouaht the coun." Penl said. "Durin&amp; Ill !bat
government's alienee for a pit- time, tile trucks aub'ec:t to tbla
" -'"J ,.,_
~
I8Doe, """' Dill uayllrook, JIRIIi- invesligadon would have remained
dent of Public CldMD, ODC of two on our lllabways."
·
I!I'OIIPI tbat ori&amp;IDaiiY peddODCd fm
OM buUt about 9 million tile
a reeall of die truc:b.
.
fuU-slze Claevrolet and OMC .w... ·
Under tile agreement announced- -ups._About .5 million are stfiiln
Fnday, ~ Tfllllpolt8li011 Depart- use.
·
mentwillnotaeekarecallofGM's
Clarence Ditlow, executive
C-K pickups built between 1973 director of tile Center for Auto
~ 1987. In return, OM wiD spend Safety, said Pena ~·sold tile Ati!eri~S1 million oo safety and educa- can public short."
uon programs. Tbe government

"The ntionale, your bon..-, Ia ;
simply I was ttying to prevent Dr. ·~
Britton rrom tllllna~ tile 30 people
be was JOIDg to kill tbat day," ·Hlll
told U.lj. Dislrict Judge Roger VIason on Friday.
!Jill also.received 10 years fm
shooting Mra. Barrett and five
years for a weapons violation. He 1
was ordered to pay Mn. Barren
$480 for medical expenses and
counseling and $1,81S for ber bus-

1bat may have sllned aftct a fi&amp;llt
broke out; police lllld.
Atleut 12 people wac IDjured

Go=•

LE.\PEltSIDP MEEtiNG- Prtlllide.at CIDo
toD aDd Vk:e Pnaldent
to Ho. .
Speaker·lnNewt G
of
rlsbt, aDd
Senat. ajerlty
Robert Dole or
Friday 1D tile Oval 0111c:e

GM tru~k probe's end irks consumer groups

C.lub stampede kl.lls three

I

.

Lou and Gramm denied that,
wltb Lou saylns: ''There will not
be any cbange ID style m votes m

'I've done nothing wrong,"
Neufeld said in !'lew York. "AU'I
ttied to do is COIIIpeui!Jiy and professionally rer.resent tbe interests
of two clients. '

life terms without parole - tbe
llllllmum peualty - fm violating
1 fedel'll Jaw prptectlng abortion
clinics. He was tile fint penon in
the nation prosecuted under tile
Jaw.
Next wetk, 1 judge wiD decide
wbetber Hlll. should be senteneed
to death on state murder charges
for the shotgun slaylnga of Dr.
John Bayard Britton, 69, and Ills
esoxt, Jwnca Bam:u. 74.
band' a funeral expenses.
- B~'s 69-:ve--old wife, June.
was wounded in tbe July 29 8llack.
A state jury convicted Hill a
montb ago llld recommended tbe
Our customers
death penalty. but Circuit Judge
appreciate
Fnmk Bellis not bound by tbe recperhaps the rarest
ommendation.
Hill had claimed the killings .
quality of all: ·

Both Bruce Barren and Vicky
Conroy agreed that justice bad
beendooc.
"We botb abbor violence," said
Barreu.
"If nothing elae I think It' a
given us BD oppo1tunity to see ~
pie who are involved in botb aaclcs,
why they believe what they
believe," said Mn. Conroy, "It' a
not golag to cbange my positlon on
abortion, but it malccs !bose people
more real."

MEIGS MEMOR~ GARDENS

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

~palgoing.

"si~!ly compnmised."

HiU, a 40-:ve--olcl former minister, was Sentenced Friday to two

courtboule.

RT. 7 &amp; EAGLE RIDGE RD.
POMEROY, OH. 45769
~
~ . COEUR D'ALENE, ~ (AP) '
, I
-6l4-992•7440
cc . ; edlkl!, died
. _
=~:,'~
!!' legal
~ 'llelaaa Finaey, who won a ,
PUNEED PLANNING FOR
~ !$:_' •..:....~:..t ·t .,.,.,,· .
hattie tD bcc:otae .the tint
•.MAUSOLEUMS • WESTMINSTER CRYPT~
B.wa,i;.
~c=~ Tl!ar_,-.
n ID}p'lliotll!dt.i!l
'A _..._,!d:d'Z'
.. _' d .· died
Wll86. Idallo, .
r• '"'EMORIAIS • WTS • VAULTS . .
--.;:.•..Jt!'m~ at Fluaey wu also a aurae and

.......
.·

:r:t

Killer of abortion clinic doctor
sentenced to life behind bars

five

=:! .;t.=ta..er~~~~
all Of Mlncnvllle, IIIII Emest and lWuDD Hatrla or S)'IKIIIC; IIICl aevaal

Neufeld. 44, bas been defeudina
Pedro Gil, charged witb tiUiag a
New Yodt polloe offioer who was
hit by a bucket of plastering COlli·
pound dropped from an apartment
roof while polloe wac towing IDe·
gaily parked cars. Gll'a trial is
expected to Jut llleut five wcets. ,
Neufeld said Gil wu willina to
waive Ills speedy trial rights, but
New York Supreme Coun Judge
Harol~ Rolbwax refused to delay.
Neufeld said 1111 clients' rights
to effective n:praen!lllion bad been

By LINDA DEtrrscB

POMEROY- Unlta of the
Meigs Comity F.mergency MedJc:al
Servioe answered 18 c:alla for aulsf$)racuse· an ldopJed daughter Sandra RobiDSOP of Newark· four lance Thundayaad Friday. Units
~a aad two JRIIl-pa-•aJ*.n.
'
responding tn..Juded•
,Also surviVIM are a bmtber and slilrr-ill-law•Dale llld Janet Roush of
, MIDDLEPORT
A:.,.;recieek; bilf-~.qila"l!llltl!dwia·Edwards-of-New-Haven, - ____!Q)S l .m. - Tbura~ay, Park
W.Va., ancJ ,NeiUe Emogene Rousb of-LeWt, W.VL; llllf-brotben, ~~Wam;--Hilliii Meil-

=-=

AaociMed rr- Wrller
WASHINGTON - By one
vote, Senate Democrats c:boae a
new leader with Iiiii~ leadcrsblp
experleace. B¥ tbC ume margin,
Senate Republicans picked a new
No. t man and banded Bob Dole a
potendaliJeadarhc:.
In separate closed-door meetings Fnday, Dcmocrata elected
Sen. Tcan Dasc:ble of Soutb Dakota
to lead' them u a ininorlty ID tbe
new Congrea lbat convenes Jill. 4.
The 46-year-old second-termer,
with Hille na!ional exposure until
now, defeated Sen. Christopher
Dodd ofC'OIIaectiCUI, 24-23.
Just down a Capitol corridor,
Dole, R-Kan., who bu led his .
party for a decade, was elected
majority leadu witb no oppoai!ion.
But his longtime second-in-command, Sen. Alan Simpson of
Wyoming, lost his job as Republi·
can whip to Sen. Trent Loa of Mississippi by a 27-26 margin. ·
. Lou, S3, is a devout conservative wbo wants his party to advance
its agenda more aggressively and
who is 1 slliiDc:b ally of Sen. Pbil
Gramm, R-Texas. Gramm, like
Dole. is
to see1c die GOP
presideD • IIQII!ination, ad Simp- .
son contended before tile vote lbat
Lott' s position could prove distracling to Dole when be begins

1'.

·~::,~~ee

111

By ~AN J!'RAM

•

~

II

""~

I

Clinton not retreating
from GOP on principle

top spots
.

'

Sun~y Times-Sentinel/A7

se~nat.e's

r!ii!..:::=::at:u!!~:!~~~ofw: Squads respond to 18 calis
n:..nc=gea~~~JIISc:bool, llleMoaniL Slate BnslSai'rivinala 1111 wife, Sara . Roulla; two 10111 llld dtllJhters-inJaWi•(]reg and Dilane Rliasb of Ddawp, and Rllldy and Miqy Roush

I

Daschle,
DOle g·et

Madam" who once lived In a
swank $1.6 million estate and
ananged $1.~a-niptlrylts, now
faces lllellt tiRe yan Ia a dreary
stateprtM..
A Superior Court jury convicted
Fleia 011 Friday or supplyiDg line
prostitutes to undercover police
officen IIOiiDa u clieDtl.
,
Sbe faces-, mandatory miDImum sentence of at least t11ree
yean ID prison llld a muinnn or
eight yem llld eiglltii!OIItbs. SenJendng was aet fm Jan. 20: Fleiss
was ~leased on S7MOO ball llld
wentiiDine wltb ber fatber, Paul.
SWEARING IN - Melp Comty C4J
aa
The jury, wblcb jlellbmted for
Pleu Judge Fred W. Crow ID, 11ft, . _ Ia L
four days, cJeac1Ioc!cDd 011 two olber
Scott Powell u a new aabtaDt to tile Me._
counta of pandering IIIII acquitted
CoUDty pro1entor T. . ndaJ. Powell, a 1!117
her of supplying cocaine to an
Meigs HIP pule 111111 1!191 Oldo UDiftnlty
underaJver polioe olftal'.
Flclas sJIIIIIMI ber blllds on lbe
defense table and laid down her
bead as the gullty verdicts were
read. Her f'adler, aeated bdlind bet
in 111e IIODt row or 111e courtroom.

blll!f:!,~onfidetit that abe's

Nation/World

Dcccmber4,1994

I.0S ANGFLP3 (AP) - Hcldl
Flda, tile l!lab-flylna "HoDywoocl

suona and she'll see her way
tbrougb Ibis," salcl defense attm. ney Allthony B~. He said be
wiD appeal.
A former fixture on the Los
Angeles party sceue, Reiss bouted
in a sccmly recorded police videotape tbat bc:r call-girl ring c:aterecl
to tile "top 1- percent" of h•d'"'la
GAILIPOUS·- Scrvillea- beld Sllnnlay ill tile Mc:.Coy-Mcxn llld cnltlt8i""'entleaden.
Funeral Hcane W.......,.,llt C"'JMpee r..- MJdle R. Gorotina, 93 r..ur;t• a
1bc media -llld moc:b of Holformer ,....tdmt of Waco, 1'eUI, wbo died WedNwhy, ~- 30, 99fill lywOod - was tantalized by tile
Holzer MediaJI Calti:t.
.
arrest and by reports that Flelaa
1bc Rev. Alvll PuiJard CJftlo
t Omvealde avka will be Qnl!!rlo kept a "black book" listing her
ed MOIIday IIi tile W101 Mcmadal Plit.
.
c6enta.
A paduate of BldweU-Puw HlJb Sd!ool, abe .p *'~ Rio OnndD
There were plenty of racy
Collcae and recdvecla M .......... dcilee ID clwmllry •ndcm rrom details during tile six-day trial,
Obio Uuivenity.
·
including vldeOIIpe of topJea and
Sbe tauallt Ia ldloollyalellll ill Ollila and PnDtiiD IXIIIIIIiea IIICl wu a scantily clad women. Samllltha
member of tile Firat Blpdat Olun:b. W101, and Vlaloa Onlel of tbe East- Burdette, a Colorado model and
em Sllr No 37S.
admitted Flel&amp;s pros_tibJJe, testified
Born Feb. 2S, 1901 Ia EDo, 1bc - tile daull*r or tile late Maurice !hat ber top fee was $10,000.
IIlii MeiMia ~ Roulla.
But ultimately, fleias' case was
Sbe mmicd Dr. M. Lulller Goetting on Dec. 24, 1926111d be also pre- ' eclipsed ID public interest by OJ.
ceded ber Ia deadl on Jan. 9, 1979.
Simpson's murder trial, and tile
SurviviDg are a IIIIer, VriJ!e a...- of GaDipolla; sevaal n1ccca ad contents of bet alleged black book
nepbews; ad SR~t-great lliecee llld nephews.
were never revealed.
Sbe wu afao preceded Ia death fly dlree brotllen, Glenn Rousb,
Dcp1ty Dil!rlct Attorney AiJn
Q;orge Roulla llld Garold Roulla; llld a aliter, Midge Frazier.
Carter said panderers sud! as Fleias
In Ilea of flowcn, coatribadonl may be made to the First Baptist exploit "sad souls" to enrlcb
Cl!wcb tJ!Jklillg Fand, nlrll Aveline ill..ocult S1reet, GaUlpoiia, mille dw:mu:Jvea.
DiM)..._~~
SdlollllbJ; FuDcl, Baylm Unlwnlty, P.O. BOI 97IY.ZII,
When Fleiss, a lllab-scbool
W.:o, T - 16 7028.
__ _
dropout, was arrested. abe wu livIng In a $1.6 million Benedict
Canyoil mansion formerly owned
by actor Mlcbael DouaJas. Federal
autborlties seized tile $37S,OOO Ia
riALuP&lt;XJS- FeuY J. Prklc, SO, Galllp!lll, died Saturday, Dec. 3, equity in tile bonae when it was
1994111 }folza'Medlt:lfCCIIICr.
.
.
last year.
iBorn Jan. 8, .19441D Weal V~ +"gbt« or tile lite Leslcr NeweU soldReiss'
auomcya aever 'arguecl
and Ndlle HlgJinhod!wn Prklc, wbo llirvlvea, abe wu aiJomemaker
tbat sbe wasn't a JMdam, Instead
SurviviD.f.~~ buol!end, Bobby Prioe, wllom abe 11111ric11 Feb. 13,
tbey suggeatecl tbat pollc:e behaved
196S; two
Dianl Roulla and nna Price, botb oflla!lipolls; a
J Roulh of Gal~•; IIIII 1brec brotbcn, BW Newell of irresponsibly.
Jurors partially agreed, acquitMd., Deaver NcWC~ GaUipolla, IIIII Chaiea NeweU of
ting Reiss 011 diD drug duqe and
SoetlJaldc, W.VL
.
on two pandcrlns
-Senicca will be 1 p.m. 'l'nelday in tbe WauJb-Hallcy-Wood Funeral deadlockina
counts.
.
Home. Burial will be ill tile Oblo Valley Memory GlldeDI. Frieada may
"I felt !bat tile wbole illveatlgacaU II diD 6mcnl ~ Moaclay r.um 6-9 p.m.
'
lioo of Heidi ... lbat !bey wac fulling fm a wbale ad c:IIIIC Ill' very
sllorl," lllld jury foreWIMDIIl SbeHa
u•tro--'-'.
. ,,,
SYRACUSE-Milton
E. Roaab, 73, Srr-sc, died Friday, Dec. 2.
wu Indicted by a srand
19M
II llllmldeaoe
.
·
juryReiss
ill Seplanbcr 1993 foUowina a
Bcl!rirJJa 4, 192} ill Bnla4 Run, W.VL, 1011 of lbe lale Dcncy L. and complex, muld-agency 11ing operaLtmill:tOIIiae'ltaJiar itaJIII. be WCll'ked fmllle Fanncn Hcane AdmiDI'- dOD. S•tZ',f. Lee, a yoiDig, styUsb
~.:1· !1111111980, aerved as ~director, .-cl made
Beverly · polloe officer, posed
-~' liaalllllllollll. Since lila .edlanent, lie opeallied a
u a Hawalllll millionaire named
beef.fliiii S.,.a.D 11m.
·
Nlko AkaiiO caleb Reiss.
•·~ ~ acw
mluiODI over ltlly u a1101e amt sun-

•

"

'

day - evidence of !be ~ge !bat seen as crllical if democracy is to
bas occured in Haiti since U.S. survive after die U.S. intervention
forces arrived In September to . force beads home.
restore elected Presidellt JeanBy next weekend, 6,000 U.S.
Bertrand Arlstide.
soldiers wiD be ID Haiti, said U.S.
"We've returned with a senti- milltary spokeswoman Maj. Regina
ment of reconciliation with our LargeaJ. Most will slay through
enemies, even if they burt us,'' said January. After then, an undeterCarlo Julien, another recruit.
mined .number will join tbe U.N.
Creating a Haldan police foroe fon:e tbat will tate over tbe misIndependent rif the military and sion.
respoosible 10 dvlllan !Wlltorltlca Is

DISCOVER lEW WORLDS

Host A Foreign Exchange Student

Each year thouosands
Studenlo haYe tllcir
or American families diB«Ner . uwn medical ii'II!Ui'lnee and
new worlds lly hosting a foreign spending money.
excJw18e atudent 1nttn
H® familiea receivo a
Gel'llllll), Spain, Japan and
!!tholarship ror IN«naalonaa
Bruit or one or thirty other
llaYel.
dilren!nt coitntries aroalld
Jr yoo -ld like Ill
'the world.
open yoor heart and ' - Ill
1'hele ~~and talented an inlornolionall&amp;udent;
studenlaaga /~/8lvM! a Jot
plelse call:
to otrer their hollt families .
11011! than anylhin« elle, these 1100) 322-4671
!IUdents nnt to sJwe their
•at-.5417 .- .. .
cultures while lelming about
Amerltan life_
AIFIF1 15 II

.....
~
,,.,_.._

DO

IT

P.Y MORE THIN YOU HIVE TO.
WE HAVE ALARGE SELECTION OF NEW
AND PRI-GWNE.
JIWIIIY.
•
•WEDDING SETS
•ENGAGEMENT RINGS
•DINNER RINGS
•NE~KIA.~ES

•EARRINGS
SlOP BY AIID SAVE

25%

GALLIPOLIS PIWI SlOP
324 SECOND AVE.

GllliPOLIS, 01.45631
614-446.0140
.'
"

'!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!

Suits

30o/o

Levrs
..., .... ,,..,.! .....

OFF

Rtfjab
.'

CoUege "Tee" Shlru ·
Ohio Slole o Michigan
• MarthaU • Wett Yarsinia
R.e6. $16.00 SJ
o

Oo 90

• Re

u
ed Fit

Regular Fit
5.50
• 505
o
0

AU UDIES
SWEATERS
30%-50% OFF

Reg. '46.00
Dreu Shoea-Siaey .tdanu

OFF

C~TARACT/GLAUCOMA SCREENING

Mens US

Tuesdays 10 a.m.- 11 a.m.
Dr. Anwar's Point Pleasant Office

Turtleneck Shirts

'

cover everytblng, we didn't pt
down to lbe T's,'' Dole laid.
Healtb reform? "We didn't m ·
that today, we only bad •l!oai.''
Dole said. Welfare refont1?
"Didn't get to the - W'a. We
slcipped JU'DIDid a lot."
Ginifi!:h said CliDioD qn111 ID
wodt wtth Republk:aul 011 eaalq
cos!ly requbcn!ents I..,IOied 011 tbe
states by Wasblngtou· makl•l
Consreu abide by die 'taws t1aat
apply to tile public sec:tor; llld
enacting a line-ilcnl veto allowiDg
the president to delete some projects from a bill witbout ldUing It
altogether.
Dole said be sug~ated that
Clinton wosult witb
blicllla
more 011 foreign policy.
tm Curliter lalb witb Clin!Oil, Dole said,
•'I assume. anytime we wut to
meet, the liresident's·tolllg to be
acoessible r. Even ltdore tile meetiDJ. CliDtoo staked ·out boundanea for
Republicans, uying in a apee4
that be would oppD1C •Y 11X 0111
tbat inflate lbe budget defldt and
fight any attempt 10 repeal a biD oa
assault weapoua.

AU Mens

30o/o

FREE,

. W~HlNGTON (AP)- Skillmg differenoea t~vt~tax CUll, wd~and bea1tb IDs-. Prealdent
~ton ~ leaden of !be incommg Republiclll_l Congreu agreed Ia
an Oval Office summit Friday to
~o~ ~etb« on a batch of leadivwve uaues.
~gins ~ lbelr fmt tallrs
with CliiJton smoe tbe.GOP .deelion landslide, IDcommg Senate
Majority J..eadeo: Bob Do~ said. "I
think the prestdent understlllds
tbere Is a lot of support out tben! ID
!)le country, among Democrats,
mdependeuts and Republicans, to
tty 10 cbange tile way we do busiues.~Andbere.oertainl . •
.
Y 11 s.ln our mteres~. where J!OSSible, to be tosetber, Dole SBJd. . .
.
. Rep, Newt Gingrich, ~ ~tng House speaker, aa1d, We
agreed as a principle tbat there
·~ be areas in ~hll:b we would
clisaatee but I don t think we IIClUally spentmuc.l! time OJ! tbem."
, Tbe ~~lic;ms_ ~ !be mee~mg was JIOillive; Giogric.b c:alled tt
''superb.'' But it was clear they
avoided areas of likely disagreesuch as taxes. "We didn't

lVow
8
37o90

AU Dresses

40o/o OFF
AU Ladie• 1994 SeoaoA
OutenA&gt;ear }aeuh &amp;
.t.W. Coat.

•~ I

•

(Formerly Dr. Buxton office)
801 Viand St.
Point Pleasant

675-4300

No Appointment Necessary
C Walk-las
Welcome

Transpo~tt~n
Available
.

.

'

�....

~long

Ofl-9olnt Pleulnt, WV .

Daily Special In Our Bakery
· 10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
Hot Dogs 2/$1.00 Y{ith sauce 3/'1.00 plain
:

RC COLA
PRODUCTS

'

the River

Section B

limes-Jmtinel

DecemberC, 11M
THE DECISION TORE·
TURN to .chool le not offM
on. to meke,
rtcuterly for thDM wllo hwe
bHn out of .chool for
Hverel YNtw, yet n•e 8
dtiCielon • growing number
era tnllklng. For 110m11, lt'e •
mlllter of MCa81ty; for
otiHn, ft'e • dftlra to melee
mora money. For rJNrly all,
It'• the proce11 of tn11kJng •
c:henge whlln chllnge 1e
needed. Here, • Rio Grande
counNior coneun. with en
edunl•mer.

24 PK 12 OZ. CANS

STORE HOURS

•n •••Y

MOIIday thru Sutday
8AM·10PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD DEC. 3 THRU DEC. I 0, 1994.

PEPSI COLA
PRODUaS

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

12 PK 12 OZ. CANS

$

FRESH PORK BUn STEAK OR

Roast ••••••••••••••••••:~•••

119

MORTON
SALT
~:

260Z. ·

..

r.; .

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Rump Roast •••••••••••L:~

BUCKET CUBED

$

159

-.

$

FLAVORITE SLICED

.
.
lb
119
Baeon •••••••••••••••••••••••

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Chuck Roast •••••••~•••••

$

149

~ F

1
·
9
(
Weiners ••••••••••••••••~~:~

EVAP. MILK

· NOTE: Bec1uu ol th• atnlltlve altuatlon of one of the tour atudenta

~uottd, 11 n1mu hive been changed.

· RIO GRANDE • The decision to return to school is not often an easy one
(p make, particularly for those who have been out of school for several years,

it's a decision a growing number are making.
• For some, it's a matter of necessity; for others, it's a desire to JDal.te.'tt~ore
•
. For nearly all, it's the process of m4king a c~ange when change is

ZESTA
CRACKERS

'•

LB..

BOUNTY
PAPER
TOWELS

(
On1ons •••••••••••••••••1:••• 69
69(
$199
YELLO•W

•

;...

Comparison of average age
Combined students at the
U. of Rio Grande and Rio Grande C.C•

·

rowing number of adults return to classroom

KY BORDER ECKRICH

..

•
•

CARNATION

2/$1

·Steaks •••••••••••••••••••••

.·

_,

12 oz.

$249
LB.

'

..

JAMESTOWN PORK

Sausage •••••••••••••••••~. 69c

,.r.

ROLL

BORDEN

Th,c:y'r1e called "non-traditional students," and they may outnumber tradil:lillnal students {those who go to college directly from high school) in the
l.c&lt;tmitlg years. Education bas become. more and more vital as the world of
business bas become more and more complex. Many employers now view a
~achelor's degree as a minimum requirement for consideration for promotion.
: For four students at the University of Rio Grande (where the average
student age is now 250, the decision to return to school was not a particularly
easy one, but it's one they don't regret.
·. "Tom" is nearly 50, and has been a teacher in Gallia County for many years.
for him, the decision to return to school was strictly an economic one.
"I couldn't afford not to get my master's degree," he explained, "but, I still
put it off for a lot of years.
·
, "Once you get that bachelor'sdegree and go to work, it's tough to go back.
:You get settled .in, and all your time seelns to already be taken up with other
(hings .
.. "Then after a few years, you actually get a Iit de afraid of it. Deep down, you
you can handle it, and you know you need to do it, but that fear makes
a little like going to the dentist."
· • Tom already has a few credit hours toward his master's degree from
~ntinuing education classes he's taken. Now he's signed up for' an evening
class in the winter term, and plans to go straight through to his master's while
. continues to teach.
• "I figure I'lljust keep plugging away until I get it," he said. "In the long run
~nd in the short run, i.t'll mean a lot of money to me . As soon as I get my
f:in:~ste1·'s pay will jump by almost $300 a month .
"And when I retire, I'll get an extra $200 a month or so. That will make a
· difference in how well I live. And the school system will reimburse part
my costs as long as I get good grades.
.·. "Every day· I've waited has cost me money . I finally decided to do
I Sl:tmethirtg about it."
'· "Linda," a Jackson County homemaker, didn't really make a big decision
to change her life- an accident made the decision for her.
"I was pretty much content with the way things were until I broke my leg,"

she explained. "I'd been out of school for a long time. The
idea of going back had crossed my mind, but I was always
too busy,
• 1988-89
"Then,.IDei:ame pretty much incapacitated. There were
no kids to take care_ of, nothing to do. I decided to go back
to school instead of just sitting there getting older."
Linda is a full-time d~y student at URG, majoring in
business. "I'm thinking about an associate 's degree in the
short term, but I may go on for a bachelor's instead. I'm
enjoying it. I've found out it's something I (\8n handle. It
was much easier that I thought to get back in the groove ."
Sudden changes in finances can also force a decision,
and that was the case for "Kathy ," a college dropout who
hadn't finished her freshman year in her first try at college.
"I really wasn't much of a student that first time," she
said, "but this time I'm trying and !like it. I'm pulling A's.
"I'm going through a separation and divorce, and suddenly everything changed. Instead of everything being
being set, everything was up in the air. I saw that my f1iends
were kind of passing me by, and I decided I'd better get an
education quick.
"I really couldn't afford it, but the financial aid office at
the school got me grants - PELL and Ohio Instructional ·
and it only took six weeks. Now I plan to go straight
through to my bachelor's."
.
Those who are returning to co llege after dropping are a
si~ificant percentage ofthe non-traditional student popu- TRADITIONAL COLLEGE STUDENTS. those who go directly to coUege from high tchool
Ia IIon a_t URG: Some students, though, have taken an even • will be equally represented In the under 19 and 20-24 age bl'llckets. The 1988-89 stuelents
more d1fficult route.
. reflect this even division. By 1993-94, though, the older students greatly outnumber those
·"Sandy," a housewife in her 30's, dropped out of h1gh In the under 19 bracket. Many ol these are non-traditional students wh~have retunjed to
school, and now has managed to earn an associate's degree school.
1
in early childhood development.
"I quit high school in 1973,1 dido 't even have aGED. I was a housewife and future.
\
going nowhere," she said. "My life was changed by Lily Murray, the director
"I started college for my mom. It was always her wish to see me in cap
of the Gallia-Meigs Head Start. She encouraged me to go back to school, so and gown. I finished it for me. It's been worthwhile- very much .
"I just wasn't ready to go to school before. I think there 's a right time for
two-and·a·half years ago I went to Buckeye Hills adult basic education.
"Then I started at Rio Grande in the REAP program in the summer of '92. everyone. For some people, going straight through high school and college
It was a big help, because I wasn't really ready for college until I went through just won ' t work .
"It has to be when you want it."
the program. It's aimed at people just like me.
Deciding to make a change when a change is needed · it hasn 't been easy,
"I've maintained a grade average I couldn't even imagine.! was always the
type of person who never finished anything. Now I have my associate 's degree, but for these four students. and many more non-traditional students like
and I'm not finished yet. I want to study pre-school special education in the them, it was the right thing to do, and the right,time to do it.

a

~~~ IUiilk ••••••••••••••Jt~.~

GRADE AMEDIUM

..

Eggs ••••••••••••••••••~~;-

SUNS~INE .

,

Dog Food .:::•••••••••••••

.MAXWELL HOUSE MASTER BLEND

,....
ff
.
.,_.o . ee........................
34.5 oz

$319
$699
.

.

2· $1

KEMPS

·

.s2· 99

Ice (.ream .................•
.

5 qt. pail

.

MOUNTAIN T~P FRO~EN

Pumpk1n P1e ••~.0/e••••••••

'

149

$

c()iiroN- .... CUDDLES
::11
DIAPERS
:.

A GROWING NUMBER of
adult leemeftl are partie/pat·
lngln higher education.
They're called "non-tradl·
lionel students, " and they
m•y outnumber traditional
etudente (thou who go to
college directly from high
· .chool) In the coming y..ra.
.· Edue~~tlon has become mora
.tnd mgre vltelu the wor~d
of bu•tneu hu become
more and mora CO!flp/ex.

.. . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. · I~·""-~- ;
-.~. 11 I : - . . • . ~I I~ •••• -.
11, I - •••••••
11

•

::
I

11
11

:le~z.·.
· I

.

·""coUPON ......

"

MUELLER
NOODLES

:: :: TUNA OR HAMBURGER :: :: QUAKER INSTANT ::::

~·

11
11
1
:

"couPoN" •••••

I

'

:I

I:

' HELPER

)($1· l: :ls.7soz.
... ..
11 1 1
11 I
1 11
11 I:

II1 •c •
',1 ' · ·.GiiodOiiiYAII'OMII'IIuperWu
1; OllltGOOdDio.4
DM. '10.11!M
. I:_-- ·~• ---~I

"couPoN" ••••• "

II

I

'

:1: 1

. :~ :: ·aoz-

IUY Oil lET OlE :: 1:

.FREE

11

11

'

. ~I t :

OATMEAL

$179

:~· :

$399 :

1

:: : 1

·

24ot32a

101

•

::

160Z
.
1l I
1l
11
P17-12·12512Mb92843
II 11I
P•17-12•120£C306E .
II
P17-12-150NWAC150
II
Poli.ll'lluperWu
1 1 1 QoodOnlyAI'-'I't&amp;ujllrlfllu
1 :I
GoadOnlyAI...,.,..I'tSuplrllllu
1
ltl'uDio. .10,11!M 11 1 1 OlfwGoadDic.41hruDic.10,11!M 1l· I
OllwGoadDio.41hruDic,t0,ti!M 11
, ,..,
--11
----~I I --- .J - .!:J!!I'!H8!£11!'!!'!!'!.---- ,!1

..

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

.,
•

•'

.

�becell'!ber

Meigs commf!nity
•The Co-lilt)' Calellllu II
pobll•hed a1 a free 11nlce to
non·pront 1roap1 wlahlnl to

·annouee meetlnp and

•P"I-1

eventa. Tile calendar Ia aot
de•IIDtd to promote aalea or
lillld·rallen or any type. Ita1111
an printed • .,_. JNIUb and
CIDDot be paranteed to ron •
lpldftc: olllllber of claya.

SVNDAY
POMEROY - A Christmas
canwa dhecltd by Sue Matbcuy, at
the Mouot HC1111011 U.B. Church,
7:30 p.m. SUDday. ·n ile, "The Gift
of Chrislmas." Public: iovited.

~

RACINE .....;, l&lt;ac:ine CllapUt:
134, OES, 'n!!tall•tioo of~. ~
7:30 Monday. Reli'C'Jnnenll.
·:

·..

Neal-Lambert

i":"· PATRIOJ -Mr. aud Mrs.
·: ttichard Neal of Patriot are
::annouociog the engagement and
"'approaching marriage of their
~aushter, Mellaaa Dawn, to
~·1boiilas KaJnra Hardios Lambert
-6f'lburmln.
· Both are liJ1Iduilel of River Val: ley HISh sCJIC);( Lambert Ia

emplOyed by the Sbelly CODSII'UC~
lion Co.
The open church weddioS wm
be 6:30p.m. 011 Salllrday, Dec. 10
at the Thurman United Methodist
Church. FoDowins the ceremony, a
reception will be held in the
Rhodes Center at the University of
Rio Grande.

LETART FALLS -.; Letart· ..
Portland PTO. at 7 p.m. Monday, .:
Letart FaliJ Elementary SchoOl.
::

~~~.

-

.~

..

Trans~mttlng obscene ~

;.j .
Save~:c::~:~:::non: f .~ .

:Jfo[U{aycuupon

matenal earns couple tJ25% .
sentences from court ~
O'off
~ Goldmark s Party House &amp; Weddilg Nook
3

Orderduring December1994

·Evans-Montgomery .

t~

·; GAllJPOIJS - Mr. and Mrs.
~JJmmle Bvaua of Gallipolis are

Gallia COunty Local Schools as a
substitute leadler.
:lmnounclna the upcoming marriage
Montgomery is a 1989 graduate
pf their d!uJhiC!, Barbara Ann of Ohio Valley Christian School.
~ 10 ~James Moot- He is employed by Ohio Valley
pery.
and Mrs. Dan Bank.
.
}lance o( ·
•
The open church wedding will
,• Evans ii)
padualc of Gal- be 6:30 ~.m. 011 Friday, Dec. 23 at
fia Acadfmy High School and a St. Peter s Episcopal Church, Gal~ .,.wue of the University of lipolis. A half-hour of music will
Rio &lt;iude. She 11 employed by precede the weddins.
!lie GllllpoliJ City SdJoi,Js and the
.

t ..;:·

:'.

By WOODY BAIRD
Associated rn. Writer
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - A
California couple drew sentences
of at least 2 In. yesrs in prisoa Friday for sending pornographic
images via COOIJll.ter in a case wat
raised questions about how to
apply obscenity law in cyberspace.
The prosecution of Robert
Thomas and his wife. Carleen, was
the fmt obscenity case in which
operators of a computer bulletin
board were charged in the place
where the marenal was received,
rather than wbere it &lt;liginated.
The Thomases were found
guilty in July of transmitting
obscenity-via interstate telephone
lines. A postal inspector 1estifled
that he joined the bulletin hoard
under a fake name and received the
linages in bis computer in Memphis.
.
1bomas was sentenced to three
years and a month in prison, and
bis wife got 2 1/2 yeaJS. Under fed·
eral sentencing rules, they must

seize the computers and equipmeat

the couple use to run their Amateur · 3
Action Bulletin Board System.
Tbe Thomases, who live in Mil- :t.JI&lt;..
pitas, Calif., near San Francisco, 1ft../

~

_ ·ture &amp; Jewelry
... -·
lngel's Furn•

, 1 Oz. Pure Sliver.
Many different styles.
WE DO ENGRAVING

Tawney Jewelers
422 2nd Ave.

:'ileiMn'ary Sdlool.
~

............
:o,..~Y!f~~=-.::

~-~

'

~ be.I*U·• ~ SllvldoD Army
:1teldiJ • w........,.. 10 a.m.
~to 110011-..t 1 10 4 p.m. Aa,\JDe In

.Deed mir·l !llb. JA!Ik:foo.

.

·~~

. Jail·Collllllllllity AaiCidatloo will

• • 5:15 p.a. TueldaY. It J'eo..
flci&gt;BIIIk 1n Middllpol1. Ne,w om~ wiJI lJC Ill C_, '
·
~

'

..

f

~ ~.

\

·--...

,~
• Opoional c.- S1nl
-P&lt;DI20Y)

c·-·-·On--·--

.

• 111 Clrnol

.SIN!&gt;,_

-

MTS Stereo System 3_
Remote

Karen's Greenhouse

.Its

3Yt
PUt Soltllln HJtll ScHGI
St. Rt. 124
a.clu,

o•.

•Ooied CIFiono

$499

99

HI-FI Stereo VHS VCR

46" Diagonal AVI Color TV

'

~'~'

\..

~\

.#

'

---

I
• .
•.

GIVE THE G1n Or CoMPORT
THAT WILL LAsT A LIFETIME

1·.

.,§o/JJ111

1:
rI; .

Hoover. Ute·~­
eExtru-reodt hose lor

owrheod deoning

•Ancxhed hose &amp;
on,boord tool set
efleluxe, hard boa cover
U!OlS-m I Ul04J:i"

Hoover.

Dimension~
·~de

-'

mounled hose

•Long 31 .n COld
(U511 5 9301

Hooverp Quiii-BrOOIII·
•E-ZEmpty Dirt Cup

•Edge cleaning
•Deluxe nozzle
S2147
C~U.NING

.,

.

--

10.

«FFEmVENUS =
PER AMP

Reg. s249.95 ·

$17lf5

....\II
I
~

!ieam
..

1

I

~

e(on.venient uprighl

I

destgn
·
•Fast and e~e&lt;five
•No ~~thook·up

1o:urd'&amp;reve~e
f51lS

-

-__
•Fill-

IINI..., w,.,
·F..,_.,...,_
.. _
.
...,..,.
._,
""' Gof -AI .......
·

·--..-DI110U1 old TV,.

.........
.·Sirvioi
,_.....,;

1

.~ 426 Viand'St.
•

Limited

•Exko bog oi"Kl belt wiff1 storage

~

·t

•

Gilmore, sister-in-law of the
groom.
Tbe best man was Rick •
Gilmore, brother-in-law of the
groom.
The ushers were Denver Bates
III, Harry Bates and Christopher
Bates. Flower girls were Ashley
Stithem and Brook Pierson. Josh
Stithcm served as ring bearer.
The reception was held at the
church foU&lt;iwlng the ceremony.

~.,., .:£;n1 .,,.&lt;) #l.et;,., ~Mir

'

' -

GALLIPOLIS - Julie Lydia
Bates, daughter of Denver and
Joyce Bates, and Mike Schartiger,
son of Okey Scbartiser and Georgia Gilmore Schartlser of Meigs
County, were married Nov. 13.
The weddins rook place at the
Pleasant View Churcb, with the
Rev. OdeU Bush officiating. Music
was provided by piauist Markey
Crum, and Donna Busb was the
vocalist.
The bride wore a white beaded
satin and sbeath gown. The gown
featured a higb-scoop neckline,
long sleeves with pearl drapes and
a cutback detach-length train.
'lbC matron of bODor and bridesmaid were Belinda Bates, sister-iolaw of the bride, and Linda

.

-----------

• 25' OUgonol

·-Conoal

c"'"'

Galllpoll•, Oh

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

'

Bates-Schartiger

: "Based on that belief, I am confident of their abilities to change
lfe course of our country In the
falUie," he added. "'waot to sbare
with them a positive, enc:ouragios
JAcssase that enables them to find
Jmpe, happiness and the keys to a
successful future.
• "I love my jobl" Tufts said. "I
hllle the privilege of assisting oth·
ets in making a beuer place for all
of us!"
- A former PGA solf professiOII•
al, Tufts left the cwnll)' club life to
spend his time making a difference
lllthe llves-vt otbcra.Sinee-l987, ·
be has traveled throughout the U.S.
and Canada speaking to lhousands
of teem, parents and educators.

1--~•rntl'\r?-TV-wlth

tltrl11111111 free•,
lufi t11nlly, traH1,
Aml1lt J•lly, Apple l•ffer,
tanlly &amp; Jelly 81H1,

: f.IIL Moa!Uy It the Letart Falla
\i '!'

Sentry 2 Receiver/Monitor• 20" OUgonoiPidln
• I&lt;Ui-&amp;llld TW\ICR/
ea.. R""""
• On-Smen Olop1oy
· Sioop1'1mef
• 111 Clrnoillllllg

1,OOO's to Choose From

[!~~
.::1 FALLS ~ Th~
n
·l'atiiDd PTO will meet 11 7

Students
·motivated ·
with speec~

MR. AND MRS. MIKE SCHARTIGER

said.

PO I NSETTI RS .

trnno~ncements

Dear Au Lallden: A friend of
mine whoae wife died two years ago
is seeing ~ lovely lady. He confided
in me lhat lie ia impotent and Ibis is
weighing heavily 011 his mind. I hope
he reads your colwnn because I don't
think I can ay Ibis 10 him without
cauailtg cmblmssmenL
Almost aU women enjoy kiaing,
cuddling, words of endeannent and
just being physically close. This can
be just as fulfdlins or even more so ·
tlwJ actual intei'COUISe. Honest!)(
There isn't a man alive, no mauer
what his age or physical condition,
who cannot do all of lhe above. Yet
so many men are reluctant to cuddle
er kiss because they are afraid they
can't 'foUow through." So -- sad to
say, IIIey don't allow any closeness
or tenderness. This kind of
distancing makes a woman feel
undesirable, and il can kill a
relationship.
I hope my friend, and other men
who have this problem, will read
lhfse words carefully and lake them
seriously. And ladies, if you
recosnize your man in today's
column, please share it with him. It
could be lhe bridge that will bring you
together. •• LOVING WITHOUT
SEX IN CALIFORNIA
DEARLOVING:Youhave!llden
for millions of women !Oday, and I'm
sure IIIey are grateful.
Iapplaud yoW' suggestion that lhey
share this column with their sexually
inactive gentlemen friends. You
might also mention lheAnn Landers
survey of 1985. When I asked my
readers, 'Would you be content to be
held close and ll'e8led tenderly and
foJIIet about 'the act'?' more lhan
90,000 women cast their ballot&amp;.
Seventy-two percent said ye~. or
those 72 percent who said yes, 40
percent were under 40 years old.

• "I believe in the young people
Oc America and I am convinced
tAat they can make good decisions
~then they are preseated the truth io
~straightforward manner," Tufts

The Quality Goes In,
Before Th' Name Goes On!

.,..

s-·

students.

U.S. Dlsuict Jud e Julia Glb·

Stocking StuHers

1984, Loe~

1'1rM1 Syndic:al:t ll'kl
Cllololl

RIO GRANDE - Quick wit,
enerJY auil a positive mesn1e·
lltghlighted a recent assembly at
8uckeye Hills Career Center that
featured motivational speaker TOlD
'tufts Jr.
: Addressing such critical topics
as self-esteem, substance abuse,
sexuality and relationships, Tuft&amp;
OOallenged the thoughts, convictions, attitudes and behaviors of

serve their full terms.

roc

· ~.

~ ~
~

unnnn..... _..

304·295·7878

11

Surprised? So·was I.
Dear Ann Landers: After two
years of unpleasant, expensive
and time-c:011suming treatment fer
infertility, my husband and I have
decided to adopt. We have completed
lhe application forms and home study
material. Now that we are waiting fer
a baby, we are sharing the news with
friends and family.
One of the most common,
well-meaning phrases we hear is chis
one: "Just you wait. As soon as you
adopt, you will have one or your
own." I lind this offensive because
an adopled child is one of our own.
Most people are unaware of our
infertility problems, and it is
annoying to hesr this comment nvt:r
and over. The implication is that if
we would just relax, we would be
able to cooceive a child. What should
we say to the ignoramuses and
tasteless clods? -- L.H., BOS'ION,
MASS.
DEAR BOS'ION: Nothing.'Illsteless comments by ignoramWJCB and
clods do not warrant a response.
Stony silence can be much more
effective. ny iL
.
Dear ADD Lucien: fm S3 and
well-educated and have a good sense
ofhliiiiOC My husband died last ye&amp;J;
and rve Slarted to date again.
"Oreg" and I have had 22 dates.
These dates have been arranged by
friends, relatives and me. GR:g has
yet to invite me out on his own. rve
taken him to charity events, the
!hester, conccns, opera and several
family allairs. As of this moment, he
has not spent one dime on me. What ,
do you think of lhis relationship? SCORPIO
DEAR SCORPIO: Wonderful for him. And OK fer you, if you don't
mind buying companionship. If you
do mhKl. stop subsidizing.Greg, and
lind a R:placemenL
ilM l...anders' booklet, •il Collt~­
tioll ofMy Favorite Gems ofthe DQ)!"
tic/cit~ the fiuuty bo~~e and warms the
Marl. Why1101 stll/!it ilia ltmdi!M'$
stock.ing? Selld a self-addrtssed,
long. biiSiMsNiu tllvelope IUid a
check. or mollt)l onltr for $5 (this illcluths po~tage a11d halldli11g) to:
Collection, c/o A1111 Lalldtrs, 1'.0.
BoJ! 11562. Chicago,/11:60611.{}562
(ill CIVIIIdo, $6).

•Deluxe super-sketch hOse

as

-

~ ·

~~c~g~com~taft«theirsen- ~~~tJ#~~~~~~~ :

Wedding policy--

The Sunday Timu-Sentintl ~adline will be published durins ·
4Jsrda. weddinp of Gallla, Meigs the daily paper as space aDows.
Mal()n Coomdt:l
news and is
Photographs of either the bride
--.:&amp;rnnv to publish weddins stories _ .liLII!e. bride an!!. grogm !lll!Y be
~=~ witbout charge.
published with weddiog stories is
weddios news must desired. Photograplls may be either
:!peel
atandarda of timell- black ~d wh~le or good quality
:.ess.
newlipaper prefen to color, billfold SIZC er larger.
jublisb accounll of weddings as
Poor quality ph_otograpbs will
.pn as possible after the eveat
not be accepted. Generally, snap.:. To be publiJhed in the Sunday shots or instant-developins pbotos
~ilion the wedding must have arenotofacceptablequality.
:'f!lken p~ wittlin 60 days pier to . ~ !08~ sulmitted for publi·
HLe publicatioo. and may be up to C8liOD 1s subject to edltlns.
;eoo words in lensth. ~ for Qu~sti~ns may be directed to
~g the River must be rece1ved
the editorial department frOtD 1-S
·Jy the editorial department by p.m. Monday through Friday at
; i!11ursday, 4 p.m. prier to the. ~ 446-2342.
publication.
.
l ; Those not mak.ins the 60 day

-

~f ._·.
~

506 Grntl Ctlllral Ave. PneniMq, WV
l
fr Gr-.1 '-~• .............
cross •

Ann
Landers

ALFRED - Oraage TOWDiblp :
Trustees will meet Monday, 7:30 !
p.m. at the home of Clerk Patty ..l
Callaway.
·

HawkWilliams

MELISSA NEAL, THOMAS LAMBERT

Relationships without
sex are possible

POMEROY - Womea Apve.
Chrislmas banquet. Dale's In Gal-:
llpoliJ, 6:30 p.m. MO!Iday. ,

LETART- Letart Township ··
SALEM CENTER - Star trustees will meet Monday 6 p.lli. "
Grange 778 and Star Junior Grange at the off'JCC building.
,1
878, repllar ICSiiou, SUDday, 7:30
p.m. at the Grause hall. Baking TUESDAY
.~
ELIZABETH KREITZER, ANDREW
cooleSt to be beld.. Potludt rel'reah·
POMEROY.- Fraternal Order ·
of the Easa Auxllilry meeting, 7 ·~
p.m. potluck, 7:30 p.IJ!. mcctin1. ~:
Tbe bride is to be employed by .
POMEROY
Open house at Tuesday. SS Christmas dinner ..
WAPAKONETA- Mr. and the Kenneth Desisn Group of the MeiJs Museum, 1 to S p.m.
deposit due DOW.
...
Mrs. Raymond Kreitzer of Columbus.
The
groom
1a
a
JrlldUaiC
MaiD
exhibit
wUI
be
Dubie.
Dolls
Wapakoneta are aunounclns the of Kent Stale University and is froiD the past 3S years.
WEDNESDAY
w
engagement of lhcir daughter, Ellz.
b
the
11m
•
Coo
MIDDLEPORT
Remember
~
loyed
abeth Ann, to Andrew Sherman emp
Y
ormanoa
•
MONDAY
Pearl Hamor observlllce, Wednel- " '
Caldwell of Powell, son of Dana trolT~~eddlng Is scheduled for
RACINE - Racine Village day, 11 a.m. at Feeney-Bennett -~
CaldweU and grandson of Mr. and
CouncU, 7 p.m. Monday, at annex Post 128, American Legion, Mid· ..:.
March
31
1995
Mrs. Elmer CaldweU of Gallipolis.
•
.
in Racine, sinoe state auditlln will dleport
.•
be using facilities at Star Mill Park •. - - - - - - - - - - . ·"
Discussion on miniature aolf
Now Open For
"'
coune. Public invited.
_,,
Christmas Season
POMEROY - Meigs HIJh
Poinsettias-6 colors
POMEROY - Mary Ann
&lt;.
Band Boosters, Monday at 7 p.m.
Poinsettia Baskets
Hawk, Glouster, formerly or
. ,·~
1_'
in the hand room.
Foliage Baskets
Pomeroy, and Ricky Lee Williama
of Glouster, announce their
Christmas
Trees
RACINE - Advent dinner and
•• 1
engagement and approaching mar·
For
the
loved
ones craft nlsht, Monday, 6:30p.m.
riage.
Donations from the meal will be Monument Sprays, vases &amp; :;:
The bride-elect is the daughter
used toward St. I ohn Cemetery
Grave blankets.
of Mary Alberta Hawt and Noah
preservation. Public invited.
Hubbard's Greenhouse
Jr. Stanley of Glouster, and the late ·
Floyd Vincent Hawk of Reedsville.
Syracuse, Ohio
REEDSVILLE - Olive TownHer fiance is the son of Kenny and
992-5776
ship Trustees will meet Monday 7
Freda Williams of Glouster.
p.m. at the Township buildiog on
Open Daily 9-5
Miss Hawk graduated from
•Joppa Road.
Sunday 12-5
Eastern High School in 1992 and
attended Hockiog CoUege for one
year. She is now employed at
.
•.•
Ames. Williams is a 1984 graduate
RICKY WILLIAMS,
of Trimble High School. 1 . 1
MARY ANN HAWK
~~U~U~1:f~tf~U~j

Kreitzer-Caldwell

1884

'

,.

"'·

675-3930
Point Pleasant

�•

.
.

•

•
'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH

, P11g1 B4 Sunday nm• Sentinel

Holzer Foundation's hospice gets
donation from tourney's proceeds
GALLIPOLIS - A contribudon r:L $3,000 was presented to the
Holzer Foundation for Tri-State
Healtb Care to be used for the
foundation's hospice, Tri-State
Board Chairman Raymond L.
Willis said.
The contribution is from the
· proceeds of the Fifth Annual Holz. er Medical Center Golf Tournament earlier this year, which had
86 golfers participating - the
largest amount to date in the tour· ·
oameot's history.
The gift designated the purchase
of two portable oxygen coocentra" tors to be used by bospice patients
in their homes, and in particular,
for members of HMC families who
have such a need.

The balance after purchase of . with an ongoing oeed for medical
the Items will be. used for other oxygen therapy. The anita' porta·
bosplre requirements.
bllity makes them more acceaaible
Representing the hospital In and beneficial.
making the presentation to Willis
"''be Golf Tournament Commit·
were the 1994 golf committee, tee bas been very generous to the
including Ron Saunden, director of Tri-Swe Foundation in past years,
respiratory therapy; Bill Goucu- providing LIFELINE unill, specinour, director of the hospital Jabo,. fying funds for the C011S1111Cdoo of
ratory; Mike Roe, director of the a concrete pathway to the hospiradiology department; and Sandy tal's shelterhouse for the conveMonre, a pulmonary fiBICdon tech- Dience of rehab patients, and onw
nician who serves as secretary in their most liberal gift for bosplce,"
the respptory therapy department Willis said.
The f oxygen concentrators,
"We an: pardcularly grateful for
which have been recently pur- this most recent gift," he added,
chased through the funding, will "because the Tri-State trustees
provide a continuous oxygen sup- &lt;:bose hospice as tbe focus of their
ply for a patient in his or ber h001e fund-raising efforts this year."

NQvember donations
made to TV, toy fund
.

' GALLIPOLIS - Area bull·llld cqalzatloaa IIC con;: tiau. · ·~ lhe Earl Neff
: .._.___
llld Toy funds

. =·

HOSPICE GIFI'- RayiDDDd L Will, ceuter, cludra.a ol ..e board ol tbe Bober Foudatlon ror Tri-State Healtll Care, received a
check for SJ,OOO from memben of the HMC

o~ offtcea In Worthington
and (Ja!Jipotia, hu sponsored the
ll:lcvilloo lund to purdlue specially-aelcll;ced vidcolapes for chiklral
to . . . In their rooma while they
are holplllll?f4
Nc:Wember''a donor to the Pediatric Toy FuDd. Tcu'a Auto Oinlc:,
1818 Eastern Ave., GaWpoUa, aave
Its seventh annual dooadon. The
OWII!n are T001111d Susan Russell,
and the «Jooatinn was preseutecJ by
Marvin Balnl. the 111111111er.
The toy fund Is used to purdlasC
toys for clilldreo of all ages, includIng dolls, stuffed animals, boob
and pmes, so that those hOipitalizcd in the pediatric anlt may have
8lliDCI ClljO)'IIICIIl eitber in the playroom or In their own hospital room.
The hospital stail expressed its
. . gratitude, along with the children

-

.,~

with tbe Department of Hcaith and
H~an Scr_vlces asked _the FBI's
Nauonal Crime lnformauoo Center
ID cooduct background checks on a
random sample of SOO child-care
providers in Nevada. Wisconsin,
Missowi and South Carolina.
t?sing the workers' oomes and
Social Security numbers, the center
found that 39 bad· a total of 440

arrests, which resulted in 181 convictions f~r. criQie~ that included
~odaogenn• the h~e of a cblld,
mdecency With a cbild, lewdness,
prostitution, theft, illegal possession of drugs or alcohol, assault
and battery, robbery and arson.
In all, 61 people were ~ntified
as hav10g arrests or convictions.
Other crimes included shoplifting,

writiqg bad checks and welfare
fraud.
.
The HHS 1nspector general's
office did not, however, obtain fin.
gefJ?rints from the individuals to
venfy that the person with the
arrest record and the cbild7care
provider were .the sam~. As .a
result, tile Investigators said, thetr
fiudlngs may be less reliable than

Pneumonia vaccine to be given on Dec. 1o

POMEROY - I'Deumonia vacdoe will be administered at the
Meip County Health DqJartment,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, on
Salllrday, Dec. 10 from 10 a.m. to
2 p.m. by Norma Torres, nursing
director, and nurses who are with
"Guanl Care."
The immunization program is a
coopcnltlvc ooc between the Ohio
Department to Health, Meigs
Ctiuoty Health Department and tile
NIIlional Guard.
·
The National Guard will be
bringing approximately SOO vaccine doses to be given that day only
. until 2 p.m. or the supply is
,. exhausted. The cost for admiolsler:-" ing the vaccine Is $2 a shoL

::

Adults age 6S years or older and
individuals with repressed immune
systems are encouraged to take
advantage of the vaccine.
According to Mrs. Torres, dlfferent types of pneumonia cause
from five 10 30 permtt of tile individuals who suffer from It to die.
Older people, as a group, are more
like Iy to die from pneumonia If
they bave long term iDoesses such
as alcoholism, heart or lung disease, kidney failure, diabetes, or
certain types of c:ancer.
Because of the risk or serious
complications from pncumonoecal
infection, the vaccine is recommended fm; older persons and dilldreo and adults with special health

problems, including those who
bave had pneumonia in the past
The pneumonia vaccine will
protect against 23 types of pneumonoccal bacteria that cause 88
percenJ of tbe worse pnellliloni8s. It
is ltilled, or inactive, vaccine and
most people who receive It will
develop protecdon against most or
all of the 23 types of bacteria with·
in two or three weeks after they an:
vaccinated, the health nurse said
Some high-risk people may Jose
protection about six years after
vaccination and require revaeciantion.
Those who.suffer from frequent
colds, sinus infections or allergies
and women who are pregnant

when fmgerprints IR used.
Based on their analysis of the
"r:aw" matebes, the investigators
wd the 61 individuals bad a total
of 726 arreSll.
The iovesdgators said the conviction rate for those checked may
actually be higher because of the
difficulty states have in providing
timely data on final court action to

should not get the vaccine.
Possible side effects, Mrs. Torres said, an: redness and pain at the
injection site. ~ than one peroent
of those· given the vaccine may
develop fever, muscle aches, and ·
severe local reacdoos. Serious side
effects such as several allergic
reacdons, or death have llii'Ciy been
reported.
For those who have still not gotten their flu vaccine, some doses
an: still available. The flu vaccine
will cost Sl for those who are SS
years of age or older, and $2 for
those under SS years of age. Ques·
lions concerDiog either of the vaccines should be directed to the
health department.

· Gallia community calendar_. . ._

ne

~eo-unity Calendar II
~ · publlllled •• • free 1enlce to

: non-profit 1roup1 wl1lllng to
• mnouace -tlnp and 1peclal
• . nent1. Tile celendar 11 not
dul1aed to promote ••••• or
r.nd-rallen of anr type. Iteere printed u ~puce permltl and
c•nnot 1M aearanteed to ran a
: lptCIIc namiMr olcl8fL
:

Holzer Medical Center. Covered
dish, white elephant excbange.
•••
CROWN CITY _ Good Hope
Cbwtb services, 6 p.m. Larry Hoiley will deliver the message.
•••
GAlLIPOLIS - The nmmlos
FamDy will sing during the t 1 a.m.
service at Debbie Drive Cbapel.
Keith Eblin .viii -~., the 7 p.m.

=~

service.

•

•••

Sunday, Dec. 4

~·.awo

services.

.
•••

Monday, Dec. 5
GALLIPOLIS - Cub Scout ·
Pack 204 ·Father-Son cake bake
sale, 7 p.m. at First Presbyterian
Church Fellowship Hall.
•••
GALLIPOLIS - Community
Cancer Support Groilp, 2 p.m. New
Life Lutheran Oturch, State Route

~

~

separates
i boys from
~ girls found
~:

Hours: Tue. - Sat.
9:30 to 4:30 pm Classes available
Tue. - Sat. 10:00 am to Noon
&amp; 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
New items srriviflg Daily

~

~·
~ By PAUL llECEil
r' AP Sdela Writer

:::

WASHINGTON (AP) - All
human embryos start out as girls,
~ but researelters say they now have
~ learned how a genetiC swltdl in tile
"; Y cbromosome triggers the series
~ of biological changes leading to
-:. IDJIIIhood.
::; In a report published today in
"' the journal Science, Dr. Michael
::; Weiss of the University of Chicago
.; and his colleagues report they used
f. IOJlltlstlcated imaglllg tedmiques to
..;; explore on an atomic level the
:- molecular events that determine
-~_o;...
- wbelher·a-pcrson it male or-female.~
The researchers fou11d that a
"' specific protein, called Isoleucine,
:: from a sene iu the Y ~OSOOie
.: Is able to insen Itself mto pan of
~- the gene structure of the embryo
.::: and start a series of processes that
~ lead to building male parts and
::i removing f~ pans.
~

~

:

"Make The Move With .
Quality Healthau-e''

BlACK HillS
GOLD

,

422 SKOND AYE.

. GAWPOUS. 011.

.

~ student at SWE

I OZ. SOLID SILVER
15 DIHerent Styles

==

PAtRIOT- A Southwestern
~~ Sdlool
will be
today
forstudent
his submllling
t .... original Idea (II "Cooperating
~. to Solve Conflict" duriua an ~
')'. aw.dl CCICDIOIIf !lpOIIscrecl by the
~ Appelac'llan Peace llld JIISiice Net-

l7d
litl

PLEASANT VALLlY HOSPITAL

V\S\1

SANTA

:: Wilson CoUege.
.
r · · An aclive teacher she is wrrenton the faculty of West Virginia

MON.-FRI.
'6 PM-8PM, .
51\i.
NOON-S PM.

•: ly
f. Uoivcrsity-Parkerabura, and is a

~

• teacher o~ Fngll•h u a ICCOIId lao:

suasc for the DuPOIIt Co.
Sbe Ia cunendy a member of tile
r, Ohio Arts Council Writer in Rcsi-

r

!: :or~~JJ:e~~

: ; ley Literary Group. .
•
!· - Sbe has held a summer fellow·

,

: "'

.

: ~ 'Jhip from lhC National Eodowmeot
•~ for the Hlllllllitles, and was award·
:· ed the M$rtha Richford Roberts
:: PoetrY ~ from tile Univenlty of
. Vlrgini8.

Conner bu published D;_.,..
!: JIOCIDS and essays in a variety of
:;

JLLCQV.ISIT!Og.{S

• ; Ulalty joUmals.
; ; , ID Conner's presentations, stu. : • dmll puticlpllte in a vlriety of ae•! alive writing and Imagination
: . Cltp'"'lon actiYilies.
;: As • e•Unplc of that she said
; : thlllhe miJht give eadl member of

.

91 Mill Street
r.,ldclleport, Ohio

SHOP
DAILY
10am-9pin

i\1 .\ I. L

. Sun. Noon-8p!ll

~ :::: :n=u,.,
ott'·:ec:.*:
·

Mall Gift Certificates
Avallabiea, Calllnc: 592-3574

f

1002 E. State, A~

to the people - IJid IOIIIC people
closer to each other.

