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jYOitl old tradltioiiS
CON lteW

flvol'lta

• FMtuNd on pege C1

Life in the high te.c h lane . Page e1

Low: 30a

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Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • November 17, 1996

Vol. 31, No. 41

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Vicksburg, ended on July
4, 1863, giving Union
forces total control of the
Mississippi River.
"Our plan is to get
everybody we can to call
into the Corps of Engiforce of Confederate raiders commanded by General
neen; and request a pub- .
lie hearing," said PortJohn Hunt Morgan. The running baUie.through the Portland' resident David
land area ended Morgan's foray through Kentucky, IndiGloeckner. ·
ana and Ohio and cut 9ff his escape into western Virginia (now West Virginia).
One group Gloeckner
plans
on contacting for
The b~mle is considered a significant battle. AI Tonetassistance is the Sons of
ti, head archaeologist for the state preserv~
· on office,
Morgan's Men, descensaid earlier that Buffington Island has been 'sted as a
.
dants'of Confederale solsignificant battle of the Civil War by the Um d States
Congress: it is classed 384th out of 10,50o' an d con: diers who fought in the battle . .
Although the Sons of Morgan's Men may be more
nicts.
The battle ,was likely overshadowed by other g~eater interested in celebrating their ancestors' victories, they
events going on around $e same time.
·
· · are concerned about tbe fate of the bolllelield, said
George Wilson, a volunteer with the Ohio Historical Gloeckner.
The reason he explaif1ed: "Most of the feljows still
· Society preservation office, remarked thattwo important
events, the Bottle of Gettysburg and Abraham Lincoln's buried up there are , likely Confederates. Not all the
Gettysburg Address, occurred just before the Battle of graves are marked."
Continued on p1ge A2
Buffington Island. Another major battle, the Battle of

:Second Battle of Buffington Island:

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O.S.U. ·Hoosiers face-off •Pages1

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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:Lines being drawn over permit for Portland.barge loading facility
Br JIM FREEMAN
Tlme.Senllnel Stall..

POIULAND - Bureaucratic baule lines are being
.drawn in what could be called the Second Battle of Buffington Island.
·
A proposed Ohio River bllf'J!e loading facility is being
opposed by some seeking to preserve the site of the Battie of Buffington Island, Ohio's only Civil War battlefield, from an anticipated gravel mining operation.
Richards and Sons Inc. o( Racine has applied to the
U.S. Anny. Corps of Engineers . to construct the barge
loading facility ~hich will be located just upstream of
the. community of Portland.
But. battlefield supporters ·want thi: Corps of Engineers to hold a public bearing concerning the facility,
and ask ·other supporters to write requesting the hearing.
The facility would be located along the right
descending barik of the Ohio ~iver at milepoint 215.5 at
SUNDAY

·,'

lndeper.cl•nt candidate
flies complaint with
board of elections

Portla,nd, the notice indicated.
Work below the high water elevation of the Ohio
River would include the placement of 12 steel sheet·pi!ing cells, filled with sand and gravel, measuring 24 feet
in diameter along approximately 1,980 feet of shoreline.
It would consist of three separate areas: upstream and
downstream Heeling areas consisting of three mooring
cells e.ach with each holding nine barges and a middle
Heeling area consisting of the loading dock.
The loading dock .itself would consist of a barge,
measuring 30-by-150 feet and secured by two mooring
,cells. A conveyor system would extend from the shoreline to the loading dock.
'The applicant· also .proposes to place riprap bank protection along 510 feet of shoreline behind the bl\fge
loaqing dock.
.
In tbe Bottle of Buffington Island on July 19, 1863, a
force of about 8,000 Union soldi~rs routed a small~r

•'

Jobless rates show
trend ·toward decline

Authorities
suspect ·
foul play in ·
•
•
m1ss1ng
person case

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. By TOM HUNTER
GALLIPOLIS - An indepenTlme1-Senllnel Stall
dent candidate for Gallia County
Unemployment figcommissioner in the Nov. 5 elecures across southern Ohio
tion . has filed a protest with the
and the state of Ohio are
county Board of Elections against
showing a declining
the candidate who won the race.
trend, according to data
Ellen M. Saunders of Gallipolis
released Friday by the
GALLIPOLIS - A Tennessee man
· alleaes that Repu!llican Shirley missing since Oct. I - and reportedly
Ohio Bureau of EmployAngel violatec! election laws relatment Services.
last ~n in Gallla County - may have ·
. ed to loiterin&amp; at polling Places, · been a .victim Qf foul play, according to
· Nine area counties
· inducinc iUecal voting, cqregat-.
reported jobless rate
=--, the Gallio County
inll at the (lOlls; bejng within I00
decreases during October
Sheriff's Departfeet !If the polls, loitering near
ft:Qm ,!l,nemj&gt;loyment fiJ--~
ment
polls or influencing votes, and
ures one year ago (OctoTbe . man, Troy
"other pos&amp;itiilities." ·
ber 1995 rates in parenSowders, .
was
Saunders' protest, relating to
thesis) including: Athens,
believed to be travalleged activity on Election Day,
4.5
(4.6) percent; Hockeli'ng the county
has also been filed with Gallia
iqg, 4.7 · (5.8) percent;
fair circuit; and,
County Prosecuting Attorney
Jackson, 5.7 (6.6) perwas residing ' in
Brent A. Saunders.
cent; Lawrence, 6.5 (6.9)
Gallia County with
Saunders alleges in the protest
percent; Pike, 7.1 (7.8)
acquaintances.
that improper conduct by the canpercent; Scioto, 8.5 (9.4)
• Sowders, 56, is
didate and/or his reprCS\'ntatives
percent; and Washington,
described as being
took place at Green Precincts I
4.7 (5.3) percent.
S-foot, ' fO-inches
and 3, as well as at Clay Precinct.
Vinton County showed ._....'-"· .....::;;;......;
tall; weighing · 200
Saunders, Angel and indepenthe biggest 12-month decrease in unemployment figures of area counties,
pounds;
with
denl Robert 0. Schmoll Jr. were in
reporting a 8.4 percent jobless rate for October compared to a 10.4 percegt
brown hair and
the running for the Jan. 2 term on
rate during October 1995, according to state figures.
brown
eyes.
: the county board of commissionMeigs Cpunty showed slight increase in the jobless rate during October,
Deputies believe he·
ers held by Democratic incumbent has a permanent injury to his left arm .
reporting a 9.5 percent jobless rate for the month. The rate was a .6 percent
. Kenneth R. Farmer, who along
increase from September figures of 8.9 percent.
A vehicle belonging to Sowden; was
. . with Saunders and Schmoll lost to found abandoned near the vicinity of the
Galli a County maintained the statewide declining trend, reporting a 7.3
Angel.
percent
jobless r~te for October. The ·rate was a .3 percent decrease from
Quai I Creek mobile home.park at Rodney.
September jobless figures.
&gt;
Deputies suspect possible foul play, due
Among the state's 88 counties, October's unemployment rates ranged
to evidence found at tlie scene.
. Witnesses . have been brought in for
SEARCH UNDERWAY - Gallla
D. Taylor from a low of 2. 7 percent in Delaware and Franklin Counties to. a high of
questioning, although no fonnal charges examined the banks of the . RaccDOn
as deputies 11.6 percent in Morgan County. Overall, rates decreased in most of the counhave been filed.
searched lor any algn !II Troy Sowdera, a
living with ties. The comparable rate for Ohio for October was 4.3 percent.
.
Deputies
believe
that
Sowders'
body
local
acquaintances,
who
has
been
missing
since
1.
Even with the declin(!S, Southern Ohio counties still dominated the tf.p
Today'• Glft
lbul
end of Ohio's unemployment rates. Only ten counties reported jobless rates
18 Sections • 184 f'aaes ·
might hove been dropped from a bridge along Raccoon Friday.
.
. .
.
. . .
Creek. ·
,
·
Anyone wtth any mformatton on tlus mtssmg person above 7.0 percent during October.
· Contlnu.d on page A2
Cl&amp;4
Officers conducted 1UJ unsuccessful. search of the area is asked ,to contact Investigator Q_on Bowy il at 446-1221.
c•••nder

Good Morning

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Column s

Sam Wilson

17

0 ICJI.Ht (JIIkl Valley Pu~illhin~ C''·

City·paving projects should be complete by Monday
. Coppler said the City Commission had discussed. the possibility of taking that section of
GALLIPOLIS - A set of paving projects Court back to brick last summer. Coppler and
in Gallipolis are expected to be finished by other city . officials consulted with Scott's
Monday - if tbe . weather cooperates, City Landscaping, Vienna, W.Va., last week Ol\ the
feasibility of putting brick down after the
Manager Matthew Coppler said.
The Shelly· Co. was to have finisbed res'u- paved surface was removed last month.
Scott's, which Coppler said has worked
forcing the intersections on the Third Avenue
project on Friday. and the remainder of the extensively in Marietta on similar projects, is
side street jobs included in this fall'~ paving· to return a cost estimate to Gallipolis by the
·
program are to be completed throughout the middle of this week.
Whatever is decided, Coppler said, that
weekend, Coppler said.
But for the time being, the stretch of Court section of Court won't be left bare.
"It's not going to be long before. a final
Street belween First ind Second avenues will
decision
is tnade," he said.
·
remain unpaved until the city decide~ to return
If the commission gives the green light on
it to a brick surface.
By KEVIN KELLY

nmee-Serillnel Stall

was looking to finish all of the projects before
re -bric~ing the street, the work c.an be done
.now or in the. winter months, Coppler ·asphalt plants traditionally. shut down for the
season in mid-November, Coppler explained.
explained.
"II won't be affected, regardless of the
In addition to Third, the city also had
weather, as long as snow isn't lying all over repaved streets in the east end, as well as on
the plaee," he said. .
Pine Street ,between Fin;t and Second, and on
With Community Develo~ment Block Court, as port of a 10-year road maintenance
Grant funding paying for most of the cost, plan developed ·by the city.
Third Avenue's resurfacing began in 9ctober
Coppler said Shelly representatives
after Shelly, based in Thornville, stripped the,
infonned
him the work would be done by tiUs .
old surface. Delays ensued when Shelly's
weekend,
weather permitting. Following a
crews were called to complete other projects,
week-long
cold snap, milder temperatures
but the resurfacing woS'renewed a few weeks
were forecast regionally through Sunday.
later.
Left .uncompleted until this weekend were ·
"That's what we're counting on," Coppler
uncovered strips at the intersections: Shelly said.

.·New llce·n sing process being established for Ohio·teachers
&lt;

into the teaching fidd;" PayGALLIPOLIS - Ohio is becoming one of the first yeOI. during which time ·they
ton said. "It's going to toke
. stales 'to establish a licensing process for new teachers would be evaluated based on
I0 performance standards.
them longer Co get their
llfld to b!l&amp;e the license on performance standards.
If
they
pass,
they
would
degree
and it's going to cost
, The standards were adopted last month by the ,state
a lot more."
, Board of Education and must be approved by th~ Legia- qualify for five-year licenses.
Ron Marec, presi·
·Jature.
to .-. ~fir
dent of the Ohio Federation
.. , If passed, they will !like effect with the class or teach- , Teachers also would have
to earn a master's.degree by
_. ·
of Teachers, which rept~·
.: ers who graduate from college in 2002.
.
flfltlg .tQ
sents 20,000 educators in
Under the proposed requirements, new teachers the end of 10 years or have
30 hours of graduate-level
Ohio, said higher entry-level
:would have to renew their license every five yelll'8. ·
standards
are
needed
· Under the current rules, teachers llfll certified every training.
They
also
would
need
a
because
Ohio
has
one
of the
:four yell'l but receive a pennanent certificate from the
professional development ·
nation's lowest standards for
;state If they earn a master's degree.
.
' · ·· .
passing the National Teacher Exams.
. Gillipolia City School Superintendent Jack W. Pay- plan. ·
Payton said the new provisions could cause o.probHe said too many of Ohio's teachers have master's
ton nid lie feels new requirements will help insure
tern locally'llue to the demand for educators.
degrees in administration or guidance counseling, and
:te..,hcn III'C well qualified.
"I think that alot more is being asked of those going not in classroom instruction.
• New leacl\ers would gei provjsi?nal licenses for a

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Under the new requir~ments being considered by the
state, teachers would have to focus on their academic
specialities.
· But not everyone supports the changes. Emerson·
Ross Jr. of Toledo, . whom Gov. George' Voinovich
appointed lost year to the state school board, was among
. three board members who voted against the standards on
Oct. 15.
.
,
He said. that while he supports the .concept, be
believes tbe J?OCkage is too cautious and creates too
much red tape.
"We're hollering about administration, and as I saw
the bodies being developed to administer this process, tt
looked too bureaucratic to me," Ross said.
.
"The point I was trying to get across was don't tell
them what to do, but try to tell them what we wonted and
letlhem come up with the way to do it."

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Sund.ly, Ncwemll•17, .1 •

Pomertt, • Middleport • GaiHpolll, OH • Point Pl1111nt. WY

OHIO VVc&lt;lthcr

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

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AccuW~ liwecul

there.
By ALAN FRAil
The House approved the measure
AaaociiiiH "'-•• Writer
WASHINGTON - The numbers in January 1995 by a 3()().132 marand the politics are stacked against .gin, I0 vOles above the 290 needed
them. Still, opponents of the bal- in two-lhirds majority. In dramatic
IND.
anced-budget constitutional amend- fashion. the measure fell a single vote
ment have a slim chance in what shy in the Senate tlv'ee months later
promises to become one of Congress' and lost by three votes last June.
As a result of the Nov. 5 elections,
first pitched battles of 1997.
·
coiumbus ls2•
Already, the two sides are reck· proponents seem to have 68 votes in
oning into the equation everything the Senate, one more lhan necessary.
from the 2000 presidential ambitions Supponers in the House say they
of Vice PresideatAI Gun: and House have about 275 "yes" votes ·from
Minority Leader Richard Gephardt, · returning lawmakers and new GOP
D-Mo., to the favors "eteran law- freshmen, meaning they need about
makers facing · re-election might 15 freshmen Democrats to prevail.
W.VA.
" It's more difficult," concedes
demaad to switch their votes.
The bottom line is this: On paper, Chuck Loveless, legislative director
the two-thirds maj9rities needed to for the giant American Federation of
change the Constitution are probably State, County and , Municipal
there ..But if Demi)Crats can shift just Employees, a perennial opponent.
But he said labor. consumer, civtwo votes in the tOO-member Senate
or can keep the votes of 28 or so of il rights and other groups will battle
the more than 40 new House Demo- the proposal with newspaper ads and
cratic freshmen, tbey could scuttle the other publicity in key lawmakers' displan for the third time in three years . tricts.
Although the IOSth Congress
And supporters know it.
" If you ask if we'll have the votes . opens in January, the new year's first
afler all the pressures, all the politics, shOis were fired in confusing manner
all the c•cuses, I'll give· you an last week. President Clinton seemed
answer on the 'day the vote is held," to soften his longtime opposition to
said Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, a 'tpe idea, saying he would consider a
. By The Associated Pren
·
·
version that .allows an. "escape
chief
sponsor.
.
A large high-pressure system covered the eastern third of the nation and'
hatch" .to allow nexibility during a ·
The
latest
version
of
the.
idea,
.
provided Ohi1&gt; with a mostly su 0 ny and dry day on Saturday. ··
which has been around for decades, recession. A day later, administration
·. Skies .will become cloudy acrilss .the region on Sunday as a cold front asso. ctated wtth a low-pressure system .in the Great. Plains advances toward the ·would require a balanced budget by aides led by Treasury Secretary
state. There will be a chance ofrain across western Ohio by late morning 2002, a 6ate supporters might put off Robert Rubin said Clinton would still ·
to attract votes. Proponents, mostly fight it.
'
and in the east by evening.
Republicans,
say
an
amended
ConOn
Saturday.
freshman
Sen. Susan
. High temperaiUres will range from the upper 40s in the northeast t\) the
stitution
would
provide
the
legal
Collins,
R-Mainc,'ridiculed
the pres·
mtddle 50s m the southwest. Winds will be 15 to 25 mph.
ident's
backbone
lawmakers
need
finally
to
perf.ormancc
in
ber
party's
Cloudy skies will continue Sunday night, with a chance of rain early in
eliminate federal deficits. Opponents, reply to Clinton's weekly radio
the west and through the night in the east. Lows will be from 35 to 45.
Clouds will Unger over the state on Monday, and there will be a contin- mostly Democrats, deride ihe idea as address.
"My Republican colleagues and I
ued charice of rain in the east. Highs will be from the middle 40s to around an unenforceable sham that requires
balance
without
showing
how
to
get
welcome
signals from the White
~
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·
Weather forecast: ·
, Sunday.. .Ch!udy
wilh scatte.red sliowers in the afternoon. Turning .
i.
.•
cloudy. east. Htgh mtd 40s northeast to 50 to 55 south. .
Sllnday night ... Afe~ lingering showers west...Otherwise mostly cloudy.
.
·
.
.
,
·
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·Cloudy east wtth scattered showers, Lows from 35 to 40 north to the mid
iiOs soUtheast
·
Continued fnlm page A1
·The economy statewide and oationAccording to OBES estimates, wide is looking better. There isn't an
Monday...A chance of showers:.. Mainly east... Otherwise mostly cloady.
Highs 'l'ostly in the 40s with lower 50s extreme south.
·
8,000 members of Meigs County's abundance of high wage jobs in this
·
Extended forecast:
8.900 member labor force were lirca, liut there arc mqre jobs avaiiTuesday...Achanceoftain south and a chance of rain or snow north. Lows employed in October. Gallia County abl~ overall," said White.
in the 30s. Highs in the 40s.
·
figures indicated 12,800 members of
Ohio reported a state unemployWedncsday...A chance of snow showers, mainly north. Lows 30 to 35. the county's 13,800 member 'labor ment rate of 43 percent.for Scptem·
force were working in October.
, ber, compared to the national jobless
Highs 3~ to 40. ·
Thursday...A cbance of snow showers. Lows 25 to 30. Highs 35 to 40.
State employment services offi- figure of 4.9 percent for the month.
cinls nrc attributing unemployment Ohio's jobless rate showed a .3 per·
decreases to an improved economy cent decrea'" from September 1996
and more job availability.
figures, • An~ a .2 percent decrease
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis City Commission will hot'd a budget
"The slight decline jn Ohio's . from the OCtober 1995 state jobless
.·
.
study session at ,5:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Gallipolis Municipal courtroom, October unemployl)lent rate is gcn - rate of 4.5 percent.
City Manager Milnhew Coppler announced.
erally consistent with the gradual
.
. '
.
growth we have seen in Ohio's ccon~~..,--. .
omy over the past year," said Debra
R. Bowland. state administrator of
the Ohio Bureau of Employment

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Sorden Road work to continue

CHES'rnR - ~oad repair work on Ct.ester Township ROIId 359 (Sorden) ~·II be co~llnued Monday lhrough the remainder of this week,
according to Chester Township Clerk Janet Life. The road will be closed
from Scout Camp Road to Sand Ridge Road.

-

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continued from page A1
We have been contacting other
rcc~actors, they are all in support of
our effort.
"If tbey keep tearing things up,
we won't have anything left,"
Gloeckner ~aid. "We'll hav~ a huge
inland lake there." .
Gloeckner prefers the land be
used as it now, for agricultural pur- ·
poses. That is how it was used at the
time of the battle, he explained.
"We want to have some impact
on this," he said. "There is very little
time."
·
Any person who has an interest
.,hich may be adversety.affected by
the issuance of a permit may request ·
a public hearing. The request must
be submitted in writing to the district engineer on or before. the c~pi ·
. 'ration date of Nov. 20. The request
m~st clear!~ set forth the interest
which may be adversely affected
and the manner in which the interest
may be adversely affected by the
activity.
The Corps of Engineers is soli~ il ·
' ing comment from the public, federal , ·stat.c and local agencies and officials. Indian tribes, and other inter·

(USPS5-)

hbti..W e~eh Sunday, 82S Third Ave.,
OrM't l'i1. Ohfo, by die aDo VllJey Pvblithina
~yK;annen Co.. Second c:lu' poltl&amp;e
,..d M Olllipolh, Otlio 4!631. Enmed 11
lllllilina mancr 11 Pomeroy. Ohio,
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M 2 :. The Auociatc:d Prer.s. and the Ohio
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Now Accepting New Clients In All Areas of Practice
Inciuding:

Probate and Estates
Personal Injury ,
Medical Malpractice

I

'workers Compensation
Do"estic Relations
'
·Real Estate

Servkcs.
Bowland said that employment
gains during the last two months can
also be attributed to a strong labor
Any comment recc.ived will be market in Ohio, supported by stabilqonsidered by the Corps · of Engi- ily in scrv.icc industries and gains in
·neers to determine whether to issue, serviCe industries.
Bids Due by December 13, 1996
modify, or deny a pennit for the.pro· '
Tom White. director of ihe Ohio .
801J·7H·33-12 Exl fi7H
posed project
Bureau of Employmcn't Services' '
~
Comments are used lo assess Gallipolis office, noted that the
jobless
rates
in
this
area
increased
impacts on endangered species. hi storical properties. wa.ter quality, last fall were attributed partly to corgeneral environmental effects and porate do~nsizing· al American
Electri~ Power plants and mines.
other public interest factors.
"These decreases can be attrib·
Comments can be addressed to uted to an improved economy and
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, people, droppin~ oO: rolls. Overall,
Huntmgton District, 502 Eighth the jobs situation see111s to be
Street, Attn: ORHOR-P, Huntington, improving statewide," said White
WV 25701 -2070 or fax at 1 - ~04"The econo.l!ly in this area is .
529-5085 ..Comments or requests for slowly improving. You can't point to
~publi c hearing should refer to P4b·
one determining factor attributing to
hc nOtiCC 19960843. .
the improvement in jobless rates.

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Columbus Office. Of counsel to the firm of:
Butler, Cincione, DiCuccio, Oritz and Barnhart, 50 W. Broad St. ~' .

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POMEROY - Several deer-car accidents were investigated by Meigs
County s~nffs deputies Friday, according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
By AARO" MARSHALL
Ac~ordtng to reports, Jackie Lyons Jr., 35, Racine, was traveling on
Gannett News Service
Rowe Road, approximately a half- mile north of State Route 338 around
COLUMBUS - Safe boating
2:30 p,m. when he swerved to miss several deer in the roadw-y. Lyons
legislation aimed at curtailing high
lost con~l of his 1988 Chevy S-10 pickup, crashing into an embankment
speed jet ski jockeys who tear around
and fhppmg the vehicle on its side.
· Ohio's waterways causing accidents
Around 5 p.m. Friday, deputies responded to SR 7 nonh of Tuppers
was approved by lhe Ohio LegislaPl81ns where Lewis Smith, Pomeroy, struck a deer while traveling south·
ture l.ast week.
bound. Damage to Smith's 1995 GMC Truck was moderate. ·
Senate Bill 295, sponsored by
Late Friday evening, Adam S. Jenkins, Pome(Oy, was traveling noM
State Sen. Karen Gillmor, R-Oid
on U.S. 33 near Enterprise wben a deer ran into the path of his 1988 Dodge.
Fon, passed the House by a vote of
Damage was hsted as moderate to the left front fender of Jenkins vehi87-3 on Thursday, the last working
cle;
day for the members of Ohio's I 21st
No citations were'issued in these ·separate accidents. No injuries were · General Assembly. The bill had earreported.
lier cleared the Ohio Senate, meaning
only needs the Gov. George
Driver cited following accident
. itVoinovich's
signature to become. law.
POMEROY- A Middleport man was cited for failure to control after
Gillmor's
legislation creates the.
a one-car accident late Friday, according to Meigs County Sheriff James
offense
of
operating
a vessel in a
M. Soulsby.
'
unsafe
manner
and
is
the first Ohio
According to reports, the accident occurred at ·11:30 p.m. on Burlinglaw to specifically address safety
ham Road near U.S. 33. Tory D. Swartz was traveling w~st in a 1994 Pon·
issues raised by personal watercraft.
uac Oraad Am when he lost control of his vehicle in a curve, sliding left
known commonly as jet skis or wave
into a bridge abutment. The vehicie the slid back across the roadway and
runners.
. struck the bridge abutment on the right.
Under her bill, unsafe vessel operModerate damage was listed to the right front and left rear of Swartz
ation
would include "wake-jumping"
vehicle. No injuries were reponed.
·
~
at a distance of less than 100 feet,
.
operating af speeds requiring anoth"
Section of SR 588 to close for work
er
vessel ·to swerve to avoid a colli•
GALLIPOLIS -'- State Route 588 from Henkle Ave.nue to Burkhart
sion
and operat!ng less than 200 feet
Lane will be closed starting Monday and untii Friday, Nov. 22, from 7
behind.
a person water skiing or
a.m. until 3:30p.m. for slip repair near the Outreach Center, City Manattempting to do so.
ager Matthew Coppler said.
Other provisions in the bill,
Heavy trucks should avoid using Chillicothe Road as a detour, he added.
backed by Ohio's Division of WaterHistoric Preservation Board to meet
craft, revise boating noise limits and
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallipolis Historic Preservation Board will hold
place Ohio law in compliance with
federal boating regulations.
a committee meeting at7 p.m. Monday in the Gallipolis M~nicipal courtroom, City Manager Matthew Coppler announced.
"This bill has already been passed
by
all the states surrounding Ohio
Trustees change meeting date
because it addresses the top two boatVINTON - Due to the Thanksgiving holiday, !he regular meeting of
the Huntington Township trustees will bjl h~ld Wednesday, Nov. 27 at 6

.I

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j

Jack"ion Office: 239 Main Street
614/286-6408 or 11888-(96-3779 (Toll Free)

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:

~
~

'
t

cii~;~;;r;~;;;d:ies holiday dinner
CHESHIRE- The Cheshire Bap\iSI Church fellowship hall will be
open Thanksgiving Day to serve dinner to the homeless, needy, lonely or
anyone else.
.
Dinner wil! be served from noon until 3 p.m. For transponation, call
367-7567 or 367-0162, or on Thanksgiving morning, 367-7801.

Immunizations slated for Monday

GALLIPOLIS - Edended hours for immunizations h~e been scheduled by the Gallia County Health Department from 4-6 p.m. Monday.
Au shots will also be available during the clinic.
Those under 18 wishing to get a flu shot must have a written doctor 's
·
prescription.
.

• Qualified employees for

· temporary
or special needs
• No hassle
• Low cost

Citation Issued in city accident
GALLIPOLIS -Gallipolis City Police cited Russell P. Bergdoll, 32;
42 Locust St., Gallipolis, for improper backing in a two-vehicle' accident
,on LOcust Friday.
Officers said Bergdoll was backin~ta vall out of a private driveway at
5:15p.m. when he failed to see a parked car behind him. The van struck
the side comer of the car, owned by Fred W. Staley, 649 Hannan Trace
Road , Patriot.
. Damage to the car and the van , owned by Ryder Truck Rental. Miami, Aa., was slight, officers said .
Cited by police early Saturday were Brenda C. Lamm Curry, 23. 1038
Horse Creek Road,.Crown City, and Lawrence S)amison, 36, 1701 - 112
Chestnut St. , Gallipolis, each for no operator's license.
Booked by city officers into the Gallia County Jail at 3:44 p.m. F..ri·
day was Tammy L. Gillenwater, 26, 941 Second Ave., Gallipolis. for driving under suspension, according to jail ·records.

Personnel
Temporary
Services

GaUipolis Land
54-62 Locust

* a division of Personnel, Inc.
· Dianne Cockerham, Manager .
610 Malr1 Street
675·3605
Pt. Pleasant

-

Minor Injury reported in collision
SYRACUSE -A Pomeroy area woman was slightly injured in a twovehicle collision Thursday on State Route 124. according to the OalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Elizabeth R. Amoriya. 51, 33450 Myers Road, was not treated at the
scene, according to the report.
. ·
Troopers said Amoriya was ea&lt;tbound at 9:54 a.m. when her car went
·off the right edge of the road, re-entered the highway and traveled left,
sideswiping a westbound pickup truck driven by John M. Powell, 46, 2621
Third St., Syracuse.
P~well ' s pickup then went off the right side of the road , and struck a
guardrail and a utility pole, the report said.
,
. . . ·
·· Damage io both v~hiclcs was severe an!! AtliOriya was cited for left of.
.,
center.

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5

..

ing issues constituents are concerned
about in personal watercraft use and
recreational boat noise," said Gill-

..