His idea: a matchmaking service, compliments of Town Hall.
just to prove that politicians rtally
:lo have a hem
·

"Why .go to the bars when y0u
can go to government?" reasons
Cupid-wannabe Paul Feiner.
"Instead of being totally upset and
disgusted with politicians, people
might say, 'Gosh•.!bat's really nice,

'4'&gt;

I

,.

'"'
Thomas P. Price,
M.D. DABOG,
FACOG, FACS announces the
relocation of his office from the
Holzer Clinic to the Medical Plaza,
936 State Rt. 160, Gallipolis, Ohio
after January 1, 1995. He will be
associated there with Drs. Abels,
""
Subbiah and Vallee. He will
continue his hospital ·practice at the
Holzer HospitaL Medical Plaza
offers laboratory, x-ray, and A.C.R.
Accredited and FDA approved
mammography.
Appointments can be made by
calfing (614) 446-9620.

twr~t~na.

....

•

PETER.
GO'IT, M.D.

Reg. '28.00

$19.50
2/35.00
health.
Copyright 1994 NEWSPAPER FNI'ERPRJSE ASSN.
(For lafor-tlon on how to
cmJmaniatte electronk:ally witlJ
tills colamnilt end otlJers, contact .u.rica Online by callina tBOO.al7-0IC, ut 8317.)

cares.• ,·
Feiner, wbo cootedes that "I
see government a little differelitly
than others," credits the match·
making idea to an offband comme~~t dropped by constituent Merna
Youdelman while they were worton

THE SHOE

CAFE • •

...........(. Gir-··--_.
tHE IIUAUT't COMPMYietCE , . .

Happ~ Holida~

From Our Staff

Practical and lasting gift
.\
ideas that. will give
~Ieasure year after year.

J\ .)

CONNER

Junior High School Monday
• through Dec. 16.
•
She comes to Meigs County
·
. : · through a grant from the Ohio Arts
- --.: ' COUIRII'I Arts In Educstlou~ pro- :: gram and m•u:bing funds from the
:- Middleport Arts Council. The loeal
:•. funds were raised through the 1993
:; production of the Big Bend Min;. strel Associatioll.
•.:
Conner holds a bachelor oC arts
~ In EnJliah from the University d
:· Virginia, llld a mastc{ of tine arts
:· In creative writing from W~n

I ·

151 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-2842

•

~-----

Cedar Chest start at
L -_ __;_;.;....;..;.:;:...;....:.:.....::.:..;_"'"'

!}0(.~
=' -X'

•·
&lt;~ ~;;;y
·

..

'•

.

=

~ join

t

screen..

DR GOTT

~ somebody

Middleport
f: Meigs Junior
Sundays ~
; High to host
this
OAC writer
Holiday
in residence
MIDDLEPORT - DdJra Conner, an Ohio Arts Council Writer in
Season
-. Residence, will be at the Meigs
::

~

MTS RARE COIN COMPANY

surgical scrub here; which is the
only way to clean the hands thorougbly. (In certain professions
such as food handlers, regula;
haodwasliing is cotiJely apprupriate, however.)
So, why make such a fuss about
a few health professionals who
deviate fiom tile laws tbeir mothers
laid down? As a gcueml rule. it is
not nece~ary for good health to
wash ones hands after answering a
call of Nature, unless there are
extenuating circiDDS1811Ces.
The students point 001 the obvi?us: Hand washing is the most
1mportaot way of stopping the
s!RJ~d of germs In hosPitals. And, I
am certain, the infectious-disease
speci•liSll (and other health professionals) meticulously scrub up
when dealing with sick people. But
to criticize .unfairly those wbo
leave pubhc restrooms with
uobatbed hands is not only an invasion of privacy; it fuels a false
myth of bathroom propriety that
makes no sense from tile standpoint
of p~rsonal hygiene or public

progressive

The Family of prof.11iona/s

' .Pmet~tatlal (aHs Avcilallle

FINE JEWELRY

PEDIATRIC DONATION- Manln Baird,- Jb.oiT-'s
Auto Cllnk In G~ llllplayed tH Bober M
Center
pedi8lrlc toy ·llan.
..... orpnlatloa'• · - ..., ol lite
l'edtatrk Toy,...... rar NoYember.

MIDDI.EPOBT .MEft(jiiANfS

joining the Medical Staff of

ONLY $900

.

HOLZ ER ·

package is something other than
flesh CUI cleanly frtm the boac.
Under the proposed rule, tlesh
·that has been JII!Xbanically lqllla·
cd from the bone through a mashing and saeenios process could DO
longer be Jistl:d on ingredient labels
• •'cbk:lcca •• or ''turtey.•'
The rule, which could become
fmal next year, would reqnire the
ingredient to be labeled as
''mechanically separated chicken
or turkey." Different labeling has
been required for similarly pro-

lnvite ·you
to shop

;. wmt.

Slxtb pier ~ Walta' will
11 other sout.beaatem Ohio
~ SludCDts in pldca six througlll2 in
,: tht: c:elealfODY It ~ Q!later Meet• In&amp; Bouie Ia C'henntey.
~ .W.aJter llballtted ID idea OD
~- cootllct aolyiDJ to ~ 14dl Annllll
Appalachian 0•1 eace Prize
: comJIC(ltioli. A
011 will
~ pliblfsh the original
of
~ the iward-recipienll, ·lll!llncludcl
~'poet!J. !UIYI. artwort, lictloD llld,
·,~- The' 1!D!1JoJoiY il kl be disrall!nf!lll 10 ~ redi*l'ts. ttac~~en. !
, . ....,. . . llld~.

.

(614) 992-4226

SPECIAI.S
• Gold Chains &amp; Bracelets
•Diamonds
•Watches

~ Group to honor

By KILEY ARMSTRONG
Aaorleted rre. Writer
ELMSR&gt;RD, N.Y. (AP) - An
admittedly offbeat '&gt;WD supervisor
wants to bring aovemment closer

~

Office Hours
Monday through Friday
9 a.ni. • S p.m.

Tawney Jewelers

CHRISTMAS
BARS

WD..LIAM N. EACHUS
and fwilies; fa ~ c:attributions. ·
Anyone Interested In making a
dooatloo can contact the Cmmllmity Relations [)epiboetlt at HMC at
446-SOSS.

E/focdw 11nmday, Dtcnnbw 1

MIDDLEPORT- GALLIPOLIS .

JIIIT ARRIVED

But a consumer group said tile
proposal. made Friday, doel too little ., tdl people the poultry In the

Matchmaking servi~~ available courtesy of town hall

New Location:
306 North Second Avenue
Middleport, OH

AI At Discount Prictsl

D

ir
;:

.

F:lmily Praaice .

.OF

.9LCQUISITI09\[S

;.•

~

.

Thomas R. Spencer, D.O.

lARGE
SElECnON

lUI'e DcparuDent.

By PETERH.G01T,M.D.
and 87 percerit of Wome. washed se~ .ID wash your hands BEFO~
The anti-gam ahodt trocpSIIR up.
unnatiDglhan after, a point of CU·
at it again 1bla time they claim to
Shocking, you sar,? Well, the quette that wu not addressed by
have CJtpoied the exPerts witb their studeoll ~~~so. • U infCICIIous- the medical students. ~os, for
JlllllS clown -or 111111er as you'll disease IIJXO•hm anmtlna po(ea- bealtby pencliiS. handwashlng after
see in 1 moment,' with tbeir Jlllltl slooal meetings do not routinely ~g is a non-issue. It simply
up.
wash their hlllds after using public: 1sn t ?""Wary·
.
As reported in the Oct. 9 New restrooms, can we assume that
W1th respect to bowel function,
Yort Tim,es, leaiiU of mec11ca1 stu· physicians and other he&amp;!th care the situation is slightly differe~t,
dents attended the 1993 meeting d
yrorkers ~tioely wash ~.hands ~1 _DOtmuc:b. Fec:aJ matter con~
tile lnfecdous DIJcases Society of 10 the cho1cal _cue area? th~y ~ons o! bacteria. the vast m:2or·
America. However, the studenu · poutedly quesuoned. Before th1s 1ty of which an: harmless d!"' fl!S
were not there primarily to JisiCD to r~v~Jatlon becomes ye,t another ?f the intestine. Except 10 rare
lectures: They were stationed In triv~ cause celebre. let s alfalyzc 1nstances, these germs seldom
restrooms, performing a study to the s~.
cause disease_. Moreover, when
detemtine il the infec:dons-dlsease
. Unne Is sterile; It normally con- most people wlJIC themselves after
, speci•ll,$ts wasbcd .their hands a&amp;c taiDS DO bacteria whalsocver. Con- I! bowel moVCJIICI!L thev are c_au·
• relieving themselves.
sequeody, there is DO purpose ID ~ uous ~~ rontammadng anything
: . Yes, folks, tile stud.ents, bidden gal~ed by handwashiog. after un- but the IDilet ~·
furtively in the washrooms with nating. Moreover, the DUcrooreanTherefore, 11 1 absurd to assume
• pads and pencils i'n hands, were isms on male and female gcmtala th~t medic~ professionals are
grading their professors 00 are fundamentally the same that g?IDg to c_xJt from a washroom
hygiene. The results of the study exist on tile body:s other ~ SID'· With t.cteria-ladcn linl!ers· Such 8
were presented at the recent 1994 face~. In fact, ~ re more likely to view Is paiCDtly umealist;ic· Moremeedng of tile society in Orlando
get harmful microbes on your fin. over, those restroom visitors who
Fia.
' gers by shaking hands with a do wash after ~ bow~l m?v~m~ot
The doctors-to-be observed 493 stranger - or by turning off the do so usuall.Y With ~ rlh"!•strc lick
people in the bathrooms and duly faucets in a public restroom.
and a ~: a nnse with ~ater
noted that only S6 percent of men
Actually, it makes much more and little, if any, soap. There IS no

:

992-2289

WASHING'J'OO (AP)- Shoppen wW bave a bcaer Idea d what
goes Iota bot dogs, bologna,
ouueta llld other jliUCCIIed foods
made with chicken and turkey
under I proposal from the ApicuJ-

: Restroom hygiene: Was· Mother wrong about washing hands?

:..
:
:
:

253 N. Second Ave. Middleport, Ohio

160

OPEN SUNDAY
1-4

the Fill's crime informadon center·
The wOitera were employed ~ :
day-care centerS, Head Start ceti;
terS and Custer CII'C homes nearlY"'
all of whlcb were licensed. ' . • .~
HHS officials blame the pro~~- .
!em 00 the 1aclt of 1 national policy
requiring background cllec:ks on
cltild-care viders
pro
·

f::ountryslde (jeramlcs
and Gift Shop

•••
• ...
Tuaclay, Dec. 6
:;
·
••
.
RIO GRANDE -The MessenGALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS-:- Oh1o _Yalley · ·gers of Jackson will be guest ·
,..:;: Ostomy Association Chnstmas singeq at Rio Grande Calvary Bap- Lions Club's annual family Ouist~: Party, 1 p.m .. French SOO Room, list Church during the 10:45 a.m. mas party, First Presbyterian
Cbwtb FelloW~£~~~£~.
'

hSwitch that

APr-wrtt.

: ·. · PO!; lhe 18111 cooaccudve ye~r,
: llUJnlo)' Wlllllm N. Eachus, wbo

duced beer ad pcidr: since the e.ty·
1980s as the rault d a
•w::
lawsuit
.
•
The consumer froup PubliC&gt;
Voice says the term 'Dwh•lrtlly:
separaled" lillie or noddal"
10 ordinary people. "They will be
ellliog JI'OUIId boac llld akin wbr.D.
they think they are eating justmeat," IBid Alleo Rosenfeld, the
group's dlrec:tor of aovernmental
affairs.
The depllltment proposed similar regu1a11ons in 1gsnor pou11ry,
where the process originated and
wu more widely used, but the
industry blocked the Idea.
Under mechanical separation,
food proceuon recover bits of
meat from chicken necks, blclts
and trimmed c:an:asses thai would
otherwise be wasted. This Ia dooe
by crushing the ~ llld ruaoing
the mass through a sieve or other

'*•

By ROBERT GREENE

. It fWIM'l Medk:ll Caller.

·: Investigators find people with .criminal records caring for children
: By JENNIFEil DIXON
· . Aaoclated Prea Writer
W~SHINGTON (AP) _ Peo· pic With aim1naJ recorda are findmg jobs in some child-care centers,
:· according ID federal investigators.
: Some of tile records include con:. victions for cltiJd abuse and asssuiL
· For their study, obtained by The
Associated Press, investigators

New rule would requirtl .
labels for 'mechanically :
separated' poultry

;
' I.

I

~

L~"

•

•

12
Months
Same ·
As

Cash
Curios $288 and
Wc:•l

Clocks start at '259

•...,..,

Christina

clocks also

.Ew

Recliner Mate Table
starting at $1299

Recliners $259
Several

VIsa

and fabrics

•

Open Dally 9 to 5
Friday 9to 8

Mastercard
Discover
Free Delivery
856 3RD AVENUE- GAWPOUS, OHIO

~

�4,1884

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, QH.-..9olnt Pleuant, WV

Times Sentinel

S~nior volunteer makes

County jail detained array of prisoners
police regulations they may be effeCtive about Government stores, but as
to affording protection 10 private
The oldest part of lbc Gallipolis citizens,recent incidents show that it
City Building waseoostructedin 1853 is of little avail. Let each citizen be
as the Gallia County JaiL It served as the guard of his own domicile."
a county jail from 1853 10 1886 aDd
Earlier in lbc war lbc Journal
then from 1886 to lhe present it has
queried if the town had any police
been used by lhe
city.Probably the .--~=--...., force. or lhe Confederates imprismost exciting era
oned here, one would include some
of Morgan's raiders as well as parts
for the building
was during lhe
of General Jenkins' cavalry. 1'beie
Civil War(l861
was one famous escape of some .
to 18M) when
·Confederates from the Gallipolis jail
orchestrated by a woman employee
Confederate
of the jail. At 2 a.m. this woman
prisoners, vagaslipped past 3 dozing jailers. She
bonds,
scoundrels,disorderly Union soldiers secured the key and then unlocked
deserters and even a future JXCSident the big iron door toletoneandallout.
Most of lhe Confederue prisoners
were locked up here.
Law and order was hard to main- refused to leave, for fear thallbcy
tain in Gallipolis during the Qvil would be unable to make lbc flight
War as evidenced by an editorial in across the Ohio River. But two of the
the Gallipolis Joumal in October of · Confederares and their woman lib1863 "Our Civil police amounts to enuor did make it to Dixie.
In regard to vasabonds and SCOWljust nolhing at all. As to the milirary
by Jim Suds
Special Correspondellt

.

drels, the Journal noted that these
kind so filled die city that a lady could
not possibly walk the streets of town.
In September 1862 die JoiD1Uil reported that the steamboat Silver l..ate
had brought to town 40 vagabonds
captured at Fayette. These men were
"miserably poor, ignorant and stupid, as if but two ideas occupied their
brains-eat and slcclp. Tbcsc ClCII!nl
will be transportedtoCol~bus,ltept
there for some time on better food
than they ever had in their lives, and
at last tuined loose to practice their
bushwhacldng deviltry over again. •
In lhat same article lhe Journal campaigned to have Confederates and
vagabonds housed in the old paper
mill so tbe county jail could be saved
for "honest and worthy clientele".
One of lhe jXisoners housed in lbc
jail was a woman aoldic-z called by
the Jouroal: "Fair as a rose, plump as
a partridge and is smoking and swearing fully equal to any trooper in the
army. Verilysbeissomeonmuscle."
AnumberofUnion soldiers ended

;RIO GRANDE -

Gallla CoaDty offered by the
Retired Senior llld Volllllteer Pro. 1Md II !be Unlvenlty of Rio
became apparcDt when
Rulb Waltea' bega a aew UlignJDCDt llllbe Dr. Saucl L. Bouanl
MeaDtll Utnry Iii ('.allipolis.
.A member of RSVP, Walker
alphabetfzea paperback boob,
shelf reads, lbelves aew materials
and UJilla palnlDS finiling materi-

up in jaillll08tly from dnmkennels.
Olleaoldiersbot dleceilillg lllwllllls
now tile Gallia Hotel fuU of holes. In'
JUDe of 1863 tile Journal voiced tile
fruslralions of QaDipn!Wms• "OWing die pest 3 weeks we lave bcal
repellledly uraed IOCIII public aaendon 10 die groa violadoo of~
rule of COIIIIIIOII deceocy by some
CIWUIQ&gt; weuillg diD fcdcral uniform. The padenoe of our cilizeos il
becoming waricdOUI, with lbc dlily
m:uneoce of scenes 100 shockingly
immoral to be JWDCd.• Eva~ lbc
usually well JlllllllmCI Trumbull
Guard did ooc:asionally let off Slam,
particularly on pay day. ''They had a
high old time to lbc great 81D10yancc
ofmany of our cilizens."(Joumal)
The number of murdeJs greatly
incieased in town during the war.
Some were not even rqoted. as
bodies with skull holes wen: found
some years after the war. The pn:sident locked up here was William
McKinley. He was an offJCCr in the

3:dr/

mODibsi!vln,

f:.':fi:

ACHIEVEMENT AWARD WINNER- Mlllpl'lt Plrbr, left,
accepts the 1994 IDdiYidaal Aclllnement Award from Cbarles
Tllomas, president of tbe Olllo Alloclatlon oflliltorlcal Societies
and Muse111111, and Elolle Tnael, lint vice presldeat.

Director of Meigs museum hofJored
POMEROY- ~t Parkcr. president of lbc Me1gs County
Historical Society and director of
tbe Meigs County Museum, was
reccndy honored as lbc winDer of a
1994 Iudivldual Achievement
Award from lbc Oblo Association
of Historical Societies and Muse-

ums.

Patter was cited for ber "iovaluableworkaspresidelltoftheMeigs
County PioDeer and Historical
Society aDd bcr llignificant cootributions' to lbc c;anm1mity Which tl -

serves."·
At the awards program beld in
Columbus, Mrs. Parker was presented tbe award by Charles
Thomas, president, I!Dd Eloise
Tressel, first vice president of the
association. Going from ber for the
presenlatlon were Rae and Ron
Reynolds, Karen Werry, Leland
Parker and Patty COOl:.
Parker started wcxt!Dg wllb the
museum about20 yeas aso and bas
contiuued through tbc years are a
-VOlUnteer, devoting many boors
-

spots,'' said Coos James Johnson,
wbo came from Albany, N.Y.
Thousands of people, many
wailing for boors, BBibc:ml nuud
tbe center's Ice skating rink for a
view of the towering tree. Police
estimated the crowd at 300,000.
Tile event, wblcll was televised
.locally, was hosted by actor
Cbristopher Reeve, singer Maureen
Mc:Govern, figure skater Mlcllclle
Kwan and cast members from
Radio City Musl~ Hall's CbrisbJUIS
Spectacular.
The tree Is taller and grander

•

23nl OVI in lbc charge of another
futun:president,RulherfooiB. Hayes.
McKinley was putinjailforadnmken
spree.

~4##~~,~~~~~!ft~,,~~~,,~

~ ·.•

Welcome to Our Annual

·. ·

Sat. Dec. 3rd &amp; Sun. Dec. 4th 12 pm • 5 pm

FREE REFRESHMENTS DOOR PRIZES
• Poinsettias • 6 colors • Poinsettia Baskets
• Cut Trees
I.
· . . For the loved ones • Grave Blankets • Monument ·. •.·
Sprays • Vases &amp; Wreaths

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

;

•

.

. , ~yracuae, Oh 992 5776

Open Dally 9-5

Sunday 12-5

' . _
•.• ~

• • • • •II! • ~ • • • • ~u~atiii-fitis•~•~ · :
&lt;W6-6620.

,

..

Now and then an opportunity

r

-Open Mon. • Fri.
6
· :.~~~~ ,

11~38 .

Member F.D.I.C. ,

&gt;(

ti:_.,_.,......~••••uulauw~At.

' ·'

Rout. 7

..."O.

......

~Plaine,

' ·

·,·

.-,.•

8141867-3181

StblllnUal pine~ lor ealty wlll'driWIII
Yoo mUIIIIIilleiiMr Fa11110t1 Bal)l&lt; locallon"' ..,..,1111. Cl'l
AF'Y le anAbi&gt;IOvlallon lor ArinuaiPa.,.,..g.,·~

•,

•'The findinss indicate that
AIDS prevention prograau approDAYTON, Oblo (AP) - The priate in one city may not be approbehavior aDd drug or choice among priate in anothca", •• he said.
inaaveoous drug usa1 in Ohio varLuceille Fleming, director of die
ied.c:ity to city and among tbc races Ohio Department of Alcohol and
in a"There's
new study·
·
· SCIVICes,
·
diffcnnt
behaviors in Dru g AddiCIIOD
warned
different citi- aDd there's no such against relyinl! on drug-use pauems
-.
too far into lbc future.
.
thing as a giant, national drug cui"I wouldn'tlike uyooe 10 build
ture," Dr. Harvey Siegal, director a bouse on that foundation because
or the SubstanCe Abuse Interven- that can change so quickly,' • sbe
lion .~grams. 8l Wright SIIII;C Unl- · said. "What you have to look at in
ventty s medical acllool, wd Fri~ _ the broad sense is addictioD. Never
dayThe stud which was published -mind what drug it is."
•
y'
•
Researchers Ill Wright Stille, lbc
m lbc July-September IS8UC of 1he University of Cincinnati and the
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, University of Akroa conducted lbc
looked _at drug use am~n~ 2,00_1 study..The drug usen were volunusers 1D Dayton, CIDCIDnall, tary participants iD ID AIDS risk
Columbus and Cleveland between reduction project funded by the
198~ and 1991.
National Institute on Drug Abuse.
S1egal, one of the researchers
Tile survey was not random, but
~bo c:onduc~ the study• said the outreach worken were tnined to
d1~fereoces m drug-use practices sedt a diversity of dug usen.
pomtto lbc ~ for localized pubTile wbite drug usen questinoed ·
lie bealth po!ICICS and programs. .

GALLIPOLIS - Addavllle
Elementary School bas become one
of tbc thousands of adlools in the
oatloo participating in "W~ Deliver," a program Introduced in 1991
by the U.S. Postal Service to promote literacy.
Addaville Principal Jim Page
said ·"Wee Deliver'' allows elementary school students to use the
experience of exchanging letters
through the In-Schnol Postal Service to supplement their regular
-·~"----n:SIDIJ and writing lessons.
At
same time, Page said, it
gives students a glimpse of the
respoosltiilitles and challenges lbcy
will race in lbc working world.
Addaville's student post office,
set up with tbc help of employees
from tbe Galllpobs Post Office,
functions much like at1 actu11l
~ opcratloo. It bas lis own stu-

-

.

dent postmasler, letter carriers and
clerks. Hallways and classrooms
bave receiyed street names.
addresses and zip codes.
Students write and receive letters from each other using swnps
tbey design. Their mail is collected,
sorted and delivered by student
postal workers.
"We think 'Wee Deliver' is a
very useful learning tool for our
students," Page said. ~with the
help of Gallipolis Postmasler Stanley Kaldor J!!lll other post office
staff, our student post office gives
the children a chance to practice
and improve on a VIKicty or lkills,
enhance their self-Image aDd promote school splriL"
Tile In-School Postal Service is
a part of tbc U.S. Postal Service's
campaign to "Stamp Out Illiteracy."

~:

•
t=

·t••
l·
••
••

.••.
..••••••
j •

:··:I
••l•

::••

l!;~

SUift 8
SPOI,. COA,.S

1

10 /1

OFF

snid they besan u~ins drugs at a
younger age than tbc blacb. More
whites said lbcy used heroin llaiJy,
while blacks said they used more
cocaine and crack.

l'~:!:t!~ J

-.

More blacks said they used
"sbooling glllcries" such as aban·
dOlled bomeiiO use drugs and took
measures to ensure needlea were

safe.

Abdur Zafr, executive director
of Project Cure, a government·
funded substance-abuse program in
Daytoo, said catain drugs are more
available in catain cities.
"It depends upon who controls
the drug-abuse populatioll. as far as
dealers are concemed," Zafr said.
He also said patterns change as
new drugs bit lbc 1111rket, such as
when crac:lt cocaine f1nt became

.

a~.

• · OFFER GOOD THRU WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1994

'•
••

••
!•
..
..•

Christmas
0pecial

Abuse list
By Tbe Allodated Press
The flndiDga or a study on
intravenoua dma uac included·
- Tile white Intravenous
drug usa1 surveyed bepa usiDJ
drugs other than alcohol at the
average age of 16, compared to
19 few.the black drug wen. And
tbe average wbite user began
injectlnl! chga Ill 21, compared
toase 23 for lbc average black.
- The daily use of marijuana among Ci!V'imad drug usa1
was more than twice tbat of
those Iii Columbus, with Oevcland and Dayton in between.

Perms .................530 Reg. $35
Spiral Perm ....................540
Prices Good until 12/17

Tanning Bed 12 visits 512
$2.00 off any lotion
Prices good until12/311

ACUT ABOVE BEAUTY AND
TANNING SALON

Source: Dr. Harvey Slept,
director of the Sub1tance
Abuse Intervention Propoaa.
at Wrlg•t State Unlvenlty'•
medical sc:bool.

Racine

949-2817

3rd St.

.. ..... .....: ........ ::..:.... ...
..........
·~·
lJotudi"*
~ Gift Selections From ~ernadine's

r

~ •Lorraine
J •Miss Elaine
~; •Escapades

~ New Groups of Sportswear:
~
~J

i~·

IN..SCBOOL SERVICE- AddavDle Et.__..ry dlldeata partldpatiD&amp; Ia tile "Wee Deliver" pi'OII'IDI !nc:Jude, -ted, from left,
Tolnml Clark, canier; Keena Sheetl, clerk; a..t Lafe Sl...-,
racer; 1tandiDJ, Adam Darst, 11011er; Eddie Rouh, clerk; Stevea .
Banlette. poetmutar; Mllildy Baird, racer; IUid Nicole WaWDa,

c:arrter.

DepoProvera-injectlon
Birth control pill
Condom/Spermicide
, Sliding Fee Scale
We accept Medicaid and private lnauran~.

•

•

from Pottstown, Pa., to Tanvmi•
"We're cuUiog edge," be says
proudly or his intemsbip program.
"We have two black interns from
Mrica, one Hispanic from &amp;:uador
and Annette."
Annette Edwards of Trinidad
was bired by Brett recendy to coordinate the sanctuary's internship
program. He bad met Edwards on
bis travels, liked bcr and punued
ber until she accepted lbc job. .
Sbe returos ·tbe admiration.
"He's such an insplratioo ... be's
wonderful," says Edwards.
Several seasonal intems also are

Confidential Family Planning Services
for females &amp; males.
•Medical Exams
•Pap Tests
•Pregnancy testa &amp; counseling
•Teats &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
•Anonymous HIV testa &amp; counseling
•Methods and supplies for birth control and safer sex

••

EQUAL OPI'ORT\JNIN c
ljNDER
,

Brett, who oversees the 2,226-acre
raptor sanctuary, Hawk Mountain, is a
character • not to mention conservationist, adventurer and mentor.

PLIIIID PIIEI,BOOD
or sou·a·aast oaao

,.,.

. ~-

whammy."
Last March, Brett met 1he Dalai
Lama in tbe Sinai Desen with a
group from 1he Society for tbe J&gt;ro.
teclioo of Nature.
"We talked abouJ mutual under·
standing of the planet," be sar,s
with uncbaracterislic revmnce. ' It
was so provocative.... It was lbc ·
aura. I don't get turned oo by thai
stuff usually, but that did some·
thing to me. SiDing bigb above tbe
Red Sea, and tbc wind was biOliV·
· ing, aDd beltind Ibis holy man was
Ibis huge fioct of black storts, and
be said, 'This is what we need to
protect.'
. .
"The whole moment transcend·
ed that particular time and place,''
be said.
Brett pauses briefly, then puts
his
binoculan up to bis eyes and
To keep himself fresh, be leaves
scans
tbc valley~the mountains or Pennsylvania for
up to 12 weeks a year and travels
around tbc world.
In 199S, be bas trips planned for
Premium Ohio Grown
•
Pauama, Israel, India and Mrica.
He's bcal invited to attend the fust .
6' to 7'
•
Jordanian Hawk Watch next fall.
.·.•. 40% off Regular Price .
Officially, Brett's travels to
Now 112 • 118
Tauzaoia, South America, the Mid&gt;. Open 9 a.m.· 5 p.m. daily ·.: '":
dle Bast and Asia are for fmdias
12 noon - 5 p.m. Sunday · possible lnteros and ~1-ers, leading what be calls • ceo-tours,'.'
·· . Hubbard's Greenhouse :
planning exbibita and ralsiog
~syracuse
992-5TI6~ :
money for Hawk Mountain.
Unoffic:ially, be says, "If I don't
go away every.once in awbile, I go ~ClW«YQrJ*Y~ :

aceepted from the United Statea,
lncluding lbree Ibis fall from New
Hampallire, Massachusetts and
Michigu. Brett works as bard to
reauit thole students as be doea 1he
foreign interns. As a result, tbc program baa become known worldwide.
For Brett. there are no days off.
His wort on llld orr lbc mountain
is more a llfestyle than a career.

.....·~·
::..·:~·~,
: ~·~- ~·~
.....

,.••,•••

OH 45783

Mountain job 24 yea aso.
During mlsration season, from
August tbtougb December, Brett,
S4, spends at least a few days a
week perched for boon at a lime
on the sanctuary' a Nulb Lookout,
counting rapton, keeping records
and chaUing with 1he regulan.
Brett also doea reseucb, orsanizes programs aDd acts as teacher
to tbe young interns be recruita

'Wee Deliver' program
promotes literacy

·.

211 w._t Seoond Sl(MI ·
......... ..a.. 4.1 r.
"O·~
.....•
PonleltO'j, OH 4ll78t

POST OFFICE FLOAT- Tbe Gallpolls Post Oflke ftoat Wlis
one of 63 units entered ID,Saturday's annual Chrlatmu pandc.
Tbe event llllltred In tbe l!IN llhopplng The pande c:o-spo1110red by tile Galllpolll RetaD Merchant. Auodatloo and
Gallla County Cluunber of eom-rce.

~~~r

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE

Company

992·7508

Route 7

for Natloolland Community Service. Tile locallpoiiiOI' illbc Unlvenity of Rio Grande. For more
information, call286-4918.

Differences shown in drug use among races, cifies

~.

YourBankfot~
..
:
•.
Fo·, -Farmers Bank
&amp; Sbylngs
ao..ar..-

C&amp;J FURNITURE
•

ducted by CD Interuatlonal Program Services in support or lbc 4-H •
program of lbc Cooperative Bxtcn- .
sion Service, be explained.
:
This particular excbanac pro- •:: ·
gram was in c:ooperation with lbc :•:
Austtalian Council of Rural Youtb. · : ·
Basic fuDdiDI was provided by tbc' · ·:
Friends of 4-H In Obio and The •::
Ohio 4-H Foundation wltb the : ·
undentandiDI! that SO preseut&amp;lioos •:
would be given onoe lbc paniclpant . :.:
returned to lbc U.S. Exaa ~- : ·
came out of the participant s per- ·
sonallimds.
Other specialsuests attending
the meeting were former Middleport resident Mrs. Beulah McComas, wbo is Todd's grandmother,
and Lynette Looue, a friend visit~
ing from Aus11811a.

'

• Coffee &amp; End tables • Couches
• Recliners
• Curios
• Kitchen Sets
• Entertainment Centers • Crafts

• ;;:. .' J~n &amp; Cir~lyn Jacoba - Owners

children. Blacktop roads are still
tbe exception, With grain trucks
being stuck for days if an infrequent rainfall shol!ld fall. Other
experiences included working In
dairy operations, cheese makins
facility, flsb spotting by plane aDd
. turr farming, die yoolh said.
At Rural Youth gatherings,
scheduled activities lasted ODe
week as young people got to enjoy
themselves away from lbclr dlatant
homes. One of lbclr bigbligbll was
going to a B1J18er King Restaurant,
ODe of only four in lbc Bille of Tasmania, which is the size or Ohio,
be said.
The Intemational Four-H Youlb
Exchange is an educational program for older young adults
between 20-28 years of ase con-

...

.

7Month Rate S.OOo/o • 5.13o/o A.P.Y.
14 Month Rate 5.75o/o • 5,92% A.~.Y.
21 Month Rate 6.50% •6•.72% A.P.Y.

Stop In And See
Our Selection Of

JJy AMY SANCEITA
Aaoclated Press Plaotopapber
KEMPTON, Pa. (AP) - From
the jagged outcroppiDg or rock
known u Owl's Head, tbe lnsb
farmland wedged between the
ridges of lbc Kittalinny M01mrain•
stretches out hundreds of feet
below.
Occasionally, a red-tailed hawk
catches an air current and glides
noiselessly pastil eye level.
Jim Brett rests asalnst a rock·
and scowls out at lbc sceaery. The
curator of Hawk Mountain Sanctuary in central Penasylvanla
explains bis weekly lrips to Owl's
.Head.
"Nobody's supposed to come
out bere, but they do sometimes.
Camp sometimes. Mesa it up.... So
I try to get out here and cbeck it
every Monday."
Tbco he grins, .. And It's a sood
way to start a wect."
Brett, wbo oveneea the 2,226aae raplor sanctuary, is 1 character
- not to mention conservationist.
adventurer and mentor.
A former biology teacher In
nearby York County, Brett also
, pent some time as a reaearcb bioi~
ogist, writing impact Slatelllents for
nuclear power stations. He was
about to enter C&lt;rnell University 10
w6rli: OD bis Ph.D. iD nature interpretation when he took the Hawk

.·..

3 dimensions of opportunity... choo~ the option you prefer.

'

RSVP Dlrec:tor D6us Mitchell
said Walter llld die lllll'My "IR a
perfect example of bow lbc Retired

Jllllel Suds II 1 special cone- : ••
S(ICIIItlentoftlleSundlyTimes-SeD· ••
tiDe!. His address Is: 65 Willow ••
Drive, SpriD1boro, Oblo 45066.

comes along that really
STANDS OUT.

• Rose Hill
• Brooks
• England/Cosair • Handsford
.
• Bassett
• House Bedding
• Sauder Cabinets

derful lillie organtzal!oo."

..·
•

than the f1rst Rockefeller Center
tree. Workers buDding the famoua
plaza in 1931 put up a tree during
the holidays to celebrate the fact
that they bad jobs when so many
did not.
This year' a tree, a Norway
spruce weighing 7 1/2 tons, is
strung with 25,000, 7 1/2-watt
bulbs on five miles of wire. A 45inch plastic star bas decorated die
tree for more tbao 40 years.
The tree came from the Ridse·
field, Conn .. home of Alan and
Maria Egler.

New and Used Furniture
Choose From These Brand Names.

orp-1

•

armacy •

• Gollipolil, OH

Gifts for The Home ...

28001
Just

The exchange wu self-sufficient from water collected from lbc
tin roofs to tbc gc:neradoo or electricity from diesel generators.
School was broadcast over tbe
radio for the younger scl!o'o!-BRC

rut

&lt;~

•Lamps
• Sleep Sofa's
·• Dinning Room Suits
• Grandfather Clocks

. tOTS for electr/clty..

aDd Senior Volunteer Pro1ram1

AlasbD ...... puppy.
strives 10 lll8k:h volunteen' inter- ~
ZC!II looting up Dlllcdlla.
Dc1iuf!..~ wilb ber wiamaeot eata with communi DriCda." .
"Rulb baa a plcumt aailllde. II . at 1bc
, Web uid tile ltlfl
RSVP , provlZa voln~teerl
well-organized and tbiDb tblilga ia ltlnd and fdendly llld belpl her oppoatunltiea for people aae ~5 llld
tbrougb," Cln,olllllid. "We really IearD.
over Ill a vmet)' of IKIII-proftt
8plftdale Rudl."
"My dauJbter tbiDb 11'1 WOO• Dizldoos such u ldlooll, Ubariel,
"1hc reut111 I aat involved with deJ{ul that I'm volDDteerinl In 1 health care facllltlea and child
lbc lilll'My II becauiC I lib boW." library," 111e llid. "11111 II one of developDellt ce11ten, ammg Oilier
Walllet exp!Mned' '1 law allny the belt thlnp that bU ~to orpnizadoos lllllagenclca.
of over 800 boob 11111 aiDcct 200 me iD a lonl time, tbil voluntcerRSVP serves Gallla. Jackson
authors, rangiDg from V.C. iDg. I would dellnltely J'l'tQDmmct aDd VlolioD countiea 11111 II fedaalADdrcwa to K•bltm Woodwiaa."
RSVP to odlm. I tbink it's 1 won- ly funded by lbc new Colptndon

. .•

Tribune 446-2342
i!lg aspects of the museum operauon. .
Sentinel992-215S
Sbe 1s aedlted with developing
11 museum librwy wbidlls r«&lt;g·
,
nized as one of the most compre- ~ • • • • • • • • • • •
benslve genealogical research ' LOSE u• O LBS •
libraries in Ibis resloo.
•
ro 1
• •
Under ber leadersbi~ ~muse- \
IN 3 DAYS!
um bas been able to 1D81Dtaill regu· • \
All Neturel C.H. 2001
; •
lar boors for the convenience of •
M'::'t%:'"e::;t'.o";~~E •
local visitors, as liVCll as the thou- • (S2.00 off wilh lhis coupon) Umill •
sand or so persons from all over die • F
h Ph
•
U.S. WbO visit the museum for •
genealogical research
m1 sc. Rt •w

r .·

111

The 8XChanrce WaS
' f
Self•S Uff Clen
from water col·
1 ...,., ff t·l
1.
iBCt(IN 0 1n 1001'S
fO diesel genera-

IDdiiD WOld "tmaJw" 10 IIIIIIC her

Pennsylvania naturalist earns worldwide reputation

each week worldng in and oversee-

"~,l$f~J{f-.l!!f'l'l$f~J{f~.l$t~~.·'M"··PJ{f4'!!fll'!lf~!lf~~

• Future Stic
•Lane
• Bushline
Ridgeway (:locks

.------------,

Cllalot c:ompul«

A particular volume that hal
Becky Carroll of the library's eatlced Waltea' Ia Stlva,~ Eclttuy
refercilce IICCiion said Walter ,baa . byJanclle Taylor. It waa from lhla
receudy leuned how to use' tbe book Walter aelected tbe·Sioux

News Hotline

Rockefeller Christmas tree goes up again
By CATHERINE CROCKER
Alloclated Pnsa Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - It spent
its life in a suburbaD froat yanlllld
will end it as mulch. In betw~n,
tbe 80-foot·tall Christmas tree
brought a holiday glow to thousands of oolooten Friday in the
heart of New York City.
At exactly 5:S6 p.m., 2S,OOO
multicolored bulbs were Ht on lbc
tree at Rockefeller Cellter, c:oolinuing a tradition tbal began during lbc
Depression.
·
. "With so much goin1 on in lbc
country, Ibis is one of the bright

slay with host families and obsetve
their lifestylea were quite diverse.
Workiog on sraln and sheep
exchanges was like being set out in
the midst of nowhere, 100 plus
miles from the nearest town, be
said.

library' a on-lloe

and now wlab other aenlor cld-

als.

Rotarians briefed on life 'down under'
MIDDLEPORT - Auatralla,
lbc COUJilry "down under," was die
topic of Middleport-Pomeroy
. Rotary Oub's guest speak«, Todd
ChadweD.
Chadwell, a 1993 Inttmatlonal
Four-H Youth Eubange (IFYE)
participant, spent a1x
working and abar!Dg many
encea in South Australia, the
Barrier reef area and Taunania
A trief slide preteatatlon belped
guide the audience
the
panoramic landscape
bad
to offer. Australia ranges from dry,
arid regions where grain was
grown and kangaroos roamed to
the tropical regions of Tasmlinla,
where ferns grew taller than houses. Chadwell said be enjoyed
bungee jumping tbc depth of 150
feet gorges to surfing the Great
Barrier Reef.
He said that opportuni Ilea to

The vaat

aaay of volal"eer opportunltiea Iii

difference at ··..,rary ·

•

414 SECOND STREET

509 S. :ntiRD STREET

GALLIPOUS

MIDDLEPORT

446-0186

992·5912

•Liz Claiborne
•Aifreci ·Dunner
•Peter Popovitch

v. All Coats &amp; Jackets
~ ~to ~OFF
v.·~·
Including Leathers

: •.: Beautiful Selection of
Christmas Sweaters from:

,jj

i~.
~1

•Bellepolnte .
•Marissa Christina
•Eagle's Eye

~
:~: *Free Gift Wrap
)/r .
Chrlstmaa Hours:
~J
Mon.·Sat. 9:3G-8:00
i~·
Sun.: 1:()().5:00

I

~
·
:-.:

ii :..::

300 Second Ave.

.

Galllpolla, Oh.

.

.

''

•

:...::..· .~·~··~·~·
,. .~--=.. . ,. .~-.. ::--.
.··~·~·
.. . ,.
'

�I

Entertainment

Oecember4, 1994

SUDday Times~Scntincl /B8

Comaneci. the first gymnast to accn a perfectlO in Olympic ~dlion,
leA Romania on Friday after a 10-day visiL It was her first visit IIU1Ce ,lbo
defecled five yem ago in the waniDg days of CommUIIist rule.
"People arc more opea. They arc freer and say what they lhlnk," abe llid.
During her visit, Comaneci reiUnlt.d 10 her hometown, met the president
and DCtfcxmcd in frontoftheprimc minister. Alld Conner,hlmaelf111 Olympic
gold medalist in gymnastiCS', astcd Comaneci's fadler for her lulld in IIIII'·
. riagc.

Killing Barry softly with song

EUGE.NB,Ore. (AP)-Da'ICBarryis
.
1bc syndicated columnist wrote in bls OcL 10
column, Mit's not tbal opera's bad; it's tbal it's
fatal." He noted tbatan AfriCIIII!IIDIIBal was
''tilled by oee!" music being sung tbree football
fields away. And he posed the question: "Could
:=:;;~sufficient d0518CS. be fatalro buman Loveless says farewell to father i~_afalherson_g
The answer may be yes. The Eugene Opera
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - JTt&amp;en years after '""
died, Patty
inviled Barry to be 8 guest star in its Jan. 8 Lov~!CSS says a~ hu helped ber ftna!,lr say farewell.
production of Puccini's comedy "Gianni
How Can I Help ~ou Say Goo&lt;J!lye JS abou! the death of a woman who
L
Schicc:bi.•
belps ber daughter realize !hat death 11 a part of life.
Tracy Lawrence
Barry will play 8 dead man wboee heirs arc ·
The soog, performed by Loveless and wriUm by Karen Taylor-Good and
;
. '!ring 10 g~ h~ld of~ money. . .
. B:OOCollins. wasafinalistfortheCountty MusicAssocialioo'ssingleoftlle
Barrywon.tbave.IO~tany~bimsclf; tl sa~·StDgtng{'llrl:His Y :..nwsong flJIIlly made me let go of my dad," Loveless said in Friday's
performanccwillcntaillytDBoorpst·likeonabedandbeingstuffedmabox. The Tennessean. "It made me see! was being selftsb. and lncetled to let go."
Her fadler, Jobn, died in 1979 of black lung disease.
.
rigbt: Opera kilis.

-----.....1

Romanian gymnast to marry in homeland

.

BUCHAREST, Romania (AP)- Nadia Comaneci's homecoming is
over. but she promised fellow Romanians shc'lli\IIUm 10 celelntc her
wedding wilh them. .
The 33-year-old gym!WI said she and her American fiance, Ban
Conner, will marry in Romania in 1996. She didn't give a date.

Lawrence may slip out of assault charges
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)- Tracy LaWialCC hu a chance IOcleln his
slalc of assault charscs.
The countty singer was amstcd Apil4 for allegedly firing a gun In tbe

air on a highway, following another car and threatelling tile occuplllll.
OnThunday,heleamcdthec:baapawillbectismjsrdifbopayacowt
wsts, gives ~ the fl.ll and stays out of ttouble for a yu-.
·
''This incldentJS behind me." Lawrence llid. "lam bappy 10 coodnuc
my efforts as an entertainer and to help others.n
Lawtencc is this year'sspotesman for Country Music Cales, Ill AIDS
ebarity. He performed at a bencfitThunday.

And by tbe way, so WHAT if
Caruso carried on like a big baby? I
can relate."
"You're trying to say you've
watched 'NYPD Blue'?"
. "Not exactly watcbed. More!
lite absorbed. TV seeps in ri'b(
through the placc:nta, you know. •
"Don't you realize tbat sbow is
recommended for adults only?''
"Lite I bad a cboice! I was a
captive audience. same as witb all
!bose 'Kojak' reruns and 'Amazing
Discoveries' Mom used to sit
tbrougb in the middle of lbc nigbL
It wasn't as If I could obange the
channel."
"Did it occur 10 you dial maybe
tbe only reason she was up was
because you gave ber bcartbum?"
"Second trimester, aocient history. But now tbat I'm out bere,
just do me one favor. Keep tbat
purple, lrnock~kf!~ dinosaur out

Gallia Performing Arts to
stage Christmas,show
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla Per- Sarab Stover, Erin Casto, Amber
forming Arts will present Home {or McGuire, Amanda Roacb and ,
Christmas at tbe Ariel Theatre on Sarab Roacb. The angels arc Haley
Sunday, Dec. 11 at 3 p.m.
Burdette, Tiffany Crum, Shauna
Tbe program opens on Christ- Drain, Jessica Durst. Leab Eddy,
mas Eve witb motber, danced by Megan Ferguson, Emily Kayser
Erin CasiO, trimming the tree witb aro Trisb Lucas.
cblldren Delena Carter, Andrea_
The production's tbird scene is
Bailey, Vanessa Wilson, Niki ·christmas momins. featuring tbc
McKinness, Britlan Pcarsoo, Sarah opening of a box of tQy soldiers ·
Brown, Rosa Bustamante, Nicole played by Caroline Altbof, Becky
Jaques. Moriab McGlotblin, Carrie Beegle, Joanna Bokovltz. Julie
Michael, Brittany Morgan. Elena Fisco, Christine LaCarbonera,
Simpkins, Kelsey Willey and Kali Katey Talley, Katie Painter, Trista
Willey.
Roacb.and Nicole Valencia.
The carolers - Amanda Blank,
Baton twirlers Lee Ann Berldey,
Jessica Donnally, lindsay Lemon, JoDie Fellure, Stacie Fellure, Jenny
Amanda Roacb, Amber McGuire, Fowler, Jessica Parsons and LindKatie Ale under, Nina Brown, say Lemon lead lbc cast in lbc fiDai
Kelsey Fife, Brittani Commons. number, "Deck tbe Halls."
Maclccnzie Levine, Megan Sbeets,
The sbow is choreographed by
Liridsay Ward, Anna White, Kacey Patty Fellure. The assistant teacher
Willey and Natalie Williams is Bree Ramey.
stop by to entertain.
Tickets are available at Mary
Returning borne for Christmas is Lee Fame and Craft Supplies, 322
father, Mike Chapman. wbo sings Second Ave., Gallipolis; City
"I'll Be Home for Cbristmas" and· Insurance Agency, SOl Main St.,
"0 Holy Nigbt."
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; from Gallia
Tbe action tben sbifts to tbe Perf(](lllinll Arts dance team memCbristmas Eve cburcb service. fea- bers; or at tbe dance studio, 22
turinll tbe cboir of Betb Fellure, Locust St., Galllpolis.
Nicole France, Lindsay Lemon,

of my face until I'm old enougb 10
have a sboc 10 !brow at lbc TV. •'
''I bope you won't mind if I say
you're starting 10 IOUIId a little colicky. Would you suck OD Ibis pacifier andjtiStlisreo for a minuter•
''Mmmmfffff.• t
"Wbat you need 10 know is, TV
ntver slOps seeping into you. But
now, it's up to you bow much. I
bope !hat, witb regular reminders
from your parents, you'll learn 10
use some viewins self-restraiDL" 1
"You mean you don't want
Butt-bead for a son."
"You could say tbaL"
"How do I avoid it?"
"Two simple rules. JTust, identify for yourself why you're watcb·
ing a sbow before it even begins. ,
Are you tuning In because you
think it will be entertaining or
informative, or even willfully,
comfortingly dumb?"
''Like 'Matlnck. '''

"Or are you watching just
because it's tbere?"
"What's lbc second rule?"
"Once you know wbat you're
looking for, ask yourself it"tbere's
anolher, better way tbaD TV 10 get
tbc same benefit. You feel like .
using your brain, maybe you'd be
better off RadiDB a boot instead of
watcblnf 'Sesame Slreet.' You
witbme? •
"And Instead of watcblns a
story performed on TV, I could
make believe my own witb my
friends. Is tbat wbat you mean?"
''Exactly0'.
''Is Ibis what a TV critic docs
-prcacb?"
"I'm just saying It's never too ·
soon not to be a couch potaiO.•'
"That would never happen to
me. TV is too rolleD 10 wall:b, anyway!••
"I don't know wbcre you get
tbat."

camps.

Mll1lh carey

At Camp Mariah, younp~en can cxplm
educational and carcerpalhs as well as enjoy tile

outdoors.
Carey,anati'ICofLonglsland,willdoldvertilemelu,meetFreshAir
youngSielS 111)\1 join the board of dim:un. She plw a benefit concen
Thursday in New YOlk.

')~ &lt;·
.
"Didn't tbe humorist Fred Allen tberest."
"Alld your readers, do they pay '
say television was called a medium
attentioo 10 what you say?' •
because it's so rarely well-dooc?"
''About as mucb as·you will."
"Yes, but !bat's wbat a critic
"But
do they look as cute as I
does - alerts viewers to lbc Well· •
do
in
my
Snuuly?"
done. And gives fair warning about
"Not a cbancc."

Rolling· Stones,
Pink Floyd top concerts

Cnm IIDd A.nnalt Baudleal; ll8dt row, Sarala
RCIIdl, San11 StoYer, Amber McGuire, LIDdlay
Lemoa, Erta c..to, Amauda Roach IIIII EllA·
bethShee...

Music makers: Ex-Starship guitarist lands on the acoustic planet
By KIRA L. BD.LIK
·Associated Prell Writer
' ·PHJLADELPHIA (AP) - Gaitarlst and composer Craig
Cbaqnico doesn't ainge wbcll peo----,Ie call bis-muslc New Age. It'&amp;
·OK wltb blin - and tbia from a
guy who used 10 rip np stages playins liP-rock guitar.
Cbaqulco'sleCOIICI acoustic guitar album. "Aaluatic PlaDel," fol·
lows bls 1993 record, .. Acouatic
Highway." He had been part of
Jefferson Stanbip and Its aucccasor. Starlblp, since singer Grace
Slick reeruitccl him wbell be was
.J6. He stuct around for 18 years;
!be band~ to disintegrate In
tbe late 1
and a cliaagreemcDt
over creative dlrec:tloil finally
forud blm out in 1990.
"I sueas I lot of people would
have ex~ me 10 go into anotb-er rodt o' roll band, or, if I was 10
·do an io&amp;lrumental record, do
klmctbing a lot more electric.'' tbe
ebullient Cbaquico (pronounced·
cba·KEE·so) said in an interview

earned an cstln"'r4 $11!1.4 miDioo,
Performaooe maaazlne said.

Tbat total docsn 't count four
sbows wbere tbc band didn't report
its eaminss because of slow tictct
sales. Mm tban 2 milll011 people
have seen the Stones Ibis year.
"They're still incredible performers." said Jane Cohen, senior
editor of Performance, on Friday.
"1hey're sdll the premiere nx:t 'n'
roll band. But I doD't ~ you're
going to see them tour 11 Ibis ie'ICl
again.''

TO PEJtFORM - c.t 11 ztn of "H01m
ror Chrl•tmu" at tlae Ariel Tlteater Dec. 11
lnclllde, fraat row, l'lom I.tt, Mepa FerpMD,
Jtllka o.nt, Trllh L - uacl Leah Eddy; mid·
die row, Bally BIIJ'dette, EmDy Kayar, Tllrmy

(E-Uzabetb's Song)." all doae on tbal, if you wanted. you could just
tbe E strlns and punctuated wltb really sit down and explore tbe
rapid-fire runs up and down tbe detail tba1 I put iniO it."
frctboard. He wrote It at age 12
after
and serioally injwed
COLONY THEATRE
bya
driver.
TONIGHTJ HRU THURS. DEC. 8TH
.!'1 woiiD up in the llol(lital an«
TOM HANKS IN being in a c:cma for tbrec clays," bo ·
FORREST
GUMP PG·13 .
said. ''I bid a IB'dlrll CODCUssioll
ONE
EVENING
SHOW 7:30
and both my III1DI were broken and
ADMISSION
$2.00
my tbumb aod my wrist -my leB
440023
was busted in tbrec placca - and
tbe first !bing I asked for was 10
play my IIIXlUStic guitar."
.
Chaquico cloesn' t mind if his
work beCOmes background music
for listeoers; tbe idea pleases l!lm.
•'This can enhance tbe mood,
wbetber It's dinner or just (tbe)
NXIIJlMIY of a really good friend or
If you're aeadns art.' ~ be said. "I
lilce my .music 10 be behind tbat.
But I also like It 10 be IODICtbing

instrumeDIIII brcab.
from his bome in San Flancisco.
Cbaqulco and bis partner, key• "Here's a guy wbo used to play
boardist
Ozzie Ablen. unden:ut tbc
tbrougb stacb and stacks of ampli·
organic
quality of acoustic suitar
fiers and tum tllem u~ to Il and
and
piano
melodies wltb tbe inorloved every minute of tl," be said.
ganic
batmonies
and llackins riffs
"But DOW, I'm sitting~ reall)'
liking tbc fact tbat I can tum tli11 of el~trlc .guitar and keyboards.
music up and it's sdll acoustic and Eacb 'JOilg Ia cyclil;al. inttoducing
and rcpcatlns several tbemea
it's not distorted.
"I consider New Age music 10 tbroughout. even within solos,
be anything musically tbal rm:s the whlcb oftcll arc extcnslons of tbc
imagination," be said. "It' a tbat basic melody.
Eacb song Is paired witb a poem
side of music tbat makes your
!bat elaborates on its tbenie.
imagination paint pictures.
"It helps tbe listener to bavc a
"There's no lyrics on my
reCords, (so) I have to have tbc gui- place to go wltb tbcir imaginatar speak tbe lyrics ... and tbe tion." be said. "Not tbat you could
melodies bavc to tell tbe story of necessarily sing tbc lyrics witb tbe
melody- it's not like they're supcacbsong."
.
.
Chaquico explores a variety of posed to be lyrics. ..
styles, from tbe dart romanddam
He sbows off bis
of "Winterflame" to tlie funk
stylings of "The Greywolf Hunts tccbnique in "Center of
Again" 10 tbc ""-" salsa Oavor
of "Aocio de OiiK).;1 He covers a
Top 10 hit be wrote for Jeffcno11 1
Sbnbip, ''Find Your Way Bact."
but gives it several Ju:~:-tlnged

:!:f!'

In coliege football action, .

Ticket sales for tbc Stones' tour.
were initially slow, but tbat w~ ·
largely because tbere was so much
ampetiti011 on tbe road, said Gary
Bonglova!!n!. edi!or c2P,9MIW.
wbicb will also repghtic: Stones as
top earners.
Pink Floyd, wbicb lumbers
along despite Internal strife and
poorly-received albums, drew more
tban 3 million fans and earned
$104.6 mil1i011, Performance said.
• Billy Jocl performed before
nearly 2 millllll people and e.ned
$75.8 million to finish tbird, followed by tbe Eagles.
Barbra Streisand, criticized for
. steep ticket prices, took in $58.9
million wbile performing before
nearly 300,000. More tban four
times as many people saw Elton
Jobo, but bis con~ert sross was
only $56.8 millilll.
The Grateful Dead. tbe Lollapalooza tour, Pbil Collins and
Micbael Bolton rounded out PerfOrmance's list of top earners.
"It's been a very good year for
CIIICCClS," Bongiovanni IBid
R.E.M., Tom Petty and Van
Halen arc expected 10 be among tbc
big concert draws next vear. -

~

Kelvin Jeter rusbec1 ror 100 of bls
118 yardS 1n lbc aeaDd half 111 ~
tbe. wlnnln~ scm in overtime as of bls 30 l*rles.
Manba1l eel IIIIIICS Madi1111 28Cawley wu 15-of-29 paislng
21 in ·tbe CAA Division 1-AA for 249 yardi and also ran for 45
football qWitCdinala Saturday,
yards on 17 cantes.
Parker' siiCOI'Ina plunge, bls secPatket.ftnlsbed with 1S3 yards
ond of lbc pmc, came after' a five· on 29 carries 10 aet the Marsball
)!lay drive fnm the JIIIICS Madl1011 career rusbinB record wltb 3,947
2S. He carried on all five plays for yards. Ron Darby previonsly bcld
the 1bunderlna Herd (12-1). whlcb tbe record ·witb 3,903 yards In
is trying 111 rcacb tbe 1-AA title 1986-89.
game for tbe fOUitb stralgbt year.
Marshall moved into next
· Jamea Madi1011 tbc:n sot tbe ball week's semifinals against the
on Marshall's 25, ·bUt on fourth- Appalachian State-Boise State win·
and-four at tbe 19, quarterback ner. Tbe Herd baa faced
Mike Cawley, rolling rigbt under Younsstown State in 1bc past tbrec
pressure. tmdenbrew Jolm Allt:11 at Division 1-AA title games, winDina
tbe goal' line,
tbe game.
in 1992 and losing In 1991 and
Tbe7dDokesfi
I .(10- ) raiUed from a 1993.
21 - e c I early in tbe fo.urtb . It also lost llic 19g7 Iitle game
quarter to force overtime at 21-21 toNorlbcastLouislllla.
on Cawley's 41-yard pass 10 Jay
y~ St. II
Jones witb 11:5.9 left and bis twown
E.
tacky15
yard run wJtb 6:43left.
, At Youngstown, Ohio,
Jobn Coursey misled a 54-yard · Yonngstown State quarterback
field goal attempt abort and rigbt Mark Brungard fired an elgbl-yard
witb 14 seconds left tbat would touchdown pass 10 wide receiver
have "!on tbe game for James Darnell Bracy wltb 1:02left in tbe
Madisoii. He also misled a 23-yard game, capping an 18-15 victory
allemptln tbc aeaDd quancr:
over Eastern Kentucky iD an
~gbled
lard4-0 at balftimeand
Cbris~
NCAA Division 1-AA quarterfinal
Par-: s et&amp;~~t·y run
same.
Grose s12-yard run.
Tbe Penguins (12-0-1) will
Aldba Byrd ran two yards 10 cut advance next week 10 faee tbc winthe lead to 14-7 midway tbrougb ncr or tbe McNeese State·MIIItana
tbe tblrd quarter. James Ma~on game played Saturday. The
tben be~d MarsbaU on tbe ~nsumg Colonels t:llded tbelr season 10-3.
posseaston and drove from tts OWD
Younsstown, tbe defending 1tbree-yard line 10 tbe Herd seven- AA cllampion, bas won 12 consecyard line, threatening 10 tie tbe utive games and bas not lost in 18
game. .
saaigbl
. But co~erback Melvin CunTbc Penguins scored fint on a
.om~ ptcked off Cawley at tbc 33-yard field goal by Paul Massaro
goal line and went 10!1 yards f~ a . witb 13:32 left in tbe rust balf.
touchdown, making tt21-7 wttb Witb 10:41 remaining in tbe sec13:21Jett.
. ond quarter, Penguin linebacker
James Madison took ldvantage Leon Jones taclcled running bact
of four Marshall fumbles in tbe Robert Bouldin in 1bc end zone for
second balf, including one by Part- a safety and a S-0 balftlme lead
er at bls own 40 tbat led 10 CawIn tbe fourth quaiter
ley's tying score. Free safety Jobn Youngstown State jumped oui
Stein recovered dial fumble.
abead 11-0 af1er Brungard tbrcw a
The Dulcea controlled tbe ball nine-yard scuing pass to tigbt end
for 24:Sl of tbe final 30 minutes.

endinJ

COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) ~- · unbeaten in tbe Big Eigbt.
Scotty Thurman scored 27 points
No. 5 UCLA IU
.
and bit two ol his li'IC tbrcc-poilltNo. 3 Keatacky 11
ers in a 32-second span in tbc secAt Anaheim, Calif., UCLA
ond baiC 10 lltak up a close game fresbman J .R. Henderson bit two
as No 4 Arkansas defeated Mis- free !brows with slx·tentba of a secsour! 94-71 Satunlay,
ond remaining Saturday, givins
ThUIDIID has 79 points in tbree No. 5 UO..A an g2-8I comeback
gamea aaainat Miuouri, all victo- victory O'ICl No. 3 Kentucky.
riea,llld played a large role in eodThe two scbools badn't played
ing lbc Tigen' 17-game bome will- eacb otber since tbe 197S NCAA
niog atreat. CBnt McDaniel added title game, wbicb tbe Bruins won
20 poinll for AJkanaas. wbich bas 92-85 for tbe last of coacb Jobn
won ita last tbree .trips to the Wooden's record 10 NCAA cbam·
Heames Center.
pioosbips.
The Razolbacks went 11-for-21
No. 6 Duke 70, lllinoll65
from dute-point nnae. inc:luding a
At CJUcaao, m; rremman guard
bank sbol by Darnell Robinson in Trajan Langdon scored alll2 of bls
tbe wanins seconds.
points in tbc second half Samrday
Butlbc victory wasn't nearly as and No. 6 Duke fougbt off Illinois
,,. impressive as last year's 120-68 ' 7~S as lbc Blue Devils continued
blowout a1 Faye.ttevUle, Ark., tbe tbeir nwtery of BIB Ten ampetimostlopsided loss in Missouri bls- lion.
·
tory. The Razorbacks scored 72
Duke bas now woo 13 straight
points in tbe second half of tbat . games aaainst tbc Big Ten, strctcbgame against a team tbat went ing bac1t to December, 1989. Tbe

Morrll • Dorothy H11kln1
ArtoiTIIMI,. 4212nd. Ave; O.IMpollo,

. CeiiW•IIIS.;.___,

LMS
SATELLI.TE

.

- - .-- - ·

-

.

-

-

--

-

-

o·•-•

' GJT)Nci TBilOUGB - Kentucky rorwud Marl! Po.. (rlaltt)
trill to blrnlltll ...1 11trou11a UCLA'• Cit..t.
111e lint
Jolla a. 'Wooden a-~c • A J n' "·Clllf., w~~en
~Mil• .
'nlnsWvii8J.81,(AP) .
I

w"'
~I

- .. -

GOING DOWN -

bl

~ -

64.
LangdoD bit two free throws 13
seconds later to mate it 66-65,
Greg Newton broke free off a delay
for a layup oo a pass from Langdon
and Citerobe Parts mlde two free
!brows wltb two .........,. left after
slealing an Diini lnbcutds pass. AIICiber fre•bm• Riclty Price,
led Duke witb IS points wblle
Parts also bad 12 for the Blue Devils, wbo bouttced beck from a fourpoint loss to COIIDCCiicut earlier in
tbewcet.
Garris scored 19 for tbc Illini
and Ricbard Kceqc bad IS.
BUl Garris sank a three-pointer
and Keene a jumper as tbc llllni got
within two witb two minutes left.
After a timeout, Garris got open
and bit anotber three-pointer for tbe

ftnt qurter of Salllnlay'• w ul111111tary ICIIIIeo
my clllh In ftlladelpllla'a JII'K Sladl..., .......
the Miclaltlpmea 1n111 ll-21. (AP)

In the Division Ill state final,

We~t

Blue Devils (3-1) scored tbc fmal
six points in tbe ftnl-evcr college
game Ill tbe United Center.
Kiwane Garris' tbrce-polnter
witb 1:23 left gave Illinois (3-1) it
only lead of lbc second balf at 65-

Navy running back

Michael Jefrenoo II broapt down w1t1t 1111 llllll1le
tadde
Anny'a Jack BeDedd (81) u tile BIKIIl
Klllghb Juon Brlzlc (91) mov•ln to aalst In tlte

Branch b_eats Clyde 28~11
-

By RUSTY MILLER
MASSILLON, Ohio (AP) .....:
First-team all-Ohio quarterback
Jeff MOiris passed for tbree loog
toucbdowns and Dominic Panezott
scored on a fluke Interception
return as Beloit West Brancb beat
Clyde 28-I 1 Saturday 10 win tbe
Division ill state cbamplonsbip.
Morris, also the Auociated
Press offensive player of tbe year
in tbe divi~iOIJ, completed only
eigbt of 19 passes and was inter~
cepted four times, but !bose eigbt
c'bmpletions went for 2AO ~.
West Brancb (14-0),1'8Dked second bebind Celina in lite liDal reguJar-season Associated Press poll,
was appearing in its fustftoal ever.
It was also tbc fust championship
appearance for Clyde (12-2).
A record crowd of 12,711almost 3,000 more tbaD the previous mark - watched tbe game at
Paul Brown Tiger Stadium.
Otber tban on West Bnncb's
four startlingly sudden toucbdowns, defense ruled tbe day. Eacb
team bad five turnovers - four
inlerceptions and one lost fumble
eacb -and neilbcr team bad mucb
luck running tbe ball.
West Brancb bad fewer first

downs (13-10), fewer yards rusbin~ pass into tbc left flal for Lilla.
(136-82) and bad tbe ball just 21 :19
Llllg bobbled tbe pass w1teo b1c,
to 26:41 for Oyde.
and it bounced off bis c1teat as be
But long touchdown plays fellliiDwanls ooto tbe turf. It ricospelled tbe cliffereBCC.
cbeted to West Branch defensive
The Warriors were abead 7-3 lineman Dominic Panezott, wllo .
early in tbc second quarter wben need untoucbed down lbc sideline
ligbming struck.
10 complete a 20-yard retum for tbe
On fourth and 4 at tbe Clyde 39, toucbdown. •
Moms faked a bandoff, waited in
Clyde scored the only poiDis of
tbe poclcet, tben lofted a pass at tbe tbe second balf on an 11-yard
rigbt sideline 10 Jeff Grove. Grove touchdown pass from Dirlam 10
caugbt tbe pass in full stride, then · Long . Justin Chagnon. wbo bad
stopped as Clyde defensive back earlier kicked a 27-yard field gOIII
Chad Long skittered past on tbe 10 give C:lyde a 3-0 lead, sc:ored 011
artificial turf. Grove tben went . a two-point convcni111 run.
untouched into tbe end zone to
West Brancb's first touchdown
COIIIplete tbc toucbdown.
bad come almost as qulctly as tbe
After Oyde failed on a fourtb· three it scored in tbe aeaDd quarand-two pass at tbe West Brancb Ia'. On tbird ancllO from tbe W•40, a run gained nothing for tbe rior 25, Morris rolled rigbt llldWarriors. On second down, bowev- pressured beck 10 lbc left.111111:.1er, Mlllris zipped a bard pass over ing a long pasa to Doat. that be
tbe middle tbat bit wide receiver caugbt a1 the 38111d lOOt lbc rest fl
Kyle Doak rigbl on bis fmgenips at tbe way for tbe 75-ylrd score.
tbe Clyde 16-yard line. He broke
It was tbe l011gcst pass play In
free from tbe grasp of Clyde's Division Ill championsbip game·
Tony Oalcleaf for tbe 6().yard score history.
to make it21-3.
Morris didn't nm tbe llall in tbe .
Two plays later, tbe Warriors fust balf, but carried nine times for.
were on tbe boanl again. On sec- 35 yards in tbe second balf. He ·
ond down at tbe Clyde 27, Flier completed just one .of six passes In
quarterback Mark Dirlam flipped a tbe second balf.

After Lansdon •s two free
In the Division V state title game,
!brows, lllinois' Jerry Hester lost .
tbe ball witb just under a miaute
left. Newton scored for a tbn:epointlead witb 21 ICCOIIds remain·
tonlgi!L"
ing and after a 01rrb DiiU. illinois By RUSTY MD ,I Ell.
Welisville came Into tbe game
got one last cbancc witb four sec·
MASSILLON, Oitio (AP) - AI
onds left following a walking call.
Hetrick ocver gets tired of winning averaging 32 points a game on lhc
• No. 13 Wllc:oo.in 70
state cbampionablps, but be does season and 25 in Its tbree playoff
Te:us Tecla 65
tire of being asted to compare victories. But tbe Tigen were limited to just five flrst downs by aVer. At Madison, Wis., Micbael Fin·
~etrick and Versailles woo lbcir sailles
defense tbat was never
ley found bis sbooting IDUcb Saturtbird slllle cbamplonsbip in tbe last fooled.
day, teaming witb Raslun Griffith
fi'IC years witb a 28-7 victory over
"We were not able to run tbe
10 sdfle a comeback by Texas Tecb , Welis~=li in tbe Divisioo ball and wben we did go to !brow,
and give No. 13 Wls«ctsin a 70-65 v state
·
p game at Paul we couldn't proteet tbe passer,"
victory over tbe Red Raiders.
Brown Tiger Stadium. ·
said Wellsville coecb Bob Thayer.
Finley missed bis first .eight
"Somebody always asks me
Wellsville bad turnovers on all
sbots btil fmisbed witb 23 points
'How does tbla compare?'" Het- tbree second-quarter possessions
llld Griffith bad ~ aa tbc B:1:: rick said. "All I know is, I never and fmisbed tbe game witb tbree
Improved to 3-0 by surviving
want to get used to tbem. This one interceptions, a lost fumble and a
aeaDd stralgbt scare • home.
beca
blocked punt.
WiiiCOIIdn. . is as sweet as tbe 11rsI oacnse
The Bad~ 01
1
----there's always different kids."
. Wbile Versailles was rolling up
Green
Bay 1-57 ednesday II tbe
F'
11 Ob'
D
a
21-0 lead and 141 !ot.al yards at
UW Fteld House. wbere WIIICOIIaio
trst-teall! a • toan an
Scblatcr cagg!!t !I !Oucbdown pass the break, Wellsville was beld 10
Is 6~ over it&amp; last M rcgular-ses- and blocked a punt tbat led to just 29 yards on its 22 plays.
1111 --cooferencc IIIIDCI·
Aaron Bergman's six-yard touchVersailles .rolled despite severs!
Jason Sasser led tbe ~ed down return u Versailles (1:4-0) bard bits on first-team all-Ohio
Raiders (1·1) widt 17 points before ran Ita winning streak to 27 in a quarterback Jason Turner tbat
foalina out wltb 1:39 left. Darvln row, best·m tbe s......
·
-.
caused bim 10 sit out most of tbe
D
I
Mark
d
S
Ham added 1 an
av a,
Tbe Tigers won tiUes In 1990 tbird quarter. Freshman Brian
wilo plcted np fonr fouls In tbe llld 1993, were state nmners-up in Philpot toot over for tbe junior.
lint half, flnllbecl wltb 14.
}9gg and lost in tbe scmifiDti1s in Turner returned in lbc fOUitb quarTbe BldacQ\IOOk a 38-26 balf· 1986. '87111d '89.
ter to lead a final dri'IC tbat resulted
time lead oa l"loley's balfcoun
The Tigers were a clear No.I in Paul Risner's tbrec-yard IDUcb·
bumr bealicr, but. tbc Red Ra1den choice Ia tbe final regular-season down run.
tepouped and palled 10 66-63 on Associated Pres&amp; state poll, wbUe
Witb Turnel bitting 6-of-8 passKoy Smitb'a lbree-)lointer witb Wellsville (13-1) was listed tbird.
es for 92 yards, Versailles scored
2:S71eft In tbe game.
· '
Scblater - an cod on offense on consecutive possessions for a
Bot wltb Griffith catcbins a and defense - bad five sacks, 14-0 lead In tbe first half.
breldler, bil bectup, Sean DuaJI- · recovcled a fumble, causbt tbree
Turner's ~ to Schlater, on a
Orly, sol an Inside bucket, and · passes for S4 yards and a toucb- fade iniO tbe leA corner of llic end
wben Sasser picked up bla ·fifUI down and blocked lbc Jli!DL
zone capped a 63-yard dri'IC. After
foul, Finley aank botb shots for a
"Ia tbal all?" Hetrtdc said witb a Wellsville punt, Greg Kilaplce
7().63 lead.
a grin. 'IHe won't get his supper covered 1the last Y8l"' of a 67-yard

=

RIO GRANDB - The Unlver-

-~

tbrcw for 8IIOlbrt 114 yards, radting up 227 of Eastcm Xeotucty' s
311 yards of total offense. Brungard was 16 rl29 pusinr for 242
yards, two toucbaowns and no
inten:eptlons.
.
Navy 22, Army 20
At Pbiladelpbla. Pa.,Kurt Heiss'
52-yard field goal witb 6: 19 left
gave Army a 22-20 victory over
Navy on Saturday, the Midship;
mea's fourtb victory over tbe
Cadets in lbc last five yem. ·
Heiss, a senior whose previous
beat was a 37-yn field soai. also
bit from 21 and 3S yns as Army
took a 45-43-7 lead In the series.
Quarterback Ronnie McAda
IUsbed for 126 yards as Almy (4-7)
won by running up the middle
against !be Navy (3-8) defense. The
Cadets ran for 373 yards oo 70 carries. Kevin Vaughn carried 20
times for 92 yards. 80 in tbe second
balf.
Jim Kubiak. Navy's career passing leader, was 24-of-34 for 361
yards. two touchdowns and tbree
inten:eptions.
An imiRSS~ve C8lcb and run by
Navy tigbt end Kevin Hickman
gave the Midshipmen a 20-19 lead
late in tbe tbird quarter before
Army marched for tbe winning
field goal.

Versailles downs Wellsville 28-7

Sat., Dec. 3, 8:00 P·•·

~ity of lUll GIIDde Jazz Easemble

•

score.
Sacca rusbcd for 113 ym and

lead.

·uRG Jazz Ensemb/f3 to
present concert Friday

•.

Jake Smallficld witb 9:S9 remaining. The point-after llftmpl failed.
Witb 8:39 left, Eutcrn Kentucky quarterback Jobn Sacca lat·
eraled to wide receiver Dialieo
Burks, who lateraled back across
1bc field to Sacca. The qUil'latlack
tben ran tbe ball S 1 yards for a
toucbdown. Sacca tbeo ran in llic
point-after attempt to mate tbe
score 11-8.
·
Eastern Kentucky went abead
15-11 witb 3:19 remaining after
Sacca tbrcw a 38-yard scoring pass
to running bact &amp;ryan Dickerson.
Youngstown Stalie lo&amp; tbe ball bact
and drove 80 yanla for the winning

nsas &amp;··UGLA notchwins over Missouri &amp;--"-UK

OHIO VALLEY
SYMPHONY

675-4851
oul!lla&amp;ae, WV •

.

25 college hoops,

Rllll·

(trombone), Harreld Scott (piallo),
Jack Slsman (tromboDc), Amy Io
will perform Friday, Dec. 9 at 8 Taylor (saxophones) and Keitb
p.m. in tbe ~~of Koby(bus).
The ememble plays millie rang&amp;be Fine llld PtdillmlDfF Ceoing
from Miles Davia 10 Charles
~.
Mangus,
and features several
Tile CIIICIIIblc, UDder tbc diiCcimprovisadooal
numbers. The ~
tion of Chris Kenney, II complacd
boor
performance
II free and C!fJCD '
of Jollll Jackson (druma), ICII! l'llul
10
tbc
public.
Lyons (ll'lllllpet),, Wendi Rollins
I

Section C

Ma·rshall handsJMU 28-21
loss in 1-AA quarterf'inals
- Qlris Parker ran two yards for

NEW YORK (AP)- The Fresh Air Fund
is geaing a fresh face: Mariah Carey.
The singer will be tile SJX*eswomanfortlle
117-ycsr-old orpnizalion, and its C8lllp in
JTlSbkill will be renmncd Camp Mariah.
The Fresh Air Fund bas been Jli'OVidlng free
summer vications in the countty-10 New York
City cllildrcn since 1877. More dian 10,000
youngstas go eiCh.)'elliO volunteer families in
lbc Nortbcast and Canada or altaid one of fi'IC

By DAVID BAUDER
Associated Prell Writer
When tbe Rolling Stones tour
started, tbere were worries time
was no longer on tbelr side.
But despite some beavy competition. tbe Srooes are lltely to eoc1
1994 as tbe year's top concert draw
in Nortb America, aa:ordiDB 10 two
COIICCI'l industry tndc publications.
Wbeo tbelr U.S. tonr ends on ·
bee. 18, tbc Ston.es ~ill bave

~imt~- jmtinet

· RuNTINOTON, W.Va. (AP)

Carey pipes up for fresh air

Oh, baby! ·oon't be a couch potato right from the cradle
By FRAZIER MOORE
AP TeleYblon Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Notes
from a cbat between a TV critic
and bis newborn 1011:
"How .can I respect a fatber
wbo watches television for a liv. ing?"
· "Kind of barsb, don't you
tblnk? You say you need a diaper
cbange?"
"I meao, just because I'm only
a few boors old doesn't mean I was
born yesterday. Thanks to my
trusty umbilical coni I was on tbe
information superbigbway even as
a zygote. I even bad my own Internet address. Used 10 e-mail viewer
comments to 'Dateline NBC.' "
"Wbicb means now you're
going to tell me you know all about
TV."
"I know Jimmy Smits couldn't
carry David Caruso's jockstrap.

Sports

•,::r•

'f

_J

.. .

I

. '

I

uwcb.

Scblater tbcn brote in tobloct a
punt by Wellsville's Shawn Carter,
witb Bersman plctins up tbe
bouncinll ball and going tbe last six
yards 10 make it21-0.
"Tbe blocted punt was tbe
killer," Thayer said.
The bi&amp;hligbt for Wellsville an 88-yard touchdown run by
Carter in tbe third Cjlllra.
Without bis long, zia-zagain
run. Welisville would ba'IC finished
witb just 39 total yards on· its 38
otber plays and would bave bad ·
two yanla rusbing oo ~ attanpts. :
"The defense played superbly,"
Hetrick IBid. " We ga'IC tbem one .
play all day - wben tbc quarterback scrambled - and tbat was
about all tbey_got.•'

Sports brief
Autoracbtl

NEW YORK (AP) - Seventime WinsUJa Cup cbampioo Dale
Eambardt, Ia rctlrinl. from Buscb
Grand NIIDIIIal bciai·
Elralul1k llkl be will «Mnue
to run a Chevrolet Ia tbe ICries
witb Jeff Green ""''flfncd 10 drlvt
14 - • lbc pon!!riHty olruoDinB tbe entire-.. 1111995.
Meanwhile, Mario Alldrettl,
who ~ frnlllllllly-&lt;:11' l'lldai •
tbe encl of the 1994 aeuon
received tbc Driver of the Ycar•i

E«mmalP Lifetime Acllicveatelll
Aw.-d as tbe ..U'I top~.
.v

�... .

'

hll•

Pon.eroy--,Middleport-GIIIIpolla, OH-Polnt Pl....nt, WV

.C2-8unday nmes-Sentlnel

'

Decem.,.. 4, 1114 •·

In the Raiders' season opener,

-lrvi~e

River Valley ·beats. South
Point
78-68
Pridar

Br, G. SPENCER OSBORNE

Tn

1

• M)l -

S...llael Sid
as good Ill exbibilico by

Graham as I've seen," llid South
Point mcnwr Rlclt Huckabay after
bls Pointers fell 78-68 to River

Valley
nigbt at River Valley
Hip Schoo In die aeaaoa opeoer
for bocb leams.

OH Point Pll'llnt, WV

Tbc Grabam 10 wiKm Huckabay
was referring was River Valley
junior point guanl JUDie Gralwn,
wbo tied wilb Je+mun wmmu
Greg James for ICOI'ing boDon widl
23 points. "We couldn't put a biDdle on blm and Jamca," Hucbbly
added.

"I saw some quickness and
intelligence," said River Valley
boss Mike Jenkins In n:prd to die
sharp and 8CCUI'IIIe passing lbat, 81
dip' game wore 011, helped lnak die
'Pointers' prc•aurc aerense and
opened up ac:oriDg opp&lt;xtunltlca In
the paint as well as frolli thrcepolntnmge.
The Raldera ·ICOICII die game's
fii'St points on Clraba!n' sin-the-lane
jumper 12 seconds Into tbe eonteat,
but aopbomon: gllllld Kevin Pennington got five of bla seven poinll
In ·die next 39 sc:cooda to give die
Pointers a S-21ead.
The trade of buckets between
BI'IICC Ward- tbe Raiden' 6-foot3 junior center contributed wbat
may be die quleteat 18 poinll bc'U
bave all yea- - and Pointer guard
James Staley, peac:ncd lbe guests'
tbree-JJOint lead In die next minute.
Then Ward's basellne jumper was
rebound In tile ftnt quarter;;, Frfclalu~'ch•'• -- tbe start or a 12-o· run by tbe
aon-opentna aame 11 River VaUey
b Sclaool. Raiders that saw Graham' 1 eigbt
The ltalden WGD '78-68 d•pltlbeJna outnbonnd- points - six of those came on a
ed 32-l5. (Timu-Sendnel pboto by G. Spem:er pair of three-point sbots from

GETTING IN POSmO~ - River Valley'•
Brett Boothe (24), Bnce W81'd (50, with only the
0 Yillble and Grea J - (loW.r middle tbird ol
the photo) KNen· oat Soatll Point'• Kevin Pennlnaton (3l) and Matt Coraett (between Werd
and James) willie waltlnl to pull down tbe

,,

Oaborne)

•

(See RAIDERS oa C3)

-. .--. . a..
----a..
-5

-M.ta.-ll

NBA stanclinp

_..._
~

1:t:t.
. . . . . . . Jf
Now Yart ................7

w_... . . .

It

......................7

S Jll
7 JOO

I'IIIIIIIIIJ*Io ............ J

.31.1

-

.s

1
I
- , . . , ............. .6 10
....................4 p

s.s

6
6J
7

.JIS·
.:101

"

a.Joae ..................7
Cldcllo....................7
Dolloi. .................... ..7 7 JOO
~ --~ ....... J

I .Jil
P .m

AIJuta ....................s

---

-

WIISTERN CONFERENCE

~ ~

li:. . . .. . . . .Jf
. 1.11111 .........................,

6 .600
S Jl3

llllllo ..................- 1
Doo........................7
~~~- .............7

.................. 11

-

3

3.5

9

60

.......................9

l
6
6
7

Ool!lol .................

.......... ........6

.643
.600
.571
.~l

-LA. C1Jw.. -__
.......
.6 ·14
1 M2
,,.0
.000

frldaJ'II!CIInl

-·llolnol.

· .. Cldcllo.l:30 p.m.
...,. .. llllllo. f:lO p&amp;
a.Joae•n-w. 9p.m.

-·---

C:OU.II.IIDIJ0..7S

- ·:th110S.
UIIY. 103.Yolo
Anllrl3
Cow
53

--......

-.IIIIIIIO. Lolllollld.UII•. 72

Soulb-IS6,PIINVIowll4
St. IO, Mo.·' • " Clly 41

___..
Tounoam•ta

....,.

,.., .....

Ciuobridfi
67.-('
~ !I,NU•ll

Cll. S6

~-11.15.-1111¥.67

..........a.

~VoniiJ

• c.an.td 61, OlrW 61

Coo!OD Cod!. IU, IDdiDD Rhw 61
CootooOI- !14, Alllll&lt;ooiS
Cootoo lolcrt.Jey 73, Cooloo TlmJooo

Ooook

- 1 7 . Clocqlas..An.S
·
..

11o11 SL 91, Tri-SIIOo S6

60

...,,_.

c.n-a-

...,,.....

c-L~t~Ka-SLI9,T-~6'1

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

I --a-

=z::.!OI,WJo..-~

. ,..... 10

.....,..a -

.,

018311 . ~-n(OT)

LIWo
. ll, Otl fal)o4l.O.

... .._,,~Todl63

•.=!¥

n

69.14ll-!4

CeD!orriii•61,Cio. l..obto Sl
C.lnllllpt. Q,llT.R. Acid. !l
o..,ril Folio 76, C.yollop IIU. S6
~ 65, Yoo. Unullao S9
CIOMI7l, OIMrliD 71
CboobJro Rl,. VII. 71, S. Pollt61

- . ...... 17
·-l:l,lool$0

-On 79, Cll SL·I'IOolloa 6l

=

79,ldlriooc.do... .

..

'f_j ~·

r

f '

turcs,

l.

Inc.

..

--~~~=~W~ard~'s~exit
witbquarter.
8-forin tbe fourth

~

Mqn elwk11 IIUIU /or /Hikr lilliJtf.

P.O. BOX&amp;14". ~

RIPLEY, WV. 25271
1oii00-458~8980

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE
PAIN CONTROL CLINIC

''Confused
. . about
life insurance?
Rely on me to.help you
make the rigbt

choices.''

WEIGHT CONTROL

•

CIL lolcHicboloo·6P,IUoloY 43
CIL - · 71,!'; c.n.O..a S7
CIL Sl.-&gt;r,CILAibo~
CIL ~M,Cla. OIM&amp;Io S7
CIL TaylOr Ill, -lolloioo 64

Cll. WIJMOIIUIII 74, CiL W•l«&lt;
J11U164
I,
CiL !7!~111,....,$3
CJo,
.. M. Clo. 1111117
CILI 'lrfiM76,TDI.IAMy6'1 ·
CJo. OIM'rillo 10, Clo. CoWawaod 60
Cit. u .....w.. 13, Clo. Monlllll
63
'
Cl&amp; NDCL 5l,lollddl.n.Jd Cwdllol
G
Clo. JliDdll 'If. Clo.llll Todl64
Clt.loulb 91. Clo. x.a..dJ 14

·'

Apii \..a;~,.

CJo.-...IO, IlothoiT.. I9
CJo.DwM71,'a!CASI
CJo. Lookluolll, CJo. Roodi!ll 3S
CIL 64, Clo. l..udnt.t Qor,

CiL Ttlplo 61,1tlqo !2

·'

.

llrid_.

--r-~a..

il

partofit

'i tate

can Joday ;~, ~m:. i~r~~.;aiba ' ·' ·

61, Trimbloll

lloyVW. . ,7.11fldt*k S6
Becdswood 66, l..utbenl B. 6)
ledlord 65, Cit. c.bo1Jo S6
IJellllftiO. Rldunolld- 4l
lleiJmoe7l,t.t.-.Q
lleoll!lg!o Lopa ~.N. Uu 43
Ilia W11111t6l, 01ototoo1t1 4l
BloonleJd 46, NmurJ,.
8owllo1 Orteo 61, - - 4 4
!14, Clllb lJ
-oiTI,Southloatoo73
Cohwra.r: n, y-...,EIIt71

.-SL1!1,s..AnMioo.76
-96,MonboodSLSl

'OtloMol71. w 11 I'

..

lloodaoo !6, , _ I VII. 41

-a-

' · 111!61!1Jt&amp;.ii!f

Some homes try to separate ~ '
you from the environment .:
Our homes make you a

Atu.,to• n. Cary·llawJo• " (01')
AlblaDd7!, Clov..ttol !4
AllliaDdCNtviewtl,l..-66

T~•ta

.

Yoa. Woooey 56, Albllbulo l!da•·

wood(/

Aboo Budai 17, Wll!ll,_ 50
Aboallob• 62, oUroo E. 60
Abo• MIDci&gt;OIIc&lt; 91 , lllpllllld73
Amollo61,CiD.- l 3
--S!oole 61, LoniD Cod&gt;. 50
Aul10, JICbol 0eDtcr 61

Loyall ldorymouoiiO, sw .....,_

'

J

s.u- 'llol. ll, - -!2
Ohio U.S. boys' scores

73 (2 01')

1

WOI1bllp&gt;o IU, WtOhnlllo

.........,,s.l7,L,-a..,,

l11uftlao 7S, Albtoa 72
--SLI4,Mu .... ll

.-

,.~

-

S.39
U,. Arlbato• S2, 0.'"..,.... 43
Vlctoxy Clio. .S, Aboo 0.. 16
W....Uio N. 49, Wortbl..... ltl~
bolnooiO
.........., HI1Jo 4 0 , - Sdoool
1l

(,U-I'nl~

r.w...

..... SL 10, SL

-,..m.56.N.Oialotod4l
SIMiion7l, You. J.lllorly6l

Replar-oetloll

MldoDU6'1, TilDa S6

...

,..,w.yo,
.....

!

-T-1

............... IICIIoll

'

:paled

....,_,
..,_.,.,_,

I\IJoml (Qdo) 61, CloociDDIII29

__

"

~ ....

Ohio women's
college scores

Ml\formen's
college scores

' •

Carol Snowden
342 Sec. Ave•
Galllpol(a, Ohio
Ph. 446 4280
· Home 44&amp;4518

'.
I

ITAtl IAIM

A

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
.
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUfSDAVS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT
(304) 675-1675

•

II!IUIANC\

CAUMEo

· State Farm
· Life Insurance Company

SP'ECI.9l.LS

8-fcr-22 fteldlgoal shooting bid 4-for-8 markslinansbip from Sbangri-la handled
:'pimarily by Staley and junior forward Aaron Johnson, saw James
nail two of bis three treys wbilc
Lloyd and Ward combined for 12
poinla In die paint.
Tbougb wbat finally caged lbe
Pointers was die Ralden' 10-for-16
efflllt atlbe foul line, River Valley
conlcln't e~pand on tbe 12- and 13point leads they beld In the last
four minute&amp; of die eonteat. Tbn:e
treys - tWo by Staley and one by
Jolmaon -In die game's llnal two
minutes were pimarily responsible
for the Raiders' not being able to
outpaee tbem or subsdtute as freely
as JenkiDll would bave liked In die
last two minutes.
"Tbey didn't quit out there,"
Jenkins llid of the Pointers."But
after be (Corneu) burt uln lbe first
balf, we abut bim down." be added
1n n:gard to Cornett'• setting only
six of bis eiJbt seeond-balf points ·
from die field.
Graham's offense came mainly
from 8-for-17 field-goal shooting
tbll included a 3-for-S eflon fnim
tluee-~int territory. The bulk of
James a offeiiiC came from 9-for14 fldd.Joallbootlng tbat Included
a 3-for-6 sbowml from beyoiJd tbc

Cornett finilhed with 18 points
coming primarily on 7-for-12 fieldgoal sboollng.

--

Tbis week~ncla will bave
River Valley
s Meigs In tbc
Marauclers' season opener Tuesday
nigbt. Then the Raiders will play
their rust road game of tbe year
_Friday at Marietta. .
-•-•-•RIVER VALLEY
(24-12-14-28oo78)
Graham ~-3-4f7•23, JIJIIICI 6-3113=23, Ward 8-0-212= 18, Lloyd 41-1/4=12, Hunt ().().212-2, Totals:
23-7-11119='711
Total FG- 30-S4 (SS.6'1&gt;)
Tbree-polntere-7-14 (SO%)
Rebounda- 2S (Lloyd 7) '
Asslstl- 28 (Ward 9)
Steels- 18 (Uoyd 8)
Tumoven- 12
-•-•SOVTB POINT
(15-16-13-ll::QI)
Staley 4-4-212=22, Cornett 7~
4/6=18, Jobnaon 3-1-012=9, Pennington 3-0-111•7, Wilson 3-0011=6, Fridley 1-0-1/2.3, Kerfoot
1-0-0/0•2, Reynolds 0-0·1/:z;.l,
Totall: 12-5-9/lli=Cil
Total FG- 27-66 (40.9%)
Thl'ftopolnten- S-1 0 (50%)
Rebounds- 32 (Cornett 9)
Aaslata- 9 (Pennington S)
Stella- N/A
Tumoven-N/A

- I

'

"We didn't play. We didn't
seem to realize tlaat they tied lbe
srore. Tbcy didn't win die game ...
we didn't play In overtime," be

.•

••

K. Smith 6-3-(W-21, C. Smith
3-0-011-6, Frye 2-0-0/o-4, Anna
1-0-0/0=2, Marks 1-0-012•2.
Totals: 13-3-411Joo35
Reserve conteat - Gallla
Academy 44, Olcsapeake 8
Scorhltl leaden - not available

0

•.

Norris Northup Dodge Parts ..,......., Is llow
OHerlag IEII DAY Delivery For all Y•r
AutoMotive IIHtls.

EIGIIIE PARTS·ACCESSORIES·IODY PARIS
Contact lola Misner or Pill MltcWI
PHONE W.OI42 •

1991 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE

'199

461 SOUTH THIRD

PHONE 992-2196

1\flODLEPOR'T ~0~

4 Door, 6 cyl., loaded, U.... mil&lt;oo.

1991 MERCURY GRAND
1220
· MARQUIS LS
4 Door, VB, loadod, .,..,. U.... miho

1990 PONTIAC GR. PRIX LE
1
160
4 Door, 6 cyl, auro, air, caaJ, PS, PB,

PW, PDL, PSTS.

3.8 V-6 eng.( P. steer . P. brakes, auto.

·1992 DODGE DYNASTY '153

trans ., Climate Control, air cond ., AM/FM
stereo cassette, air bags, leather interior,
dual P. seats, P. windows &amp; P. locks, rear
defroster, cast aluminum wheels, 21,000

· 4 Door, 6 cyl, l&lt;oaded

)991 FORD ESCORT

'122

Sro . wogon, 4 cyi,S Spd, AMIFM, PS,
PB

miles, one owner.

'll,l.

• 1990 FORD TAURUS LX
• 4 Door,

~

cyl, loadod, l&lt;ow miLo•,

4.6 V-8 eng., P. steer., P. brakes. auto.
trans., air cond., Climate Control,
AM/FM stereo cassette, tilt &amp; cruise, P.
windows &amp; P. door locks, P. seats, rear
defroster, cast aluminum wheels .

--

&lt;:'

• 4 cyl. eng ., P. steer., P. brakes, auto.
trans., AM/FM stereo cass ., air cond. ,
cruise control. P. windows &amp; !;'. locks,
rear defroster, cast aluminum wheels,
18,000 miles. One owner.

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP RAP
D.IUVERBD AND SPRUD!
•Mason
.•Top Soli
-concrete Sand
•Fill Dirt
•Pit Run ,
•Driveway
•Drainage Gravel
Mat
•Pea Gravel
•Draihage Tile
.Culvert Tile (all sizes up to 5')
•Block and Mortar Mix

17 lbootlna tblltnclucled a 4-f«-9
effort from tbn:e-polnt countty .

Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.®

said.

.Reserve contest - River ValIcy 49, South Point47
Scorln_J leadera - Richard
Stepbens (River Valley): 13: Brandon Kitts (Soulb Point): 13

arc:.
Sll!ey "nhhed wilb I tcam-biJh
22 poiDta coming IDOIIly 011 8-for-

Home OOke: Bloomlflllon, Illinois

•

opposite sides of tbe court - belp
pj!'sb tbcm a 16-7 lead wltb 3:26
left In tbc flfSI quarter.
1 Botb teams essentially traded
baskell In the remainder of the
qUarter. However, the Raiders, on
two occaslonaln die second quarter, saw tbe Pointers cut tbcir lead
to four before die Raiders, wbo led
by as maliy as 12 in die ruu minute ..
-of act two brcanee of Doug Lloyd's
trey, bad to settle for a five-point
1 lead a1 balftime.
I River Valley was 10 for f4 from
: die field - Ibis figun: Included a
: 4-for-6 showing from three-point
, I'III&amp;C -In tbe lint quarter, com.filth South Point's 6-for-17
;effort. But lbe Pointers' pc:nerver1 anc:e was bell Jefiected In dleir 7for~12 abowlng In tbe secood quar, ter, a fnme tlaat saw River Valley
.: five of 13.
• The Pointen cut the Raiders'
: lead to 36-33 In die fii'SI minute of
:die tbird quarter on junior fJmlman
:Matt Cornett's In-die-lane jumper.
!But die Raiders, wbo were effccttive sbooting in tbe paint as weD as
•outslde it. &amp;bowed tbcy wanted to
it to die Pointers by getting die
,ball to Ward. He n:spondcd with
:six of die Ralden' 10 in-die-paint
•points in the frame. Tbat belped
itbem to weather tbc l'qintera' end:or-the-quarter charse and take a
fsix-polnt lead Into die final frame.
~ Tbougb Ward would join the
:PointerS' Larry Wilson on lbe pine
:as foul-out victims, River VaUey

r

'l'riiJiy 13, ""''Lite~
• · ....
ntU.~n
llia'i...o.,. $0,Xooloa.. 26
lolo)llold "· ...........
- . . Vnoo 40, Pnolollollll. 31
Onroll Orud VIlli)' !1, Plla•¥1111

Tr_.,_n,.a-.

To..llat'o 181D•

.......

-

1'lllldop 103, RIO !lllANill! illS

-·~IOp.m.

a..- 4!1,Cit. _ , . 31
o.wpo&amp;S7, Q

I-IM-C. ... T MIIooel09, IIMII-E11156
w. Uloorty " ' · - 6l

~"Oolillo!lolo,IO:lOp.m.

W.Ttcbl9

O.W..Q,W--31
Dublia 56, ~22
s.toUN.II,hdrord:l6
-dl,CoLW-*1

~60.Eunb54

-oUoollloiOp.m.
Ml•...,., ll LA. CUfpln, IO:J) p.m.

I==

39

..-.-.

bonlllof-ootcb.
.
WISCONSIN: N - !""" DoiNdy

a .. w.niiiJI 59, Clo. Uacola·W. .

Qdo DomloiCID ~l. CIDciDDIII Bible

'l'IM1 piiYed SaturdaJ

-

........
MISSISSIPPI: N...... Tollllly Tu·

- -.... n.., . . - ...

a.. - 1 6

O..Hoyl04,0~

.

Joey Bon. ........... ,.......... ....
loll-.
'
omo .STATE: Slpod lobi Coopor,

-

' I
C1o. Collllwaod ll, 0.. Oloa'rillo 3l
Clo.B. Ttcbli,CIL -26
O..l!loi4Z.

GIMftlloiiQrT..a--t

Jfilrlllll!l91

Wl!lblqjDI .. No. Yart.7:l0 p.m.
~---7:30p.m. Jlbll!ldolpbla 11 CLBVI!UND, 7:30
p.m.
7:30p.m.
Jw:u .......... J...,.lp.m.

14

r ... .,. .....Jn--..

71

C41lllp

DillE: AIIOIDCed lh• ..... , . or

."

oth teams an: In the tournament for tbc second time. Oblo loll
1549 10 Iowa In a lint I'OIIDd same
In 1989, Hunter'• first year with
the Bobcats, wllilc Cal-Irvine lost
to tbe Hawkeye• 124-88 In the
cbampionsblp same 1n 1987.
Cal-Irvine coach Rod Baker
couldn't believe the Anteaten
couldn' 1 hold tbe halftime lead
against Oblo 81 well • 1 four-point
advantage with 6S aeconcls to play.
"Tbey' re ranked 1-4th In the
country. Do you tblnt they're
going into the locker room and
pack dleir 8lllff up and goT' Bater

g:::r

. 9-lOLit])YlY

10

&lt;•

'Cootoa lolcltllloy II, CUiol Timbo

Mooot Vonobo N - I 13, DomiAJ.
qo,N.Y.,
Tllllllll9, St. v- 94 (01)

LA.Libnl07,-ol9

-

...

...... (I

112= 11, Munn 2-2-010.10, ColeSenior Mcshan Kolcun, who · man~ Mllllroa 2~.
finished wltb 11 potoll &amp;aiDed Hastwell 1·0-0/o-2 Tlclcett 1-0mainly on S-for-11 fleld-soal 01().2. Totals: ~s-57
sbootlngtorecord ber sixth COIIII'JC·
Total FG- ~I (41'1&gt;)
utive double-figure aame, led In
Three-polnten- 3-10 (30'1&gt;)
assists and stcala and pulled down
Rebounda - 27 (Coleman 9)
five rebounds.
Blocked abotl- none
Kelli Smith led the Panthers
Alllltl- 18 (Kolam 9)
witb 21 points.
Steall -13 (HIItwell4)
Turaoven- 13
Tbis week' a agenda bas tbe
-•-•- .
Angels (2-0) fadng Warn:n Local
Claaapelke
at Vlncelit on·Monday before play(U.IO.l-11-3..)
ing Marietta In lbclr bonle opener
· ·· ·
on Tbursday.
-·-·-·Gallla Ac=
(12-12-11·
Pope 8-1-3/3-22, Kolcun S-0-

de(-.

l b e - Wbooolllap of die w-.
llo&lt;by........
.

Ohio U.S. girls' scores .

TOIII'IIAIIIIDia
(o\1_ ..... ~

011- ll.l, Now Yen 100
AIWia !Jl,CIICIID II

Sill-"·

__ ,.,"'

olpod 01• TYWcmi:J,

ZIIIIYiUt JloleCIIM.73, Wll&amp;lrford '2

lrilloi71,So-•...... 7J
Coo!OIIIoriloop Clor. 4!1, -

period. Sbc a1ao bad six rrhomda.

AN~-="~ DiFcKS: AI· ·

~,I,IDIIard4l

-76,C..W....,.SI

fbllldllpblaW, 'mE~ 96
-107,-103
-lll,Noori-JI
WllbiDfDilll,Dollvtll04

HockiJ

You.CIIINYIO, You.B-71

Roplar- oetloll

lJ
4
IOJ•

WOIIbiDIIOI .ltllbouruo 70, W.W01

Other Ohio men's
coUege scores

I.S
l

..UMoo,piiOd.Piootd ....... WWW..,
l'orword,oodle bojund 1111.

_,.

eo.

Mimy St. 107, Troy St. 'II
N.C.·WIImlllatoo 73, N.C.·AibeYIIIe

4 .733

LA. . -..............9

-

l
ZJ

6 J31
7 JOO
13 .133

uoo- ................z

-

lil

tbololundJJoL
Dl!NVBR NUOOm: A&lt;ll- Dor·

WorlliiiiiOI Qr, 62, Col. Nvf11!111111

l9

Cln&gt;Jiu "· tauob Clrolill31
I1So\lr -

r-. '"""

~oo1tor Trtway 72, Doylt1towa
~:,_79,Coftlrylllr. 74

a.ctuoti60, T-o 41

,011

'!
CRICAOO lULLS: Ploeod Corio
Blollll, !orword, 01 die l¥ond 1111. Ad!•,..... ...., ~ryo~~:ow~ot.

WoodJDon14,S-kyPdD73(Z

'at" r'

T-

to

........llookltbal
I 'A• I,

_ ,.....,......Uo$6

MoiDo !10, Alcon SL 79
SB-Il,I'Oioflold15

J
J.l
l
l
JJ
4

' .61!
6 JJI
7 JOO

PADRBS~Hd

mloor·llopo---·

.,...........,,._,.

II9WCIIJa-

--·

sAN DIBOO

Wor-.WO IS, Dildo 40
Wollotooll, Co.-o VII. 6l
W-1l.B-!I

Pinl-

S .Ml

Proctorville, Gallla Acidemy'a
IJI11e Aaaela ~~~~ down S.R. 7
friday night to face tbe CbeaaJleake Panthers, and tbc Angela
1!8DJC bact wilb die IIIIIC dllng tbcy
took bome wltb them tbe nlgbt
Qcfore- a win.
· Tbc Anaela won S7-3S In 1*1
tiy ac:oring one points lesa In tbe
llrst ba1f lbaD die Panlbcra ICOICd
In die eontest.
: Junior forward Mindy Pope
P,Owered tbe Academy's offense
wltb a same-blah 22 points gained
mostly on 9-for-18 field-goal
shooting. Twelve of ber points
Clllli! Ill tbe first quarter 10 equal
die 'peake' a offensive outpJtln die

u.-

lo- Aid«

w.... a..... l9, - 7 4

SLI'IUr'oi4,Noor~61

c.n~- ·

CIJMlLANI) .........P
lldlou ....................l

17

Oiarp Wllblqloo 17, S. CtnJIIuSt.

ICIIOillcu

N-.J'CIUCAOO CIJBS: l'llolld Do\'t Otto,
plto:bor, ......... for
or ....
llahlm11110011dltlollll-

w~ 76, Pladlay 55
Womo69, Colldwoll 6j (01')
WoolilioiiOD C.ll !1,

... o\--~lla..k

i.a,Twenty-four lloun
after openlas
tban 10 m11ca from

m111aor •-d Slen Poucnh pilchlll
IIOICil ellblool Vlllloy Ill die Now York·
Peu ....._ ..d Prut Nmne mlacw·

......

pia

Trent made It 66-64 wltll ~s sec- bcaiiCalt 83-50.
onds left. Bul die Anteattn failed
Nortll Cuulltllll •"
SoatiJC..'
to Ice die same wbcn MiJIInleks
and Kevin SimmoiJI eacb mined
South Carolina COKII Eddie
the front ends of one-and-one Fogler gave ..,. Tanpk OJ!Idl Jolm
opportUnities In tbe final 28 sec- Cblney bad never bad a ICB be 10
onds.
unpoductive. 1'billp CQUIIIy
Trent took a pass from Geoo bad for tbe COKbel of Yale and
Fool and acmd a layup 10 knot die Kent.
same at 66-66 as the final born
So mud! was
10 poorly In
so many placea,
It was only
aounded 10 force ovatimc.
''Tbcre was a aii'Cidl wben we ba1ftimc.
Of the five Top 2S aamea
dido '1 aeon: and tbcn be (Treot)
came down and laftd two, tbree played Frid~t, four were
by intclnalltimes In a row," Bater said. ''Two IIIOJe or leu
wecta aao nobody tnew mytblns sion. Tbc only euepli011 was ~o.
about Gary Trent. Now every· 14 Ohio' 1 vkiOiy over Cal-Irvine
body's lllkinl about bim. He did lnovenlmc.
tonight wllal good piayen do...
No !Cim - 100ft impreaslve
Ford scored 15, Gus Jobnaon In tbe tint balf IbiD Nutb Carollbad 12111d JIIOD Terry bad II for 111, and no coac11 was 11101e dejectdie Bobcats, wbo made nine of 10 ed tban Fogler.
"I tolcllbcm tbc game was over,
free throws in the overtime to
and you doll'tteU your kids tbat
secure die win.
Raimonda Migllnlcta scored 17, too oftaJ II balftlmc, '' Fogler llid
Chris Brown bad 13 and Khalld after Nortb c.olina mate lS of ill
fii'SI 17 111011 and built a o40-polnt
CbanneU bad 10 for Cal-Irvine.
"We did wbal we wanted to In lead In die first balf.
Rasheed Wallace aad Jerry
die last six seconds of Je!ntiAtinn we got die ball in Gary47~," Stackbouac ICORd 17 _poinla each
Hunter said. "I felt like we dodged In die tint bllf as tbc 1ir Reds (3a buge bullet."
0) abot 67 pcra:ol aDd llOilllllitled
In otber Top 25 action, No. 2 only three lllnlOVCn.
Fogler had die &lt;4nooocb (1-2)
North Carolina beat Soulb c.ot1na
9S-S8, No. 10 Cincinnati beat Tem- open with a zane clef-. llld die
ple 6041, No. 16 Con!JCCIJcut beat T• Hecla pcwpdy l8lt five dnc\'ale lOS-53 and No. '22 SYJ~CQSC
(See TOP B • C..)

GAHS girls post 57-35_ win over Chesapeake ·

Nouilod lollb ......... IIIII Bnd

.

held a 30.18 n:!wmdlna edse In
tbc lint 20 mlnutea.
.
••you Clll mate • million CIQJio
es, but people acrou die coun~
would have seen tbla as a lou,
Tn!nt uld. MYou an talk about oar
~~:hednle, beiDa 011 tbe 1181, bdna
tired. It' a no factor.
"You have to suck It up and
play. I doll't Willi.; lite aytblna
away from Cal-lrvine. rm juat not
ver~leased with tbe way we

Friday nlaiJt'a Hawkeye la.atatlonalllnt-roaad aune Ia Iowa
sald.
City, Iowa, wllen tile Bobeatl
Cbris Brown's two free throw&amp;
woa81-731DOftrtlme.(AP)
witb l:OS remaining gave Cal._.__ _.::::.__ _ _ _ ___, . Irvine a (i6.(i21cad, but a bucket by

.v.-.
olldllu "*"Ill Cltorlelloa of
111e So-til- o\lluilc ~MauD: lump Wlllo

w..... Rldp 71, Col. BOoclocroft65

sw- St.l9,lllcNMISt.64

JJ
4J

.417

W. M,.kblpmlloi, ...... IO

~.,.-SL74

lil

lila 25 polnta onr OC-Imae'a
Slaaan Battle In till lin&amp; 11t1111 o1

.-

_,.!'I

Miiiiiiii'PI St.IO, Co. . . 76

By GREG SMII'II
.
· IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP)Ohio Unlveralty'a Gary Trent
keeps gealnadle PJbllclty llld die
141&amp;-llllbd Bobclll tecp ndDq
up die wins.
1'lllt - tbc formula ...... Friday 81 'Iialt ICOftld 2.5 polnta and
arablled 1-4 n:boundl to lead Obio '
to an 81-72 oven1mc vlcrGry over
Cal-Irvine In tbc filii round of tbc
Hawkeye lnvlt!Jdootl.
"You am never let cnonplnk.
I just play. If you win and you do
tbe ript dllnga, you'n: loiD&amp; 10 Jet
. tbe lnlc,.. TieDt lllld.
Obio (S-1) played Iowa In Sllllrday nigbt' s championship. Tbe
Hawkeyes beat Peppcidlne 99-63
later Friday DiKbl In tbc Oilier lintround eontest.
Tbc Bobcala bave yet to play In
front of tbelr home crowd: '11ley
Ioc*cd rasged aa111nat lbe An.,....
(0.2), faiUng beblnd 39-30 It balftimc wbile Tn:ot atrusalocl with
only four points. Cal-Irvine also

(left)..,.. to tllelloop lor two o1

111ioo Coulty,lad. ~. Eoloo lS
Ulllttd 64. W-.
(01')
Vw ..... 66,N.B-65
v-.u.a ..... l9 TJpp City 44
VldiJrJ Clr. 76, Aava a.r. 16
W. .r.tl'tnOD 40, BuJoy 311

~c.a...

in OT; ·UC &amp; North Carolina also win

TRENT SCORES - Olllo
Vnlnn!ty lorwerd GUJ Trilat '

TAJaNG AIM- Tllldna aim In froid olltll bencb II River Valley ·:
lonrud Gntl J---. wlao llaiM'hed three ol the Ralden' MYIIl tlaree. :
DOinten In Friday nJPt'a 1aome pme agalmt South Poln&amp;. ne n:· •
i;allla Academy trontman c:anaeJfll polntl to help pub tlae Ralden :
to a 78-611 win. cn--s.ntlael photo by G. Spencer Oabome)

..

' .J .'

SPECIA.I.S OF THE WE.EJC
1983 OLDSMOIILE CUTLASS CIERA

1987 FORD TEMPO 2 DR.

2 Dr., V-6 eng., P. steering, P. brakes, 4 cyl. engine, power steering, power
auto. trans., AM/FM stereo cassette, tilt brakes, 5 speed transmission. AMIFM
and cruise, air conditioning, new tires,
rear defroster.

stereo cassette, air conditioning, rear
defroster.
I
·

2,215

8

0

0

•

�aec.mber 4, 1114

1814

from the hardwood •.•

Tile strina of 28 ~onseculive
flee dlrowa dW die GaWa Academy Blue Devib' Ron fcrgUIOII set
in 1970 still atanda as the school
-t. but wllat a time It wu dial
tile Gallla Acaclcmy Blue Anacla'
McJilan Kolcun bid In due"tMMJ
tbalmut.
FCfJIIIOII' I .aeak started iD tile
1970podioD of die 1969-70 ICUOD
wltll awlallea In bla last two
attempts iDa 64-59 lou to Well·
ltoD OD JU. 9. After haviDJ DO
attempts In a Ian. 10 pme qalnat
AtlleDI, perfection continued for
die six-foot acnill' In dais qsl!loo:
Jan. 16: 7 for 7 vs. Meigs (11
IOial points)
Jan. 17: 2 for 2 (four total
points) va. Coal Grove
Jan. 23: 10 for 10 (18 total
poinll) agalnlt l...opl
Jan. 24: 3 f9f 3 (his offenalvc
tolal) qalnat Albena
Jan. 30: 2 for 2 (his offensive
101111) qalnat Jackson
Feb. 2: bia first two (12 points in
all) before mlsalng one against
Cheaapeelre I
TllC Blue Devib willlelscd Ferg11aon end Ills farewell 'aeason as
tile Soutllcaatern Oblo Atllletic
League'stop flee dlrow shooter.
Like Fcrauaon, tile yQungc•t
dlugbter of AIIIJy and Debbie Kol-.
can or Oalllpolll bid llllf lbc sea1011 belllnd her when sbc llllrtCd her
streak, which contributed to tile
Blue Angels' post-scaaoo tourna·
mcnt success before continuing
lniO tile opening same of her senill'

BJ TIM Ailodat.d rrThe NBA has triple-doubles,
r'double-doub1ca and sometimes

By DAVE BAltltiS
lake i little lime for everybody .¥1
Ttm I Sentlael Con•poat11nt
get use to cacb otllct. 'Oiey bav,e
d · SOIIICtltlng to prove, we llliDt after
S
OS
ROCK SPRIN
- ccon • three or four aamca, people ar~
.year Mcip t:OII:JI Jeff Slr:lmter will go ins to forget aboutlut year·
welcome five reiUrlllng leuaiDCii as
acnlcJn
tbls
tile Melira MarJuden prepare to Meigs bu only roor
011
"
"'---~eniD sea.on's squad of 12.
open lhell' ICISOII ..........y cv g
"Our Joal Is to set beUcr every
wltll a road game aaalnst River game ud to work harder tllu
Valley. •1 first
and ld everybody else. We want to eruc
Skinner
tbc memory of 0-21. We are not tbc
21
squad finished witll a continues same team. We have claht new
and_ tile:u'dlng ~Marauder do people and we do not want to be
~ave -::t:ull-tlmc starters (SeeMAUUDERSanC.5)
returnins, but lien Ewing anc1 o.y
Stanley started a ollmbcr of games. Meigs Marauders'
!:a~attled Injuries during tile
_ SChedule ·

By G. Spencer Ollbom41
Tlmes·Sentlnel Staff

PlaiDs (10 tot8J points)
Ian. 29: 2-2 -vs. Iacbon at Jack- .

~arunl

Mr;Qi~, Heat and Spurs get
. '30·30s' in gaining v~ct~~s
a
r: career::=:

Meigs boys to open .
cage -season Tuesd~y

TALES

son (14 IOial points)
.
Feb. 2: 1-1 vs. Meigs at Rock '
SpriDgs (lltolal points)
.'
Feb. 3: 2-2 va. River Valley (six '
IOial points)
Feb. S: 2·2 VI. Rock Hill at
Pedro (12101al pokata)
Feb. 7: no auempu vs. Losaa at
Logan (no points)
Feb. 14: no attempts vs. Fairland at Proctorville (six total
points)
Feb. 17: no attempls vs. Warren
Local at Vinceat (lix 101a1 points)
Feb. Zl: no attempt~ .,.. Rlftl'
Valley at Rio Graade (lO total

~even,quadrupJc.doubles.
;·
: Lyne Center slate

".....'!l?lcGfor~~ :~~'...~:

•.