mor.
Gillmor said the legislation was
needed because of the phenomenal
growth of personal watercraft in
Ohio and nationwide. She pointed to
statistics that said Ohio's 25,000 registered personal watercraft, which
account for 7 percent of all boats,
were responsible for 28 percent of all
boating acCidents.
Local State Rep. Darryl Opfer, D·
Oak Harbor, who voted for the bill on
the Hoor of the Ohio House, called ·
the legislation a "bill of major significance" for his distri ct.
"I get phone calls and letters complaining about jet skis all the time,"
said Opfer. " It's becoming increasingly dangt rous in our beach
areas ... and something was needed to .
bring things under control."
Gillmor saidherlegislation will be ,
successful if accide.nts· and noi se
HONORING EDUCATION- Gallia County Local Board of Edu·
resulting from personal watercraft are
cation
President Mel Carter,. aaa1ed at laft, praparea to algn a
cut down. And she said the noi se
board
resolu1lon
honoring 1he efforts of Gallia Local tuchera dur'problems relating to jet sk.is she had
ing
this
week's
American
Educa1lon Waek ob.. rvatlon. Watch·
experienced personally. "The Gillare
Superintendent
Robert Lanning, seated right, Gal·
lng
Cllrter
mor cottage east of Port Clinto'n has
been plagued by jet ski noise as car- · lla County Local Educa11on Association Vice President Peggy
Hubar, standing at left, and GCLEA President Darla Saunders,
ly as 8 o'clock on a Sunday morn·
rlgh1.
ing," &lt;aid Gillmor. "So I sympathi&gt;c
with people who want to sec the noise rr'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!~
~~~··
.
I
As for cutting down. recreational
_.c
boat noise levels, the bill would SCI a
Ul .··
muffler noise threshold of90 decibels

The last blooms

j

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attorney.
The company and Public Service
Commission staff had negotiated the
settlement since June, said American
E)ectric Power spokeswoman Jeri
Matheney.
"It's something that all interested
parties believe is' the best possiple
solution." Matheney said.
. The agreement would.slart Jan. I.
The rate freeze would help the pow:
cr company prepare for competition .
said Terry Eads, the company's director of reg~latory affairs.
"We can plan our e•pcnditures
accordingly over that period instead
of spending a lot of time and money
planning the annual ralc review,"
Eads said.
It al so would help industrial util·
ity customers by allowing them Ia
know what their c•penscs will lie,
Eads said.
·

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) ·American Electric Power Co. has
proposed reducing rates for its
400,000 West Virginia customers an
average 5 percent in exchange for a
three-year rate freeze, state and company officials said.
The rate freeze enables the company to avoid.an annual review by the
state Public Service Commission
which usually brings requests for rate
reductions.
The Columbus, Ohio-based company's proposal now goes to the com·
mission.
If approved, it would save the
average residential cus1omer about $3
a month and reduce total costs by
about $33 million. said Billy. Jack
Gregg, director of the commission's
conSuf!1cr ad vex: arc division.
Savings to industrial customers
would be slightly higher on average,
said Karen S~ort, a commission

EMS units log 11 calls .

can trigger bouts of wheezing in ·
those individuals prone to allergies.
If you have questions call the

ter;

II :49 p.m., Overbrook Center,
Ernest Carr, VMH.
SYRACUSE
10:07 a.m., Wckhwwn Hill. Sandra Boling. treated at lhc 'i(:enc.
RUTLAND
10:25 a.m., Mcig~ Mine 3 1.Jamcs
Murphy. O'Bicncss Memori al Hospital:
II :27 p.m., motor vehicle acci·
dent, Lasher Road. Brandon Larkins.
Michelle King, and Tl,ll'any Curfman.
VMH, transported by Rutland Squad
40. Travis Friend, Lester Parker II,
VMH. transported hy Rutland Squad
44.

Hospital news

r • • • "" • • • • • • • • - - • - • • • • • .• • • • • • • • • • • • 1

POMEROY·- Units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service
recorded eleven calls for assistance
Friday, including lhree transfer calls.
Units responding included :
MIDDLEPORT
1:5.9 p:m. , Village Manor Apart·
ments, Henry Thoren, Veterans
Memorial Hospital;
9:28 a.m., motor vehicle accident,
State Route 7 and Hobson Dri vc ,
Clara Kincaid and Earl Mathis, treated at the scene: ·
10:10 a.m., Maples Apanmcnts,
Gwinnie White, Holzer Medical Cen-

7

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.- AEP proposes rate cut
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In Pick 4 Numbers players
:By The Associated Preu
, The following numbers were wagered $385 ,284 and will share
:selectedin Friday's Ohio and West sts6.8oo. ·
· The jackpot for ·Saturday's Super
-Veterans Memorial
tVirginia IOiteries:
•
·
OHIO
Lotto dr~~Tw~:~g~Ji~ion.
Friday admissions - none.
! Pick 3: 7-9-8
·
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Friday discharges - Aorcnce
I .Pick 4: 6-7-2-8
g:::~ ::;:~:
Circle, Pomeroy; Elizabeth Carpcn·
Buckeye 5: 1-20.34-35-36
Cash 25: 7- 11-14-17-22-24
ter, Portland; Delores Whitlock, Syra·
· ; No Ohio Lottery player came up
;with tl)e right fiv~ - number combina====::!::::=="=use=
; H:arry=Cia=rk=,R:ac'=
·nc=
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jtion in Buckeye 5, so no one can
jclaim the $100,000 prize, the lottery
announced Saturday.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
400,035.
.
1 The 116 BuckeyeS game tickets
' with four of the numbers are each,
worth $250. The 3,532 with three of
the numbers are each worth $10. The
37,658 with two of the numbers are
'l each wonh $1. '
i
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
l$886,414to winners in Friday's Pick
.3. Numbers daily game. Sales totaled
l$1,504,617.50.

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·o · h'I0 J0 bless rates

fpdoa..:1b1chM&amp;IDidlt

jpli!lll.

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''"'1

Attorneys

·Coo\inlssion .plans budget study .

· B~ffington

Deputies check deer-car accidents

t

"That Class of 1998 is very intet.
esting," said Senate Majority Leadt;r
Trent Lon, R-Miss. "Wo~ld
want to change their min!ls7"
.,
•

•

Clouds,' chance of rain return .to area Sunday .

'

amendment.
.
Some opponents olso fCII' th..
Gephardt aad Senate Minorily Leader
Tom Daschle, D-S.D., may n01 figtlt
aggressivelY,. Their. chief fear: 19911
looks ominous for consressional
Democrats; because a president'.s
party historically does badly in co~- ·
gressional voting halfway through ~
second term. Why twist anns of vulnerable Democrats in that unfriendly climate?
,
Supporters are eyeing. senatOtjs
facing re-election in 1998 who vOted
"no" before, including Byron ~
gan, D-N.D., and BarbBnl Boxer, UCalif. Supporters also don 't ru~
changes in the amendment to wip ·

votes.

ft
.,..

Tri-County ~riefs:'- Legislation puts

'

House, however mi~ed they may be,
that the president may finally be
changing his mind," she said. But she
said the amendment must be strong,
not flawed as Clinton wants, which
"sounds like a fishnet with more
holes than rope."
· The presidential two-step produced headlines that amendm ent
opponents fear could encourage tee·
tering lawmakers to vote yes by
putting Clinton's position in doubt.
They W!lrry that as Clinton focuses on neg01iating a bipartisan deal
actually to balance·the bud get, he'll
be reluctant to spend political capital
fighting the constitutional change .
Amendment foes hope for help
from Gore, who if elected president
might not want to be saddled by the
amendment. They wonder if he
would risk the fight , however, with
the public overwhelmingly pro-

Regional'

•

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.foes own slim chance of winning:.

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Commentary

Sunday, ljovember 17, 1818

junhq ~imes- ientintl .Good intentions won't pay the U.N.'s bills
-

'£stll{,fislit.t{ in 19(;6..

825 Third Avenue, Galllpolla, Ohio

814 448 2342 • Fu: 446-3008
111 Court Sbett, Pomeroy, Ohio
114-892·2156 • Fu: 992·2157

.2r

A Gannett Co. New$paper
Robert L Wl,;g.u
Publlaher .
Margaret I.Aihew ·
Controller

Hobart WIIIOn Jr.
Eltacutlv. Editor

••le" ._,_In flood,_,., -•Inti ,__, not _,.llllta. .·

"-101M editor.,.
rn.y Mlould IN,... lhlln 300 - ·
All lenin .,. IUbjlct 10 ld/llnf- mUM I» ~Mit and lnciiHN addrNI
.....,...,. - . No uttligMd ltlfiN wH/1» pilb,.Md. UIIIIW

This talkative parrot
offers truly unique
cultural experience

By JACK ANDERSON
and JAN MOLLER
UNITED NATIONS- Energized
by his re-election, President Clinton
can be expeettd to press Congress on
several issues that laid dormant during 1~e campaign. Ge1ting Congress
to ante up the $1.4 billion thai America owes the United Nations is at the
top of !he list
The subject of U.N. funding was
a 1ouchy one during the campaign.
Clinlon hardly mentioned it, while
Bob Dole took a few political swipes
a1 the issue. One ·of Dole's biggeSI
applause lines was his Pat Buchananslyle attack on the U.N. and ils sec'
retary general, Boutros BoulrosGhali, feeding into fears thai American soldiers 'o\'Ould soon be serving
under foreign command.
Those feelings are amplified in the
Republican Congress, whjch considers lhe U.N. one of the lasl beggars
in line for American dollars, especially these days, when balanCing 1he

By JOHN HUNN!'LL .
.
. .
.• . .
· 1lle rooni that the beloved late Fred. W. Crow called hts frog room has
·changed draspcany:
:.
·
'
.
Oh, all of his frogs are still there. All shapes and sizes, occupying a greal
deal of space. 1lle big change is that 1he frogs are inanif!late. but the new
resident, Hector, an African gray parrol, is definitely animate.
Hector belongs to Richard "Rich" Crow, Fred's brolher, who moved here
July 2. Rich has had Hector fo&lt; about nine years.
.
.
The African gray parrot lias the largest vocabulary content of any btrd.
According to Susan Parker, wife of Dr. Mark A. Parker, of the Walnut Hills
Veterinary Clinic in Jackson, the African gray with the hil-gest. vocabulary
content can speak 1,000 words. This is the undispuled world champion talker named Prudle, and is lisled in the Guinness Book of World Records.
An amazing fact about' the African gray is !hey also have a wide range ,of
sounds, FOr- instance, they can bark like a dog with such clarity that it is easy
for one not to know the difference. Barking is one of Hector's favorites.
African gray parrots also has an amazing abilily 10 pick uj&gt; sentences and
words on their own. NO! only can they do that, but they ~ill regroup them
into different word-sound combinations.
King Henry VDI is well known to have kept an African gray.
·
The oldest known stuffed bird is an African gray. This bird was owned
by ·the Duchess of Lennox and Richmond. Its name was Effigie and it was
stuffed after her death in I(J60. It can be seen at the Norman Undercroft Museum at Westminster Abbey in England.
·
.
.
Neither Rich nor I have any idea of the exact number of words that Hector can speak. Rich has several tapes of Hect&lt;;&gt;r, and by lhese and observation, we estimate around 500 words, not counting tbe various sounds he
makes.
.
.
.
.
Hector's latest phfasc is ''Betty Crocker knows." Since Rich has cable TV, By BOB WEEDY ·
he has to be selective in' his viewing, as one would be with a child. due 'to
Every four years God holds up a
Hector's perception. He also has to .be careful what he says around him mirror before the American people.
because you never know what Hector will say.
_!!y~~'ll~~·elves in thai mirror,
To anyone who has never e.perienced being around an African gray, _I
we sec who we
urge you to visit one if you can. his truly a cultural expenence. Tha! ~s 1f
are.
you are around when they are talktng,_as some11mes they have no mchnaWhen
tion.
- .
.
•
that mirror was
In closing. I can honestly say from query thai his honor, Judge Fred W.
held up on Nov.
Crow III. as well¥ myself, find Hector most amusing as well as amazing.
5, we found thai:
(John Hunnell reside• In Syracuse and 11.a contributor to the
• Prrir.
Sundtly Times-Sentinel.)
.
AlcxandCr Tyler
was
correct
thai lhc majority
always vo;es f9r 1hc candidate 1ha1
promises the mosl from the public
. treasury...
·
By The Associated Pre..
.
. ,
• The Henry J. Kaiser Family
Today is Sunday, Nov. 17. the 322nd day of 1996. There are 44 days lefl
Founda1ion/Harvard
Univcrsily
in the year.
s1udy
was
corrccl
when'
lhcy
found
Today's Highlighl in His1ory: ·
On Nov. 17, 1800, Congress held its firsl session in Washington in the lhal man'y do nol cast an informed
vote regarding what "maucrs most"
partially completed Capitol building.
10
1hem ...
On this date:
• Characlcr and moral values arc
In 1558, Elizabelh I ascended 1hc English throne ~pon lhc dcalh of Queen
or little importan&lt;::c when we choose
Mary.
. ..
.
In 1869,-thc Suez Canal opened i.n Egypl, linking lhe Mediterranean and leaders .
A Wirthlin Worldwide poll conlhe Red seas. ·
In !889, the Union Pacific Railroad began direcl, daily service be1wccn . dueled on Nov. 5 of people who had
v01cd. found lhal only, 21 pcrcenl
Chicago and Ponland, Ore., as, well as Chicago and San Francisco.
vo1cd
against Clinl&lt;ln hccausc of his
.
In 1917, sculplor AuguSic Rodin died in Mcudon, France.
abortion
slancc. Three and one-half
• In 1925; actor Rock Hudson was born in Winnetka, Ill.
In 1934, Lyndon Baines Johnson married Claudia Alia Taylor. bellcr tiffics as many ·Amcricmls earlier
said !hey were opposed 10 partialknown as "l'.ady Bird."
In 1962. Washinglon 's Dulles 1nlcrnalional Airpon was dcdicaiCd by Pres- hirlh abortion. ye1 Climon vc10cd
the han. Even wilh those who ci1ed
idcnl Kennedy.
·
In 1970, tlWSovict Union landed an unmanned. tcmotc-conlrollcd vehi- moral issues as important . 2~ · pcrcenl vo1cd for Clin1on. The Kaiser
cle on the moon, the Lunokhod I.
In !973. Presidcnl Nixon told an Associalcd Press Managing Edilors mccl- study cited voter confusion, and this
ing in Orlando, Fla., that "people have go1 to know whc1hcr or no11heir pres- is what we saw in the mirror.
We all nrc spiriiUal hcings. The
ident is a crook. Well, I'm no1 a crook. "
warfare g:oing 011 in American sociCIY is spiri1ual warfare. This is nol
something new, it has been ~oin~ on
since lhc Garden of Eden. For Ihe

Soviet Union in 1991 ended21 years
of hostililies between three rival
guerrilla factions that claimed more
than a million lives.
To help ensure the peaceful u-an·
sition to democracy. the U.N. created the United Nations Transitional
By
Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC), its
most extensive and expensive peacekeeping operation ever. The goal was .
to complete the mission in less than
two years, using more than 20,000
hopes to convince ·congress that the peacekeepers and personnel at a cost.
U.N.isdeservingofmoremoney.For of $1.7 billion. Yet even this wellthe world body is a haven for waste · intentioned plan met with some
and abuse, constantly giving its crit- embarrassing failures.
ics a reason to withhold funding. As
As pan of its nation·-building
our associale Dale Van Atta has efforts, U.N. b~reaucrats planned (o
learned, even 1he most successful tum Cambodia into ari agricultural
-U.N. projecls are ofl.en ·rife with mis-, wonderland. Some 370,000 refugees
management and mistakes.
· returning from camps on Thailand's
In Cambodia, for example, the border were each promised five acres
U.N. is justifiably proud of itself for of arable land. ·
res10ring peace afl.er two decades of
Bul the U.N. brass relied on faulty
civil war. A peace trca1y brokered by assessments in making lhat promise.
the United Slates. China and the They didn't know that !here wasn 'I
budget is priorily No. I on Capitol
Hill.
The Clinton administration will
have an uphill road to climb if it

Jack Anderson
·
and
Jan Moller

''•

Berry's World

. '·

'

.Texaco
.:.. settles
:". on-suit·

'

enough land to 110 arovnd, lind that
much of the available land wu Httered with land mines. So UNTAC
simply forked over cash to make up
for the broken promises: $50 per
adult; $25 per child.
.
Even the free elections, held in
May 1993, came with a steep price
tag. About90 percent of Cambodia's
'4.7 million eligible voters courageously went to· the polls, despite
threats from guerrilla groups that vot·
ing might cost them their lives. In
U.N.tenns, the $100million price tag
was almost a bargain - an average
of $23 per voter.
;
Money was also wasted when the
U.N. tried buildin_g~
, a!e_ r ~urifica­
tion system - a v1ta\, ~ect tn a pan
of the world wh e poor-quality
drinking water of1en contributes to
disease and malnutrition. U.N.
bureaucrats failed to account for the
expensive chemicals that were needed to run the system. As a result, once
the initial supply ran out, the new
facilities stood idle .. Ordering ,new
·supplies became difficult, because
some of the chemicals were hard to
obtain.
So instead of relying on the new
systems, 1hc peacekeepers made do
wilh UNTAC-supplied bottled water,
while the local citizens were left to
1heir own devices.
In aoother case of good in1entions
gone awry, UNTAC ordered more
than 1,000 electrical generators. But
at least 337 of the generators were
never used, according to an inlernal
U.N. audit, a waste of $3.2 million.
In the meantime, the $234.5 million
budgelcd for "premises and accommodalion" for the peacekeeping
forces ended up innating local real
estate prices 10 the point where many
natives could barely alford to live in
lhcir own country.
Some of that money wenl for the
care. and feeding of UNTAC chief .
Yasushi Akasbi, who required more
than $100,000 to refurbish his own
house to his taste.
(Jack Anderson and Jan
Moiler are columnists for Unit·
ed Feature Syndicate.)

'

&lt;.;ie

a•..., .

• tfNIIJ NU.. h:.

'·

~

..,.,.,.., a hundrtld grand. M4l and the little lady
11111nt to IIHp In whllt's-his-name 's bedroom c.;.

•

Uncoln."

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j

Americans think like Japanc.c," he

'

·gy KAREN TESTA
:t.aaociated Press Writer
FORT LEONARD WOOD, Mo.
L SeK charges at two Army \raining
'•bases have pul the spotlight on a
• ·problem the military has for years
:, handled in lhc privacy of its. own
, 'tourt system. \
,
' ) Thouglj couns-manial arc a ~at­
. ter of public record, the m1htary
'makes no effort t~ publicize lhe cas''Cs, including sexual harassment or
misconduct.
·, "It's an intemallhing in lheArmy,
, • 'just as any organization," said Brad
' 'Rose, a spokesman al Fort Leonard
' Wood, one of the Army's largcsl
·(raining bases. "We have never found ·

' it

necessary to advertise those

things."
·
But on Tuesday, in 1hc wake of a
·~ex scandal alan Army base in Mary. land, officials here· sen I out a statement ·detailing pending charges
'hgainst three inslructors .. The Anny
said there was no conncc1oon between
41\c two· some of the Fori Leonard
. !Wood ailcgaiions dale back 10 July
'1995.
t. By the end of the week, L~ckla~d
.l\ir Force Base in San Anton1o, dls:tloscd that eight inslructors had been
\disciplined for se•ually harassmg or
· ~raving . relationships with. female
trainees in the last three years.
n Separate from civilia~ couns, 1hc
'lllililary judicial system 1\andl.es VI?·
la1ions of 1he Uniform Code of Military Juslicc. The code covers s~eh
things .as rape and c~&gt;D5CDS~al sex
between 'Kn instructor and tramce - .
which would not be a violation of
@ivilian law.
!1 A base legal officer said one rcaIron for not publicizing the investigations is to protecl the accusers .
n. "1loere's no reason 10 prolong
n.eir embarrassmcnl when no one's
evon inquired about it," sa!d Maj .
10m Joh~s1on, chief of the em! law
division atl'ort Wood.
Retired Staff Sg1. Marsha J. Beeeo, of Springfield, Mo., said trainee
,,abuse was pervasive in her 20 years
• ih the service because , inSiruct?rs
have the most pressure to ai::hieve and
the least authority to do so.
1
"It makes lheoll feel personally
powerful, which is somet~i111 the
Anny doesn't allow them to do
sometimes," Beeco said. "PIIrentl do
fi to children : 'I can't control my ·
!loss, but I can contrOl yotl.' "
; • Becco said trainee ab!Ue .foe\
lrcyimd sexual complaints, citina tilt
""' cltposure deat~ of four Almy·
Ran1er traiJICes at io Florida swimp.
1·

John Omlclnskl

I

I

I

•

Page AS

1991 BUICK CENTURY
LIMITED WAGON

See

Jer,Y Bibbee
· Marvin Keebaugh
:Doc Hayman
Clark Reed

:.Scandal put~ spotlight on old Army problem

I

&lt;.)

'

11

stones.

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I •

GISENYI. Rwanda (AP)- Every hour, 10,000 Rwandan Hutus trudged
across the border tp their homeland Sat~rday in a wear:y. ram-soaked c_olumn of humanity desperate to end the mtsery of thetr ex tie m e~stern Zaire.
More than 200,000 refugees have streamed over_the border smce the exodus began Friday moniing, the United Nations esllm~tes . A downpour Saturday drenched the 25-mile line of men, women and children making t}Jetr
way through green. winding hil!s from a now-deserted refugee_ camp, through
the Zairian frontier city of Goma and over the border .mto Goseny1.
Fellow Rwandans lined the route beyond the border, applaudmg and hugging the refugees as they lugged their tatlered bundle~ on a 20-mtle slog from
the border at Gisenyi to a U.N. transit camp.
:
.
"I'm not afraid," said Pierre-Celcstin Muyandekell , 27, a retummg farmer.
"I'm very happy to he in my country."
,. .
As night fell Saturday, up to 400,000 people on the Zaman stde seulcd
down to rest by the road before resuming their trek al daybreak.
.
The refugees had fled Rwanda 2-l/2 ·years ago, fearing relribulion afle~
a Hulu-led govemmenl presided over the massacre of a half-mtlhon Tuts1
civilians.
.
.
Hutu mililias in the refugee camps in Zaire virtually J:!eld the refugees pnsoner until Thursday, when an auack by Zairian -rebels sentlhc mthttas .neeing into the hills of the interior and lhe refugees hurrymg home.
.
There was lillie sign of anybody seekmg revenge agamSI the ragged column of exiles.
·
President Pasteur Bizimungu came to lhe border Friday Ia welcome the
refugees, telling them, "You are our brotl)ers."
· The Thtsi-led govemmenl thai ouslcd lhe Hulu leaders aflerlhe 1994 genocide has promised to U'eat the reluming Hulus well, and most refugees who
· returned earlier have been allowed to resettle peacefully.
..
Amncsly International, however, c.pressed fear thatlhe nowly "turmng
refugees might be subject 10 arbilrary punishme?l m connecllon wtlh the
genocide, joining the 80,000 other Hutus already 1n crowded Rwandan Jatls
.awaiting trial in the killings.
.
.
.
The refugees' unexpeeled r~tum has ·overtaken a po_nderous mternallon_al effort to assemble a mullinallonal m1htary fprce to dtsmbulc md and cr~ine safe corridors 10 allow lhem home.
·
Rwandan leaders say there is no longer any need for .military intervention, calling instead for aid in rcsculing refug~es. .
· . .
.
"What'is happening on 1he ground IS changmg qutckly and the Ioree wtll
have to adapt as well," U.N. envoy Raymond Chrcttcn conceded as he arnvcd
in the capital, Kigali, for lalks with Rwandan leaders.
Bizimungu refused to meet wilh Chrelien ~n Saturd~y. Rwanda also
delayed permission for an advance team ofCanad~an troopsto laad at K1gah.
Rwaadans in this lakeside border 1own watched the seemmgly endless column of returning refugees with salisfaction.
.
"This resolves our problems," said Emmanuel MaZimpaka, hcadmaSicr
of the local high school. "We were worried the rcf~gccs would attack us from
the camps. Now they are coming home .to help rebuild lhc country."
·
Witnesses said Friday a group of advancmg Zaman rebels massacred abou1
30 Hutu civ(lians in the Mugunga refugee ca':"J'·. Otherwise. the refugees
appeared not to have been harassed on either stdc of lhc border.

,. Texaco agreed to spend $176.1 mil:, lion ~o settle ·a 2-year-old race di s•. "crimination suii Friday, just II days '
-~ after it was disclosed that top execu_1, tives had been caught. on tape belit1 tling black&gt; and plotting to destroy
'' documents in the case.
:: texaco will pay $115 million in
- cash to about 1,400 current and former black workers who ·sued, $26.1
"~ million iii pay raises over five years
' foi black employees, and $35 million
n. for a task force to set up sensitivity
1
" 'and diversity training programs and
1J t•·
•
•
•
monnor compliance .
-' Plaintiff attorney Michael D.
··~ Hausfeld said the settlement, which
-, still must be approved by the coun,
· · would impose one of the most com.~ prehensive evaluations and monitor'• ing systems in equal employment his. .;: tory.
' -'
"No longer will we hear the
eKcuse, 'We just didn't know,"' he
. '• said.
''
Peter I. Bijur, Texaco's chainnan
1 and chief eKecutive, said that with the
' 1 litigation o~erwith, "we can now
agreed to pay $176.1 million to settle a 2·year·
WINS SETTLEMENT - Sll Chambers, left,
move forward on our broader, urgent · and Bar! Ellen-Roberts, center, two plaintiffs In
old ret:e discrimination su.lt Friday,just11 days
'' mission to make Texaco a mOdel of
after It was disclosed. that top executive• hild
the discrimination euh against Texaco, held a
: ,. workplace opportunity for all men · new• conference · Friday with their lawyer,
· been caught on tape belittling blacka and plot·
., and women...
. .
.
tlng to 'destroy documents In the case. (AP)
Daniel · Berger, right, In New- York. · Texaco
.,
The lawsuit, filed in 1994, sought
' 1 as much as $520 million on behalf of
' blacks who claimed that a "good old plaintiffs after he lost his job in a not derogatory; but a 1erm common- of il," Robens said Friday. "This has
1' boy" network at Texaco reserved the
ly used in diversily training pro- been a hard baulc."
downsizing .
The 1ask force will have wide· · best promotions and biggest raises for
"When I heard the tapes, my reac- grams.
However,
Texaco
acknowledged
rea,
ching power 10 create and moni 1 whites.
lion initially was, 'I can'l !J&lt;;Iieve lhis.
· ' · In court papers, former and cur- We know these guys,' " said Bari- . thal the tone of the conversation was lor programs over lhc next five years,
:· rent employees complained of repeat- Ellen Roberts, a 44-year-old senior slill troubling, and it did nol dispule reponing regularly to Jhc company
' edly being passed over and being financial-analyst in Stamford, Conn .. that the executives talked of trying to and the court. Texaco must follow ils
hide evidence.
.
. rccommendalions or get a coun order
subjected to racial slights and slurs. . and one-pf the plaintiffs. ·
·
The 1ranseript contained in coun · blocking them.
Proseculors immedia1ely opened a
/;Blacks were called 0rangutans"
lis mission will include establish·. and "porch monkeys" to their' faces, grand jury investigation into whether papers qu01ed former Texaco 1reasurer
Raben
Ulrich
as
saying
of
the
ing
diversity and scnsitivily training.
d~cuments
were
in
facl
destroyed,
they said. One was invited to join in
records:
"
We're
crcaling
a mentoring program, writ- .
company's
hiring
Tex3co suspended tWo executives
·• a round of golf- as a caddy. ·
going
purge
_
t
he
(expletive)
out
of
ing
rules
that lie management salaries
10
• . The pressure on Texaco mounted and apologized, the Rev. Jesse Jackthese
books.''
to
diversity
performance, assuring
., dramatically iast week afl.er the pl~in- son called for a boycott of Texaco and
Jackson had W3l)led lhal pickeling 1ha1 employees arc not relali ated
tiffs claimed to have a tape of eKec- NAACP President Kwcisi Mfume
would
begin Saturday if there was no against and revising hiring and
1hreatened
to
urge
stockholders
to
utives using the word "niggers" and
settlement.
He and Mfumc also assignmcnl policies .·
divest.
·
"black jelly beans,"· mocking the
demanded
1he
White Plains-based oil
The task force - wilh\hrce memAn
investigator
.
hired
by
Texaco
·
black cultural festival Kwanzaa ancj
giant
produce
a
company-wide
plan
bcrs
appoinlcd by Texaco, three by
plotting lo ..hide or shred d6cuments said an electronic enhancement oflhe
lo
resolve
minorities'
complaints
the
plaintiffs
and a seventh member
recordings found thai the execulives
sought by the plaintiffs.
chosen
by
both
-sides to serve as
The recordings were made by an did nol utter the word "niggers," but aboul promotion and pay.
chairman - also will dc1ermine
"St. Nicholas." The investigator also .
"I think 1his is an hi storic sc ttler~•ecutive of Texaco's financial
said
the "jelly bean" reference was ·meni and I am so proud to be a part w~lhcr to sci numerical hirin·R or
·•i!cpartment who gave the tapes Wthe
. promotiOn goals

turcs," he writes. " It often takes .!J

writes.
religious form, and the global revival
· Samuel P. Huntington - unc or
"The argument thai the spread of of religion is a direct consequence of
America's more incendiary intcrna- pop culture and consumer goods modcmi1.ation. In non-Wcslcrn sociJ
around the, world represents the lri- cties, this revival often assumes an
umph of Wi:stern civili1.ation depre- anli·Western cast, in some ca&amp;qJ
·
ciates the strength of o1her -cultures rejecting Western culture ... becau51;
while trivializiitg Wcslcm culture by it is Christian and subversive, in otl\'
lional thinkers - has given the tri- identifying it with fauy f&lt;xlds, faded ers because it is secular and ~gc11;
umphalists of Western civilii.ation a pants, and fixxy drinks.
'
,crate."
similar whisper in the latest Foreign ,
"The essence or Western culture
.' Some societies have taken · till;
Affairs magapne.
is the Magna Caria. not the Magna technology they need f~om 'the Wes~.;_.
"Coca-colonization" the Mac.91
. writes Huntington, without~
nmion that "Ameri.can popular cui- • ·Huntington, wbo la.ot year caught culture. Indeed, he notes that man~
turc is enveloping the world"- is many eyes with his analysis of .the East A~ians •· attribute \llcir tconom,-.•
pure hokum , wrilcs Huntinglon, current '•'cla.sh of civilizations," does- 1c development not to their impon 'J
director of the Olin lnstilute for n't disagree that efficient aircraft, Western culture, but to their adher•
S1ra1cgic Sludics at Harvard.
freer trade and universal television ence to their own culture."
;
The notion thai somehow the lll'll spreadin1 ·Wcstem culture into
It is_a fIICt th,at ma~y Asi~ leacl,
acccplance ofWestcm products will every comer of the world. That does- ers behevc thctr · regioq eventuall):
·accelerate the 'spread of Western c"ul- n't mean it is beinJ accepted' and will ovcnakc the West hec:IUM J
·ture, says Huntington, is "misguided, absorbed.
their sociociea' CIICnlial coMiiveneu
arrogan1, false, and dangerous ...
Indeed, there ha., been a reaction and the absence of co:!t Wealeqi'
"Drinking Coca-Cola does not aaainst the West.
dcfi~it spendina and
fn pror ·
"Many non-Western cultures have arams.
make Russians think lik~ Americans
·
~'
,any more tban eating sushi makes seen a return to indigenous cui:

I'

Rwandans .welcome
returning refugees

WHI.'JC PLAINS, N.Y. (AP)-

•i

Ji.or this to happen, 1he church the right side.' We should al'o 'supmajorily ,of American history, cilizcns really felt thai moral values will have 10 ~orne to the realization port leaders who arc on the right
were importanl, -especially for our that the rclreat from 1hc public side. We should congratulate toe
leaders. Children and youlh looked square was a miSiakc: The Anti- United Methodist Church for its
to our leaders and !heir lives and Christian Liberties Union and the involvement in the ca.,ino gambling
!ended to follow their example.
folks for the Separaliun of Ch~rch · issue. Many other spirilual issues
We no longer feel 1ha1 character and Slate who have championed 1hc could also be addressed positively if
is all that important. While we arc secularist cause have intimidated we could ·sec more applicalion qf
saying this, we arc also saying then many church leaders. The clear scriptural principle&lt; to the "hot" toRthat God isn'l imporlant, for that is leaching of being salt and light in !he ics of loday's culture.
what He is about. That is why He public sq~arc and communily must
Many thoughtful Christian leadhas said : "Righteousness exalts a be implemented and in a manner _crs sec judgment upon Amcric;a
nation, but sin is a reproach to any where the love of Christ is prc-cmi- because of her rebellion. God is np
people." Why should we wonder ncnl.
longer welcome in many plac~s
why drug usc among: lccn's has dou·
If the. church is to bring positive 1oday; He isn't abandoning us, wp
hied in (he past four years'! Why moral beliefs hack to the public arc turning and have hccn turning
should we wonder why one million square, she will in many cases have away from Him. The epidemic of
unmarried lcens get pregnant every to figure out a· way to help her mcm- sexually transmitted disea.o;cs, AID~
year, and half of Ihem ge\ abortions? , hership to make informed decisions being only one, is cited as OIIF
Our children have 10 live wilh the where current questions arc directly example of His judgment. The co~­
kind of leadership we gi vc lhem in · rclatcd to scripture. Where princ.i- fusion regarding sexual identity and
America.
pies are black and while, the one role is further cvldcnce of 1he hu!l
Nol too long ago. a president who names Chrisl's name should not lhat is being . experienced. TJti!
resigned basically . because . he be like the worldly folks and say il is explosion of drug usc, both legal and
attcmplcd to cover up a lhcfl. 'Gary gray, and therefore I can do as I illegal, is a sign that something its
Hart's campaign wa.' slallcd when a please. If we belong to Christ, we wrong in lhc way we deal with rcalpicture of a woman siuing on his lap cannm do as we pl.casc . We mus1 ity.
,
on a boal was published . An all'air seck always to praise Him. This kind
The grace of God is greater than
was nol al:t;cplahlc.
of witness will inevilably attract Olh, all this rebellion if we arc interested
Quite a tcw arc surpri sed 10 sec crs to do likewise.
.in laking another look at His way,.