· ........,
""' ,......, """
.;at tile Univcnity of Rio Grande's
• Lyne Center.
FilMa center,
(D'miiUimn
•.
md racq•tball courtl
Today - 1·3 p.m. and 6-1 I
p.m.
Moaday-7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Twe.day- 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
WeUIIday- 7 am.-11 p.m.
nlll'llllay -7 a.m.-11 p.m. ·
Friday - 7 am.-9 p.m.
Saturday -1-6 p.m.
Suday, Dec. II - 1-6 p.m.
and6-ll p.m.

maro: ..J!.s

1994 95

Lettermen returning for Meiss
OP!f""l
include Stanley (8.7 pts.ISIIDIC), DJit ·
Ewing (6.1 ptaJpmc), senior Ray Dec. 6 ......................at River alley
,Russell (2.3 pts.lgame), senior Dec. 9...................Nelsonvllle-YII'k
Adam Hcttdrh (1.2 ptsJpmc) and Dec. 13 ................. .Federal Hockin&amp;
junior Cass Cleland (7.0 ptsJgame) Dec. 16 ..........................at Wcllstoo
points)
who started at Soutbem last ICIIIOD. Dec. 20 ...............................at Miller
March 1:6-6 n. New Lexiq·
As far as startera, Skinner laid. Dec. 22 ..................at Point Pleasant
ton at Chillicothe (12 total
·MAll 12 playcr.s arc considered Jan. 3 ........................... RlverVallcy
points)
starters. We are a team, and all or us Jan. 6..............................at Wabama
March 3: l·l n. Sbertdaa at
·are w~ IOgelller 10 acblevc tile Jan. 10 ...............................Southern
. ChUiootlle (13 total points)
same goals. '
Jan. 13 ...................................Bell:
BOLDS CLUB RECORD - Gallla Academy •olor Megbaa Kol·
March 8: 2-2 .,.. Lopa Elm at
Tbe
Marauders
have
seven
Ollber
Jan. 17 ............... ..............at Trim lc
C1lll, alloWD at tile 1111e during Thunday night's pme againlt Fairl.eoctliiter (12 total polnta)
new
races
tills
season.
They
Jan. 20 .................. at Vinton County
her duh-m:ord conseeutlve free-throw &amp;boot·
Dec. 1: her first shot before land, mlllat have
welcome
juniors
Travis
Abbott,
Jan. 24 ............... ..............Alexander
missing tile second VI. Fairland at 1ng streak end at 26 pmea, bat that put her In the Blue Angell' book
Nick
Haning,
Brent
Hanson,
Paul
Jan. 21 .............................. at Eastern
u tbc all-lime leader In that category. Cflmes-Sentklel me photo by
Proctorville (11101al points)
Pullins,
Mark
Mills,
Jerod
Holman
Jan.
31..............atNelsonvllle-YII'k
G. Spencer Osborne)
and Donald YOSL
Feb.
3.................................\Yeilston
. Who's lOins wllcre Ibis \\'Cd[?
. Skinner feels tllat depth wlll be Feb. 7 ........................Point Pleasant
Most ol oor 1oc:a1 vmity reams
one of tile Mlnuders lll'tlllg polnta Feb. 1o...............................at Belpre
arancd tllelr aeaaona last w«k, but
this scaaon, something tile Feb. 14 ...............................Wabama
111m two teams - tile boys' reams
Marauders
lackcd.lut year. MOur Feb. 17 ..................... Vinton County
from Meigs and Rccdavillc Eastern
work ctblc and attitude will be a
_ tbat 1llill begin tbeir business
strengtll· for us." In preseason
(Unless otberwise noted, all
dais week·
practices
and scrimmages tile weekday doubleheaders will have
racing
with-more
tban
$22
million,
ByMIKEBARRIS
·
Here's a look at who's doing
Marauders have not let up from start reserve contests at 6 p.m. and
NEW YORK (AP) - Dale he added a record $3,400,733 in IOfmisb.
what and when.
varsity contests at 7:30 p.m.
Monday (glrla): Gallla Acade- Earnhardt had a bls day Friday, 1994.
Skinner feels dW inexperience .at Weekend twlnbllls will feature
filling
his
pockets
with
cbecka
as
That
broke
his
single
season
my at Warren Local; Jackson at
his reward for a record-tying Wln- record of $3,353,789, set last sea- tbe varsity level will be a weakness. reserve games at 6:30 p.m. and
River Valley; Soutbcm at Meigs.
"We have a lot of new faces, It will varsity games at 8 p.m.)
aeaSOD.
.
Tuesday (boJI): Meigs at River SIOD Cup cllamplonsllip and accept• son . He is the only Winston Cup
ing tbe 1994 i&gt;rlver of the Year driver to have swpassed $3 million
However, It Clllle to an end at Valley;
in a season and has done it tbree
26 sbots In tile Blue Angels' season
Wednesday (Jirb): Eastern at Award.
The 43-ycar-old Earnhardt, times.
opcucr 'lbunday nigbtapln• Fair· Waterrord
Overall, tbe stock car folks disland wileD, after making tile lint of
Thursday (girls): Belpre at whose seventb series dlampionshlp
.•··•
Happy Holidays
:
matched
a
record
set
by
Richard
·
tributed
a record $30 million for
two f'ree !brows IS aeconds from Eastern; Marietta at Gallla Ac:ade. Annual Appreciation Customer Chri;ltrnas
lbc second qw.ter's halfway polnl, my: Federal Hockins at Meigs: Petty in 1979, tbc year that Earn- the
bardt
was
voted
NASCAR
Rootle
A
record
II
drivers
each
won
-allc mlsaed die second Tile mlsaed River Valley at Atbens: Vinton
Give-A-Way by Whittingtons BP, 309 Upper
of tbe Ycar, still Is awed tbat he more lban $1 million, breaking tbe
s11o1 fOrced lbc Angels, wbo even- Co110ty at Soutbcm.
finds
himself
In
dais
posltioa.
m;uk of six set in 1991 and
tually woo 104-33, to seUie for a
Friday (boy•): Alexander at
River Rd. Guaranteed gas, nitrex rm&gt;tor oil"'lbat (seven tides) wan feat I matcbed in 1992. Most of that
·43-71cad at thai point.
Eastern; Gallla Academy at Fair·
·.· , Atlas products. Tick~ts available for free gas
Tile streak made her tile rccool land; Nelsonville-York at Meigs; thought would never be tied," money was handed out Friday
Earnhardt
said
Friday,
before
all
night.
bolder In tills category in Blue River Valley at Marietta: Soutbern
.· . and oth~r prizes . Beginning December 4th,
tile hoopla of tile Driver of tbe
Other business Friday night
;Angd blatary.
,
at Trimble;
1994. Drawing will be December 24th, 1994,
Here's a look at Kolc110 s span
Saturday: River Valley girls at Year l11ncheon at tile famed 21 included $50,000 10 Ken Schader
·of perfection (tournament games Chesapeake (DH-1 p.m.); Eastern Club and tile NASCAR Awards for the DuPont Automotive Finish. 12:00 noon. Numbers will be posted on window
·ue In bold).
.
boys at Chesapeake (DH-6.p.m.&gt;: Banquet at tile eqllllly well known es Award, ~he $50,000 Sears
· • ·one week. If numbers are not claimed, new
Diehard Racer Award to Ricky
Jan. 26: 4-4 w. VInton County Vinton County boy,• a~ Gallia Waldorf·Astoria Hotel
"People let reccmla and goals Rudd, tile $30,000 True Value
(17101111 points)
Academy (DH-6:30 p.m.)
numbers wiU be drawn each Saturday until all
and whatever. I never' realistically Hard Charger Award to Ernie
Jan. 27 : 4-4 vs. Atbena at 1be
,
thougbt ..ybody would tie iL I fig- Irvan, the $30,000 B11sch Pole
' prizes are claimed.
ured scxnetblns would happen and Award to Geoff Bodine, along witb
.· • December Specials
six would be all we could win.
$10,000 to his crew chief, Paul
"Tills year wasn' t-easy, but II Andrews, tbe NASCAR Maoufac• Nitrex oil, filter, lube $16.95 up to five quarts
seems
like
tile
championship
WCDI
Cleve•
_
.
Dauabcrty
said
he
had
made
_
turus'
Trophy
10
Fonl,
a
$2.5,000
(AP)
CLEVELAND
• $20.00 off set of 4 atlas tires
·
slow-progress with physical llxn· by so fast. It's IIIIIZing; SOIIICtlling check 10 top rookie Jeff BllrtoD and
lllld Cavalicn CICIIter Brad Dlugband wutcd to give llimlelf a I never tb011sht would happen. ... the STP Award or $20,000 to
• Tire rotation $6.00
erty said Friday be will uodcrso ~Lance to return to basketball by
I'm just a fonunatc young man Rudd.
• Front brake special, pads , turn rotors
surpy to rellcvc pcniltcllt lower having lbc IIIJ8ery DC:Il week.
from JCaonapoUs (N.C.)."
·
Bill France Jr., president of
l!lck palo and repair two bernlalcd
"My bact will get better. the
Among tllose on hand to sec NASCAR, CXIIgratulated Earnhardt
• 1,-abor as low as $59.95 plus tax
Eambardt receive bia secoad Driv- and the rest of tbc award winners
dlacs.
period of time is liDpredictable,"
• Complete computor service
er or the Year trophy - tile first Friday, saying, "It sta1ed out as a
'I"!
he said during a news conference.
I
~
I" ••• Dr. Henry BohlmaD, wb!J will was in 1987 - was one of his early tragic year witb tbe loss of Neil
Owners
heroes, Bobby Allison.
(Continued rnm C-3)
do die sursery Mooday at
Bonnett and Rodney Orr (in crash..
Jim and Dorothy Whittington .
Allison, now a team owner, es at Daytona In February)."
pointers Iii tbe firSt five minutes ~':'.ssal.:e~of tile said.
''Dale deserves every honor
.
Mgr. Mike Eblin . . •··...
· "Then we had Ernie Irvan' s . ·...·
and Jrllt.)cd a 23-S lead. It was 40u1ar yaeaaon bllt could posaibly he gets. He's a tbrowback', a real
--;/' ~0 Ill tile midway poiDt of tile open- reb In lime for tbc ..Jayoffs DC:Il old time racer. He would have fit In crash (at Michigan in A11gust), and
mlhalfand64-21ailbc~
re
~'""
thank God he is here aud recoverany time. Nobody thousht ing," added France, whose fatller
No.1t ClndonatJ M, T....,ae •1 spriDg.
.
... ,.,......
N C lbc Owls (1The s11rgery might relieve Richard's seven championships
...........ottc, • .•
Daugbelty' s palo lmii!C'Atialely and would ever be touched, but .Dale founded tbe series in 1949. "Now,
l) IDIDIIed only 16 points .in the might also llclp remedy a Jes weak· might just win two or tbree more/' as we look at our series and look
lihead. I can't help but tblnk tllat
fintllalf, tllcn went 12 m•autes ness dcacrlbed by Dau&amp;herty as a
Eaiimardt's acc:aaplishment did NASCAR as a sport still has an
wilbOut a field goal in .tbc second mild paralysis, Boblman said.
not go uorewarded. Already lbc allen route to tylns tile lowest
BoJ!Im• said be would temOve time leadiiiJI moocv winner in auto 11nlimited future, ud we look forward 10 that."
· .pointllltalln CliaDey's 13 years.
ruptured disc malerial thai is pressNo. UiCoaoedkld 105, Yale 53
log on Dauahcny's nerves and
At Hartford, Conn., Donny Mar- passing tllr011gb his spinal cord,
shall scored 2S points and Brian and would trim back a piece or
Fair added 20 IQ lead lbc Huskies bollc ncar lbc ruptured diacs.
(3-0), lVbo led 44-211l balftimc.
He said he was confident
Yale (0·3) committed 23 Dau.&amp;bertY would return 10 play for
turnovers wlllcb Connectic11t lbcCavallcrs.
CDriiOd Into 25 ~·
· "I am cauti0111ly optimistic dW
· •No. U S:t•- 83, Kmt SO
be will," Bohlman said.
At S)'I;ICilse, tile Orangemen
Doctors bad said SllrJery would
bclit Kca't (0-l) to 13 first-half be risky and might not help, ao
~
Dau.&amp;bertY bid been on die rebabil:
r
'lbc ()do=·(2·1) advanced iTal fOii p rogram dcSij"ned to .. "
...
JO tile ... ----- ·- fame Saturday
·
tile muscles around tile

Pool

TodaJ-1·3 p.m. and6-9p.m.
MondaJ- closed
Tllelday-6-9 p.m.
Wedllllday - 6-9 p.m.
Thunday- 6-9 p.m.
Friday -6-9 p.m.
Satvday- 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. II - l-3 p.m.
and6-9 p.m.

-a

·Everything For The
Fish Enthusiast!

PordaDd.
Beat 115, Nell97

.
Rice wu l4-llamlor-18WandiiiiW!rls
14-for-23 for M
.
s so claope.
had .a scason-lllsh 17 rebounds
against visiting New Jersey.
Kenny Anderson paced New
Jersey with 16 points and 13
assists.
Hawks 92, B.U. 81
Stacey A~gmon , scored 20
points and Craig Eblo s fust _tJuee..
pointer of tile season was a big ooe
u Atlanta won at Chicago.
Ehlo' s shotjave tile Hawks a
79~ 73 lead, an lbc Bulls got Do
closer than five points tile res! of

20%
·.

FOR

CBRISTMM

...,.....
~

ALL MIG$, SnCK, GAS MACHINES ON SALEI

,

.
f

J

'

w.

fau1 P1111ina-G .............. S-10
Ray Rnsseii-C .................6-4
Benny Ewlng-G ..............S-8
Donald Yost-G .............HO
Mam Hcndrix·F ............6-2
Brent HaoSOII-G .............6-2
Nldc Hannln11·F.......... :...6-I '
..............
6-2
"'-vls.AbboU·F
;&amp;Ill
•

While Suppllea Lutl

Gallipolis, Ohio.

.

c;.y Stanley-0...............6-l
t!fatt Mllls-G .................S-8
icrod Holman-G .............S-7
C:... Clcland-F ...............6-2

·REGULAR $608.00

'

,,
I

I

.

W~..!l :.0

....

HOLIDAY LOAN
SPECIAL

424 SECOND AVE.
GAWPOUS

25"' Iff

58•

Clear·•••••

CIFIIIinl*lll

This gift keeps giving all year
long. Great for laking to the
ballgame or on tnps.

Advanced noise-reduction
system lor high sound
quality. 9-number memory.

reg. 119.99 ,'16-170BF

reg . 19.99 143-568BF

81
14
IJZA®8·1n·11'81Mt1
f5%8ff

lAVE 'I

Unique, colorful remote makes a
great gift . Preprogrammed and

11
58
Ell'l·ltyleiJIIIIIe

easy t O US6 . reg. 19.99 ptnk. •t5 -19128F.
yellow. t15 -1913BF green . 11S-1914BF

wttll•wltHI'
S1ng1e microcassette for

IAVE 148
Plll'tiiiiiiCIPIIIle
With .......

easy and reliable operatron
LED message counter.

MOST STORES OPEN
LATE NIGHTS
'TIL CHRISTMAS

Take the party with you! 6'12''
speaker and 5-band equaliZer.
reg. 139.9911'32-1 1548F

rvg 599911'43-7658 F

INTEREST FOR TWO YEARII

38!!

On Thll All Computer Syst.a

42\lf
A/V llllllded balllllllllllllllller

24 ~ Mlallq hJIIIIftta.... lleblll ..... **

:!!ltD
:IJ;;U

Ideal for use near TV or PC-perfect for center channel,
main or rear speakers in home theater systems. 4" woofer
and 1" tweeter. reg. 69.99 wh•te, 140-2049BF black. ~4Q.2048BF

~. N.I

...~
. , ......

IQJ

·

•u

AUTHORIZED DISTRIIUTOR:

446 4360.

:::::=half

:;c

TAWNEY STUDIO

lAVE '41

eonvenlent drawer design allows you to .
change up to 4 COs while another 1s playmg.
Programmable and random play modes.

•

I
I

~r.

Includes Monitor!

reg. 199.99 142· 5048BF

88
88
Optlnlli® PGP' tla CD player
'lAVE

•n

E•tended Bass setting adds depth and rich·
ness to your COs. Repeat. lnlro-scan and
random play modes. reg. 119.99 f.42 · 5042BF

4881X PC wltb 1111181'-VGA cOlor manit•
,... ,.,

1..,.

an "''"""",......,

The AST Advantage!• Desktop with Super-VGA monitot 1s 1deallor first·
time users. 4MB of RAM and local but video give you laster speed In
Windows. Pre-installed software includes Windows 3.11, AST Works! and
PFS Works. Three 16·bil slots and two sv.· open device bays let you add
sound card, CD-ROM drive and faxJmodem anytime! 24-hour 800B"' PC compallbl e. •25-4031~16
~"" F ~· pavrnents ' 0 t 1&lt;11 .00
number support. I M.
1
11176 00
Total 0 pay~IS
·
' Pa ymei'IIS as low 15 SA9 .00 lrn s talft witiiOut t i iH iu .. 1111 . such as Delaware . Montana. Ontoon .

-=uePI~o~&amp; accoum w.lll l'llln.-num SM purehue1 A monll'lf\l , ..1,. . a
metll: :J·be Mnt but no P'IVIT!af11 or rncrtaM'" P1~ wJII bt dut ~ 00
"'
QUa~fyiolg IKf"cl\aN unt~ Marth 1995 F"Otowtng tnt IM!trred PlfiOd l nu .
No • ., ...... ""'"-., .....

tfYOM

!I"' Iff

3818
IC Rime Tilfawer II

IL

Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr. .
Sr. .
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.

....._

158ll

5•1111C CD CINIIIII CIIIIIIIJ'----

Melgs roster

'Center
BIG RIVER;ELEaRJC INC.

~

ft:c

$14.95. Reg. $19.95. SAVE
$5.00. We also do pueport
photoa, Identification photoa and photo flnlahlng.
3 to 5 day service.

.,

•
~

1~

photoe. Special 2-6x7'1 for

2.2" Colli' LCD TV

having a good Jeam. Nclsonville:York is starling the season late
because of its football .team's
advancement Into tile stale playoffs.
Vinton Co11nty, also rebuilding
under first-y~at Deli! coach Rick
Brooks, bas only one letterman
returning and lost all nrc starters 10
gradll8tiOD.
The format In the TVC' s two
divisions will allow lbc Maraudcta
to play eacb of ~he Hocking
Division members (Southern,
Eastern, Trimble, Federal Hocking,
Miller and Alexander) once. witb
each game counting ill tile TVC
standings.
In non-conference action, tbe
Marauders will p~y neishbor !liver
Valley and cross-river. nval.s
Wahama and Point Pleasant m a Jllll'
ofgames.
. b
Skin 11er wiJI once agam e
assisted by Rick Ash. Rick Edwants
will return as reserve coach. Gene
Wise will return as tbc freshman
&amp;ac.b.

Aqu.rillllll.

La1a'1 ette' Mall ' GaJU)IIIIIs

~

""

16 points iDd- reboaD
ll4, ....._
lint
w~rct!naJ.)' =:r in tile
WI be had ;g
talild Dine
-'-~~ ainst Del::_
''"""""""II
f .
~he Bullets, losers o . I l l
straight. oyerall, were 0-4
Webber Joined tbe an.after
I
obtained in a trade Wltb Golden
su;ebber made rjnht of ll sbots

Belpre should again lbc team 10
beat iD tile Tri-Valley Conference's
Ohio Division, wil,b Wellston qaiD

S•le ucludet Aquarium

·"The ·Shoe Cafe

....!!._":"'
:Jc ~
......,.. Y

Let ua copy your old family

: Racquetball coon reservations
can now be made one day in
8dvance by calling 245-7495 locally or 1011-f'ree at 1-800-282-7201,
extension 7495 .
All guests are to be accompa·
Died by a Lyne Center membership
holder and a $2 fcc.

conclud¢.

Set Upe,&amp; 10gal ·

\

- llcld In
finiMiol wilb

(Continued from C-4)
associated with 0-21 ," Skinner .

SAVE

LAYAWAY

S::~
ov~l ~nlanl,·

KeviD DuthDdllllld 18 pailltl
and 10 rebODDda for tile BIJ)Iets.
wbo illlled from a ls.pollll416:it ·
wiD tbclr first piiiC ill 20 days.
C8lbert
Cb
y ICIII'Cd 19 poinll.
10
Grant Hill scored 28 and J~
Duman 20 for tile Pilton&amp;, w )lp
have lost five of acvcn ovaa11 Mid
flU llnlipt an lbe1111d.
s-111, ~ 112
Phoenix overcame a 22-popat
ddkit iDd _ . . .
by DomlDilple
1
• at BOIIOD
10 of bta lint 11
(See NBA oae.f) ·

1

Marauders.••·-

o Freshwater Tropical Fish
·o Live &amp;Dried Foods
o Free Advice &amp; Instruction

WIRE WELDER '

~01

15

IAVE'21

· SACRAMENTO (AP)
Cyclist Greg LeMODd, a tJuee..lime
'fo'iDner or lbc Toor de France, says
be plans to retire because he no
lOnger can campcte at the higbcst
level.
· According to The New York
Times, whicb reported tbe retirement In today' s editioos, LeMond
plans 10 make his formai8DIIOWICCment at a fund-raiser for tile United
States C~l Federation In Beverly Hllls,
. .• tonight
' In an interview aired Friday by
station KXTV, tile 33-year-old
cyclist, who won the French
cycling classic In 19g6, 1989 and
1990, said lingering healtb problems, wbile Dot disabling, hinder
b,is ability to compete.

~.Wf.ijkf.i*Uilijkti~*ti*iii*i.J

IDEALARC® SP-100

:iriaeuoo-low

~·

; Notes: A Lyne Center memberiblp is required to usc tile facilillcs.
Faculty, staff, students and administrators are admitted witb lhelr ID

LeMond retires
from cycling

Uni=

mplete Line Of
Supplies For
All Pets

~8

Wds.

·.. Daugherty to hav,.e surgery
·to repair damaged discs

ECIAL!

~

tine.-.

The: Rockcta
~Oiaj

~mil and 1 rebounda

•

season.

).

die way.
.
BJ. ~Sand Toni·Kutoc
scored 19 po1ats apiece for tile
Bulla, who
nine
from Salttle
Lalen 1 , Rockets 19
Cedric
bid 2S polnta
and a carcer-hiab 16 rebounds u
Los Anacles came back from its
thinl-wont defeat In clnb hlatory 10
slliD v1a1t1ng lfoulm
V1adc Divw:: added 22 points for
tile Laten. wbo WOD for lbc sixtb
time In aeven games and only die
ICICUid lime in tbcir Jut dgbt meet·
logs witll tile. defending NBA

·•
Bonw athletic eveall .
.
'· Mond•y- women's basketball
·vs. West Liberty, 7 p.m.
. Tbunday -women's basket·
ball vs. Transylvania, 7 p.m. ·
~ Saturday - men's basketball
YS. Malooe, 7:30p.m.

p-.,~~~~«~~"~·«~4'!"*'11

lllintdO. .

and Scan Ellkt lltUOII-bifll31a
die Spurs bdd offlbc Toil lazcn.
Tbe Spun scored lbc fiDIII four
points of lbc
afttr tlletleBiazcn
bad scored five m a row 10 1191 •
91. Chock Pasoo' a 17-footer with
3S
ID play pvc San Antonio die lead for aood. 93-91.
Clifford Robinson scored 17
POlnta for tile Blar.cn,An•-~bomadefcll to
~-4 at IKme. San .......,
of 20 free lbrows.io tbc second
half, compared w1tb 0-for-1 for

tured 30-30s, wltll tile winning
team getting more than 30 polnta
from two playas in
Orlando won Its Dinlh stralJbt
ame as Sbaquillc O' Neal scored
points and Anfernee a.daway
had 33 as tile Masic dominated
New Yort 12.S-100.
Miami won for just tile foorlb
time In 13 games witb Glen Rk:e
· 34 lots Mid Kevin Willis
311Jfn 8 IIS-97 decision
g N Jt'iSe
defending NBA
5COring cbamploo David Robinson
scored 32 points and got help from
Sean Elliott's 31 in a 95-91 victory
over tbe TraU Blazcn.
Elsewhere, it was Pbiladelpbla
99 Sacramento 96; Phoenix 107,
B~ston 102; Washington llS,
Detroit 104· Atlanta 92, Chicago
81: and tbe' Los Anscles Lakcrs
107 Houston 89.
'spun 95, Tr'all Bluera 91
Sali Antonio held off Portland
for its second road victory In six
tries dais scasoo.
Dave RobinJOD SQDiCd 32 points

Tuesday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Weclilllday - 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Thunday- closed
Friday -3:30-8:30p.m.
i; Saturday -1-6 p.m.
J
Sunday, Dec. 11- 1-3 ·p.m.
'and 6-11 p.m.

leading driver for ·1994

half

. do Friday night. tile lcque fea.

Free-weipt room
T~-6-ll p.m.
M
y-closed

NASCAR names Earnhardt

0P 2'1:: ho
.· 0'"8

Pomero,.......ddleport-Gelllpolla, Ott Point Planant, WV

Two gears double the fun! 4·Wheef
spring suspension. 14" 1ong. 27 or
49 MHz. reg. 41il .99 r£0 -4138BF"

. ., ,
$E~AOE

olllte and/or federal law. !he ~&amp;!MIG balance on !he q~~ lnQ h: : will be lubJ«I tO 1 tina/'101 Cll&amp;fge o1 up 10 21~ A.NNU~L

RATE·l50C montllly mmomum) II1CI cllargeiiO' Iate

Moll ll.&amp;a. Credit c.dl 1ft Welcolle
.,..,..

h

••

...a. 12 11 (1 / 94

We pt1cft gu1r1ntHd t rou...

and Naw Hampshrre) 11 you do 1"104 makfl your purchas• rn one ol IMst states . t he advertised low

PI mtnts Will bt II•QIItly hrghtf dUI to tne Ulet/ use ta•es lf)plrcabt.t to your purchase. Monthly p.yon ti'!IS Spec:tll P ureh. . Prcqam are
ot the total amount ch arged _to your R SVP account

m1nts

On approved regu'-r

'I~
i'"I'#Ohi~ Shack VIIUtPius Account wrth purchase of select AST com-

~

puter systems. OCMI interest rs ·
on our
ot 24 consecutr.ve monthly paymenlt 01 '/,.. ot
qua1ityrng purchase amount including tuea. U not pllid in 1\111, or ri a payment ~ m r ~MC~ dUnng tnt

NJ.M. on the q~litylng pwchtH re~rts

to a regular revol'ling progrtm
and Mpending on vour state Mdlof . . .llllttw a fii'IWICe ohwge ot up to 21% ANNUAL PERCENTPrltts ICIIIIYII ~·~•
lftd llnlt•t.. lltf!IIIIOI f'W~• "' rou• ~~r~ocoDar.,o ::;~·
-.GE RATE (SOC monrtltv minimum) wilt ~ to the unpaid balence ol tMt purchase duri"tt )'OUr
tilt IIII WCIII· ~rtd at !Itt lll'l'tllr~ ~~1~ :'flf~''i~ ~~~o~~~:e t~ 1 rtQ ' next btllrng cydt . CrtUol IIIUid ~ l~ HltlMel
....,..,.r FDIC ()ft., is vatKt Oc1robit 21o:y
Tlrl
Otcember 24, 1"". No! vatic! with lny othlt dill:aun on.-.
10f0 1$ 1 aer"tt '!\lilt ti iN Roc~~ Roll H.. tl f ..... 1110 MuSh Ill Inc;
""
24.month period. the

I

·

"o'"
:
~ar::~':.':,'r~~
Mel """""' ~~t,,':m'!rt) ~ ~~trmot$1011
1

1·800·THE-SHACK811

·

RidiD Shick ValuePIIIrt Crlllft Cant lid

Cof,n:~· c.::::s,.:.~MM

We can wrap a gift, add a card i nd ship it
anywhere in the us voa Fed Ex" delivery
service. For a store near you or to order, call

PI~'

~ay bt auetlfd. Otter 18 ~abel ~ 1_3 ttw~ o.c.m-.. 24 · 1

1'/ttllllr

yt011

a...

~~ott till~ "li' ~· ''~~'~ '

'"""$1 II 1\trll lor m10ftll0~ t..!rlft Mit

N0110nlllfld'¥Cttttlr ,ettWDrtll "75101

I.

,ladle lllaeli

'

You've got questiOf).S. ·We've got answers.SM
'

I

Out of whack? Out of warranty? We fix
IJIOSI major brands of out -of-warranty
electronics. For a store·near you , call

1-800-THE-sHACK"'
•'

�.-

.
December 4, 1184

PomerOy-Middlepori-GIIIIpolla, OH-Polnt Pleuant, WV

In the Dltila/on Vlst.fe title pme,

.

. -

.

~ember4,1994

Nietfeld's tackl~ preserves St. Henry's 21-7 win over McDonald.

By RUSTY MJIJ.RR
MASSILLON, Ohio (AP) Paul Kalacr ruabecl for 202 yllda
, and a late toucbdown and Ryu
Uhlcnbake ru for one KOrC ud
passed b another.
. But It waa a toudldown-aavlna
tackle by Tim Nietfeld whicli
loomed largest u St. Henry beat
McDonald 21-7 Frida~::; the
Divisioo VI state champ
p at
Paul Brown T!Jer Stadium.
On the fourth play of the fiDII
quarter, McDonlld'a James Jooea
came out of a jumble at the liDc llld
suddenly appeared 10 bleak free cl
everyone by IS yanJa and bclded
(or the tylna roucbdown.
But Nletfeld, the faalcst man on
tbe St. Henry team, didn't OODCede
the score. Galninl arolllld quickly
as Jones drew closer to the goal

line on .wbat would be a 68-yiRI
run, Nletfeld e&amp;UJbl Jonea and
alm01tllripped the ball u be ta:ltled blm at the five.
"At lint, I tboul!bt lbout alviDa
up. Then I saw I waa ailnlni
f~:und, 10 I decided to Jet after
· " Nlctfeld said.
"I doo't know if I lhou&amp;ht I'd
Jet in," Jooea said. "I knew tbcle
would be aomebody chuina me.
They're not tbc kind of team tbat
Jives up wben there's somebody
ahead of them."

Aaked if he thouaht Nietfeld
could catdl .Jooea, St Henry CXlldl
Tim Boeckman aald, "No, not
truthfully. But I tlllnt that play
kind d symbolized our wbole - sona. Tbe ldcll just never gave up,
and they CXJUld've."
But that W8111't all of lbe dnma.

·a

1'blce runs put the ball within
couple of lncbes of the aoal Hoe.
But on fourth down, McDonald's
Anthony Rozzo wu lloppeclll tbc
line 011 the right aide by.St Henry
defendela Nletfeld, Roo Boraentlng, Chad HneiPDF IIIII AP Divilino VI defenalve player of tbc ye.
Olri&amp; Hue!PDU.
"We thouJbt lbout throwlna It
or maybe golnJ outalde," said
McDonald coacb Brian Fedysti.
~'But I beUeved our kid&amp; could get
it ln. They've been 80ing ri&amp;ht 81
people all year." .
Taldng over Inside Ita own ODC,
St. Henry then cllacbed the win
with a 99 1/2-yard marcb capped
by Kaiser's SS-yard toucbdown nm
with 3:37 left thai put the game out
ofrcacb. .
The Iitle was the third In five

years for St. Henry, wblcb Jnviously bad won tides In 1990 and
· 1992. SL Henry (12-2) waa fiDked
eighth In the final resuiar-acuoo
Associated Preas poll.
McDonald (13-1) lo&amp;t In the Iitle
game for the aecond time and 'baa
DOW made it to the final four three
times without a title. The Blne
Devils were ranted ·second to
Del~ SL Jobn In the poll.
St. Henry sot on the board first
011 a 0110-yn keeper by Uhlenhate
In the first quarter. Uhleohate hit
his only pass of the drive for 31
yards to Tim Nletfeld IDd carried
three limes for 21 yards.
SL Henry foo:ed McDouald into
a tiRe-playa-and-out sltua11011 for
tbc third atralgllt pouesai011, then
CatDe riJbt back down field.

This time Ublenbate c:ompleted
all three of his paasea for S7 yards.
On ICCOIId and 7 at tbc McDonald
IS, Uhlcnbakc used a arcat playaction fate, rolled riabt u.i hit
Jobn w~ ,:oo lliW two lack·
lea before
IDJinto the end ZOIIC.
Flnt·team all-Obioan Paul Kaiser
tbcn too1t a pltdt around rlabt end
for the two-point conversion to
make itl4-0.

1

alive tbanlts to a 43-yard ldckoff
return by Josh ICrum!Jak that save{
them pos&amp;e~slon at the St. Henry'
49. An Interference call and thrcc
James Jones runs produced only ;
the third toUchdown JiVen Up by I
St. Henry In the playoffs, with '
Jones zig-zaaalng IS )'llda tbrouJb '
heavy traffic {or the soore.

By SPORTS AFIELD
A B~ M•ziM
All kinds of life fian btUDans to
plant&amp; bave a biolOJkal clock and
the more you know about nature's
timetable, the better off you will
be.

Your body's master clock
orcbestrates bow you feel and what
you see, Micbacl SeaeU wrote in an
article In the current issue of Sports

·.

'"; '''·\i'

Warren, Athens &amp;• Logan
•
get Season-open 1ng WIns
from the field and conva1Cd 2S of
40 free throws.
The Buckeyes arc coached by
Bob Flnne&amp;rtY, wbo served u ID
assistant c:oacb at Athens for IS
yean. Hi&amp; team JOI a lite llalt 011
baW:tball becNtac ri their putld·on in the sllile football playoffs .
!:"November. Jason Gall led the
Buckeyes with 18 point&amp;.
At Cambridge, Dustin Ford
drove the lenath of the floor and
scored 011 ala)'llll with Just cine accood left to Jive Camtddae a 67-66
victory over Marietta. Ryan Robinson had drained a tbree.polnt Joal
with eiJbt secooda left to Jive the
TIJcra a 66-65lcad.
Ford led Cambridge with 19
point&amp; and Bert JoDel added 15.
J1or the Tiaen. 11m Healop IOill'ed
opcmcr.
23, Robinson had 18 and Orca
.At Tbe Plains, the Bulldogs' Tbeisa bad 17.
Mike Boyd acorcd 20 poinll IDd
At Piltdon, die boat Red Sllalb
Kableem MuweD lidded 16 over _ _outacored Jackson 22-9 In the
the neiJbborlns Trimble Tomcat&amp;. fourth quncr. Leadins Pltetoo's
Maxwell alao led in rebonn:!e offense were MlkeiHannab (20
wi~ eiJbL Joey WriJbt and
polnta), PiaU Roberta (13), Terry
Mtller= the loacn with 14 Jordan and Josh Lameraon (12
and 12
ta, respectively.
each). Jacbon wu led by Jared
At udltel, CbrU Stamer pared Wolford's 11.
the Logan Chieftains · with 2.2
Pibuln'l victory wu pardy the
points, Coy Lindsey bad 18, Chad reiult of 23-for-40 sbootiDa from
Zimmerman bad 14 and Dustin the fiCid, compared wilb Jacbon's
Dennis had 11. Logu shot 51% 18-for-60 abowina.

Southeastern Ohio Athletic:
League teama pried the lid off of
the 1994-95 lwkcthe11ICUOII Fri·
day niJbt postlnJ four wins ud
IWO lo&amp;&amp;ea In competition aplnit
IIOII·leaaue IJtlPO'Cillt&amp;.
Teams opeDin8 with victories
included River Valley over South
Point 78-68, Wmen Local over
.Caldwell 69-63, Athena downed
Trimble 68-SI and Lo&amp;ID rated
Nelsonville-Yorlt 89-57. In othciaames Cambridge eclaed Marietta
67-66 and Piketon defeated Jackson 62-44.
The Gallipolis Blue Devila had
Friday off but opened qain&amp;t Dayton Colooel Wblte Salurday afternoon in the Waverly Claulc.
Colonel White thra&amp;bed Daytoo
Dunbar Friday n!Jbt 96-88 In Ita

NBA action...

(Continnt4flanC-S)
ClarcDce Weadlcr&amp;pooD ·aanc~ 12
of bia 18 pliota In the 8Da1 period,
helplnJI'tliladelpbia defell visiting
SIICI8IDellto.
The teams were tied 69-69
cntcrina tbc f~uartcr before
WeatbslpOOD
llix point&amp; In
a IS-8 run to Jive the 7iieis an 8477 lead tbcy never 1o1t
.
Dana 811101 had 16 point&amp;, 12
...-IDd nci tiiDOVel'l for the Six·
en. He bas S7 ass1ats In bia 1aat six
pma; IDd only two tuniOven.
Mltdl Rk:lunood led lllliCORII
with 30· point&amp;, but he hid eiabt
IWiiOVal for the Klop.

abots In tbc second balf, and bis
last bubt save blm 34 poiota and
tbc Cdlica a 100-97 af witb 1:47
left. BUI the SIDII reapoodecl with a
1M ron to rePin CCIIIIUl.
Danny Mannina's three-point
play and layup sauted die burlt and
put Phoenix ahead to stay, 102100.
The Suns, :who won for the
ninth time In II pmea, were led by
Dan Majerlc widi 21 point&amp;, Manning with 19 IDd Ch¥les Barltley
with 18.
, . . . " ' Dip"

Wi11ic B... ; W15 point&amp; and

.
play, 75-yard drive thai coosumed
S:41 - Asb Jained 46 yards~ elabt
c:arrics 00 the drive, includinJ the
two-yard run for the IOJCbdown to
make it 14-6. ,

niJ;: Pantbcrl bad tbcir opportu-

In · the third quarter tint te
.
•
• am
All-Obto defensive back Dan
McCain tackled Chardon quarter·bact Scott NeW, wbo t1lppcd a '!ad
pltdl that was recovered~ tbc Hill~
:ovedpper th8. ~~etoe rtheunniWmg buplays
0
•
e .,...
t 011
~ ~ a Mite Roush run
Ash opened the scorina on a

.m:

.' 1

story.

wee

~~

~:dr:'v~U:::::.P{t~fi Po~~~=n~~cv:;

EAST LANSING, Mich. mgb sd.oo1 and 1s the son of Jim
Aaron Sbeeu; I aenior wrestler at and Jennifer Sheets, wbo also
Jobn Canoll Unl~ty. ~=­ auended the tournament.
eel in the Mldlipn Open Wre
1
TourDIDICIIt 011 Nov. 19 and 20 at
Reds have 7,000
Mlcblpn Stile Univenity.
Approximately 400 wrestler&amp;

left after two days

Sheet&amp;, compctlna asainst 29
other wrcatlen In the beavywclpt
claas, w011 bia flnt matdl asainat
Ohio State's Eilcb Odit&amp;. LOIID&amp;
bil second match to Micbl&amp;an
State's Rob Train, Sheets then
dlopped to the consolatioil 1n1:tct
for further c:ompelition. He won bia
next two matdlea against Micblgan
State's Russell Smothers from
Midligan Stale and BroclqJcxt University's Jason Spector bef&lt;n losIng to Micbi8811'S Kyle Srei!!!!CJrer.
In the cluaroom, Sbeeta maintains a 3.8 cnmnlallve point boor ·
rilio.aa a pre-med student.
· He was named outstanding
freshman wrcatlcr his flrlt year 81
John Carroll but was unable to
wrestle bis sophomore ud junior
years because of Injuries wblcb
required reconstructive suracrielln
those years.
.
The Michi8811 Open waa Sbeeta'
first tournament of the year, and bia
excellent sbowlnR against Dlvisloo
I and U sdloola hu enabled bim to
regain his vanity poaltion with the
wrcatllng team. Twelve John Carroll wresden and three coaches
atteDcled the Invitational .
Sbeeta~ a araduate of Melas
... ..

CINCINNATI (AP)- Tic:keta
for the Cincinnati Reds' opening
day game In 1995, normally a bot
seller, still remained Friday after
~~~of beiDa offered roc &amp;ale.
' opening day tidceta usually seD out within boon d the time
they go 011 sale. But cl the 18,000
ticltets that went on sale 81 9 a.m.
Thursday, nearly 7,000 rem•ined
by day's end.
The players' strike Is threatenIng the slart of the 1995 lle8IOII and
owners are dlacuaalng using
replacement players, lltely minor
leaguers.
·
"Consid.crlng the environment
for baseball rlabt now, we're dolna
very well,". said Jobn 0' Brien,
ticket dircc:UJr for the Reds.
O'Brien said be 'did not know
bow many additiooal openiDJ-day
tickets were sold Friday, but tbat
some still rem•ined.
The Reds' home opener Ia
scheduled April 3, against the
Chicago Cuba.
Riverfront Stadium's baseball
seating capacity Is abqut S4,000.
Season ticbt bolden • expected
to buy the remainina 36,000 IC8ll
for the opener, O'Brien said

m

The New Yort Daily News

reported Friday that Montana
would retire at the end of the NFL
season. The newspaper quoted ·
unidentified league sources and did
not elaborale.
There was no answer at ncwspaper's sportS department this mom·
ing when an attempt was made to
get romment
Montana sprained a foot in last
Sunday's loss to Seattle and nmtorS
started that be would be out for a
lensthy period and would not be
bact next year.
"I've got a sprained antic and
some guy writes that I'm retiring,"
Montana said. "I bad a hangnail
last wcelt and he dido' t write about

Wyou are plS!nlng a wedding,
then you should come see ua at

that."

Haallins-TaMer.
·
You wli hiVe over 1eo slylea of
tuxtclot to c"- from. We have a
larglllllctlon of the llttat IIYies ·
and ~~I!!Y ~uoriea for

"It's irritating. It's irritating that
you have to put people through
this. It's irritating that I should
have to stand up here and go
through this,'· Montana said.
He s,aid chances are "preuv

lt,..,.
.......
..._.We
thll epacill oeeulon.

By JOHN WJSSE
DIYilllon of Wildlife
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The recreaiional and economic

~~=o~f~Oblo's
deerthe
bunting
10 JIOW.
Dlvi-

i

economy and helps support
6,000 jobs. Much of tbe
~Jf*:t is felt in the rural counties
small rommunilies of southeaSt
easteru Ohio thai attract both
and bunters.
"If we bad 10 pick: one wcelt of
year wben this economic
~~~_act of deer hunting reaches a
it is the six-day statewide
~lfDIS deer ICISOII. About7S perof our total deer harvest occurs
tbls one week following
and we expect to see
record deer harvest this
~_'1 ,sai~ Division of Wildlife
KJalllllJ Pierce.
The swewide rueanns deer sea-

is open Monday throuJb Dec. 3
attract as many as 500,000

to a 1993 Division of
deer bunter survey, the
Ohio deer bunter spent
during tbe season,
~·ludinJ lk:ense and pennit fees.
that money Is spent on
r.r~r::~c:lothin~a. food, lod&amp;ing

_.

"One aspect of deer bunting
attracts bunters is tbe bigh
6iullit~~of ebio's deer bcrd. espeo
trophy deer," Pierce said.
taken in Muakingum,
tJ-~=~~~w·~erc Licking,
Hocking,
t::J~~)~thens and Cosboc-

pleased to announce our

spccialisrs in obstetrics and gynecology.
Left, ~

right

Glinr~r;

A sampling of average deer
JMm'tinJ relaled expenditures:

Chan, D.O., Kenneth

$47

D.O. (Jeated), Catherin~ Coats, D.O.,

, - Transporwioo: $57.96
-Gear: $176.64
-Lodaing: $11.63

and Jac;k Ramey, D.O. For more
inforination pi~ call

'

(6 ~ 4) 593-2398.

aaid.

Deer hiDiting conUibutes an esti~~ $175 millioo eacb year to

..

Ware
are Jack

.

and 9 p.m. The beat time tor per.
directi'oo.
formin 8 simple repetitive tub 1 WDe fll' !lay.
late afternocin. Man illeut acnsi~ _ Left to run oo.its ~·devoid of
After traveling west, set u
live to pain In early momlng
liJbt and other s~t, 11 would run much outdoor li&amp;bt .a t tbc end or
Recent advances In the 'u
on a 25-hour day tn about three- the Ally as po11ible to delay the
standing of c:in:adlan (about an:; fourths of ail people, ll!ld strc:tl;h onset or sleep. If you have traveled
rbytbma bave c1ooe mucb 10 ~ out as long as 33 bours m the rest east, get as much liJbt as pouible .
nate jet lag. Thcbodyrbythmstba; Its t:XPO~ure to m~rnlng and early in the day. If you llave
direct mental and b .cal ldil
evenmg hgbt keep It, and your crossed more than seven time
and sleep are re ula~~~
s . s sleep cycle, rcauiar.
zones, get a lot of midday liJbt,
of stimuli,
w~ a ~anety
When f01;1 spend the m~s ~ regardless of which dircctioD you
when you go to wJt
Y eat, Pennsylvanta and the evenmg 10 bave traveled.
spouse's sc:bedule. -even your Montana the SCN becomes COD If you really want to move
The most Influential environ- f~. The extra ~ ~ of day- things along, use a syntbctic vermenial cue is_liJbt. which reaches a liJht throw the body s internal sys- sion of the hormone melatonin,
small clusrer of brain cells, called tems :me'. sc:creuons mto dtsarray, available in health food atores,
the supracbiasmatic: nucleus
resu!Bung mJetllinlag.
wbic:h reportedly rcsulares your
throunh th
.
•
.Ycontro g your exposure to internal clock and, dependin&amp; oa
15
r e eyes. Tbe SCN !be sunhJbt, however, you can quickly when it is used, promo1e5 or delays

1ncJu.

York Daily News report, Chiefs
spokesman Bob Moore said that
Mootana bas always said be would

mofakethe~~~is.ionuntilaftertheend
~

00

strength is 81 its greatest between 6
-

1

11

percetves as

Western llDl.e z~nes than tf y~u
were tra·veltng to tbe oppostte

reported, you 131 be 8ll1lfCd of not
missing a beat of nature's .

driving. Agents for Warren and
Sm,i,th said Smith was drivin~ .
Chris Warren at DO pomt was
operating the vehicle," said Rick
Schaeffer, Warren' s agent

was registered to Smith.
"I doo't believe Lamar bad any
idea of the severity or the KC!dent," Seahawts coacb Tom Flores said. "He bad no idea thit
Chris had .been cbarJed. Wbell be
found that out be immediately
made sure be 1ei his agent (Euaeoe
Parker) know and made tbc ~~ate­
ment that be was the one who Will
driving."

Driver
•
•
0 f seahawks wrec·k .stl"II dISputed
I

Moore said "it is just natural By JIM COUR
·
The qtieslioo of wbo was behind
that from DOW until the end of the
KIRKLAND, Wash. (AP) _ tbe wheel re~ained in ~ispu!e
season there will be allltinds of Seattle Seabawk running backs today, but Ktrkland pohce satd
speculation about Montana's future Chris Warren and Lamar Smith alcobol was likely a factor in the
plans." •·
walked out of the bospilal after a Thursday nigbt collision. Empt.Y
Meanwhile, the Chiefs are flgbt· ~ car aash. Defensive tack- beer cans were foiDid in the veht·
ing to reach the playoffs.
le Mike Frier will be leaving In a cle, pollee satd.
Kansas City (7-S) plays Denver wheelchair.
A _1992 &lt;?ldsmobile Brava~a
(6-6) at home Ibis weekend, and
The 6-foot-S, 299-pound Frier carrymg Slll:t~. Warren and Fncr
Steve Bono is expected to be the likely will never walk again, his ·ran u11? a utility pole n~ the.Sea·
starter Cor the Chiefs after taking doctor says.
hawks headquarters, police satd.
almost aU the snaps In practice this
Police reports said Warren was
week.
.
Mootana, 38, spent 14 seasoos
with the 49ers and helped them win
four Super Bowls. After playing
officer John Harrington, managejust one game in 1991 and 1992, be By RONALD BLUM
NEW
YORK
(AP)
The
ment's dlief iabor negotiator, said
was traded to Kansas City in April,
Toronto
Blue
Jays
say
they
won't
Tuesday
that owners intend to usc
1993, along with safety David
be
playing
with
replacement
playreplacement
if the union's slrike
Whitmore and a third-round ·draft
ers
in
the
SlcyDome.
cootinues
Into
next s]Xing. ·
pick in exchange for a first-round
Ontario
Labor
Minister
Shirley
"I
don't
want
to get into the
draft cboic:e that the 49ers later
Coppen
said
tbis
week
the
wbole
discussion
of
replacement
traded away.
province's
law
baning
replacement
players,"
acting
OO!Jimissioocr
Bud
Montana was reported to bave
workers
applies
to
the
baseball
Selig
said
Friday.
"That's
an
considered retirement last season
option that at some point if we
after sustaining a concussion in team.
"As far as sbe can determine, don't bave an agreement ... we'll
Kansas City's AFC championship
the Blue Jays fall under this legisla- have 10 consider."
game loss jn Buffalo.
Management lawyer Chuck
Until last Sunday, this season lion," Blue Jays chairman Peter
was relalively injury-free for Moo- Widdrington said Friday. "If it's O'Connor said the American
the !aw, we' !C POl going to try to Lea&amp;ue would have to decide bow
tana.
obviate the law. We will follow the to handle tbe Blue Jays' situation if
law."
other teams use replacements and
The Montreal Expos would be Toronto can't play at home. But
able to use replacement players 0' Connor said management
because Quebec law applies only to lawyers still beUeve it is possible to
unions certified in thai province.
US41 replacements in the StyDome.
"Tbls Is not a certified union
Both players and owners, who
-Meat processing: $17.40
and we have very rlgbt to do so," aren't scheduled to meet again until
-Hunting lease: $9.73 _
Expos president Claude Brochu next Friday, are preparing for the
-Taxidermy: $14.94.
said.
possibility of replacements. Tbe
Boston Red Sox cbief executive Major League Baseball Players

"!b~ prel~lnary inv~stigation

at thiS time pomts to Cbris Warren
as the ~ver of~ vehicle," Kirkl~d police Deteatve Ed Maltowskt_lold The Journai-Ammcan on
Fnday.
Malkowski confirmed the car

Blue Jays won't ~se replacement players in 1995
Association asked the U.S. Labor
Department on Nov. 14 to certify
the strike.
If tbe department grants tbe

req~t, ~n-U.S. citizcDS ~·t
obtain . vtsas to play 10 tbc maJors
unless they were oo40-mao ~
Aug. II, the day before the &amp;trike
be~an.

.
'indstromB
~
ORIGINAL

BLACK HILLS GOLD

\l/11014f0

Ohio among nine
states forbidding
Sunday hunting

•

Over 500 items to choose from - All at Discount Prices

·TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 Second Ave

Us
Pur A SMILE ON A
HELP

1By JOHN WJSSE
Dlvldoo of Wildllle

CREATIONS "

ry-\

Deer hunting drops $175M
yearly into Ohio's economy

Prices

opening day tlcketil

reprciCIIliDJ 40 different D1vill011
·1, and
co11e1ea llld aniveraitle&amp; too1t .,-tIn the two day event

u

.. ·"It's ridiculous," the Kanau
City quarterback said Friday at
Arrowhead Stadium during bis
WCCJdY news cooference. "I hadn't
l;leard about It until I got here
today. I thlnt, first of all, you guys
are going to slart bavinato stand
up for what you write. It burts the
credt'bility of your field."

''

'!

a...

men, wboac teatostetone levels
rcacb tbcir annual peat in Ocrobcr.
Not IIUiprisinJiy, men are most sexually aclive during tbc hormonal
blgb point and·Jeaat so from JanD.\lfY 10 ApriL
Testosterone, wbicb influences
aggressivene~s. also fluctuates
dally, peatlnJ m the early mMiing
and hittinJ ita nadir In later after·
110011 !'lid evenlnJ.
Sctentiata have oaly recently
begun to lJIIdcr&amp;land bow daily and
•
seas~ fluctuations of temJICra·
ture. habt and hormones afre~t
I I
I I
•
bumu bebavior.ID fact._lilouJb hiS
sliDI'" that be w"' be able to. pla·y h.ormooes may mate btm aggresw
stve at 4 or S a.m., a lilan is 81 his
against Denver today in Kansas least vigilant Bl that time because
governed by tycle' and seasons,
with eacb shift and modulation
occurdng In obedience to some
master!:!'~ . .
,
In fall, for instance, animal
metabolism slows, fat depoaits
swell. Muc_b of the avian world
allnost simultaneously takes fll&amp;bt
for distant warmer climea.
- FaD also is a time of change fll'

~~?:~:!!:nnb=g~ ~~7!5Asked
~tfus:e~
ankle reels better of ~~f :e~: ~lr::rs~~ is ~!.~~~~~E;7~1 ~~~: tia~~:!~::r:!;J?~ '~1 undcrstandins your own
earlier about the New around noon, and bis physical based
wbat·"t
_P
the penod llllll:es easter to ad~usr to internal cyc:les, Sports Afield

aild be anJriiy allicized the media
(ot reportina an unsubstantiated

McCain pick:!:f six yards. A
McCain run 1 · IWO yarda, but
IWo sacks and an Wegal ]IIOCedure
penalty left the Panthers lacina 4th
and 21 81 the 33.
Quarterback Eliot Rosenfeld
tossed a perfectly de&amp;lped acrcen · .. .. TURKEY DAY BATTLE· Foilowlag tbe "cola toll" on
Th•"!'r.YID&amp; Day oo tbe old Mlddlcport Yelow JICbb lllld, tile
pass 10 the riJbt, with Cbet PobolYeDow IICkefl and Purple Puthen ol Pomeroy eopsed lD a "ttil
tab arabblng it and then cutting
of war." Left to rlabt an Ted Beep, Terry Olllloaer and Freil
bact to the middle of the field to
score the touchdown. McCain 'a
Crow, Jr., or tiM P-ro:r teuo;, Artie Foo, referee; f.Sillle:r, 1b
Neal and Bob Aalaley of tbe Middleport ~qud. (See Fred W,
two-point conversion run up the
middle came.., abort.
Crow'• cal- a tada:r'• editorial.-.)
.
Two plays later the Puthen
bact In ~ aftr6 a NeW
·• .. '
~~':~!'e11~shrilbt flal
r. • ··,

Sheets wins three of five
matches in w~stling tourney ·

.

·

- ..
.
• y CRAIG BORST
: KANSAS· CITY, Mo. (AP) .

plays In the marcb were IS-, 10- IWorunabuttbcnstumb~fell
and 18-yard ~puon teepers by oo an abortive pass-bact to a widequarterbaclt Neill
open Rosenfeld. Joo Soos' 51-yard
. Rayland Buckeye took tbc ensu- field-aoal attempt wu I 5 yllds
maldckoff and converted a pair d short.
·
fourth-down playa to counter with
Cbardoo dOled the ICl1lrin 011 a
Ita first soore.
_ 23-yard field goal by ~arty
On fourth and one at tbe Macbr midway tbrouJh the fourth
Chardon 28, first-team all-Obioan quarter.

Afie~d. and the natural world Ia

• press
,':·.,.ont.ana denleS
•
~ l'!epOrf of hiS l'!etr·JI'!ement
1~

Chardon defeats Buckeye Local17-6
Tbe cbamplonahlp came in
Chardon's first trip to the title
game. Tbe Hllltoppal bad lOll In
the semifinals In 1988 and Jut
yar.
·
Cbardoa (14-0) was ranbd tblJd
In the ftnal rellJ]ar·leiiiOII Alaoci·
ated Preas poll, while Rayland
Bacbye (13-1) Will fourth.
The Chardon defense, which
bad three &amp;butonll this season
a11owcc1 only ODC lint down In ~
&amp;eallld half to pn:scrve a 7-6 baittime adVIIItaae.
Tbe Hilltoppen ~ the outc:aDC wbell t&amp;Cy lOOk the ICcondhalf kickoff llld put together a 12•

Sunday Times-Sentinel _

Biological clocks influence various cycles of all organisms

Held witboot a flnt do9iD In the
first quarter, the Blue ~ CIDIC

In the Division II state title game,
By RUSTY MDJ,EII
MASSILLON, Ohio (AP)Eric Ash scored bodl touchdowns
and Chardoo's defense bottled np
Rtyland Buckeye Local In wiDDIDg
. the Division U SIIIC cbamploulllp
with a 17-li victory Friday at Paul
Brown Tiaer Stlldium.
. Ad! was llmited to 29 yards 011
11 carries In the opcninJ half, but
gained 85 yards 01111 carr1ea In the
third quarter alone as the Hilltoppen kept the baD away from die
Panthers.
Ad!, a second-team aii-Obloul,
finished with 138 yllda 011 28 carries.
·

Outdoors

f.

.

ATHENS, Ohio (AP)- Ohio is
one of nine states th8l doea not permit Sunday bunting of all legal
game species . Coyotes, foxes,
woodcbucks and waterfowl may be
hunted 011 Sunday during the open
season in Ohio.
Commadal sbootlng preserves,
most of which offer pheasaat and
q~ bunting, also may be open on
SuD&lt;lays.
If the Legislature would authorize SuD&lt;lay deer bunting, Ohio's
harvest would ~ by as 11!1JCb
as 30 percent, tbe Division of
Wildlife said
However, deer archery season
continues throop Jan. 31, excluding Sundays. The statewide primi·
tive sP.ason Jan. 5-7 gives gun
hunters another opportunity to take
a deer as most wW-be using muz.
zleloadlng rifles.
Across southeast Ohio, hunters
enjoyed the mildest bunting condi·
lions in years_ Condilions 011 Mooday were characterized by windy
and unlellSonably warm temperatures under partly c:loudy sides. The
rest of the wcelt also has seen ideal
deer bunting CXJDdilions.
· "Weather significantly influences bunter success. With the conditions during this year's ftrcarms
season and the overall abundance
of deer, we no doubt wW surpass
last year's record deer gun ·season
harvest of 104,S40," said department Chief Richard Pien:e.

CHILD's fACE •.

See Puzzler on Page D-2

It's Our Way of Saying Thank Youl
Stop in during business hours
December 5th - 9th•••

* Refreshments
·* Register for dally give-a-ways and drawings
*See the ·oress-A-Doll" entries on displa_y

Call today for details!

\bUr Bank in~···

675-3398
1·800·766·0553
(304)

· (Fs) Farmers.....Bank
,
·

11

&amp;Savings Company

211--Sioool

P.0 . .... 63t
- o y. Ot40&amp;1tt

61&lt;11992-mt

PO. lloo :D9
·~· ,laint, Ott *17U
61-H1tl

Cable

Our s~cially priced HBO I Showtime Holiday Hollywood Pack is ava,ilable only until December 21, 1994.' Other
Premlum ChanMls or Packages may also be available. ,Call for details!

..Member F.DJ.C.

'

•••••• ••••

Balk: Cable SaMce required: Toy must be new arid unwrapped with a minimum value of $10.00. Cash or check equ1valent accepted. Offer eMPires Decembe 21 1994
Some rtotrlctlonl or conditions may apply.

,

'

If

.f

4

I

I
I

I

I

I

,.

•

•

·

�.
'

P191 C8-Sunday Times Sentinel

•

-'

'
Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllp()lls, OH-Polnt Plu11nt, WV

•....
~·

-

•

us1ness

se:,.::-

American jobs.
~~retailers like Wai-Mart and
ed a surge In polt·1banlrsgiving sales, ~

; 8y RICK GI:.ADSTONE

:¥ B•-• Wrl._

, · NEW YORK - Preaident Clinton, plpefitters,
: Wal-MI!fl people grcc~rs. Treasury traders in tbe
· l;lond pit.
What's unUJUal about that divene group is every..one on lt could find acmetbing good In the CCOII(mic
tlllla released dlis )lilt wett.
.
', ' CliniOD SIICCCSS~ lobbied ri divided Coqreu
·· 10 radfy an unpr
nted free-trade !f{3:.,ment,
; wbicb supporters say will create a balf~ · · new

g
sign of a prosperous Cbrlspnas for them IDd the
· retailing industry.
Government lladlllclans said pcnonal inl:aDc llld
spending surged in October and the number of new
jobs IOIII'ed in November, led by a remarkable Cllpallslon of the construction industry at a time wben
buDders often are winding down. Sborlagea of dectriCians, pipefttters and welders abound from Arizona
to New England.
. .

tf3EFreports 14~increase
~In quarterly net 1ncome
JUNIOR HIGH WILDCATS- Hannan Trace'•1994 footbaU
team ended Its wttli a 4-3 record, wbldiiDduded Qls In three
of Its lu four pme8.1n front are Trevor Sbafer, J111b Willford, Jason
Mntln, Joey Congron, Cory Harrison, Randy Ru11.e11,. Luther
Westherford and Daaa Blclde. In the second row are S"nn Sheets,
c:CM:aptaln Jeremy Davll, Justin CaD, Justin Blowen, JIUOn Bub, c:oc:aptaln Jonathan Baker and Bobbv Belc:ber. In the back row are

: ; COLUMBUS - Bob Evans · be a source of growth for the com:f1arms Inc. reported net sales of · pany In core markets. During the

Trent Cremee-. bead coada Doa siUDden, Ryan Stiarer (the team'• '
top tadder) and IIIOit ftlaable defe.Wve Unemu), J.R. Boothe (tile
team's top scbolar-athlete), Rufus Stanley (the team's top olre.Wve '
lineman), Rudy Daft (tbe team's most Improved player), Chad :
Mlc:bael (..-t·valuable back on offense md defense), Ricky Poth and ·
IIISistant coacb Matt Houck. .
·'

In an attempt to resolve stadium rift, ·

.

..

I'M STAYING - With
State athletic director Andy Geiger
standing In the dlstuce, OSU bead footbaU coacb Jobn Cooper dis·
cuaes biJ dped-and..aled Intention to stay with the Buckeyes for
nve more yean at a neWI conference Friday In Columbus. (AP)

Cooper to stay at OSU
as head football coach
S62S,OOO a year.
By LA.URAL KARPANTY
Athletics ~tor Andy Geiger
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Jobn Cooper, who has coached said Cooper would get a bonus and
football at eiJ)It colleges in a 32- one year added to the new contract
year career, said signing a new if bis team either goes to the Rose
five-year cnntract with Obio State Bowl, wins ·tbe national cbampimeans he woo't have 10 plan anoth- ' onship, ranks in the Top 10 in the
Associated Press or CNN/USA
er move for SOllie time.
"I'm 57 years old. Guys, I don't Today poUs, or wins nine games in
make it a secret. This is wbere I a season. including a victory over
want 10 end my COIII:bing career," · Michigan.
"I am delighted to make Ibis
Cooper said at a signing ceremony
announcement
at this time as we
Friday wbicb ended a week of ta11ts
prepare
for
tbe
Citrus
Bowl and as
with offiCialS from Obio Slate and
we
prepare
for
a
very
important
Lonisiana Stale.
Cooper Interviewed for tbe recruitment program this weekvacant LSU job on Monday in end," Geiger said. "This is a heart·
Atlanta, but said he caUCd officials felt endorsement.''
Cooper is 54-25-4 in seven
there on Thursday 10 ask that bis
· name be dropped from considera- years at Obio Stale and bis 27-7-2
record since 1991 Is tbe best in the
tion.
Big Ten Conference. But many
~per and the Buckeyes n~w
can tum their attention to,prepanng fans bave crlticiied the coacb
for tbe Fiesta Bowl against tbe because be has yet to take tbe
loser of today's Southeastern Con- Buckeyes to the Rose Bowl, is 1-4
ference championship game in bowl games and until Ibis year
bad not beaten arcb-rival Michigan.
belwccn Alabama and Florida.
Obio State completed a 9-3 sea"I'm e~tcited about the football
team we liave, the players we bave, . son two weeks ago by defeating
Michigan 22-() to earn second place
not only for the bowl game, but b
the players coming back. It's a ~ery in tbe conference and tbe Citrus
e~tciting lime for me and I'm JUSI Bowl berth.
Tbe contract requires approval
very, very happy everything's been
from Obio State president Gordon
worked out," Cooper said.
Cooper's future at Ohio State Gee anti university trustees. Gee
was determined justin time 10 m~l said the board, wbicb had its regua self-imposed deadline of Ibis lar mccling Friday, would vote on
weekend. He said be did not want tbe contract later.
Cooper is 136-65-() in 17 years
contract talks to go beyond that
because on-campus recruiting of as a bead coacb, including eight
bigh scbool prospects is under way. seasons at Tulsa and three at Ari"I'm gotng to be here. That's zona State. He moved from Arione of the exciting tbings about it zona Stale to Ohio State after winfor me and our coaching staff is tbe ning the 1988 Rose Bowl. He also
fact tbal we do bave stability in this was an assistant at Iowa State, Oreprogram,'' he said when asked goo State, UCLA, Kansas and Kenabout tbe effect of the contract on
~be coaches at Obio State for
recruiting.
the
next five years, his career as
The contract includeS,_!~ base
salary of $130,000 for the first bead coacb of the Buckeyes will
year, up from the current _$117 .~. bave been surpassed only by ColIt also contains several mcenuves lege Football Hall of Fame members Jobn W. Wilce, wbo coached
and performance clauses.
With prOduct endorsements and the team from 1913 to 1928, and
income from his television and Woody Hayes, whose tenure lasted
radio sbows, Cooper's total pack- from 19S 1 to 1978 and included
a'e In bis current cnntract brings national championships in 1954
bam reportedly $400,000 to and 1968.

Saban named Michigan
State's new football coach
EAST LANSING,-Mich. (AP) .
-Nick Saban, the defensive coordinator for tile Oeveland Browns,
will be Micbiaan State president
Peter McPheraon's recommenda·
lion to replace George Perles as
football co~b, It was reported
•-'-'
wuay. .
Sabao'IIIIIIIC will be tlrouJ)It to
the boM"d of truStees for approval at
a meeting schednled for Dec. 9, the
Llutsillg Stole Jounwl reported, citing wbat it descri~ as a biJh· ·
level university ollicial.
Perles' 12. year stint at MSU
ended with bis firing Nov. 8. He
COIII:hcd bis fiDal game Nov. 26, a
toss to Penn State, ending his
coacllinJ career 7H2-4 at MSU.
Saban, 43, and Penn State offensive coordinator Fran Ganter were
tbe final two candidites in tbe
sea-dl for Pedes' replacement. the
newspllp! said. ·
But, Ganter was reluctant to
leave Peon State, wbere he may
eventtaiiy become head coach,
...,..dlill eo the Joumal.
Bowling Green coacll Gary
BlackJ!eY took himself out of tbe
- running Tbursday.
.
Green Bay Packen.offeosive
,oordinator Sherman Lewis;
IcimiliJ City Chiefs nann,ins l!acb
cOidl :::r.::..ye, a foriDer Spar·
tans q
and 'YotmgStowD

Stale bead coacb Jim Tressel bave
also were interviewed, the Journal
said.
Also today, the Detroit Free
Prtll reported the university was .
awaiting Ganter's answer, wbicb
could come as early as today,
""'fore
making a fmal decision on
""
Silban.
Saban told the Free Press Friday
tbal he bad spoken with McPhenon
by phone late Thursday and was
told the decision could come as
soon as today.
Saban said he made it clear to
McPherson tbal be could not t;llte
over uadl the Browna' season ends,
the Free Press said. Browns owner
Art ModeU has said Saban would
not be allowed to leave unlit tbe
seasoo is over.

~pOrta

brief
rootli.a

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Oblo State coach John Cooper;
wbosejob bad been tbooJ)It to be
in jeopardy, was awarded a fiveyear contract extenSion tbrouJ)I the
1999 aeason.
The announcement ended a
wtct or negodadons and speculation lhai he miJ.bt leave Ohio Stare
for Louisiana S"tate.
1

"

park is in nortbern Kentucky. ·
Schon wants 100 acres of land
wbere she can build a, family-style

park and entertainment complex
the
newspaper reported Frjday' quoting
an unideotlfied source.
Scbon and Coleman talked over
luncb Friday at a Cincinnati club.
Afterward, she deuied talking with
Coleman about moving the Reds to

around a new basebaU.stadium,

~tucky.

"We were not even talking
about tbal. Len and I were just dis·
cussing a lot of things. He's just
trying to be.belpful, because they
don't like what's going on bere,"
Schott said.
'
Shirey said Cincinnati remains
committed to keeping lbe Reds and
tbe NFL' s Bengals in the city.
Shirey said tbe city bas not

heard from Scbou recently and
would prefer to negotiate with ber
direclly, rather than read newspaper
reports concerning her position.
Ricky Clemons, a National
League spokesman. said Coleman
was in Cmcinnati to discuss baseball matters with Scbotl He did not
know wbelber Schou and Coleman
were specilicaUy discussing a possible Reds move to northern Kentucky.

Schon beads a group of
investors considering buying and
renovating Riverfrom Stadium,
wbere both the Reds and tbe Bengals are tenants. Hamilton County
owns lile 24-year-old stadium and
the city operates it.
Scbott repeatedly bas criticized
the city for negotiating a deal last
year with Mike Brown to imJXOve

and add seats to Riverfront Stadi- ';~
um, without discussing tbe matter ::;
with her.
· ••
Sbirey negotiated the deal after :
Brown publicly threatened to relo- ;;
cate the Bengals to another city for ~
a m&lt;ire lucrative arrangemeDL Tbe:;,:
Beogals have been in Cincinnati . .:
sinoe starling play in 1968.
·'··
Brown said this week that he ,;;
wants to keep the Bengals in •
Cincinnati. But be said he ibinks a:·":
renovated Riverfront Stadium·•..
would not generate enouJ)I revenue .•:
for tbe Bengals and that it should /.
be razed and replaced witb a bigger·;:
stadium.
'
One possible site for a new ball- ·
~ is a 120-acre uact just west of ' .~
Riverfront Stadium, along the Obio
Ri·.er. But ScboU said she doesn't ··
tbinlt tbat site offers enouJ)I room. ·•

urday.

OCA director aeneral Abdul
Muttaleb AI-Ahmad siitl that "it
bas been proven beyond any doubt
that they lid bydrotesterone.''
Tbe OCA's action confirms
reports that bave circulated in the
Japanese media for more than a
week tbat Chinese athletes bad tested positive at the October games in
Hiroshima
"We're sorry tbis,bappened and
we bope that tbe punishment will
be stiffened in the future," AIAhmad said in a telepbono inter-

view.
He stressed that tbe athletes
"will be stripped of other privileges" earned for winning tbe
medals, but did not elaborate.
AI-Ahmad said the athletes, six
women and five men, won their
meAials ror swimillin&amp; cycling and'
the decathlon. He said be 'did not
bave a list of the athletes' names
immediately available.
Earlier Ibis week, a Japanese
newspaper identified 11 Chinese
atbletes it said tested positive at the
games. The newspaper's list, however, comprised sill men and five
women and included swimmers,
canoeists, a bUnuer and a cyclist.
Tbe OCA' s confirmation will
increase suspicion in the West that

the phenomenal success bver tbe desirable for results to be available '
past 18 mooths of Chinese athletes, more quickly," the IOC said in a
especially lile women, is due to a statement.
systematic doping program within
''Tbe IOC Is also pleased to
the country.
note the clear and very firm p(Jsi- ··
Tbe International Olympic lion expressed by China's sponing .
Committee, Whicb bas pointedly authOritieS, particularly the Chinese .
refrained from malting sucb allega- Olympic Committee. They have
tions, reacted Saturday by calling cooperated fully with the internathe incident "very serious," but tional bodies at all stages of the ,
continued to cite the Cbinese dop- procedure.
ing affair as an example that its
"Tbey have clearly informed·(
drug-testin~ system is working the IOC of their Intention to seek rather tban acknowledging that out and sanction the true culprits. It •
tberc may be a widespread problem is indeed known that in most dop- ~
in China.
ing cases the athletes are not the
"The IOC notes that structures only Diles implicated and that th~ ·'
and procedures put in place within responsibility must also be souJ)It: ~
the Olympic movement ba.ve func- among their entourage, aiotabty•l
tioned pedectly, even if it would be their coacbes. ''
!I
'
"

Arizona's McLaughlin wins Lou Groza Collegiate Award
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(AP) - lbe best thing that bappCned to Steve McLauJhlin was a
51-yard miss that could have saved
a win against the University of
Miami two years ago.
On Friday, McLaughlin, a 6foot-1 senior at the University of
Arizona, was named the recipient
of the Lou Groza Collegiate PlaceKicker Award, given each yea- to
the nation's top place kicker.
McLaughlin, of Tucson, Ariz.,
admitted bis 51-yard·near-miss
with three seconds left that sealed
Miami's 8-7 vlclfilr&gt;' over the Wild-

~ports
Tellllll
MOSCOW (AP) - Stefan
Edberg defeated AleltaDder Volltov
to give Sweden a 2-0 lead over
Russia in the" best-Of·S Divis Cup
Final.

cats on Sept. 26, 1992, was the
"wming point of my career."
"This is a dream come true,"
said McLaugblln, who beat out
finalists Brian Leaver of Bowling
Green, Mike Shafer of Southwestem Louisiana, Ryan Williams of
Virginia Tecb, and ReiDy Hamilton
of Micbigan.
McLaughlin, 23, connected on
23 of 29 faeld goals this season for
a .793 percentage, including a
career-long 54-yaa:der against California.
The soccer-style sidewinder

Officials say 1994 crop
loss assistance is available
I•

0...
\

premium deferre~
~annuities makes sense 1n
~fl 'safe rnoney' program

.•
,

brief

'Jfjvatment VIewpoint
~BRYCE SMITH
~lidvcst, Inc.
~ : Diversificltion illtey to lily IUC-

· Edberg beld off Volltov, 64, 62, 6-7 (2-7), 0-6, 8-6.
Sweden's Magnus Larsson
d~feated Russia's Ye~aeny Kafelnikov 6-0, 6-2, 3-6, 2-6, 6-3 in the
secood singles mateb.

6:issfulinveslmll0l~Jrh
:21(versificalion you
~findacanfort·

in otder to
: . .investment
;
;
0 !JCCUves.
: ~ For savings.
t&gt;fiented individu~ ,wlio want to be sure they have
~Qough money wben they need it, a
~gle premium deferred annuity
.

~SPDA)offersanwnberofalllactive

lK!nefits including safety of princi·
W. lalt-deferml growth and profel~nal money 1118118Ff11eDL
; 1 Basi~y, an SPDA is a COIItiiCt
.,.,ween an indi~ and ID inlur·
•
company tbat is divided ililo
iwo stages-Ill accumalstion period
a payout period.
~ Under the terms of the contracl

'*'

"''1'

you can:

A

t{' Yld!r'l!lr....
~
~~~!NOUR SU~~

r

985-3300

.
STAII'HUTI241

..

' • Invest as liale as $2,000 or as
.in.uch as $1 million.
.
• • Put 100CJ, of yourCCIItributioo to
work immediately since til= n 110
sales charges. ·
;: · • Earn compound illterest and acttimulatealllnveatmcnteaminp-ciCferred until payouL 'Ibis IDCIIII yotr
money will ·grow faster over time,
eYing you more mooey when you
OOed IL For Cl11111ple, two ~lc
each in the 28'1&gt; tax bracket-in\Bl
stoo.ooo and earn the ssmc 8'1&gt;-.

.

LUMBER CO• .
915-3301

CHISJII, OHIO
'

~--~--~--------~
~•
,,

.

.

'

tum.
One pays laltes on earnings; the
other does not.
The l8lt -deferred investment
grows to more than $648,000 ln 2S
year; tliC lalled mvestmeiit grows 10
.less than $410,000. (Earnings on the
lalt-ileferred annuity are lalled as
ordinary income only wben wltbdrawn from the conbacL) Elect a
payout option for some future date
when you can receive eitber a lump
sum distribution or periodic annuity
payments.
If you opt for montbly payments
for life orfor a filled nwnber ol years,··
only a portion of the payment will be
laltedeach year. Therefore, tax liability can be s(nlld over that number~
years. Designate a benefician' to
receivetbeaccwnulitedvalueoryour
conbibutibns.
·
EnjoylhebenefatsofJXOfessional
invesunentlllllll8gCIDCIIL You sbould
· rnalce sure the insurance company
has .a'successful record or guaranteeing I!Utuity dollars and e~tperienoes
investment mapasernenL
Types ot Almultles
~pending on the risk you'~e
willing to assume, two types of
SPDAs are available.
1
Filled annuitiel n best suited for
invesun who wintto know exactly
wllal they will Nceiveafter a certain
psiod ~ lime. Wilb dlia type of
-wty' bcdl the llindllalllld iDler·
Cllarefunypniueodbperlodaof
from one ywupeo lO,_wdepelodiDI C. the ia\'IIIWI ae ~ Jill.

Continued on.D-1

--·

~

'

f

~Single

. .e ballmoe be.Jteen risk and re-

i

an annual operating budget or more
thlll $200,000 and linDua1 sales of
Sl~ million, would put $50 million
a year to work in Gallia County,
VoUbom explained.
.
Producen Livestock Association, wbicb is proposing a branch 81
Gallipolis, has 60 yean of lillllteting experience and 18 otber branch
locations in Obio and Indiana The
member-owned rooperative counts
recent SIICOCSses in the area of new
teclmOiogy, information, fmancing
and access to markets. A new networking system for.polt producers,
called Protection Plus, has been
introdiiCed in a series of meetings
around the state Ibis month.
Tbis system would provide local
farms an opportunity to sell feeder

catUe in groups and thus enhanoe
price,,Vollborn added. Loads of at
least 45 head of steers of similar
weight and body characteristics can
bring up to $26 more per bead than
animals sold individually or ia
smaller lots, according to a recent
study by Kansas State University.
Gallia County Farm Bureau
President Paul Shoemaker of
Cheshire said another important
advantage would be the savings in
trucking costs. Area beef produc:en
now must pay $20 to $2.5 per bead
to transport cattle to the nearest
markets, Sl&gt;oc:maker said.
Producers Uvestock would be a
ready source of ligbtweiJ)It feeder
cante, Vollbom said. Feeding these
catUe to market weiJ)It would be an
excellent source of supplemental

income, wbidt could oitset aoticipated losses u the IObaa:o indultry
scales back.
A local market would proVide a
boost for feeder pig producers, u
well, said Vollbom, serving as a
vital link between local producers
and potenlial buyers in major hog
feeding regions.
It would also serve as an outlet
for market livestock produced by
youngsten for Junior Fairs in tbc
region, Vollbom added. In Gallia
County alone the value of the
'resale' animals from fain Ia
around $100,000 annually," he
added.

Patty Dyer Ia lnformatlo•
coonlinator fill' tile Gallla

tyFarmB-L

c-.

basket weaving and ceramic creation. Earllel classes apptaled to aU
ages and both sexes, she added.
Countryside Ceramics also carries the coundes' most extensive
line of paints for ceramics and
paintings. They include: Kimple,
Scioto, Stodio Stain, Dona's and
Duncan's Painting Glazes.
"Wben they're creating they
don't bave to convert colors to
other CXlmpanies," Carnahan said.
Eventually, Carnahan said she
hopes to feature the new release
molds in the .front of the store for
easier access. Her mother, Bonnie
Unruh, helped bring the JICW liVre
to a reality.
Ceramics classes will be held
from 10 a.m.-noon and 7-9 p.m.
Tuesday through Friday. Special
mold requests will be taken. The
open bouse wiD he Dec. 17.
One differentiating point
behleen Cotmtryaide and her eotnpedtioo is prompt tum-around of
Olden, she added.
~Wben someone wants sonietbiog I'll turn around within a
week," Carnaban said. "Tbe customen come before anyone else
and I'D do anything for them."

Tobacco sales are off to a good start

"I reevaluated my steps and ..
fine-tuned my approach," ,
McLaughlin said Friday during a ...
conference caD. "Inslead of a wide ,,
approach, I .cbose a ~arrow :;:
approach, wbtcb gave me more •
consistency instead of crusbins iL" !
The Groza Award; named for.:
tbe famous Cleveland Browns:;
kicker, is sponsored by tbe Palm •
Beacb County Sports Commission. ; ·,

'

&lt;

«as

made seven of seven fnul 20 10 29 ·cial teams coach for the Minnesota ;,
yards, four of sill from 30-39, nine Vikings.
~

of 11 from 40-49, and three of five
from SO yards and further. He was
26 of 26 on point-afters and fmisbed bis Wildcat career third on
tbe all-lime scoring list with 278
points.
.
McLauJ)IIin, wbo once nailed a
71-yarder in practioe, said after the
to~ in the Orange Bowl, be went to
a kicking camp run by Gary
zauner, who bas since ~ spe-

BOnd tnlden joined their stock and auJency-cntding bretbrell Friday, biddiag up the value or U.S.
securities and lhc doUar, which surpassed 100 yaa Ia
foreign exchange trading for tbe fust lime in two
months.
Some fmaoce professiooals suggested lhc flDaD•
cial nwtet rallies were teclmical in nature, a rebound
from earlier tosses.
But others detected a marked change or JIIIJdloiogy from the uncertainty that bas prevailed in the U.S.
markets since the Federal Reserve begiD raisiDg
interest rates 10 months ago to thwart inflation.

The buyers or raw lllllterlall for the natioo's factorles said Jl!lllufacturing readied its healthiest level in
10 years l.ial111011th. A widely followed measlftDICIII
of consumer ~ ~ AmeriCIIII;I fdt. the
most secure about their financial weD-being smce
July 1990.
Good feelings even spread into the contrarian
world of the multitrillloo.OOUar Treasury bond market, wbicb tends to thrive on bad news and wields
enormous ioJluence over tbe direction of interest
rates. When the 3~-year "'!nd yield rises. 30-year
. mortgage rates lftll t far bebind.

Countiyside Ceramics opens in Middleport

OCA strips Asian Games medals from 11 Chinese
KUWAIT CITY (AP) - The
11 Chinese atbletes who tested positive for performance-enhancing
drugs at tbe Asian Games bave
' been shipped of their medals, the
Olympic Col!ncU of Nia said Sat-

December4,1 ...

Vollborn·• Gallia County needs
a centrally located stockyard

:$194.4 miUion durln~a::OOOd second quarter, tbe first "small•·~,a 10 ~t
oW% town" location outside of Obio was
By PATTY DYER
·..111 million In 1993, and net openedinAunn,lnd. .
-lliCOOIC or $14.2 million, a 14 perEarly in .tbe third quarter, a
GALLIPOliS • A new livestock
:cent bike over $12.4 milliolla year Cantina del Rio opened ln Cincin- market in Gallia County would
·go.
· nati. Depending on weather and handle more than SI5 million of
~ . Earnings per sbare were 34 availability of sites, the company' a sales eacb year and that would
:~nts, compared to .30 cents last plans caU for the opening of 45 to li1IDSiale to an CCOD&lt;IIIic impact of
.year.
so restaurants Ibis fiscal year.
some $50 miUion for tbe county,
: : The increase in net sales was
The seasonal approach to new according to Obio Stale University
:clue mainly to more restaurants in menu items continues for Bob Extension Agent Edward Vollbom.
:operadoo in the compa~~)"s restau- Evans and Owens Family restau&amp;roxnic informadoo about the
·rant segment, u well as Increased rants. In September, "Fall proposed facility was provided to
:sales in the sausage category within Favorites" menu items, including the Gallia County Farm Bureau,
:the food products division.
beef tips and noodles, stuffed pork which support1 establisbina a local
: . Tbe inaease in net income for chops, apple berry topping for hot- market as an oudet for lfvestock
·the quarter among food proclncts cakes and oatmeals. Cbocillale silk grown oo area farms.
:waa attributed to str011ger margins pie and apple cobbler, were intro- . VoUborn said:::: needs a
to guar:on sausage products because of diiCed and wiU run tbrouJ)I Jill. 22. oenlrally located ·
~~~~ a IIUIItet for local farm prod:tower live hog coats during the 1995.
:q)llll1a' OIIJIPII'ed to a year ago.
In the food producu segment, ucts, whicb is ooe of the goals of
··· - For the six-month period that the convealence entree product, the Gallia County Strategic Plab.
The multiplier effect, appUed to
:eilded Oct. 28, sales were $392.3 Bob Evans Homestyle Cbicken .t
lilillion, a 10 ~~ increase over Noodles and Biscuits, Is now lfvail.
:~'55.5 million a year ago. Net able.in sk sales marltets and plans
111come was $27.3 m111ion, a 13 call for coolinued expansioo of the
~percent increase compared with product throughout the Bob Evans
:s24.2 million a year ago, Earnings marketing territory. Homestyle
- A two-year·
'Jll:l' sbare were 65 cents, compared Sausage Gravy &amp; Biscuits was oldMIDDLEPORT
Racine business outgrew the
:tQ 58 cents last ycar.
introduced with a similar atrategy basement it started in. So the
• · A total of 325 restaurants were , last winter and is now in all Bob ceramics
sbop recendy bas opened
Qpcrating at the ead of the qWKta', Evans mmts.
its doors at 235 N. Second Ave. in
The board of directors of BEF Middleport.
·compared with 296 a year ago.
This includes Bob Evans and declared a quarterly dividend ~ 7"It grew very fast," owner
Qwens Family restaurants, 18 1/4 cents per share 011 lhc compa- Sandy Carnahan said. "It aU started
"smaii·IOwo" Bob Evans restau· ny' a outstanding common stock. out with tryin to create rabbit troriots and 10 Cantina del Rio The dividend wu payable Dec. 1 phies for a ctut."
restaurants.
to sbarebolders of record on Nov.
Countryside Ceramics &amp; Gift
· · Officials said the "amall-town" 18.
Sbop
DOW bu the space to really
Bob Evans operations continue to
expand, Camahan said.
Starling with just 600 different
molda, Carnahan now baa 2,SOO
and coutlnuea adding about 40
more cadi month, she said. Tbe
•a tae remains the only IIIIJIPiier for
B) LISA MEADOWS
crq~~ pri« to payment.
. KiDlple molda ill Meiaa COUuty.
Tbe m~orlty of her store .llaa
- GAUJPOUS • Producers suf·
A D0tab1e cblnge to the disaster
ccramicl
ill tt J South-lei a IDd
ferlng losses 011 1994 production progi'llll Cor 1994 is tbal payments
.AmerJc.n IIIOdfl. But, widl
-4ue to liiiUIII cli•rtrr hcpn ipply· wiU be factored for crq~~ wbich n Nad~
Jiig for dllllf« aedit Cll Decem"•,- -not harvested or prevented from plenty or floor lp8CC she will CM'f
:1
beinS planted. Contact your local all the holiday ceramics year·
: : Wbile COlt~ die county experi· F~ Selvic:e Agew;:y (446-8686 in round.
T~sforming mud Into vases,
-enced normal crop yielcll, .ume Gallia County) for .sdltilllal infor·
aoldit.n
and tcttm poles involves a
have been affected by hail, malion.
lteeze or other forcea of natural
TAKE NOTE • The Gallla greenware phase which Ia tbeo
Jljsast~r soch aa excess rain or , County Farm Servloe Agmcy wiU fired in a lr:l1n to bemne bisque 'CirouJ)It
: be sbort-staffed tbe week of whic:b is then painted, Carnahan
.
: : ReQuests for ,U.Ier cmlit and December 12·16, due to tralni.Jig said.
After
the
beginning
~
tbc
JICW
~ecoraa of production are now ' brought about by lhc reform of the
year,
Caroablll
will
IJold
classes
b
.bbingiC"ePted ll the GaUla County crop insunDoe JW8IIIIIL ProWcal
j'Jrm Servlce A&amp;e
of1k:e1 (for· are urged to try to conduct office
·merly ASCS). Tfie~program is business before December 9, or
il'mll•to tbole ill JUalt ycm with after December 19. Please ex~
::ttop tosses or grearer tb111 3S'I&gt; ~ any Inconvenience Ibis tralomg
)l'ormal (40'1&gt; for those without may cause.
·-iBsunmce) beiJig ell&amp;ible for disas·
Lisa Meadow• l1 tb ac:tiDJ By EDWARD VOLLBORN
GALI..IPOUS • Tbe tint week
7t0r benefits. Producera requestins co1111ty o:ee11tlve director of tile
llenefita will be ~equlrcd to obtain Gallla Co•nty Farm Service of burley tobacco sales ended
November 23 with an average
';allp insuraiK1e for 199S 011 eHgible Agency•
18S.47 per bundred. That was '
$3 .2~ higher than opening week
last year. Net doUan received by
the farmer was aboat the Illite due
to the iaaase deduction for no-net

Shirey wants meeting with Schott &amp; Brown
CINCINNATI (AP)- The city
manager wants to meet with
Cincinnati Reds owner Marge
Schott, as well as Bengals owner
Mike Brown, to try to end tbe
debate over wbere their teams
should play in the future.
"It would be better if we could
all sit down together at the same
time, in the same room and discuss
bow to proceed and meet everybody's oeeds," City Manager Jolm
Sbirey said Friday. "That would be
the best course instead of trying to
represent positions tbroufb newspapers and press releases.'
The proposal came tbe same day
that Scbou met with National
League president I:.eonard Coleman. 'file CincinMti Post reported
that Schott told Coleman ber preferred localioo for a new Reds ball-

~imes- itntintl

Section D
~easc;»n to be jolly, at least for a week

a

' •'

",, •I'

.

'

COlt.

Tbe companies also contribute
4.6 cents to tbe no-net cost fund
pusbinglhcir' lotal cost on acme of
the bigher grades over the $1.90 a
pound maJt. USDA estimates Ibis
year's production at lhc 636 mil1ioll
pound level, only 2.8 percent of
gross sale went to the pool during
lhc tint wcct. There llpJII35 to be
more or the mixed color tobacco
offued.

Farm Flashes
The B3M RJade for ewnple is
.suppmed at SI.n and sold (or an

avenae $1.84 the fant week. My impovemenL
obltmtkll dlis Tb~ (Decem- · The pork industry remains in
ber 1) Ill the Ripley, Ohio marketa sboct over the depths to wbich bog
was that buyers were differentiat- prices bave fallen. Acalrding to Dr.
iag price within the B3M grade, Chris Hurt, Extensioa Economist
with a price 1111ge of $1.80 • $1.85 from Purdue Univenity, terminal
depending upon the amount of bog prioea were under $40 per hun"flcsb" colored leaf in the bukc:L dred lilly 15 percent or the time in
Details on the deal to aell out pool the Jut 20 years. Recent lows feU
tobacco impacts on future quota, below the $28.86 prioe wbicb was
the average for April 1980.
~ estimates should be available
How quickly cao prices recover
m a few days.
from
low price periods? Dr. Hurt
The ODNR. Division of Water,
says
that
average prices in tbe 6
report showed October 1994 to be
months following tbe low price
· tied with October 1964 to be tbe period have typically been $5 to
tenth driest October in 112 years of $10 per hundred weigbtbigher than
recoiili:lJround water levels con- iluring the low prioe period.
tinue to remain below normal ~- Where-does Wall Street get its
e ls 10 most areas- of Obio. An name? Free-roaming hogs were
observation well in Fairfield Coun- notorious for rampaging tbrougb
ty, representing sandstone aquifers tbe precious grain fields of local
in eastern and southeastern Obio, farmen. New York's Manhattan
reached a record low level for Island residents cbose to limit the
October. I am sure tbat tbe Novem- riotooS bogs by erecting a tong perber repon will not reflect a lot of manent wall on the nortbero edge