this new, lax. moral auitudc cnmc 10
Some churches arc making Do we like the picture in the mirror?
the fnrcf;&lt;ml. Thi·s allitudc has lakcn · progress. One major problem Ihal is If not , il is clear where we must look
over because of lhc law of soWing hard 10 deal wi1h is 1he thinking by 10 change it.
:
and reaping. Also. if we praclicc some that the posi1ion or a political
(~ob ~eedy is a regletarelf
1hosc things lhal arc immoral. why party is of higher im)Xtrlancc than profeuional engineer and
should il nol he OK to vole for lhat scriplurc. The hmlher .In thai con- taught at Hocking College for
1ypc of person'
ccpl is that it isn'1 pmpcr 1o diocuss nine yeara. A reaident of
This spiritual condilinn in Amcr- so-called "pnlilical " issues in Logan, Weedy hae eeveral ~·
. ica ~:an he treated only with spiritual church. It is just this surl of thinking atlves In Melga County ~ ·
medicine and guidance. lbc home lhal ha.s gouen u.' inlo lhe mcs.&lt;i we hla mother, the late l;tha,l
and lhc church· arc lhc inslilutions arc in. Moral issues may hc dis- Edwards Weedy, wu born anljl
lhal have the hcSI possibility of suc- guised in other dt~lhing. hullhcy arc reared. He Ia cbalrman of thf
cess in changing our attitude and slill part ur 1he spirilual cunnicl.
Hocking Chriatlan Coalition
hringing us In a more healthful situAs such, lhc church membership ancl a member of uveral comr
nlion.
must be involved in lhe issue, and 'on inunlty organlzatlona.) ·
_1 ·

from the crumbling._2.000-year-uld

II ' u....II

_

Western"culture's popularity less true than thought
By JOHN OMICINSKI
Gannett New• Service
WASHINGTON
Before
e mbarking on a .hero's procession
through the strccls of Rome - wilh
their loo1 and captives trailing he hind
in wagons and in chains- some victorious Roman generals wisely took
along a t,rusted servant.
Even as the crowds roared in celebration of Roman blood and power,
the slaves would whisper into the
conqueror's ear, reminding him that
fame, fortune and influence' were
neeting.
"Sic transit gloria mundi" - so
passeth the glory of the world- was
a moderating influence on the great
soldiers. reminding them of the
fragility of empire. Some even listened.
If you've ever walked through the
ruins of the Forum on a quicl lui! ian
evening or watched hundreds of cats
pad silently around the Colosseum,
you know those words still whisper

Nation/World

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

Mirror reflects what needs changed in our moral climate

Today in history

•

• ( NoNo,'lllll••mlllrllbtlel'll' 17, 1 *

II
r..

"Male rec.:Uits usually have to die
before there are headlines," she said.
It is difficult to dclcrminc how
widespread ' trainee abuse or seKual
harassmenl is in the ranks. The Army
docs not keep statis!ics of criminal
prosecutions by the kind qf charge.
An~ it docs not have numbers on
trainee abuse related only to sexual

pressured into· a relationship with

him.
A hot line for complaints of sex"Who was I supposed to reporl
ual miscondUCI has been noodcd Wilh · !his lo 0 " Paulsen asked the mililary
calls since it was cslablishcd in the judge. "Who was going lo bel ieve
wake of the scandal at the military's · meT '
Ahcrbecn Proving Ground in MaryTaylor. 29. of Chicago, w~s senland. Of 1he more 1han 3.100 calls tenced to five months in prison and
logged; 341 cases were deemed to a had conducl di scharge for allcgawarrant investigation.
lions ·ranging from sex with three
At Fori Wood. lhe numher of recruits to accepting love note~ and
trainee abuse c~scs have dropped dropping hi s pants to show off a tntsince trainees were in1cgra1cd .hy gen- loa.
For years. recruits at Fori Wood
der in September !995.
In fiscal year 1994. Fort Wood have hccn· assigned a same-sex part!rained ~5.352 rccruils and inveSii- ncr whom lhcy'rc suppos.cd lo he
galcd and fQund 63 cases or trainee wilh a1 all limes. Bu11hc "baltic-budabuse, including sexual. verbal and dy" sySicm failed former 1raintc.
physical abu·se or improper relations. Angclia Shirley, 19. of Vickshurg,
Miss. , who received a medical disThat's a rate of 0.25 pcrccnl.
In fiscal year !996, )"hich just charge hcfore cnmplcling her lrain-.
ended, there were 36 cases among ing.
She lcSiilicd thai she and Taylor
23,803 trainees for o'ralc of0.15 perhad
consensual sex.
cenl.
"Thai's whal we had and my hal' . Everyone at Fort Wood is given
tic
buddy knew.:· she said. " They
equal opponunity and sexual harasscover
for each other. If il's whal you
ment !raining within 30 days.
waniiO
do. you ' re going lo gel away
Trainees receive the lessons on lh~
with il."
first day.
·
Bccco. lhc reti red sl,aff scrgc~nt,
Still, trainees arc given mixed sig-

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614-992-6637 or
614·446·9716 .
Jerry Hall

inh•ri&lt;lor .AC, delux stereo cass, PS; PW,

1111. cruise, rear defrost. Very nice
'lwagtln.

PEOPLES BANK'S ANNUAL STOCK PICKING CONTEST

issues .

•

V6, auto, dark blue wlblue cloth

nals. While. told how 10 reporl com- said problems will always persist
plaints, the recruiiS also are 10ld thai because the ArmY is a microcosin of
drill sergeants have "absolulc con- the greater society.
trol," said fanner Pvl. Joy Paulsen,
21, of Kennewi ck, Wash.
Paulsen. who received a medical
dischargc,lcstificd during Sg1 .' Loren
B. Taylor's court-martial that she ftll

lfanrest Report '96

The leaders thus far in·the Peoples Bank Stock Picking Contest: ..

0

••
•

0

. +50.9

jameS Harlow

+43.9
+42.0

~tty McKenzi~

HoUyVoll
Jeri Tomes

+39.3

Farmer Bob +.7

As of November!!, tht'Sc were the top
out of the hundrt'lis in our conlt'St.

. Are you plowing under

Fanner Bob?
He's not squealing.
Stop in any Peoples
Bank office to see how
you're doing.

4 ~rlorming portlolios

Each conlcstant chose S puhlidy tradt'&lt;l ~tocks from a·IISI of.HKI
sek'Cicd companit'S. Contest perlonnance is ba.'it'li upon cl!ange in
portfolio value from the close of business Ffiday, Oc_t. 25,
1996,through December 31, 1996.
•· · .
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Fanner Bob's seasonal picks...

Breed Technologies, Deere &amp; Company, McDonald~
Corporation, Outback Steakhouse, and Smitckers-CL'A.
In a few weeks we'll see if Farmer Bob is outstanding in his Peld.

Asi fM' • .00111pllmeitl11ry lllseoll1tl brohrwge fu schlltde 111 ""'Y Peoples Bfltti office.

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X

!sunday, November 17,1111

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gellipolll, OH • Point P111•nt, WV

I

Dallas E. Allbright

Spy.scandal figure Alger .Hiss,
still seeking vindication, dies

By JERRY SCHWARTZ
GALLIPOUS- Dlllas E. Allbright, 76, o.IIipolis, died Friday, Nov. 15, AIIOCI*«&lt; Prwa Wr1t1r
1996 in Holzer Medical Cen~er.
NEW YORk - Alger Hiss, the
Born MII'Ch 16, 1920 in Mudsoc, he retired from lhe &amp;late highway depal1· patrician public servant who fell
ment and was a retired flliiiU.
from grace in a Communist spy
He attended the First Church of God on Garfield Avenue in Gallipolis, scandal that propelled Richard Nixon
was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II, and was a member of American to higher office, died Friday afterLegion Lafayetle Post 27, Gallipolis,VFW Post 4464, Gallipolis, and lhe DAV. noon. He was 92.
Surviving are his wife, Maxine Neal Allbrigh~ whom he married March
Hiss died after a long illness, ju,st
; 14, 1940 in Kentucky; two daughtert, Shirley (Jim) Doss and Kay Allbright, four days after his birthday, ·said
both of Gallipolis; a daughter-in-law, Alice Allbright of ThUrman; three grand- £A:nox Hill Hospital hospital spokeschildren and two g=t-grandchildren; and a half-sister, Marion C!&gt;llins of woman Jean Brett.
Columbus.
Writer Tony Hiss praised his
He was also preceded in death by a son, James Allbright, in 1985; and by father Friday for courageously standtwo half-sisters and a a half-brother.
' ing up for American principles. He
Services will he 2 p.m. Monday in the Willis Funeral Home, with Pastor . said, "other people, whose vision was
Paul Voss officiating. Burial will be in the Centenary Cemetery. Friends may clouded by Cold WOI passions, couldcall at the funeral home from .6-9 p.m. Sunday.
n't see the truth ofthe man. 1'
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the First Church of God
Hiss' lifecan be neatly broken into
Building Fund.
two pans. The first was a stellar rise
-a brilliant academic career, clerking for U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Oliver Wendell Holmes, a senes of
CIRCLEVll.LE - Eleanor M. Hall Amsbary. 76. Circleville, died Fri· important posts in the New Deal and
day, Nov. 15, 1996 in Berger Hospital, Circleville.
the foreign policy ~stablishment;
Born July ;26, 1919 in Alfred, Meigs County, daughter of lhe late Webb foundation work.
.Then, on Aug. 3, 1948, a rumpled,
0 . and Carrie Dean Hall, she was a member of the Community United
Methodist Church of Circleville, and a former member of the Johnson Memo- overweight magazine editor named
Whiuaker Chambers alleged that 10
rial Church, Huntington, W.Va.
She was an active member of the Huntington Women's Club, several years earlier, Hiss had given him
State Department secrets which
bridge clubs, and a "olunteer at Cabell-Huntington Hospital.
Chambers.
in tum, passed to the
She was the widow of Jack Amsbary, a pa11ner in the Amsbary Clothing
Soviet
Union.
Store, Huntington.
At the end of the investigations
Surviving are a son, Richard (Betty) Amsbary of Circleville; a granddaughter; a sisier, Dorothea Phillips,of Columbus; a sister-in-law, Annabelle and trials that followed, after spectacular developments involving
Hall of Columbus; and several nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in·death by a sister, Hazel Grueser; and a broth· microfilm in a hollowed-out pumpkin
and an ancient typewriter, Hiss was
er, George Hall.
.
Graveside services will be 2:30 p.m. Monday at Mound Hill Cemetery. convicted of two counts of perjury
Gallipolis, with the Rev. William Campbell officiating. There will be no vis- and imprisoned for three years and
eight months.
·
itation.
Arrangements are by the Defenbaugh-Wise Funeral Home, Circleville.
For the rest of his life, he worked
Memorial donations may be made to the Hospice of Pickaway County. for vindication, in courts of law and
in the coun of public opinion . .
He proclaimed that it had .come
finally in 1992, at age 87, when a
.
RIO GRANDE- Grace E. Lloyd, 62, Rio Grande, died Friday Nov. 15 Russian general in charge pf Soviet
1996 in Holzer Medical Center.
'
' intelligence archives declared tHat
Born. March l6, 1934 in Gallipolis, ,daughter of Ruby Harris of Jackson, Hiss had never been a spy, but rather
, and the late Wilham Lloyd Green, she !l'lired from the .U.S. Army.
a victim of Cold War hysteria and the
'
She was a member of the Union Baptist Church, Blackfork, and a mem- McCanhy Red-hunting era.
ber of !he American Legion Lafayette Post 27, Gallipolis.
Besides her mother, there are no other survivors.
Services. will be .• p.m. Tuesday in .the Waugh-Halley-W~ Funeral
Home, Galhpohs, with the Rev. Roger Ford officiating. Burial will be in the
Pine S~t Cemetery. Friends may call at lhe funeral home from 2-4 and 7: 9 p.m. Monday. ·
·
.
By ROBERT BURNS
A military nag presentation will be conducted by VFW Post 4464 and AIIOCiilhtd Pra11 Writer
WASHINGTON - In an aboutAmerican Legion Lafayeue Post 27.
.
'
face on Bosnia, President Clinton
said Friday the United States .will
keep thousands of troops there until
June
1998 in hope~ that " the habits
RACINE - Anna McHaff~e, S8, Racine, died Thursday, Nov. 14, 1996
of peace can take hold" in the cthni·
' in Unive~ity Hospital, Columbus.
'
Born Nov. 3, 1938, daughter oF the late John and Eliza Powell Foreman. cally divided country.
The U.S. peacekeeping commit, she was employed as a cook at Cardinal Towing.
•
Surviving, are her husband, James McHaffie; a brother, Joe ·Foreman of ment in Boshia was originally to end
; Portland; a sister, Bertha Proffitt of Columbus; and several nieces and next month. Some 8,500 troops ll!'c to
' nephews:
•
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.
take pan in the extended mission.
Clinton also.said he was ready to
She was also preceded in death by ·a brother, Ed Foreman; and a sisterdispatch American troops to Zaire as
in-law, Betty Foreman.
.
.
_
A memorial service will be hc;ld at6 p.m. Wednesday in the Reorganized part of a Canadian-led humanitarian
mission to case central Africa's
Church of Jesus Christ of Lauer Day Saints, County Road 35, Racine.
refugee
crisis. About 4:000 U.S.
Arrangements are by the Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport.
troops arc c•pected to he part of' the
multinational rescue effort.
"Wberc we can make a difference,
we
must oct and we must lead." ClinPOINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Capt. Carl "Jack:' Reynolds, 66, Point
ton
told a. Whi.tc House news conferPleasant, died Friday, Nov. I 5, 1996 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
ence
l!cforc leaving &lt;m.a 12-day trip ,
Born May 18, 1930 in Daniels Landing, Tenn., son of the late Capt.
to
Hawaii.
Australia and Asia.
Thomas Jefferson Reynolds Sr. and Garnett Virginia Neal Reynolds, he was
Criticism from congressional
born and mised on the "Majestic" showboat, and was a master pilot retired
Republicans
was immediate hut relfrom the Valley Line Co.
atively
mild.
A past master of Minturn Lodge 19, AF &amp;. AM, Point Pleil5ant, he was a
Sen. Dan Coats of Indiana, for
member of the Sand Hill Church of Chris~ the Sons&amp;. Daughters ofthe Riv~
e.ample.
accused Clinton of carrying
er Pioneers, the Point Pleasant River Museum, Point Pleasant Chapter 1 of
the RAM. Point Pleasant Chapter 75 of the Order of the Eastern Star, and Out a "scat-of-the-pants, reactive foreign policy " that risks U.S.troops lor
Franklin Commandery 17 of the Knights Templar.
He was also preceded in death by two sisters, Margaret and Hazel; and ill-dclincd goals. But he also said
·, four brothers, Roy B. Reynolds. Marion Reynqlds, ,Thomas Jefferson lawmakers. probably would not
oppose the decision.
Reynolds Jr. and Norman Reynolds.
The president said.hc had agreed
Surviving are his wife. Lucille "Dodic" Bumgarner Reynolds; two daugh·
in
principle
to a "new but much Inure
tcrs, Sandra (Walter) Clark and Jacqueline (Carl) Blankenship, both of Point
limited
mission"
for U.S. tn~&gt;ps in
Pleasant; two grandchildren; two sisters. Ruth Mcaige of Gallipolis Ferry.
Bosnia.
He
said
he
would not make
W.Va., and Catherine Kin!! of Marion; and a brother, John Reynolds of Point
· a final commitment until he is snlisPleasant.
·Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in the Wilco•cn Funeral Home, Point ficd that NATO's final plan is clear
·
Pleasant, with Walter 0 . Eads and Vernon Henton officiating. Burial will be and achievable.
The
administration
dropped
its
in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from
original
goal
of
withdrawing
U.S.
6-9 p.m. Sunday.
.
forces from Bosnia hy the end of this
Graveside rites will he conducted by Minturn Lodge 19. AF &amp;. AM.
year. Clinton shid, because while a .

:Eleanor Hall Amsbary

Grace E. Lloyd

Gen. Dmitry A. Volkogonov later
qualified his statement, saying that
while he had found no evidence
against Hiss in KGB files. he couldn't speak for other Soviet intelligence
agencies, and many documents had
been'destroyed,
The controversy flared ~gain this
MOich, when the National. Security
Agency released hundreds of pages
of newly declaSsified material that
included a reference to a Soviet spy
working in the United States. during
World War II.
A cable, dated March 30, 1945,
said the spy went by the code name
"Ales" and was "probably Alger•
Hiss." But the cable offered no sup·
paning information for that identification.
~- . Duri.r\g the decades of controversy, such conservatives as William F.
Buckley Jr. backed Chambers and felt
justice was served by jailinj! Hiss.
Hiss defenders included libemls like
Supreme Court Justices William 0.
Douglas and Abe Fortas and Sccre'tary of State Dean Acheson.
Hiss'· establishment credentials
were impeccable: He attended private
schools, then Johns Hopkins, where
he was Phi Beta Kappa, and Harvard
Law, where he was a member of the
law review. At Harvard he attracted
the attention of Feli• Frankfurter, at
whose recommendation Hiss served
a year as Holmes ' law clerk.
ATter three years in private law
practice in Boston; Hiss joined the
New Deal - first as an official with
tlie Agricultural Adjustment Administration, and then as a Senate legal
assistant and as a Justia.c Qcpartment
altorney.
. At the Dunibarton Oaks meeting
to lay the groundwork for the United
Nations, Hiss was executive secrc·
tary. In February 1945, he was a del·
egate to the Yalta Conference, where
President Fr~nklin D. Roosevelt,
Winston Churchill and Josef Stalin

settled tlte map of postwar Europe. At
the San Francisco Conference that
adopted the U.N. ~h~r, Hiss was
secretary-general.
He left aovemment atlhe end of
1946 to take lhe presidency of the
prestigious Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace.
Enter Whittaker Chambers. A
senior editor at Time magazine,
Chambers told the House Un· A~r:
ican Activities Commitl&lt;e that he had
been a member of a Communist
underground that operated in Washington in the 1930s. And during that
time, he shuttled U.S. government
secrets to Soviet spies.
Chambers said that in 1937 and
1938 Hiss was a Communist who
hettayed his country by giving him
documents. to give to the Soviets.
Freshman Congressman Richard
Nixon pressed the case and drew his
first national publicity. Ni•on later
told intimates that he would never
have been in a position ·to run for
president if not for his pursuit of Hiss.
"If the American people knew the
real nature of Alger Hiss, they would
boil him in oil," Nixon once said.
Hiss denied it all. But Chambers
took investigators to his Mllryland
farm and produced a hollow pumpkin. Inside, they found microfilmed
State Depanment documents - the
ones Chambers said he received from
Hiss.
· ·
Supreme Court justices Frankfurter, llnd Stanley Reed were character witnesses for Hiss:
There was no trial for spying
because the statute of limitations had
expired. Hiss'·first jury deadlocked
on perjury charges. At a second trial
in 1950. Hiss was found guilty of
lying to the grand jury when he
denied giving Chambers the docu·
mcnts and said he had. not seen
C::hamhers after the first of 1937. .
Appeals wore ,unavailing. On
March 22, 1951 , Hiss was shackled

'-

to a mail thief and transported 10
federal prison at Lewisburg,
serve his five-year termn . i:H~i~s,~~·::t
inmates gathered at thew
cheered · when he was released
·November 1954.
He had no job- he had been
barred. He became a salesman
stationer, earning $50 a week
commissions. He wrote "In the
of Public Opinion," a rather
recitation of the case for his
ccnce.
•
His marriage fell apan. The HiSf·
es separated; they would never
divorce. In 1985, after Priscill.-s
death, Hiss married his companion ~f
more than a quarter century, lsabelJe
John~on . He had one son, by his fill
marroage.
His son is a longtime contribut r
to The New :Yorker magazine andla
visiting scholar at New York Univ~­
sity's Taub Urban 'Research Centc4
"I've never known anyone w~o
had as many friends and devot~d
friends 'IS my fathe't." Tony Hiss s"ld
in a statement Friday, "literally tho$·
sands of friends and acquaintance);.
and all those people and millions fl'
well-wishers seemed able to sec him
for what he was - someone w~o
throughout his life tried couragCOUf·
ly to stand up for the American prin·
ciplcs of tbe New Deal and for intci-•
national principles of cooperati~n ts
cmbodoed on the early hopes nl t~c
United Nations. .
.
j

He displayed character,

.

Anna McHaffie

Capt. c·arl·'Jack' Reyoolds

Aftivist's killing-leaves .
friends wondering why
CINCINNATI (AP)'- Friends of
Buddy ·Gray. one of the city's most ·
· outsppken advocates for the poor, arc
trying to understand why he -was
killed.
A man who lived in one of the
'buildings that was developed througl!
Gray's efforts is accused of entering
Gray's office Friday morning and
fatally shooting him. .
Gray, 46, was pronounced dead
shonjy after the shooting at the
Drop.lnn Center, an overnight shel·
ter w~~c g~sts can g~t a free meal .
and a mat to sleep on.
.
Pqlice charged Wilbur Worthen.
56, "'ilh aggra~ated murder. Gray's
frienlfs said Worthen lived in a lowincoqie housing unit developed by
one ~f Gray's groups.
"!'can 't figure out why he did
what 'he did," said Beulah Burns, a.
longtjme shelter resident.
"ltveryone knew he was sick, but
he all.ays seemed real pleasant to
me, he said. "Buddy always helped
him hencver he'd nc.d a loan.. for
• his lf&amp;lment rent or whatever.
~·
wjlliCsses told police thai Worthen
:: walkj!d into a room where Grav was

"t'

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meeting with co-workers and oj,ened
fire with a .357-caliber Magnum
revolver. Worthen emerged from .the
office holding the smoking gun and '
announced, "I shot Buddy," according to witnesses.
GALLifOLIS - Dallas E. Allbright, 76, of Gallipolis, died Friday,
"He was bragging and stuff," said November '5•.1996 in Holzer Medical Center.
··
witness .Dennis Palmer.
!
- Bo~ Ma~ch ·16, 1~20 in Mudsoc, he was reared in the home of his grandWitnesses also told potlce that · parents, Hauoc and Joseph Allbright. He retired from the state highway depanWorthen accused Gray of pumping ment and was a retired farmer.
poison gas into his apartment.
He attended the First Church of God on Garfield Avenue in Gallipolis,
Worthen was at the shelter when was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II, was a member of American Legion
police arrived and arrested him..
·Lafayette Post27 of Gallipolis, a member ofVFW Post 4464,of Gallipolis,
Wonhen has a history of offenses, and a member of the DAV.
·
ranging from public intoxication to
Surviving are his wife, Muinc Neal Allbright, whom he married March
misdemeanor assault. according to 14, 1940 in Kentucky; two daughters and sons-in-law, Shirley and Jim Doss
police. Pat Clifford, coordinator of of Gallipolis, and Kay Allbright of Gallipalis,; a daughter-in-law, Alice All·
the Greater Cincinnati Coali~on for bright of Thurman; three gral)dchildrcn. Joanna Lynn Cardwell, )onathon All·
the Homeless, said Worthen had bright and James Edward Allbright Jr.; iwo grcat-arandchildren; a half-sis··
mentat problems.
ter. Marion Collins of Columbus: and an aunt, Lillian Monroe of Patriot.
" Worthen had medication for the
He was also preceded in death by a son, James Allbright, in 198S· and by
!problems, but did not always take it, two half-sisten and a a half-brother.
· '
Clifford said.
·Services. will be 2 p.m. Monday, November 18, 1996 in the Willis Funer"He wu wild When he was off his at Home, with Pastor Paul Voss olliciating. Burial will be in the Centenary
(medicine), but nOihing like this," Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral' home from 6-9 ·p.m. Sunday,
Clifford said.
November 17, 1996.
.
.
.· Gray founded lhe Drop-Inn Cen- ·
Pallbearers will be Gary Miller, Roger Neal, Tom Pope, Keith Mille( Joe
ter in 1973, exjWidina lhe building Dailey and Larry Fallon.
· '
•
'
nlllth of downtown over t1te years.
In lieu ·of nowers, contributions can be made to the First Church of God
•n Garfield Avenue Building Fund.
·
"

Plnyd L. Bl&lt;tzer. 43. WChillicothe
Road. Gallipolis. charged with petty
lhcft. was·J'incd $15(), nne year pn~
hntion tmtl HO hours community service .

POMEROY
., ._ Pomeroy·MIIon Bridge
1182·2588
VINTON ·
Geltllt County Dllpllty Yllrd

"

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,i~~Wing (either vetoed by President or fell shortof
'

1. ABalanced Budget by 2002. ·
2. ABalanced Budge-t Amendment.
3. Term Limits~ twelve year maximum in either
house of Con!l{ess.
4. Repeal of Assault Weapons ban.
.s. Capital Gains tax reduction
.

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iJil"'

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'

a lift chair you won't struggle any longer trying
get ?ut of your..chair. At the touch of a button the
lift c.ha1r slowly ratses you to a standing position and
also fully reclines.
Stop In today and sit
in one of our stylish
and comfortable lift
chairs. A great
Christmas gift for that
person with special

smaiority):

'

6. Ban on Pcirtiai·Birth Abortions.
7. Religious Symbol Protection Bill (not voted
•
.upon}.
·'.
8. ssoo per child tax credit~
9. Had the strongest record for "Family Values"·
among Congressional freshmen.
·

Yotes where
Frank hocked
.
th~ party line and won:

155lleln St.

Oa IIas .E. All.
. brl•ght

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•'•

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I. Making Congress subject to their own laws.
2~ Ending Unftinded Mandat_
e s-.
•
3. Theline item veto.
4. Welfare Reform.
·5. Staff Reductions in ~he Congressional bureaucracy.
6. A Gallia County Industrial Park (With aid and cooperation of John Carey,
·· ·G eorge Voinovich, County Officials, ·e t al.) .
7. Flood reli~f for Meigs County and food distribution for the needy. ··
8. Defense of Marriage . Act

Gallia County court news !

l

~

'!· s .A· chlevements
of:lhe·- m·. · ):

j .

Common Pleas ·
GALLIPOLIS - The followi g
acuons were recently liled in the G41·
loa County Common Pleas Coun : ·,
Divorce lilcd - Amy L. Napor~­
Hauldrcn, I j77 State Route 7, G~l­
hpohs. from James T. Hauldrcn, ~6
Myrtle Ave., Gallipolis; and Josenh
W. Orrick, 1915 Chatham Ave., Gllllipolis. from Vicki L. Orrick, Elkalt, .
Ind.
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1
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Divorce granted - Cheryl A.
Caudill. Kerr, and Kenneth C:::.
Caudill, Gallipolis.

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after a year regardless of whether w*r
or peace followed.
'
. "If we leave after a year. and thO&gt;:
decide they don 't like the henclits Qf
peace and· they're gning to staj't
fighting again. that docs not meqri
NATO failed. It means we ga•c
them a .chance In make their pcaqc
and they hlcw it." Clinton s.uid at .tac
time.
·
~
Knowing he faced harsh criticis~t .
a hoarse ' vniccd Clinton sought &lt;in
Friday to ponray his decision ~s
approval nf NATO plans for a seJl!l·
rate mission to solidify the work
already per1i&gt;rrncd in Bnsnia. "~s
is a different mission," he insisted;
At the Pentagon. Defense Sc.:rc.tary William Perry said, 'The conditions for peace still do not e•ist jn
Bosnia."
j

.

104 th Congress.

Clinton extends Bosnian mission until1998 :
fragile peace has held for 12 months, a goal she called "questionable and
Bosnia's "biuor harvest of hatred" probably unrcali~tic."
has relll\lincd.
And a Democrat, Sen. Russ Fein"With time, the habits of peace gold of Wisconsin, said, "The Unit·
can take hold," Clinton said, but ed States continues to be drawn
progress acliicved over the past year deeper and deeper into a situatio·n
would be jeopardized if U.S. troops from which we appeOI unable to
left now. From a peak of about cxlricatc ourselves.'' ·
20,000 U.S. troops. tberc arc now
But Democratic Sen. Jeff Bingaabout 14,000 in Bosnia.
man of New Mexico defended the
The president addressed the Zaire White House. saying Clinton is
mission at thC same time.
· "bowing to the reality we focc.'' And
"The world's most powerful Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., called the
nation must not turn Its back on so decision "the right thing to do to pre·
many desperate people and so many vent war from erupting again."
innocent 'children who arc now at
Cli.nton docs not need congresrisk" from ethnic violence and dis- sional approval of his decision, but
case:· Clinlori said, addinl! that he Congress would have to approve the
had not yet given a final go-ahead.
mission's funding .
. The troops would help food and
A year ago. ,Clinton had said the
medicine reach the 1 million refugees peacekeeping troops should.withdraw
in eastern Zaire, mostly Hulus from
Rwanda and Burundi. The oper~tion
would last until March 31.
Although thousands of refugees
began returning home to Rwanda on
Muni&lt;ipal
Friday. Clinton said it wa.&lt; too early
GALLIPOLIS -The following
to say the U.N.-sancationcd rescue actions were recently resolved in the
mission would not be needed.
Gallipolis Municipal Court:
Later the White House announced
J
M :Ghe v
·
$25 million in humanitarian assisames c . c, mton , charged
with passing a had check, wa.&lt; fined
lance to help in the repatriation and $100 ~nd 40 hours community scrrcsculemcnt of Rwandan refugees vice.
returning from Zaire.
Kenneth B. Hunter, 32. 375 Tc•as
Anticipating Clinton's go-ahead. Road. Gallipolis. charged with
1he Pentagon. sent transport .aircrurt In assault .. wtts fined S 100.
Europe during the day to prepare tu
M he s c ·
huild an "air hric.lgc " fnr relief sup'
au w . l&gt;ckcnger. 22.3913
Ingalls Road. Gallipolis. c~urgcd
plies I&lt;&gt; Zaire.
with improper handling of a lirearrn
Critics in Congress were quick In in u mbtor vehicle. was lined 5150.
~cspond.
·
· Victur
s. Smith. 21.
Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison. R.. McC&lt;mncl&lt;&gt;illc . charged with dri Tcxas . .~o~.aid keeping Amcrk ~m fllrccs vinl:'! under the inllucm:c. was lined
in· Bosniak tn scp&lt;tl'illc
. J·. · 1 • .
·· be the riv&lt;tl
.• fac ·. ·$4~0
. · thrc t..:. d·ty
• s •11 . nne year pro.·lmns
wor
' st.·atcu goal .ul , h·ltion
"nsc
.. suspcn·
. . •
·
'· sBil!_.!mnst
· •I h
•
•·md 1MO d·tys
• . 11•l:c
mtcgmtmg
nsn1a s ct nu.: p:rnups- .~o~ion.
·

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.1. ·Appalachian Regional
· Co ission Funding.
.2. Minimum Wage .increase~ .
3~Continue~ funding for rural
. hospitals.

pn Medicare Frank's votes would have increased the spending some 40% over the
next seven years, yel his enemies called it a cot: however to increase it more will
bankrupt the fund.
,
On student loans Frank 's vote would have returned the program to the way it had
been handled prior to 1993. only with more funding; yet his enemies called it a cut.
Have the 1993 changes so treasured by Frank's opponents improved the programs
made today's students tomorrow's wards of the government?
•
In May 1994, Frank Cremeans and Senator Cooper Snyder battled hard for the
GOP.Congressional nomination. .
'
Yet in October 1996, Senator Snyder wrote of his one-time rival:
.
"Frank Cremeans has proved (sic) himself to be a 'promise keeper'. He
does not play games with the voter.. .l urge you to support him In his (bid
for ) re-election.
Naturally we are saddened that the 6th District electorate did not support Frank's
relurn to the 105th Congress. We are especially distressed that the voters of Gallia
County did not give him any more than the narro~ plurality that they did. Nationwide,
five out of every six Republican freshmen won re-election, including Steve Chabot,
Steven LaTourene,"and Bob Ney in Ohio. Neighboring Kentucky sent five out of six
Republicans to Congress and gave resounding support to SenatQr M~nnell. West
Virginia sent Cecil Underwood to the State House. The GOP still co ols both
.
Houses of the U.S. Congress. By running counter to the national tren • the Sixth
District is in danger of falling into a permanent state of dependenj::y. Gallia County
and the Sixth District must b.e.ar the burden of losing a voice who foUght for the right
·wilh character, conviction ancfcourage.
·
... and, Frank; we art still proud of you Ill

or

''

P11d lor by Fn.ncla af Franlr CIWIIIMIII
L

··j '

•

..

"

'

I'

�'.

Incidence of Medicare fraud Medicare pays big ·share
of home health care costs
highlights system weakness

Policy changes in the 1980S expanded eligibility for home health-care
changes, coupled with an aging
population, have spurred a 105% increase in the number of Medicare patients .
receiving home-care assistance, and a364% rise in Medicare payments to prov~.

cover~ under Medicare. Since 1990, those

~·; n t·

By PETER EISLER
USA-TODAY
I OS t\N(

dilfindl lu ..

ii ~ I.I ·:S

.lta!-.1 oin'"·

nwnths otli1.·r JHhn Watts fullshi.·tl his
pnsnn h.·rm fall' L't'll:aint.' tiL·nhn,: in
M:m:h I1JIJ I, hl· laundu-..1 Ius lalP•I
mnnL·~· maLin~ wntun· . l lnth.• ll ( ':u·L·
'"'1111.' lk:lhh S\.T\' Il"l'S hk·.
Hut hi~ t1\'\\' husim·ss turm:d ou11t1
Ill.· no moh.' lq:al than thl' lit :.;I : hl' 's
n,m ;m ·o•ilitl)! st.'tlll'JKin!! alkt ht·inl!
, .....,, h:lt' tl fnr usin!! th'-· hnm'-' l'arl'

:1}.!'-'nt.' Yto tll.ofrautl M"·d i~,.· ;m.: of ahntu
$1 milli~•n.
·
··w'-' tl~tln ' t "tmt uul tu tlu this."'
Woms l~sttfit.•t.l last f.1 ll In .t St.•nalt'
~,·,,mmith..'t.' ' im•~o.·sti!!;llinl!

hc.tllh (an.·

fmtM.I. "Hut it was JUSt tnn c:.Ny."
1\ liSA TOil/\Y inwstii;illinn
l'in.. l~ Waus' sluty is aiHnnrnmmnn
in th•· wnrkl nf humc hcillrh care. uno
_,, the l':tsll'St ~rnwm~ sources nl
health l'~ln:" fntu..l. Hnmc t'otrc 's hotltn-

illi! J1tii"Uiarity -

it's now the

nnliun'N l'a~ICSI growinp. industry hils titupk~ with lt~lSC liccnsinl,l
laws ;tml h1x nvcrsip.hl tn make the
husi1k:~~ ri~ fnr thieves, tl\ugs and

scam nr1ists.
StmJC work as

is pnlVut ..·d m lh..· homt• il\ ·vc •y

c~1re

givers. uOus.

in!,! and stc:lling from the cl~crly an~
di,;ai*.J p;ttiCI\IS wlkl tum to them for
hdp.
OthcTN j,lravitate to the husincss
side. making easy muncy off sham
llpcratillns. TI1is year, Medicare and
Medicaid. the government insurance
rrograms for the elderly. poor and
disahk-d; will lose an estimated $2.2 ·
billi11n 111 fraudulent · home care
providers. Private insurerli will lose
millions more.
·
Ripe for the picking
The husiness is ripe for scammers:
In nine stale&amp;, anyone can open a
home health agency, regardless of
background or experience. In many
others, the few rules that do exist are
lax and do little to weed out potential troublemakers.
·.