of wbal is now lower Manbattao. A
street came to border this wall,
aptly enough, WaD Street Tbanka
to Troy Putnam, OSU Extension
Agent in Highland County for tbia
interesting story.
Obio State University's Luther
Tweeter says tbat the tall rode will
likely be changed by the new
Coogress so tbat only real capital
gains above the inflation rate will
be l8lled. He says that's good news
for owners of farmland. Land
prices wiD likely go up a litde if
gains on its real ~ue can only be
taxed like ordinary income. Dr.
Tweeter does not sec future land
values increasing-much more tbao
the rate of inflation.
Reminder: Steer Weigb-io for
the 1995 GaUia County Junior Fair
will be Saturday, December 10.
Edward Vollborn Gallla
County's agriculture utenslo•
~~~:ent.

Plants need proper care to extend useful lives
ByHALKNEEN
' POMEROY • As tbe holiday
season begins, many of you will be
decorating with live plants. Proper
care can extend their useful lives.
Potted piapl$ sucb as poinsettias,
chrysanthemums and cyclamen
need to be placed in sunny areas
and away from cold or bot drafts.
w. the plants with WMiD water,
but be careful not 10 over water
them or leave the plants in llandina
Wiler.

Extension Comer
Cut Chrisanu trees 804 everpeen 1Jouahl IJriahlell up may ~
our llomea. Before bri.Jigins them
IDto die house, recut the truDt or
bouab ao water can be absorbed
IDto the p1aaL A Cbrialmal tree am
ta .1/2 to 1 p1loa of water a day
dept Min&amp; 11)1011 the rotDI temperature it is Dlaced in. A 6().65 degree
room will improve the tree's
loasevlty. Never let the wlller well
1D the pllltsland g0 dt'f, M die lrec

or bouJ)Is wiU need to be recut.
Noxious weeds - Five more
plant species bave been placed on
tbe ooJdous weed list in Obio, per a
recent Obio Department of Agriculture news release. This brings
tbe list to fourteen weed species
under lhc cmtrol of localtowosbip
trustees. The weeds being added
possess ooe or more of the following undesirable attributes: aggressive competition with cultivated
aops, toxicity to livesmck. or habitat degradation.
Poisoo bemiock (Conium macu·
latum), a wbite flowering member
of tbe parsnip family, produces
leaves, shoots and fruit wbich are
especially poisonous to livestock.
Creuleaf groundsel (Senecio
glabellus) is a yellow flowering,
daisy-like biennial' with an invasive
SPJCMiing habiL Musk tbisde (Cardims DUIIDS), or nodding tbistle, is
ID introdiiCed biennial with siOUI,
· spipy
leaves, commlllly
..... stalks- llld
. .

reacbing a lletgbt or Sill teet. Purple
loosestrife (Lytbrum salicaria), a
notorious wetlands weed, ruins
'lllildiife babililt by crowding out
more desirable semi-aquatic vegetation. Mile-a-Minute vine (Polygonum perfoliatum) is a prickly
·annual vine accideDially introduCed
from Asia with nursery stock. It bas
a growth babit like kudzu vine,
covering o,ver every shrub, fence
and tree in its patb.
The prior Obio Noxious Weed
list included Shatter Cane. Russian
Thistle, Joboson Grass, Wild
Parsnip, Wild Carroc. Olteye Daisy,
Wild Mustard, Canada Tbistle IDd
abandmed gnpevincs.
Upcoming Programs - A Farm
Tu School is beinl! beld Friday,
Dec. '9 from 9:30a.m. to 12:30
p.m. Ill S~ PauJ's LWhcran Chun:.b
m Poolmiy. Topics to be reviewed
· include: revisions In the 1994 tax
laws, bow to report incomt./expens.

es in small and large fanns, payroll
and payroll relaltxftaxes and possi.

'

i

ble

tax

savings
'rroin
planning.
Tbts workshop is sponsored by H
&amp;: R Block and Tbe Obio State
University Extension. Meigs County. Reserve a seat, call the &amp;ten·
sioo Office at992-6696.
A Wiater Vegetable Scbool is
being held Monday, Dec. 12 from
9:30 a.m. - 2 p.m. at the Racine
United Methodist Cburcb. Topics
to be covered include growing
tomato transplants, cullcctions,
growers' panel on varieties pown,
worker protection staodards, Yell·
ctable daseases and vegetable proWction. Registration will lllrt Ill 9
a.m. A $S fee is payable at that
time. If possible, prereaiater by
calling lhc ExiCDSiCII Offioe at IJ92.
15696.
Harold l:aeen II t•e o•lo
Stat• Unlver•lty Exte•lio•,
Mel11 Co•iaty, A1rlc•lt.ral
in~estmentlretiremcnt

A&amp;el.t.

.

.,

�·osu professor ignites l

Bonds'
boost
sp.urs
market

A meeting

est rates were also softened by a
drop of 0.1 percent In October In
the government's Index of leading
. indicators, and a 0.4-pcrcentage
point ·drop in factory orders in
October, analysiS said.
Todd Clark, senior director in
equity trading at .MBbon Secnrities,
said stocks were also getting a lift
from a firmer dollar and a drop In
oil prices.
But concern .about higber interest rates down the road bas created
widespread caution. Stock
investors worry tbat higber rates
could crimp corporate earnings.
"Tbc market is ttying to decide
whether this earnings growth that
we saw in the third quarter is going
to be able to carry In tbe face of
higbee rates," Clarlt said. "We've
really had trouble holding on to
gains lately, and people are reluctant to bid (stocks) bigber."
Technology stocks, wbicb led
the market lower on Thursday,
were mixed.
Best Buy was active on the Bill

without any respoose frOm you, we
assume tbat you are not prepared to

See Answer to Puzzler on Page C-7
ACROSS
1 Fast
6 Rub
11 Beat ill
16 Prospect
21 Love.
22 Baseball great Hank

meet with us wben we requested

tbe meeting was cancened, Doolen
spokesman Fred Spar said, "The
letter speaks for itself." He
declined addltiooal comment.
Kazariu spokesman Ricbard
Nicaluzo said be expected the
meeting to take place next week.
"We're disappointed they caoceled the meetin$ and trust tbey
will attend a meeting we requested
in our·letter of Nov. 30 for luesday, Dec. 6, In New York,~ said
Friday nigbt
He did not say wby Kazarian

23 Sound: prefix
24 Muslim religion
25 Jests
26 Moves a little
27 Mathematical
proportion
28 Writer Zola
. 29 Honest30 Sirloin or T·bone
31 Retread
32 - Francisco
34 Caiflndar abbr.
35 Brave
38 Last Greek letter
40 State near Ky.
41 Cease
42 Drink
44 - the Terrible
45 Cry of a crow
47 Auto fuel
. 49 Spotted horse
52 Stormed'
54 Idle
56 "Body Hear star
60 African plant
61 Enjoy the taste of
62 Ran away
63 Publication of Hugh
Hefner
65 Part of ,Eur.
66-alia
67 Antlered animal
68 Detergent
' 69 Rowing item
70 Asner and Sullivan
71 --do-well
72 Steep rock
73 Evergreen tree
74 Stage
76 BoUed
·78 Boor
79 Distance measure
80. Latvians
81 Thai girl

did not respond to Borden's request
for details.
Kazarian bas said thaiJaponlca
proposed the $670 million repurchase of Borden's common stock
fOT $17 a share. The offer Includes
$430 million in casb and $240 million from Borden preferred stock.
The offer came one week after
New York takeover specialist
Koblberg, Kravis, Roberts &amp; Co.
announced the beginning of a $2
billion exchange offer for Barden's
stock.
Borden stock closed Friday at
$13.87-1/2 and a balf a sbare in
trading on tbe New York Stock
Exchange. The price was
uacbanged from Thursday's closing price.

resigned In March.

Both lawyers s~oke only on
cmdldonofanon}'llllty.
1bc White.House bas repeatedly
denied tbat tbere was any polldcal
Interference In inquiries of White-

attorney in Little Rock before a
special prosecutor was named to
bandie tbe Whitewater affair.

WASHINGTON- From persooal recollection• to telephone
recordS. proeecaton are Interested
For Wbitewater Investigators,
in questioning former Associate
Hubbell offers an intriguing
Attomey Gencn1 Wcblter Hubbell water.
prospect because of his access to
about possible political interference
Acalrding to the
Starr's President Clio too and the Wbite
in the Whitewater affair, two . oftlce Is Interested in bow lbe U.S. House loner circle.
lawym famiU. willi !lie liiveilip~-----ntomey'rofnc-e-twLinle" R~
·
·
lion said Friday.
handled two criminal matters !bat
Hubbell bas agree&lt;~ to admit to
Obtaining Hubbell's coopcra- touched on tbe Clintoos. Tbey mail fraud and tax evasion, a
lion "on Ibis and oilier IIUIIIa'S bas Include:
·
source close to tbe investigation
been the plan fiiiD tbe sat." said
• Criminal allegations by tbe told The Associated Press on
one lawyer familiar wltb Whilewa- Reso111don Trost Cup., the govern- Tbursday. The cbarges appear to
ter Independent counsel Keooetb meot's S&amp;L deanup lljCDCY, about stern from allegations be ovelbilled
Starr's loveadgadon.
tbe failed Madison Guaranty, an clients and bis fomier linn as a priAnotber lawyer said Starr Is Arkansas savings and loan once vate lawyer. As part of a plea bar·
.'almost certain to delve Into any owned by the CUntons' Whitewater gain, defendaill.s routinely agree to
cooversationl Hullbell, as the No. 3 b11sl11tss l*biers.
cooperate with prosecutors
JU51i!;c ~t offi~, mlgbt . •'~'be? case ..aiost former niuolc- .
The fall of a dose frl~ Is yet
bave bad about two criminal casea ipal judge DaVId Hale. who repeat- another blow to a Oiotoo adminisbandled by federal prosecuton In ediy told prosecutors that be bad tratioo already sure to face a
Little Rock, Art. .
lnformatloo lioltiog President Clio- Whitewater ooslanibt from Capitol
That source suggested prosec:u- too to an improper federaDy backed Hill wben Republicans take over
tora mlgbL use telephone rec~ loan.
·
Congress in January.
and calendars durfns Hubbell s
Botb matters were being hanRepublican Rep. lim Le8ch said
Just41e Depill1l1!tDt reuure as a road died last year by tbe office of Paula Friday tbat tbe news about Hubbell
map io IIUdylaa die Ointon admln- Casey, a former campaign worker ''UIIdtncores the sc:riolimeas of the
lstratioo's actions. Hubbell whom Clinton appointed U.S. Wbitewaterinvatiplloo."

sources.

62 Ranch.
63 Costly fur
84 "The - of the
Worlds"
85 Scrub
88 Sit for a painter
89 Heap
90 Plant used in pies
94 Mammoth
95 Decompose
96 Hairless on top
97 Disapproving cries
98 Regret
99 Assoc. relative
100 Brad
102 Wet
103 Rope of wire
104 Poem
105 Leaned
10.7 Speartike weapon
108 Thick soup
109 River in Belgium
110 Sharpen
111 Trash
113 Irrigate
114 Crystal-gazers
115 Kimono sash
117 Abbr. in bus.
118 Mouthful
119 Bye-byel
12f Liquid measures:
abbr.
124 Balsa
126 Giggle
128 Hauled
132 Have a meal
133 Bravo!
134 Swabs
135 Kick out
139 Period
140 Oak-to-be
142 The ones there
144 Boutique
.145 Where Jerez is
147 Purple color
148 Lid
149 Giant god
150 Having weapons
151 Office wQrker, for
shor1

152 Pays attention to
153 Odor
154 Like forest floors

Ia ~an Ridlard Weiolralb
Friday.
" - - coclqllt llld - CleWS .·
In addition, ·Weiotnwb said, tbe
to llll!b ftDal bble;cbecb ca die
o1 tuc1 llllolnl ~ plaDca, a pilot 111 lint officer will confirm
the amount of lhelin JIOUIIC(a as the
aya.
fiDal
step wblle the plaoe .is .. tbe
ucw prOc:tclare followa ·

....,...t ...,..........,
T'
I

RJI!ll!llhl!l USAir piBa- ptcl;

Wltb iuafllclcnt faellllolnl. .
Bcllimi!Dg last MollciJy. tbe ilrlloe 6eau iaatractiDI ita gate
agcojl to or .•y ccafe( Witb tbe

tarma1: before.it pulla onto tbc runway for llkeoff, ,WeinbiUb said. ·
The two rw cbe(b are being
added to two alrcadr existing
c:lleckoffs, made by USAir flight
crews, matins a total of four
cbecb before cac.b departure, be

c:ocil*•lloW ........... ~baa
before die fllallt Ia IIIIIICcl over 111
die OIPt cmr.llld die piiiiC'a cloof said.

PUBUCSALE
!lema awarded to VIllage
of Middleport from Fife
Ceae wf!l be eold at VIllage
Hall on Saturday, Dec. 10,
19841rom 10:00 a.m. to 4:00
p.m.
!tame will be eold "AS IS".
VCR.'I, TV'I, Chain SIWI 6
Mlac. Toole.
"NO GUNS"
(12) 4, S; 2TC

DOWN

1 Hindu prince
2 Sun-dried brick
3 Card game
4 Anger
5-Moines
6 Troupe
7 Detest
8 Elaborate melody
9 Pay: 2 wds.
10 Print measures
11 Scion
12 Personality
13 Leamby14 Black cuckoo
15 Bullwinkle, for one
16 City on the Danube
17 Doctrine
.18 Muck
19 Claw
20 Make better
30 Chem., e.g.
31 Hamilton bill
33 "Murder, She
Wrote" star
36 Bone: prelix
37-Jima
39 Loony
40 Playing card
43 Scraped harshly
44 Composer of "The
Rite of Spring"
46 Help
48 Bashful
49 Knighls·to-be
50 - - -Franca
51 Scandinavian
53 Declare
54 Mr. Cassini
55 Seedlike body
57 WW!! vessel
(hyph. wd.)
58 Cook a certain way
59 British wMewalls
61 Derisive look
62 Stunt
64 Clapping of hands
66 Inborn
87 Snare or bass
68 Costly fabric
72 Apple.remnant
73 Not coarse

75 Alpert of Tijuana
Brass fame
n Ruffian
78 Endure
79 Not al all spicy
82 Trick
83 Coconut juice '
84 Complete
85 Splash
86 Monte 87 Pipe or barrel
88 Self-esteem
89 Glass square
90 Director Redford of
"Quiz Show"
91 Got up
92 More impolite
93 Foamy drinkS
96 Make pies and
cakes
97 Naked
101 Antenna
102 Revealed
103 Attractive
106 New: prefix
107 Play on words
108 Pitiful
109 Laap or fiscal
112 -to belied
113 Toupee
114 Depot: abbr.
116 Quarterback John
Elway. for one
118 Coach
120 Perform
121 Sounds loudly
122 Implied but unsaid
123 Filched
125 Command for Fido
127 Ones who copy
129 Groups of players
130 lroquians
131 Foppish fellow
134 Relocate
136 Ballot
137 Persia. at present
136 Penny
141 Sprinted
143 Garden implement
144 Rds.
145 Waterston of "Law
&amp; Order"
146 Quid- quo

lmltlldlatliJo

Efllcllvi

each
NONE HIGHER

RAYBURNS
MARKET
KANAUGA OHIO
1

Gallipolis

2 . pupploo• ,_.., - . . .

&amp; VIcinity

Etkhound a SL BemOrd. 311'4-

875-7930.

ALL Yon! SoiH 111111 Be Pold In

3 Ron Torr1tue1 2 flll!!,il..t.!...llalo Adnnce. DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
11/Z Y11re Ola, 814.ZOOHir...,.
the doy belorelha Ill 1o to r11n.
5 Adonbte PuPIIIu, Bom Ho~ Sundoy IIIHICOI • 2:00 p.m. ·
- · Nlahl, ·CiHM Lob llbr, Frtdly. - y IIII!Gn • 2:00 ·
Roady To Cfol 614 218 loti.
~P:::·m:...::Sol:::u::;rda=y• ..,.....,.........,,....,.....,.
Drvt ~Amvoto FIN llarbl, Will I
~~r '"' porto ot
304- Thlft,_J)eotn Wlloomo, 8148 :mt belortii:OO P •
448-4..,., 814-448-34711.
Oonnon Sh_, I a- mix,
,..,.,•. 30W'nl-m0.

no

r•

Lutller SmHh Flrml, Baloh

Grove Rd., R,.land due lo liob
huntore, than IIIII daetrilcllon of

proparty. All wrlttan pennttaare
......111111
I will nol ben JPGftllbk for In)'
- · ..... tllon my - .

-..-...

PuODioe, Border Colllo mbr, 304-

7r.l-8sollotter 4:30 PM.
Roady To Clo 6 Wllk Old Puppi•, AKC AkHa, 8,_7ot131t.

BRIDGE

Monday. Dec. 5. 1994
In the year ahead, you might be more
daring and enterprising in financ ial .

PHILLIP
ALDER

endeaVors than ; ou've been in the past.

&lt;

Greater responsibilities are indicated for

you in the year ahead, and the rewards
will be commensurate. If you're a doer,
you'll be a getter
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) This
could be a good day to socialize with

.;

clients or .business associa!es. In a con-

vivial atmosphere you may ba able to put
deals together that wouldn't otherwise we get to heaven leaning on arms of
geL Astro-Graph year-ahead predictions those we've helped. Today your interests
make wonderful Christmas stocking can be advanced in several ways by
stuffers for all signs of the zodiac. Mail oHering aid to other~ .
$1 .25 to Astro·.Graph. c/o this newspa· PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Warmer
pe·r, P.O. Box 4465. New York . NY relationships might develop w1th several
10163. Be sure to state the zodiac sign(s) persons in the near future . lt will be up to
you to initiate matters, however.
of your choice.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) You ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191 Take a gam·
could stand out at a gathering today . ble on your expertise today. It might
Your warmth and good humor Will attract demonstrale how your talents can
improve your lot rn life.
others like a flame attracts moths.
TAURUS
(April 20-May 20) Associates
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19) The stars
will
seek
you
out to make deals today.
indicate you Will recerve benefitS through
others. Exactly what will occur. however. Your impanial and sharing anributes will
attract alliances.

may not be evider'\t immediately . Be

patient.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Today's
developments might bring about some-

thing you've been wanting . Begrn to
intensify your expectations instead ol
diluting them.
ARIES (March 21·Aprlt 19) Lady Luck
continues to stack the deck in your favor
today . Aim high and think ambitiously.
You won't need to worry ab.~&gt;ut being sec·
ond best.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Today you
w•ll understand developments that baffle
others . Frien(js are likely to rely upon

·

ously might be lucky for you again. Listen
to what he/she has to offer.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) You might
realize today that you need some support
on a current project. Fortunately, those
most qualified may be al your disposal .
''LEO (July 23-Aug. 12) Substantial gains

'
~
·~

..--.
I~

''

""''"

your resourcefulness today.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22)

·

Arrange a
social activity today that •ncludes an· old

friend as well one of your new!!r acquain,...~

• i.:l
. II·

"''\Jo
t

-.
.j

'"
_,

•

'

recently estranged friend. He/she is also
ready to forgive and forget.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Take the initiative
today instead of waiting to follow instruc·
lions. If you see something that needs to
be done, do it.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Others should
be willing to work wrth you today after you
make it clear that your method is best lor
all concerned and doesn't just grat1fy your
. own interests .
LIBRA (Sept. 23.Qct. 23) Close a Iuera.'
tive venture today. You're on a prolltable
roll and it you handle things properly.
desirable end resuHs aoe indicated.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You will be
an astute judge of character today. Put
this to good use by delegating e•actly the
rfght workers to handle specific assign·
ments.

outdated into something functionaL l)se

"

.

perfect time to make amends with a

01994 NEWSPAPER:ENTERPRIS£ ASSN.

can come from transforming something

...

departure.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Watch for big
business opportunities today. Your
chances for personal gain look promising.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) This is the

~

CHECKTH.E

lualfor tiMi fun o!K. · ,

·

OIIIIM NEWSPAPEIII!NTERPRISE ASSN.
•

•

'•

Sun. 12-6

12· 3·94

•5 3

LAYNE FURNITURE

¥A 3

•A J 8
o~oAK8765

WEST

EAST

•9 8 4 2

•A J 7 6

¥6

52

•Q ·6 5
•Q 10 2

¥K 9 8 7 4
t K 7 4

•9
SOUTH
•K Q 10
• Q J 10

• 10

Vulnerable: Both
Deal~r: East
South West North East
I¥

Pass
1 NT

Pass Dbl.
Pass
Pass 3 NT
All pass
Opening lead: • 2

To win or
not to win
By

Phillip Alder

Having just published a book my· '
self. I can relate to Clarence Darrow's
.comment, "Some day I hope to write a ,
book where the royalties will pay for 1
the copies I give away."
In bridge, it is sometimes possible
to profit from giving away a trick East
missed his chance on today 's deal .
from the World Open Teams at the
NEC World Bridge Championships.
Against three no-trump, West led
hi s lowest , not his highest , heart,
since he hadn 't supported his part·
ner's suit. East won with the king and
switched to his· lowest spade. But that
didn't cause declarer any sleepless
nights. He won with the king, cashed
dummy's two top clubs and, when the
·suit didn 't break 2·2, unblocked the
heart ace before playing a third club.
Whichever suit West led noll.- would
concede a nin th trick to declarer.
"Wouldn 't it be better to continue
hearts?" asked West. "When I get my
club trick, I clear the hearts, and you
cash two heart tricks when in with the
spade ace."
"That doesn't beat me," e•plained
South. "After winning with dummy 's
heart ace, I immediately lead a spade
toward my king, eslablishing my ninth
trick."

-

LARGE SELECTION
OF
LIVI.NG ROOM SUITES
SOFA&amp; CHAIR
PRICED FROM
$450T0$1195
FREE DELIVERY
Mon. thru Sat. 9-5; Ph. 446-0322
3 Miles Out Bulaville Pike

9 3 2

•J 4 3

"The winning defense ," pointed oul
North, "is for East to duck the first
trick. This allows East to stay in touch
with his pal"\ner."
When they compared scores at the
end of the match, it was learned that
North-South's teammates had defeated three no-trump.
"Well defended," said,South.
"Not really," observed East. "They
played the contract by North and I
simply led fourth -highest from my
longest and lltronfll!st.•

tances. This meeting could develop into
something very interesting.
LIBRA (Sept. 23.Qct. 23) A mailer that's
been bothering you will be resolved to
your satisfaction. The lesson here is not
to worry about things that might never
happen.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Today if
you engage ;n friendly competition. do
not takll it, or yourse~. too seriously. You '
can have a wondelful time doing things

2 miles N. of S. Bridge on SR 7
Sat. 9-7

_tures.

Sunday. Dec.4. 1994

Presents
• B&amp;B Christmas Trees
* Fresh Cut Christmas
Trees
* Uve Poinsettias
*All grown in Gallia and
Meigs Counties
446-4530

Situations you develop on your own have
a better chance of success than joint venSAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Of all
the signs you might be one of the luckiest
today. Others will be working on your
behaH behind the scenes, helping you in
critical areas. Major changes are ahead
lor Sagittarius in !he coming year. Send
for your Astro·Graph predictrons today.
Mail $1 .25 to Astro-Graph, c/o this news·
paper, P.O. Box 4465 , New York , NY
10163. Be sure to state your zoaac sign.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Your
hopes can be realized today if you take
action instead of waiting for fate to roll the
dice. ,
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 191 Some say

New company coming into area.
We are a Fitness Center
dedicated to the needs of todays
woman. We provide tanning
beds, aerobics, weight loss
training, physical fitness training.
Group and private instruction ·
available, also child care facilitythis facility is open for women
only. For more information call
446-3401 . Scheduled to open
October I st.

IVYDALE COUNiFW

ASTRO-GRAPH

who was an advantageous partner previ·

"

$12, $20 &amp; $22

llllPllli!lt on Ev- IIIII

GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) Someone

"Tbls Ia. just a redundancy,
liantly, to assure tbole In the public wbo mlgbt baVe any lingering
doubts about tbe inlegrity- of tbe
fuel cbecb,'' WeinbiUb said.
Tbree weeks ago, Tbe New
York Times reported that nine
us~~':nbad left tbeir ga1e1
witb
t fuel ~ c~ur~na
a 16-montb period after the airline
eliminated a requirement tbat· tbe
· ground grew provide' the cockpit
wilb a refueling RC!dpt befQII: ea

Pine

3 Announcements

your suggestions instead of their own
ideas.

I.'

.,.

Public Notice

Christmas Trees
Have Arrived
Scotch and White

3 Announcements

PUBUC NOTICE
Seperete,
eealed
prop01111 will be received
at the omce of the Tr•eurer
of the Board of Education of
Southern Local School
D!alrlct, Racine, Ohio, Melli•
County, until 12:00 o'clock
noon, December 13, 111!14.
For Bua Cha1111 and
Bodlea. Coplel of the
SPECIFICATIONS,
lnetructlon to blddera, and
propoeal forme may be
obtained at the omce of the
Truaurer, Dennie E. Hill.
Said Board of Education
raaervtl the right to reJect
any and all, or parte of any
and all bide.
By order of Board of
Education of South.ern (12) 4, 11; 2TC
LOCII &amp;ehOOI Dletrlct.
Dennie E. Hill, Trueurer.
A11110 unee 111 e111 s
(11) 13, 20, 27; (12) 4; 4TC

•

I

WASIIINEJ'I'tW (AP)- USAir

PubiC Notice

..

! USAir adds refueling checks
I.

adults with chronic lung disease
will meet:
Wedneeday, Dec. 7 at 2 p.m. in
the French 500 Room
Holzer Medical Center
Gallipolis. Ohio
Speakers: Candace f'ope, BS, RN
Topic: MaxWell 50 program For
more information, call the Holzer
Heahh Hotline at
1-800-462-5255

/·

j

iii

"BREATHE EASY"
An educatonal support group for

SUNDAY PUZZL.ER

Hubbell-plea bargain intrigues
Whitewater case prosecutors
By PEI'E YOST
.U.OC:Iafed Pa- Writer

:

COLuMBUS - Wltb bla oversized sweater IIICl casual pants, Paul :
Scbultz bardly 1oob !be part~ a Wall Street mover ad lbabr.
•
But tbe Oblo State Unl'mlity liJvmcx: JIO(eaaor llld two c:olllborlltOn ~
find tbemaelvea at the center of a cootroveny tbat tble8teDI to roct Nu- :
daQ, the natloo's SCilOIId-larxcst stock cxdlanac.
•
Schultz, OSU ooDeague Jeff Harris and WiWam QJrlade of Vandatlllt :
University publlabed two studies of stock prlciDg ca Nudaq earlier ~ :
year. Since tbeo. lnvesun bave Oled a dozeD claaa action lawauita
log that brokm rig bids ca tbe computetb'Jed tradlns a)'llelll.
:
1bc U.S. Justice Department baa been looking Into the Nudaq trading, •
as well as tbe Scauilica .t Exd!ange Commlulcll.
:
"We thougbt Ibis was potentlally Important," Schultz said Friday. :
"We did expcc:t tbat regulators would be Interested In Ibis.
:
''Wbal was aoomplete sbodt to us were the lawsuits.''
•
Scbultz said be and Cbrlstie weren't looking for imgularltiea wben :
they began reviewing Nasdaq J1ice quotes In !be fll!IIII1W of 1993.
:
The pair t.J;•mlned tbe quotes of the 100 1001t actiwly traded Nasdaq :
stocks In 1991. Almost immediately, they spoaed something odd about
the ''spellls.''
:
A spread Is the difference between tbe bid - the priee buyers are willlog to pay for a stock - and the aak - tbe price requested by sellers.
1bc spread amouots to tbe difference that the Nudaq brotal receive
for executing a trade .
Tbcy found that actively traded stocb, sucb as Apple.Computer, bad
spreads ~ about 2S cents, wbere8ll CIOOlparable stocb on lbe New York
Stock Exchange - the nation's bisgest stock market- bad a mucb oar~
rower gap between the bid and aak prices.
Schultz and Cbristie also noticed that more tban two-tblrds of tbe •
stocb were quoted witbout prices In "odd-eigbts," or prices ending In 1Board and. up 7/8 at 33-3/4. The
8, 3-8, 5-8 and 7-8 of a dollar.
stock of Ibis retailer, wbich sells
"The inidal Impression Is thai these guys bave some sort of under- •
electronic equipment and computstanding or some sort of implicit agreement not to use tbese prices,"
ers, fell sbarply on Tbursdsy after
Schultz said•
tbe company said its earnings
So bow much difterence oould 12-112 cents make?
would be below analysts' expcctaAbout $100 million a year, acc:ordlog to one lawyer involved. Othen •
tioos.
say the fiJure Is hlgber.
.
Intel Corp. rose 1/4 to 62-718 In
And it s the small investor wbo Ia losing the. most, Scbultz said.
leading Nasdaq volume. The stock
"Small trades tended to be almost always at the bid or the ask," be
was recovering from two days of said. ''Large trades a more likely to be executed at an odd eigbL''
sbarp losses amid concerns about
Nasdaq officials disagree with Schultz' coaclusions.
problems with tbe company's Pj:n- "
"The study Is flawed," said Nasdaq spllla:smm JIIDCS Spellman. "It
limo computer chips.
cherry picks to llllive at answers and it misses the point' •
Stocks were lower overseas.
1bc point, Spellman said, is not the price quoted to Investors, but the
Tokyo's Nikkei index fell 0.1 per- price at whicb tbe traosal:don Is carried out
·
cent, and Frankfurt's DAX index
"People bave the opportunity to better the spread mel, indeed, they
was down 0.4 percent. London's do," be said, citing trades made on 161bs, 32nds and 64tba.
FT-SE 100 fell 0.73 percent
Schultz remains UIIClODvlnced, particularly after wbat bappened on May
27.
.

aUea· : ·

scheduled for Sunday between Bor- and the Sunday morning meeting
delll lac. and an Investor wbo bas - _will be cancelled," Tasco's letter
propoaed bUying 30 percent of Ita said.'
stock appeared to bave been called
Wben asked wbetber. tbal meant
·
off. ·
Borden CbairmaD Frank T~
raised questions about the New
York meeting In a letter sent on
Friday to Paul Kazarian, mmqlng
partner of ProvldeliCC, R.I.-based
Japonlca Partoels.
Columbus-based Borden asked
Kuarian on Thursday for more
details about bls offer, including
bow be plans to incnase Borden's
stock price and bow be will pay for
the deal.
"As the business day bas. ended

BULLETIN BOARD

•:•

By PAVL SOtJIOW)A
AIIOdated Pa- Writer

Meeting between Borden,
potential buyer called off
COLUMBUS -

~

Nasdaq controversy

By PATRICIA LAMIELL
AP Bul~Ma Writer
NEW YORK - Stocta posted
strong gains on Friday, as bonds
staged a surprising rally and
pushed interest rates lower amid
new confidence that Inflation Is
undec control.
Tradm also said the mar1cet was
staging a technical rebound from
sharp losses earlier Ibis week.
The Dow Jooes illdustrial average rose 44.75 to 3,745.62, reversing a 38-point loss nn Thursday
. .and ending the week with a 37polntgaln.
1bc 30-year bond shot up 1 3-16
points, pushing its yield down to
7.90 perceot Bonds rallied despite
an unexpectediy strong November
employment report, which showed
But Jolmsoo and others said tbe
the nation's unemployment rate
market bad been tecboically poised
dropping 0.2-pcrcentage point to to rally after losing substantial
5.6 percent
ground eartier in the week, and that '
Analysts said that data might tecbnical factors, like program
have signaled that the economy trading, were responsible for some
was growins at an Inflationary of tbe IIUIIIcet's gains.
pace, and could encourage the Fed"Stock Investors are very, very
eral .Reserve to fm1her raise short- tentative," Jobnson said. "Tbe
term Interest rates.
level of confidence Is not higb."
But bond Investors focused on
Still, advancing issues bad a
part of the jobs report tbat lhowed solid 3-to-2 lead on declioers on
a drop In hourly wases and the
the New York Stock Exchange.
average wort week, both. of whldl
Volume was a moderate 284.75
signaled that lntlatioo may not be million shares, down from 285.93
an immediate problem. Signs of million Thursdsy.
low lnt1atioo could slow down any
Broad-market Indexes rose as
plans the Federal Reserve may well, helped in part by a rebolllld In
bave for further dsbtenlng credit,
some technology stocks. Tbe
and that was taken as good news
NYSE'
s composite index rose 1.97
for both stocta IUid bonds.
to
248.ot
. The Standard &amp; Poor's
"The conclusion, at least for
·
500-stock
Index rose 4.38 to
today - and It's oaly lelltadve 453.30.
is tbat the ecoaomy Ia going to
slow to a no-boom, no-bust, sus- w Tbe Nasdaq composite index
tainable, non-inflationary pace," rose 3.83 to 745.02. The American
said Hugh Johnson, chief mllfket Stock Excbange's market value
index rose 127 to432.46.
$11111egist l!t F:II'St Al!ll!!ly Corp,
Investors' fears of IJ}gber inter-

By TIM PVET
Aaodllted Pa- Writer

OH-9olnt Pl1111nt, WV

THE ARK
PET,SHOP
758 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-2275
' Christmas Hours
Monday thru Saturday
10 am til9 pm
Sunday noon til 6 pm
Have your pet's phototaken with Santa,
December 10
Groom Shop near
Centenary 10-2
Price $5 each
All Proceeds To
Animal Welfare League
Past &amp; Present ·
218 Third Ave.
Will be open
Dec. 1st, 2nd, 3rd, &amp; 5th
Lots of Goodies
9-5
Special offers
8' to 1o· Trees
Only $40 each
Bradford Pears, Pin Oak,
Kwansan Cherry
Free.Delivery 256-1 140
Davison Landscaping
Call 446-2342

or992-2156

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Will come To Your Home.

Call 441-01 08
for Details

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment
SR-2.2
Cancelled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior
Insurance

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure ·
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance
Phone (614)446-6111

Gallipolis
BOOTS
All leather Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
Engineer ........................ $49.00
We!!ington .... .................,$49.00
Loggers .................... .....$50-55
Harness .................... .... $59.00
Carolina-Georgia-H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex
Swain Furniture 62 Olive St.
Gallipolis
All U.S. Made
Old you know that.. PlaMed Parenthood of
Southeast OP\Io in Gallpotto ~
confldenlla1 family plaming services 10 600
Qallia County residents each year. Sinh
Conlrot Services inctl.de a physician
examination, cancer seteening, education
and binh control IUPI'IIes. WOmen and men
may , _ tests and treatment !of sexually
transmitted disease and anonymous HIV
t~~ · Sti&lt;lng Foe Scale; Private Insurance
and t.tedlcaid ano ......,.od. Planning

prevents unintended Pf80080CY. For an
appt. call (614) 446-0166

IVYDALE COUNTRY
Presents

Resin Santas
Pine Cone Trees
Uve Wreaths
Uve Crosses
2 miles N. of S. Bridge on S. R. 7
Hours: 10· 7 M-F
9-7 Saturday
12-6 Sunday

PHONE 446-4530
Arts &amp; Crafts Show
Overbrook Center
Middleport, Ohio
Saturday, December 10, 1994
10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Arts and Crafts by Area
' Craftsmen
Free Table Space Available
For More Information Please
Contact Mike Crites at
Overbrook Center at 992-6472
between 9-4 M-F

Brunicardi Music Inc.
Guitf\r Sale
330 Second Ave .
446-0687
Gallipolis
AM VETS FLEA MARKET
WED. &amp; THUR.
DEALERS WELCOME
446-4208 OR 446-3478
NOTICE: Starting Dec. 2, Pt.
Pleasant Flea Market will be
open Fri. thru Sat., 9 am - 7pm
Tickets will be given away with
each purchase for drawing
each week until Christmas.

�•

..

'

Ott-Point Pleaunt,

:rI

wv

t

·.: .

8

AplrllhlWII

PubllcS&amp;Ie
· &amp; Auction

!"
~·r~~~~~~~~~--------------~

··· BOGGS AUCTION SERVICES

aa-t
••
- R8nolo
~ Dn
•, 112 v.in Old,
2111
~~.

Christmas Auction
3 dealers
Sat. Dec. 10, 1994 7 pm

.'

Yanl Slle

9

Wilted to Buy

W.- To 11ur:

Pomeroy,
lldcllllport
&amp; VIcinity

J,..

11

t..rr LMir.IM , . 1111

-

-

Opponunny

;=.~n~ T.=-'l:- ~

Auloo
Wllh Or WlhoUI llol- Col

Dow"'!:"" - · ........
11•
..,._,
Ui'
...-=-=~
With
Dooaoi!IIJOn To: ~ DMI AI
To lo!r:

4 l•*omn. 2 FUll ....... 10
Ao .........OI9 .... ....
"--'
Cnok
, .. .
Lcocolod Righi Olf 1111,. c
IDoiL Aecllald To: ..,.. Or
._. ort.r. 114 441 11'11.

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

........ " " ' -

Llllor 01 .........
._TileD
• t- i i O
IIIIr I, 11M To: llo. 111¥1111

COIIW, Ooldlllnao. SliVer~

:
•·

Real Est2te

=

Gold CGIM. II.U. CGin llhop,
111-..tA- Gallpollo.

lod

..._ PHR, - - 0 1 ~•',!11 01 Ato

Employment Serv1ces

AI Wciik - . . Fleldblo Hounl 1211 Thlnl AviiiUI, Galllpollo, un
~ -

1 No Door IDoor.
clop. Alp. ,_'1112-4731.

Preview 8:30 a.m. Day Of Auction

Ohio University Personnel Services is currently
accepting applications lor an permanent
intermittent (called in as needed) LABORATORY
TE9HNOLOGIST for the College of Osteopathic
Medicine. JOB DUTIES : Perform all routine lab
work in the clinical laboratory for the Osteopathic
Medical Center. Answer questions from nurses,
physicians, pathologists and any other source
necessary. Maintain excellent work quality In the
clinical laboratory. QUALIFICATIONS: High
school diploma or equivalent required. Two year
degree as an MLT (ASCP) registry or eligible.
Experience in all aspects of medical technology.
Starting salary is $10 .99 hourly. Hours of work
are to be arranged. Days off are Saturday and
Sunday. APPLICATION DEADLINE: December
9, 1994.
All individuals interesled in this position must
complete an application (individuals may not
apply over the phone) at University Personnel
Services, 44 University Terrace, Athens, Ohio.
Applications may be obtained between lhe hours
of 8:00 a.m . and 5:00 p .m . Monday through
Friday.
OHIO UNIVERSITY
Athens, Ohio
An Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer
Minorities and Women are Encouraged to Apply

&amp;Auction
llekPooroonAuellon=,
tun umo ouct_,, •
auction ...teo. Uuawd

,

Help Want.ed
8

LABORATORY TECHNOLOGIST

Public Slle

III,Ohlo I Will Vllalnll, 77N'/U.
Wodomty•'• Auction ........
a
. . r · IIIIIIIIW7NIIO.
0

Real Estate General

Public Sale
&amp; Aucllon

8

t";

Public Sale

.'..;:
: ..
: ;·
:
•
;,;

&amp;Auction

Public AucHon

Saturday, December 10, 1994
10:00 a.m.

.e h'llstma.s

Location: From Gallipolis follow State Route 141
South approximately 20 miles turn right on
Flagspring Road and go 3/4 mile.
Having sold our farm we'll be selling the following:
Couch &amp; Chair, Recliner, end table, hospital bed,
baby stroller, 3 pc. Bedroom Suite, electric sewing
· machine, Buffell, Bed, Square Oak End Table, metal
bed, Linnen, Table &amp; Six Chairs, Chest type Freezer,
twin bed, Lawn Spreader, Work Bench w/Grinder,
Some Hand Tools, Large Saw Blade, Wheal Cradle,
Wash Tubs, milk crocks, stone jars, Fan, Old School
Desk, Dishes, Harrow, 4 rolls Barbed Wire, Small
Stove, Some Horse Equipment and other Collectiable
and Miscellaneous items.
Cash
Lunch Av:1ilabJe

fred &amp; Ida Miller, Owners

Lee Johnson -Auctioneer
Crown City, Ohio
Phone: 256-6740

Real Estate General

·

rluctlon

:

All New Merchandise
Friday, Dec. 9, 1994
at 7:00p.m.
Something for Everyone

614-379-2720

Cash
Eats
Positive I.D.
Not Responsible For Accident Or Loss Of Properly
Uc. and Bonded In State of Ohio
Auction Every Saturday Night

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

446-1066

..,_,.

,... .

,,.

...
•
...•..

~

..
.,.,
.,.

:::,...
....

,.....
,.~

.

thanks to everyone who
helped, or contributed in
anyway in the loss of our
loved one. Willis Funeral
Home,
Holzer
Emergency Room .Staff,
Oallia
County
Emergency
Squad,
Ouyan Fire Dept. First
respondc;rs, Revs. Ralph
Workman &amp;
Gary
Wamcr, The lnherilers,
Veterans of Foreign
Wars, American Legion
for the beautiful flowers,
food, calls, visits, co·
workers, to the women
who prepared food. May
God Bless each &amp;
everyone
Naomi Whitt &amp; family

Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Reattor/Broker-446·0971
Mose Canterbury, Realtor-446·3408
Jeanette Moore, Realtor· 256·1745
Tim Watson, Realtor-446-2027

'~

Au~tloneer Mark Hutchinson 614·698-6706

•

Licensed and Bonded in Ohio
Partner Frank Hutchinson 614-592-4349

Chery1Lemley.............. 742-3171

11 467· EXCELLENT LOCATION, DAIRY
BAA BUSINESS. Alt equipment stays, bldg. ,
approx. 624 sq. ft., 3 half baths, elect

d1-...112
,,
OH. E x Condition, UOII I1WfJ.
3113 Evonlllgl.

heaUcent air, clly water.

~ . ;2~-;~~~~••=m:~;~;-....-

DEBBIE DRIVE·EVEAYONE SHOULD
OWN A NEW HOME AT LEAST ONCE. This
2 story beauty features 3 or 4 br's, 2 baths,
beamed ceilings In llle LR &amp; family rm, cherry
cabinets in kltchen,.6.in~ouler wall.s_l much
more. Fantastic view.

•!

1473- BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY CAPE COD
offers 63.75 acres, mil, mostly pasture,
tobacco base, 40x60 barn. 22x44 block
mitkhouse. 750' road frontage lor possible
bldg. sites.
1452· RIO GRANDE· t 1/2 story brick home
offers 4 brs, 1 1/2 baths, LR, FR. DR. full
finished basement, attached garage. Call for
more details.
___ .

NEW UST1NG· 2 homes located on approximately 1 112
acres. One home has 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1 112 baths,
living room, dining room. family, kitchen. One home has
8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, kllchen,
family room. Bolli have rural water. LP gas Furnace. and
more. Call lor appointment to see.
HOME ON RACCOON CREEK· 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
living room. dining room. kitchen, 2 car garage located
on approximately 1 112 acres more or less. Oily
SChOOlS. CALl. TO SEE!

11482· $25,000 Just minutes lrom town.
used lor rental properly now. 3 BRs, bath,
FR, kitchen. DR, gas heat

1445· VINTON AREA. ..Very nice brick v,
home, LR. FR. kitchen, DR. HP, cent. air,
garage and unattached garage. Rental
house on prop.

64 ACRES. mil, Comer ol Woods Mill and
SR 554, has a really nice homesite old bam,
tots of privacy yel close lo school and other
activities.

LIVE IN ONE AND HAVE THE INCOME
FROM THREE IIORE· each umt has 2
apartmenls.Faclng clly park with all the
conveniences of in ·town living.

HOME ON RACCOON CREEK FOR SALE· 2
bedrooms. a balll. 2 decks. new root, eleclric heat, 1 112
8Cf8S, more or less. CAll FOR AP~INTMENT.
HOME FOR SALE· 3 bedroom home, hardwood floors.
ceiling fans. fire place with insert. 20 x 24 garage and
much more, clly schools. CALL TODAY

1427· EXTRA NICE HOME ON ST. AT. 7
SOUTH· 3 BAs, LR, FR, dining area, lull
basement, garage. Can todayl

HOUSE, 8 ACRES MORE Oli LESS, located In
Lawrence Co .. 2 bedrooms. living room, dining room,
kitchen, bath, lg. garage 24x40. CALL FOR
APPOINTMENTI!I
LOT IN GREEN TWP. FOR SALE· 156X1 00 city water
and sewer. eleetrtc to pole level. Priced $14,000. CALL
FOR INFORMATION.
HOlliE FOR SALE • 3 bedrooms, bath, living room,
. family room, kitchen. lanced In baCk yard. PRICED AT
$45,000.00
.
VACANT LAND • Approximately 10 acres located on
Bob McCormlct&lt; Rd. Cilll for more lnlorrnation.

a

FOR YOUR CONVENI&amp;NCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1-IICJ0.894.1066

ID
~

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE UST1NGS
PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS,
RETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.

J

EXECUTIVE BUILDING LOTS. 5 minutes
from Holzer, all 5 acres or more.

1419- JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD· Addison
Twp., 386 acre farm, 3 ponds. tobacco .base,
44x100 barn wllh concrete lloors. May
consider spill. (678)
1477· LARGE BUILDING WITH LOTS OF
OFFICE SPACE AND GARAGES FOR
TAUCKS ..Jrontage on Third Ave. and Grape
Street. Call for details.
COURT STREET RESIDENCE· Older hOme
. has 2 sep. units or could be converted bacl&lt;
to 1 tamiy dwelling. Facas city park.
BLAZER ROAD· Ranch home. 3 BAs, 1 112
baths, LR, kitchen, 16 x 28 garage. River
Valley school dlstrlct.
1429-0FFICES, OFFtcES, OFFICES. Thafs
what this 3,,000 S&lt;Vft. building offers. Located
on SR 160 near Holzer. Ideal for many uses.
Call for more Information.

1431· Approx. 5 acres wllh lrontage on
Raccoon, beautiful shaded lot, house has 3
BR, bath, LR, kitchen, large unallached
·garage. Offers a lot ·ol privacy and peace &amp;
quiet.
1432· MOM &amp; POP OPERATION FOR
SALE· Small restaoranl wllh two rental
houses. Properly Is located In Oak Hill, Call
for more details.
1409- Four lots. 4 BR home, reduced to
$44.000. 2 ballls, LR. DR. lull basement. gas
haaUcent. air. Comer lots.
1405- NEED A NEW OFFICE + A RENTAL
APARTMENT? 250 Sec. Ave. Nice offlca
downstairs and apartment and storage up.
Convenient to banks and &amp;hopping.
33 ACRES- MIL corner of SA 325 and

Woods Mitt Road, &lt;recreational land· only
$16,500.
.
"ATTENTION' DEVELOPERS AND
·fNVESTORS...EXTAA NICE .PIECE .OF
PROPERTY LOCATED NEAR PORYEA..
J::arge lake wlth·take front sites, mobile home '
·on properly at present time, county Y(ater, '
entire tract'COIISists of 77 acres, mil.
,

Lllr!'!,

NEW LISTING 1 YR OLD LOG HOME·
Sports approx. 2700 sq. It of living area; solid
wood walls, floors &amp; ceilings; extra large
rooms; wrap-around deck; part basement;
attached garage &amp; 2 barns, located al gage
on a sprawling 4.2 acre tract. $165,000.

•
$~
\1~

t

t.

l:

500 ACRES LOCATED ON US 35· Between
Rio Grande &amp; Centerville approx. 75 ac.
" croptana &amp; the balance In WOO&lt;Ia and brullhy
pasture; vary nice t t/2 story brick home with
4 br's &amp; a full basement; some buildings,
$250.000

1;
~

;;

'!-·
~

:f.

1411· LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN PEACE
AND QUIET· Thle could be it. 49.66 acres, ·
Andrews Rd., 8 year old home willl 3 BRs, 2
1.2 baths, LR, DR, FR; heat pump, 2 car
garage plus 24x48 detacbed garage.

. ..

;'!:
;~
~·
~

:t:..-.

1428- CHERRY DRIVE-just at the edge of
town : 2 BRs, 1 balll, LR, kitchen. Gas heat,
city water, good Investment properly.

·:·
:·.:
••
•
'•·
:::

1447· OAK HILL, former clothing
store ... $27;900, corner lot. Call for more
Information.

441-7711l

11115 14170, lrodudw lng, " ' - blocloo, , ,...
homtOM\1111'8 lnlurlnol. MCI I
noonlho fRU lol nnl. Onlf

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
4-011-'-Pioo.Cor-

-Of .,.um TrolAnd • Rood, $14,000, .-ntt. .

"'"""'
few - .
112 NortloorD.
In
Olllllo County
,_
Cuoolom tog homo, cOli

114-112-3Z87.
Sonic

.

Vollllf, Applo

-IN

~

41 Houses for Rent
Bodroom - . I300IIIo.
~

Cnok Rd., IM-

Nol1h In Tho Clolllpollo Ctly
Llnllla. lit ttl 2411 Na " - '

t..MIIII grAnd-No.

,.
-.Pl. ,..._M~
['00111!, 2 Ful ......

11400 u.pa.l, No .... ........

DOL

.=::=,--

tor ,... 1n P•"'o':r:;

-

IS WHERE THE HEART
your
heart wiH tell ygu 10 make this houso your
home. Remodeled t 1/2 story home inciU&lt;Ies allths charm of your grandmo1her·s home..iusl
updated! 3 bedrooms, living room, eal·tn
kitchen and dining room. Bonus: large block
building with potential lor many uses. $52,000
.
1214
25,000 SO. FT. OF WAREHOUSE SPACE!
Located only 3 miles from lnlerstale 35 on a
state highway. Several loading docks and
ramps. Very nice office space (5 offices) and
conference room . 2 baths. Many possible uses.
Approx. 7 acres of flat land. $175.000 . .Call
David Wiseman.
n13

42 Mobile Homu
lOr Rent

---~~
IIJm~~tl~

plleoi,-Jitii!E

· llnl
n•nc.:r.~llll~
Dn
l.alln
CIIWI*•
'1111.

I 1\11. -

a,.

t:f

·

a lrllf u

3 diamond dinner ring, 2 diamond rings, 1 chip, large
diamond ring sat w/5 stones and mise other Items.

llob7o ..._ In

~ " 1984 SkyHne 14x46 elecflc heat, 2 bedrooms, 4"
: walls, porch &amp; underpinning. To sell at 12:30 pm. Very
• nlcel

Exec:utor c.e l286t4
Dan SmHh • AucUoneer
'
Ohio 1344 W.Va. 515

.•

OWNER WANTS IT SOLOII Very nice ranch
style homo in lam~y oriented naoghborhood. 3
bodrooms, large family room. 2 ~r garaQil.
Localod in Green School DtStncl. large
covered patio lo enjoy. Fenced in yard.
Outbuilding. $69,900
. . 1201
MORE ROOM THAN MEETS THE EYEI
Explore !Ills 5 bedroom home and you'll find
there's a lot of house for the price. Large living
room . eat·in kllchen . 3 lull baths also
complement this home. 2 fireplaces, gas heat,
central air. Close to town. Nice neighborhood.
1210
'Priced to move al $85,000.
CHARMING CAPE CODI Hare's an
outstanding 3·4 home that's in beautiful
cOndition. Featuros include 1111 outstanding oak
kitchen looking over the bast bacl&lt; yard deck
· around. 2 full baths . both remodeled 1n
excellent taste . Large living room with
attractive lireplace. 2 car garage and full
basement. Don't wait to call bacause believe
me. it won't last long. Call Davie.
11211

WISEMA~

NEW LISTING! Don'1 Nix 11, Fix ltll This
home located on LeGreande Boulevard neods
some work, but ala price of $49 ,000. you CM
afford to do the work. Offers 3 bedrooms. 2
balhs, large kitchen plus office space currenUy
rented. Bonus feah.nes include a new root and
brick exterior. You can't afford not to can
Carolyn today.
ftiOO
Mind Your 0Wft Buolroau at Homell c.tch ·
up i&gt;n ollice work or lolour. reading In tho
privocy of tho oludV while lloo rut of ltelamily
Qlllhen around 1te firoplace in lloofamly ooono.
Thlo 3 badloorn, 2 bath ranch with a ear
allachool gantge ollon plo&lt;Jty of living ..,... for
tho growing family. Call today tor an
· appoin.,..t 1o -IIIia Rio Grande - home
prioed at 151,1100.
IISGI

1ft E~l Ovor 14,0(10 "+ ft.
ofP~.IIIe
~-. .......-ouw &amp; garage ..,__ Nearly 1
114 of land In 11oo hoalt of town witt 322'
of • - lra'illogo an IWD cilleNnl ......._ Owr
21,000_eq._ll ofj)ariUng ....... lllucll, rroucll
lllora. I:IUICiing In very good rapalr. c.JI Dew
lor ,_. dottailo.

REAL ESTATE, INC •
'

Howard Logan-

La!QI! ._nice auction, come prepalred for weather, too

COUNTRY RANCH Imagine living in the
country. Peace &amp; quiet Beautiful rolling hillside
scenery. But not t~ far. Only 5 mlnutas to
Holzer and shopping. Small family oriented
nelghborllood. This spacious her!'• offers It all.
3 bedrooms, 3 battiS, large family room with
woodburner. remodeled kitchen and more. If
your're a handy man or need extra storage,
you'll love tile outbuildings. 24x32 pole bam &amp;
12 x16 workshop. Plus large 24x30 drive·thru
garage. Home In great condition! Groen
schools. $109,900
1228

to the n;;;;,;tr}wn
Business District! Here's an opportunity to own
one of the largest buildings in the heart ol the
downtown business district· The .Lupton
Building . 3 retail units and 3 restdenual
apartments privide excellenltncoma. Access 19
all the rental units from the roar a!ley and
municipal parking lot. Call Dave for more
inlorrnation.
1229

NEW USTINGI Good Rental Investment • 2
bedroom mobile home s~ualed on .92 ot an
acre. Room for another mobile home with own
septic , water and electric hook ups .
Outbuilding. Located on Hannan Trace Road.
$15,300
1100

446-3644

"Mobllejtome"

.

..JI . ·,

s Bodooono - . I!Uo 1

I

' .'
' :!1:1 n\ucti'!O·IIItl

STRETCH THE VALUE OF YOUR OOLLAAS
in lllis surprisingly afforllable 3 bedroom. 1 112
balll ranch on a large level lot. Vinly siding will
keep maintenance 10 a minimum. Better be an
oager beaver and call Loretta today. Priced at
$58,500.
1504

Ren ta ls

!':

~
i•

I

~az.

:;: Dry cherry -&amp; walnut lumber, hand saws, levels, bits,
~ ·ptanes, drills, table saw, be~ sanderMbralor, lawn fert.
spreader, all kinds of hand tools, step ladders, .
•• wheelbarrow, craftman bench grinder &amp; vice, 20" lawn . "a~M:!iiii~f!M;:i~
mower, drtl press, jointer &amp; jig saw.
~. 1
11o1o1o .-_ 111. 7
•-t
"COin•" '
Noolh In Tile Clollpotlli !:If
20 Silver dollars and 15 proof sets: To sell at 1:00pm
=-=-=~

'::!·
ti

... .
Brick Ranch tn lllnt Condition· Very well
cared tor home offers lhe family everything it
could need. Features include parquet floors in
entry and dining room. 3 bedrooms. 2 lull.
baths, living room, attractive kitchen and 2 car
garag,o. Large back patio. Famtly onented
neighborhood. $66,500
,
11222

'

"LUmber a Toole"

"Rings"

SMALL WONDER· Thora's no place .llke lhls
home lor the money. VInyl sided on the
outside. freshly painted on tho Inside. all you
have to do is move. 3 bedrooms, 1 balll, living
room, large kitchen with new floor. Full
unfinished basement with 2nd bath, t car
carport on a large lot for .only $48,000. Call
Carolyn todayl
1605

==:

_.lngii,ODO.

· . ·

•·•

Real Estate General

To llooltlo Ollllo ol......., lionIN .II .... an AI. 31, Lal
A Pliny, WV.
$1,1110.

This Is the estale of ·James Weber. Located at 814
Page St.Middleport, Ohio. Watch for auction signs.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS"
Kitchen ciOGk, round stand, marble top wash stand,
cherry Willett dresser, cherry bed, marble top stand,
pair oak marble top bedside stands, walnut marble in
lay chest; arm chair, rose back chair, 4 dining room
c~alrs, Duncan File Iaili&amp;, 4 shelf glass door 3
departm.ent cabinet, pie crust stand, stand table, oak
stand, 4 tin comer shelf, sewing rocker, glass door
china cabinet, service for 12 Nortake china, lots of
tamps that has been electrified, Sunny Day In Spain
picture, pair dancing girls, dresser set, jewelry, jewelry
boxes, vases, china clook, dresser, several pictures,
glass baskets, Hobnail, camlval, Fenton, hutt &amp; lots of
tots of good glassware.Come and buy your Christmas
gifts, pair lamps w/tear drop, NYC oil can 1 qt.
measure, wooden scrub bucket, and lots, lots more. ·
"Houaehold"
Lazy boy sleeper, Temputer Grandfather clook, lift
chair, desks, single bed, chest of drawers, table &amp;
chairs, Sylvania TV &amp; stand, living room sune, coff!IB
table,.• lamps, stnds, pictures, dishes, pots, pans,
electric appliances, rug, comer desk &amp; more.

;i

ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES
Maytag wringer washer, butter dish, blk. glass candle
holders, rolling pin, old mixirig bowls, Shawnee and
McCoy planter, Gallia County plates - Grace
Methodist Church, Harris Baptist, Harris Bridge and
Centennial stone jars, wood carpenter's boK, walnut .
East Llike arm chair (from Dr. Ella Lupton house),
rocker, chalk ware, blue glass dishes, two hao'SAnMn--1
dolls, McCoy bean pot, doll clothes, chains, child's
rocker, set of china. wood boxes and caddies, gran·
ita bowl, p~cher set, dresser, unusual 'h size metaJ::i
poster bad , set VICtorian rocker and arm chair, di'ish·-1
es, cookie jars, milk bottle, Indian artilacts, shaving
mugs, glass basket, depression glass, Middleport
boUle, iron skillets, iron kettle, lnd.rCamlval waterj
set, set silver plated flatware, egg baskats, oil lamp,
oak coat stand. shoe last set, loom carpet rugs,
lamps, dresser with three mirrors, Hull .art pottery
vase, hankies, hand tools, organ bottom, and much,
much more.
HOUSEHOLD
Sofa, set of Revere stainless cookware, music box,
cabinet, stereo, rowing machine, books, display
racks, bookshe~. set of dishes, sewing caddy, bas·
kets, cushion, blankets. Christmas ~ems, lamps.
Home Interior, pots and pans, dishes, misc. tools,
gran~e cookware, metal wardrobe, linens, jev.rel~t. l
stand table, and much. much more not listed.
Eata
Cash
Poeltlva J.D•
MARUN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER Lie. 3615
614-379-2720
Not Aeeponaible tor Accident or Lou of Property.
Llo. end Bonded In Stata of OhiO
CHRISTMAS AUCllOH
FRIDAY, DECEMBER t, 18M AT 7:00P.M.
SATURDAY NIGHT AT

~.Cifdo-..11'.

l '• chairs, SC81lner &amp; mortt.

;.

Audion 111ursday, Dec:ember 8,1994
at 7:00P.M.

Real Estate General

Z1c. loll, good nllll,

!;!

$16,800 47 acres, nVI, Harrlaon Twp, Elliott''
Road.

From Gllllpolle, taka Route 141 , tum lalt onto
Route 775, tum right onto Patriot Aolld. Watch
tor signa.
PIK'IOIIII Property of the Lata Wilma Gnler

Bual....
Buildinga

34

44tlo1St2.

"Mise"
::: Electric roaster &amp; stand, cabinets, Redwood tumiture,
: •: exercise bike, sweepers, walkers, portable potty, lawn

!PuGfLc cfluction

1120 o
- ll
ond 11M por C
i-

ESTATE AUCTION
Sat. Dec. 10, 1994
10:00 am

.~

LOOKING
FOR A HOME THAT YOU CAN
AFFORD? Then Call Cheryl to see this one! 1 1/2
story with 3 bedrooms, bath, living room . 12'x24'
deta~hed garage, 30'x30' log building. Approx. 1 acre
lawn.
11697

--,---.~Total EloclriO, Uo*'plr"
11M IIIIo Dn
Comor 1.a1 Putc Lone llob7o
Coutt. Phonll11 141 II De. IM-

1110

••·

1453- OHIO RIVER PROPERTY
end or While Ayenue off Garfield.
lots $20,000.

47159 EAGLE RIDGE ROADI Aluminum sided t 1/2
story home, living room, kitchen , over sized detached
2 car garage. FA electric furnance . Additional mobile
home hook·up. Must call today lor an appointment!
1558

'!lnll· Awdf To

2

:••

~

LOOKING FOR A NICE LOT? THEN CONSIDER
ONE OF THESE:
11
4.507 ICrtl m/1
'9,1100
112 4.615 acres mil
10,1100
13
4.702 acr11 m/1
9,1100
14
3.881 acraa mil
8,1100
IS
4.190 acrea mil
5,1100
16
5:442 acres mil
10,1100
17
6.148 acrea mil
6,1100
18
10.320 acral mil
11,1100
19
7.253 acres m/1
7,1100

1tiiiCioflanTraa...aa
112 1111ho.
- on
Add~loll.
Shullod

::

1-800-585-7101
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER rliiih=:,

•..

::=

:~: ~~--------~
In Memory Of
~,
JAMESO.
~ . GOODEDRAM
....
that passed away
~
on Dec. 6, 1979.
!~
_ Sadly missed by his
~:
wife-Winona and
Son-James Edward
and
granddaughter's
·and all the families.
God saw him
suffering and gave
him Peace.

Take US 50 &amp; 32 west of Athens and exit onto 50
west towards McArthur. Auclion is a quarter mile on
left. Signs posted.
SO in. wal. S roll top desk; stepback cupboard; oak
secretary bookcase; oak highboy; washstands; oak
dressers w/mirrors; sets of chairs; oak tables w/
leaves; jelly cupboard; pie safe; oak mantle w/pillars;
slag glass lamp w/8 panels; donnaghho and other
marked jars; scooter; metal airplane; and other toys;
w~U apple bowl; depression and other glass. Very
brief listing see full ad in Dec. S Antique Week.
Terms: Cash, check, or travelers check w/positive
10. Out of state buyers not established w/ us required
bank leiter for check acceplanee. Food Available.
Smoke free facility w/clean restrooms.

t

. 32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

express our sincere

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

.

Auctioneer

Lie. 3615

limitation or dlacrimlnatron
baaed Ql\ race, coror. religion,
HX familal statue or national
o~.oranylmenuonto

Fri. Dec. 9 at 11:00 a.m. 2 miles south
Reedsville, Ohio, Meigs County on S.R. 124
•
across from Forked Run State Park. 14 miles
So. of Little Hocking, 12 miles North from
,- the Ravenswood, W.Va. bridge.
.,
Offering 130.5 acres of prime river bottom
land. App. 45 acres of alfalfa, bal. in veg.
o&gt; and grain crops. Appr. 3800 ft. of frontage
·~:·
• · on S.R. 124. Tuppers Plain water svc. on 3
., '
sides of property.
48 x 50 hay bam. 2000 fl. air strip. Brock
grain bins with a cap. of 18000 bu. to be
offered with reserve.
Land will be offered in 3 pa~cels, one acre
fronting on the Ohio River. App. 59.5 acres
on lhe West end. Then a combination of
cancels whichever brings the most.
There will be a very reasonable reserve on
lhe property. Surface rights only.
' Terms of sale 15% down day of sale. Bal.
on Del. of deed within 30 days from the sale
date.
Auct. Note: One beautiful tract of land
ideal for farming inveslmenl, p:crealion,
development and pride.
Property offered thru Palmer Really, Bud
Spires, Auct., Real Estate Broker. 614-3742819 or 614-678-2817. Gary Wolfe, Owner. ·

PiMa rlirl'w;a~~ever:·

· Public Sale
&amp; Auction

==·~-..-

Experience Makes The Difference! Call
Cheryl Lemley, For a Full Time Meig1
County Agent For Over 17 years!

..

8

don.

"-IDr-----

..... Llrll 111'. ~

All real estate advertising In
!hla
~subject to
the Federal Fair Housing ACI
of 1968 Which makes 11 Illegal
1o adver1188 •any prererence.

1
..•· ~=================~
All(LAND AUCTION)

Toys, Tools, Gun Racks, Clocks. Lamps,

8

MEIGS COUNTY

maka any auch pralerance,
llmhatron or dlllcrimillltlon."

•' .

From Galllpolla take Route 141, Turn
Lett onto Rt. ns, Turn Right Onto
Patriot Road, Watch For Signa.

Wood Realty, Inc.
The family of Charles
L. Whitt would like to

-r

Sunday, December 11 at 10:00 a.m.
Albany, Ohio

..

.

....,...._ ..... __ Don'l,... our-...,

NEW LISTINGS WANTED!

IumaN INC.
Alman AumaN

Hourty Selina -.. olo Qd!pollll O.llv Trlbu~ 1

11

8

Cash or positive ID
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property
Licensed and bonded in State of Ohio

•

oorto- I - - T o CLA

AVON .. HOUDAY

A~ .. 411

... .....

Real Estate General

. · ·:·'-----------..;...;,.;,,;_...;;.;,;.;.;..;.....;.....;.._.,J

Ri:'a::.,""&amp; :':. Como
- Eoporlooocod
a.bvolnor To
EEOJM"'-'--.
To lly Home 11-f. lWo
=:.c.:.:=-=.,........=·'=-=--- I Smol ChlliiJwl, llencl Ex·

....... ,.

~

~

=..=-.........
:=-.=.,-oa,;.
•-

David Boggs Auctioneer
Lie. 4596 (614) 446-7750

_,.,.,. ""' do now wlh ~ fO'I
IIIII
NOftoHiol--r
....

quii'MI
CDnDinlr.llon
lri Elltr Ctlltcll ' ' d
DDIR•~•I"topniifto..,..
.,. , . .,.._ lind

=·~=n,OH
!op ..,._ Pold: AI Okl U.l.

=

IIICmCal
•
OliO VALLEY Pill~ CO.

.....
.....,...,._........ .
Lhlril ...... _~~

I' 1 t ... IM MNtll

Directions take 160 to 554 tum left go 1 mile
.... on right.
•••
:·· Lots · of toys, gun racks, tools, Christmas
paper, lights, jewelry, pictures, clocks. Large
truck load of ·merchandise. Something for
everyone.

Bual....

Help Wanted

,.. P4rlll ..

,_

.... lrllllr, . . tnllr ... ...
~:::·•
~rw.

'

...

--·IILNw.l.~

I

7 .

11114 111,0110,

~

AIMI 4 ! I SF _ . _,
. . . . 1 . . , _ ........

at

~.

Fllld11CI.il

45

forRenl

Carolyn Wasc• • 441·1 007
.

·=~=----

�I ,

QOOO

10~

UIIO

APPLWICII

~,.
,.._,

~~-

1'1

LN-IOY ~ ":::. $100;
llnlllw .,......
-A~ S41; pry

a.

LAYNE'S R.IRNRURI!
c-plolo

......

lumlohlnaL

Houro: .._..., W. 114-4{1..
11322, I mltoe oul BullVIIII Ad.
Froo Dollvory.

PICKEHII'U "IIITURI
n
,._

No .,..,._ . . . . . _ fut.

lllrchlncllll

LAWNIIOWER
12 W Cui LAWNCIIEF
14000110,114--

.._.

~...

· 55

-

Building
Supplln

56

Pete lor Slit

UVIIIOCk

..................
=:-.,.:;..•:..-=

....

Pellt for Bile

MIS

1IJ7 ,_, LTD CIMII Can4 rAw

--...~-

58

.T~ot Intriguing Word Game with o Chudle

.

11aVWIIIIIIIIt,-IOH7J..

.

. .

'' •

1--- -

,_., Glenll9!1111-.

---.:'i.-:"'t:I.....

""'"'"'Il.....,.

1

~-

-.l.lghlo

Old Avon llaltllt, .............
ond • Av... llllno, tlollll
1lno1110. -Tl'Uitl.

55

Building
Suppllel

Real Estate General

__ ,.,.,_ .

HOUSE FOR
SALE BY OWNER.
Located at 59
Hilda Drive,
Fairview
Subdivision.
Behind Spring
Valley Plaza. Very
convenient, quiet

IEqulpNII. -

OFFICE 9_
92·2886

16

.&gt;

2 mllea from City. Excellent location.
Looking lor an Ideal offlca space for a
new business or relocated your present
on. Excellent floor plan. This office
could also be turned Into a residential
home with vary little changes.
Commercial or Rnldentlll land
located In the city limits. Build your
dream home or build a new business.
Deferred property tazes for 15 years.
Call for more details.

Call446-7474
Days or 446-6452
Evenings &amp;
weekends

Real Estate General

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ................. 388 8826
.

WILMA WIWAMSON, REALTOR .........441-o632

205 North Second Ave. ·
Middleport, OH
HEMLOCK GROVE· Appro~. 6 acres with two t970
campers- one 16 ft and one 19 ft. and 2 mora hool&lt; ups.
·Ali!Q hes concrete blOck john, electric on lite end witched
for wen.
11,1100

.._,.~~ OJ'
~
· ··
~"

PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR ................. 245-9575

.

PATRICIA

REALTOR .................. 446-3884

f2/'m.i/.,{
.f1?l

-

..........
.......... •:., ,.........,...
-·

1933. HOME AND INCOME - Double Home with earning
power. You can live In one unit and rent the other. Close
to schools, shopping &amp; churches. Call for full Information

MIDDLEPORT- Oliver Street· A one story home with 2-3
bedrOoms, one bath, space heaters. vinyl aiding, end
carport.
REDUCED $11,1100 WAS $21,000

11147. NEW USTING- KING SIZE FAMILY HOME &lt;It use
thia super nice 5 badrm . tor PRIVATE HOME CARE. 3
ballll. 3ac. m/1. Virginia L Smith 388·8826.

POMEROY· RIVER FRONTAGE- Need bualness building.
Great location. Has approximately 375 feel of frontage on
West Main Street Has a big building that could be used for
business or tear down and build your own. ONLY$135,000

, _ COUNTRY HOME;JGREEN TWP. • 3 bedrooms, 1
112 story home, garage &amp; outbuikllngs, 5 acre...lltenced.
Remodeled w~ovely k~chen cabinets. lg. LR &amp; DR. new
heat pump &amp; good root
11188 INVESTMENT PROPERTY all 3 lor$76,000 plus 2
ac. m/12 bdoom home, full living room, k~chen, utUity,

2 enclosed porches (big enough for eKtra rooms) 2
garages beautiful landaeaped plus 2, 2 bedroom rental
unls, pay for your home with the rentals. Approx 2 miles

from University of Rio Grande. all blacktop road. city

schools, a must to see.
11111• .LAfiGE HOllE IN VINTON · 5 bedrm., 2 stories
LA. DR kU. lam. rm., enclosed porch, 3 building. Sales
onlce. extra building, lanced. blacktop drive &amp; patio.

IIM4 FOUR BEAUTIFUL ROWNG LOTS on White Rd.
alll.llllles avaNable. 2 t/2 Ar.. m~ each make your choice

IM!i. SR 1150- Convenient to the Freeway, 3 bedrms .•
ranch wtnew k~. &amp; bath. Lg. family rrn. w/woodburnlng
fireplace. On acre m/1. Only $45,500. 388-8826.

1115V. COMMERCIAL BUILDING • Olive St. 16. door 4 .
caNing w/10fl: tor storage 210 &amp; 220 elect. water &amp; sewer.
6' cement to load &amp; unload In front 30x80 building
3800 sq. n. blocl&lt; &amp; hme. $45,000.

formal entry with open stairway, formal living room with
fireplace, formal dining room, Cherry cabinets line the wall
of the eKtra large kitchen. Breakfast room and powder
room . Second floor offers four bedrooms and bath.
Bedrooms are king size, carpet over hardwood floors,
bath has all new fixtures and Love Tub. Basement has
huge family room w/tireplace. bedroom. exercise area.
laundry room and storage room. This home is of superb
quality 85 the plumbing has been replaced. All new all
covering, beautiful new c8rpet throughout. new windows
Installed. Spacious kitchen with cherry cabinets, Island tor
Jenn-Air range. Only private showing will decide the value
Is here.
CALL VIRGINIA L SMITH 440·6806 or 388·8826

speakers throughout, brass light
fixtures and
more. 2 car attached garage, attic
storage, 2 acres m/1. This house Is maintenance tree of

COimtl'lll, sa- '

- eotno,.
4 2 2 - A - CI&amp;Wp 1'1.

best q..,.lty. Make your appolnlment and see nyou dOnl

agree.

......... flll_lfll8lll. ,__,1110:

_....

•-IJitOIUIIII10 111111111114-

ROY JONES ROAD- Syracuse - Approx. 1/2 acre of ground
end a 12&gt;&lt;!10 Windsor with 2 bedrooms, a bedroom addition,
large living room. equipped kHchen, deck, and outbuilding.
.
JUST$12,000
POMEROY- Beech Street- A 2 story 15 year old colonial
home with a fantastic VieW. Has 3·4 bedrooms. 2 fireplaces,
3 1/2 baths, family room, formal dining room, finished
basement, ln·ground SWimming pool, aolar heat, staeiNte
dish, 2 car garage, end lots of privacy, sitting on 25 acres.
$133,000

.. c. -...!filii, lie.

Cannelb.urg, Inc. 45719
Specializing in Pole
Buildings.
Designed to meet your
needs. Any size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post Buildings and
Package Deals. Save
Hundreds, evan Thousattds'I
of Dollars.
Local Sales Representative
WESLEY MULLET
I · 14 I Barlow Rd. 1
Patriot,Ohio 45658

PH. f14·25r·I031

~ - . , LIU - . 114-281-

l'lcii,Up Truoll 8lllo F.--lhlp • ,...
• atllf. Lona •

........-

-

POMEROY- Laurel Cliff Road- Have you always wented a
mini larll'l? Watt, here H Is, approx. t7.34 acre Jarm with
1979 Holly Park 14x70 mobile home with 3 bedroom., 1 112
baths a'1approx. 28x80 Red Pole Bam.
$411.000

H'(SI!LL II UN ROAD- A spacioul ranCh horne with free ga
sitting on approx. 11 acres. Home hu 3 bedroom &amp; 1 112
baths. AJeo there Is a garage and above ground IWimmlng
pool.
!
$11,!011
CHESHIRE· Third Street- A 2 story frame with 3-4
· bedrooms, flnlshed basement, one belli front and lide
.. porch. storage building and big lot.
ta,IIOO
WE'RE RUNNING OUT Of HOUSH TO SELL:
UST WITH DOTTIE TURNER REALTY.

1130. APARTMENT BLDG. - 7 Units. w,;1 maintained &amp;
choice location overtooktng the Ohio River.
11155. HOllE WIZ UNITS one rents lor S275. mo .. can be
reverted to one large home. This home Is In good repair.

Call VLS 388-8826.

·

RANCH HOME with f~ll basement. app. 1710
living space, gas heat, cent. air, 2 fireplaces, 3
bedrooms. 2 baths. 2 car detached garage, 30x16 shad,
2 small outbuildings, smatHrama home wHh 2 BR end t
bath, 2 homes and buildings situate dOn 5 acras mora or
leu prlcod In the $70's.

fVI7 ONE • OF· A· KIND HOME/RECREATION/LAND
Scenic acres surround this charming home. 30 ft. living
rm ., inviting kitchen. 3 bedrms on the first floor. FuR
basement finished in 2 large rms., t /2 bath, utility area

closets. Encloaed porch. Pool wibath house, party house
overtool&lt;lng a stocked pond. 2 car garage, ~1 acres more

or Ills. The home setting is back lrom road for privacy.
OWner may sell on terms to a qualified buyer.
·

'

11171. LAND COHI'RACT, 3 bedrm. Home, Bam 6
garagi. Alae 8 ~. $45,000.

n.

IIA. LAROE ITUL 8UILDING W/15, 750 "'l· MIL.
bath, oneck bar, looding, dock lanced, ac. MIL, Well

e

weter. county water avlita.ble. Propane gas heaters.
.Owner mey IIUt w/Opllon to purchaH. Can ul8 as a
trucking terminal, atorage lockers, boat storage,. or

miYbt a1bam danca hall. ThiS can be a real money
maker.

.,

.,

LARGE POND &amp; I 7+ ACRESI Not to tar from
R•o. Grande. City schools! County water
· available. Nice quiet place to liver
1121

STOPIII PAYING THOSE
RENT PAYMENTS and get this 2 story older
home at 102t Second Ave. 3 bedrooms, living
room. dinng room. kitchen, 2 car garage. ~ew
carpeting &amp; more. Don't delay call today! 40 s.
1717

HUNTERS PARADISEI LOTS ·OF LANDI 1761
acres approximately. Mostiy all WOOded and full
of wildlife, close to Tycoon Lake and frontage
along Raccoon Creek! Priced right!
17t9

bedroom

Kathy Cleland ........... 992-6191

•

•

SYRACUSE· 2232 6th Street, Syracuse
property, 1 story frame horne, 5 rooms total,
2 bedrooms, 1 beth, FAN.G. healing,
Central air conditioning. 2 car garage, total
appliances, dishwasher, disposal, act.
Located on a paved road.
ASKING $42,000. MAKE OFFER I

TREED LOT, In a n1ca

neighborhood, lots of privacy, 4 bedroom, 2 baths,
with basement.

111111 CAMPER'S DEUQHT, lo1 wHh 22 loot camper

priced to seetlor only·$5,500.00.

OFFICE 992-2259

•••

1160 OWNER WOULD LIKE TO TRADE FOR
HOME IN GAWPOUS, on thiS 3 beOroom 2 story ·
v.ith 2 car garage and a ~ room garage apartment tor
extra Income In the Albany area, call Wilma for more
details.
f953 LOVELY Bt.LEVEL ON

Office .......................... 992,2259

•

1131 PASTURE LAND. 50 acres level to slightly
roll ing and a 4 bedroom farrri house and 2
outbuildings priCed at $60,000.00.

' -;

.'
'

.
f

..

CHESTER· Located on SR 248. This 1 1/2
story frame home features 2 bedrooms, t
bath, hardwood &amp; carpet flooring, N.G.F.A.
hast, TPC water, new part roof, some new
siding, full basement, attic space, small
garage large rear yard. Firaplace In living
room.
ASKING $29,900

bams, -pond wlll1
and

i.O bUld your drJam home on and farm the rest. and
priced so cheap you will look IWK:e at tho price
hurry and give us a call and

we wUI

fill you In on tha

price.

11110 GRACIOUS LIVING AT IT'I BEST, In tills 3
bedroom 3 1/Z baths, basement all on 12 acres moro

.. .

or iess. f~ls home Is lop quallly, just 'reciiilly
romokled with new carpelolllrough-out the home, ..w

wood floor in dining area, an"Y and break room .

land close to the convience of town'shopplng, call Wi lma

mobile home tots, this one won't last so better hurry
on thiS one. call Wilma tor a vrew.

..·-.

Stocked pond and lots ol lovely ueaa, also has 2

Ave. - t
trame home
bedrooms, one
new thermo payne windows, electric
baseboard heat, remodeled In 199t . Newer
wiring, plumbing, windows, carpal, Iron!
porch, side decking, blown-in Insulation.
fOfCed air eleotriC furnace in lull basement.
NOW$27,100

. ..
:•

MIODLEPORT· Rutland Street- 2 story
frame home wilh newer vinyl siding and
newer roof, 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, gas
flOor furnace, new unit alr. rear screened
porch, appliances, blinds, lireplace, block
storage building snd wood storage building,
3 room apt with storage and cellar below.
Lovely flowers, storm doors and windows.
Very well taken care of.
·
REOUCED $37,000

11111 WELL KEPT CHARMER located.! 11184 GREATLY
In a desirable neighborhood off SR 35, Want's Sold Today, this Is a lo\lllly
Slate foyer · entrY, 3 bedrooms, family spacious home that you won't w111t to
bath, &amp; the master bedrm. has a bath, miss out on taltlng a·look at, 4 bedroom, 1
Inviting living rm., family rm. w/flreplace, · 1/2 beths, 2 acr!IS with lovely side room
kit wnoads of stor11ge &amp;. pantry, utility
a summer k~chen, sewing room or a
rm., above ground pool &amp; deck, Patio, 2 shop of some kind for elrtra Income, 1hls
car garage. This home Is Immaculate and home has unlimited posslbll~les .0 don't
a .pleasure to snow. City schools. pass it by call Wilma today for a look and
$67,000.
more info. $65,000.

I

-·
"·:I
..

"'"

·,

,,

·,

LONG BOTTOM· Post Office. Rd. YThls
nice 1 floor frame home features 2
bedrooms, t bath, beautiful river frontage,
carpeting throughout, range and hood, TV
an11ma full basement with gerage and 1/2
baiho F.A.N.G. heat. Monogahella electric
end TPC water.
ASKING $50,0111r

. ·.f

as beauty shop other s;iicd~~en:~~OI~i;;i:~~!l)
sq . ft. vacant. Call lor co
ASKING PRICE $48,900

WOWI OVER 47 ACREs- $23.000.00! County
water available, paved road, pretty wooded
setting, great land to build a new house onl
1633
OWNERS LOWEREO PRICE TO $47,900
Remodeled 1 t/2 story home consisting or 3
bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, living rOIJrll, dining
room, kitchen end more. Over 41 acres, bam
and larm pond. Nice quiet place to live, call
today for an appointrnenll
1612

SEE THIS FOR YOURSELFI 4 BR ranch, t .5
BA, LR, eat· in kitchen. ·basement. Culligan water
system, newer roof &amp; some carpeting. Nice laotn
being approx. 2.75 acres more or less.
1699

Low melntenence home (brind •-). One
story ranch. 3 large bedrooms. dining room,
living room, kitchen, cathedral ceiling. 2 baths
with skylights. Over 1 acre lawn. Electric haet
pump.
1617

CHESTER· New Hope Road· 1988
Manufactured home with 3 bedrooma and 2
baths, all carpeted. Large bath In Master
bedroom. Also lncludas deck, blinds,
refrigerator, range and hood, storm door,
windows and screens. carpet and vinyl
floonng, elec. heal pump, C &amp; S electric
TPC water and a 2 car garage.
'
.
ASKING $43,500
RACINE- Close to everything· shopping,
grocery store and banking. This 3 bedroom,
2 bath home Is currentiy vacant end YOU
· can move In IMMEDIATELY! The horne Ia a
1987 Clayton end Is located on a comer lot.
Thla homt could be yours for only
$26,500.00.
MAKE OFFERII

LDOK $15,000 or make an offer. VInyl siding
home consisting of 2 bedrooms. living room .
bath kitchen. Nice lront porch. Level lawn.
.
1588

REDUCED $$$- ROOMY MODERN 4 BR
HOME· This one hes plenty olextra space. 4+
acres, grassed. County water. well &amp; spnng.
36'•70' barn. Extra mobile home hookup .
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION!
1705
SECURITY IS OWNING YOUR OWN HOMEI
Ideally located close to Gallipolis. 712 SR 588.
Nice sized lot Large living room w/newer
carpeting newer roof, alum. siding, eat in
kitchen. WILL CONSIDER LAND CONTRACT
TO QUALIFIED BUYER! CALL FOR MORE
DETAILSI
17t3

$10,000 Bayvlaw t4'x70' with 2t ' long
~ando. 3bedrooms, t t /2 baths, living room,
dining room. kitchen, FA electric
furnace/central ac. Washer, dryer &amp; front porch
Included in sale!
t723

FOURTEEN PLUS ACRESI Lots of cl~ared &amp;
land. Road frontage, mineral rights
Included. County water available.
1696

SETJ'ING All ALONEI OWNER WANTS TO
SELL NOWI MAKE HER AN OFFERI 4 BR,
1.5 story home which has been remodeled. 2
BA, t car detached garage, concrete ~rlveway.
20+ aaas.
1622

Don't pass up this brick! Located at SR
t .5 story home w/4 BR , 2 BA, LR . kotclnAn.
large front porch . City schools! Convenient
downtown Gallipolis.
•112
EASY ACCESS TO THE OHIO RIVERI 2 lots
along Bear Run Road . nice camping silas,
IICC8SS to boat ramp!
1706

QUIET SETTING FOR THAT NEW HOME!
Nice building lot approximately t OO'x300'.
County water available. $7,000.00
1681
MIDDLEPORT· Bradbury Rd. • t977
Double Wide on 2+ · acres. Home has 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, perms payne windows,
paneling, carpet, electric heat pump- 3
years old, pello, refrigerator, range, storm
doors and windows. A/C, and also an
above ground pool.
ASKING $39,500

OWNER WANTS AN OFFER
AN OFFER AND YOU JIIST
SURPRISED!· Great business
Avenue and Cedar Straet. 2 story hrir'k~r•m•
building, upstairs used as 2 r~ntal
consisting of 1 bedroom, hvmg room,
kitche.n. Downstairs current1y used on

ACREAGE • CITY SCHOOLSI 9 acres mora or
less of vacant land. County water available!
1672

APPLEGROVE· DORCAS ROAD- 1 acre
vacant lots. Utilities avalleble.ASKING
$7,300 per lot.
MAKE AN OFFER II
Hartinger parkway- This
one floor rrame
features 2
bedrooms. 1 b&amp;th, utility room, 2 flraplaces,
newer FAN .G. lurnaca. perma·p~ne
windows, paneling, carpal and vinyl
flooring, front sitting porch and shed.
ASKING $35,000

TWO HOUSES! TWO LOTSI Situated in
Gallipolis . Live in one &amp; rent the other. (1) Z
story horne w/alum exterior. 4 BR. 2 BA, large
rooms, over 2.000 sq . ft. /2) t BR home. Call
for Information.
1709

WE THINK THAT YOU ARE MISSING OUT IF
YOU OON'T CONSIDER THIS COZV HOMEI
Snuggle up this winter to this fireplace with
stainless steel liner/heatilator, Ioyer, living room,
kitchen, dining area, basement, detached 2 car
garage and t acre lawn. $30's.
1698

..,

so

I

WANT SOME SPACE? 11 Acres more or less
just oft Bulaville Pike! County water availablal
$15,000:00
1690
227 LARIAT DRIVEl Exceptional 2.200 sq. ft.
ranch, Vinyl Siding. beautiful view. Largo living
room and family room each with a fireplace. 3
bedrooms. t 112 baths. Lots of cabinets In
kitchen. large dining area. Super location closa
to hospital and shopping.
1715
FRENCH HISTORY MARKERt THIS IS ONE
OF THREE TO CHOOSE FROM . Large
beautiful homes that overloolc the .city park with
a VIew or the Ohio River. Renovate to surt your
own tasta! Call today or your own private tour
and mole details!
ACREAGE- t2 plus acres/ Road frontage
county water available. Nice homesite. 1635'

"

Updetecl • Well Uelntelntclf Extra nice t .S
story home lhafs been elltenslvely remodeled.
Solid oak cabinets, 4 BR, dining area, family
room, 2 BA. newer electnc heat pump &amp;
Andersen windows. Large front, porch. 2 car
a1taclled garage.
17t1
LOOKING FOR A LITTLE ACREAGE? Then
consider these 3 t/2 acres more or lass.
Owner asking $7,000.
1716

9 ACRESI RIVER VIEWI One story frame
home consisting or 3 bedrooms, living room
dining room, kitchen, bath. 'Storage building'
Good hunting areal Call today lor 8 ~
appolntmentl 40's.
171

.

a

SIMPLY BEAUTIFUL! Really nice 10+ ecres
(correct amount of acreage to be determined
by survey), pond and t992 t4'x70' Mansion
mobile home which consists of 3 bedrooma &amp; 2
baths. City 5dloolsl
181111
II

I '

I

-

;.

Henry E. Cleland Ill992-6191

you would want so call Wilma today tor more Info.

-

clothlftl. Locatl&lt;l on 2nd Ava. downtown Gallpolls.
l8ala the 11oro rm. &amp; buy tho Inventory end equipment.
Move In lor tho Holiday sates. ,

NEW LISTJNGI 239 CORA
$47,900 City school system. 4 bedroom ranch
style home, large eat-in kitchen. living room.
laundry and bath, fenced in lawn. Large deck on
back. 1 car detached garage. PLUS a detached
one room cottage! Cable TV $40's.
1727
NEW CARPET • FRESH PAINT! IMMI;DIATE
POSSESSIONI RemOdeled t 112 story home
will. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, detached t car
garage , 20 acres. bam &amp; other buildings. City
achools, located at Stele Route 588 . PRICE
REDUCED!
~

NEW USTING· 5 YEAR OLD BRICKIFR,oi&gt;J,lE
RANCHI Perfect for just starting out os setlllr11J
downl Nice level lawn, 2 baths, living room,
K::;~ t car
Call tOday lor your own
p
1726

Sherri Hart................. 742-2357

f1411 UNUMITED P08BIBIUTIES HERE, Lovely 3
bedrooms, 2 112 bath, Whtte brick rancn·on 4 aaes, a
4.000 square loot building lor arry type of bualnoa

fi73 OWNER V)'ANrS SOLD DESPERATELY, Iars take

todoy.

NEW USTING- Farml Used as a delryl Over 60
acres, excellent home site complete with septic
and county water. Large bam approKimately
72'x1 03'. com crib, silo, feed tot, tobacco base.
Mostiy pasture, fencedl Frontage along Raccoon
Creak.
t724

Tracy Brinager .:......... 949-2439

1114. NOTICE: ONLY 2 LOTS AVAILABLE IN
LAKEVIEW ESTATE. B\IY NOW TO BUILD YDUR
MASTERPIECE IN THIS OUTSTANDING
NEIGHBORHOOD. 5 ACRES MIL ALSO 2.3.18 ACRES
MIL. CLOSE TO SHOPPING AND HOl2ER HOSPITAL
AI.L LOTS SUBJECT To RESTRICTIVE COVENANTS.

eUIIINESB OPPOIITUNITV Stoclcad &amp; Equll&gt;ed &amp;
operating · 11 •Kida Croaatrtg•, se11ing nama brand

Real Estate General

....iACREAGf!i ACREAGE, all tho land you need

a k&gt;ok at this 3 bedroom mobile homo 1883 on t/2 acre ol

117~.

...... a-. -

~

NEW USTING- BONUS BUYI Included with the
sala of this 3 bedroom ranch horne consisting of
dining room. kitchen. living room &amp; bath. Is a
rnol!ilt ~.!!mt @lrtl!dv ~t . up ~mpl@tt wit!l l!ll
electnc h,eat pump. ApproK .. 7 acre lot. call for
complete listing!
1725

Henry E. Cleland ...... 992-2259

'

anotnar outbuilding, ready lor tanning, and the 1ac1y 01
the house will love this beautifully spacioui '
bedroom bl-level wHh large kHchen, don'lholli1ale on
this one. OWner would like an oner.

1

Russell 0. Wood, Broker ......................... ........ 446-4618
Phyllis Mllltr ...........................2!i6-1136
Marthe Sm:th ................. 379-2651 .
J. Merrill Carter ....... _.............. 379-2184
Cathy Wray .................... 446-4255
T•mmie Oeultt ....................... 245·0022
Cindy Orongowskl.. ...... 245-9697
Judy Dewitt ............. _.............. 441·0262
Cheryl Lemley .. ............. 742·3171
Ruth o•r·r......................

levaiiOI. $58.000.

11187
this 100 acre farm with 2

,

S.·:~
.,. . . .h=
. . . . . 4 ,....

tll4 CIMC . . _ I.L I.W.I.

'.

POMEROY· E. Maiu Street- A 2 ~tory home with 3
bedroomtl and one bath. Front &amp; rear porches.
$21,1100

county. Ualian tile Ioyer,

{jive V.s .9l. Ca{f. ..

NEW LISTING- GEORGES CREEK ROAD!
$36,500.00·modualr home with newer LennoK
heat pump, windows &amp; roof. well insulated
app,mately .48 acre treed loti
1728

•

II?J. OLD PLANTATION HOME - Bul~-in 1800's waiting
to ba restored. Large bam &amp; sheet. 117 Ac. MIL. crop land
ll pasture &amp; woodect. Close to Holzer. All utilities
available.

~~~:r,,~~l~i~~aBR.
2 112 baths, living room with
~
equip. kitchen. breakfast room

--

.•.

ranch, 31~ bedrms,
basement wtth 4 divided nns,

call today.

deal to offer. Designed lor great living. First floor has

.-

.

Real Estate General

1943. HOME • INVESTMENT • can ba bought together.
New 3 bedrm. ranch home wllarge rms., White brick front.
charming LA, din. rm.,large rms. throughout. loads of oak
cabinets In kit., 2 car garage, 2 ac. MIL w/home.
Two story home, full basement and garage has a great

ttl

•

··....

•

Inc.

~-~ty,
446-7101. or l-800-585-710

71 Autos for Sale

,··
' '.

nowl 8ulld your dream home In the coUntry and have
evetlastlng comfort.

ELEGANT ALL BRICK BEAUTY

Complete th• chuckle quoted
. by filling In the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

,.

IBM ADDISION AREA. 4
wHh loll ol opeca
and prk:ed right, with a great view of the rt'l8r.
Recently remolded wHh new roof, siding and lumace

Great Buy $44,500

Ktna • . - or COli ....,
Wllfi Tloonnolll~ A A W der,114-281-1Zll.

c.n

eJJ/a4

0

..

and an appointment VL Smith 388-8826.

. . . . . . . . .:00114 . . . . .

l,otp
Clain...........
,.._01 -

CJ?

·-.

Bmnth ODJce • 446-6806
2J Locust St.
Gal/ipqlis, Ol!io 45631

lil82 RIO GRANDE H!)ME, $40,000.00 for the 3 bedrm,
2 bath 1 1/2 story, tul basement home. Gas and wood
heat, village water &amp; sewage. ~atio &amp; 2 car garage . Also
t 973 .Champion mobile hOme &amp; lot $20,000.00 Both

556.000. Owner wants offer.

RACINE· SR 124- WaH till you see this 3 bedrOOfll home
with beautiful hMJwood lloors In living room. a delached 2
car garage with a one bedroom apartment over the garage
all sitting on approx. 5 acres.
$111,000

A

~

bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, dining room, bulft-ln
dlshf.aaher, 3/4 basement, deck, garden spot, carport,
storage building, and tow maintenance a~mlnum siding.

RACINE· Pine Grove Road· II you have always wan)ed a
nice home end mini 181m. Here H lsi The house has 2-3
bedrooms, Central Air, Heat pump, and equipped kitchen.
Approximately 5 1/2 acres with most ol Hfenced and a nice
bam end other buildings.
ASKING $511,000

=

n /

gorgeous home In town but on a large lot having 4 spacious

AT. 143·A 11/2 story, 4 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath home that hat
a beautiful stone llreplace between living room and dining
room, has spacious eat-In knchen, a large 2 car ga~age with
workshop, cellar w/storage above, and Is all silting on
approx. one acre.
$48,100

:.~.=

_......,

..,.._

Main ODict-388-8826 ·
958 Chulc Clulpel Rd,
Bidwell, Ohio &lt;15614

10

Tl . Autos for Sale

.~

EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR ...................446-1897
LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR .................. 446 6806

MIDDLEPORT· Broadway Street· You need to see this

=..

CLAUDE DANIELS, RNhOf· Ph. 3811'*12
KENNETH AUSBARV, REALTOR, PH. 245-5855
WIWS LEADINGHAM, BROKER

·•

-See Answer to Scram-Lets on Page D-4 -

Real Estate General

fi='r

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

...