"It's j~st fraught with fraud/ ' says
June Gibbs Brown, in.spector general 'for the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, where she
heads a big anti-fraud campaign in
which home health care is a chief target.
.
"There are so many benefits to'
home health care - the person is in
their own environment, they have
their support system -· and in the&lt;&gt;ry. it should also he cheaper than a
full-care facility, so we .support the
concept," Brown oddi·· "Uut when

~·l·

whctllt'l a pain: Ill

S!;~lc

and federal auditor-.. have
lunV compl;1inctl ;1hcmt weak controlo.,

n·ally ~t·tsllk· ~,·;~r~o.·. ttr wl1a11hc qu;~l
11y nftlml l':tl'l' is."

over Mcdic:1rc and Mcdi(;aid\ payments to ltll ~orts of hctthh care

.lol111 W;lll " jltlsht·tl lhnutg h alii he
loophol'-· ~ .'
.
Ill s t'tmvit'tion in a 1111llion -doll.u
t'ocunc saks sdlciiK' wmm ' t an ' ~" uc
111 ~t·U inJ! ;1 ( ·;',hfollllil li~.:c n ~c In t Ull

provider~ .

llomc c~1rc ~i mply ha ~
cmcr~cd as a popular new way tn
cx rloit those solt ~ pots .
"A lthough we have hccn rcpon:
tng on program wc&lt;•kncss"C~t

a home ht•al.lh t·arc agcnt:y. No one I&lt;lSI I~ years , t:ontrols over the
askt·ll al'k ml ;1 1.:ri111 ina! rcc.:(1nl, 111• t 11iC Mcd1carc h1 •me health hcnclil rcmatn
was rctttiircd to du.x:k. I lis experience csscnt~:tl ly non -cxhtcnt," says a
as a nighlduh ownCr was deemed . March 1~% rcport.hy the U.S. Gensufllncnt In qualtfy huu ,,, the cr:t!Acl:ounling Office, which serves
ap.cncy's adnlinislral11r.
as Con£rcss'l nvcsligativc ann . "Few
Walls and a pat1n cr gnt their lirst hotnc health claims arc suhjcct to
po.111cnts hy paying a lt )(;O.II doc tor m med ical review. and most clatms arc
paid WI thOU( lJU CS liOil ."
illl illci!al ex-change lor patient rclcr. mls. But soon they decided they dttlThe most (.jOmmon s~.:a ms in volve
n't ncetl real patients, and they .hcgan . hillin£ for fictitious visits, h1lling for
hilling Medicare for serv ices they care that's unnecessary, over-hilling, '
never pruvit.lcd, using names of c.J cac.l or u"tng unqualifi ed care givers for

pcnplc or jlcup!C they 'd never seen.
UnitcU was allowed to send in
claims via computer, no paperwork
required, and that " made il easy for
us to suhll)it Medicare claims for
patients to w'hnm we never provided
any scrv1ccs." Wall' tcstl!icd.
United "had hccn pmd millions nl
dnllars li1r lraudulcnl claims hcfnre
Medicare even hcgan to ask for any
documentation that the services were
... actually performed," he added.
When Watts linally was asked for
paperwork on United's home care
visits, he and his partner simply
fqrgcd it. And with no one actually
looking to sec that l~e visits were
made, that kept investigators at bay
for months more.
Watts, who pled guilty and was
ordered to pay restitution, has had his
sentencing delayed while he shares
his ~tory with prosecutors and policy
makerli looking for insights on how
fraudulent home care providers work.
Exploiting soft spots
1lie biggest victims of home care
fraud are nation's two taxpayer-fund•ed health iniurancc programs:
Medicare, which pays health .care
costs for the elderly, and Medicaid,
which covers those costs for die poor
and disabled.
Together, the two are expected to
cover about 60 percent, or $22 billion, of the $36 billion the nation will
spend on home care in 1996. Government investigators estimate I0
percent of the claims paid by the programs are . fraudulent or improper,
translating into waste of. about $2.2
billion,

Number of
Medicare home·
care patients

1.9

2.2

... .
••

·

For-profit vs. not-for-profit

~

. Chain/for-profit

.'
::.•

J

25.4%

lndependenVnot·for-profit
. Government
Chain/not-for-profit
Church

'90
Medicare
payments for home
health care

49%
S1"4

Medicare-certified
N·o n-certniea

Last year, the Department of
Health and Human Services issued a
spccml alert to state and federal
investigators to watch ror rraud in

Med icare and Medicaid cla~ms suhmillcd hy· home care providers.
. Restoring trust
And home health care, along With
nursing homes and medical equipment suppliers, is a chtef target tn
Operation Res tore Trust. The. 19-

Medicare tops agency
It's difficuh to determine how home care is paid
•
for because many patient~ make private .
arrangements with care gtvers. When care rs
provide~ through an agencY., Med!care and
;
Medicaid foot. most of the btl!. Paytng the $30.9
billion in bills for home
agencies in 19942: • '

care

•

Medicaid ~

16"4 .

•••
•

1990
1991

•

1992

Private ~

1993
1994

insurance :

13% .

month-nld initiative teams stale and

. federal law enforcement, including
hundreds of FBI agents, in an anti- Medicare for more than $14 million
fraud crackdown focused on the five m bogus expenses, for everything
states believed to have the most from fancy jewelry to a luxury beach
problems- New York, Florida, Illi- condominium.
nois, Texas and California.
• Absolute Care owner Benjamin
A flood of recent cases does little Wilhams pled guilty last March in
to suggest home care's fraud prob- Minnesota to defrauding Medicaid of
lems are overblown:
about $200,000 for misrepresenting
• A random federal audit of services, billing for care by unqualiMed1care claims by home health fied workers and forging time sheets.
.care agencies in Florida found that26 Williams, whose scam included makpercent of the 'billings were.bogus. In ing kickbacks to patients for whom
the case of St. Johns Home Health he claimed to be providing services,
Agency, of Miami Lakes, improper was ordered to pay restitution and
claims, often for services not ren- spend eight months in jail.
dered, accounted for 75 percent of the
Home health care " is an industry
agency's $45 million in Medicare that contains all of the components
charges for 1993.
for diSaster," says Tom Temmerman,
• ABC Home Health Services who heads Medicaid fraud ·prosecuInc., one of the nation 's largest home tions at the attorney general's office
care chains with more than 40 offices, in California. "It is unregulated tn the
was convicted last February in a mas- traditional medical sense, multiple
sive Medicare fraud case. Investiga· , agencies are involved · with large
tors sa1d ABC's owners billed amounts of government money and it

is attractive to the consumer.' '

Medicare and Medicaid aren't the
only victims of fraudulent billing by

home care providers: The dwma1~e
also has .eached the ranks of private
insurers"
•

11.1.\ &lt;l

I

..

~

WAIEIIAGS
•DOMES

• HEATtRS
·\Ill CJom, LOOP LOC SNTEY COVfiS

HOLIDAY POOLS INC.

Convicted killer sneers just before .execution
JACKSON, Ga. (AP) -A IUIIer
whose appeal became a_test case for
a new federal law designed to speed
up death penalty cases was executed
hours after the Supreme Court rejected his final appeal.
Ellis Wayne Felker srieered at wit·

nesses shortly before he was electroFelker was to have been executed
In June, the court upheld a ·key
cuted Friday evening for the 198 I at 7 p.m. but the Supreme Court part of the law and rejected Felker's
rape and murder of a college student. stayed his execution until it could appeal.
"Justice is done ," said Georgia review ~applications for stays and
Felker was convicted of rapmg
Allorney General Mike.Bowers, who formal appeals. The court unani- and killing Evelyn Joy Ludlam 15
was frustrated by the frequent delays mously denied Felker's mouons late years ago. She was a waitress in a bar
in the case.
Friday afternoon and the execution at a Warner Robins motel ana a stubegan at 7:30.p.m.
dent at what was then Macon Junior
Felker, 48, declined to make a College. .
final statement but left behipd a
She was looking for .other work
taped message thanking his family. because o: her strong religious
girlfriend and their daughter for their beliefs, and Felker, who had already
support, corrections department Mike served time for aggravated sodomy.
Light said.
offered her a job at a failing leather
"He stated he was innocent and shop he operated. accordmg to testi- ·
J;aid the state was putting an innocent mony at his tnal.
man to death," Light said.
Sne dtsappeared the · next day,
Felker was tirst spared ·from the Nov. 24. 198! , after going to meet
electric chair in May when the h1gh Felker to talk about the job. Before
court agreed to hear hi s case as a test she left her home. she wrmeJtis teleof the Anti-Terrorism and Effective phone number on a napkin and a note
Death Penalty Act of 1'196. The act telling her landlady where she was
cracked down on death row inmates going.
and other state pnsoners who file
Two weeks Ia1er. a man collecting
numerous appea ls in federal court.
aluminum cans found her bodv.
'

TWIN SIZE·

SJ·299S..ea.setsunly
pe.

l

. Sit- ..... 5209.¥5

...... ,.,

·POSTUIEPIDIC
hi Sin Set $3H.95

'"* ···-•-·-·

----~~-~~=~
ATTORNEYS
lsn·' tlt Time
MARSHALL B. DOUTHETT
AND
DEFENSE RESPONSE :-- Light snow fell Friday as Stephen

JanH, detense attorney for Oklahoma City bombing SUI!pecl Tim·
olhy McVeigh, responded to questions at the federal courthouse
In
U.S. District Judge Richard Matsch set a trial (fete for
McVeigh for Mar.c h ·31,1997. At left is Robert Nigh, an attorney
on Jones' staff. (AP)
'

o.nver.

First trial in Oklal:loma City
bombing slated for March
IJENVEK (AI') ·-· Jury selection is set to hcgin this spring in the lirst tri •1 in th&lt;: Okluhmnu C11y humhmg. ncurly rwn years ;~ftcr the Alfred I~ Murrah lluii~H'i wus tblruye&lt;l, a iotloral.iutlgc ruled.
l~rusct:uturs had w~tn t c d the lri;tl to ~lilrl in catly Fchruary. ami i.lclcn st•
lawyer Stephen Jones asked 101' April or M.ty
Uut during a priv;tlc 11_1cctinl!. with allonll'y s Fri .. lay. U.S. Dislrit·t Jud!!t'
kkho.ml M;t,tl"i-Ch ~Uicd un March :ll as tht· :oi lill'll.l ~ll t' fur 'finmthy McVdgh ·s
triul.
,
Jonc~ cslimalcd jUt)' . .clcctiun will taLc twu tu thn:c Wt'l'ks .md the 1nal

w1JIIot~l ~ix .weeks h~ three u.u.'~lhs. .

.
.
.
McVc t~lt • s ccJ~ tlclt·tula,lt . lcny Nt\.·lu,l s. wtlll'k.' ln~o.·{lotlll'rw:lnl .
Huth r;,~,: c a possihk tlt·:tth Sl.'llll'Ul'\.' tf c.:onvktl'tl of JIIUit.k:t . l'nnspira..:y
;nul wcotJMms t,:hiiiJlCS mtl~ Aptil 1'), I'J'J5. 1,..,nthlll)!. whid1 kilk.. l Hdi J'k.'• 'l•lc :mel mturctlmuu: tl1a11 500 oth .. ·r-..
l'tu:-.cnthll ~ Wl'fl' plt.·:•s.t.·d willlllll· d ;lll.".
''We IIUtiiJ.'hl il wa.-. impmtanltu ~ l &lt; lllllk! lri.tllk:l'or\.' lhc Sl'L.'OIHI antH\'t'l ~ary," o., aul Pallid;. l&lt;yau ul 1114: II .S . alllllHl'Y's ofr r"''"' in Ol..laho111.1 Ci1y . .
Sollk: vrdirn:-. Wl"H' plcaSl•tf ; nlltt.·rs :-. ilulrl duln 'lumlh..·r.
Ju a h'kftlttliK' mll' rvn·w ln•111 lu ~ ( )~lahtlllta ( 'ily htlllll' . llr. l'aull kallt.
;t INNIIhiiiJ' o,mvtvtn , :-.aitl t 141tt.•f Vll'lim:-. and lamily lllt."lllhl·r-.. afL.'f-!,OiHJ.! lu sa~·
" wtdt a ... i,•h ull',·fid', ' WI~·w. it's ;1hou1 lillrt· .' 'l'lu·y·r..· J!llilt,l! h• ~. 1y Wl.'- t'l'

,•••• 1...

DONALD A. COX
Announce the Opening of Their
Southeast Ohio Law Practice
Mapball B. Doytbetl

Donald A. Cox

Artorney in Jackson si.nce 1962
Part-time Jackson County
Municipal Judge since 199.1.
R«·eived Law lkgroc fmm
Ohio State University
Mcml&gt;&lt;r of Ohio Stale Bar Assn ..
Jackson County B:u Assn.
34 yc;1rs ;tS a tro.til itth,rncy 111
Snttthcast Ohio

Gallia county Common Pleas
Judge 1986-1991
Served in 25 counties as a trial
judge since 1992
Certified mediator
Member of Ohio State Bar Assn ..
Columbus Bar Assn ..
Sm.· kty for Prof~ssionals in
Dispute Resolution

St. ALBANS, W.Va. -In West
Virginia Class AAA football playoff a~tion, St. Albans defeate·l
Point Pleasant 14-7 in overtime.
.i
St. Albans scored in the first
I
quarter on Rodney Johnson's fourII
yard run. The Big Blacks (7-4) tied
it at 7-7 two quarters. later when
outside linebacker Ethan Greene
'.
returned an interception for a
touchdown.
In overtime, Johnson's sevenyard touchdown and Point Pleas·
ant's fumble on a pitch on the second play of the next possession
the Red Dragons the victory.
Belle to cancels
autograph session
EUCLID, Ohio (AP) - Freeagent Albert Belle canceled an
autograph session at a suburban
Cleveland shopping mall because
of a threatening telephone call
made to mall security, his market'·
ing agent said.
Belle was scheduled to sign
posters of hi111self ·
evenin~
at the Euclid Square
Mall. The threatening
was
made to mall security that afternoon, said Paul Garofolo, Belle's
" marketing agent.
"There are no leads and we
probably won't he developing
any," Euclid p'olice Detective Ray·
mond Jorz said Saturday. "It was
an anonymous call that was
untraceable."
.
Garofolo satd an estimated 250
people haq been waiting to meet
Belle. The Cleveland Indians player on Friday became eligible to
negotiate a contract with any team.
"When Belle arrived at 6 p,m.
I advised him not to go through
":ith 'he appearance," ' Garofolo
told Th~ (Cleveland) Plain D~aler.
ii''.J~,, 1 "Belle was disappointed because
he want&lt;4 Ia meet the people. !told
him not to take any unnecessary
risks."
Belle could not be reached for
comment because he does not have
a listed telephone number in the
Cleveland area.
Reds release Howard;
m.-.ery
(AP) - The
Rells made another paymove Saturday by
unco.hdilionally releasing outfielder Thomas Howard instead of
_offering him arbitr~tion.
1lie Reds also announced that
pitcher Jose Rijo will have
exploratory surgery on his right
elbow Wednesday and is expected
miss next season as well. It will he
Rijo's third elbow operation in 15
months.
Howard was one of II majorleague playets who needed credit
for service time during the 1994
strike in &lt;)rdcr to become frc,·
~~:~~::~~this month. When ownerli
a settle men\ with the players' union, the II remained with
their teams and were eligible for
arbitration.
·'
Howard hud a ·ss75,000 base
last sca,on, when he hit .272
games with six homerli and
42 RB!s. The Reds decided they
~coutan · t afford to offer salary arbi·
!ration.
· . Owner Margp Scholl has
a· 19\17 payroll of $30
down more 'than $10 million from its 19961evel. ·
The Reds also announced that
pitcher Mark Portugal, catcher Joe
Oliver, third baseman Chris Sabo
and outfielder Kevin Mitchell have
chosen free ageooy and will ~ot he
offered arbitration. None of tflose
moves was a surpri~.
Rijo is entering the final year on
iii• contract. His $5.5 million base
.for 1996 was cov~n:d by
HrtsutraiK:e:· softening the impllct on
the team payroll. He will get a
SS.75 million base salary next
year.
· Brown apologlmlto Elvb
'· SANTA CLAI~M Calif. (AP)
-Elvis Grbac's fellow 49crs may
have tthrown flowets 6om San
Francisco Mayor Willie Brown in
the tmsh.
But the humbled mayor !las
finally gouen his chance apologize
tO the quarterback in a telephone
call to the 49crs locker room from
Paris.
Now some are wondering
whether i:umors that Brown plans
to show up at today 's home aame
I:DJ!ainiSI the Baltimore Ravens are

To Think
About A
New Career?r~~

T

•Opportunity
•Independence
•Success

Now Accepting New Clients In All Areas of
Practice Including:

Probate and Estates Workers Compensation
Persona/Injury
·Domestic Relations
·Medical Malpractice · Real Estates

I

Ja~k.~on

Office: 239 Main Street
614/2116-6408 or 1/888· 796-3779
Hours: Monday through Friday 8:30 A.M.-5:00P.M.
Enning appointmrnls available.
ColumbuN Qffile. or counsel to the fiml of:
Butler, Cincione, DiCuccio. Oritz and Barnhart, 50 W. Broad St.

-~· l&gt;•on.

In perhaps one of the ·biJgest
1 :=1~~~~~ of his first year as mayor,
F
is still payin&amp; for cllliDJ
Orbac "an elJlberrusmenf
·humankind" for his J!CI'f0!11Wice in
49ers' 20·17 lou to Dallas.

1/11118· 796-.m9
Appointments by arrangement.

•

-----.,. --·

•

,

Grbac, who says he won't hold
a grudge again~t the mayor, is starting the gan1e in plao;e of SIC~
Youns. ~·· been sidelined witfi
his seco_pd concussion of the sea-

I

•

• '

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B

Suncley, Holiember 17, 1186

OSU beats Indiana 27-17
to capture _
Big .Ten crown
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP).At long last, another Rose Bowl for
No. 2 Ohio State.
Mati Flnkes returned a fumble 45
yards for the tie-breaking touchdown
with 6: 18 left and the Buckeyes beat
Indiana 27-17 on S:uurday to clinch
their first Rose Bowl berth in 12

i

Not known/other
About half get Medicare payments

Home health-care spending rises
In 1990-94, the amount of money, from any
source, spent on home heallh care has
grown at a 'fasler rate than that spent on
hospital care or nursing home care:
Hospital Nursing
Home
.care
homes health care
(all figures in billions)

Section

Sports
in brief

•

Independent/for-prof"

~

had providers.

orts.

agencies in the nation. About half are for·Droi'K:

:~1

work thut's hilled as skilled nursin g
care.
.
1\nd the rise of such prohlcms has
spurred new ctlort"i to uack down on

•

3.t.- There are more than 16,000 homt health

25
·

•

--

Sunday, November 17, 1HI

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV.

•

years .

With the game tied I0-10, the
Buckeyes' fortunes turned when the
Hoosiers' Jay Rodgers, scrambling
for a first down, was stripped of the
ball by line_9acker Andy Katzcnmoycr. Finkes grabhed the ball in the
air and ran untouched into the end
zone, putting Ohio State ahead 1710.
· The Buckeyes (I 0-0, 7-0 Big Ten}
can complete a perfect season with

a win next Saturday over Michigan. ed to be- undefeated going into its
Then it's on to Pasadena, to play No.' showaown at Florida State.
Wuerffelthrew two touchd'owns
4 Arizona State in a game that could
have nation~! championship impli- in an ·otherwise horrendous day passing, and Fred Taylor rushed for 139
cations.
Pepe Pearson carried a career- yards and three touchdowns in a 52high 37 times for 130 yards, while 25 victory over South Carolina on
fres hman David Boston had 13 Saturday.
The Gators (I 0-0, 8-0 South_eastcatches for 153 ya!'ds to help the
ern Conference) have a week off
Buckeyes.
Indiana (2-8, 0-7) gave the Buck- before playing Florida State in a
eyes a tough challenge in Bill Mal- game that could determine who
plays in the Sugar Bowl for a shot at
lory's final home game as coach.
the national championship.
In other Top 25 action:
But the Gators struggled for the No. 1 Florida 52
second week in a row against a team
South Carolina 25
At Gainesville, Fla., Danny they were favored to beat handily.
The Gamecocks (5-5, 4-4) got
Wuerffel didn't put up glillering
numherli in his tina! home game, but two touchdowns from quarteiback
he put No. I Flonda where n want- .Anthony Wright
'-

GRABBED - Ohio University defender ·Dennl• Fitzgerald (32)
gets a 1olld grip on East Caroljna running back Scott Harley dur·
lng Saturday's game In Greenville, tt.C., where the host Pirates won
55-45. (AP)

In Ohio college football action,

East Carolina
beats OU 55-45;
Marietta also,wins
GREENVILLE, N.C. (AP)- Scott Harley broke an East Carolina single-game record by rushing for si~ touchdowns to lead tbe Pirates to a 5545 win over Ohio on Saturday.
.
. Danny Gonzalez passed for 383 yards and a touchdown in his second
start in place of injured East Carolina quarterback Marcus Crand~ll . .
., Harley, who finished with 205 yards on 28 carries, broke the previous
record of four touchdowns, held by three former East Carolina playcrli. with
a four-yard run that gave the Pirates a 48-24 lead late in the third quarter.
He had tied the record on the Pirates first possession in the second half on
a 32-yard scamper.
1
Five turnovers by the Bobcats (6-5) in the first half resulted in three touchdowns and a field goal 'for the Pirates (6-3). Ohio fumbled five limes, losing four,-and Kareem Wilson was intercepted once as ECU took a 31-24
· halftime lead.
..
·
A Harley touchdown seJ up_by Marvin Burke's interception gave East
Carolina a1IG-:i lead with 2:461eft in the lirst quarter.
, •
The Pira\es stretchet11he lead·to 17-3 on a 15-yard run by 1-liu-tey on the
last play of the first q~arter. ,
. .
Wilson pulled the Bobcats to within 17-10 with II :59 left in the second
quarter on a one-yard run. and his two-yard ruii.)Vith 5:07 left in the half
lied the score.
·
- ' O_n the ensuing possession, Gonzalez connected with Troy Smith for a .
53-yard gain to put the ball at the Ohio 15. 1\vo plays later, Harley scored
his third touchdown to gl-ve the Pirates a 24-17 lead :
Lorenzo West's fumble recovery set up EastCarolilla's last scoring drive of the first half. Gonzalez found Scott Richards in the end zone for a 31 17 lead with 2:10 le(J before intermission.
Ohio answered with a seven-play, 72-yard drive, capped by Steve Hookfin's one- yard run to close the gap to 31-24 at the end of the half.
Ohio scored two late touchdowns, the first on a· two-yard ru~ by hackup quarterback Mike Orlando with' 5:25 left in the game. 1lie second came
all a one-yard run by Raru Grimn 'with I :02 remaining. ·
Allegheny 61, Oberlin 7'- At Youngstown Kyle Adamson passed lor
three scores and three Apeghcny players had two touchdowns apiece as the
Gatorli beat Oberlin 61-7 Saturday and clinched their lifth North Coast Conference title in seven years.
It was the Yeomen 's 40th slraight los..
The Alleghc~y ( 10-0, 8-0 NCAC) home game was shtftcd from
Meadville, Pa., to Youngstown State's Stambaugh Stadium because·of heavy
snowfall.
·
The victory wa~ the Gators' 11th 'in a row, the third-longest winning streak
among NCf.A teams mall !Mvisiuns. The title was Allegheny's seventh in
the 12 yeats of the conference.
.
· Oberlin (0-10, 0-8)·hasn 't won· &gt;i~cc 1is ne•t-tu-last game ol"the 1992
season. l
,.
Adamson completed 13 of 17 passes for 142 yards and touchdowns of
· 13 and one yards to Ronnie Anderson, who hadifight catches for 64 yards,
and a 20-yard touchdown p;ts. to Jason Francis. '
Kyle Smesko, who gained 77 yards on ctght carries, scored on runs nf
nine and 24yards. while J1m Mormino. who had 63 yafds on five attempts,
had touchdown runs of 25 and six yards.
"
Allegheny, which led 61 -(f hcfon: Ohcrlin sci1n:d in the closing
moments im James Parker's eight-yard pass to Fcli~ Brooks-Church, piled
up 572 yards. 382 rushing yards and 33 lirst downs.
. .
Brooks-Church and Parker each set Oherlin rc-c&lt;lfds. Brooks-Church had
a school-record 17 receptions l(lf 165 yards, while Parker's 30 completions
were also a school mark. Parker completed 30 of 52 passes fur 278 yards
with two interceptions. .
·
.·
.
. Wlllh. &amp; Jeff. 37, Defiance 7- At Dcliance, Jake Williams rushed""
· ISS yards and one touchdown and Jason Bacr passed lilr two scores"' Washington &amp; Jcncrson heat Defiance.37-7 Saturday in the scasun-Qnding game
for both teams.
'
Williams carried 25 times, scoring on a one-yard run In the lirst quarter.
Baer, who completed 15 of22 rnsses li1r 120 yards. had touchdown throws
of 14 yards io Jason Rossi and seven yards to Mike Paul.
,
The Pn:sidcrlts (8· 1) also picked up points on Stcv M1,llcr's one-yard run.
a, safety and Harry Silvas' 35-yard interception return.
. Delian'ce (3-6) was limited to 128 toiiil yards, including 71 mnhe ground.
'The Jackets' only scQrc came on a 49-yard run hy Damon Cummings.
Marietta 30, Musklngum 3 - At New .Concord, Mariclla's Dante
flrown broke NCAA Division Ill single-season records for rushing yards
and all-purpose yards Salurday as Marietta defeated Muskingum 30-3,
. Brown for the day had 205 yards in 36 carries and linishcd the season
with 2,385 rushing yards in 314 attempts. Carey Bender of Coc College wa'
!he previous record holder with 2,243 yards·in 1994.
' Brown also had 41 yards.jn punt returns and ran a kickoff back ~6 yards ..
for a score. living him 332101al yard• in the game and 2,967 yards for the
season, breaking ~cnder's all-purpose mark of 2,656 in the same y~u~..
He finished with 238.5 rushing yards per game, bn:aktng Ihe diVtston
recoid for average rushing yards but falling just short of Barry' Sande"''
NCAA mlrk of 238.9, set in 1987 for Oklahoma State, ,
Brown a:ored twice, with his other t()U(;)ldown coming on an 83·yard.
run. Also scorina fix' the Pioneers (7-3 overall, 6-3 Ohio Confcre"") were
Aaron ConiC on 1a three-yard run, Karecm Brown with a 53-yard return of
an intercepled pesa and Darrell Schuss with a 21-yard field goal.
Joel BI'Oie kicked a 27-yll'd field goal for the Muskies (S-5, 4-S), whose ~
ICIIdin1 Nlher. wu Jill Declt!linlda ~ith 37 yards in 12 carrief.
·
Ohio Northel11 41, ~37 -At Tiffin, Ben Snell rushed for
· 140 }lards and two touchdo..,ns and Joe Scl\rig intercepted a pass late in the
game as Ohio NOrthern hel4 off Heidelberg 41-37 Saturday.
I ,

WRAPPED UP - Ohio State defensive lineman Mike Vrabel (94) sacks Indiana quarterback
Jay Rodgers as Buckaya lineman Luke Fickeli
(99) moves In to help In the first halt of Saturday's

Big Ten contest in Bloomington, Ind., where the
Buckeyes' 27-17 win gave them the conference
title and a berth In the Rose Bowl. (AP)

Marshall ·pounds Furman
42-17 to capture SC ti_tle
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)Marshall's Randy Moss broke .lcrry
Rice' s I-AA record for consecutive
games Wtth a touchdown reception
in lcadmg tfic Thundering Herd to a
42- 17 win Saturday over Furman .
The win gave top-ranked Marshall ( 11 -0. ~-0 Southern) its second
outright Southern Conference championship in its final season in lhc
league. Marshall, headed to the I-A
Mid·Amcricun ncxl season, f'irst
won an outright SC title in 1'194.
Moss had eight receptions for 157
~ards against Furman (7-3, 5-2). His

lone touchdown reception came at Furman 's Jason Wells hit a 22-yard
II :56 of the second quarter to tic it licld goal just before halfumc, Mar14-14. Moss, a freshman, has caught ,,ilall went ahead to stay on !mea toUChdown pass in every game this hacker Jcrmame Swafford's 33-yanl
season. In 1984, Rice had I0 straight interception return for a touchdown .
games with touchdown reccplions
The interception was the first in
for Mississippi Valley State.
215 pa~scs, by Furman· quartcrhack
Moss also linishcd the season Branilli.,Bonuventurc, also u ltAA
with 1.074 receiving yards, hrcaking record . Marshall was the last team to
the I· AA freshman rccnrc.l of 921J . pick Bonaventure t!ff,'in the next -to,
yards hy St . Marys, Calif.. receiver last game last season.
Blake TulH1 in 1993.
Tight end Luther Bmughlon led
BUt it was a defenSive play that Furman with six receptions fur 114
helped the Hprd pull away. Trailing yards.' Bonaventure was 17 of25 for
17-14 early in the third quarter after 210 yards. Marshall's Er~e Kresser
linishcd 20 ur2K for 307 yards.

M·a jor college football scores
14
Clemson 40. N. Carolina St. 17
· Dav1dscm 27, Bridgewater,Va. 24
E. KcnLucky 24,-Austin Pcay 10
East Carolina 55, ,0HIO 45
Florida 52. South Carolina 25
Flondu A&amp;M 20, S. Carolina St.
6

0

South
.
Appalachian St . 24. W. Carolina
17
Aaburn 28; Georgia 21
Cent. Florida 27, Bowling Green
19
Cincinqati 34, Ala.-Birmingham
'

I .

. Georgia Southern 45, Liberty 14
Howard 49,. Morgan St. 0
Jackson St. 76, Prairie View 20
Kentucky 25. Vanderhill 0 ·
LSU 39, Mississippi 7
MARSHALL 42, Furman 17
Middle Tenn. 31, E. Illinois 24
Miss. Valley St. 25, Alabama St.
20
Murray St. 50. Tennessee SL 14
N. Carolina A&amp;T 17, Grambling
St. 12
Nicholls St. 29, Harding 19
Norfolk St. 14, Hampton 7
Samford 31, Tenn.-Martin 12
Tennessee S5, Arkansas 14
VMI 34, Citadel 27 (2 OT)
Villanova 40, James Madison 23
Virginia 20, North Carol in~ 17
Wake Forest 17, Duke 16
William &amp; Mary 28, Richmond
!3 .
Wofford 43, Charleston Southern
15
Midwest
Ball St. 24, Toledo 14
Illinois St. 26, Tennessee Tech 15

·Iowa 31, Wiscon sin 0
Morehead St. 3K. Evansville 2·1
Nebraska 49, Iowa St. 14
Northwestern 27, Purdue 24
Northwestern, Iowa 13, Drake 7
Notre Dame 60, Pittsburgh 6
Ohio St. 27, lndmoa 17
Penn St. 29, Michigan 17
S. Illinois 34, SE Missouri 17
SW Missouri St. 27, Indiana St.
12
Texas 38, Kansas 17
W Michigan 76, Kent 27
Southwest
Baylor 49, Mi sso uri 42 (3 OT)
North Texas 24, Idaho 17
Rice 30, Texas Christian 17
SW Tc~as St. 31, Stephen
F.Austin 19
Texas A&amp;M 33, Oklahoma 16
Te.as Tech 56, SV. Louisiana 21
Troy St. 35, Sam Houston St. 14
Far West
Arizona 35, UCLA 17
Montana 24. Weber St. 10
Montana St. 49, Sacramento St.
14
Nevada 66, Arkansas St. 14
Stanford 33, Washington St. 17
UNLV 44, San Diego St. 42
Washington 53, San Jose St. 10
Wyoming 25 , Colorado St. 24

�,

.

•

p ge82•,J ' , .

Pometot • Middleport • 0111'"-'11, Ott • Point Pleaaant, WV

•

k

••

Cavaliers get 105-89 victory against Iverson-less 76ers
PHILADFLPHIA (AP) - Over
the last two seasons the Cleveland
Cavalim have done two thinJS very
well over the last few seasons: Win .
in Philadelphia and hold teams under
100 points.
Friday night, they did both. ·
Again.
The Cavaliers defeated the 76ers
105-89 for their lith straighi win in
Philadelphia and set a franchise
rec:ord by holding an oppoJ11!nt under
I 00 points for the . 14th straight

game, including the last six games
from, last season.
Cleveland, the league's lop defensive team, held the 76ers to 37 percent. shooting, 30-for-81 and forced
22 turnovers.
The 76ers also lost Allen Iverson
for at least a week with a separated
left shoulder. The slim rookie guard
collided with Cleveland's 6-foot-10,
246-pound forward, Danny Ferry,
and left the game with 6:16 remaining.

Further X-rays will determine points and 13 usists for the Cavahow serious the injury is.
liers, who trailed 60-50 with 8::16
The 76en said Iverson will be out remain ins in the 3rd period.
for at least a week, but Ivenon wantHowever, a 16-4 run put the
ed to return earlier.
Cavalien ahead to stay.
"I ran into a screen and I knew it
"We had too many turnovm in
didn't feel right. I threw a pass and the first half, but we finally got into
it didn't feel good, so I took myself · a good gro&lt;ive," said Cleveland
out. I don't think it's that bad, coach Frank Fratello. "Terrell Branthough. I think I could be back by don made some big things ha~n
Wednesday," Iverson said . .
for us tonight, and our defense
Bobby Phi Is had 26 points, Chris forced a lot of breaks our way. We
Mills 2S and Terrell Brandon 24 made a lot orshots in transition."

In other NBA action,

·

.

victory ai New Jersey. No prognosis
was immediately given.
Baker went down hard in Milwaukee's 103·99 loss at Sacramento when he was fouled from behind
· while going for a rebound. He left
the arena on crulches at halftime, and
the Bucks said he was day-lo-day
· with a bruised hip.
There were no such problems for
the Bulls, who heat Charlotte 110-8'1
on the road to remain the NBA's only
unbeaten tcaJll.
In other games, it was the Los
Angeles Lakers 107, Los Angeles
Clippers 100; Detroit 95, Washing.
ton 84; Utah 104, Vancouver 96;
Indiana 93, San Antonio 78; Atlanta
85, Miami 77; and Denver 82,
Boston80.
Michael·Jordan had a smile on his
face much of the night as he scored
38 points in just 29 minutes at Charlotte. His performance was more
than enough to help the Bulls (9-0)
improve on the best stan in franchise
history.
"I'm having a great time, really.
It's just a lot of fun for me right
now," Jordan said. "Basketball
seems to be enjoyable for me once

Down they went, one by one: A
superstar, an exciting rookie, an
overpowering center and an All-Star
shoo-in.
Knee surgery for Anfernee Hardaway, a se~ed shoulder for Allen
Ivmon, a banged-up hip and elbow
for Arvydas Sabonis and a ~. ~ised
hip for Vin Baker.
It was an NBA Friday marked by
injuri~s- and yet another lopsided
win for the undefeated Chicago
Bulls.
·
None of the il\iuries was e.pected to sidelipe anyone for much more
than a month, but there were some
scary moments nonetheless.
·
The procession of bad news
began in the afternoon when the
Orlando Magic announced that
Hltdaway, bothered b~ knee pain for
mOnths, would undergo expl'oratory
arthroscopic surgery today. He could
be sidelined for as few as two weeks
or as many as six.
Iverson, drafted No. I overall b)(
the Pllilndelphia 76ers last June,
separated his shoulder in a 1.05-.89
loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers. The
team surgeon said Iverson wou.ld he again."
\)Ut a week; Iverson· said he may be
And why 'not?
ready next Wednesday.
.
Jordan's team has played only one
Sabonis Jell hard to the floor in close game, and this one was effecthe first qu8f(er of Portland's 93-8.5 tively over by halftime.

Today's games
Ca~olina a1 S1. Lovi1. I p.m.
Chicago al K&lt;UJSilll City, I p.m.
CINONNATI &lt;Ill Buffalo. I p.m.
Denver 01 New f.J18IIlnd, I
JDL:booviUe m Pimburah. p.m.
New Orlc&lt;lns Ul AllnntD, I run.

NJ,IA stanclJngs

r.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allo..kOioiJion

»:
New Yort ........... ,....6

Ita

'

.L

ra.
.1.'t0

llll

. 7~

~

.61.1

I
I

~

.:t7.1

:i

l .286
5 .000

)~

2
I

Orlando .................. J
Miami ..................... S
Phiildelphia ............ J
WISNRJion ............ )

5 .J15

-

.................... 2
New Jcney .. .......... 0

'1

4I

C......OI.IIIon
Chicaao ..................9 . o 1.00
Detroit ....................7
CLEVELAND ........6
Milwaukee ...............~

2',

J~

4
5

~·,

{)

,

ll L l&lt;L

lam

Huu111an .................. 7
U1ah ........................ 4

I .K7:'i
2 .667
~ .571

Miwsota ...............4

Denver .....................1
lbllul ............. ,........ 2
San Anlonio...... .. .. 2
VM.'OU~'r .............. 1

Iii

5 ........

.1

5 .2K6
b . 2.~
K . Ill

... .
5
6'··

2 .7SO

J . .667
5 -~
4 -~
5 ..\?.~
5 .2K6 '

l\lc11111td .................. 5
L.A. Cli('lfiCn .......... 4
Slti.Tnmtmo ...............1
Goldo..-nStme ............ 2
l'tlOcnix ...................0

1 .

3',

K .000

6 ·

Dh•lllenJV
lkllaire 12. N~-w..-k Lickinr. \I;LIIcy 7

Ca~talm Mnf8arcu:~

They played Saturday
at New Yurk. I p.m.
8os1on 011 W:v;hinJton. 7JO p.m.
T~1»11fl.l III _Orland_
l), 7_:.\0 p.ni.
Ph1l:wklph13 ill M1an11. 7:.\0 p.m.
O..:&amp;rnit :11 CLEVELANI.r.7::\0 run.
lknvl!l' :II N.:w J.:nct·~ . ll r .m.

Atla'm:L mCbica~u. M~ ~ p.m.

Ut ; ~l at Dotii~ . II :.'Op . m .
· Gokkn State 011 Houston .lt:JO p.nL
S;.,.mmcntu at ~:tttk: , 10 JUn.
·

Tonight's games
Pnnl;md at lndilllllL. 6 rIll.