Home
Improvements

I

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTill

"I have the best green thumb
:: of any gardener I know," the
NE WUS I ~husband boasted. "Yea," the
'
·a
;. wife laughed, "and you got it
.
... from pulling out your money at
...-------------. the - - - - - - - - - -!"
g·

~~~~~~~~~~~~::=;·.:.
r.Phone

UBI; PW:

84
Serv1ces

17

SEP0 0 P

LOTS OF LAND
@ 2.33 acres Green Twp.
Wooded. LAND CONTRACT
5.66 Acres +· Green Twp.
Wooded BUHL MORTON
RD.
Lovely Home Green Twp. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. Excellent
neighborhood. Close to hosphal &amp; Grocery.

~=====::!!::~~::~ ·

Real Estate General

DoubiiJ c
.. r.
SpeoW,.,:
w.n.

I

STAAT THINKING ABOUT SPRING • SUMMER
Fishing, Boatllg, Hunting, or Just
In ~~· ~~i~
Camper &amp; Gampsite approx. 7 miles
Overlooking Blue Lake &amp; Raccoon Creek.
TO SELL THIS CAMPSITE &amp; CAMPER. BUY IT
BE PREPARED FOR SPRING 1995. SEE IT NOW PH&lt;)NE: I
TODAY
t584

H E MD0 T

n~lghborhood.

Hatpolnl hony tluly .......

llotorcyclll

PH. 446·7699 01 446•9539

Real Estate General

Sll,114tt1Zo77111ll,.......
JYC Homo ...................

~

A CASTLE OF CLASS
A be8utlluJ home lhal could very e.lly be fealred In
national magazine. 9 rooms, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths.
klt:hens, 3 tltoltes, ate., etc., etc., sllllaled on a 5.50
estafll, juat off Rt. 7 north, minutes from town. Cell now
an appointment. Procrastination coutd mean elimination.

p

=~~.-

54. Miscellaneous
Merchlncllll

.,.

Chewy ""' - - fllllll,

11211

~:!~..."==~=i

WllhPIIMo,~

~~1~

K R UJ E N

Ntnt111r111t llolot
Homo 140; 11orb1o Patdlo N;
DoU
Up Wllh l'ul'

For Mlnloturo Dono 110;
Ollnllll Cot F""" W11
Sfmulltod ACI&lt;Iwoy Couroo
Built Into llooll Ito. 011w ,...
;
: : : - ttO; Toblo ..... .. Eoah .. Ortalnll

i

81

Suppltos
&amp; Ltvcstock

-polio.-.._ . as.
:;::'::;,.":',":41 :.. •
0IIVI ••

=

..........

m:o.~

F,11111

R.IRIIITURI. 12 :Z:..:720::.:.:AFTE::-::::.A:.1~:;:·11.=----

l

.,.,.,, -. -

..

f3

'I

.................. ¥-

:..~With

A NG E E T

ur ,v::, """"'ho

Sunday

78

2

wlnlno I hour
cloorw1400. Ethori Alton bot ••
blonde to 70" W12
·
- uaa.... onytloM 112..1117.

nlohlng. 112 mi.
Ad. Pt. LMna Room Suitoo t2111J, 114~~
CIIIOMll--, 378-mOAFTEAIP.II.
4 ·
t
~ Oraon, Etootrlo, ~
SWAIN
lint Condllon flQO, 11W7f.

AUCTION I

-

-

R HH A UR

t..... . _
I:IOpM. .

cyclopedia NOll. Wl1,_11oob
IIIIN In ptotic (82,13,14). 2 11e11on
IWI¥11
SIO. Gun

73 Ylnl&amp; 4 WD'I

wv

OH-Polnt

IJodal c:.nonn .....

Rearrange th• 6 scrombled
words below 1o make 6
simple words.
Print letters of
~ch .In Ita line of squares.

Willie VInyl Top. tt.- . _:

CoiiFor~T=..- - LIU ,.. World look EJt.

ltlltetl lty ClAY I. "HI.AN - - - - - -

0

11M ,... An.

,.. Willie

Pomeroy-Middleport~lllpolla,

S@\\~}A~l&amp;£~s·

&gt;

71 Autol for Sill

llelllll , _ _.,.. Nwll

1!!
Jolnl~trol
~~.=
, ..
PU- LP.
Nil. .....
..;;,;o,Eioetrtc F
. . _ 114-

==

Wllh · - t121; ....

~;1
EICII,

54 IIICtlllneoue

54 MlactiiiMOUI
Merchlncllll

Household
Goods

December 4, 11194

Deceniber 4, 1tM :

Pomeroy-Middleport....:..GIIIIIpolla, OH-Polnt Pltu~nt, WV

Page--06-Sunday Tlma-Sentlnel
5I

. ..

,
'I'

••

�Contemporary Living

December 4,1114.

Pomeroy-Middleport-GIIIIpolls, OH Point Pleulnt, WV

.P•ge-08-Sund•y nme. Sentinel

-

.Junhav eurhtus-•tntint!

Section·.;E

Bailey nsmed Big .Tree contest winner

MYSTERY FARM- Tbls week's mJiferJ
farm, featured by tbe Gallla SoU and Water
Conservatloll District, Ia loalted IOIDewbere In
Gallla County. ladlvldula wlabia1 to participate In tbe weekly CCJDtelt may do 10 by ID r 1•1
tbe farm's owner. Just maD, or drop otr your
guess to tbe GaiUpolls DaUy Trlbue, 125 Tblrd
Ave., Gallipolis, Oblo, 45631. or Tbe DaUy Sen·
tlnel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo, 45769, aad

By CYNTIIIA L JENKINS
GALLIPOLIS ·lbis year's Bla
Tree Contest winner Ia Teddy f.
Bailey of Palriot. Teddy'1 winDing
sl!agbatt hickll'y (awya OVIII), has
a circumference of 138', a total
vatical helaht fi 102'' and. atl'wn
spread of BB'.
Total poltita for tbe tree ue
260. Tbc Illite biJiree for abllbatt
hickory Ia 247 points. This puts
GalHa County' a biggest blckory
tree In tontention for t.be state
c:hamploosblp.
Bailey was presented a plaque
by Debra Elliott, 0.0. Mcintyre
Part manaser, .at tbe Gall Ia SoU
and Wiler Conservatioa District's
SOth annual banquet. .
The Big Tree Coatest is spon·
sored annually by t.be Gallia Soil
and Water Conservation District

you may win a $5 prize frOID tbe Oblo Valley
PubUablna Co. Leave your ume, addre~~and
telepbooe number wltb JOUr canl or letter. No
telephone calla will be accepted. All contest
entries should be tur"Red In to tile newspaper
ollke by4 p.m. each Wedaeadlly.In cue ora tie,
tile winner will be dlosen by lottery. Not weel,
a Melp County farm will be femred by the
Meigs SoU and Water Couervatloa District.

GALLIPOUS - Holiday grand
opening activities t.brougbout t.be
week of December S are planned
for t.be arrival of a oew business In
t.be Gallipolis area.
Located on Upper River Rd. off
RL 7 (behind t.be Parts Plus Warebouse) tbe "Ladies Preference
Healt.b 'Club" eaten to a WOIDBD S
special fitness~.
.
Owner Trudi Frankl-Werry, a
filii lime registered nurse, has more
t.ban 18 yean experience in tbe fit·
nesa field She has provided exer·
c1so Instruction for bot.b I:arae class-

GALLIPOLIS • The GaiHpolia
Kmart opened Ita doon Saturday
momlog for its annual holiday
sho!Jping spree for llldelprivileged
cbii!&amp;en.
As part of a national Kmart
Community Volunteen prosram,
tbe Kmart at BS Upper River Rd.,
allowed 20 children to select $20
worth of merchandise or t.belr
choite. Tbe children were also
treated to breakfast at ICmlrt and
received gift-wrapped presents
from Santa Oaua.
Gallia County Head Start and
t.be Meigs County Department of
Human Services provided the
names of needy children from the
conununity.
The community-wide participation In past yean' sbclpplng sprees
convinced Wisoclates at Galllpohs
Kmart t.bat t.be event is a wortb·
while c:ommunity project.
"Sbarlng holiday activities wit.b .
tbe lllldetplvileged cbilcten In the
community benefits everyooe who
Darticipatcs," said Kmart manager
koger Buck. "We care about t.be
conununlty of Gallipolis. 8Dd especially enjoy reacbing .!I'll to bright-

lbal

.

TRUDI FRANKS-WERRY

Here's a variety of
seeding selections .
By BUZ MILLS
GALLIPOLIS • Farmers let
their imaginations run wild on
aeedlng selections t.b1s year. They
PJanted
legumes andlor gtasses Ibis
spring and bad good success
despite wet and cool weatller.
These same seedings were also .
Planted in t.be late summer and
early fall for futu1e hay 8Dd pasture
··
~ter on in the spring many .
laes of soyheaos and sudax went
iiito the soil
Bll'ley; rYe, and wheat for pain
. and cover crops were sown on
IDIDY acres following tobaa:o. pepper com soybean crops. These
~I grain aeedings also accomplished erosion control and
lbsorbed any left over nlaogen In
the soil
Several atreJ of a rye, l!!!iry
was
vetcb' and cow pea -•-ture
WIA
planted and seeme4 to be doing
well. This mixture should supply
early 199S forage produC:tioa and
fumisb SliDe nilrogeD for t.be dou·
ble crqu:un.
Another relatlvdy new approach
II seedlnJ wheat or rye wit.b or
wlt.bout a grass Into old pascwa. If
the weat.bar cooperates you could
get IOIIIC fall grazing. Even if you
oh
wt.b ~ fall
do
not
set
CDOUdJI
8f0
grazing by next aprtng you or
can 1)

paze tbc crop- possibly more t.ban

once. ') tbe grass, if seeded, should ·
he e.stablishing and furnish some
and, 3) cloven can be frost
011 t.bis.pastUre and pcik t.be
~g potential eyen more.
Thiusa sampling of what some
Gallia County f~ are tryinJ.
So when ~e _wmd and sno":' IS
blowing t.bls wtnter, take some !JIIIC
and see if one of these seedmgs
might wort for your farm or COJDC

OBTAINS LICENSE •
Patricia M. BaJS or G.Wpolll
recently COIDpleted clauu at
Hoadro1 Career Center Ia
Columbu1 and bu obC.Ined
her license to engage In tbe
real estate buslne11. Sbe
joined tbe VIrginia L. Smttb
real estate ftrm No'¥. 14. A
t!l75 gndaate or Rio Grande
College, abe wu at tile Gal·
llpolb Developmental Center
and was a phJSkal ed•catlon
lnstructclr at Carlehia Sdlool
In Meigs County. Sbe II a
member. of the St. Loul1
Catbollc Church In Gallpolb
and a volunteer for Holzer
Medical Center.

Single pr~mium

ofMidligaD City, Tenn.
.: The bu)'a' was Todd Bryanl, d
Bidwell.
' Earlier In the day, the calf had
6eeulapped grand chulplon in
aln,lea competition at tile feeder
cal show at t.be Nortb American
Inlenl8lionll. Bryatlt felt the calf' I
'
.
I

.. . . . ,... "'

-

-- · ·· ~ -· ~

~~:albal:r~
e.nec1 is compounded llld tall-cte:
~;!,.~r!'~.:=
choices: the annuity can he renewed

.. . ,. - "

~

.,..

deserve .•. ·~·--..;::fl(~~:ft-BQO

Traditional Styling Beckons All

UIGij~

fll,ILAX

ft.IAD

.., 4?*

ILIIIl

FLQ:&lt;:j\·000

sf?
.• This Christmas do someth_lng for yourself. Stop by .· •
• discover
•Bowman's for a Free demonstration and
.the comfort you deserve at affordable prices.
•

BOWMAN'S
HOM·ECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY
GAW~~~OHIO

'

TOLL FREE 1-800-t58 6844

-

_..

·-·

D

']

-·

a

-·' ---~
-·-

in our contest. 379 ponfollos are ahead of Pete. Each conreswu chose 5 publicly
lraded stocks from a list of I00 selected companies. Perfonnance is based upon
change in ponfolio v:ilue from the close of business Friday, Sept 30, 1994, through
Friday, October 13. The v:ilue of illl ponfotios will be tracl!ed through 1994.
Peoples 821Jk will award $500 to the top perfonner, $250 for second place and
$100 for third place.

~~

Pete's ponfollo picks include British PelroleumiJohnson &amp;Johnson,
Martin M2rietta, Prlxair,lnc. and Rocky Shoes and Boots.
Pete's Pick of the Week: British Petroleum. "I'm hoping the new confidence in the eco!lomy combined with
some heavy holiday traveling will make me the comeback kid."

Belpre
423-7516

--- .- . ...... ~

Middleport
753-6661

593-n61
Lowell

The Plains
797-4547

896-2369

...

~

. ...

.

.

. ... . .. ... - . ..
.

.

~

.

-

""" p
- ..

..

II

·-·/

IDDOnly
376-7123

J--....t....J-4~--1 J

-

Clip this order and return label
Enclosed Ia S4 lor plen No.
Enctoaed Ia $4.95 tach lor the booktet(a)
'

...
DIE WEIJ,.PIANNED Interior lreepe eftlyday blfomull llvluc out
fi die fonnai tA die home. ~ die time, die ~
areu ol the family room, ldtdJen and dinette are tied tq&amp;etbei- for
combt end alllhetlieftce. A lheplac:e In die family 11111Y be
llhared by tbo8e In the ldtehen and dinette. The upeblln ~
lUIIe .,_ two batluwm plane, depeudinl oo )'0111' budeEt and
ptelt:eau:c.
f

t

II

·-- ·~ ----- ---- -·

.'

Nelsonville
753-1955

To Order Study Plan

I

MAIN FLOOR

Ad for • t:mtf/lll,.,.ry diM:tnlr~tlwollntJge fee se,_,le 111 lllf)' Peopla llilnll ol.flu.
Athens

.,J..

••rllbtr

The Peoples 821Jk Discount Brokerage Service is ideal for investors who do not
require the benefit of research or recommendations, but who still insist on service
and personal benefits. Peoples 821Jk Discount Brokerage Services are offered
through Olde Discount Corporation, member SIPC, NYSE, NASD. Discount
brokerage funds are not bank deposits and are not guaranteed by or insured by
any barik, FDIC, or any agency. Investments involve risk and market v:ilue changes,
including possible loss of principal.

Marietta
373-3155

..

~

As of November 25, these were the top 5 performlng ponfotios out of the hundreds

.........._ -

.
...
.. .......
. .- -

•

_______ H0 use· .of the wee k

The leaders thus far in the Peoples
Bank Stock Picking Contest . . .

u..._.

- - ·.........

COJl[IIOrt you

-

periodsofonc,threc,five,eightur 10
yciars,alumpiUIDdistributioncanbe
taken, or Income payments may be
received at any time usually after the
.
lint year.
.
furv::::'!::•~
fti
take a men riak. They.o ar a range
of mutual fund optioos. Each has its
upwldla~g_idcaofyourown. ownobjectivewithaselectedponfoTho ~ ~oil 8Dd Watl:l Con- lio of SlOW, bonds ur short-tmn
servatlon Distttc:t was pleased that Instruments. You can choose those
our no-till dri!Js were used in IJU!DY that best meet your risk tolcnnce.
of tbeso aeedlngs. Our three m:ms
With a variable annuity, you are
planted ove! lSOO. acres as m1nl- not locked into a specific ra1e firemilD or no-till scedings.
IUIJI. Instead, yoor rewm during t.be
As 1994 draws to a closes we accumulalionllldpayoutperiodswill
waot to t.banlt 1!11 t.be fiUJ!lerS ~o fluctuatewiththeperformanceofthe
made t.be Gallla S_WCD s no-1111 Investment portfolios you bave se.
drill program a btg success and lecled
.
wish all G.ula Coun!}' residents a_ _ While results-ere-not 8uann.eed,~
safe
andMllilll
happy hoilday
--h-• ·mv..........
~--t .....
-ormance·
has
. B
dlltiidseason.
t«bnklllll """""'
..
u
thepotmtial!Oproducebeutzresulta
for Tlae United Statu Depart- ovartimethanaftxedraleoflnterest,
mmt of Apicnltun (USDA)
which can lag market rates. Unlike
fixed aonuilies. variable annuities
Austerltv move
charge yearly administrative and
~J
Investment management fees.
NEW YORK (AP) - In a
Accell throaab withdrawal
sweeplna IIUittllty 1110VC, Ownlcal
AI"""·"" SPDAs n primaril'y
Banking Corp. says it will ellmiveiUcl
nate 3,700 poaitloas, sen most of lonJ-term investment
es, you
ita New Jersey openlkm llld put may wlthdlaw all or part of your
;;;;-ly
. $} blllfon in bad property contniCl value before annuity pay1011111 on t.be block.
~~~fecisusuallycllarged

. . . ....

Using trees for _structural products

PEOPLES BANK'S ANNUAL STOCK PICKING CONTEST

:::f

-~

paste dry and !hen wipe or rinse it off.
ventilated. When spnylng a bleach solution, keep bath towels and fabric
· •Soak a mildewed shower curt~in in the tub inwatersoftener.lfthatdoesn't shower curtslas out or spray ranee.
work, wash it by hand in • water and detergent. Hang the curtain on its hooks
•If the grout is really grungy, clean it with full-strength vinegar instead of
to dry.
bathroom or kitchen cleaner. Try covering stubborn stains witb a paste of
•If a shower curtain is macbine washable, put in two or three large towels scouring pliwder that contains bleach and let it stand for several hours. Then
to balance the load. To remove soap film, add one-half cup baking soda to the scrub and rinse off.
'
wash water. To keep the curtain supple, addone-halfcupvin~garorafewdrops
• Cover hard water mineral deposits on tub or shower fixtures witb a·pastc
of minerai oil to the wash water.
,
of baking soda and vinegar. Drape with a terry-cloth towel and let stand for
• Remove mildew on a bleach' safe shower curtain by sponging it with a about an hour. Wipe off, rinse and dry._
solution of one-fourth cup chlorine bleach to 2 cups water. Then machine
• Mineral deposits frequently clog shower heads. 'll!i.remedy this, remove the
wash. If the fabric can't be bleached, spread on a paste of baking soda and shower head from the wall pipe. Use a pair of paddie!pipe wrenc~ to avoid
gently rub the curtain before washing.
marring the chrome. Disassemble the head. carefully noting the position of the
• Remove mildew from the grout between ceramic tiles by wetting the various parts. Soak the parts overnight in vinegar, then scrub them clean with
surface with waterand then spraying with asolution of one-half cup of chlorine a stiff brush. Use a paper clip to poke debris and minerai deposits from the
bleach to 2 cups water. Scrub the grout with an old toothbrush.
shower holes.
.
CAUTION: Whenever using bleach, make sure tbe room is well• You can replace a shower head with one that has a plastic faec plate that
won't clog. Follow the manufacturer's directions.
•If you're tired of cleaning around nonskid decals in your porcelain tub or
shower, scrape them off with a straight-edge razor blade (in a holder) dipped
in soapy water. Remove the remaining adhesive residue with acetone or nailBy POPULAR MECHANICS
construction or trim work- can be cut up and used to make engineered lumber,
. remover.
For AP Spec:lel Feature•
These trees, aspen being the most common, are plentiful and grow quickly.
Engineered or manufactured, lumber makes wood a realistic alternative in
Using these trees for structural products opens up a new, readily renewable
. situations that might previously bave called for other malerials.
source of raw materials. Natural defects that occur in the wood, which would
Some of these materi- nonnally cause a piece of lumber to be rejected for structural use, are either cut
als; such as steel, arc out or spread randomly throughout the reassembled beam.
Engineered beams have opened manufactured from reThis technique generates a much higher yield of usable material from any
sources
that
are
not
regiven
tree. And because there is so much concern about the prudent use of our
up new possibilities for architects as
newable, so it's valu- fore~t resources, any innovation that optimizes wood use is a positive develwell as builders. The ability of wood able to set them aside opment.
for situations .where
Engineered beams have opened up new possibilities for architects as well as
/·beams to carry greater loads than they are truly needed.
builders. The ability of wood !-beams to carry greater loads than comparable,
comparable..s/ze solid-wood joists Also, using structural . size solid-wood joists provides increased flexibilily in placing bearing walls For AP Speclel Featuree
.steel on a project often and support beams, while maintaining a relatively thin floor structure.
Building a home that is friendly and convenient for people of all ages and
provides Increased flexibility In plac· requires specialized · The result san be a more expansive floor plan- one in which the client's different degrees of health may be one of the smartest investments you can
tradespeople and equip- lifestyle can be a greater factor in the ultimate design.
make with your home-buying dollars, says Better Homes and Gardens maplngbear/ngwallsandsuppottbeams, ment, which can add
As you might expect, the benefits ,of these products do not come without zine.
considerably to thetost cost. Typically, engineered wood items are priced about twice that of a Why? Because one in every three Americans will develop special housing
while maintaining a relatively thin of
a job.
comparable length of solid lumber.
needs in his or her lifetime. Building the right features now will add little td
Because
engineered
The
manufacturers
of
these
products
are
quick
to
point.out,
however,
that
the
your overall costs, but can spare you many costly remodelings or an even mor~
floor structure.
wood uses raw materi- combined factors of less waste, greater strength, faster installation and lighter expensive move to a nursing bome later on.
.
als of short length and weight per unit length all contribute to savings that offset the higher cost of the · Some of the most beneficial~etaiis you should look for in an adaptable house
_ width, trees that would normally be considered weed trees - useless for product.
include:
.
,
Lever handles on doors and faucets. Round knobs can be impossible to
grasporturnifyousufferfromarthritisoraninjuredhandorwtist.ifyouranns
are full, or if you're just a tyke. Levers can be operated with little effort. _
• Height-adjustable showers. These and adjustable soap dishes serve everybody well, from the wheelchair U!ier to people who need to sit when bathing,
to that6-foot-10-inch family basketball star.
• Lower light switches. By placing switches, fuse boxes, and thermostats at
48 inches, you bring them within reach of wheelchair users ami kids.
• Reinforced bath walls. Installed during framing, a simple 2-by-4 brace fot
a grab .bar in your bath wall can save you from having to pay.for installation
later.
• Eliminate level changes. Sunken living rooms and other level changes can
stop a wheelchair cold and can even cause a fall.
·
• Wide doors and halls. Doors should be a minimum of 34 inches, hallways
42 inches. This not only gives you access for wheelchairs and walkers, but
makes moving furniture or any bulky object easier .
• Eight-foot-high garage doors. Taller garage doors allow wheelchair vans
to get in and out, and a wider garage also makes climbing in and out of the car
easier for everybody.
• Single-story living. For some elderly people and many people with injuries,
stairs can be impossible to negotiate. Your best option is to build a single-story
home.Jf,llla&amp;!,s outgf lla• ~nesfiO'\ build 1 !!ou&amp;c.wiiii4Neryq-:)!qll need 011
the entry level. ·
.
• High-density,iow-pile carpets. These are less likely to trip you, less likely
to cause you to lose your balance with soft footing, and much easier to roll a·
wheelchair across.
• Hat thresholds. By flattening the sill of a dooiWay, you eliminate a bump
that can trip anyone and give wheelchair users a lot of trouble.
Raised work areas. Bendin2 and stoopinl! can be lart!eiv eliminated bv
keeping certain surfaces off the floor, or higher than normaL Raised fireplace
hearths and raised garden beds can save your back a lot of strain, as can 36inch-high bathroom counteJ!ops.
• Contrast wall and floor colors. When the walls and floors arc the same
color, people with vision problems have a hard time seeing where the two meet.
·Sharp! y contrasting surfaces helps to define the spaces and prevents stumbling.
...
• Kitchens. For wheelchair mobility, keep aisles and work triangles extra- '
wide.
By lowering your cooking surface, you make lifting pots and pans easier
A FOCAL INTEREST in thla deslp Is added by detallinK over a ~· aulll! win~, without deCI'acdlw from die home'• JlniOe(ul
.
for
everyone.
Side-by-side refrigerators with bins and pullout shelves offer the
donaliJI'DIIOftlone.
best accessibility.
1ty PAT UJKAS
family space. The kitchen offers a
• Baths. Leave room for wheelchair negotiation. A large walk-in shower
AP Newaleaturea
large work island and a dinette with
with
a flat threshold is convenient even if you don't use a wheelchair or walker.
Graceful, traditional proportions sliding glass doors that open to the
eslgn F-21 has a living ing glass door in the dinette
Hot
water
sensors prevent scalding.
and details make this home i
backyard A fireplace in the family
opens
to
the
backyard.
The
overroom,
dining
room,
famiau.ndout
·
room brightens the entire area.
ly room, kitchen with all dimensions of 38'8" by 60'8"
Flower-filled boxes dress up windows
Duian F-21, by Homestyles
·Convenient to the kitchen area
include
the
garage.
The
house
·
dinette.
library,
three
bedrooms,
"Source 1" Designers' Network,
are the powder room, garage
AP Spec:lel Feature•
two baths and a foyer. totaling has a standard basement.
access and a laundry room.
exudes warmth and charm. The
You'll be the toast of the neighborhood when you dress up your windows
2,161 square feet of living space.
front-l'aclni pbles and the railinis
On the second floor, the roomy
with
flower-filled window boxes. These small gardens are a dream come true
An alternative master bath plan
and columns on the fr!lnt porch wei- ID88ter suite is complemented by a
for
time-pressured
gardeners. Upkeep is easy. All it takes is watering, fertilizadds 70 square feet. There is a
come an who approach. Wtth a total private bath available in two oonliging
and
pinching,
says
Better Homes and Gardens magazine.
livlna area ol2,161 square feet, this urations. With choice of master garage behind which is a laundty
To
add
flowery
focal
points to your windows, you 'II need a container, soil.
room and a powder room. A slidthree-bedroom home provides plea- bath, it boasts a walk-in closet, a
plants
and
only
a
small
amount
of time. If you're baffled about which flowers
1¥ ol room fora III'OWioll family.
whirlpool tub and a separate showwill
look
good
together,justlook
at a color wheel. Colors opposite each other
The lidellgbted foyer divide~~ two
er. The alternative master bath
.
- make
an
eye-catching
display
every
time.
formal areas of the bome. Feti!Ured
adds 70 square feet to the home.
:
:'
..
.
.
•In
a
window
garden,
plants'
root
systems
are squeezed into a small space.
In the foyer are an overaized coat
Two additional bedrooms each
Using the right soil mix is crucial. Sunshine mix is a perfect choice; it has
closet and central open-railed have aenerous closet space and
Canadian sphagnum peal moss, a wetting agent and a fenilizer. Look for
stairway with a balcony above. To
share a full bath. A sunny library
........ r.
Sunshine
mixes at lawn and garden centers .
the left. a aood-siud formal dining overlooks the foyer and provide~~ a
.
J
I.;
lrL
~~·
room·olen ~tq the front v~t.
•
•
Choose
healthy plants from a reputable nursery. If you want a window
_(Y-and Is easily served from~e
~-s ~ry home has energyg;/'raen lhai'SimmeaiateiYfill«l-with bursting· blooms, buy-plants in 4Cinch
. kitchen. To the right of the foyer is efficient 2x6 exterior-wall fnminll
pots. Remember to place taller plants toward the back and center of the
the living room, which niay be and a standard basement.
container
and trailing plants toward the front and stdes.
. ..... ,.r
joined with the family room via
• Water the window garden thoroughly after planting. Frequent watering is
optloul pocket doors, thua creal(F~~r a """' dltailtd, scoltd Plall
critical for continuous blooms. To display your finished window garden,
lqan even lar1er expeoae for o/lllilllo!Ue, illcl•rl.illl pidu to
mount the container .with the top edge just below the windowsilL
either formal or lnformalaather- atillltJiifll ttllls alld /iiUIIICifll, ulld
lop. Yet the pocket doon may be
U ~ Ho!Ut of 1M W1u, P.O. &amp;.
UPPER FLOOR
closed to aRow for privacy.
1562, N1111 Yori, N.Y. 10116-1562.
10'-r
- At the back of the home, casual 8t "'" ~ illdlllll 1M
of tlu
•
areselotermiltale to create an open,......:P_III.,.."._J_ _ _.,....-:-:---,
Full study plan inlonnatlon on tHis house is avatlable in a $4 baby
blueprint. Four booklets are also available at $4.95 each; Your Hom11-How
to Build, 811)1 or Sf/// tt: Ranch Homf/s, 24 of the most popular from this
feature; Practical Home Repairs, which tells how lo handle 35 common
problems: and, A-Frames and Other Vacation Homes, a collection of 24
styles. Send check or money order payable to the Associated Press and this
label to: House of the Week. The Sunday-Times Sentinel. P.O. Box 1562,
New York, N.Y. 10116-1562.
AP Speclli Fellure
It's important to keep your shower clean and fresh, whether it's a separate
shower stall or a shower in a tub.
Here are some tips:
• aean your shower right after using it, when the steam has loosened up the
dirt. Just wipe the damp surface with paper towels. Then spread the curtain or
close the door so that it, too, can dry.
• Wipe away the spots or film that soap leaves on tiles with a solution ofwater
and water conditioner, or mix one part vinegar to four parts water. Rinse, tben
dry with a soft cloth.
• W1pe dull and filmy glass shower doors with a soft cloth saturated with
distilled white vinegar or water softener solution. Then shine with clean cloth.
• Oean a fiberglass enclosure.by gently scouring the walls with baking soda
on a damp sponge. Then rinse and dry.
• Bleach stains on tub or tile with a paste of cream of tartar and hydrogen
peroxide. Spread the paste over the stain and scrub lightly with a brush. Let the

at prevailing markeiplace rates for

'

..;.

Home maintenance: Keeping the shower clean

lnformatloo you may can the o. o.
Mcintyre Parlt District or the GaiHa
SoU and Watl:l Conservation DistricL
Cynt•la Jenkins Ia dlltrlct
forelter for Tile United State
of Agrlcalt•re

Continued from D·1
denco llld tbe IS8UIDs company:
F'wd anuilies are Invested in

prosnun,ao SPDAmata aense.Tho
unique canbination of benefits ofprice which was Qlllflrmcd by auc- .fcml can bave a powaful effect oo
tioneer Merlin Woodrutr 1 final t.be 1oepnn value of your investprooounamenL
ment, panicullrly In today'• tax 8Dd
Gross sale receipts of the feeder economic environment.
calf sale were Slli.OOS. Tbc aver('l)iaarticle is inleoded tQprovide
age price_ per._, was $1,078.40.
on1y 'senen~ infiJ'mation about the
101m Haney, klls-lime IU)ICrin- SPDA. Consult your amlUilllllt or
lelldent of the calf sale, l8kl about tax attorney-for talllreaiiDCDl infor3,SOO buyera had leViewcd calves mation that relales to your particular
before t.bey wetJt oa stage ID perform under the direction of t.be auc- silWIIioo.)
•
I
tioneer's save. About ·1,SOO
Tbe Uolveraity of Pittsburgh
revicwcn showed up at the sale In .
was tbe ra:st c:oUese football ream
t.be exposition' a Newm8ltet Hall.
to number ill players.

owned by NOWIIZke, Kelly, Pratber

me

for
bigest poplar lree In GaiHa
County.
.
For reJbtratlon forms and 111010

en die holiday season:·
The Gallipolis Kmart is one of
more t.ban 2,400 Kmarts participating In t.be national event The program is designed to help more t.ban
48,000 children in t.be United
States.

NEW ARK - Tbe Board of
Directors of Nalional Gas and Oil
Co. declared on Nov. 17, a casb
dividend of $.09 per share on t.be
common stock, payable Dec. 19 to
sbarebolders of record on Nov. 28,
prior to t.be record of t.be 3-for-2
stoct spilL
The spllt'declared on -Aus. 25,
also will be Issued on Dec. 19 to
sbarebolders or record on Nov. 28
after t.be record of t.be casb dividend.

achlevtinmt was wort.b S7,soo; die

~Thc higb-seUing feeder calf-

lbal

study of trees. Trees, a renewable
natural reaoun:e, are a huge part fi
our everyday lives. The average
American comes In contact wit.b
10,000 forest productl a day. These
products range from grocery bags
to medications to tbe very bomes
we live ln.
The forest industry In Ohio
a1ooe employs over 70,000 people
and adds over 7 billion dollan to
t.be state's economy.
Tbc 0. 0. Mcintyre Parlt District and Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District would like to
thank all tbosc who partlcipaled in
t.bls year's 1994 Big Tree Contest.
Next year's allltest will be looking

Declares dividends

Bidw•ll's Todd Bryant
=:e.=&gt;::~==
buys high-selling feeder ::1'V:ueup! 1.:'~=~ .
calf at NAILE for $7,500 :$oa::7~:eanm::;:
LOUISVILLE. Ky. • Tbc feeder
calf JB)e at tbc Nortb American
Intemational Uveatoct Exposition
(NAILE) grew In 199:4 accudina
tO D article In I~ DCWipi-

an

Gallipolis Kmart hosts
needy kids shopping spree

New business to
open in Gallipolis
es and as an individual personal
lraiDer, and Is fmlueotly an Invited
JRICI!Ier speaklna oo t.be IOpic of
bcalt.b 8Dd exercise.
The "Ladies Preference Healt.b
Oub" offc:n a unique approacb to
sbaplna up. Through lndivi~ually
desipcd programs
are 1llilored
to ay level of fitDesa, Ladies Pmerencz olfen multiple opporlllllilies
fur area woman to do somet.bins
for t.bemselves.
·
New members can work toward .
weisht control and better self
image using the latest exercise
equipment, and attending line
dance or aerobic classes. Also
available are musage t.berapy by
appointment, unlimited tanning
sessions, a licmsod dietitian, a skin
care professional, and child care
services.
Ot.ber specialiud classes such IL'i
t.be ~Ladies Plus" class are open
8Dd offer t.be dumce fur extremely
large women to participate In an
exercise regimen t.bey can manage.
Also, women wit.b long standing,
but stable hcalt.b alterations can
overcome tbe obstacles of exercising !brougii Individual attention
provided at Ladies Prefaeoce upoo
a pbysician' s ~~AWVal.
Business boars are from 10 a.
m. until 8 p. m. Monday t.brough
Friday, 10 a. m. until 2 p. m. on
SIIIU!day, and dosed on SUIIday.
For more Information, or to
- ammge an lnttoductory visit, call
.446-3401.
.

and 0. 0. Mcintyre Part District.

Tbc alllteslis for
Gallia County
mldents. It Is hoped
t.be contest will lead many people ID the

Neme

'

,,

Street
City

'

Stela (ZIP)

'
r

•

.

.

,. ,

�Peo• ·E2-Sundey 11m•

Pomeroy-Middleport-:-GIIIIIpolls, ~oint Pluunt,

Sentinel

wv:

Anasazi Ruins: A subdivision with a .difference;. Virtual reality moves into the ·operating room·
and semisubterranean c~remonial kivas of those the Navajos call the Ancient
Ones.
They may only be excavated under the supervision of a certified archaeologist, excavations must be covered and artifacts cannot be sold. Upon the
owner's death, they must be given to a museum.
·Archie and Mary Hanson ofTempleton, Calif., whose family has developed
the exclusive Rolling Hills, Hidden Hills and Hidden Valley subdivisions of
town."
Southern California, decided to buy land here after taking an archaeological
But it's the backyard that makes her Indian Camp home unique. It has its own tour.
Once they had acquired more than 800 acres they decided to build Indian
Anasazi ruin, left by the prehistoric people who lived here for more than 1,000
Camp.
years, departing about the year 1,300.
"We fell in love with the Southwest many, many years ago and then we went
Anyone who buys one of the 31 sites among the junipers, pinons and sage
allndian Camp, 6 miles east of Mesa Verde, must agree to preserve the pueblos on this trip to Crow Canyon and thought it would it be great fun to live in the

CORTEZ, Colo. (AP) - Views from Nancy Reynolds' log house high
above this f'our Comers town resemble scenes from a classic Western film.
The deck offers a panorama of Shiprock, N.M ., more than 40 miles away,
Sleeping Ute Mountain, Mesa Verde National Park and the La Plata and San
Juan Mountains.
"There's different weather on eacb side," Reynolds says, adding the
"sunsets, double rainbows and crackling lightning make this the best show in

•sweet Relief• a success story for Williams
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)- Every time Victoria Williams goes to the doctor,
· she says a prayer of thanks for "Sweet Relief."
1be album of artists performing her songs boosted both the health and career
of thts 35-year-old songwnter. It was an uncommon ''good news" story that
came at the perfect time.
' "I was surpr!sed just by the existence of the album,'' Williams said. ''The
s~ of it was ju_st gravy.''
~tricken by mult1ple sclerosis and without health insurance, Williams was
at a low ebb two years ago. Both of the albums this Louisiana-born singer had
recorded were out of print and her health made it virtually impossible to
perf'?DD·
~nends decided to p~t together a tribute album to help pay her bills, and
enltsted the help of arttsts such as Pearl Jam, Soul Asylum, Lou Reed and
Matthew Sweet.
Considering few people knew Williams ' work, the public response was
stunuing. "Sweet Relief" sold 218,000 copies, according to Soundscan.lt has
nised more than ~200,000, enou~h to pay medical bills for Williams and set
up a·fund to help tnd1gent mus1c1ans.
Williams has a new record contract and just released "Loose," her first
album in four years.
While Mammoth Records had shown interest in Williams before "Sweet
Relief," the compilation's success gave her new clout: She was able to spend
111uxurious month in the studio, hire arranger Van Dyke Parks.and even take
time to record such standards as ''Whl!t a Wonderful World.''

Williams, whose tremulous voice disguises an eclectic musical ambition,
said it also gave her new confidence.
.
"I don't think I would have had that attention at all- maybe after I was dead .
or something bad happened," she said. •'The fact that they did all my songs
basically made people aware of me."
"Loose'' aptly describes the album's structure. Williams touches on big
band, lounge music, country rock and even a hymn. "My Ally" is a touching
acoustic duet with Soul Asylum's Dave Pirner. "Crazy Mary," recorded first
by Pearl Jam on "Sweet Relief," is a fully orchestrated epic.
"You get all sides of me on this record," she said: "I don't know if you get
all sides of me - I didn't do any opera on it. I love music so I suppose I'm
influenced in a lot of different ways."
'
On "When We Sing Together," Williams duets with Mark Olson of the
Jayhawks, whom she married last December.
Her song, "Century Plant," is about it cactus plant that blooms once every
100 years, which she uses as a metaphor for late bloomers.
.
Williams talks in animated terms about her ideas for "Crazy Mary," about
how she had Elton John's "Madman Across the Water" in the back of her
mind and wanted violins playing parts written for horns . .
Williams concurs with a description of her work as rural music, a disc
roughly equivalent to a long, slow ride in the country.
" There reall y is such a thing as city music and country music, and there is
a lot of country on that record,'' she sa.id. •'That country is Hank Williams. It's
more country, the earth. •'

.Ginseng: a mysterious root of vital'ity

EDITOR'S NOTE- There'sgold in them tharhills,butyou have to dig
iD nttlesnake co•ntry to lind iL The gold is green and turns brown when
It's dried, but it brings hundreds of dollars a pound in the Far East, and
it helps 1 lot of people In West Virginia make extra cash for the holidays,
By ALLISON BARKER
Aaloclated Preaa Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)-Ginseng, that mysterious root of supposed
·vitality and health, promises riches and mystical powers for those willing to
plunge into the darkest corners of Appalachia's toughest terrain. ·
, ."The weedier, the snakier-looking place you can get into is where you will
find the ginseng," says Jack Baisden, a ginseng buyer in Verdunville. "It's in
deep, dark hills, back in the hollows."
Ginseng has been celebrated in the Orient for centuries for its medicinal
powers, but it's part of mountain lore in Appalachia.
In 1992, ginseng sold for about $250 a pound in the United States and as
much as $600 a pound in the Far East.
So it's no wonder tbe hills are alive with folks 'senging.
"Some people make it pretty much a full-time profession," says Bob
.Whipkey, an assistant administrative forester with the West Virginia Division
of forestry.
William Slagle, who·farms about five acres of ginseng in Bruceton Mills,
says, "It's like when prospectors used to go looking for gold and silver, but it's
worth more than silver. If you find a good patch of 'seng you can make a
thousand bucks quickly"
Marie Satgeill, a 74-year-old Verdunville g•andmother,·says she makes
about $500 a year Christmas money digging and selling ginseng in the faiL
"I get out and run the hills and go and go," she says.
Dick Lambert, who trades in ginseng at his canoe rental business in
Fredericksburg, Ind., says, "Some people spend the whole season in the woods
and will make $2,000, $3,000 a season.' '

The wiry root, green when ~arvested but brown when dried, is powdered for
capsules, salves, teas, soft dnnks, extracts and food flavorings. Some say il is
good for arthritis, rheumatism, liver problems and even AIDs:
Mountain people say wild ginseng soothes nerves, calms upset slomachs
and, yes, excites the libido.
But ginseng is n~t approved as a drug in the United States despite its health
cla1ms. says W1lham Studer, executive director of the American Ginseng
Society in Brooklyn, Mich.
"Your bo~r cap r~sist i~fections if your HDL cholesterol 'is high enough,"
Studer says. Arnencan gmseng IS one way to increase your leVel quickly."
J1.mmy Mason of San Francisco, a former intravenous drug user who tested ,
posot1ve for the AIDS VIrus 10 1987, says he started taking American ginseng
on 1989 after two years on AZT.
"In a matter of two months after I stopped taking AZT and started taking
ginseng, my T-cell count went up for the first time,'' Mason says.' 'My doctors
think it 's marvelous."
The plant is on the U.5. Department of Agriculture'sendangeredspecies list.
Ginseng digging, buying and exporting is regulated by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, the U.S. Customs Service and state agencies across Appalachia.
Some state laws require diggers to plant ginseng's bright-red berries
immediately after they remove the root.
The root is cleaned and dried before sale at ginseng weighing stations, where
it is r~1:9rded for state authorities before export:
." · ·
Ginseng is sold by size, shape, color and age in Hong Korig,' Taiwan,
Singapore and China.
Ginseng once grew abundantly in Asia, but China now produces less than
100 pounds of wild ginseng a year, at up to $5,000 a pound, says Paul Hsu,
owner of Hsu's Ginseng Enterprises Inc. of Wausau, Wis., a grower and
exporter.

.Anemone
WE SELL!
protein
WE SERVICE!
stimulates
PASSENGER • .LIGHT TRUCK • BIG TRUCK
heartbeat
FARM • INDUSTRIAL • OFF ROAD

TIRE

WSANGELES (AP)- A protein
extracted from a sea anemone that
thrives off Canada's West Coast can
stimulate the heartbeat but is far from
giving doctors a new tool to regulate
the pumping of blood, rcseiuchers
say.
One reason is that it also appears to
be toxic.
Nevertheless, it represents another
example of how scientists are looking
10 marine life for new therapies.
The findings on properties of the
sea anemone Urticina piscivora were
presented Nov. 9 to the American
Association of Pharmaceutical Scienlists annual meeting in San Diego.
So far, the team from the Faculty of
Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical SciCnee5 at. the University of Alberta,
Canacla, has only isolated and purified the protein.
"From a scientific perspective it's
very interesting, because natural materials haven't been extensively evaluated .for pharmacological activity,"
aaidJohn Samuel, an assistant professor in the pharmacy faculty who helped
purify the protein.
He .cautioned thai "in terms of drug
, devclopoent, something for therapy,
it's very far away. If it is.nontoxic,
o~Jiy then it becomes a .candidate for
dius development."
Samuel said, "even if it is toxic,
one. could look at what part of the
protein is really responsible for the
. cffcet. One may be able to separate
that."
Anemones are flower-like sea creatures with poisonous tentacles. AlthousJ! tropical and subtropii:al varieties have been studied before, the
ic:searcbcn focused on the more
readily available Canadian types.Tbcy
found extncts from Urticina piscivora
to be especially active in stimulating
contnctions of nt beans.
That finding is particularly surprising "because you'd have to ask yourself what was the function of such a
compOund in these animals?" said
!£Guard Wiebe, associate dean of
jilamacy tesean:h at the: university.
l

sao

$28

P155/80R13
WHITE
ALL
SEASON

P165/80R13
WHITE
ALL
SEASON

165/R12
BLACK

METRIC
RADIAL
RADIAL CR-10

OTHER SIZES
AVAILABLE

PR812

NOVA

$44

$69
PIB5/70Rt4
WHITE

P185)80R13
WHITE
ALL
SEASON
TOURING

GRAND PRIX

"THE
RAIN
TIRE"

AQUA FLOW

RAI)IALSTE

P235/75R15
OUTUNE
WRITE
LETTERS

ALL
SEASON

· ~

.

.,

I

area. And Jhen it grew sort of topsy turvy. We hacf no choice but to develop
along arcbaeologicallines because there they were," said Atchie Hanson:
''This isn't massive intelligence. We just fell into this, We're trying to have
our cake and eat it, too.' '
Four more housing starts are expected next year. Seventeen sites have been.
sold.
.
The sites, all at least 35 acres, are selling for between $151,000-$200,000,
with utility connections provided but homes to be buil_l by owoers. Covenants
bar trailers or modular homes, and archaeologists approve building sites fqi
homes.
.
.
.
.
"For my husband; money is only spent to do something well," said Mary,
Hanson. Only one home and one guest home are allowed per site.
Reynolds is the first Indian Camp resident to buildahouse.Shehad it blessed
· by a Navajo chanter before moving in last August.
.
"I think it's fantastic. It's unique. Archie's got the foresight to see that the
people who are jlOing to buy their lots are into preservation and love the rules,''

.

·~~

.

Reynolds says she expects most of those who buy into Indian Camp will be
amateur archaeologists like her who studied at neighbOring Crow CanyQII
Archaeological Center. Thousands of students, mali y of them retired people;
have paid the privately run research center to take part in archaeological dig~.
More than 200 sites have been found at Indian Camp, the highest recorded
site density .in Colorado, said Hanson. More than 10,000 artifacts have been
recovered from the pueblo the Hansons have excavated on their own site.
Home sites are marked by metal. statues of Kokopelli, the humpbackeo;
flute-playing satyr who tribal lege~ds say traveled the Southwest seducirfg
women.
So far the project hasn't drawn any public opposition, although Williaill
Doelle of Desert Archaeology Inc. of Tucson, Ariz., says that in most areas
local or state laws would preclude this kind of development. ·
Sandy Thompson of the Crow Canyon Center said that ''given the altern~:
live''- the likely ransacking of the sites if the area is developed piecemeal
-Indian Camp is a good idea. There are thousands of sites in Montezuma
County, where Mesa Verde. is located, and some landowners ))ave sold
archaeological rights to pothunters who peddle their finds.
··
Judy Knight-Frank, chairman of the Ute Mountain Ute tribe, isn't so sure:
"If anybody disturbed my bones I'd haunt them," she said.

75o/oAPR

As
Low

•
CELLULARONE®

With Approved Credit

As

TRENTON, NJ. (AP)- Virtual reality is coming to tbe operating toom.
. Surgeons are testing spcciil video mmiiton and eycwcar, minute cameras
~n~ computer processors that give them a three-dimensional, lifelike view
1nstde tbe body as they operale through tiDy incisions.
ne s)'stems likely wiD replace most two-dimensional ones now used for
minimally invasive surgery, or MIS. Surgeons perform such operations
through keyhole-size incisions; to see what they're doing, they insert a camera
.call~ a laparoscope through another tiny cut, or an endoscope through a body
opemng.
Because the 3-D systcms.provide depth perception, surgeons can locate
organs and do suturing and other tasks more easily and quicltly than by
· watching a 2-D video monitor.
· · "It's as real as it gets.lt's restoring what we would see when ... you made
a big incision,'' says Dr. Steven I. 'Becker, director of The Surgery Center in
Fair Lawn.
·
· · "Once tbis is established, this is what we're going to usc for all our cases,"
bys Becker. .
,

PRICE

B,y DANIEL Q. HANEY

P.P Science Writer

BOSTON (AP)- Heart specialists are·morc likely than family doctors to
provide the latest and most aggi'C6Sive kinds of care for heart attacks, the
n,ation's most common medical emergency, a study concludes ..
Its authors question the often-repeated belief that more medical care should
~ turned 0ver to general doctors. In this case, at least, it appears that greater
. ~edical knowledge actually does translate into better~·
.: .In recent years, a variety of research has shown that clot-dissolving drugs
~itd aspirin can reduce the severity of heart attacks. Furthermore, long-term
treatment afterward with aspirin and drugs called beta blockers can also save
lives.
· The new study attempted to see whether these widely accepted practices are
actually being followed by doctorS who tr~t heart attacks. It turns out that
~nerally they arc, but tbe chances of getting state-of-the-art care are better if·
the doctor is a cardiologist.
·
· "For drugs that are clearly shown to benefit patients, cardiologists were
inore likely to recognize their benefit and to usc them in practice," said Dr.
'John Z. Ayanian of Harvard Medical School, one of the researchers.
· · The idea that specialists know more about a specific area of medicine than
tbeir generalist colleagues may seem hardly a surprise. But unril now, there has
been
. little evidence that their greater experti'SC leads to healthier patients.
.

Heart attacks are the nation's biggest killer. 'fl!is year, they will strike 1.5
million Americansand kill about one-third of them. Victims are routinely seen
by cardiologists in large hospitals, but this is not necessarily the case in smaller
ones.
The latest study, based on a survey of 1,211 physicians in New York and
Texas, was published in the Oct. 27 issue of the New England Journal of
Medicine. The doctor,; compared the approach of cardiologists with that of
general internists and family practitione(S.
Among the findings:
•94 percent of cardiologists said they were very likely to prescribe clotdissolving drugs for heart attack victims, compare.d with 82 percent of
internists and 77 percent of family practitioners.
•About 90 percent of the general doctors said they would give aspirin, which
has become a mainstay of heart attack treatment, compared with nearly all of
cardiologists.
•Beta blockers were routinely prescribed by half of the family practitioners,
two-thirds of the internists and three-quarters of the cardiologists.
•The general doctors were more likely than the specialists to use two drugs
that are wonhless and perhaps even hazardous for heart attack patients.
Th~ researchers speculated that while genera[ doctors may know about the
newer approaches to heart attack care, they may be reluctant to use them

By TIM WHITMIRE
Auoc:lated Preu Writer
·fROVIDENCE,R.I.(AP)-Afteralmost40years,tcicherWalterBlancbard
h~ stopped giving grades, correcting tests or flunking students. And he's not
.even retired.
•
He's teaching at a new school where none of those things matter. It's the
' Alpn Shawn Feinstein High School for Public Service, where the ''three Rs''
and other venerable traditions ofAmeri!=3n education, like letter grades, paperi'anil-pencil tests and the ninth through 12th grades, aren't found,
1: Instead, there are "stages" of learning, self-evaluation and real-world
!;tes:ions outside a regimented classroom. The public seJVice-based curriculum
·;is llelieved to be the first of its kind in the country.
,, ·~' I feel invigorated," said Blanchard, 61, who considered retiring last
:suinmer before getting a job at Feinstein. "This is what people like Tolstoy
:were talking about back in the 19th century ... mixing life and reality."
; Students at the school, which opened in September, will be evaluated in
;writing by their teachers and will progress through three stages- explorer,

master and major -by demonstrating their abilities through a multimedia
prescnlation combining the written and spoken word and visual displays.
"From tbe first planning meeting, we've talked about Feinstein as a 21stcentury school,'' Principal Anthony Milano, 50, said.
If Feinstein is the future, not everyone is gleefully looking ahead.
•'When people start talking about real-life experience as though classrooms
weren't real and as though studies in the academic disciplines weren't real
they' ve already g~t it wrong," said Dr. Edwin Dellatre, dean of the Boston
University School of Education.
But some of the school's students said they like being educational pioneers.
".)think it's great," said Vaughn Baker, 14. "Justto get out of the old way
of high school and get into community service.''
'
Sokhoeuth Sim, 13, agreed.
''Public service is a way to help other people, instead of playing sports all
the time. You can make a good example of yourself," he said.
Sitting in an office filled with unpacked boxes, Milano C&lt;BIIed Feinstein's
curriculum a work in progress.

; LONDON (AP)- Mary Pavey remembers her friends' amazement when
:she went to live in the Trinity Hospital almshouses in the heart of London's
,East End, forever associated with Victorian poverty and squalor, Jack the
;Ripper and thieves' kitchens.
·- _ _
.. "They couldn't understand it when I said I was moving to an old almshouse
I in:Mile End Road," she recalled.
'"That was 27 years ago and I wouldn't change. It's an oasis of tranquility,
:the last thing you would expect."
·
1
The
almshouses
survive
because
of
a
project
begun
there
a century ago, to
.
1
measure, draw and record imp&lt;&gt;rtant buildings and entire parishes of the

I,

I

,.

1:

•

i'
i'

1:
·'

' l ''

••
•

•

' '

~

.. c- . ~ ·

'.

..

'

I•

'

.
'

"Our community involvement
takes many surprising shapes
and forms."

rear det., cloth lnt..................................................... $8995·
1993 HYUNDAI EXCEL, 14603, A/T, AJC, AM/FM Clll.,
aport wheela, cloth tnt............................................. $7644
1993 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME S,l4880, Dk. Pewter,
A/C, A/T, AM/FII caaa., "at, tilt, crulae......... :.$12,200
1992 NISSAN SENTRA XE, 14613, AfT, A!C, tilt, cruln,
AM!FM, ca11., rur delroater ................................... $7803
1993 FORD ·TEMPO GL, 14604, red, A/T, A/C, AMJFM
CIM.1 P. locka, curt wheal ...................................... $8313
1189 CHEV. BERETTA GTU, 14717, red, aunroot, AJC,
AIIIIFII. CISI., tilt, crulae, alloy Wheell, P. wtnciOW.
$74$0
1992 PONTIAC SUNBIRD, 14196, red, 4 door, A/C, Air,
AM.IFM cloth lnt. ....................................................... $8174
1~ FORD MUSTANG, l4695,grean, A/T, AJC, AM/FII
crulll, P. wlnclowt, 25,000 miles .................. $1830

P:

4848 State Route 32lloulh
P. o. Box 200 • Rio ClrMde, Ohio 415874

"Every community is different. Different people, different~· different n~ds. And so are each
or Ohio's electric cooperatives. But one trait common to us alliS our comrrutment to commumty
involvement, to making things better for everyone.
"And as chainnan, I had the opportunity to see firsthand the many Unique. exciting and meaningful ways that our electric cooperatives have become involved in their communities.

every member like they own the C01TIJX1IIY. Because they do.

,,

..

,.

'

One of27 Ohio '£kctril Cooper;atiVts

•

I

"For example, one cooperative helped start a wate~ com~ that's bri~ econom.ic gr?wth to
their area. Other cooperatives have helped plan new mdustrial parks and hospitals, whtle still others
have become involved with local civic groups, charitable causes, and school educanon programs, to
name a few.
"But no matter what form our involvement takes, our commitment to community growth and improvement remains the same, as does our operating
philosophy. Because we're not satisfied with simply providing you with .
elecnicity...we honestly want to. help make a positive difference in your life."
-Ed Lecluone,
.
Former Chairman, OREC Bcard &lt;?/Directors
.
, '
I
Each 9/0hio's electtic cooperativ~ is unique ,in m~ ~ lhi~/Y different
in our local ownership and operation Yet unzquefy alike 111 our philosoplry to treat

Jntonnlltlon: (114) 448-1111 or 1-800-231-2732
~ 1-4100-182-7204

,/

" . . ... ,,, • .,· . · . ·.•. · ,.. ·.

hornet~ al~oholics.
.
.
·
.
By mveshgatmg old files on. drams and sewers, ta~atoon, th~ census,
bankruptcy proceedmgs and the hke, the Survey expands mto the history of a
pansh.
. .
The Survey was founded by Charles Robert Ashbee, a noted archotect who
saw architecture and town .Pl~nnmg as~ way to create a better hfe f?~ aiL He
beheved that reco~dtng butldmgs was_ hkely to prevent their dcmohtl~n.
Frank Lloyd Wnght, the great Amencan arch1tect, knew Ashbee and m 1910
too~ a photograph of h1m, wh1ch IS on show at the Museum of London tn an
exh1b11ton fdr .the Survey s centenary·

capital, as well as ordinary buildings that are. characteristic types.
The state-funded Survey of London, wh1ch has produced 61 scholarly
volumes, still has a third of the city left to cover. .
. .
.
.
~ 'The Survey is a remark~bl~ institut!on, a histone bu1ldmgs proJect wh!~h
has endured for 100 years,' sa1d Herrn1on~ Hobhouse, lhe ge~eral ed~tor. It
will never e~d as London is always chan gong. London os so b1g and ~as such
variety of buildings, from Roman temple to tower block."
The Survey has embraced a dovecoie (a small house for pigeons). the Prime
Minister's official residence in Downing Street, the Reform Club on posh Pall
Mall and Christ Church, Spitalfields, which is notorious as a hangout of

I ,

. 1

e

The school's enrollment is 170, and it will grow to 400 over the next three
years. Students apply for admission and are interviewed by school administrators.
Feinstein was started with a gift from Cranston philanthropist Alan Shawn
Feinstein, who also is funding the creation of a public service studies major at
Providence College.
The high school's interdisciplinary curriculum combines traditional classroom learning with volunteer work. On a typical day, students might spend the
morning in the classroom discussing humanities - on a recent morning
students watched a segment of the tele, ision miniseries "Roots" and discussed it.
The students are expected to keep journals of their experiences and participate in discussion groups.
"We want students to use concepts from traditional fields to help them get
a handle on questions that are important to the commvnity," Milano said "By
the time they're ready toexit·Feinstein, hopefully they 'll present a solution of
some son.

!The a.~ists: Rescue of London build.ings launched-1.~0-~year~ ago "

675·3930
426 VIAND ·sT.
POINT
WV

••

because they fear triggering side effects that they cannot control.
The number of specialists ofall kinds has risen dramatically in recent times,
while tbe growth in general do!:tors bas been much slower. Currently about 30
percent of all U.S. physicians are generalists, compared with 43 percent three
deci!des ago.
One of the goals of the failed Clinton health care reform was a sharp increase
in the proportion of family doctors. Many believe !bey provide adequate care
at lower prices, in part because they order fewer expensive tests .
Health maintenance organizations and other managed care insurance plans
also stress the importance of using general doctors to coordinate patient care.
They routinely limit patients' freedom to see specialists as a way of keeping
down costs.
Dr. Ellioi M. Antman said the Harvard study, which he coauthored, suggests
this may be bad for the sick.
. "We believe that if we move in that direction withoqt paying attention to the
benefits to the patient; we may see cheaper medical care that is not optimal,"
he said.
An editorial written by Dr. Jerome P. Kassirer, the journal 's editor,. also
cautioned against wholesale restrictions on the use of specialists. ·
"If we are not smart enough to protect patients' access to some of our best
physicians," he wrote, "we will all be losers."