G11Jde:n State :11 S:m Amuni&lt;l. 7 p.m.
l.l\, L..lkl.n at Phuenl_l. i) p.m.
Milwuuk~....- at L.A. Clij~'rt- , 9p.m.
\luncoun&gt;r a4 So..-auk. \1 p.m.

NCAA Division I
men's scores

Dh·Mon VI
Dtlhl Hardin Nc,nlr~·rn -'~- llrit.lttCfJI'fl

Sl

Coorr AuttkH11y b4. Rlo:hmo11d r.2
Idaho St. '15. Global Spnrb ~~~
LSU MI . lkLIIuriH -10 .
Uthuani:~ Club Tt:am 94. UhiPII!O
M:wa&amp;:hulldts M7. (un.,.erk! AII-Stllrl

Melbtxlrnc Ma.U~· 72. N. Ariluna61
Midtittnn IU . Slovakia ~.5
MUftmouth. N.J. 74. NH Ostro1v3 49
Mnnlor.Ba S1. IOJ. Cluht Tekcom 117
N.C...Qrccosburo 92: Moful l.u...YIII!c

Nnrwalk St.
S1. Ht:nr)· 7.

P:~ul .~-1.

Min~''-"

T4!at~

Sc. 101. Spon1 Roea.:h 7.1
VASDA KK. M,.-N«~e S1. 19
VMI75. BCTet:O&amp;Z DL-bm:an 61 .
WBO SIIIN YO, W. JIIi111Jis KK
Widtita St 70. Alfddt•l• A~IWn :.6

"

right to fire the coach if he engages
"in criminal or morally reprehensible cond~CI or conduct which woul4.
tend lo bring public disrespect, con;
tempi or ridicule upon the universi:
ty."

On ·todsy's NFL agenda,

~ag.les

-

Underhill pleaded guilty to drunken driving in the Daylon suburb of
Kcu.cring in March 1991. A judg~
ordered him to take part in an alcohol-chu~scling program.
_
Underhill had a 356-162 record
and a .687 winning percenla~e ol
Wri~hl Slate.

·'

See

~enyBibbee

Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
Clark Reed

:4

Aib ~Grande

io:'hoilor

39
!'il 47
59

:'IM

Turomo ...............!' 10 0

16 !15

61

Phucni.11 .............. 5 9 2

12 JK

46

Colurado 1.1 .........!1 ·' 21,1

7H

19 !14
Ul 51

!i7
49

C;lli!&gt;lfY ..............~ K K 2

IH 6-'
I K -19

59
-1:\

S:UJJIJ5t' ............... 7 9 :i
Ar~;rhcim .. .'........ ..4 J.2 ]

17 ~3 62
II 5:! . 73

.U

Division I
AI Cin. Nippe-rt St.;~dlum
Citr 1:1Jo:r {10-11 v~. Cin. Mndlo:r t~:!).1 p.m.
•
1\t Akron Rubbtr &amp;wl
, Brunswi.:k t 11-0) v~. C;•nlvn M~Kiri lc~ti0-1)

AI 0Jyton Welcom~ Stadl•m
Um:1 So:niur ( 10.1) ~~ Tmy ( 11 -0)
At hrma Kytrt~ Fidrl
Cle . St. J~n :ni uN IK-21
Hud Nmt

v•.

(10-J)

Divi!Unn Ill

AI l.arM"IIIt~r l"ullun l'' irl6

C11l. I'NSalcs (I}-2J
(ll ·Ol '
.

v~ .

JACKSON

r~~~~Ji~~E"~~~r~~~r)i~~ (10-1,

vs. Canlitlrl ( 10.1)
AI Findlay Doruwll Sllldlum
Um.1 B:uh (1'1~3 ) ~~ - Jldlt!Vlk.' ( 10-1 )
AI Lakewood Sh11dlum
Mentor' Lake C:~tiH11k (I I -01 ~~ . Clc.
Benalk1inc (9-1 )

•

DiYisiun \'
AI Sprinafltld EYan~ Stadium
Col. ~cady (10- IJ ~~ . Vo:r~tillo..'l ( II ·

01

At PorhntOUih
Spartan Ptfunklpal S111dium
WHE:ELERSBlJRG t 1J- It ~ .~. Am:m·
,la-Cio::ltcl't!'c-k ( 11-Ql
.
AI t'estoria Memurlal Stadium
Muri11n Pk;rlant (l.l ·tlJ. ' 'S . El11wrc
Woodm!.H'l: (10· 11 ·
1\1 Btmro Flnnk- Stadium
Avon c 11 -0) vs: Nonh Lima 'Suulh
Rang~ C 11-0). 7:.10 p.m.

OUver
.
and Glover
Saturday
. .
'

'

!

Frid•y's scores

I

Onaw:t 4, O•il'OI!U' .~

W:L~hitll!lltn ~- Mnntreall
lktrl1h ~- S11n Ju~ I
N.Y. lslantkrs ll:kwidu J (lie}
Oallilt ~. Ana~im .l

I

Dey played Saturday
Tampn Bay :rt New Jc"'ly. I p.m.
f)llnwm at N.Y. blandt..'n, 7 p.m.
N.Y_Rnn(!.\.'fS at Pittstw..r,.h. 7:;\0 p.m.
Dusmn 111 RutJalo . 7:.' 0 p.l\1
V:uK:tl\l~r m MontrClll. ~ ::\0 r .m.
S.m lu!\1.' ;It Philadelphia. 7::\0 p.m.
C:tl~ary :II Sl. Lnui~. K:JO r .m.
Hanfuril a1 Cnlnrut.lu. IJ p.n1.
Tnruntu ar Phocnht. IO:JO p. ~.

I
\

'27615
02
•215
. '
'26587

Tod•y's games
l...cl'l 1\n,!!eb al OtiCliJtt. J p.m.
1\n; ..dm '"St. Louis. 7 r .m.

· [);lll:t~ m f'J.I~llmton. HfUll.

, I
1

oa ..b•ll
A•rkanl.caaur
DALTIMORf. ORIOLES ~ orrcrcd
~alnry 31'11ilrati!m hi LHP Jeuc On151,.1.1.

UOSTON REL'I SOX: Allrll."lt.lncl-~ C
Mike Stanley CIIL'fl:i.~~ hi, 1'\NJ rtt'(inn.
CLI~VELAND INDIANS : EAcn:il\'\1
th\'ir IIJIJII npr11i1! nn RHP Jn!IC ~sa.
'
SEATrLE . MARINI~RS: Cl:aimcrl
INfo' l&gt;:t~o.' Silvo:~tri uff waivcu frum lhe
Munln:;tl Ell(lt~
·
TE_XAS RANGERS: Oll~h!r.l •nlary
url'lllriillvntn 21J Mart Md.cmnre.

•·

Nllliunlll.tqlll'
CH,If'AGO CUllS: OO"cl't!'d Jml;u-y llrllhr;Fiiun loi.HP 8uh l'm~'f~llll .
,
HOUSTON AS1'k0Sl Nn~t.l M11n•
ny A..:t:r rlliUiitatcr. lll:wlcy 1'aytur plrchhlat
l"O:~ h :md J11r~c Una I.'IJOM:h fur Quad City
11ft I..: Mhlw~'II IA!;tl(U..: ,

. Basketball

"

UTAfi JAZZ; Mcle~t~c-d (i Hrnnb
Thomptillft. A ~li~all'd Q.jl Jami,.- WONIItll
h~l .

Football
N•llum.l t'uucbftlll.up
SAN FRAN&lt;..IS(.'O "I}EN.S : Slj!u~·d
QB Ginu Tnm..'ttu. '

Hotkoy
Nau.... Hod.ry '"•"'"'

BOSTON BRUINS : Aui~tn,•tl H
YtvJ.en)' Sh11hJyhin and U ltuh lk~.,-.: hl

I

AntkrJ Etik111HtiO 0...1tuil uf !111.· AHI •.
FLORIDA PANTHI!MS: Aliisi~tn~·~
RW CnMJ, Manin In Cnn1h11t1 urt"'-' AHI.
nod 0 Wn Swiuon ro Tallah""'-~ ul' tM•

A.danlkDivWOII

»: L 'I !II. Sif
Flori&lt;b II ......:.....2 ·~ 27 ~9 J6

11M

0 20 ~ S6
6 I IY ;\M
9 o IK 51
10 4 16 00

Tampo Boy ......1... 6. ll 2 I.&amp; !U
'N.'r'. Jslnndm ......-4 1 6 14 44

li4
~

!'2

~

54
'1

ECHL.
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS ,' A•·
1i1nrd C Cr11i1 llwb)' IU PhillldcJtmia uf
the AHL.

SAN JOSE SHARKS' Ault•""' RW

Chri1 Tan...ill I!J Kettlur,;ky

.
s¢ored,a carecr-tiigh 32 points on a
. night when the Lakers, otT to their
best start (6·3) ·since 1989·90, lost
Sbaquille O'Neal to his sixth foul
with 6:58 remaining . .O'Neal finished with 18 points but just three ·
rebounds. J:ilden Campbell added 20
points and '10 rebounds.
. The Lakers continued their trend •
of failing to sell out the Forum, with
16,207 OQ hand for the third straight
n9n-selftlut. '
.·
Pistons 95, Bullets 84
; At Auburn Hills, Mich., Grant
kill scored '27 jJointl and Otis Thorpehad 20 pointsand 12 rebounds as
~troi( improved to 7-1. lyina HOII5to.n for the !leCond-beat record in the
le113ue.
'
DetrOit also got 25 .points from
Joe Dumm and II rebounds from
Grant L0111.
·
-'

ur 1hc" AHI ..

Secar .

M¥1&lt;'-"'-

TAMPA BAY MUTINY ~ Na010d
lathll IWwaJikl aMleh.

.'

~:

I

.. ,

J, NEWTON OLIVER

'

.Lyne Center slate
RIO GRAN DE - Here is \lie
· schedule for the week of Nov. 17-24
at the University of Rio Grande's
--Lyne Center.

.

'

...

i
\.•

.

.,.,

{7-3), quarterback Jim Kelly has Warren has averaged 4.5 yards a car·
played well the past two weeks and . ry in the lasll1vc games for lhe Sea- .
Thunnan Thomas has rushed for 805 · hawks. Barry Sanders has rushed for
yards.
·
848 yards for the Lions ..
Seahawks at Lions
Panthers at Rams
The Scahawks (5-5) will be try·
Carolina (6-4) will be 1rying for
ing to win four straight games for the only its second win in six games on
first time since they won the last five
the road. while the R.ams (3-7) have
in 1986, while the Lions (4-6), who Scored all of their victories at homp ,
are 3-1 at home, will be trying to
including a 59-16 trouncing of
snap a four-game lo,sing streak. Chris Atlanla lasl week.

mistakes thai helped us and we were
fortunate enough to capitalize on
their errors," Cromley said. "The
interception by Cundiff at the goal
line to tum them away empty-handed in the final minute ofthe first half
was a really big play for us. We got
our teet wet in the postseason and
came away with a big win.
"I also want the fans to know how
much I appreciate their support.
They came through and picked,,. up
when we needed it the most, espe·
cially in the final quarter when Big
Creek was beginning to mount a
comeback
"

••
' '
'
Kevil Knapp, Syracvse, Ohio
FOI'IIItlly JOII' Sties Rep ot Don
Tate Motors, Po•eroy ·and
Turnpike fgrd of Gallipolis.
Kevin his now jolaed Taylor
Hontla In At.ens. T1yl. Hoada
Is the newest •••er of •••
Taylor · Team of Dulershlps
which oHer a fill sel~etiatl of
Ho1da, Chrysler, Plymoath,
Dodge, C..vralet, a.lck, and
Nissan itlwHIGry. Kevin can be
reedletl ot (6141 594·8555 or
1-800·772-1993•

Sale ,Extended Monday thru W~dnesday • New Items Added

O'DELL
LUMBER

·INVSNTORY
REDUCTION
SAL£

TREATED FENCE POSTS
SHADOW BOX TREATED FENCE
bOG EAR TREATED FENCE
SPLIT RAIL FENCE .

15~

off

LINE POST, CORNER POST, LINE RAIL .

Lawn &amp; Garden Supplies

OVER RUHS,
OHE-QF-A-HIHD
ITEHS

50% off
MASTER MECHANIC TOOLS
full lifetime warranty

..

• 50% OFF Open Stock Comblnltlon Wrenches
• 35" OFFToot~x~
• 35% OFF Master Mechanic Tool••"
~ 25% OFF.Maater Mechanic VIles
• 25% OFF 8pc Screwdriver Sets

OPEN
7:00 am tl 5 pm
Dady

""'

MIS·MIXED PAINT, INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR:STAIN, PAINT SUNDRIES AND
MISC PAINTING EQUIPMENT. ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION/II/II.

Fitness center, gymnasium

RON K. GLOVER

. and racquetball courts
Tnday - 1-3 p.m. and 6-10 p.m.
Monday -6 a.m.-10 p.m. ·
Tuesday ...,.- 6 a.m. -I 0 p:m.
Wednesday- 6 a.m .-.10 p.m.
Thursday- 6 a.m.- 10 p.m.
Friday - 6 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday - 1-6 p.m. .
Sunday, Nov. 24- 1-'3 p.m. and
6-10 p.m.

Ia his alma mater."
Oliver graduated in 1949 and was
the Rio Grande men 's basketball
coach and atliletic' director ·from
1952 to 1953, when he lead the learn
to nalional fame wilh a da1.zling
young player, Bc;vo,I' rancis. Francis
still holds the NCAA record with I! 3
(SH HONOREES on B-4)

Pool
Sunday-'- 1-3 and 6-9 p.m.
Monday- 6-9 p.m .
Tuesday - 6·9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday -closed
Friday - closed
Saturday - 1-3 and 6-9 p.m.

from .B-2r

16 points and 20 rebounds, J&lt;,hn
Stockton handed out 18 assists. a
season-best, Jeff Hornacek added 16
points. his high for lhe season. and
rookie Shandon Anderson scor~d 13,
his career-best.
Pacen 93, Spurs 71!
At San Antonio, Derrick McKey
and Fred Hoi berg scored I~ points
each and Dale Davis added 19
rebounds for Indiana, which broke
the game opeo with a 19-p ""'Jn the
third quarter.
.,
.•
Ha'lf(cl 85, Heat 77 • '
At Atlanta. the Heat estab(jshed
an NBA record for second-half futility, $coring only 21 points over the
final two quarters. Miami, which
.Cored 13 points in the third quarter
and 8 poiniS in the fourth, broke the
mark of 24 points set by five diff~
ent teams.
Nugeflll, Celdca Ill
, 'ha d4,Gr• "•~
.At IJOIIol'l, Dale Ellis scored 36 ·
At Silt Lake dty, It Wlf a niJht
IJf dOll- tnd ~-hiJhl fOI' .the points and "'&gt;vin Johnaoa had • key •
1~ , 1' '
•. '
'·. blocked shot and t1uee free U.OW. in
: a.,·~ )lid emw-llillll of _ li1e final minute.

,.

'

I

Bears at Chiefs
The Chiefs (7-3), coming off a big
win over Green Bay, are very tough
at home, bul it would nol be a surprise if they start slowly againstlhe
Bears (4-6). Chicago has allowed an
NFL-Iow total of 13 points in lhe
first quarter.
Dolphins at Oilers
The Oilers' defense. ranked third
in the AFC (292.8), will be faced
wilh stopping Dan Marino. the con·
ferepce 's top;ranked passer and the
NFL's 50.,000-yaid man. It also will
be tested by Karim Abdui-Jabbar,
who has rushed for 634 yards forth~
Dolphins (5-5). Eddie George has
run for 899 for lhe Oilers (6-4).
Ravens at 49ers
Elvis Grbac is expeclcd to start in
place of Steve Young, who suffered ·
a concussion last week, as the 49ers
(7-3) try to rebound from their overtime loss to Dallas. Vinny Tcstaverde has passed for 23 touchdowns for the Ravens (3-7), but he
also has thrown 13 interceptions.
Jaguars at Steelers
· • A seconp upset of th&lt;l Steelers (73) 'would equal their 1995 inaugural-season win total for lhe Jaguars (4.6). Jacksonville beat the Steelers 249 Sept. I.' Mark Brunell of the
Jaguars has passed for over 200
yards in each of lhe last 12 games,
the longest streak in !he NFL. Jerome
Bettis has eight 100-yard games and
lops. the league 's rushers with 1,064
yards.
Bengals at Buts
The Bengals (4-6) will try Ia go
to 4-0 since Bruce Coslct replaced
Dave Shula as head coach. The
· defense is looking good for lhe Bills

'

'

DETROIT RED WINOS; l.tllltk•riU

EASTERN CONFERENCE

\

NEJ.A. games•.. &lt;&lt;;:onti~ueil

ProVidetk:e or thl: AHL.

NHL standings

RIO GRANDE- The Universi1}.- of J3.\0 Grande Bcvo Francis Classic basketball tournament weekend
&gt;1/ill honor the man for whom lhc
QJurnament is named, Bcvo Francis,
'!lith a prescnlation of a portrait in
ll.yne Cenu;r and the following two
~cia! dedications during the Athletic Hall of Fame dinner Saturday.
: The gymnasiu!l' in Lyne Center
.,.ill he dedicated as The Newt Olivq Arena, recoghizi ng former Rio
cyrande baskettnill coach and businessman J. Newton "Newt" Oliver.
~ graduated from Rio Grande Collige iQ 1949.
. · ·
'. The Ron K. Glover Athl~tic
·Training and Booster. Rooms in
· l)yne Center will recognize the long,
·Lime support of 1961 alumnus Ron
K. Glover.
·
: "Both met arc special in 'Rio
Grande's history," said Barry M.
Oorsey, prcsidenl of the Universily
·or Rio Grande and Rio Grande
C::ommun.ity College. "New! Oliver
plJI Rio Grande on Lbe mop in the
!?50s us an outstanding cooch and
Ron Glover ha~ distinguished him·
. s~lf as an international businessman
and an individual who has consistcntly given his .time and resources
'

Natkmal811~rlhlll A-l•tkMI
LOS ANCiElf~'i I.AKEkS: Pl:...-._'\1 11
(.'cilrk (\'b;lllu~ un 1hl..• injuf'l"lf li~l.
NEW JERSEY NI·:I'S: "Num~·rl Un.•n.
d:m Omwn vilk111 ~r~urdin:~~rW.
-

fi"tmllhc rlisuht..-J

to host Redskins in division tie-breaker

first ·in five games with Ty Detmer
. The Philadelphia Eagles are not starting at quarterback. '
·
'
exactly what the slumping WashingIn other action today, Denver is al ·
.ton Rcdskins need .
New England, Chicago at Kansas
· • While the Eagles lost last Sunday, City, Miami at ff&lt;luston. Baltimore at
~ they are riding an eight-game winSan Francisco, Jacksonville al Pius1ning streak against the Redskins,
b~rgh, Cincinnati aJ Buffalo,' Seattle ·
' who have lost the last two week&gt;.
at Detroit, Carolina at St. Louis, lhc
:: Today's game betweenthe two 7- New York Jets at Indianapolis, Tam' ~ clubs will break a O.,st-P.Iace tie in pa Bay at San Diego, lhe New York
i llle NFC East and keep the winner at Giants at Arizona, New Orleans at
..!):ast one game ahead of the Dallas Atlanta and Minneso1a at Oakland.
• Cowboys, who play at'home MonBroncos at Patriots
;aay nig~t against the Green ·Bay
ll's the Patriots ' home game, bul
.foackers. , ~
it might not matter. The l)roncos (9·
:: Washington's offense, third best , ·1) are off to their best start since !hey
in the NFC (330.1-yard average), is went 11-1 in 1984 and they have
$parked by Terry Allen, who needs beaten New England seven straight
yards for a third straight 1.000· times. Besides having John Elway al
yard rushing season. His 17 touch- quarterback, the Broncos also have
. 'llowns, all by rushing, leads the NFL. the NR.'s top running attack (162.2
: The Eagles' Ricky Watters has yards per ~arne) . The Patriots {i-3)
gained 1,153 yards from scrimmage, have scored 255 points in the last
including 204 yards on 28 pass eight games when they went 7-1. The
¢atches, for the NFC's second- Patriots ' Drew Bledsoe • is the
tanked offense. The 24-17 loss to youngest
pass for
tJuffalo las! Sunday was the Eagles'
13,000
•

ss

IK

.

By The Associated Preas

~~l~~~liA

J)eii'Oil 11 ............. 7 z 2-1
Olicnttt' 10 .. .. ...... H 2 22
St. louis ...... .......9 9 0

their toll on us and the tash of pen~l­ up 20 yards to the 12 where Johnson
ties 'we accumulated was a direct skirted the left side untouched for the
result of that, because we were play- six points. Sigman once again kicked
ing so many people at unfamiliar the point-after.
positions."
Big Creek answered with a 56- ·
Wahama took a 7-0 lead when yard series, with Eddie Hale going
Johnson broke free on a 61-yard run the final 15 yards to get the Owls on
to the Big Creek five-yard line. Qne the board. Shawn Holbrook hauled
play later the WHS senior scored, in a Matt Martin pass for the twoand booted the PAT as well.
poinl conversion 10 make it a 21-8
WHS marched 36 yards in ten contest with 6:28 remaining in the
pl-rs on their nex,t possession, with quarter,
A 64-yard drive was the White
John son capping the series with a
response·to the Big Creek
Falcons'
one-yard burst. Steve Sigman split
the uprights on the point-after kick to touchdown. Johnson again was the .
stake Wahama to a 14-0 halftime key player in the Falcon series. A 24advantage.
yard Johnson sealllper preceded a
Big Creek threatened just before Ji'nal two-yard burst for the touchthe half ended by traveling from their down, with Sigman kicking the extra
own 42 to the Falcon eight, bul Slel- point to give Wahama a 28-8 lead at
lar defensive stops by Yonker and the close of the third quarter.
The final period saw Big Creek
Chris. Brinker netted the Owls just
one yard before Keith Cundiff picked close th~ gap 10 28,14 on an eightoff a Matt Martin aerial al !he goal yard Martin lo Rex Crawford pass
before Wahama closed put the scorline to prevent a score.
. Wahama made it 21-0 with 9:07 ing with a 41-yard John son run and
to play in the third quarter when . a 77-yard fumble return by Roush in
John son recovered a muffed .Punt at lhc final 2:55.
!he Owl 32. Tim Jordan then picked • "They (Big Creek) made a lol of

the year, into the semifinal round game with, with both senior pt•yers
next week against the winner of the being instrurnen~ in lim!ting Big
Gilbert-Wheeling Central encounter Creek to well below their season
that was played Saturday.
scoring average. The Owls also sufA victory by the top-rated Lions fered a number of penalties, which
Saturday would send Wahama to benefited the WHS cause immenseface Gilbert Friday or Saturday, ly.
while a Wheeling Central triumph
'These kids played with a tremenwould give the White Falcons their dous amount of heart tonight," Falsecond straight home field berth.
con 'coach Ed Cromley said. "The
Big Creek saw their season come type of offense that Big Creek utito a conclusion-with an 8-3 record on lizes is very tough to defend against
the year.
but our kids deserve all the credit for
While Johnson and Roush were making the play~ wh~n they had to."
accumulating points for Wahama, it
Big Creek moved the fOOlball
was the play of the White Falcon exceptionally well between the 20defense and the heroics of the offen- yard lines only to have the Falcon
sive line that .turned the tide in .defense or penalties turn the Owls
Wahama's favor.
away time after time.
The McDowell County team held
The Bend Area learn forced five
Big Creek turnovers, which includ- an overwhelming edge in first downs
ed interceptions . by Keith Cundiff (20-ll) and aclually outgained WHS
and David Mitchell and fumble 267-234 in total yaf\lage, but it was
recoveries by Tyson,Reitmire, Dale the big play strikes by Wahama that
Johnson and Chris Roush. 10 keep proved to be the deciding factor.
the potent Owl offense in check .· "We didn't get after them like I
thought we would," Owl coach
throughout most of the'night.
.Scott Yonker and Tim Jordan Drexel Adkins, Jr.. said . "This wasemerged as the defensive stars of the n't our typical team. Injuries took

•

Thoy played Salurday

Philadelphia 10 ... 10
New Jmcy .......... 'i
Wuhinaton ......... 9
N.Y. Ran...........6

NFL's·Week 12 slate

.

GL

Mtmrucvill\.• K
0

Nonh C:wohf\il K4. Melbourne 67 ·

St. Mary·J. Cal liO. Blut It Ould

·'

1996 FORD TAURUS

MuF-ndun.- -UI. Cadi~. J 4

69

fle&lt;l12

'

store near' the univf:rsity Campus in
!his Dayton suburb.
Police said Un'der!Jill selected six
bottles of vitamins at the store Monday but paid for only one, concealing the o1her five as he tried to leave.
Underhill has pleaded innocent 10
a misdell)eanorcharge of petty theft,
which carries a maximum penalty of
six monlhs in jail and a $1.000 tine.
Underhill w.as in the fir.&lt;t year of
a IWO-ycar contract extension 'thai
paid him $75.000 annually. The
agreement gives the univcrsily lhe

2H

Friday'• exbibitions

Adclllii~L'. 1\\btrali a '"· K:m~a~ Sl.l'l2
Army 9~. Nt:W Yurk A~es bl
Auburn 75. Gkob:li All-Stan 6b
Bowling Gn.'1:tf II~ . D.C. Elpltlftr!

l!'i, Oat- Harbor 0

Gernmnwwn Valky VIew :l-1. CUI.
Wyoming 14
·
Yuu. Mnmlty IM. Akmn Mundlc~l cr
0

Fliday's scores

Min~,.

Sprin~llckl

.,

'~

Denver K2. 8o,fl011110
Partland 9:\, N&lt;'v.+ J.;ner, ~5
CU~VELAND IM, PhtladeiJlhinltiJ
Atlania lt5, Miami·77
O.:uoit ~- Wa5hi11Jiun tW
Chic"*') 110, Ctt:1tlolte ~7
lndiun;1iol.l Su11 AnkM'Iiu 7K
UtM 10-1, Vru~t""OO.,.ct%
L.A. t..1nTS 107. LA. CUrren 100
Sacmmcnto IOl Milwoob."C W

17

~t~

7 J
7 0
Edn1m1m11 . ......... 9 10 0

Fostoria 1"4. Cnl. W;~temm I:!
'
" Solun 2-1. Chardoo 21
.
Wa,• hington Cuurt House Mi:1mi
Tr:~~..-e 7, M:t.' M 6

2
2
~

Oivhlion.ll
Akron Buchtel 1.\. Akron

At Inglewood, Calif., Eddie Jones
(See NBA on B·3)

waukee.
Lakers 107, Clippers 100

-•-.

An~ek L. ...... K
V;u~t:tlll~!!r .......... IJ

Friday's rtgional Onal scores

1
•:

"

MDfllrcll ............. 6 10 3 1:1 6K 711
Otlawa ................ :'! 7 5 1!1 47 ~
Pilllbu!Jh ........... !! II I II &lt;18 6]
.
'
WESTERN CO~RENCI;
Ctnlral Dlwl-.

l...m

COLUMBUS. Ohio {API- H~re are
1hc rrglnnal nnul results ano.l pairinJsh•r
1hi1 weekend's OhiO High &amp;houl Alhlo:tic
AstiodiUioo footb&lt;IU playoffs.
In lh&amp;: pairing~. all p.:tmt~ iii"C at 7 p.m.
Ck~'tpl where no~\1 .

2'-:

';' llAVENS OOD, W.Va.-Dale
fobnson scored five touchdowns to
set a new Class A playoff record in
' leading l)le Wahama White Falcons
\iast the Big Creek Owls by.a 41·14
fuqin Friday night at Ravenswood
' High School.
·" The Class A quarterfin~l r.Qu~d
· c;ontest was played before a lqe
-crowd of shivering Bend Area
patrons w~o challenged the elements to Witness the S~:Cond playoff
win in Wahama history.
Johnson ran for 180 yards on 18
, carries while sening the state playoff
record for rushing touchdowns, total
points scored and most touchdowns
scored. The ~-7, 160-pound speed•ster tallied scoring runs of five
yards, one yard, .12, two and 41
yards.
Junior Chris Roush also exceeded a · playoff landmark when he
returned a fumble 77 yards for a
touchdown to eclipse the old'mark of
6.5, set in 1991.
The playoff 'jyin sends the eighthranked
White . Fhlcons, now 9-2 on
.:

PKilk DiV"ision

Ohio H.S. playoff
Kores &amp; pairings .

2

Padlk IMrWon

Scauk.&gt; ......... ............6
L.A. Lakcn .............. 6

Mondu's game

I '~

·-·WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mkhrfti -IMvWon

- ·-

-T-s CorYuerd•m

I

Wright State fires Underhill after coach .
.failed to explain shoplifitng .allegations

Green Bay a1 0.:.1\as. 9 p.m.-

I .H15
2· .7~
J .625
4 .~:%
4 .429
5 .J7:'i
5 .2M6

Allan~a .................... 5
TOMIIo ................ .. J
Cbarlotle ............... .3
llklinna ....... ,............ 2

New York J~ll a!lndlnnapbli~. I p.m.
Sentllt: nt Detroit, I p.m.
WMhington n1 Philadtlphia. I p.m.
Bnhimore 1:11 San Frundk:o, 4 p.m.
MiilRli at Hoo511Jn. 4 p.m.
New York Giunt!i at Ariiona, 4 p.m.
Tampa Bay at S;m Diego. .a p.m.
Minnesota al Oakland, Kp.m.

The Hornets hnd orily two offenGlenn Robinson scored 29 points
sive rebounds ill the first half, which and Sherman DouMias 20 for Milended with ·Chicago leading 55-36. ·
The Bulls pushed their lead as high
as 37 in the third quarter before both
coaches began emptying their bench-.
es.
Scottie Pippen added 17 points
and Dennis Rodman had 11
FAIRBORN, Ohio (AP) - The
rebounds for the Bulls.,
man
jn charge of Wright State UniTraU Bluen 93, Nets 85
.
versity
's athletics program said he
At East Rutherford, N.' , former
fired
basketball
coach Ralph UnderNet Kenny Anderson scored 22,
hill
after
Under!Jill
would nol explain
Cliff Robinson added 21 and Isaiah
Rider had 15 for Portland, which allegations that he shoplifted some
snapped its three-game road losing vitamins.
Athletics director Michael Cusak
stre*.
.
said he met with Underhill and the ,
Shawn Bradley ~ad 18 points and
coach's attorney, Anthony Zaharkff,
IO rebounds for the Nets, whose 0- .on
Tuesday and that ZaharieiT said
·5 start under new coach John CaliUnderhill
"would not respond to or
pari is the worst in franchise histothe
allegations." Cusok said
address
ry.
he ' met again with Zaharieff on
"I tolctthem after the.game I wasn't happy," said Calipari, who lost Thursdax and he "refuscd.lo respond
explain the siluation."
only seven games in his last two sea- to or
"·Wright State University has
sons at UMass. "I told them this is reviewed this mauer, including a
a game we should have won.
police report in which Mr. Underhill
Kings 103, Bucks 99
slAted
that he made a mistake, that he
At Sacramento. the loss of their
did not have enough mpney, but that
best scorer and rebounder was too
it was no excuse," Cusak said.
much for the Bucks to"overcome.
He said that Wright State had
Mitch Richmond scored 12 of his . offered
'Underhill a "special accom30 points in the fourth period, &lt;;orllss
modation" that ·would have preWilliamson added 22 points and
served Underhill's pension, but that
Mahmoud A.bdui-Rauf 20 for the Zaharieff rejected it.
Kin~s. ·
Messages left at Underhill's home
were· not returned. Zaharicff scheduled a news conference for later
today. A woman in his otlicc said he
would not commenl until !hen.
Underhill, 55, who coached !he
Nortlteut Dlwiaion
Raiders for 18.years, was accused of
Hartfurd .. ...... ......9 ~ 1 20 49 4~
Buff;~lo ... ,....... __ __,H Y I
17 47 ~
shoplifting vitamins from· a Meijer
Bos10n . .............. t. 7 3 1.5 -17 :'15

By GARY CLARK

•

Brandon agreed that the defense then made a three-point shot. spaRing a 14-poim Cleveland run, capped
was the key.
·
"Our defense made a lot of things by another threc:-pointcr by BrandQ9
happen . It got us off and running. to seulc the Hsue.
..
and made il easier to get the ball to
Clarence Weatherspoon had I~
Chris (Mills) and Bobby (Phils)."
points and~ 4 rebounds for Philadcl;
Said Mills, "We just didn't have phia.
• ·.
our act together in the first half, but
"II via.&gt; a very physical game, but
we never let them get too far away we expect thai from them because
from us. Terrell made a lot of grea1 . they help each other out all the time.
ploys in the second half.''
We had the lend, but we didn't m~~e
The Sixers trailed 85-73 with slops when we had to, and thfi
9:41 left, but rallied to within 89-87 turnovers hurt us down the stretch,
at the four minute mark. Brandon he said.

Surgery and injuries sideline 'Penny' and Sabonis; Bulls· win
. By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP BMbtbllll Writer

Wahama beats Big Creek 41-14 in Class A quarterfinals

Home athletic events
Monday - Women 's basketball
vs. W.Va. Stale a1 7 p.m.
Friday- Bcvo Francis Classic:
W.Va. Tech women vs. Geneva at 2
-p.m.; Humber men v•.-Biuclield at 4
p.m.; Red women vs. Clinch Valley al
6 p.m.; Redmon vs. Erindale a18 p.m.
Saturday - Bevo Francis Classic: 2 &amp; 4 p.m. games with'opponrnts
to he announced; ij.edwomcn al 6
p.m.; Redmcnal 8 p.m.
Sunday, Nov. 24- Rcdmen JVs
, vs. Edison State at 2 p.m.
Notes: A Lyne Center mi!lnbership is required to usc the facilities.
Faculty, staff, students and administrators arc admitted with their 10
cards.
• Rocque1ball court reservations
can now be made one day in tid vance
by c&amp;lling 24~-7495 locally or toll- ·
free at 1·800-282-7201, •~tension
749S.
.
• All guests are 10 be acCQmpanied
by a Lyne Center membership hold-.
er and a $2 Cee.
·

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LIST SALE

LIST SALE
POLy·STOWAWAY UTILITY SO~ """
WHEEL JOINT RAKER.,.,.,
MAG BIT TIP SET "'"'
1'"PE HOLDER """
REO AUTO SNAKELIGHT """ ·
56 1/8" BAND SAW BLADE ,,.,,.
6" QUICK BAR TOOL CLAMP ,.,..,
ALL PURPOSE SNIPS """
5" DIAGONAL PLIER .,..,.
TIN SNIPS"'"'
YARD &amp; GARDEN CART,_
1 314 QT WATERING CAN,,_
22CC GAS EDGER """
ELECTRIC WEEOEATER 509 '"'"
ELECTRIC BLOWER 121701
TORO 8" ELECT TRIMMER '"'"
.SUNCAST HOSE REEL .,..,
GT TELESCOPING WATERWANO """
HOSE SPRINKLER """
. .
HOSE SPRAYER ,.,.,.
FAN HOSE SPRINKLER GT HOSE GUIDE
2 GALLON WATERING CAN '""'

,..,n

4.55 2.23
10.49 6.12
16.49 7.77
. 7.59 3.64
37.99 32.00
9.59 4.77
18.99 11.14
10.99 5.74
16.99 9.75
17.99 10.75
32.99 12.77
3.09 1.54
194.99157.01
63.99 44.30
34.99 27.76
26.49 18.88
27.99 18.50
13.99 8.86
7.69 . 3.88
"19.29 . 8.92
2.85 1.52
1.79 1.05
4.39 3.30

THERMAL WAVE HEATER.,..,.
42.99 33.92
WATER HOSE TIMER'""'
13.49 6.90
CIRCLE SPRINKLER 1. _
4.39 2.35
HOSE SPRAYER DIAL-A-SPRAY,..., 9.99 5.02
PESTOLITE INSECT TRAP"'"'
74.99 41 .20
DRIP GARDEN KIT_,.
24.99 12.61
BLACK WALNUT STAIN PT ,,
3.69 2.68
REDWOQD STAIN PT "'
3.69 2.68
HONEY MAPLE STAIN QT 130
5.99 3.60
BLACK WALNUT STAIN QT
5 99 3.60
.
BRN MAHOGANY STAIN QT.,.
5.99 3.60
CHERRY STAIN QT.,.
5.99 3.60 · '
MAPLE STAIN QT..,
5.99 3.60
REDWOOD STAIN QT.,.
5.99 3.60
' LT OAK STAIN GAL 510 12.99 9.88
WALNUt SrAIN GSL "' ·
12.99 9.88
HONEY MAPLE STAIN GAL 0100
12.99 9.88
CHERRY STAIN GAL 81.,.
' 12.99 9.88
MAPLE STAIN GAL..,,0
1299 9.88
24PK FIRESTARTER CUBE
2.75 1.86 ·
OUTDOORPHONEJACK..,,..
11 .~ 5.72

...

,.,.n

I

634 EAST HAiti 5T
POHEROV, OH

614 19Z-5500

ALL SATJZS FINAL....
SORRY NO RSTURNS.......
ALL rl'SMS AS-IS.

SPECIAL PRICES
ON HAND.,NO RAIN CHECKSII
. LIMITED TO QUANTITIES
.

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P8geB4·~

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.......

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Seven Meigs players and Chancey get Ohio Division honors
· By DAVE HARRIS

T·S Conw11p o.'ldent
PoMEROY - Conference co-champions Meigs and Vinton County
dominated the Tri-Vallcy Conference's all-Ohio Divisipn selections made
by the coaches.
.
Meigs and Vinton County placed seven players on the first team. Belpre
landed four. and Nelsonville-York and Wellst.on got three each.
'Jlle top-individual honors were split by the co-champions. Junior fullbackllmebacker Todd Braden of Vinton County. was selected the .league's
.top offensive player. On defense , the Marauders' outstanding two way tackle Adam B.arrett was selected the conference's top player for the second year
in a row.
·

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RICKY HOOVER

B.J. NICHOLSON

GLENVR:LE. W.Va. - Rio Grande's women's basketball team
tallied an 81 -77 victory over host Glenville State College in a sea·
son-opening tournament Friday ·night
.
.
. The Redwomen held Glenville to 27 first-half points in pan because
ofMisti Halley's si'~ steals and 12 early rebounds (out of i3) from
senior Stacy Riley.
'
On offense. Rio senior Megan Winters led all scorers with 29 points.
Michelle Tabor had I 5 points, while Halley had II and fellow sopho·
more Meghan Kolcun had 10.
. ·
Rio heat Glenville 21-9 at the foul line. Riley sank all six of her
free throws, while Winters had seven points at the stripe.
The Redwomen, who finished the tournament Saturday night, will
host West Virginia State Monday at 7:30p.m.

·•'•
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Gall/a Academy basketball
,.,serve ticket sale dates posted

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COACH MIKE CHANCEY

MATT WILLIAMS

....----------Area sports briefs--------__,···
Redwomen beat Glenville
81-77 ,·n season O•nDner
&amp;CP
,.,..,
S ''•a•II!JI

•

Belpe
Marauder head coach Mike Chancey took the coach of the year honors.
Nelsonville-York
Chancey led the Marauders to a 7-2 mark overall and a 3-1 mark in the
Nelsonville· York
Ohio Division, tying Vinton County for the title.
Nelsonville· York
Having completed his fourth year at the helm of the Marauders, Chancey
Wellston
is the second generation in his family to win the TVC coach of the year
· Wellston
honors. His father, Charlie Chancey, won the le11gue's top honor after leadWellston
ing Meigs to a 10-0 mark in 1986. The elder Chancey also was the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League's top coach in 1967.
Players of the year: OFFENSIVE-Todd Braden, Vinton County.
A;lso. named to the team fJom Meigs ~as junior tailback Mau Williams
DEFENSIVE-ADAM
BARRETT, MEIGS
.
andjumor classmate centerlhnebacker Jason Roush: Roush 's brother Justin,
Coach fo the year: MIKE CHANCEY, MEIGS .
a freshman fullback, senior guard/defensive end B.J. Nicholson, senior twoway tackle Aaron Hockman and senior guard and defensive end Ricky
Hoover joined him.
·
.
.
Barrett, who al~o was selected the top defensive player last year, was
dominating on both sides of the ball. He was second on the Marauders in
tackles.
Justin Roush became the first freshman in Meigs High School history to
rush for 1,000 yards with 1,086 yards in ISO carries (7.2 yards a carry) to go
along with 15 touchdowns. Williams, a first-team repeater, rushed for 961
yards in 180 carries (5.3 yards a carry).
' The entire Meigs offensive line- Jason Roush at center. Hockman and
Barrett as th~ tackles and Nicholson and Hoover as the guards - was
selected to the first team. Jason. Roush also was the Marauders' top tackler
on defense, averagmg 18 stops a contest.
Here are the members of thel996 TVC all-Ohio Division team.

MEIGS
MEIGS
MEIGS
MEIGS
MEIGS
MEIGS
Vinton County
· Vinton County
Vinton County
Vinton County
Vinton County
Vinton County
Vinton County
B.elpre
Be.! pre
Belpre

GALUPOLIS - Reserve seats for the 1996-97 Galli a Academy
boys' basketball season will go on sale Monday and Tuesday for Big
Blue Super Boosters.
· .
.·
Parents of varsity and junior -varsity basketball players, cheerleaders
and pep band members may buy reserve seats on. Wednesday and
Thursday.
· .
.
Reserve scats for the general-public _will he available on Friday,
Nov. 22 far $36 per ticket. Tickets may be purchased in the Gallia
Academy High School principal's office between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.
There is a limit fQ four tickets per individual.

are $20each. White tickets, which grant admission 10 all varsity girls'
.home games, are $20 each. Gold tickets, which grant admission to all
home games played by either team, are $40 each.
Stadium seats with the Rebels imprint (an image of the Rcvolutionary War Minuteman) will also be available.
For more information, call ~56-6379.on weekdays between Ma.m.
and 3 p.m.
.
·
.
.

The cost is $5 for family members und other guests.

Cliffside board elects 1997 officers;
meeting scheduled for Tuesday

..

ROCK SPRINGS - Registration wi II end Monday for an Adult
Education Cl~ss for indi~iduals interested in becoming an Ohin.High
School Athleuc Assoc•at1on-cerllfied basketball official.