Older teacher, principal invigorated by public·service school

'Buckeye ~C, Inc.
,,

. Pr- M,idllelll T~t, · ~ of ·Ia~ and e~ 1111'~ II
Co1~-Pmby.te~ Medical Ceo~ 1?. New York Cily, also p'Cdidl a
: .boQmtnwbathecal!S aupnenteclre~hty, T~tsayslbesystemseve!'tually
. should be able to show docton both tbe 3-D v1cw of tbe surgery and UIIIJel
from X-rays or other scans.
.
Manuf~rs ~m that s~rgeons eventually w1ll be able to openle 011
remote patients usmg tbe amagmg sy~tems and robots, but surgeons say that
will only happen .if heallh care reform does not choke off rcscarcb dollars.
. Even without 3-D, minimally invasive surgery bas become commonplace in
tbe past five years.
.
Becausctbeincisionsaresosmall,patientshavelesspain,bleedingandriak
of infection. Patients can ,now go home the same day or momins after
operations that once kept people hospitalized for a week.
Thatsharply reduces treatment expenses, making MIS increasingly popular
as insurance companies reduce their costs. Surgeons and manufacturers are
sure that trend will continue, and more and more difficult operations will be
tried using MIS.
' ·

Study focuses on widely-accepted practices for .heart attacks

PHONE*

1890 CHEV. 8-10, 147224, Red, aport WhHII, AM/FM
Clll., cent. ltrlpee, rear allde ................................. $5495
1990 MIT$UBISHI TRUCK, 144673, auto. trana., AMIFM
CIU., aport WhHII .................................................. $8145
1189 CHEV, 8-10,14707, .
center etrlpea, auto.
·
·
·" : , .., · · :• . ·
&amp;ana., AMIFM, duai'"
1989 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE, 14712, red, A!C, AfT,
AM,IFM. cloth Int....................................................... $3495
1890 CHEV. CAVAUER, #4689, blue, A/C, A/T, AMIFM,
cloth lnt .................................................................... $5495
1992 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE, 14738, fold down rear
AM/FM, cloth Int............................................... $5495
1991 FORD.PROBE 9L, 14737, Lt. pewter, AMIFM cea1,
P. loc:ka, crulu, cloth lnt ........................................ $5495
1992 PONTIAC SUNBIRD CONvi:, 14527, red, 37,000
mllea, A/T, A/C, AMIFM Clll1, alloy whHia ............$9995
1993 DODGE CARAVAN SE, #4372, burgundy, 7 plu,
e!'CI·•.A!C, A/T, AM/FM Clll., tilt, crulae ........ $12,995
1890 CHEV. S-10, #4718, A/T, V-e eng., A!C, AM/FM
ca11., aport whHII, rear allda ................................ $7995
1993 CHEV. LUMINA APV, 14685, white, A/T, A!C,
AM,IFM.ltlt, crulae, P. window &amp; locka ................ $12,875
1991 CHEV. 8-10, #4639, V-6 eng., 21one paint, aport
whHII, rear all de, dual mlrrore ...........................,, $7995
1991 FORD RANGER, 14687, white, AM/FM, apcirt
wheale, duel mlrrora, rear blga .............................. $8995
1992 CHEV. S-11! TAHOE· MAXI CAB, #4738, reer flip
Mala, AM/FM 0111., sport whella, dual mlrrore ... $8995
1992 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN, 14734, A/C, A/T,
AM/FM 0111., cloth Int. tilt, crulae .......................... SN20
1988 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER SE, 14735; 7 peanngar, V6 eng., A!C, A/f, tilt, cruiM, rear det....................... $8865
1993 DODGE GRAN VAN, #4733, grHn, V-$ eng., 7
peannger, AM/FM, A/C, A/r, tnt, cruiM .............. $11,995
1992 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER YAN, 14737, blue, A/C, A/T,
7 pan., v-e eng., AMIFM caaa., tilt, crulae ......... $10,850
1990 FORD RANGER XLT- Long Bed, #4729, black,
A/C, aport whHII, AM/FM, dual allde, canter atrlpea
$8800
1880 T,OYOTA TRUCK, 1#4727, blue, AMIFM·CUI., A!C,
tool bOx, rear bumper .............................................. $8995
1993 NISSAN TRUCK, 14726, 6,000 mllea, AM/FM .
0111., dual mlrrora, aport wheela ........................... $8995
1993 NISSAN TRUCK, 14702, AM/FM 0111., alloy
wheal''• rear eNde, bal. of llctory warranty ........... $1965
1990 PONTIAC GRAND AM, 14705, red, A/T, A/C,
AM/FM CIH., rear del .............................................. $8995
1991 GEO STORM, 1#4827, bll!ck, A/C, AM/FM Clll.,

Becker bas been trying out a 3-D system uncJt:r~elopment by Automated.
Medical Products Corp. of New York.lt uses a ~·ogle lens, special gosglca and
computer processers to simulate three di~natons.
•
. ·
More than a dozen companies worldwtde are workins to develop threedimensional systems. Three have clearance from tbe federal Food and Drui
Administration to sell their products.
Manufacturers and some doctors call the new systems a major advanct.
Some doctors who have tested them say it will be allcast a year until needed
refinements convince hospitals and surgeons that the equipment is worth its
$30,000-plus price tag.
Professional conferences covering "Virtual Reality in Medicine" are
announced nearly every month. And John Ahem, president of Odenton, Md.based Endo Image Corp., which is developing 3-D systems with and without
special eyeglasses, expects the worldwide market for such systems to soon hit
$2 billion annually.
"I think you're going to see the sophisticated surgeons begin to do the
procedures in their office," Ahern adds.

'
•

-

�•
4,

Plge E4-Sunday nm• Sentinel · .

Pomeroy-Uidcllepon Galllpolll, OH-Polnt Plelllnt, wv

Poilleroy-Midclleport-Galllpollt; OH-Polnt Plluant, WV

--Aboard the Santa train -----·Synthetic blo.od ·l atest goal ·

.!

for the 'Edi·son of Medi~i·ne~:

I

Santa Clau bands out • Rift to tile crowd Ill Dwp--. Va., I'Kelltly during the 52nd Santa
Train. 'lbe route - from Sbelblaua, Kh to Kl~ TtiiiL To,a and food were bmded out
during each atop oldie route tbroup

_...Wftt V

(AP)

Navy casts glance at nature
to create

automa~ed

By JON MARCUS
Associated l're.!B Writer
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Wbcn
englneers bc'ao casting around for
a more eftiaent mCBDS of driviDg
submarines, they spied on IUIIUIC.
And so, after three years of
research, scientists have acaled an
UIIIII8DIICCI sub shaped like a flail. A
bluefm tuna, to bo precise.
Robotuoa, lbcy call it.
"Sixty million years of evolulion have made thia the epitome of
high-speed motion," said Davids.
Barrett, a graduate student iu ocean
engineering who is developing the
robot fish.
. .The 4-foot-1ong prototype,
dubbed Charlie, made ,its malden
voyage July 4.
·
It has 41 polystyrene ribs, com~ to 48 ribs in a real nma. Ita
tendons" are made of Jtalnlesasteel airaafl cables aDd its sldo of
latex foam aDd Lyaa In a scrt of
oeon:blue California beacb desip
that malcea It easier to see duringtesting.
It swims gracefully down a 11~
foot testlog tank, its tail oacillat1ng
and its body beodlog to cut down
on drag, exactly like a living fish.
•'It kind of startles me at

times," said Barren. "It's amaziogly biological.''
To accomplish this, designers
camped out at the New ~land
Aquarium's nma resean:b
and
built a scale modellhat bangs by its
tail in the lab. They use a pool in
MIT's Depadmcot of Ocean Engi·
neerlng where models of most U.S.
Navy and many America's Cup
boat designs were tested.
But Robotuna far exceeds the
efficiency of sails or propellers.
','Wbat w.e're trying to do Is
acb1eve maxiDI.um watta of thrust
g~iog out for watts coming In,''
wd Barrell
Unmaooed aubmarlnes used for
research bave a restricted range
because of lbclr limited power supply. One soluli111 is eo Improve the
supply, but ''nobody likes the.Jclca
of a totally auiCIIomous sub with a
nuclear generator," Barrett saicl.
"What if it washed up on Hamptoo
Beacb? So the option Is better
.propulsioo."
~ithlo five years, engineers
believe lbcy can coostruct IS-foot,
fully autonomous, tuna-shaped
underwater submarines to carry
son~; navigation equipment and
t&lt;;.sllng Instruments 10 map the

speed

ocean fioor and find lbc sources of

underwater pollution.
They even coukl collect s~imens lhroup their -"mouths' and
store them lo their "stomachs."
The projected cost Is SSO.OOO each;
so far, the research has been partly
undezwriltell by the Navy.
"We coold throw it off the doclc
in Charlestown and tell It to fmd
out what's out there aDd come baclc
In three DIODtbs," Barren said
For now, lbc tuna is CODDCCted
to a carriage that supplies its
power. Its movements still are
being studied liOOl the "briclge" of
lbc testing tank, where one CXllllplltcr mooitor is labcled'wilh the word
"TUNA" scrawled on a piece of
maakiog tape. From there,
reacarc:bcn Clll moultor ita catimatcd 137 trlllion possibie motions.
The room is filled with biology
rextbodts.
"It's a big eooup accomplisbment jus~ to make it swim in a
straight 1iDc," said Barren.
· Wbethet' people ever would be ·
able to travel in tuna-styled submarines is another . question
because of the diffiCulty in pressorizlog a flexible bull.

By JAMES HANNAH
Alloclaled ..._ Wrtt.r
YELLOW SPRINGS - It
abould·bo In a mnaeum, But CIIC of
the world's first heart-luna
maebiDes sits iDaCeacl in the hall·
way ofim Anllodl Collese lab, alllectlng dust ldc:tcd up by workmen
renovating Jhe buildlnJ.
The machine has saved thousands of lives by aervloa u the
heart aDd lunas or boart patients
durlog sorgery. It' I taldog a weDdeserved rest.
But ita owner ud loveotor Is
not. Dr. Leland Clark Jr., 76, walb
through the lab wJth a acnae of
urgency.
With more than 80 loventiooa to
his name, the ''Edison of
Medicine," u some know him,
says his next one may bo among
the most imporlaDL He Ia tryiDs eo
make artificial blood lhal will bo
universally compatible and help
prevent the uao~oo of AIDS
aocl hepatitis tbrouah clollo( blood.
Clalt &amp;aiel be aDd his assistants
are in the final stages of plopoiDtlng all of the essential Ingredients
.for good artificial blood and tryiDJ
to fmd a way to make It In large
quantities.
The blood - a thick, liquid Ouorocarboo that looks like cream bas 'been tested successfully on
said.
tic blood II going to be
a reality, said Qart.
Clarli: is beinf backed by Synthetic Blood Intematlnoallnc. The
company received funding from
some Swiss investors last April,
said Gerald Schlatter, company
presideoL
.
Robert Larsen, ~betic
Blood's cblcf fmaocial o
, said
be expects to ask the Food and
Drug Admioiatratloo within six
months for permlsaloo to bealn
testing the blood on humans. He
saidlbc IDA could approve commercial distribution one to three
years after lbc comJIIIDy applies for
testing.
.
Clarli: said be first came up with
the idea for artifJCial blood In hopes
of finding a convenient aubatitute
for donor blood.
"But a real turning point
occurred whc'n AIDS was discovered," be said. "For the lint tlme,
lbc man on the street be&amp;an to realize lhat donor blood ... could have
problems."
Dr. 'Thomu Chana. diRctor of
the Artificial Cella and Organa
Research Center II M..OW University's medical school in Montreal,
. said the primary benefit of artlflclai

blood ia-lhal it alUid bo IICri1lzed, aredlal~-~ ~ ~'e'~
destroyinl.!~i micro-oraulama
""" _ . .... wil1111...1' ~""'~""'
dial cauac
duod AIDS.
dial are t i aet beucr."
He llicl it 11ao alUid bo ~~Diver- · As a boy powlDs up in Attica.
saDy compadhlc'llld lh111 avallablc N.Y., Clark allowed few algoa of
for trusfualons In war or major becomlna a pioneer In medical
acddtnll willloll delaylto maldl reaeardL
blood type.
.
• He admits be was not a very
But Chua~d lhe problem Bood student ID high sc:bool H~
wilh ualoJ a fhiDIOCIIboo u artlfi· said he wu frustrated by '~!!i
cia! blood Ia that It 11u not been rules." such u haviDatoJold
able to Clltf'J CDOUah oxyp.
papcn a cedlliD way.
Joe Walder, professor of blo"I got called iDID the PI'IDcipai's
chemistry at the University of office lD school many, man
Iowa, hu developed ID anificlal limes,'' he recalled. ''I develapecl a
blood that 81el a derivative of whole ~Cries of ways to get out of
hemoglobin in humu blood to adlooL"
.,
.
Clltf'/'Oll)'geo. He aald it hila lldvao·
One way wu to sUp out o( a
taaea over the fluorocarbon balhroom willdow and escape io a
appr\Ab,
ta........... Jab, where be ·worked OD
"It hu a puer oxysen-carry- chcml.atry espcrimeota.
log capacity. aDd It IPPWI to bo
Gracmt~ns durlos the DepresJess toxic," be aald.
·
alon, Clark had litde money to
Walder' a blood Is being tested altelld college. He chose ADtiodl
on humu patients by Baxter because lhe school's work-study
Heallh Care, a medical research proJI'IDI !rovided the money fqr
aroup baaed in Dccr&amp;ld, m. Bax- his educalioo.
,
ter spokesman Thomu Schmitz
said the sroup Ia a1ao testing ita
Followins graduation, Cl~k
VCISioD of a ffiD'Oaltlon artificial beld reacbiog postaii·ADtiocb, then
blood on hUIIIIIII,
the University of Cincinnati ColClark said bia blood CaD carry lege of Medicine aDd finally tile
more ox'lJ:o than human blood. University of Alabama Medic~
ADcl be
tbe toxic dele effecta Collcge. where In 196S be CODI!octhave been eliminated over the . ed an experiment lhal drew atteil. ''
ti011.
yean.
Even lf'anificial blood comes
"Iuat on an
I got ,a ·
into use, It would not likely put bcabr, poured In 1 · oil abo\tt
blood biDb outofhusloesa.
the same viiCOIIty of water, bu~
Dr. Iudilh Woll, mec14:11 dircc- bled oxygen tbrouah it, dropped 'a
tor of lbc Commaoity Blood Ceall:r rat in, and be just started (o
in Dayton, aald artificial blood tnalh," a.t said. "I doo't know
would have a Ibm life apm and bo who wu more surprised. I SIIJliX)Ie
useful primlrilv
In cmeqCIIClel. · · I was.''
, ;
•
"It woUldn1t cllmlnp die need
airk DO longer tcadles. He now
for regular blood," abc aald. "We speoc1$ moat of his time in lbc ~.
p,eople to continue to WCllkillg uj! to 12 hours a day.
:

. . ._

'ms=·

S:!.

Clarli: Ia pallaps beat lalowD a . Schlatter said Clark aoes 11oa1e
inventor of lbc bcllt-IIIDJ mrilne, at nlsht and often sits out 111 bp
a m"""•lcal pump dill divem lire ac:reeoed-ln porch, attractlns Olber
body' 1 blood from the heart 111d reacan:bcn who Hve in the ociglimaiD11iD1 ciraJlalloa.
borllood.
:
Invenled lo 1949,1t hila lllowed
"At least OiiCic every other da ·.,
surgeooa to perform open-heart lbere mi&amp;llt be alx or aeveu ~
surgery, coronary bypua opera- aiabaa III'OUIId his table just t•IJrinl.
tiooJ l1ld ~ tnllllplaots.
lbout Ideas," said Schlatter, ;
Other lnveotlooa 'to Clark'i
He said Clarli: is probably 1bf
name lnciade the Oll)'geo elecCroclc truest humuitariao he bu ever
to meuure blood gues and lhe met. He recalled that Clark on~
enzyme eJectiocle; whlcb can me,~~- refused to c:halleogc the pateot~
sore blood aagar and utber com- ampctlng caoJ)imy that dcvcl
·
pouoda In less lhan a mloule.
a aimllar prod~ to bia because he
"Moat of the thlo&amp;i'I'vc Invent- feared the legal battle would buit
ed are atill lyins around some- &amp;Btieota.
'
Where, ellher In my llead or on a
"There's not too maot
piece or paper or oomecw..,," llicl ~seM'dlera· left .Ia the world wi~
C1art. "What t tend to do is pick the quality of tbls man," said
up the things that seem the most Schlatter. "He's ·very, verv
~
important to me. Aocl the thlogs '"~fish."

•

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.(!)
PJI.I.CBBISTMAS
CAR fl TBITCK SAtl

.,

·

308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio
1-992-66411..aoo-&amp;237·10M

1995 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO
Tall• A T•d
DrfNff

1995 CHEVY
~ TON

EXT. CAB

2 WD, V-8, air, stereo, ·
tilt, cruise.

=:Ill "

4 WD, auto., air, V-6,
leather.

$2500 OFF

,.

(EDITOR'S NOTE,-: Glaa· tblllk, lo Earope, lo -tbo next 50 · Del M01111:0, who uva be ,w u
carlo
lib ...del
...MoDKo
. lla t a teaor yan,.half the tbeltln IIIC .
geuetlcally proarammed for
Dillllr, M.to del , cQc:. When IOID"Abinlla .
· opera,'' alma to mate operu
M-.:o, bat M wwb In open, · it enters into cJecadt:ncc
bcllevable. ''lute to be troc, 10 the
•• • .dllnrecGetor. Aher • car~tr
. "()pen ia In lhe middle of an siDgcn COllet they are aloJlouf~nd
....ay, • ....._ 1111 expalliloo In Amerk:a. So the •""" have the • Un the. •
at AJ.rlca' Metr .IM.
E
bo
. the le_,of_
aoc 8 f re te
a
of urope cannot
sty
realatory," heu,a.' And lhepol).
Qpera two yeara aao. • wu America."
lie b~lievca what Ia solag 01.
• . _ 1U Met lllnd 111m
Del Monaco made his Met That 1 the maximum you can
bact
...~ anaoa.)
debut .wilh TM Girl tftM GolMII reach_"
'
·
8DY - .Y C.uti"BELL
West. In 1993-94, be lfll&amp;ed Sti.JftDel Monaco says that be, u
AP NeWII•tara Wrtter
lio. The public, critics and the reglsseur - wblcb mean a he
NEW YORK -Ia 0JX18 fading Met's managCmcot llkccl wbalthey direciJ aqe ICdolllllll Ia in cb1rJe
out In~ but It· its peak In the saw.
of whit Ia aeca - dlooles the set
UoHIIeclere·~tales?
bo ...........
M Now ~~..~et b~ofb'!._~~ del aDd OOIIW!ie clcalpen. ''The repa..
s one mao w .....,... so,
ODKO .,...., .or two
uu. seaICID'cloddca lbc bi&amp; line."
hc;aboulcllmow,
son's four new ]ll'.nductio.oa. His
1o MllllqmaBIIIlnjly, del M1111He s Glaocarlo del Mooaco. In Madama BuntrflY arrived Dec. 1 costrangsaya,e :~
the 1992-93 seuon, be made his aocl bla Simoll BrKCt~Mgra on Jan.
......,.,...
debut as a director at the 19.
es his oeptlvc aide. Even m~lf,
.
.
Opera where his '
"We're doing bere an absolute- In Dortmund (Germany) in I
I
father, Italian tenor Mario del ly realiatlc, · ~de Butterfly,'' set It In Vlclnam. I did #tl'lll Sa;g:W.
Monaco: bad many triumphs liOOl del MOIIIICO says. We even took a 20 years early."
I9SO to S9.
, Japanese garden arcbltecL I want
(Miss Saig011, based 111
Opera sets are ottea realiadc In euctly each flower, each piece of of Madama Bunerfly, ope
on
Americ~. be says, ancl far-out in grass to be botmlcally ripl ~ Broadway In 1991.)
I tblnl: the CXCle of~· ~ of the piece Ia to be rclpCCI
"I set LD Por:JJ dtl DtlliiiO In
In Europe, be says. I ed.
1bc 1937 Spaoiab OvU War," del
Monaco aaya. "I politicized
'Tosca' In lhree epochs for the
three acta- 1800, tbe 11148 revo1
.
lution and 1943 wilh Germans In
Rome. The politica cbaoged but lbc
dictator, Scarpla, Ia alwa,albere."
11
But del Monaco baa turned
away liOOl sudl opcralic "intcrJR-

•r,-

:;:;!:p:r.

:J'lot

'O
13
Chl•et
'
1
Apol
• •
...ecalls miSSion·

that went awry

By MARCIA DUNN
AP A.eroapaee Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -The man leaned over the table
wbllc Apollo 13 ctmmaiJder Jim Lovell was 111~ (lQIIies of
bla new book, lmt Moo~~: TM Periloru Voyage of
lo 13, IIIII
wblspered: "Tell me one tblos. What about tboiC
pills?"
"Just a minute. Give me back your book," I,ovell said. He
y&amp;Dked the book open to Jla&amp;e I aDd pleaded, "Rmud the prologue.''
An oxysen taDit In Apollo 13' s service module ~eel April
13, 1970, juat SS boun Into 1bc Oigbt. Lovell, FIM Halae and Jack
Swigert were 200,000 miles liOOl Earth when the taDit blew, aocl
so.ooo miles lioolthe moOD.
.
Here'slbc final WOld on whether the lhrce IISII'OIUIIIJ padted suicide
on what was NASA's ooly in-space cliuater. (Cballeoger
bado t reached apace when it exploded in 1986, ldlllng all seven
aboard.)
.
Lost Moon, Paae 1:
·
''Nobody knew bow the stories about the poiloD pills got ltarted.
Moat people bad beard diem; most people eVen believed them. The
press and the public certainly did; even some people lllhe Agency

r.ills

~

..."

-

isttation.)
.
"Stories about poison .,,us always made Jim Lovell laugh,''
Lovell writes. "PoB pill&amp;! Forget about It! There just weren't any
· situations in which you'd ever really consider makiDs, well, BD
early cx!L ADd even If thc:re were, you bad Iota of caaicr ways to do
it IbiD polson pills."
Far casla-, LoveU points out. would be to tum the aant for lbc
cabin vent, suck out the capsule presaore and boll yoiD' blood.
EverytlliDj would be.ovct.in afew.seconds.. . . .
. . . ..
In 111 interview die Dllllllins after hla November boot-lipiDs 1t
KeDDCdy Space Center, lbc 66-yc:ar-old ~~ said It's DOt the
most common question he's asked, "but people thlnlt about that,
youkoow."
·- - _
So 111 wilh the rest of the mlssloo and the rest of lbc IIDry, soon
to be a movie directed by Ron Howard aDd S!lDTlng T0111 Hanb as
Lovell.
Loven Wl$'111 have been lbc fifth man on the mooo, Halse No. 6.
They were to have explmcl the Fra Mauro hiplanda wbllc Swigert
circled the moon walling for them.
All lhat evaporated as precious oxygen gushed from the spacecraft Into deep space. Two of three fuel cells went out. One of two
malo power-distribution panels went out. The spaceablp lurched
toward the moon and Lovell fouptto gain control of tlic aaft.
For Lovell It wu~ally dcvaswlng. Lovell had circled the
moon on Apollo g,
was bli second trip to lbc moon and bia
fourth space fiipt, Bod be knew it would be bia lasL
"lo a way," Lovell writes. "he felt straDf.IY pbiloscpbical." He
knew dial some day be'd mourn thia faa, 'but lhal time was not

.

.....

,..., __ " .
''Now I lib a )l'edlc, realisdc l
way of dolo&amp; ihcller, hila:lcally
correct and
.. he
Yf{l I atay alwar~'e aamaae,Yilt.
would be bortoa. thlat my c:arecr
bu "-loat bec•ae ofdull&amp;inl.
I ace my colleague• disappear.
They never bad the courage 10
renew lbemaelves."
.
In his youth, del MODICO llllcl-

·

:.,..ho doa't bow the ,;_,., .. be ,

or

._A

-

1

-.-·-

-

·

So, .;

t

&amp;

•'f.:

Book sheds light on mysterious Irving Berlin
Noted composer's
daughter probes
dad'$ shadowy life
By ~CIIAEL KUCHW~··
AP~Wrtt.r
NEW YORK ~

1rvinJ Berlin
was America's beat-known and
most elusive 1011gwriter.
His 10081 - anthems lilce
"God Bless America," "White
Cbristma~." "Easter Parade,"
"There's No BusiD:esa Lllcc Show
Busioeu" and more - are
Ingrained In the public CODicious·
ocss. His l,l'ivate life, except for a
blaze of pUblicity wbco be m8rriecl
his second wife, Elllo Mackay,
Now his eldest daughter, Mary
EIUo Bart,ett, hu put together a
penoaal portrait of the mao, titled
simply Irving Berlin -A Daugllttr's Mnt10ir (SimOn .t Schuster).
Not the dcflnltive bloaraphy,
not a aillcal aoalyala, not a history
O( lbc Amcdcan maalcal theater, It
is Berlin's 110ry IOid from the per.snectivc'"of-'·woman who CJ)Jed

him-·'Daddy."

Bam:tt, dcapiiC being the •tlu
of three novels aDd many maprine
artldcs, says abc found It difficult
emotionally to pot her ~llcctloos
on paper.
"All my writer' a life, people
have bccil saying to me, 'SCIIIC day
you're going to have to write· a
book about yoiD' Calha-,"' Barrett
explained during an interview.
"Ancl all my life, people have been
asking me, 'What is It lite being
Irving Berlin'l daupterr"
For y~. Barrett didn't even
tlllnk lbout lbc project becai!SC abc
knew her father- a private and, in
bia later years. a reclusive lll8ll didn't want anything written lbout
him while be wu llive.
ADcl Berlin's life spanned IDIR
than a century. He died In 1989 11
the age of lOt.
"I always knew that I would
begin the book with my parents'
meetiog because that's really when
our family began - and thia was
going to be a family story," Barrett
says.
·
•
That meeting - at a dinner
party in 1924 - wu the stuff of

legend, aDd their later romance was
covered by a preu u eager for
uewa as any tabloid television
show of today.
The courtsblp bad alllbc lop
di~ of a modem fairy talc: Soccesaful songwriter meets youoa
bciresa. Ha- wealthy father ralaes
religious objections. She persists
and is dlainheritecl. Yet defiant
claupter llllllries her tniC love, and
they have a happy,lovlng IUl'iage
that lasts more·thin 60 years.
'Jbo,boolt touches on the rarely
seen side of Berlin. It looka at
events dial toot place wbilc be was
writiog IDCb Broadway musicals as
the Music Box revues, As ThouJallds Cllttr, Tlli1 11 tu Army,
AMit Gtt Your GIUI aDd Call Mt
Madam and such duaic Hollywood films 11 Top Hal, Follow the
Flett aDd Holiday hill.
There were uaaedlea that a
young Ma-y FJUn bccl!!!e aw.e of
later in Bfc --4bc dcalb of Berlin's
ooly 1011, a baby boy who died 011
Cbrlatmu Eve; the suicide of
Berlin's troubled aiallcr, Slnh; the
bitter fight over the Ba-Ho music
publiahiog cunpany, and Berlin•s
pitKiiilill:i'lidi"Of ~· -­
proclaimed "dry spell&amp;" when be

ibou&amp;ht he wasn't Writing productively . .
. The book toolc Barrett three
years to write . .She started the
memoir In 1990, the year after her
falhcr died.

''My memory was the spine of
it," she says. But thc:re were other
sources for the Slay abc.waoled to
tell.

Barren fint ,retraced her father's
journey to Ilaly during World War
II wben be toured with This Is tltt
Army. The sbow and its arduous
visits to Europe and the Soutb
PaclCic during the war were an
important part of Berlin's life.
"I bad no idea as a totally selfInvolved teen-ager what be went
throuah during World War n with
This Is IM Army," Barrett says.
•'The extent of bia excrtiODS were
eoorm0111.
''Tbere also is a marvelous
cacbe of wartime letters that be
wrote.my mother. She saved them
all."

brancea of benlother' a stories
which were checked out apiaat
newspaper atoriea of the day llld
other people's iecollectiolll. ''They
were surprisingly accurate," abe
sa,a.
"I bad 11C111C ~~own,
Including my first po
piece
of writiDg, wriltell when I was 9 a description of a Berlin Cbriatmas,.. Barren adds.
The boot opc'os aDd cloaea with
a haunting visit by Barrett to the
first apartment a youna lrvlna
Berlin shared with his new wife in
192S. The buildlog, located at 29
W. 46th St., just eiat of New
Yort' s theater clistric:t, was owned
by Ba-lin and for a while housed
the Irving Berlin Mnaic Co. oo its
lower !loon.
The structure Ia still there but
the building was sold after Berlin
died. Only Jbe memories remain,
Barrett says, and that' a what abe
wanled to dcsaibe.
"This isn't jaat a dausbter's
!JVI:IIIt"ljr,'' tbe auk says. •'Thll u

Then she made a field trip to
Southern Califorola to revisit the
locales of her father's Hollywood a writer~ghter'a memoir. And I
wmtcd to make lhe boot not Cllly a
.!i!I.Y!.A!I.c;l. cqrroi;Jorate ~C:~ Q.WD -plain
o~., adliif lllid IDOila·memory llld impUty oo IL
er
and
ou
Ufe, bat 1
to
tbat memory Included rememmake it a quaHty piece
"

NEW 1995 ·NISSAN 414's
~lr, a~sseHo,chro11o

packa1o, More.

$14,999

994 CADILLAC

SEVlLLE SLS
V-6, loaded,auto.

loaded, V-8,
Lower or Hi Top.

NEW 1995 'NISSAN PATHfiNDER

Leather,
Calypso Green.

Air,

$17,995 s7000 OF.F $35
.
I'589

i
'
'

tl Now Accepting New Accounts
tl We Deliver Only Clean B.P. Fuels
tl Courteous Dependable Deliveries
tl We Accept HEAP Vouchers

tARS &amp; TRIJtKS

Athens

.j

1991 GMC SONOMA s ai-el. alr,~terto............:...._ .....................~............'5,995.00
1990 CHEVY Yz TON PICKUP v-a. 11110., 11r..............................................'9,995.00
1991 CHEVY CORSICA v-a. 1uto., air .................:......................................... '6,995.00
1991 BUICK PARK AVENUE ULTRA...............~................................'12,999;00
1993 G'MC, Yz TON 4X4 PICKUP Autc(. elr........................~....................'15,995.00
1993 PONTIAC GRANP PRI)( 2 Door, V-t,loaded..................................'12,995.00
1993 NISSAN SENTRA 1 ....c.,llr, 08111111..................................................'8,995.00
1989 CHEVY 5-10 BLAZER 4X4 v.e, re~~oe........................................'10,995.00
1993 CHEVY LUMINA Z-34 Brtght rte~, 23,ooo m...,tlocal owner.......'14,995.Qo

Cars

Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject,to credit approval

810 E. STATE ST.~ ATHENS, OliO
NEW CAR DEPARTMENT
USED CAR DIPARIMENI

594·8555
i

•

l ~'

•'

~

'·

BP OIL·C,,O.

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

114

*AI prlcee . . _

1111111110 diller.

LARRY I. MILLII
. CALL TODAY
1157 • 1·100·591·5654

T-&amp;IMonat

lncUied.

.

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVEl

'

•

...
... , :

c:llllil; I
IP.
aaya. 'I start from lhe po!Dt·
sail beau,diftlmll
aploat the Wind.
.., ...,.. ' .j:
view the J!!CiariD' llu to know the had Iota. of J!llicllcc_wl* • · ·• .
piece bc:tter tblri the lillgcn Oily
said 'If
fWioqll,' ·
like ,lttbll Clll -lit over ...S..IIId
• we get )'011
1011 .
......:doL:::Z~•
-».,.,-makcasoodmt.' ·
··
have,_.. .,_you -L
"I have a fiJhtiDI dtlneler•.1
Del Monaco says it's also declcled to ose my palnful C!llfldimporlaot to have a good relation- eoces and tranaform diem iD.IO .
abip with lt.clmiciaDs and artists A intpindoo for the 111p."
.,
reglaaeur may have sood ideas but
bel Monaco's mother wu 1
ledmici• aDd •
ioake tbcai IOpiiiiO. His fint wife wil a a.- .
led ... ~ trumpet 11111 ......ftg, .... . 6;
amgcn
~-his falber, ~~hi:
He speata five languages and !;'O::':~~~:Ji~ ;;~
most famoua role, ·Ortllo, 427 calla himself " Italian itll
African. His brother il&amp;neral
timea.
0enoan tcclmiq:." Now
D11DaJer of an opera .........y- Ia
"I thiDit l 'bavc a IOOd VOice,'' lived In Italy cipt YCIO. studied In BeiJradc in the foaoer Yuplav~J. ,
be says.
Swilzerlaod for 12 aDd bu lived In His daapter Stella, 17, wants .~
But, he uya, "I never bad the G::mumy for 30 He hu been gen. ltudy actina. Hia lofiDt daapw
interst to aiDs. Fint, It Ia impoaal- era1 director of the Bo opcr · Fedora "mates more noise dull .all
. blc to be bcaCr lhlll my father. He a1oce 1992
on
a lbc flaoi1 •..
.
wu CIIC of lbc blgest 1o the blstoIn Oeniwa aDd Vi
A ·
ry of siDgiDI. Second, because of tria, del Molaco wori':'un:!; his~. ~ ;n~:J ~~
my point of view. 1 lite to think of Guorber Rcooat, W'ldaod w
biriD
lbc Met.
the big picture IIIII .ICII stories. Sto- and Walter Felsensteio
Rudolf Bins came to Sa
rica loVOive IDIIIY JICIIODI."
happy I kept my persooalliy " be Fnoci
· 19SO bar
elder
. By the time fie was 14, del says. "I~ is possible to lose' yOID' deiM':=o aio~ with ~eaata
Monaco saya, ''I had more than penqoallly when you work with Tcbaldi, be offered him $1,(100 1
120 operu lo my brain, note by sreat teachers. I kept my Italian week. Del Mooaeo Uicl his priee
note. Now I have men than 180 fantasy, with Germu tecbolque, was $1,100aperform......,,
operu memorized. I remember l1ld survived.
But be dferecl to lila a - when I wu 11 sc:hool, everybody
"ADd sometimes I lcamcd from mancc for free at lhe Melii;1
was listeolns to Elvis and Paul no succesa. There is a GermaD cboae Mat~o11 LtsctJut and save
Anita. OK, lliateoed to that. I bad proverb, 'Wbat doe so' t kill me him a mMJner: for c:biJdreo. At the
my opera recorda aDd my accna in makes me. stronger.' My divorce end, lbc dloros caTicd him off OD
myi'OOPI. Itwasmybobby.
was there. My father died. My their shoulders, and Bing OK'd
"It's cay to fiDel ItaliC directon mother l'«ame side with CIIIICel. I $1,100 a performance.

remalna D1&lt;R myataious.

(The Asency being the Naliooal Aaooautica aDd Space Admin·

Now be was too busy, trying to save bia aocl his crew' a lives.
To survive, the astronauts used lbc cold aDd aampcd lunar module as a lifeboal for four days. They looped III'OUIId lbc moon and
· aimed for Earth. A few booB before splasbdown. lbcy aawled bact
into their aippled cunmaod module, Jettisoned lbc ruptured ~ce
moclule ud llfe·saving lunar module, and landed safely an the
Pacific Ocean OD Aprill7, 1970.
Lovell coUaborated oo lbc book wilh Jeffrey Kluger, a contributing editor and columnist for Discover magazioc.
Publlsbed by HoupiCII Mift1iD in Octriber, Lost Mooll already Is
in ita fifth printing.

S·lOBWER

PIP

Met dire.ctor feelS opera at its height irl U.$; ,·

now.''

·.1994 CHEVY

Sundly nm•. ••~

.

a•to., Y·6, power wl1llows ••II locks, tilt, cr•ln, casnHo, 4 tiMr.
140-

$23,999
414

414

GOOD SELECTION OF
.1995 DODGE RAM 414's IN STOCK!
·f·l, Y·1 0, ••II DIESEL AVAILULE

�'

.•

I

'Lost Generation' revived · · t
with publication of rec·ipes 1
By MJCRF.fJ,E LOCO
book still elliatcd, albeit under a
Alloellted ,._ Writer
_ cWfamt name.
OAKLAND, Calif. - Ernest
Sbe !Mid a friend wentlbele and
Hemlnpay waa rllk says autbcl' Oldered die -roaat chicRn tbat
SIJZIIIIIC Rodrlpez-Hunra Parla 11 the characters Jake and Bill
a movable feast. Sbe'a 'sot tbe enjoyed In tile book. lllppCd off by
rcciJ)es 10 prove it.
lbc same walk.
From Papa' a favorite rout . "It waa Just wmderful.lt waa ~
cbicbn 10 GirtrDcle Stein'a tea par- 1f we were dlnlna wltb them,
ties to Josephine Balter' a naked Hunta said
IDDch Hunter baa researched and
From tllere came the Idea of
rccreited menus of tile e~ finding refcrencca to food In tile
Americana In Paria for her boot, fiction or memolra of the cl!pltriForwl Meall of the Lon Ge~~era- ares !!lid m!!!d!IIJI tbat to n:clpes of
tile time.

tioll.

Pan chatty history, pan c;ootboot, Found Meall Ia a tasty read,
mflectlng tile lllaty appedtes of tile
c;oteric of writers and artists who
went 10 France In tile 19201.
For Hunter, an Oakland tree- lance writer it waathe cnJmln•don
School, and her llllldenta, Mandy Foat and Scott
of a fasclnailon witll tbc JCIIellllon
MEIGS MINES AND EDUCATION- Dllft
sbc firal Jead about u an 18-ywl..ong. Foater will - her SOCCO mini...... to
Baker, far left, • - n raoiii'CCI -~~~~~er for
bay
fur
them..
old
In Hemingway's A Movttlblt
ScMatlltna OWo eo.I Co., ,wu Bette Foaer, a
Ftasr
IUa IJ'IIde te~er at AUennUle Ele. .ntary
· •'I. malized that tllere WCII! all
tbese people wbo lived out lbele ill
a way 1 didn't know ellialed. They
sinned. And they lived to teD the
tale " sbc said
Hunter ~~on to apend a yell!'
in France wbell! abe found herlelf
visiting 'ber Idols' homes and
·teachers at Rutland Elementary haunts
WILKESVILLE - Soutllcm celebrate Appalachian history, lit- School Tbe program uses tile JoaiTbe Idea for the
came
Obio Coal Co. funded II projocts erarure and culture.
.
c;a1 p~nic;a aystenl to supplCIIIClDt
while she waa
San
!II 111!1 acboolll tbil year, acrordlng
A.banc;Js~ 8piKOIIch to saencc · and reinforce phonics stU1a alona Also Rises, and
rcatau·
to a news release from Amcric;an also 15 bema taken bY Carol Evans, with regular reading instniCtion.
rant Hcminpay wrote about in tile
Electric Power.
a fourtb grade teacher at Rutland
Tbc mini-lllllts arc given IIIIIU· Elementary School.
any aa I*' of tile company's P.t"I have not bad tile money to .
nersblpsln fldlJCllliolll'logllllll. To · develop a bands-on approac;b to ·
date $36 000 bas been awarded, learning in science," Evans staled
funding oW:r 90 projects during die in ber grant applicadon. "The won·
program's uiDC ycus. This year's dcrful activities materials and tits
cub awarda range from $ISO to tbat I have listed are self contained.
$400.
Everytlli.ng Is provided. I don't
"They arc Intended to provide have to track down materials and
private funds for innovative and worry about tbe eipense."
Cll!llive projeas Initiated by teacbThose items inducle "Scicnce in
ers for wbich school disttict funds Action" l&lt;its, wbich teach students
are not available," said Dave about plants and animals, electrlciBater SOCCO human resourc;es ty, oc;eans, simple machines,
·manaier and coordinator of the weather, rocks, mineraia and 111118mini grant program.
nets. "I'm roovlnced· tbcsc materiSOCCO, wbich supplies c;oalto ab would help my students discov·
Oblo Power Co.'s Gavin Plant, er bow wonderful tbe world tlley
operates two underground mines live in can be," abe said.
and a coal prepuation facility,
Students in Pamela Crow's fifth
employing more IbiD BOO indlvidu- grade cws at Salisbury Elementary
ala from Meigs and surrounding School in Pomeroy willlcam more
c;ounties.
about tile world around them
·Proposals for tllla year's mini- tbrousb some new, blah-quality
grants came from schools in the videos purchased witll their
Vinton County School District, SOCCO minl-&amp;rant. Tbc videos
Meigs Loc;ai School District and tate students on 10UII of the U.S.,
Alexander School District. The Europe and Aaatralla, aa well aa
projocts were selected by a special Civil War battlefield&amp; and Kins
SOCCO review commluee, con- Tht's Tomb.
sistilia of one reprcsentatlve from
"1bbs project will 11clp OlD' atueac;h ac;hool district and three clenll kcome literate in ICOJI'8PIIY
SQCCO employoea: Janet Duffy; -and- biatory, 10 that they can
human reaoarcca; Cindy Peuce, become productive members of
maiu,.ance ~· and Bud society wbo know bow ibc world is
~of die Me
Mine No. 2.
put tosetber and bow tbc lessons of
. F'cir Cllllllple. ·
Lowery, tile put can help tbcm make tbil
a flflb grade teacher at Pomeroy world a better place," Crow said
Otller fl!O}eds funded tbrougb
Etemrnwy School, wants her students to be proud of their tllis year s SOCCO mini-grants
Appala.·cbian background. Her program include "Effective Pbon·
· socco mini-grant will be ~ to ics Insuuction," awarded to Saunpun;baae a variety of books til at dra Tillis and Kristin Jungbana,
·

am-:..-

Southern Ohio Coal funds
aid educational process

Lesbian officer tells
story in new volume

-

By UM L MILLS
Aiaad..,.. rr- Writer
. WASHINGTON- Sbe II lbe
blsbcat-raaklna soldier ever to
cballcnge ~ben on says in tile
miUtlry. Blliln Sttclaand Just fin!abed lbootin&amp; a TV movie about
licr life, atarrln.l Glenn Close and
Judy Davia. Stnm11cn walt up to
her on tile atrcct, bug her and say
tblmb.
But Col. Margarclbe CammerII1C)'CI' waall the World to know sbc
la not unique.
•'Of the h~ of pcopiC that
I've ~ 111 in the lui ~ ~
there ui ao many almilultlcs
between my journey and tllein,"
Cammermeyer says. "And the lettera that I've rccclved from ~lc
wanting to share that tbey ve
lllalted In my lllOCS -. tbcy're glad
to bear that thCII!' a IOJDCOIIII else
wbo baa beelllbele witb tbcm and
would perbapl understand tile difficulties tll!cY've been tbrouglt."
('tn!!Nsmep- Greta. to her
friencb- chlliled the c;ourae of
that journey In April 1.989 when
abe 1~ tile woola, "I am a lcsblan, 10 a iDililary lnveltigaiOl' at
a security cl!;aance lnlmview. Sad·
dcnly, an CliCIIIillarY 26-year Army
cucer, wblcb lncillded a Bronze
Star ouncd In VIetnam, meant
·uothlnJ. Cammermeycr, who
tllou1bt abc wu on bcr way to
becoming cb_lcf nurae for the
Natloaal 0u1n1. WI!' iDstcad ~
up befcR IDveatipdve boll'ds _.
llripped her of her l'llit, her uniform. licr very lclendty.
Sllc c;heltensed the Army ill tedcrll CIDiilt. mel 'NOlL Cunallly, \be
Juallce Dcpartmeut Ia dcc;ldinJ
whether to appeal to the U.S.
Sui' 'C Court
Ca,mmcrmc~ baa ~~-II~
lilllld a IJobt
her
·
Senlilfl ill Sikll«, It dmlldel bcr
odYif!C7 from dutifal Army nunc,
wife .and aOtber of four boya to
dlvotced lciblaD tlld hero of the
eft~ to end the prohibition on

gays In tile military:
In tile boot, she desaibes herself u a private person. Now, her
life Ia Cllposed to tile. world, and
Cammermeycr admits she'·&amp;
ullllOIIIfonible.
"It's very awkward," she said
discussing tbe book on a recent
afternoon. "But it needed to be
done and I pll!teDd tbat tile boot Is
about sOmebody else...
Cammenneyer was born In 1942
in Norway during tile Nazi occupalion, and says her first mlliwy
OPCialion was aatunlling succcu;
lfer mother lll!!!&amp;&amp;lcd auns to tile
.resistance past Nazi beadqwKiers in
Oslo in ber baby curiage, wltll
Greta in IL
..
Her fatller, a neuropatbolopat,
and mother, a nurse, emigrated 10
tile United States in 19S 1. Cammermeyer attended tile University
of Maryland, where abe had
planned to study medicine. But
after a difficult (Iahman yeu, sbc
turned 10 nunlna. In 1!161, a yeu
after becominaa U.S. citizen,
Cammetmcycr joined the Army.
Camnw meyer iiiWIR lbll tbc
book and the IIIOVic, wllldl Ia alll·
ed to air. euly ncllt year, have
eliJ)IIIcled her opportanltica to tell
her atory.

•

"It seems 10 impoltantto like
advantqe of the manc:nt, eapecial·
ly when you believe tbat your job
is supposed to be what mine baa
bcQOIIIC risht now and tbat Ia ll'yina
to c;bangc the stcreOtypC that baa
been promoted tbrou.ab otbera'
defining ua," abe said. "And I
don't mow • e1sc to do It otbcr
than through ellamplc, tbrouah
taltlng, tllmuJil e4ucallOD and try·
iqtoprovldcaclillcmltJmqe."
em..,. meyer aid the aovem·
met~tllld her ~~~m~eya have been
di'CIIIsinl a ICUJement of her c;aac. .
But JIVeD that abe baa beell rein·
lllliCd llld illefVID&amp;in the Nltional ,
Guard in Waahln&amp;IOII state, Cammermeyer said abc did not know
wbat waalclt eo settle.

.. s··

~- ,.

-

-· • .r" •·-- · ··

·-

· ·Power~

a -

ster.
::
"Why all the fuss?" Bator
wrote. "It didn't take Ions to pti
oo MY costume."
·~
Found Meals Ia published 1Q'
Faber mel Fiber, Inc., witb a
gested mtall price of S21.9S.

sue•

8-15-24-19-34-41
Kicker:

Pap4

l5l730

•

en tine
•

VoL 45, NO. 150
Copyright 1994

Pension fund shortfall jumps 34 percent
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe
lbortfa1l between penaion benefits
promiacd to AmcriC:an wCRcn and
retirees and tbc money set liSide to
pay for tllcm shot up 34 pcn:ent
last year 10 $71 billioo.
.
The Pension Benefit Guaranty
Cclrp. said today lbat underfUnded
llagle-etnployer pension plans bad
usets of just $316 bUllon to pay
$387,billion In beaefit1iaNiitles at
tile end of 1993.
The federal pension Insurance
qency said 8 million wortcn and

mtirces arc c;overed by the underfunded plana, but cmpbasizcd tbat
7S percent of the shortfall Ia In
plans stonsored by financially
bealtlly 1stncsses.
.
About $18 billion of tile underfunding Ia In plana aponaoll!d by
C&lt;lllpauics witll below investmentgrade bond ratings, It added. The
plaQs rover about 1.2 millioo people.
.
Tbc PBGC noted tbat ConSII!II
C&lt;lllplCted action last week on legislation deais!Jed to ll!duce under-

funding by more than twO:.tlliida lbe deal for workers who have
over tile DCllt IS ycm. The biD also COUIIIed on and earned tbc Amtiriwill ellmlnatc witbln 10 yean tile can dream of a securc lditcm.:nt,"
agenc;y' s deficit, which atood at be added.
$2.9 billion at tile end of 1993.
Although people In 11101t uncler"Wilb c;on811!181onal paaaaac of funded plana 1ft rovercd by PBGC
the administration's pension insurance, many remain at risk
reforms, we can now begin to because tlle_IIJCIIcy's parantec Ia
mvcrse tile trend tbat poled a riat limited to $2,SS6.82 a 111011tb, often
to workers and retirees," said less than tile promiacd benefit. The
Labor Secretary Robert Reicb, .annually a4jlllled payment will be
chairman or lbe PBGC boud of . $2,S73.86 a month Delli year.
dirccton.
'
The underfunded p)Ua ll'C COD'' A solid penaion will be pan of ceobaled In a mlatively amal1 DIDD"

pnjec:t.

IIWII- 'IICIEVY WE' 'II
•Ill

4MPICI!ItUH,_
• - Slolfill • c.- Ooll-

·-•IW Ani-loci&lt;·1.3~-

·SiooiBeloc!To•

••11
-

. . BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) President Clinton today called on
the leaden of more than SO DMions
.to strengtllcn Europe's rollective
capacity to curb etllnic c;onfllcts
like tbe one tearin&amp; Bosnia ~
"We must act on Its leasona. ' be
decia'cd.
As be spate to I

F.uloPcan security conferenc;e, however, the
bloodshed In tbe former Yugoslav
republic; waa defying diplomatic
formulas, prompting a fiery Republica~ 8l11ldt on Clintal' a peace pol·
icy.
Clinton lent his support to
upgrading tile peacetecplng func·

-

s...ta -

to to- to visit
wltll tile yo•n1er clllldren,
t••re wa1 m•rlc by a band
••••mble l'rom Mei11 Rl1ll
Sdaool, -

dloral •lectlom

Slello

Doorlod&lt;o • c.-~-

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
ntDDber of violent aimca reported
to police dloppod 4 percent in tbc
tint sill months of 1994.CODipDCI
wilb tbc I8DIC period Iaat year, witb
a 2 percent decrease In murdcn,
tile FBI says.
OvaaU aime during tbc period
dropped 3 perc;ent, tile same percentage decline .-eporled fer tile C.
more numerous ~perty aimes,
according to pll!luninuy fincllnga
mlcasod Sundly.
At tile same time, tbe FBI Uaued
its fmal report on crimes reported
10 Jaw cnfiJI'OCIIICDI last year, findIng thai violent aime fell 0.4 percent even u tbe number of boml~
cides rose 32 pcrcen~ to 24,530.
"I tbint it's good neWs overaD,
but tbcll!'s bad news bidden witll·
In," said James Alan POll, delll of
criminal justice at Nortbeaatem
University in BOSIOII.

CAB PICKUPS!

'10,788** '

'16.988
•L!Tiim

Ani-loci&lt;-

·-Siollill

fully fancied. witb usets of $6()3.
10 cover pension lilblliua
of S518 biDion.
'

billiol1

that Ravenswood Aluminum is
ellperiendng some very positive
fundamental
changes,"
Ravenswood AlumintDD President
Gerry Meyers said. "1bbs rootract
between Ravenswood and the
USWA is a c;onc;rcte example of
that."
The rootract rovers nearly 1,700

hourly workers attbe Jackson

County aluminum fabrication plant.

·--

•IMFIISiooo

•

Al•unin1un and aeate1 the ltlbillt)'
in tile c;oa;paay's buaiiiCH, whkll:
is so important to everyone'•
future," said union District 2J
Director Jim Bowen.
:
The agreement CODtruted wllb·
tbe dispute of 1990 wbell'
Ravenawood hired more tbln 1,000:
non-union wcxttii to ·nm Ill plant
during a 20-mooth labor diJp¥ . . ~
A federal judge this fall
approved a $3.9 million scalemen«
between Ravenswood and 160 fermer mplacement worters.
The n!piacement wortcrs WCII!
fired when Ravenswood and tbe
union agll!ed 10 a rootract In June
1992.
'
The WOlken wbo sued COIIICnded tbey sbould not have 1lccn fill!d
because tlley were classifiCd as perIJiliiCIII employoes.

lions ot lbe 51-natioo Confercnc:c
on Security and Cooperation in
Europe. "Etllnic batted thrcatenJ
peace and toleranc;e,'' be said.
"Change everywhem is causing
r~ and insealrity ...
Allotting only about seven hours
In this picturesque former COIII!qU·
Dist apital. Clin1011 gave brief but
high-profile aaentioa to tile seucb
for new security urangements in
post-Cold Wt11 Europe.
He also was presiding over a
ceremony marking a signlflc;ant
mvcrsal in nuc;lear weapons stoc:kpiling.
Clinton c;alled Bosnian Serbs,

wbo are rcsistlng a peace plan and
pn!SIIag tbcir drive "&amp;•in" Mnalinl
· enclaves, aurcasora. He ursed
tbem 10 agree to a ceaac file and 10
seuie dilfCICIICCS wid! Muslims and
. CroalJ in tile former Yagoalav
republic.
"We tnow tbat Conner cnrmies
can realllcile,' ' be Slid.
Clintal said tile ~2-nalion aecurity conference hu tbe "ullique
tools" 10 foster European intepatioo.

Speal&lt;ing after Clint011, Ruuila·
Pll!sidcnt Boris Yeltain voiced--cems about a U.S.-IIIJIPOited pia
toexpandNAlO.

.

'

'94 AND '9511500 EMNDED

•IW

piau.
.
.
It said tile vast majority of tile:
ainJic-aDploycr plans It~ ll'C"

FBI states
..-----Local briefs-violent crime
. Persons sent to prison
County fuJitlve began serving bis S-yar sentmce wbell
down
. 4 percent be AwasMeigs
sentiO tbc Orient Reception Center Friday, IIIXllllding to tile

CHOOSE FROM 20

·"'""*·-Sitllllg ·--

Tile asenc;y said mucb of tile
1993 anderfunding Increase was
due to historically low intereat
rates, which reduced pension plan
carulnga. But it added dW even if
rates bad not fallen, lbcm would
have beell no significant improvement in underfunding, wbich baa
arown over tile past decade

''Pension underf..diDI bu:
been chronic and pcniatAt uc1:
wiD not go away by illolf," said:
Martin Slate, die 11 . C)'' I cliCCU-:
live director.
·
Tbe PBGC guarantees baaic.
pension bencfitl of 41 million
American wonrn and aetilccs .--:
tic:ipating In about 66,000 peiiiiOII·

President calls on world
leaders to help curb conflicts

were preaented, and the
. Pomeroy Merellanta AIICida·
tlon 1erved llot c•ocolate to
the cWldren in . . mini-part.
Suan Clark repreaentlq
the u.relaanC., aena a cup of
llot chcolate to a kl•der·
. 11arten yoan1ater, Andy
McAn1••· Trl•mtn1 one or
tbe tree1 au atadenu l'rom
Mr1. Tammy Chapman's
. ldDderprten c~a~~;

·-- ·~

·--

ber of oomamiea. tile PBGC said.
More tb1m half of tbe ondclfunding
lain lqe pension plana, primarily
in the-steel, auto, tire and airline
iDdastrica.

Creating festive atmosphere---. Steelworkers ratify new contract ·:

Pollltroy took oa a more
r.tlft atmoll....... Prlday a
UU..n of tH Po-I"'Y Elellltntary Se.ool came down
to- to ileeorate tile Cluilttreei wlllell line Second,
Covt _. Main Streeta.
For tile put aeYeral yean
tile achoof ••• joined the
P-roy Mercllanta Auoda·
tlo• In t•e tree decoratln1

$1&amp;888

•• rto.'BIIMI
- Slollill

·•'-Dilrl*
· ~~&amp; . . . . ~ •!11!111:..

1 Section, 10 ..... · - - ;
A lllultlmedlll Inc. N.. rp p II ;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 5, 1994

It includes wage inc;rcases of 30
cents an bour in 1996, 2S , 'lilts an
bour in 1997, and 30 cents an bour
said.
in 1998, tile c;ompany said.
The· oontract will ellplre May
Tbc CODtract also includes tbrce
31, 1999. The old c;onttact, wbicb pension inc:rcascS in addition to a
took nearly two yean 10 reach, wu $1,000 lump payment to cac;b
to expill! May 31, 1995.
hourly employee, tile company
Negotiators be'gan working ou said.
tile new COIIIrl1Ct in August.
"This is a major ac;c;ompllsh"Wc have slated for some time ment for everyone at Ravcaswood

'1Q988**
•-

·-

SuperLouo:

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)
-:- Ravenswood AIUDiintDD Corp.
avoided tile labor strife of the past
few years 11 tbc OllllpaD)' and tile ,
SteelwCI!ren anion ep:cd 10 a new
4-112 year oonlr.ICI.
~ Tayb, prcalclent of tile
local
, said botb tile union and
tile company wanted to demonSlraleaCW!!!!!itmenttothefuture.
"This c;ompany abd our members have been l!!n!ug!J aomc bani
times, but we have cbosen to look
to tbe future, not tbc past." Tayler

·MIIIIC..
•11

• -Door lod&lt;l

recipe die provide• for the malfl
dilb appell'l flldlful ., die m.m.l
- abCIJued It on a recipe by Hail
de Touloule-Launc:.
A macb quieter affair II ._
description of a ~ Lana•lO!!
Hashea ahued wltb 1111 loves;.
Mary, on their ... Diabt Dptbc:r. '
ltupca- ODC of .evaal blact
Americans wbo fmned I llpifllo
c;ant c;ommunlty of their on lp
Paria durin&amp; the 19201, clraVIII ~
ly by tile IIIIX of JICialiJinien, •
He had to work as 1 Diptd~
diahwasber, a lowly position tbtt
prompted Mary's fatller to ordtf
her bac;k bome to London.
.
There was time for ooe laaL
romantic repast, desc;rlbed bt
Hushes In his autoblopapby ~
start - wine and
to fiDisll
- wild lttiWbc:irles bousht on ...
way bome and ea1e11 In a~
scat wbllc "sadly 'llllldllng the aut .
set over Parla."
'
Josepblne Baker rccaUcd in lllf
autoblosraphy bow ber habit dl'
lying low to avoid fans led a•
alarmed stage manager to bunt lntp'
her dresllag room, afraid abe Wll
m. Instead, be found Baker. anve.:
well, totally nude and catina loll:

Pldt3:
138
Pldt4:
0:1.61

with management at Ravenswood •

·-Doll!*

·-Sioomo

1

Southern
defeated
•
mopener

HURRY
IN NOW!

OVER20CHM
.URBAI4x4's IN STIK!

Meigs County Sheriff's Department repMS.
David M. Pcnons, of Long BOIIOIII, recently wu sentenced fer
felony fleeing, felony tlleft and felony escape in tbc Meigs County
Common Pleas Comt.
Also transported to tbe reception center was Bobby Vance.
Vance was sentenced on traffickinglcultlvatloa cbuges, rcconls
sbow.

Pomeroy

man chaTged with DUI

A P0111eroy man faces ntDDCIOUS charges - includina clrivin&amp;
under lbe infliiCIICC - after bis c:. sailed off stale Route 338 tile Ravenswood bridge, bit a tree and tbeo bacted into llllllher tree
Friday nigh~ acc;ording to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department

repoN.
.
Odrcy Reed, (]old Ridge Road. Pomeroy. waa cbalged wilb DlJI,
driving under suspension, failure 10 maintam control aDd lcavin&amp; the
scene of an accident. leclll'ds sbow.
Reed was driving east on Ibis highway wbcn be lost COIIIrol in a
sharp curve aboulll :30 p.m. Friday and was arrested bY tile Meiss
County Sberllf's 1Je4atment later. rep!XtS sWDd.

Scipio trustees to discuss park
are

The"scipio Township Trustees
Uying 10 build a recrca1i011a1
p11t and play ground at the Pagcville toW115bip lot, aocordina 10 a
relcasc from tile 1n15teCS.
Tbc t:nJSteCS wUI meet II 6:30 p.m. Wednesday • tile Pqeville
Townsbip building rcr its regullr meeting. Aft« tile mcctinaa C&lt;lll·
munity discusaion wUI be beld to get ideas lboat tbc project.
,

'Pomeroy reports fender-benders
Two minor aocidcnt.s oc:aarcd in l'llmeroy Sllllday,ICCOrdinato
tbc Pooleroy Pollee Dqlll1mcnt ft:IUIS.

_

"
II

"I j•t Jead ~~~~ I could
get my hands on, she said.
Hunter r~aeucbed more tllllll'
IWO dozen satberiDJI, providin&amp;
scttlnas. guest llats, oonveraation
a!!d recipes tea ted In her own
l&lt;i!d!cD.
Tbc book beainl wid! a famous
1908 banquet l&gt;icaaao tbrcw for
painter Henri Rouaaeau, then an old
man who waa s-allY saJnllld by
tile offldal art flOOd.
Tbc blmquct was IIUppOICCI10 be
a stately eveninS f$1U1in&amp;a "riz a
Ia Valendennea" (a sophisticated
paclla) witb a Juesl 1iat tbat indaded Stein and her new frielld, Allee
B. Toklas.
A wild Dipt enaucd, c;omplete
with a aate-crasblng donkey.
Hunter admits what really happeued 1bat eveDina II bani to aueaa;
a quandty C?f booze waa quafled
and gueat accounts COIIfllct. The

·-·--

·~Cardbl

Ohio Lottery

".

&amp;~I,,. t.s224f17•

m·• •au 5tlf1 •422-11151

. ANTIQUE TOYS ENJOYED- M'lan,

wt, 111111 La. . llarrtloa, mldna of . . . . . .
J.....r llaaTIIon, O ........ tllllo,...t DOt DIIIJ
tH ~ dilplay of a..w. dalll at tH Mtlp

COtmty M.....i ope• · - $• IIJ, hilt aliO
tH anttq• to,. Dll alllblt.lhn IIIey a ' I w..
antlqtie wicker baby biiiiJ Uti a
rocldDt! llone cllalr. .
.

•ucr-.

----

Dec. S

20shopplng
days to Christmas

At 11:38 a.m. Sunday, a Gallipolis woman's van bumped
Pmlcroy Mayer Jolm BIMIDil'a GMC truct ill the BDOuc , __
lag lot cauaing moderate damage to tbe tnM:t'a driver' a aide,

rccoots sbow.

Cynlbia Tayklr. 39, rl Gaiiipolis, bad ligbt damiJe to die ... of
her 1994 Chevrolet Aatro van. No dllliona wae ialt1Cid in dlillnd·

deal

I

At 2:~ p.m. Sunday, a vebic:lc ckivlng Clll 08 Eut MaiD SIII!Ct
Continued on
3

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="368">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9740">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="31794">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="31793">
              <text>December 4, 1994</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1739">
      <name>burns</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1437">
      <name>french</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1813">
      <name>goetting</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="260">
      <name>price</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2292">
      <name>sigler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="241">
      <name>white</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