The class, sponsored by the Jackson Basketball Officials Association will be conducted at Meigs High School, beginning at6:30 p.m.
The successful completion of the class will enable class officials
to officiate all levels of basketball cxcepl for Varsity in the current
season. For funher information, contact any local basketball official
or contact instructor Dave Jenkins at 304-882-3951 after 7 p.m. Further information can .he obtained at Monday's meeting.

Gallipolis P&amp;R to hold
Rlnky-Dink draft Monday

~

South Oallia High School is seHing three kinds of basketball tick·
cts for the 1996-97 season.
·
·
Red tickets, which grunt admission to all varsity boys' home games,

bachCior of science degree in sec-

ondary education from Rio Grande
in 1961. He worked for Amencan
Express for 20 years he! ore accept:
ing the president's position with the

North America Dun and Bradstreet ;crved on Rio Grande's hoard of
Corp. in 1990.
truslecs and rccc1 vcd an honorary
· He staned his own business this
doctorate from the University of Rio
Granc.lc in the 19ROs.
year followmg employment with
U.S. Banknote Corporation . He has

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At lhaleh Miller Chenolet,

~

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t:l...,.

602DWA1

~;&amp;tllpai~Oitlo45631

"141446--4554

1

• 50% OFF Open Stock Combination 'Wrwlch•
• 35% '0FFToolboxH

• 35% OFF Maeter Mechanic Too!Hta
• 25% OFF Maeter Mechanic VlaR .
• 25% OFF lpc Screwdriver Setll~eniii151ii1iM~

ALL DECK HARDWARE
KITS 15% OFF

5()00

Hd up

.

Aluminum Stonn Windows

•soo .,

Stainless Steel Sinks

.'!JH.

'

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I'·
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+155Rl3

$64.99
$83.99
$84.99
$87.99
$89.99
$96.99

..'

USTSALE

Natural Wood Interior Shutters
(many styles)

Reg.$1995

'ZfKJ

P185/6.51:1• $131.99
P21.5/60Rl.S $186.99
P225/70tll.S UO.S.99
P23.5/701t15 $211 .99
1'20$/55116 $207.99

P225/60R16 $198.99

S100.i4

SIMM

....."

SUI."

ll ....i4

....................s-......

·=. ....

Wlllt-..n hr

...... ... lolllf!IG

$129.99
$13.5 .99

$U9.99

$152 .99

114.74

$169 .99
$157.99
$162 .99

... -

$127M

"""'
$122.2&gt;0

IIIMM NICI IALI NICI
$11999

P225/7511S
f'2J.S/7Stll.S

$1 33'99
$1 oi0.99

'"·",.
.,.,,,..

1'23.S/7.5ft1.5

$137.99 ,

SIOMt

• 97A9 . P21.S/70R14
$101.99
nJ.st7.5ftLs

1'112M
13.99

$151.99

Ill

S1J0.99

$100A9

1~ ;":,;;,~~s~ido air bag. 5 spd, full bench
, 1400 lb. payload.
radials, 3 yr 36,000 bumper to
plus 5 yr.

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

lliO,ODO PQWer tra1n warranty.

llw lftllll'llcltl
11tp1rt Rtttlttl

Special Sale Prio&amp;...;

liD

. . . . . . . . Wllllllll

P235/7.5115
LT2J5/75U5
lT235/7.5RI5
30-9SOII15
31 -1050AI5
H'235/7.5RI5

$130.99
. . . . ..
$137.99 ' $103M
$142.99'
$107.24
$143.99
S1D7.M
$159.99
$11,,ft
$162.99
$122.211 ~·

. . . . . Will ..........

_,...,

I• 1

'117 · S29.t9

lAW l'llcltl.

-

•::a·~

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

......

1:::

.....

.

+ PIB5/01Jtl; .

Pl9j/1QII;
P'lO.lllatl;
+ P19l/01Jti5
+ P71l/6ltl15 .
P225/10115

1996.NISSAN MAxiMA GXE
air, crulee, II", c:ua, all power, dueiair bags

•'

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off

Preflnished Exterior Shutters
ass't colors &amp; styles
and up

•soo

6' Wood Hinged Patio Doo~

Interior Prefinished Paneling

·. SALf •zrs ·

ZO% off

Wood Deck Patterns &amp; Overlays

SAlE

Z Brick

'4" bole'

ONE OF A

each

'~Z9

I'(IND ITEMS

OVER STOCHS HEAtf VOU SAVEl

Andersen Wndows,
Patio Doors &amp;.Sash

LIST SALE
MM 6" ADJ WRENCH """
13.49 9.21
HEX KEY SET"""' ·
17.49 8.02
SONIN DISTANCE MEASURE.,.,.{
43.99 24.00.
MM 6PC COMBO WRENCH SET _ ; 9.49 2.89
5PC OPEN METRIC WRENCH SET'""' 7.99 1.67
RATCHET SCREWDRIVER.,.,.,
14.49 7.93
MM SCREWDRIVER,.,,.,
7.b.'l 4.25
MM SCREWDRIVER ,.,,.,
6.69 ~.12
9: LINESMAN PLIERS """
7.691'7
. .c
MINI GLUE GUN _,.
7.59 4.38
3.6V VERSAK BATIERY """
19.97 10.77
5 1/2" LONG NOSE PLIER """
4. 75 1.27
C/PLIE~ DIAGONAL """
16.39 9. 70
4PC CLAW SCREWDRIVER "'"'
13.49 10.27 ·
BARNEY BORDER"'""
10.99 7.44
, BASEBALL STENCIL"""
7.49 2:84
BASKET STENCIL DESIGN"""
. 2.29 1..12
ALL TEMP MINI GLUE STICK ""'' .
1.09 .71
TI HD SPRAY CLEANER OT """
1.99 1l58
CERAMIC TILING TOOL KIT "'""
9.99 4.88

50% off

Insulated Pipe
wood/gas &amp; ace:
.75 per Inch .

Shower &amp; Tub Enclosures (doors)

50% off
New Pellet Stovn &amp; Pipe
I
llst$1299
Andersen Window &amp; Door
Screens &amp; Grhles

•

50% off

Stainless Steel Kitchen Sinks

50%' off
Lawn &amp; Garden Supplies

50% off

Bathroom Fixtures
KOhler, Mansfield, Artesian . ·
and up .

•zooo

SALf '899

•

Wood Interior &amp; Exterior
Doors
•~and up

-MIS·MIXED PAINT, INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR STAIN, PAINT SUNDRIES

Dllcount... ....... -4,052.95
Spec;lal Sale Price

•...... ._e

O'DELL LUMBER

•

VIHE ST AT THIRD AVEHUE

GAWPOUS,OH

614 446-1276
I•

SPECIALSIII

M.S.R.P....... 524,&lt;&gt;47.95

If loa Ibn At Lelll•l,300

j

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ALL SALES FINAL....
SORRY NO RSTURNS.......
ALL rrsMS AS-IS.

SPECIAL PRICEUiMITED -TO QUANTITIES ON HAND.,NO RAIN CHECKS II

puzzle on page
02
.See
.
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SCRATCH
.
. lr DfHT
List$599

List $5905

.99

each

Suspended Ceiling Grid
. SystemZS% off.

'•

_.,....,,,....,.._, . .......
,,. ..... _
5-lfE"-~
'*-"-'"""'-·
·~ .....=fir
_. --.w...
........, =·* '

·

3.5VVERSAPAK SCREWDRIVER"'"' 21.4915.22 SPRAYDIVERTERFORDELTA_, 3.991.61
5.89 2.57
SOLDERING GUN KIT """
39.99 24.06 LEVER HANDLE DIVERTER .,.,.
9.99 6.00
HOT KNIFE SOLDERING IRON""" . 16.49 .8.47 . DELTA FAUCET HANDLES_.
•. 12.99 8.00
WIRE END BRUSH,.,..,
\:""..:
7.59 4.4.1. SHOWER ARM CADDY ,..22,
FINE WHEEL ,,.,.
. 4.59 • 2.44 MINI DRAIN BLASTER ,...
1 1.99 7.33
6" FINE WHEEL ,_,
7. 79 4.20 MP TOWEL RING ~""'
2. 79 .33
ME
PLATE
2GANG
IVORY"'"'
2.09
.94
1 112 WIRE BRUSH FINE ''""'
3.39 1.55
3" COARSE WHEEL,..,.
3.19 1.60 ME SWITCH W/OUTLET BRN ,.,.., , 10.69 5.11
3" FINE WHEEL,_
3.55 1.78 MINI TRIPLE TAP IVORY"'""
3.25 1.34
3.39 1.63
.MM QUICK BAR CLAMP,_
15.59 9.44 1/2WfHPRF CLUSTER BOX..,.,.
2.79 1.24
TURBOMAX DRILL BIT SET""'"
22.4911 .22 CANOPY RECEPTACLE"'"'
3WAY
TURN
KEY
SOCKET,_
3.95 1.65
RATCHET SET,,..,
22.4910.77
4.49 2.00
M10X1.5 ADAPTER...,,
3.79 2.08 ME TRIPLE TAP BRN,,., .
3/4" CRIMPED END_,.,
3.69 2.23 ME 1/2 WTHPRF ,2 GANG BOX....,. 13.19 4.81
4.29 2.04
7 112" FLEX DRILL KIT"''"'
21.-49 10.24 T/OAK RECEPTACLE PLATE""''
.69 .33
33-312 TAPE RULE ,,..,.
11.29 9.25 BRN DUPLEX WALLPLATE5.19 1.90
160Z HAMMER ,,.,,
20.49 12.88 13881 BALLAST;_
18.99 3.89
8' X '112" POWERLOCK TAPE"''"
7.49 5.59 · PORT GFCI ADAPTE~ """
RCA
VIDEO
OUB
CABLE·.,,.,.
6.29 2.55
.
6'
SPEED REDUCER'''"'
.
.11.99 6.70
.
1.39 .57
8" 'C' CLAMP """
7.89 4.23 TV GAME SWITCH 2401 n .
ME
TWO
SET
COUPLE;R
,,.,,
4.29 3.08
8" 'C' CLAMP"""
12.09 8.~5
2PC
MODULAR
WALL
JACK..,.,,
4.09 1.50
3/4" PIPE CLAMP"''""
26.9917.05
T
MODULAR
LINE
CORD_,,
3.99 .71
1/2" PIPE CLAMP"""
12.09 3.42
SCYTHE STONE,....,
3.99 1.96 100' POLAR SPEAKER WIRE'""'
5.79 ·2.17
MM BALL PIN HAMMER ,,.,.
16.99 11.07 REMOTE ANSWER MACHINE""" 35.99 27.04
606M FRAMING HAMMER 110170
28.49 18.99 CASSETIE HEAD CLEANER""'"
2.99 1.21
5.49 2.76
80Z POLY MALLET,,...
10.29 5.86 TELEPHONE UNE TESTER,_,
SAW HORSE BRACKETS,.,..
7.79 4.54 1710 DIG ANSWERING SYSTEM,_, 64.99 52.73
3.39 1.37
11 PICK MATIOCK ....,,
14.79 10.05 TOOL RACK,.,.
5#RAILROAD PICK.,.,.,
14.7911 .67 MM 15" ADJ WRENCH '"'"
45.99 24.99
70.99 47.88
ROUND MAG FLOAT -•u
23,49 12.89 66PC SOCKET SET·-··

Wood/ Metal Park/ Lawn Benches

$41.74

+P185/701UA
$62."
P185/75RIA
$63.74
+P195/70RIA
$65." .._ .....,Qulotllldlne.
P195/75RIA
$67A9
Tourintt .......
P205/701114
$72.74 Abo 4111 Tiro FNO 0to Othor
btn 11emw wtitlwlll. +IIDdl s.r.; ~.e~~n. • ' w a a • • - r...
Otlor !izts Wollo.

,_

See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
ClarkAe®

. . . Ilia WI JIIICI

sat

I

.

:::

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MMUI: PIICl IMIIIIICI

DCANHEJ,P

'•

!10 each

LIST SALE

Kitchen &amp; Bath Co1.1ntertops
·J,~ ft . .

I

60% off

Simulated Wood Beams
8' (decorative)

&amp;Sash

Single Bowl

(wood p.-.ftnlahed)

Prefiniahed Wood &amp; VInyl
Moulding• 1100 and up

E,.,Cf FOREVER DOORS

ZS%

....
.. -- ......

~Door,

CASE HHIVfS

ZS%off

'·

.Come Up Aces With The Classified$
- :-.

'I--

ASSORTED

I

OtrllostV. ...
Palla'

.-_

7 AM TIL
6!30

LOWEST PRilE OF THE SEASON

! .

The reserve girls wi II open up the evening's action at 6 p.m. Fol- ·
lowing wilfl&gt;c the varsity girls preview al6:4S 'p.m. The reserve boys' '·
preview will he gin•at 7:30 f!.m. The boys' varsity ni'ghtcap is sched- .
ulcd to tip off at 8:15p.m . !(
·
Tickets will be $3 for adults, and $2 for students.

,'

off

Ceiling Tile
' 12"x 12" and 2' x 4'1ay-in ·

•

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DAILY

SALf .'995

~·

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15%

ALL TREATED LUMBER .....

·•

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

.~ ~

OPEN

.

·uNE POST, CORNER POIT, UNE RAIL

•

,nasi'um .

~

TREATED FENCE POSTS
•
SHADOW BOX TREATED FENCE
DOG EAR TREATED FENCE
SPLIT RAIL FENCE

NATURAl. GAS FIREPLACE

1988 CHEVRO:..ET
· SUBURBAN SILVERADO

'

No Credit, Slow Credit
B.t Credit, llaukruptey?

Wl~teriM Year

t:emplete Set Oaly •t2.8S

. .

~
,,)II

Dr, 4x4, 350 V8, auto, White/Blue
I wnbluA cloth inte{ior, AJC, stereo cass,
PL, till, cruiso, rear doors, 1-owner.
great runs great.

Miller put the Capitals up 2-.1 at
9: Ic, of the sccund period with his
lirst ~ual. tappintr his uwn rebound
past Montreal goaltender Jocelyn .
Thihault.
Thihault,·who missed nine games
with a broken finger. had 21 saves in
his first start since Oct 19. He is J.
4 lifetime against Washington.
Islanders 3, Panthers 3
Ray Sheppard and Stu Barnes
scored goals I0 seconds apart in the
S&lt;;COnd period, setting a Florida franchise record and helping the Panthers
. rally to tie New York.
The · previous fastest span
between goals for the Panthers had
been 17 seconds, accomplished
twice.
The Islanders, outshot 30-18, had
two shots to one for the Panthers in
the scoreless ovenime. Scott Mellanby's slapper was g'oved by Tommy Salo with seven seconds left in
OT.
Zigmund Palffy had his 12th goal
and two assists for New York.
~nators 4, Blaekhawks 3
Andreas Dackell 's fourth goal of
the season, with 2:25 remaining,
gave Ottawa the victory ove~ Chica- ·
go.
Dackell beat Jeff Hackett with
assists going to De.nny Lamben and
· Bruce Gardiner.
Ale~ei Zhamnov and Ethan
(See NHL on B-6)

,~

'

,:

Steve Yzerman cenainly proved
that he won't be taking it easy just
because he has a new four-year contract from the Detroit Red Wings.
The San Jose Sharks could have
done "wilhout the demonstration.
But that's what lhey got Friday
night, and it appeared to be conta·
gious.
"I felt we played quicker and at
a hillher tempo than against Colorado,/• said Yzerman, who had a
,goal and three assists in a 5-1 victo·
ry just 24 hours after approving his
new deal.
,
Detroit's Brendan Shanahan
, ~ agreed.
, -!
"We were disap(J(linted with the
·,;I lack of emotion in our last game,"
said Shanahan, who had his first goal
in nine games. '"We played like spec. · · tators, so we wanted to do better
:. tonight."
'·
That they did, much to the chagrin of the Sharks, 0-10 during the
•..: regular season in Detroit since they
~ came into the NHL.
~•
Yzerman set up Detroit goals in
~ each period before scoring one him. ;~ self in the third.
:··
Vyacheslav Kozlov, Darren
McCar.ty, and Tomas Holmstrom
also had goals for the Red Wings.
::' Greg Hawgood scored for San Jose,
his first goal since the 1994-95 seasoh .. .
Goalie Mike Vernon made 24
• • saves for Detroit, which has held
: opponents to two goals or less in I 5
• of 20 games.
;
Kelly Hrudey slopped 23 shots
for the Sharks.
Shanahan. who hadn't scored a
goal since Oct. 22 at Boston, restorod
Detroit's two-goal lead juSt 45 sec' onds into the third period. by one• timing a pass from Yzerman .past
Hrudey from the left point.
"Any time you get the chances
•
: and they 're not going in, you press
• a l!ttle bit," Shdnahan said. "I think

this was the game I had the least
amount of chances, then 1 score a
goal."
San Jose's Marty McSorley
thought Shanahan's goal halted any
momentum the Sharks may have had
after Hawgood's score.
•
"We were in a 2-1 hockey game
and got stuck," McSorley said. "We
weren 't able to come all the way
back. We' ve done it b.cforc and
we' ve won hockey games ."
Elsewhere, Washington l&gt;cat
Montreal 3·1, Ottawa took Chicago
4-3, Dallas defeated Anaheim 4-3
and florida tied the New YNk
Islanders 3-3.
Capitals 3, Canadien• 1
Jim Carey stopped 30 shots as
Washington finally reached the .500
mark while extending Montreal 's
misery on the road.
. Peter Bondra, Kelly Miller and
Sergei Gonchar scored for the Cap. itals, whose eighth win in 12 games
. improved their record to 9·9 - the
first time they've been at .500 this
season.
Brian Savage got his ninth goal
for the Canadiens, 1-8-1 on the
road. Montreal is 4-10-1 since opening the season with two wins and a
pair of tics.
·
Savage scored in the opening
· minute, but Carey didn'tlet another
shot get by him in winning for the
sixth time in seven stans

- ~

.

POMEROY- The Eastern Eagles, Meigs Marauders and South·
ern Tornadoes will open their 1996-97 boys' basketball campaigns with
preseason preview outings scheduled l&lt;&gt;r Friday, Nov. 22.
. Jeff Skinner's Meigs Marauders v:~rsity squad will appear in the
31st annual Athens County Shrine Preview at Athens High Sch&lt;x&gt;l's
McAfee Gymnnsium, as they take on Jay Rces' Alexander Spanans
m a 8:30p.m. contest.
·
The game is part of fnur exhibitions on tap. Also on the agenda
arc Vinton County vs. Log:~n (7 p.in.), Trimble vs. Federal Hocking
(7:45p.m.) and Athcn·s vs. Nelsonville-York (9:15p.m.).
. E;&gt;stern :~nd Soulhern will take. part in a rc.•crve/varsity boys: and
g~rls prev1ew Fnday 111 Soutl&gt;crn H1gh Sch&lt;x&gt;l's Charles Hayman Gym-

flonor~s .. !c~o~n~tin~ued~fr~om~B-~3)~--~--~--------~--------~----~-----------------

points in a league game against
Hillsdale College. He scored a total
of 1,954 points in the !952-53 season with a high of 116 against AshI'
land College.
Employed by the Harlem Globetrotters in 1956, Oliver has been an
• uctivc business . investor and longtime resident of Springfield. where
•' he was elected Clark County Cummissioner in 1978. He ha.• l&gt;cen
'
''J active in many civic activities such ..
as the Clark County Heart Fund Dri·
ve, the Clark County, Fan'n Bureau,
the American Forestry Association,
' the Ma.&lt;onic Lodge and the United
Methodist Church.
In 1965, Rio Grande College
' introduced the Newt Oliver Award,
·given each year to the institution's
outstanding male and lcmale alh·
Jete&lt;. He was elected .to the Rjo
Grande College Board of Trustees.
In I972 '. and was inducted into the
'• Athletic Hall of Fame as a player and
• a coach. In 198). he received an honorary master's degree of public ser.'
vice froni Rio Grande College.
As president and chief Executive
officer of the New York-based First
Wave, Inc .. Glover lettered in bas·
ketball for four years and recei vcd a

..

~

·.. Meigs County basketball teams
to play in previews Friday

GALLIPOLIS- The Gallipolis Parks and Recreation Dcranmcnt
will hold a Rinky-Dii'ik Basketball druft Monday in Washington Ele·
mentary's gym.
Fourth-grader&lt; will be drafted ut 7:30p.m. Fifth-graders will he
drafted at 8 p.m. Sixth-graders will he drafted at M:30 p.m.
For more information, call 441-6022.
·
·

CHESHIRE- The River Valley Athletic Boosters Club will sponsor the R1vcr Valley lull sports banquet Tuesday at River Valley High
School.
·
•
·
Dean Circle Catering of Gallipolis will provide meals· for parents
.and other guests. The Boos1ers will provide the student·lllhlctcs' and
cheerleaders' meals.

By The Auocllil8d Pren ·

.

RVHS awards banquet Tuesday ·

South Gailia b~sketba/1
season tickets on sale

.

Wednesday - New Items .Added Daily.

O'DELL INVENTORY
LUMBER =cnoN

!•

GALLIPOLIS - The Clilf&lt;idc Gvlf Cluh Bourd of Directors met
on Nov. 12 and elected Brett Epling'" president, Shelley Haskins as .
v1cc pres1den1, Tom Meadn'l'"s as tre:~surer and Nancy Ohlinger as secretary.
The following committee heads were selected:
'
Com mince on Housel' Mcm.lnws
Committee on Grounds: !'.{&gt;ling
Commiucc on Finance: Dick Brown
.,,
Committee on Sports and Pastimes: Jon Cunningham
.
Committee on Social Activities: Ohlinger
Committee on Publicity: Huskins
Commiucc on Assessments: Brown, George Pope and Ron.Toler
There will he a meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Shrine Club to
discuss the prosposcd assessment and improvements to the course.
For more informntioit, cull Huskins at 992-6637. .
'

Class registration deadline Monday

Sale Extended Monday

.. Red Wings beat Sharks 5-1;
_, Islanders tie Panthers 3-3

•
Vernon Reams-TB/CB ............................................... Sr.
Eric Mitchell-WR .......................................................Sr.
Ben Robey-QB ....., ...................................................... 10
Nathan Stalder-TB ..................................................... Sr.
Chris Kight-Rover .............................. ........................ Sr.
Shad Wonders-FBIDT.. ............................................ :.Sr.
Ryan Stevens·TEILB ................................................. Sr.

Playrr 61: posjtjon
fin
ADAM BARRETT-OT/DT .................................. .. .. .Sr.
AARON HOCKMAN-OTIDT ............. :..................... Sr.
RICKY HOOVER-OGIDE ............ ...... ...................... Sr.
B.J. NICHOLSON-GIDE ............ .. ....... ,..................... Sr.
JASON ROUSH-CILB ... .... ........ ............................... Jr.
JUSTIN ROUSH-FB .................................................. Fr.
MATT WILLIAMS-TBIDB ............. :......................... Jr.
Ryan Bobb-HBILB ..................................................... Sr.
Todd Braden-FBILB .................. ........................... .. ... .Jr.
Mike Claar-HBIS ....................................................... Sr.
Brian McGraw-OG/DT .. ............ ................................ Sr.
J.D. Ousley-HB/CB ........ ........ ............ ,.... ....... .,.......... Jr.
Jason Wells-CIDE .............................. :.:.. ................ ... Sr.
Ma.u Whittington-OGING .................. ;,,.. ...................Sr.
Eric Chevillier-FBILB ................................................ Sr.
Steve Cox-TB'LB .: .................................................. ... Sr.
, Jim McCoy-C/LB .. ... :.......... ,......................................Sr.

Pornelby • Middleport • Galllpolll;s~,O~H~·~P~o~lnt~Piu~~u:"'~WV~~-=;-;---;----:::---:~~:!'~·~·~-~~,~~~==-·~·P~egt!!~BS

-~... ~nclay. November 17, 1996
ln theNHL,

Sunday, November 17, 11M

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Plea..nt, WV

II

•
·'

'•'

I

•

'

.(

.,

�•
I

.:Jklnday, November 17, 1896

Sunday,No~ber17,1~

Pome"-Y • Middleport • Gelllpolll, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

scon

JAMIE EVANS

ceptions and 80 tackles on the defensive side of tbe ball for Greg Gilders'
Lancers.
Southern players selected to the team were seniors Jesse Maynard and
Jamie Evans. Maynard was one of. the area's top passers, being well suited
to Daye Barr's run-and-shOOI offense. Maynard was 122-for-212 passing
with 1,4~5 yards, 10 interceptions. ~nd 23 touchdowns. Maynard and Evans
were Southern's Offensive and Defehsive Players of the Year, respeclively.
Jamie Evans had 67 receptions for 602 yards. On the defensive unit,
Evans finished the season with 120 tackles.
Eastern players earning honors were seniors Jeromee Calaway and lineman Billy Francis.
.
Calaway finished with 35 carries for 210 yards and caughl 13 passes for
258 yards. Calaway averaged better than 10 tackles per game, ending the
season with I~ l tackles Iota!
Francis, one of the area's top linemen, finished with 10 tackles. on the
season.
•
Here are the members of the TVC Hocking Division team.

Z.Ch Miller-QB/DB .... ...............................................Sr.
Brian Camecbis-WRIDB ................................... .........Sr.
Josh McClelland-TM&gt;E ............................................Jr.
BradyTrace-FBILB .................................................... So.
Nick Altier-LB ........................................................ ... Sr.
Healh Howdyshell-TB .......................................:.......So.
Anthony Riley-LB ............................... .... .................. Jr.
JESSE MAYNARD-QB .. .................. .. ..................... .Sr.
JAMIE EVANS-WR ........................................... ....... Sr.
JEROMEE CALAWAY-LB ...................................... Sr.
BILL FRANCIS-T/DT ........................................ ....,.. Sr.

JESSE MAYNARD

Trimble
Trimble

Trimble
Trimble

.

Mill~r
Mill~

.8y SAM WILSON
•Times-Sentinel eom.ponclent
; Good things are happening (cir Rio Grande ath:Ietics. The soccer team is playing in !be Great
i~es Regionals, and last Thesday the Redmon ·
,4efeated Wilberforce by a 67-90 score. Basketball
season is back and !be Redmen have begun their march to Tulsa.
i •. Against the Bulldogs, Sherron Wilkerson had 26 points, seven rebounds.
'
five -assists and three steals.
Jason Cruse adc!ed 20 po\nts, II
rebolinds and five assists. The
team shot53 .5 percent from lhe
field and held Wilberforce to
38.9 percent shooting.
..rllitlJ .;,:,;._;t") ::q1Tl1tese are just a few of the early
of what the Redmen
· ·
· · · '
· · ' ·.
in store for their oppo=-:·: ·.- ..··.·_ , , ·. '-·&lt;··'
_.......
·' .; ',,. :: .,:-:,__: ._. :·. nents.
'
, -. '. ··_
,·.·.· &gt; - . • , . . . . ( . I was especially pleased with
' '·· ·. ,,.,.' . ·''. ·· ·· · · :· ... ·, · ·.· ,. the perf011)lance or Des roy "the
4ieslf(&gt;Yel~' Grant ·he adds an intimidalion factor which few .teams possess.
one of the·most athletic and gifted big men to come to the MOC
quite some time.
:'! It's not by chance that this team is rated eighth in the NAIA polls. l just
· can't believe there are seven teams out there beuer lhen the Redmon. ·
I told you las1 spring thai this team and year was going lo be special for
· Rio Grande hoops. Mark my words, sooner or later all of you will be com·
ing to !be Paul Lyne Center to see for yourselves if this team is for real.
Believe me, as the season g~s on tickets are going ,to be difficult to acquire .
, Co~e .find out for yourself if my words are true. Next Friday is the II th
.Annual Bcvo Francis Classic at the University of Rio Grande. All of you.arc
,nvited 'to attend to lhe Redmen and Redwomen games.
.
ll For those who wrote me about attending the tailkatc pany, il begins at 4
.m. in 1he parking lot next to FRIENDS Cafe. FRIENDS is helping to spono~ the.event. Look for the big te~t with the sign: "Sam and Jake's WaJ Party:

Miller
SOliTHE~
SOliTHERt'
EASTERN
EASTERN

..J ~===--~-==---

BILLY FRANCIS

iNASCAR sche~ules exhibition race for Saturday in Japan
events.
about what our sport is. That's one
The Winston Select was on a 1.5- .o f the biggest things, to ,go down
~
Seven tlfousand miles is a long mile oval. The Japanese race will be lhere and show them what we're all
;; w~y lo go just to run an exhibition run on thel.4-mile Suzuku Circuit- about."
; race.
, ,
lana East road course.
There weri some Winston Cup
~
That is ex~ctly whal a group of
"We're taking the same car we teams and drivers who chose n011o
: · NASCAR's best llll' doing this week,. ran at Walkins Glen," Waltrip said, make this trip, and Wallace doesn't
•: traveling to Suzuka City, Japan, for referri'ng to one of only two road know if his team will continue to
: the Suzuka Thunder Special 100 on courses at which the Winston Cup · participate .
: Saturday. ·
series competes. "We ran as high as
"We're going to see how much of
~
"It's an opportunity to see anolh- third or fourth in that race (in a benefit it is for Miller Brewing Co.
; er pan of the world for my wife and August) and wound up finishing sev- and our other sponsors and see haw
; me, and we are certainly looking for- enth. We were real competitive all successful everything is in this first
• ward to getting to do that, as well as day."
race," Wallace said. "I really thought

,. 8y MIKE HARRIS
~ AP Motorsporta Writer

: getting to see another race track,"
~ 'driver Michael Waltrip said.

Wallace was one of lhe two Win-

ston Cup regulars, along with Dale
;
"That's an exciting pan of being Eamhardt, who made a trip to Japan
; a Winst(ln Cup dnver the~ day•, in April to tesftires for.Goodyear and
i We've gotten to open up arid be pan help promote the event. ·
; of new facilities all over the United
"The track's not going to be hard
r States.,''
to gel around to put a good race on,"
:
Along wilh Waltrip, drive,; Rusty Wallace said. "It's got a long frQnt
. _ Wallace, DaleJarrettandEmielrvan straightaway where you're in third
l also are making the trip.
gear or high gear. Everywhere else
~
;'This isjqst another one of\hose on the track, you're in second gear.
; steps, where we get to go to anoth- There will be guys messing with that
~ er pan of lhe world and take our cars
a lot, trying to come up with some: with us and race in a NASCAR-type thing."
·
t race," Waltrip said. "And Winston,
.This time, Wallace will be ready
• of course; has come to the table . for the culture shock of Japan.
again. If we are able 10 win the race, . "Everything looks different," he
r we get another $75,000 for a bonus. said. "The food is all different. 1
::so maybe I've got a little bit more don't understand nothing, the way
: reason l~ be happy abou1 going."
ihc plugs look. the walls, the way the
Wallnpeamed a shot at the bonus showers look. You've just go to
: by win_ning The Winston Select; a understand that when you go over
- non-pomts event, m May at Char- there. It's a differenl world .
~ l!Jtte Motor Speedway. The series
"But the people are very, very ·
; sponsor has offered the $75,000_for- gracious. They like us coming over
: a sweep of the two non-pomts there, but they are 'real ~neducatcd

!

~t\-COUlJth
PHONE 992-2196

when l went overthere that this was

going to be this huge, huge, big deal.
And it's not. It's ~ice people, a nice
little truck and that's about it."
A week ago, JndyCar annouo~ed
it has ~igned a lhree-year.contract to
run PPG Cup points races in Japan
on a banked oval-track being built by
Honda 60 miles nqrth of Tokyo.
Could a similar announcement be in
NASCAWs future?
"Well, I wouldn ' t think that
would be something that would be
good right now," Waltrip said.
"There is a lot of racing to be done
here in the United States .
NASCA.R's job is tough, trying to .
figure out how to make all this come
together. We'll just have to see how
it all plays out., but I'd like to hang
around the United · States for a
while."
Some of the other drivers weren't
especially happy about cutting into
their short time off between seasons.

/1'

'

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court defense, and someone had to
do something. They did, we dldn 't,
and we're 0-1."
Defending NCAA champion
KeniUcky played Clemson in the second game of The Classic, a doubleheader at the RCA D!Jme sponsored
by the Black Coaches Association.
ConnecticUt, which beat lnOiana
by 34 points in the Great Alaska
Shootout last year, lost four sUirters
from that team, including Big East
player of the year Ray Allen. The
Hoosiers lost Big Ten player of the
year Brian Evans.
The inexperience showed.

The first half was a series of
streaks !hal neither team could sus·
lllin . Indiana went almosl four min·
utes llefore its lirst basket. Con·
necticut's only consislent scorer was
Rashamel Jones. a sophomore, who
had 13 points before the break and
21 for the game.
A three-point basket by Jone; put
the Huskies · up 15-12 midway
through the opening period, ~ut
Indiana regained the lead with an 82 burst; including a basket and free
throw by seven-foot freshman Jason
Collier and the second of four threepointers by Reed.

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.j...-Sports briefs,•
f VIlLANOVA, Pa. (AP)- TopNnked Stem Graf defeated Chanda
Rubin 6-0,6-3 at lhc AdvantdCham·
Jlionships.
.
; Graf will f11e4; !14th-ranked Mar;' ne wtrdcl Witineyer, who upsei
Jbth-ICCdcd BarbanfPaulus. l'{o. 4
Novotna overwhelmed Anne
Iller 6-3, 6-0, and f~~:ea Yayuk
ukl, who beat Lisa RaymQnd. S-

' .6-3, 6:-3.

•

•

9
~~;·--····--------· 2.1

t.

.

64-61 with 25 seconds to go.
Reed then hit 1wo free 1hrows
with 18 seconds left and Luke
Jimine&lt;, a freshman reserve, hit two
more 10 seconds later for the final
points of the game.
"It was pretty obvious Indiana
was prepared mentally and we
weren't/' Connecticut coach Jim
Calhoun said.
"Indiana out-willed us, and that
doesn't happen often, J might add,
and we succumbed to that. We did·
n't stay with what we were supposed
to do " Calhoun said.
"doth teams played terrific half-

~

c.--

,.

Speedy Be Quick
wins Lebanon .
Raceway feature

r

•

State
Fann
Sells
Ufe
Insurance.

:NHL games... ·

\Clemson beats·No. 3
~Kentucky 79-71 in OT
.•

By STEVE HERMAN
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Indiana 's heralded freshmen had to
please only one person in !be RCA
Dome crowd of 32,000, and even the
Hoosiers' harshest critic couldn't
find much wrong.
"They accounted for themselves
really well," coach Bob Knight said
al'ter a 68-61 season-opening victo·
ry over Connecticut Friday night.
The Hoosiers started three fres)l·
men and got Slrong inside play from
one of them, 7-foot center Jason Collier, even though they needed the
scoring of juniors Neil Reed and
Andrac Pancrson to beat the
Huskies.
·
"It would he kind of interesting to
be a freshman playing his first game
on national television before 30,000
people," Knight said.
"We made some mistakes. but we
also made some good plays. It was
pleasing for us, because the. ma1ur,i·
ty of our team has not been real great
the I!1St couple of seasons."
.Reed. who had 20 points, and Patterson. who added 14, were ihc only
upperclassmen in the starting lineup.
They had nine points during a I 5-4
streak that broke the game open
midway through the second half. ·
"Defense plays abig pan in any
run. You can' t have some team scoring and some team nol scoring wilhout defense," Reed said. "So defense
is what allows us to win games. And
we're going to have to play it."
Collier added 12 points and led
both teams with I0 rebounds and
four blocked shots. ·
"Coming in here, especially 1he
freshmen coming in here and contributi.ng and how much coach
Knight has really put his faith in us
and let us play our game, I'm really
pleased so far with what we've
done," Collier said.
"Winning againsl UConn is really a nice win for us."
Indiana took a 54-43 lead wilh
eight minutes to go. Connecticut,
which started two freshmen Itself,
.got eight points from Kevin Freeman. another freshman, and pulled to

with 20 points, eight in the overtime
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - ·The including 1he three-point play that
:~ast time Rick Pitino walked off the gave Clemson the lead for good at
''COUrt after a game last seas1&gt;n he was 70-67 with 2:48 left.
::Wearing the smile of a man who had
The three-point play was a dunk
LEBANON, Ohio (A:P)
:Just won the national champiomship. on a nice wraparound pass from Speedy Be Quick won Friday night's
' The first time he walked off the Greg Buckner, who had received a Lebanon Raceway feature, pacing
tl:ourt this season he looked ·like a nice lob pass from lkcr Iturbc.
the mile in 1:581o give Eric Ledford
!coach whose team had just shown it · "Once I' got the ball it was just a his fifth victory o.f the night.
!has a long way' to go to come any- matter of extending my arms to the
The wimier look the lead at about ·
~where near the heights of last season . 1im," the 6-fool-8 sophmorc center the halfway mark a~d paid $2.60,
•' Third-ranked Kentucky became said. "We're just happy that we $2.20 and $2.40.
itoo .lhird straight defending national __ responded so w~!l and the way we
Jehanna was second by two
i\:hampion to lose its opening game got on the glass.
lengths, relurning $3.80 and $2.20
·~~fihc season when it fell to No. 20
Buckner and Terrell Mcintyre . and Ann's Magical Laag paid $3 .60
Cicmson 79-71 in overtime Frid~y each had · l3' points for the Tigers, ' to show.
· ighl in The Classic.
while lturbe, who missed all last seaThe combination of 1-4 was
Few e~pectcd the Wildcats to son with a blood clot in right shoul- worth $30 in the late daily double.
1
:P,atch the domination of last 'sea- der, had 12.
;son's team that ·went 34-2 w1th an
Derek Anderson led the Wildcats
· lovcrage margin of victory of 22 with 22 points and Ron Mercer had .
points. Even fewer· expeclcd the 16.
~roubles the current team showed in
UCLA lost as dcCcnding champi,!.hc _loss to Clemson, a veteran team on last season to Santa Clara in the
hat !lladc up a IO-p9int dclicit car- Maui Invitational. The year before,
y in the second half and exploited Arkansas opened the season hy loshe Wildcats' luck of an inside game ing to Massachusetts in the Tipoll
1!Nith layup after layup and ·a 33-21
Clu."ic.
. bound .advantage.
In the opening game of the dou".LaSI year we were a great blehcadcr, which was played at the
~~cam," Pitino said. "We have be~n RCA Dome and sponsored by the
racticing for four weeks and 1 Black Couches Association. Indiana
beat. Connecticut 68-61.
•
~aven't even seen a good team. I m
~cry surprised we kept ,!' close
nough to get to ovcrttme.
Pitino couldn't find a bright spol,
01 after -Kentucky went l,for-10
rom the field in the overtime: 8-for. 5 from thrcc:point range and 11.
.
$
or-18 from the loul 'line.Remington 12 ga. slug..•
S pk
~ "I don't think any of our players
5
played well," Pitino said . "We took
Remington 20 ga slug--·..········-·········-5 pk
bad shots, took too many threes and
5
Remington 16 ga. slug."""";.··-··-·····---- 2~29 5 pk
l.lidn't block out. You also can't win
5
~lose games shooting li'ce throws
Winchester
12
ga.
slug..
·-""""""""
5 pk
!:ike that. I'm not happy and I haven't.
5
llccn happy and I didn't expect 10 he
Winchester
20
ga.
slug""'"""-""""""-5 pk
happy." '
Clemson co.ach Rick Barnes ':"as
ppy, but it was a controlled JOY,
ne of a coach who knows lhts was
· c season opener:··
f. "Ou( players have to feel good
~ut it's early and we have to keep
' o!ng," Barnes said. "It's an excelnt win but we have to do some5
- ing wilh it. It's a long way to
~arch.
·
1: "This doesn't mean anything if
~e don't keep the attitude we have
+
ad the last two years." said Barnes,
.
•
.
.
.
5
ho last season took the Tiger~ to ·
eir first NCAA tournament smce
990. "There's no question they arc
ing to g_et better and better. The
uestion for -us is are we ~oing to get
5
.
Iter ancj better." .
&gt;' Hau:old' Jamison led the· Tigers
••

more aggreSsive without the tax."

agent Tom Reich said.
Clemens, perhaps ready to leave
the Boston Red So&lt;. may he
11Afl PAlM
approached by the N,cw York Yankees. He wants a four-year deal.
Smolt7., the NL Cy Young Award·
winner, would prefer to stay with·the
Braves, but says he won't take less
INIUIANCI
.
liD
money to remain in Atlanta.
"It looks to me like the better free
agents wil! do very well and then
there will he a hunch· of guys at the
low end who wil.l get squeezed, "'i.
has hccn the case in the last five
years," agent Craig Fenech said.
Under the original schedule, lhe
signing season would have tlcg:un
'
Monday, hut it wu.' pushed back four
days
to allow extra time for a lahor
•
,
(Continued
from B-$)
deal.
~ Moreau had three-point perfor"You can't just keep waiting,"
: mances in the losing cause. They · Dombrowski said. "We've already
~combined on all the Chicago goals,
lost some time because of this. We
~but it wasn 'r enough to . keep the
need to get to thc .point of making ·
some· moves."
'
i Blackhawks from losing for just the
1
;second time tl)is season on the road.
Seventy free agents already have
.! Zhamnov scored twice in the
filed, aod up to 31 more could join
:second period, and Moreau tied the · lhem by Monday. Players in the lat342 2nd Ave. Gallipolis
;game 3:43 into the third for Chica- . icr group arc covered hy the restric446-4290
, •gO- now 5-2-2 on-the road.
tion against repeat free 'agency in a
t Wade Redden, Steve Duchesne five-year spun and can file only if
State Famt Life Insurance Company
iond Randy Cunneywonh also scored
they weren 't offered salary arbitra-Home
Office: BI9CJminJ10n, Illinois
tion by midnight EST Saturday.
:for Ottawa.
Stars 4, Mighty Ducks 3
, Jamie Langeitbrunner's goal with
• II :42 to play completed a third-peri;od comeback, and Andy Moog got ·
•his 336th career victory as Dallas
lbeat 'Anaheim.
·
· : Anaheim opened the third period
:with a 3-2 lead, but Sergei Zubov
~i~ it with 15:39 to play with a powlet play blast froni the poin1, his third
s..
;coal of lhe season.
Jerry
Bibbee
' The Stan III'C Il-l in their! run 12
Marvin
Keebaugh
:.Metings wilh the Mighty Ducks,
Doc Hayman
:improving -to 3-1-1 in their last five
Clark Reed
:11nteS and beating Anaheim for the
:SCCOnd time in five days.
.
Moog hltd to make only 18 saves
auto,
., he moved into sole possession of
lwlllltJtt clolh, Interior, AC, a~ttreo cau,
4ixth place ,in
wins among
Pl, tilt, crulae, 37 K miles. 1-owner.
Sh8J11Van
.
.
NHL Joaltenders. Moog started the
)lilfd tied for sixth with his boyhood
hero, Oump Wonley.

'

:

Smaltz and Clemens head
1
agent corps
. iist of baseball's free
.

Baltimore decided it won't offer
arbitration to Bobby Bonilla and
Eddie Murray.

.

I

::SY JIM O'CONNELL'

~ Belle,

; By RONALD BLUM .
~ . NEW YORK (AP) Albert
• Belle,-John Smoltz, Roger Clemens
~ and the other free agents finally can
; stan talking money. And there's cer: tai.nly no lack of interest.
; It didn't take long Friday for the
:,Marlins to speak with Belle's agent,
~ Am Tellem.
r
"We talked parameters of dollars.
( We expressed our feelings. They
: expresse&lt;l their feelings," Aorida
: general man'ager Dave Dombrowski
; said. "We continue to be interested
r in him."
'
:. With the collapse of efforts for a
•.new colleclive bargaining sea~on,
: basehall's free-agent signing season
~ began with no luxury tax and no rev; enue sharing to discourage large~ market teams from adding high-

ake No Prisoners!"
·
·
'.
~ ,,'
~: Enjoy the pageantry and excitement of college basketball. Wear your
:J,I.edmen apparel, have your face painted, mingle with the alumni, staff. fac. ~lty and students, celebrate the classic with some barbecue and a beverage.
lt.fterwitrd, go to the game and cheer for your team and support your college.
:We hope lo ·make this party an annual event at the classic.
~ Since local high school football is over and the X-Files hal.;e moved to
:~unday; you now have no excuse .to stay away. Come and join the fun. As I
~~aid, it's going to be a special year for Rio Grande hoops'
1': Sam Wilson, Ph.D. to an uaoclale profuoor of hlotory allho Untverolly of
,i&lt;lto Grande. An avid fan of all opotta- and a near m~~nlacalfollower ol baoket&lt;ball- he to a nallva of Gary, Ind., Mid a gr~ oflndtena Unlvarally - whlch
\rhould tell readaro o&lt;imothtng oboul where hla head (and Hoosier heart! to.

4tiODLEPOR'T; o\"\

'

priced players . .
"Certainly there arc going to be
teams who would have been subject
to the luxury lux that arc likely to he

~

· ~ · · t:l.o;;ct .,
461 SOUTH THIRD

Indiana beats UConn 68-61 in season opener

Basketball is
:·.back at Rio

Co-players of tbe year: Chris Meek, Alexander; Sani Sechkar, Federal
Hocking
Coach of the year: Dave Boston, Alexander

School
Player &amp; position
firu:
Alexan,er
Travis Meek-FB ............... ........ ............... ................... Sr.
Alexander
Travis Hawk-T ................ ..................... ............... ....... Sr.
'
Alexander
John Ross-T ............................... ................. .... ............ Sr.
Alexander
Mark Riley· TB ................ ..................... ...... :... .. ... ,....... Sr.
Lance Rolston-QBIDB ...... .. ,.................... ................... Jr.
Alexander
Alexander
Jason Hawk-EIDB .... ..... ,...................................:... .,... .Jr.
Mau Riley-NGtr .............. :................. ...... .. .. .... ......... So.
Alexander
Sam Sechkar-FBILB ... :......... ... ...................... ...... ...... Sr. ·Federal Hocking
Kevin Morris-G/NG ............ ...............:.. .......... ......... .. Sr. · Federal Hocking
Lance Richards-QB/HB .. ...... ....... .......................... .;..Sr.
Federal Hocking
Federal Hocking ' - - - --= ____ _
J.R. Sprlnger-HB/OL .. ... .................. ...... ........... ......... Sr.
Justin Edwards-GILB ............... .. .. .................... ... ..... ... .Jr.
Federal Hocking
JEROMEE CALAWAY

tbuJ • Page 87 ·

'

Hocking Divisi·on all-stars include fpur Meigs County players l
By
WOLFE
T-$ Com1plli1dent
POMEROY - Divisipn champion Alexander and runner-up Federal
Hocking dominated the Tri-Valley Conference's Hocking Division all-star
team selected by !be coaches.
~le&gt;&lt;ander placed seve~ players 'on the first team, with Federal Hocking
landmg five selecuons. Tnmble added four, while Miller placed three players on the All-Conference team. Eastern and Southern added two players
each.
·
Alexander head coach Dave Boston was selected TVC Hocking Division
Coach of the Year, while Chris Meek of Alexander and Sam Sechkar of
Federal Hocking shared the TVC Co-Most Valual!ie Player award.
Meek finished !be season rushi,ng 155 times for 584 yards. He picked up
the slack when. Oatley went out wtth an IRJUry dunng the middle of the year.
Sechkar fintshed the season. 124 for 794 yards. He also added six inter-

,_,...., c-...JJ

Pomeroy • Middleport • Qalllpolla, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

•'

'\.

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go•
Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval!

BAUM LUMBER
St8te Route '248

Cheater .

DON TATE MQlORS,.Inc.
ITS WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

98~·.3301

'
•

.'

.,

�•

•

Outdoors

Pegeaa • ~ ' a....._.,_•nloool'

With Purchase
Of Any Vehicle

Beat of
the Bend
•

•
By Bob

Hoeflich

..•

·,

•

FAVORITE
INGREDIENTS
MAKE
INTERESTING
.NEW
ENTREES

•

•

In the Open
By Jim Freeman
Tlmes.Sentlnel Staff

AM/FM CIM, re1rlllder,
.whHia, 1pcH11tripes ......................... ~ ......................
1989 FORD F·150 18240 V8, 8' bed, AfT, sport wheela,

'

.

According to Ohio DOW,

.. ~

Deer ,management
changes will come

1895 CHEVY BLAZER 4X4, 16259, 4 dr, Green, LS.
pkg, AfT, A/C, AM/FM caM, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, luggage

COLUMBUS- (:hange is coming in how the Division of Wildlife
will manage Ohio's deer herd, cure
rcntly estimated to number about
SSO,OOO animals.
"Our goal is to maintain a deer
population thai will allow for maximum recreational opportunity ~hile
minimizing conflicts with agriculture, motor vehicle travel, and other
areas of 'human endeavor," said
wildlife biologist Mike Tonkovich,
wlio leads the Division of Wildlife's
deer management and research
effort.
Regulated sport hunting continues to be the wildlife manJ\6lcr's most
effective tool for maintaintiig the size
of game populations, including deer.

duar mlrrors ............ :................................................. $7668

structure as it relates to deer hunting
in Ohio. While many private
landowners will likely welcome such
changes, some deer hunlcrs who
hunt on public lands will no doubl
question the need for any changes.
'
But a key factor in deer manage.os access. Hunters and deer '
men!
•'
Successful whitetail deer hunters be'in shapefor.the season and to slay
abundance appear· to be moving in
, know the thrill of seeing deer in their within their physical limits .. Out-ofopposite directions on public lands.
" natural . environment, but now a shape hunters can tire easily. Toward
At the same time, aeee-. (o private
''. Michigan exercise physiologist says the end of a long day's hunt, reflexlands continues to decline while
U,at rush could be dangerous to a es can bec6me dulled and gun handeer
numbers are increasing.
dling relaxed in even the most physhunter's heart.
Will
changes in how Ohio's deer
Susan Haapaniemi from William ically fit hunter.
herd
is
managed remedy t)le probBeaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, . . While' many people today do noi
lem'/
Nol
without the help of private
Mich., hooked 25 hunters up to heart have the time or resources to get into
landowners
and Ohio deer hunters,
monitors and sent them into the and stay in shape, most hunters say wildlil'c biologists.
' woods, according to a United Press and everybody else for that matter The Division ofWildlife can pro- can benefil simply by slowing Very conservative harvest regulaInternational report.
vide
expanded deer hunting oppor"The heart rate of hunters would down their pace,.
tions
were
used
in
the
early
history
tunities,
hut private landowners arc
Once that big buck is lying on the
almost double sinlply upon seeing a
of Ohio's modern-day dc.er manal'c- lhe ones who really manage deer on
l&gt;'uck.• ~vim though the hunter was ground, tagged and field dressed, menl program to promote growth of
standing totally still," Haapaniemi hunters oftentimes act as if they have a deer herd thai was absent in the · a local level. Whilc ·all landowners
know they can control access to thc.ir
said.
'
to get it out of the woods immedistate from t 904-.1922. Early deer property, few realize thai they can
One hunter's heart rate jumped .ately.
hunting seasons were short, restrict- , dictate whal hun1crs take from their
from 78 beats a minute to 168 beats
Don't rush. Slow down and relax,
cd to a few counties, and limited 10 property if given the opportunity to
just at the sight ofa deer, the report
take frequent breaks; the deer isn't a bucks-on! y harvest.
,
. hunt on private land.
stated. ·
going apywhere . .Better yet, if posBy
1960,
deer
were
present
in
."Even fewer· people realize the
Most successful deer hunters are : sible get ~ buddy ·tO help you move each of Ohio's 88 counties, though a
·
reproductive
potcnlial qf deer, and as
·aware of this phenomenon, usually
the deer or use an all-terrain vehicle.
statewide
deer
gun
season
did
not
,
such,
landowners
have hccn Jar 1oo
Remember, hunting is not a comknown as "buck fever."
return
until1979.ln
1973,
for
examcQn~crvalivc in not harvcstihg
· The moment when game is first
petitive sport. There is no reward for
ple, antlcrlcss deer permits were used enough deer from their property,"
being the firsl out of the woods.
spotted is a crucial time. With the
to
slow 'he growth of the deer herd. said Tonkovich.
·
excitement, it's easy to rush into a
In 1984, either-sex deer permits
A good · ruic of thumb · for
~ careless or dangerous sbot. Hunters
were
issued
to
slow
herd
growth.
landowners
wishing to stabilize deer
should double their &lt;nution when
Despite these changes and a contin- nu10hers on their property is to harthey first sec a shot, ~nd be sure to
ued increase in harvest, Ohio's deer vest half the estimated number of
clearly identify their target and what
herd still grew.
deer they believe arc present on their
is beyond it.
Even
with
more
hunting
rcgulaland each year. Most importantly, 75
The most dangerous phase of deer
.tion changes in recent years, which percent of those deer harvested must.
., hunting was after the kill, when the
· included creation of urban deer he antlcrlcss deer if numbers arc to
•· men were dragging their trophy - zones and a live-deer bag limit in be stabilit.cd, say wildlife biologists.
COLUMBUS
-The
Ohio
Divithrough the woods and raising their
these
zones, an unlimilcd number of
Assistanec from hunters will he
sion of Travel and Tourism. and
•· heart rates idarmingly high, the
bonus
dee&lt; permits, and a two-week · needed as well. In . breaking with
Ohio
Diyision
of
Wildlife,
again
report indicated.
The problem is the average hunter have joined !heir resources 10 pro- deer gun season, Ohio's deer herd their own tradilions in some cases,
vide toll-free access to weekly hunt- still exceeds desired levels iq m.JSt Ohio's deer hunters will need to seck
js most likely out of shape. Even
new hunling locatiOns as old ones
ing reports through the 1-800- areas of the state.
w-orse, the excitement of a success"Deer
abunilancc
is
at
or
above
become lcs.• productive. Hunters arc
ful deer hunt, coupled with the phys- . BUCKEYE hOtlinc. The rcpons arc
desired
levels
in
about
threc-founh.•
···ulxtatcd
each
Monday.
encouraged
to sw::ck permission hum ·
ical demands involved can resull in
of Ohio's 88 counties. We estimate .landowner. long heli1re deer hunting
Initialed
last
year,
the
hunting
a deadly combination for out-ofreport can he accessed by caller's to that this year alone, hunters will have season hegins if they wish to hunt on ..
shape hunters.
the
I-MOO-BUCKEYE line 24 hours to take 33,000 more antlcrlcss deer private land. Ethical hunters will he
Like many today, hunters arc
a day, seven days a week. Easy to compared to Ia." year just to prevent · welcomed by many landowners and
likely to lead a sedentary lil'cstylc.
But on the first day of deer season, · IOIIow inslruclions to ucccss the the deer herd from growing. But to invited to perhaps return in future
repol'\ arc provided at the beginning reach lhc division's target goals liJr hunting SCll'iOOS.
_ they put on about 20 pounds of clothall counties, we' need to sec the .
of
the toll-free call.
Additionally, huck-only hunlers
ing and equipment and attempt to
antlcrlcss deer harvest increase hy as will nc~d lo do their share :11. conhunling
rcpons
incl~de inl&lt;&gt;rThe
trundle over the hi'lls hpd valleys.
much as 64.000 deer over last year," trolling deer hcrU growth, cNhcrwise
Allhough statistical figures are · mation about Ohio's hunting sca.•ons
Tonkovich said.
and
regulations,
localior\s
where
lhe only trophy .class bucks left ill
not available, every year some deer
While
this
year's
deer
hunting
game
populations
arc
abundant,
and
Ohio will be lhnse already mounted.
... hunters will die because they exceednollikcly
Ill produce
regulations
·arc
which
hunling
seasons
arc
currently
Harvesting more antlcrlcss deer is
ed their physical limitations. The
the desired anllerless deer harvest, the only way tn stop herd growth,
open.
The
weekly
rcpons
provided
-::. Ohio Division of Wildlife keeps
by the Division ofWildlilc will con' the Division of Wildlife believes say wildlife biologists. '
tabs on hunlcrs who injure or kill
tinuc
through the end of December hunters would take more c.Jccr ifrcgThuu[!h changes in deer managethcmscl vcs or other hunters, hut
ulati&lt;ms were funhcr lihcrali~cd and ment arc coming next ycur, hunting
or
early
January.
docs not record health-related casu'Thi's gives us an expanded they huc.J more nccc:-~s lo hunting.on regulations alone will nut tctum
alties.
.
to provide useful infor- private lands.
opportunity
deer populations to widely acccplThere Ure several rca~ons why
How would deer hunting oppor-. ahlc levels or maintain the level of
mation
aboul
Ohio's
hunting
opporhunters ' need lo he aware of their
tunities he expanded in 1997'!
tunities," said Division of Wildlife
qualily deer to whi~h Ohioans have
physical limitations and not attcmpl
State wildlilc biologists arc sug- become accustmnciL Only through
chief Michael Dudzik. The wildlife
to exceed them; the biggest reason agency and Division of Travel and .... gesting a series or regulation changes .
~.:nopcmtion or landowners, hunters,
being that fatigue is a prime cause of
Tourism also provide 1-800-BUCK- that would aflcct sea,on lengths, sea- and others, .will harvest .regulations
•· hunting accidents.
son daleS, hag limits and licensing he ellcciivc.
J
Hunters owe it to themselves, EYE callers · with weekly fishing
reports
each
Wednesday,
April
their Jamilics mid hunting buddies to
through September.

!

t

-

Ohio agencies
to provide free ·
access to weekly
hunting reports

I

..

Sports deadlines

--sports briefs-

Horses expensive
The Gallipolis Daily Tribunt,
NEW YORK (AP) - Owning a
Tht Daily Stntinel and the Sunday
racehorse,
especially one that rarely
nmts-Senrinel value the contribuwins,
can
be
an expensive propositions their realf'ers make to the sports
sections of these papers, and they rion.
Trainers usually pay nllthc daily
"' will continue to be published ..
However, certain deadlines for expenses and hill the owners once a
month. The national avcr~gc per bill.
" submissions will be observed.
The deadline for photos and rela{- for each horse is close to $3,000.
Joh'n Kimmel, a veteran trainer
ed articles for football and other fall
and
veterinarian, has this advice for
sports is the Saturday before the
Super Bowl.
· anyone considering going into the
The deadline for pbotos and relat· racing business: "Visit lhc trainer·in
ed articles for basketball (summer the morning and see how he runs
basketball" and related camps fall things around the barns. Then wawh
under the summer sports deadline) him in the paddock before a race to
tutd other winter sports is the last day see how he handles his horse."
·· of the NBA finals.
The deadline for submissions of
TralniRI or ridlni
local baseball- and softball-related
NEW YORK (AP) - Trainer
photos and related articles, from TAngel Cordero, once a leading jock!.11 to the majon, as well as other ey. talks about the difference
aprinl and summer sports, is the day
between training a horse and riding
of lhe last game of lhe World Series.
one.
These deadlines are in place to
"When a horse llntin wins a race,
allow contributorS the time they
I sometimes cry with joy," Cordero
- ' 10 ICCJUire their photos from lhe
s1ys. "My horse to me is like a son.
pholoJraphy studio/developer of When I wu riding. my mount was
)dloi&lt;:e and 10 Jive the Raffs the juS! another hone that I might be
· -~ ~~publish these items in the
seeing
the first tirne."
i\IIJPIIlPfllle season for those sports.
'

for

.,

•

•

COMBINED FINAL NOnFICAnON AND FINDING
OF NO SIGNIFICANT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
The USDA/Rural 1;1.-velopmlnt (USDAIRD) hl8 obtained an
application lor lhMtnclal 1nlatanc• from OaHla County tor thl
Porter/Btdwtlll s.-r ProJect. The propoHd pro)IICt con11111 ol
pt'Miure coiiiiCtlon 111111 w1t11 grlncllt pumJIIIn Port«, conwntlotllll
grwlty collection linea In Btciwelland a coutiilied diiCha,.ellgoon
~ pe.m wltll dllehll,.e ... In ......... CrwiL
USDAIRD "- 111MII d 1ha pllllntlll enwoumentallmpiiCta otlha
projlct IIIII detMnm.d rnldent181 jjtOWIIt could han an tmpect on .011
ecru of Identified -lenda. L11111 wilt Ill conltructacl at:r018 ont1
ftoodpleln lnd nl~ !_trlltma lmp8Ctlng .41 - o f fiOodpleln and ..14
- ol wetlandl.
.,
Thllmpect ol COMtructton ollltlllln ftooelpllllla witt Ill mitlgataCI
by r18torlng plpellnt1 routH to precon1tructlon contour• and
condltlona. Thllmpect ol ~ olllllll In wetlanda will 111
mltlgNd by compt/lng wltll permit IMUIII by 1ha U.S. Amty C4irJ11 o1
Engl011ra 1nc1 1ha recommenclltlon• of till u.s. Fllh 1nd Wflclllltt

~.

·•

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running bQ,arda......................................................... $5995

•

Report .points out
need for .ti·unter fitness ·

•
•
•

'

· · U8DAIRD hlllwtlllr tllllrmlllld Uti projiiCI wiN not l!gnlllcantly
ellect 1ha quality ol 1ha NnM llhibtwHnt. Tltlrel!n, US~D wHI
not prep1111n anv11'01111111111,lnlplct atltllmlnt tor Uti proJect.
Any written -..nta Nl•dlllll 11118 tlllllmlnltlon ehOuld Ill
povldtd w11111n 11111.111 c11ya
put! Neilton 10:
Llndllt Pttge, IIIII Din :let
U80Mhnl Deuel pmt
200 No!IIIHIIII ....... Roonll07
Columllul, Ott 41111
'
USOAIRD will ...... no tilr1har diiCIIIanlf::cdlng title PtOiict
during thllllftaltt U, period. R1q1 I II kt NO-- I ~ ol, kt
NVIew 1111 USDAIRD enwll 01IINIIIII Mllllllllll!l upon wlllclt thll
dllsmlliutlroiiiiiiiiMd II aullllll.tllld to:
lolln I. "-uccl, Runtl Dlnla, 11111t lplclllel
USDAIIIInii,.UII '
1t
141 illltlltlna .. DriW
''1111118, Off

.,.

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rack, aport wheela...••••..•••............•••..••••.••••••....••....$18995
1893 FORD RANGER XLT 16257 Bid liner, iunroof,

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rear ·auder, aport wheels, cuat atrlpes.. :................. $8250
1893 FORD RANGER 18142, AMIFM Clll, sport
wheels, cuat strlpea ................................................ $8800
18931SUZU TRUCK 18160 AM/FM Cl88, sport wheell,

'·

1995 GEO TRACKER 4X4, 16224, AMIFM casa, sport
stripes, sport wheels ............................................. $102n
1994 FORD EXPLORER 4X4, 16275 Green, A/C, A/T,
AM/FM casa, tilt, cruise, leather seats, PW, PL, PS,
luggage rack, sport wheels .................................. $16995

'

'! f

ltuffthe

..

turkey
until Just
before ·
cooking.

v~s

1...994 ME!lCURY VIUAGER 16272 V6, 7 paas, A/T, A/C,
tilt, cruise, PW, PL, PW, dual mlrrora, cloth lnt ... $13465
1992 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 18240, Whlte,A/C, .
AfT, 7 pess, V&amp;, tilt, crurse, PW, PL......................... $7995
1992
CARAVAN 16195, A/T, A/C, AMIFM V&amp;, air
bag, reardef ................................... :.......................... ;. $741~
1992 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 16222, Dove
A/T, A/C, tilt, cruise, 7 paas,
1992 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 16230, Tilt, crusle,
A/C, AM/FM casa, 7 Jllll, air bag........................... $8631
1$93 DODGE GRAND VAN 16214 blue, V&amp;, A/C, A/T, 7
tilt, cruise, PW, PL, air bag, AM/FM casa, rear

:
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,.

.

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..

:

,.

...

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...

·

NEW i\RRI'V.US
1993 FORD MUSTANG

Green, A/C, AM/FM cass,

·· ...
...

cruise,
sunroof,
sportXLT
w_;~:~rr:'Fi;
· d·:·i~~~··b;~;i:·;~~~~
1992 FORD
RANGER
1162n, Red,
long bed,
casa, sport wheels, dual mirrors .......................... .
1992 MERCURY TOPAZ 16246 ................................ .
1989 FORD VAN CONVERSION #6280, Custom stripes,
A/C, AfT, tilt, cruise, 4 captain chairs, running boards.

.

·.··

. . . :,' ~

...

rear ban«?h, long body .............................................
1993 FORD TEMPO GL 16281, White, V&amp;, A/T, A/C,
AM/FM cass, cloth Int. ...................:.....................·....
1994 FORD TAURUS GL M6286, 35,000 miles, AfT, A/C,
AM/FM cass, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, PS, sport

. ·,

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'

wheelS '''''''''"''''~'''''''''"'''''"'''''''""''"''''''''"'''''''':,,$1 0760

• . 0.0 ...,

1995 NISSAN TRUCK #6285, 32,00() miles, bal. of
factory warranty, blue, A/C, ~M/FM cass, chrome
whnls, rear sllde ......................................., ............. $9995
1994 DODGE INTREPID 16284 A/t, A/C. AM/FM cass,
til~

cruise, PW, PL ...........................

~

! ..... ...... . ...........

Arr.

$9916011

1994 FORD TAURUS GL 16283 Green,
A/C, AM/FM
cass. tilt, cruise, PS, PW, PL ..............................;... $925i5
1994 MERCURY SABLE GS M6282 AfT, AJC, AM/FM
caas, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, air bag, ~loth Int........... """"'"'
1989 GEO TRACKER 4X4 M6244 Red ..................... $5495•..,r:
1992 FORD TAURUS 16263, Blue, A/C, AfT, V&amp;, till;
AM/FM rear def. cloth lnt ....... ,................................. $5995
1992 MERCURY TOPAZ 16264, Black, AfT, A/C, AM/FM
casa, tilt, cruise, PW, PL................ .-.........................$5995
1991 GEO STORM 16268, A/C, AM/FM rear det, dual .

mirrors ...................................................................... $5995
1995 GEO METRO M6150 A/C, AM/FM cass, 27000
miles bal of factory warranty .................................: $6995
1992 NISSAN NX #6183, Red, 2 dr, A,M/FM cass, A/C,
1993 PONTIAC SUNBIRD #6199, Blue, 2 dr,A/C,AM/FM

cass ....................;...................................................... $7922

1994 CHEVY CAVAUER R.S.I6256 AfT, A/C, AMIFII
cusJ tilt, crulse......................................................... $8995
1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE 16255, Black, A/C, AfT,

I

MIXING UP NEW

ith only two weeks to go until Thanksgiving, if
you're going to try something a little different from
your traditional fare, it's time to start looking around
forideas.
'
' You can spice up old favorites or create a new favorite
worth second servings.
,
·
Following are·recipes for all the courses of_a Thanksgiving
dinner ·
Roast 1\trkey with old-fashioned bread stuffing
You'll need the basic kitchen equipment here: a cutting
board, a good sharp knife, several large bowls, assorted
saucepans, m&gt;xing spoons, a potato masher or ricer, a 9-inch '
pie plate, a colander and a roasting pan for the tur'key. A turkey
baster will help, but a small ladle (or bent spoon) wil: .;)so do
the trick.
If your tur'key does not come from the market with a builtin plastic popup thermometer; you'll need a meat thermometer.
Don't forget an apron, and plenty of hot pads and trivets.
Now, you're on your own, with only the following eaution: ·
Defrost your tur'key in the refrigeJ1!tor, not on the counter.
Never sluff the bird until just before cooking. Refrigerate leftovers as soon as possible. Trust me: These are food safety concerns, and you don't '!_CCd to know all the reasons behind them .
You've got enough on yoor mind already.
1/3 cup butter or margarine
I cup chopped celery
I cup sliced fresh mushrooms or I 4-ouncc can sliced mush- .
rooms, drained (optional)
,
I medium onion, peeled and chopped (you should have
aboul
·
·
·
112 cup)
I teaspoon poultry seasoning or ground sage
114 teaspoon pepper, plu.• more for turkey
1/4 teaspoon sail, plus more. for tu&lt;key
8cups dry bread cubes (store- bought or,homcmade)
3 to 4 cups canned chicken broth
I l 0-to-12 pound turkey
Cooking oil
2 cups dry white wine, dry vermouth or apple cider (inexpensive table wine is fine)
,.

cloth,lnt ..............:..................................................... $7879

II'S difficult to believe that ~
· ~Thanksgiving weekend musical ~f
the Big Bend Minstrel Association ..
will open at the Meigs Junior Hiah ·
School in Middleport in only ·12
days .
It's been nip and tuck all the way
trying to· gi:t the production ready
and there are still a lot of loose ends
around, I grow a bit weary trying to
pick them up. For the most part
Murphy's Law has been quite active
but some helpful· cut members are
helping fight it.

Of course, I planned on a men's
. quartet as a show feature and this
year there was one already organized locally consisting of Denver
Rice, John Anderson, Hugh Grahwn
and Gerald Powell. Graham is from
Gallipolis. However, the dates for
the sho\1'. Friday and Saturday, Nov.
29 and :30, collided on Saturday
night with Gerald Powell's teaching
obligations at Ohio University. Rice
1 came to Ihe · rescue and recruited a
I singer from Milton, W.Va. His name
is Lou Swan and he will come in for
Saturday night's show to fill in for
Powe.ll who will be on hand on Friday night. All of these quanct people
an: members of the Gallipolis bar.bershop chorus. The q~artot will
' re~lly .. be bringing the audience of
1couple of old time songs this year.
And I do mean."oldies."
1&gt;:

. A women's tno was also planned
for the 1996 show which will use the
theme of "Musical Mem&lt;irii:s ." .II,
too, was organized already. Howcv,
er, Debbie Grueser, a member of the
-trio had to . be out of town over
Thanksgiving weekend and · so
couldn't participate. A big problem
until Amy Perrin of Middleport
agreed to rill iiJ..Ihc gap and she's
· ~ttjng along 'well with ot joining
Sharon .Hawley and Dixie Sayre to
rourn_J out the v?"al group.
_

Ju~ior \'{~iie ~{ Chcshhy rcaHy
slapped lhc 'bass around at the 1994 ·
, sho--: and . of cour.e, we all felt
lunior would be back with us this
year on lhe bass fiddle. However, as
it turns oul Junior will be having
surgery at the Holzer Medical Cen- '
ter before the show and will ~oi he
recuperated enough al tile time to
·handle thC lpg.'S work, So 'now we're
lqoking with a magnifying glass in
search of a replacement.
Tho dancing ·linc chorus this year
bout ~ever goi off the ground but
under lhc direction of Michelle
, Mc-coy ,and Rae Gwliadnwsky has
made real progress. A number of the
girls in the line will be dancing in ·
the show for their tirst time ..
Rehearsals arc being held al the
Rivcrbend Arts Council quarters in
Middleport.
And this year's show will feature
two clogging groups from ·the Midnight Cioggers founded some years
· back by Bruce Wolfe. Bruce who
has hccn with Disney World as an
cntenainer for the past five years
. teamed that the 1996 show will be
• the finish of iny participation with
the musicals and ~incc h~ was a cast
Continued on page C-6
•

I

I

Make the st~ffing (you can do this the night before serving):
Melt the buttcr 'or margarine in a small saucepan over mcdiut11low heat. Cook the celery. fresh mushroom&lt; (if using) and
onion in the butter until lender but not brown (5 to lo minutes),
Remove from heat. Stir in poultry seasoning or sage. pepper

A Cranberry Apple Pie usea two
traditional Thanksgiving lngredl·
ents In a different combination.

Continued on page C·7 , ·

AMJFM cass, tilt, cruise, PW, eport wheels ......... ,.. $9995
1995 CHEVY BERETTA M6262, Blue, AfT, A/T, AM/FM air
bag, dual mirrors, 36000 mlles .... ,.......................... $9514
.1991 CHEVY CAPRICE·CLASSIC 16174, VB, AfT, A/C,
AM/FM cass, leather Int. PS, PW, PL, tilt, crulse ... $8495
1993 PONTIAC GRAND AM SE 16205, Whlta, A/C, A/T,
AMJFM cass,
rear def .............................$9814
1994 CHEVY
White, A/C, AM!FM
tilt, dull mirrors,
1~ DLDS CUTLASS
White,
A/T, V&amp;, PW, PL, tilt, crulse,AM/FM Clll ............. l1iiRM
1993 PONTIAC GRAND AM GT 16178, Green, 2 Dr, V6,
A/T, A/C, spor1 wheels, till, cruise; PW, PL ..........$11400
1995 FORD PROBE I6261;Red, A/T, A/C, AM/FM caaa,
tilt, crulaa, PW, Sport wheala., ............... ,.....:........ $10995
1995 FORD I;SCORT LX 16228 Red, A/C, A~ casa.,

..

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Tracin·g the family_tree of the Gallia County Stuarts

cloth ln...................................... ~..............................:. $8915
1994 CHRYSLER 'NEW YORKER 16267, Red, A/C, AIT,
AMIFM caM, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, PS, 45000

.
mlles................................. :......................................$14115

1992 HONDA ACCORD~ 16245 Reel, AfT, A/C, AM/FM
caaa, tilt, crulaa, P. aunroof &amp; windows &amp; locks, anti •
thetleyatem, Sport wheels, rear def, dual

1995 MERCURY MYSTIQUE 16271, AfT, A/C,
Power wlndowa &amp; locka, AM/I'M
1994 PONTIAC GRAND AM 16273
2 Dr, AM/FM
Clll, tilt, crulaa, 44,000 mHea, cloth lnt ............... $10860
1995 OLDS ACHIEVA ~74 Red, A/T, A!C, casa, tilt,
crulaa, power windows &amp; lockl........;................... $10995

.I

or

Gellllt

-~

Never

ot"*

"'*"'CCUIIII~Ia:-~~~---~--~

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They may say, "There's no business like show business," but I don'!
believe it, at least not on the local
!level.

I
I

By JAMES SANDS
Special Comtepondent
The builder of the house at 538
Second Ave.. in Gallipolis was
Charles Sluart. He
had the dwelling put
up in 1879. He lived
there wilh his wife
Missouri
McCall
Stuart for about 15
, years before moving .
back to Harrison
Township. He died
there in 1898.
Stuart was born near Lincoln, a
small village in Harrison Township, .
in 1826. Ironically Sl•oart reseonbled
, Abraham Lincoln. Stuart was iall ,
and commanding in appearance just
like Lincoln.
Stuart rose to the rank of captain
during the Civil War serving in two
short term reaiments that later carne
to be referred to as "squirrel hunter
regiments." He· served in a number
of elective offices in the ·county
inelndina two terms as sheriff ·of
Oallil County. He was elected in
1875 and aalin in 1877.
The Stuart clan was quite numerou1 in the county at one time: but

many of the family reloc'atcd to West
Virginia, including one person who
became quite an athlete. Johnny 'Stuart was born in Tennessee but lived
much of his life in Huntington,
W.Va. and on the Stuart farm n~ar
Lincoln.
In the W.W.l era Stuart starred in
all sports at Huntington · High
Scbool. In 1921 he became the staning quarterback Jor Onio State. In
the 1921 Michigan and Ohio State
football game it was Stuart who
broke open a scoreless tic. Michigan
hndjustpuntedtotheBuckeyes. The
Michigan defenders had g9thered
around the ball to allow it to come to
a stop, when out of nowhere Stuart
picked up the ball · and ran for a
tciuchdown. Ohio State went on to
win at Michigan '"'·0.
Stuart six years later pulled the
same stunt in a pro game when Ashland beat Portsmouth, coached that
year by the famous Jim Thorpe. Sttiart's run save Ashland a 7-6 lllin for
the mythical championship of the
Ohio Valley. Th~ Ashland team had
a host of All Americans in !he f9201
including Leo Raskowski, Pooley
Hubert, - Red Weaver and Red

,..__ _ _""'!_~

{;

area learns held their own . In fact the
ttorec local teams never lost to these
NFL teams. ·
Stuan is best noted though for his
haschall. In fact his name is in the
record book as one of five pitchers
in major league haschall history who
have pitched two complete games in
one day. The la•l person to do that
was Wilbur Wc~xl . pitching for the
Chicago White Snli in the 1970s.
Stuart was brought to the St. Louis
Cardinals in 1923 by manager
Branch Rickey. When· the team
broke camp Stuart was lislcd on the ·
roster as a relief pitcher. In fact until
July 10, 1923 when he started the
first gam'c of a doubleheader against
the Boston Braves, Stuart had never
started a major league game in his
life. In that first· game of July 10,
Stuart gave up only three, hits to the
Braves, IWO singles and one triple,
the IaUer lo clean-up hitter Stuffy
STUART FAMILY· Thl1 houM Wlll bulh In 18781\ay Capt. Chlrlea McGinnis. Stuart walked two, ·hit
· Stuart, who It the time w.. the Sheriff of Gillin County. One
.one and did not strike out anyone.
ber of thl1 0~1 llrge G1llll c'-tn Iller pitched for the st. Louia Ctr· The Cards won II -I. In the second
dlnlle.
•
game of lhe doubleheader July 10
Roberts.
Chicago Bears, New York Giants, the Braves got to Stuart for I0 hits,
Between 1925 and I 930 Ashland, Kansas City Cowboys, Cleveland but only one wenl for extra bases.
Ironton and Huntington pro foot~all Pant,hers, 'Dayto~ Triangles and the · The Cards banscd Brav.es starter
teams played such NA.teams as the · Canton Bull~ogs . UsuaHy the three

'

mem-

Ocschgcr for six runs in the first two . ·
innings and Stuart made the lead
hold up for a 6-3 win. In game two
Stuart had two walks, and again he
had no strikeouts. Stuart later staned
eight more games in 1923, completing five of them. His record for the
year was 9-5.
In 1924 Stuart entered the iota-

ti&lt;~n. He won nine and lost I J. In

1925 . Branch Rickey was fired as
manager. Hornsby was made the
manager and since he and ~tuart
never got along, Stuart was released.
It was unfortunate for Stuart as in
1926 the ('~rds heal the Yankees in
one of the great World Series' of all
time four . games to three. Stuart
returned to Huntington to coach. He
was lhc head basketball coach at
Marshall from 1927 to 1931. H(s
best. year came in 1930 when his
team was 13-2. Johnny "Stud" Stuart
died in 1970.
J - 1 Sanda Ia I IJ)IICIII COI'·
rtlpondent of the Sundlty
n~ S•ntL"'II. Hie lddl"l 11: ·
IS Willow Dr., Springboro, Ohio

45066.

. ..

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PageC2•,

II' - V
•
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Sunday,NovendMw17,1ti8 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleesant, WV.

lia+l
n-

...••

\

•

r:- ~unc~~~y,

NcMmber 17,1t88

'

OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Are you ready to ·lose a job over too much ·salt1

e ug y American

By CRAIG WILSON
say it's OK to put the napkin on my think the young recruit showed a
" What lu~J!pens W\len fJ.Ie
USA TODAY
lap," kids Charlie Kurth, a senior certain enterprise and thrift and recrurter starts hittlng on you?" llfks
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. · economics and government major should have been n:warded with a senior clan vice presidenl Melissa
Didn 't these kids have an Aunt from Bethesda. Md. "I think my job.
Dodd .
.
Edith? Didn't they have anyone who parents might question why I needed
But they are the young and rhe
"How bad do you want the .ipb.
told them to keep their elbows off to come here ronight. But I think it's jobless, so what do they know? They Melissa?" Mahanes responds
the table and to work from the out- a good opportunity. I'm interested in had understood bener the rule of roar fills rbe room.
side in when dealing with silver- investment banking, 311d any e&lt;tra never ordering rhe mosy expensive
But•. of cours~, Mabanes says t's
ware?
edge is good."
item on the menu or the f!!ost ex pen· totally rnappropnate behaviOr on
About 180 upperclassmen at the
The evening is a cross between a sive wine.
recruiter 's pan. and you're ahoost
University of Virginia, most of them Miss Manners lesson, ·a Dale
One young recruit did, Maha.nes entitled to do whatever you wan! at
seniors dressed in their Sunday best, Carnegie course and some old-fash- says, and he didn't get the job either. that point, which delights many! of
paid $15 each for a "Corpomte Eti· ioned tips from "The Rules" girls. It •It didn't help that· he also told the the women present.
.
i
queue Dinner' last week, hoping takes Mahanes three hours to run her recruiter that he had very expensive
Throughout the evemng, Tablt:2
some polished table manners might students through their dining paces, tastes and ex~ted to keep them. students look for pieces of food ln
give'theJlllhat lillie extra edge in the and much of what is taught tonight Bless him, Table 2 thinks.
one another's teeth·. Green be$&gt;s.
job market.
·
could have come from your grandLessons learned here tonight go perhaps. A piece of lenuce. . :
As job recruiters descend on mother. Not that your grandmother beyond the dinner table. Mabai)CS
"And rt's totally appropnate• to
campuses nationwide this fall, stu- knew much about name tags. warns the soon•ro-be job candidates tell theJ1!," Mabanes says.
:.
dents quickly realize an interview . (They' re supposed to be worn on the about dangers of being put up in ·a
Whitney Casey, a hvely serjior
~ould be over lunch or dinner, mak- right, by' the way.)
hotel by a recruiting company.
majoring in sports medicine, thitks
ing the final test of their college
The soup arriv~s and Stephanie
"If you order a video, make sure the evening is fun and education~!.
careers the defr handling of a four- Davis,aseniorfrom Jl,ockville, Md ., 'certain kinds' don't appear on the
"When you go out wtth ol~er
star restaurant.
,
proves a quick study, choosing the bill '·the ~ompany will be paying," people, not just baby boomers, tljey
. Pitfalls are everywhere. Some- proper spoon. Outside right, not she says.
have a lot more requirements at the
thing as simple as salting your food . abo.ve top.
Also, don 't get · in tl1e bathtub dinner table than we do," she s~s.
can win or lose you a job, as we
''I'm Pl1Shingcthe soup . away Jacuzzi and start racking up huge "It's good to know what they are;"
learn later.
.
from me as I speak," she laughs, fol- phone bills by calling every triend
Before the ganache ring gat~au
·This was the fifth year of such lowing Mahanes instructions to you ever made, telling them thar arrives, a quiz: You're about to oput
"etiquelle" dinners at 'UVA. The move the soup spoon throug~ ·the some hots'hot company is pulling food in your mouth, and the recruiter
largest so far.
soup away from you·.
·
you up at this fancy hotel. And that asks you a question. Do you put fhe
The corporate world begap offer"And never blow on the soup," mini-bar in the room?
fork back down. chow it down ·fast,
ing ill-mannered junior managers Mahanes says. "It could splaller on
"Don't open it up. unless you • or put the food in your IJIOUth, eai it
ctiquelle course, a ·few years ago, your recruiter."
want an $8 Snickers bar billed to the slowly, and ponder the questton?l
· and industry sru&lt;Jies still show only ' Potential problems here are crou: recruiter."
The answer, · according 1tc
12 · percent of recent MBAs have tons (avoid Lhe!'l) and bugs swimMore rules come wirh the arrival Mahanes, is No.3.
•
But, really, wliy are ·lhfse
• acceptable manners. The University ming in the soup. Mahanes says of chicken jardiniere. While students
of C:alifomia at Davis has a COfPO· some actually · recommend eating arc cutting bite-size pieces of the scrubbed, eager, bright kids "{bo
rate etiquette course for its MBA around them. The bugs, that is.
boneless breast of chicken, Mahanes appear to be from good homes w&lt;JSt·
students, but UVA remains one of
"I don't rhink so," Davis says .
tells them not to discuss salary, reli- ing their time here?
1
. FOREST AND ROMAYNE HARDESTY , .
.
the few ·schools trying ro nip the
Some rules seem rat~er, let's say, gio,n, poliiics, sexual preferences or
"I think it's because 'it's the first
problem in the bud before its under· . elementary, 1
sports.
·.
time we realize we need it, and it's
grads even begin job interviews.
Never eat your recruiter's meal.
"Can I wear a bow tie?" some- rrot our parents telling us to do this,"
"I promise not to single anyone Never eat all the bread in the basket. one yells out.
says Betsy Kraemer, a senior eco·
SOUTHPOINT
Forest and in Ashland, Ky.
"Sure," Mahanes says.' "It all nomics major from Washington,
out for your manners," Joanne And never ask for the leftovers to
Rom;~yne Hardesty of Southpoint
Formerly of Gallia County, they Mahanes, coordinator of career take home.
depend's on whether you're·comfort- D.C.,' who admits her mother sets a;
celebrated their 50th wedding have one daughter, Carol (David) development at UVA, tells rhe vast
Mahanes tells the story of a able with it."
formal dinner in the dining roein
anniversary Nov. 13 with a trip to Mandt of Dallas, Texas and two hall of young diners as they settle recruiter from Campbell Soup who
Bur don't appl):. lipstick ar rhe every night.
: .
Bmnson, M.o. with their family.
'grandchildren.
inro a four-course dinner that begins rook a job finalist to a four-star table, or wear too much jewelry or
One of Mahane&lt;' final rules ' of
' They were married Nov. 13, 1946
with shrimp bisque.
restaurant. At the end of the nieal the too much cologne, or white socks the evening could be right from
'Seven students at Table 2, ncar young recruit asked for a doggy bag. with a blue suit, nor that Virginia Betsy Kraemer's mother's mouth:
Mahahes' lectern, are poised for the
"He didn't get the job," Mapanes men need to be told that.
"Write a thank you note. Within 1.18
challenge.
says.
And then comes the question of hours. The recruiter will remember
"I'm going lo take aguess and
Some of the students at Table 2 the evening.
you. "

By DOROTHY SAYRE
In our travels in foreip countries, George and I have attempted
not to be the "Ugly American." We
uy to be good-will ambassadors of
our cO&lt;mll)" and respect the differences in our cultures. Having lived
abroad in two countries, George is
instilled with government protocol.
However~ sometimes because of
slight language problem~. it is easy
to make an embarrassing mistake,
even in an E'nglish speaking country.
Usually the words "please." "thank
you," and a smile go a long way,
though.
We had outstanding service in a
hotel in Scotland the magazines
reponed as notorious for rude service. I loved it last year and this year
we weren't sure what to expect after
the negative reports. Again, the hotel
behaved as a "five-star" in the
remote area of Scotland where ir is
located. In ,fact, one of the employees not only fed rhe deer.for us so I
could take photos, but he ~bared his
latest photographs with us late one
evening in an elegant sitting room
complete with a coal and wood fire
to warm the chilly night. I had
admired his photography skill last
year. He is now beginning to make a

1
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Auxiliary Unit 161 Vinton will be . I
p.m. at Ewington Hall. ·
·

•••
•••

1Uesday, Nov. 19

•••

GALLIPOLIS · Choose to Lose
Diet group 9 a.m. Grace United
Methodist Church.
•

•••

· GALLIPOLIS
American
Legion Auxiliary Lafayellc unit 27
meeting 7:30 p.m. at post home on
McCormick Road.

•••

•••

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POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Joyfulaires to sing 1:30 p.m. St.
Pauls United Methodist Church.

~r,~Pomeroy.

, • : Wilson is the granddaughter of
Bernard and Hilda Stanley of Jensen
· Beach, Fla., and Beryl and Virginia
Wilson of Williamstown, W.Va . .
. Ridenour is the grandson of
Robert and Marilynn Trussell of
Chester and Pauline Ridenour of
,. S::hester and the ·tate Buel Ridenour.
:• Wilson is a 1994 graduate. of
.~f

...

~·~. I

CENTENARY • Revival with 7
p.m. Nov. 15 through 17 Centenary
United Methodist Church with ~v.
Calvin Minnis speaking and special
singing.

,. ' RUTLAND _: The wedding of
f'1'ahnee Johnson of Rutland and
;" Martin Andrew of Tilghman, M4.
't:s '"

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0

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards the weddings of Gallia,
Meigs ana Mason counties as news
and publishes wedding stories and
photograpqs without charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeliness. lbe .newspaper prefers to pub·
lish accounts of weddings as soon as
possible after the event.
.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
.taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication. and may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received br
the editorial depanment by Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date of pub·
lication.
Those not making the 60-day
deadline will be published · during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of either the bride or
the bride and groom may be pub·
lished with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger..
·
Poor quality photographs win not
be accepted. Generally, snapshOis or
instant-developing photos are nor of
acceptable quality.
.
All material sut)milted for pubh·
cation is subject to editing.
Questions may be directed to the
editorial depanment from I to 5
p.m. Monday through Friday ar446·
2342.

'

FALL INVENTORY
•
CLEARANCE
ALLRED TAG
REDUCED$599
TO...
DJR

OUR·NEW APPLIANCE
DEPARTMENT IS NOW

OPEN!
JfJS'f ARRIVBI)

ln-Stock
Room Darl&lt;ening
.
'

ROLLER SHADES

j

371/4" X 72"
'

sz~s

APPLIANCES

Borders lit Stock
• Precious Moments
~ Winnie The Pooh
• Religious
• Lord's Supper
SO% OFF Book Prices

. Memorial Bridge App[oach on
Garfield Ave., Parkeretiurg

••··Fri. 9·1
S.t. 9•5:30

Holiday ~pecial
&amp;ve .!&gt;5.00

be submitted within 30 . days of
occurrence,
·
- AH binhdays musr be submiue'd
within 42 days Of the occurrence.
All material submiued for publi·
cation is subject ro editing .
·

Toll Free Number l-800-~5384

Getyourfree gift for .
ChriStmas '96 and extra
cash for Christmas '97.

428·1065
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Our equlp~ent Includes Eagle .variable resistance
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free weight room. life rowers. treadmills. several
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Various membershlp·optlons and payment plans
available. A great gift Idea for the holidays.
For more lnlormatloa pi ·e call our beldtb
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Mon.-Thura. N
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we are taking orders
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' .

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•

Open a Chrislma&lt;~ Club now and receive a FREE .holiday mug or
snow angel ornament.. The Christmas Club is so convellient! Your
quistmas check arrives when you want it most-just in time for
Christmas soopping. Chrislma&lt;~ Club is so easy to join-and so easy
to keep up because you choose the amount of your regular deposits.

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Sugg, RetJII $670
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76·114" tall. 1~ wldl

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West Virginia State
Body-Building Champion

Join the Christma&lt;~ Club now! Gel a free gifl and earn interest on ~
the daily balance in your account. Come in today-it's never too
early to save for Christmas!
·

QUALITY FURNITURE .PLUS·

ing its

Sue, a middle-aged female, was
discovered in 1990 by a woman
walkiag her dog on Williams'
Che:,:ennc River Reservation ranch.

place togo

will be 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 30, ar
the Rutland Church of God. Music
will begin at 1:30 p.m.

.

Wallpaper and
Blind Shop

Some paleontologists speculated
that Sue could sell for up to $5 million. but others suggested Sothcby's,
which is paying to have the fossil
cleaned, could have trouble n:cover-

Haskin&amp;Tanner i., the

'

011tpoll1 Mlddl1pD11 ~
441 111111 . . . . .1 tli-2133

"It's going to · cost Sotheby's
abour a half million dollars to clean
those ·bones, and the d'nosaur bone
p~arket has been depressed hy a lot
of rccenl tyrannosaur discoveries,"
said Dr. Donald Walberg. a paleontologist at the National Academy of
Sciences in Philadelphia. "They'll
never get $1 million, and it's really
sad that Sue has come to this."

• Wedding • Party
Dance • Family Affair
• Black Tie Dimier

•••

'

Paleontologists have described
the •kelcton ,as the most complete
and detailed fossil of aT. rex ever
found. Sothcby's· vice president
David Redden said irs valuf ·is esrimated · at "$1 million plus," but no
fos.sil.of such commercial an&lt;j scienrific importance has ever been on the
open market before .

-l~e O.P.Pici"'l Wov~oL\f
Ce\\tev O.P. Gi\\~ Jov~~\\, ••

•••

Wedding policy

I

was buried for lens of millions of
years.
Discovered embedded in a South
Dakota butte in· 1990, the skeleton
was seized by tl!b federal govern- ·
ment in 1992 from Perer L Larsen,
the commercial fossil dealer who
excavated it. The government said
the land where Sue was found was
under federal jurisdiction and offlimit&gt; ro collectors like Lar!iCn. who
lacked special permits.
Sotheby's is selling the fossil on
behalf of Maurice Williams of Faith
S.D., the Sioux Indian on whose.
ranch Sue
found .

GILMORE

•••

I
I·

~

.

In iln effort to provide our readerwith current news, the Gallipo- _
, lis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sen- ·
l tine! will not accept weddings after
• 60 days from the date of the event.
All club meetings and other news
l articloe&lt; in the society section musr

'Tis The Season:
to Save!·

'*

Need a Tux for the
Holiday
Season? ·
I

------.-News·policy----

Baileys observe 40th

'

Eastern High School and is pursuing
a degree in the physical thempy
assistant program at Shawnee State
University in Portsmouth. She is
employed in media services at
Shawnee.
Ridenour is a 1994 graduate of
Eastern high School. He is pursuing
a bachelor. of science degree in
pathology at. Ohio University in
Athens. He is a lab assistant at Ohio
University working on undergradu.ate research and volunteers il\ the
microbiology Jab ar O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital ; Athens.

NEW YORK (AP) - Sue the
Tyrannosaur spent 65 million years
underground and another four years
being fought over by a commercial
fossil dealer. a Sioux Indian and the
federal government.
'
Now, a Sothcby 's auction. is
cxpecred to decide the owner of the
historic 50-foot Tyrannosaurus rex
skeleton, The New York Times
reported today.
The Times said the fossil will be
.sold in the spring in Manhauanand that the exact date will depend
on how difficulr it is to remove Sue's
bones from
rock in whiclr

Johnson-Tilghman

. ***

~hip

GALLIPOLIS · Communtty '
Cancer Support Group 2 p.m. New
·CROWN CITY . ·Charles Lusher Lj&amp; Lutheran Church.
•••
to speak I I a.m. Good Hope Baptist ... \i·.r
Church.
GALLIPOLIS · BPW meeting
6:30p.m. at Stowaway with Barbara
RODNEY · Rev. Charles Lusher Coleman chairman.
speaking 6 p\ m. Faith Baptist
Church.
MERCERVILLE ~ South Gallia
BILL AND DOLORES BAILEY
...
. . ~igh Sch"!/1 Boosters 7:30 p.m. at
GALLIPOLIS · Gallia County high schooL
Historical Society Board meeting I
•••
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS
· Operation liftoff
MIDDLEPORT ·· Bill and in Pomeroy.
'
meeting
7
p.m.
First Presbyterian
Dolores Milhoan Bailey, Jl413
The couple have a son, Rodney
CENTENARY
•
Rev.
Donnie
Church.
NQble Summit Rd., Middlepon, cel- (Sherrie) Bailey of Pomeroy and a Johnsbn preaching and Harper Famebrated their 40th Wedding anniver- daughter, Rita (Larry). Ball of ily singing 7 p.m. Centenary United .
CHESHIRE · TOPS meeting 10
. sary with a family get-together Sat· Langsville; and three grandchildren, Christian Church.
to
· II a.m. Cheshire United
urday.
Renee ani! Shell.ie Bailey and Wyau
•••
Methodist Church.
They were married Nov. 16, 1956 Ball.
GALLIPOLIS · !75th anniverby Rev. Bates, then pastor of the
Bailey is retired from Federal sary celebration Grace United
EWINOTON · American Legion i
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church Mogul.
i
I

Revival
,
EWINGTON' · Rev. Norm
'Arrington wilr appear at the Ewington Church of Christ in Christian
Union, Nov. 13-15, 7:30p.m.

"

.

Wilson-Ridenour

;.•"·, REEDSVILLE •· Beryl and
::;Linda Wilson . of Reedsville
announce the engagement of their
~ o daughter, Jaime Lynne, to Jared Lee ·
'' t Ridenour, son of Roberta Ridenour
·!!OfPomeroy and John B. Ridenour of

•••

Monday, Nov. 18

•••

JAIME WltsON AND JA~ED RIDENOUR

.. ..,

-----Gallia community calendar _
. ______,

friendly chatter, and we leave them a slightly vulgar
letter Americans
with profuse thank-yous.
George and I have tried not to often usc for a
criticize their foods and customs. restroOm visir. I
Actually, I like their food and they said, "I beg your
make the best cole slaw I've ever pardon?"
She
.
eaten. I'm sure if they came to our repeated her question and I said,
country, they would wonder at so'me "Waiting?" She replied to the affir,
of our dishes and eating habits, mative and we both laughed.
including dipping our French fries
(chips to them) in catsup! They
We do share the same languaae
sprinkle on malt vinegar. It is a mat· with !he British people but the way
ter of taste. Our views differ in toast, each counrry uses a word differently
also. 19sif toast is usually cold, bur makes for some inten:sting experi·
they d&amp;n.:t seem to mind.
ences, and some of their accents an:
Language differences? Imagine very strong. I finally gave up rryin1
the horror of one American who .was to understand numerous people from
visiting in Scotland and asked if he . Gl;lsgow, who have notoriously
wanted to share some crack. That is thick accents. We discovered all
a word used by Britons of all ages to people understood us but 'j'e could,.
mean "chat• or "visit". I heard some n't understand some of them. W~
Irishmen ialking about "cracking" learned to nod at intervals, smile a
with others.:
lot and say, "Tell me more:· AftCr
1be word thar is commonly used all, as a friend recently said, ''1110
all over Great Britain, even in news- reason you go to another c~untry is
papers, but I hadn't heard until this .because i\&gt; is different." I hope .we
year, i~ "queue". One dictionary def- " dldn'r ser relations back a fe)ll hunr
· inirion is: a long file or line of peo- dred years, because we do .not warlt
pie waiting. When a well-dressed to be the "Ugly American" abroad. ·
lady asked me ours ide a restroom if
Dorothy Soyro ond
huo--.,..
I was. queuing ' I'll admit
to
a
bit
of
formerly
of
llotga
County, "",.... .
.
1bout thr• , ..,. 1110 end now rMicte tn 1
surpnse . or downnght shock. I """'" foctng tho Ohio Rt- Jiiot immediately thought she was using Syrowoo.

Battled overT. rex fossil to be auctioned at Sotheby's next spri_ng

'

Hardestys ce_lebrate. 50th

The Community Calendar Is ' Methodist Church Rev. James
published as a .f ree service td Waugh prea~hing 10:45 a.m., carry
non-profit groups wishing to in dinner 12 p.m.' and program at I
announce nwetings and spa- p.m.
clal events. The calendar Is not
GALLIPOLIS · Riverby 'minidesigned to promote sale!i or
fund-raisers of any type. Items crafters meeting 1 p.m. French Art
are printed as space permits Colony.
and cannot be guaranteed to
('"&amp;&lt;····
Nn a specific number of days.
. BIDWELL · All-~ay service at
· Sunday, Nov. 17
Poplar Rid~e FreeWill Bapti'st
Church. Lunch a1 noon. Rev. Bob
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Thompson speaking, singing in the
Narcotics Anonymous Tri County afternoon by the Dan, Hayman
Group 7:30 p.m. 611 Viand St:
Country Hymn Singers.

~,1'

· name for himself and money is
pouring in for his effons. He is now
featured in magazines, calenda.s,
postcards, posters and has been
asked to do 30 jackets for CDs at a
phenomenal price. His photos '"""
exquisite. With his wife's blessing,
be left Wales over a year ago to pursue his dream of becoming a selftaught photogmpher. He went to a
ski area in Scotland and started tak·
ing photos all year of the same subjects plus wildlife and flowers. He
has thousands of shots. Does thar
sound like a stuffy employee?
1be .bus . drivers were so polite
and caring last year that we thought
ir must be a fluke. They were as
wonderful to us this year throughout
England and Scotland. On our return
to London, we went by AirBus from
the train station to Heathrow Airport . We told the driver where we
wanted ro go at Heathrow to find a
hotel for theo night, and he made sure
we weren't fotgotten.
. By just inquiring where some
place is in ·a polite way, we disce&gt;v·
ered people normally bent over
backwards trying to assist us. We
·have had people say, "We arc going
rhat way, just :walk along with us."
·The resulring walk is filled with

r
(:

•

..•.

�\
P8giC4•~ 11

a•

Jundzy, NovemiMr 17, 1811

Sundlly, ~ 17, , ...

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Polnt'P111unt, WV

•

that he was holdins and it broke into
many pieces. He bussed me like I
was never hugged before. I spent
two more happy days with lhese
beautiful and friendly people.
My motto is to be kind to people
in any foreign country and give
them ·a nice souvenir from USA that
goes a long way toward making
fri&lt;nds.
When I was in Kaohsuing, Taiwan I was.booked for five days, but
Taiwan wasn't too inter&lt;sting. So I
wem to the airport to gel my ticket
changed, but the girl working ther&lt;
told me I could not change my ticket· as the Japanese had every seat
booked full all week because they
were having a convention thore. I
showed her an American silver dol-.
Jar and told her it would be hers if
she could get me on tbe next flight
out. She told me to come back in 20
minutes, which I did, and she had
me on the next flight by bumping a
Japanese big sh6t off. I gave. her the
silver dollar and also a $5 bill. I
quickly got on the plane, and as' we
were taxing down ~ runway I saw
that Japanese man jumping up and
down. I knew I had his seat. I imagine that girl lost her job. But she had
a silver dollar and a $5 bill, and I
was on my way to Thailand. I would
like to go back there someday and
see if she still has her job.
When I was in Africa with.Jack
Hanna several years ago I would go

Into a bole!, llld line '-" ._...
that eveninJ. they all came btlck IIIILt
lhrew a bi1 cl!Okout JllltY for me.
This luted until I a.m. They l'OUU!Cij
a pig with . all of the trimmings. !tl
was fantasllc!
"'
I was supposed to fly to Jaklrta
two days later, but I cancelled an4•
stayed in Dalia for four oflhc happi•,
est days of m',life. I have a large
· photo of me and
those wonderful
boys that hangs
in my office. I
often look at it
and think of those
_happy days.
These are just
.
,.a few of the good times I have had ,
traveling by myself, or "solo."
"But when you get in your 80s, you•
cannot do · what you did in you)'o
· younger days, so I reflect upon the
good times I haye had, and I never
get jet Jag on long flights. ! will havt;
to go on conducted tours from no1
on, and I am going to go as long a(
my health and money holds out. I
am having,a book published on m$
travels, and it is supposed to be ou;
next June.
·

Thomas-Neutzling

immune system, shuts · ·down
. By PAUL RECER
processes that repair tissue. blocks
AP Science Wrller
WASHINGTON (AP) - Stress sleep and even breaks down bone,
ried a bouquet of white and navy
and
depression that send emergency said Gold.
blue roses.
He was among the speakers at a
Matron of honor was Krista John- . honnones flowing into ihe. bloodstream
may
help
cause
brittle
bones
two-day
conference of the lntetnason of Chester. She wore a navy
in
women,
infections
and
even
canfor NcuroimlioJal
Society
·dress. Flower girl was Laura Fields
muhomodulation,
a
group
of expens
cer,
rescarcher.s
say.
of Pomeroy. She wore an olf white
W
~Q
study
the
effects
of
stress
and
A .natural "fight or Oi.ght'' reflex ·
lace dress.
The groom wore a black tuxedo that once gave ancient 'humans the depressiOn on.phystcal 'dtscase.
Gold presented a study of bone
.with a V'hite tie and cummerbund, speed and endprance to escape primdensity
among 26 women. half sufitive
dangers
is
.triggered
daily
in
Bestman was Ducky Jobnson · of
many
modern
people,
keeping
their
fering
from
depression and half with
Chester. He wore a black · tuxedo
honnones
at
constant
·hyper-readia
normal
emotional state. The
with a black tie and cummerbund.
A reception was held ip the ness, cxpens say. Even some forms depressed women had high levels of
Church social room following the of depression bring on a similar hor- stress hormones, he said.
Although all the women were age
monal state.
ceremony.
40,
he said, lhosc with depression
"
In
many
people
these
horFollowing a. honeymoon to Ten... had bone dcnsi!y like
'uniformly
moneSI
such
as
conisol,
tum
on
and
nessee, the couple · resides at 28544
stay on for a long time," Dr. Philip that of 70-year-old women . .They
. SR 7 Middleport.
Gold of the · National Institute of were clearly at risk of fractures. The
Mental Health, one of the National · magnitude of bone Joss was surprisInstitutes of Health, said Friday. "If ing.•·
A study at Ohio State University
you are in d~nger, conisol is good
showed
that routine marital disfor you .:. But if it becomes unreguagreements cap cause the "light or
lated, it can produce dise~c ."
In extreme cases, this hormonal Oight" Jiormone reaction .
.
Dr. Janice Kiccoh-Giascr, a psystate destroys appetite, cripples the

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
11IMHienllnel Staff

public with lhc e&lt;eeption of one which is exhibition
table pictur&lt;s, called "Count Your Blessings." In that
.: POMEROY -- The holiday season would not be ~om- · class each garden club in lhc county will be doing a holptete witbcl!ll the Ouistrnas flower show held annually iday table display.
i1Y the Meiss County Garden Clubs Association for
Baubles, gliller, snow, accessories, backgrounds, and
more yean than anyone can remember.
bases are permitted in all anistic design classes. The
&lt; It will lake place next Saturday and , Sunday ill lhc rules, however, preclude contrived flowers, painted,
c.rleton School auditorium at Syracuse, and the public dyed or olhcrwise anificially colored fresh plant materiis' invited to panicipate wilh arrangements, or to come als, although treatment techniques can he used on dried
as spectators to view lhe creative desisns made by oth- plant materials in any class.
Th~ show will be held from I to 4 p:m. both days.
Exhibits are to be in place by noon on Saturday, and
Usually held lhe weekend after Thanksgiving to coin- at I p.m. the judging of entries will take place by an
with other community festivities, the timing was accredited judge of the Ohio Associalion of Garden
anged this year as a way of making it easier for those Clubs.
""o want to see it all but at a more leisurely pace.
Ribbons will be awarded in three places in each class
j
Many
ha~
found
that
too
many
things
on
one
week•• the discretion of the judge. Also to be awarded in the
1
' ~nd make the $!:hcdule just too hectic.
adult classes will be a best of show, reserve best of show,
~ The theme is "Songs of the Season" and the anistic
and a cr&lt;ativity award for designs, and a honiculture
arrangement classes will tell the stories of songs with sweepstakes award for the .exhibitor amassing the most
dtsigns incorporating a variety of techniques and acces- p(lintSTor ribbons.
·
1
sories. The schedule was put together by Betty Dean,
In the junior classes for those under 18, awards will
$&lt;lzy C&amp;rpcnter, Donia Collen, the show chairman, and be made for best of show and reserve best of show, and
~aren Werry.
·
a honiculture sweepstakes award winner will .be select' All of the classes are open for e•hibit to the general ed on the basis or ribbon points.
.

•

.:.

'

Ros_
e joins·'The
Sound of America'

Mu Tawney, area bualnea.man
occaalonally
write"
columna for the Sunday Tlli'IM!&lt;'
Sentinel on hla tnnrela and the,
hlatory of downtown Grlllpolla.

Researchers link hormones of stress with disea·se

TIMOTHY AND LORI NEUTZLING .

CHESHIRE - Lori Lynn Thomas
and nmolhy Robert Neutzling were
united il) mllriage Sept. 14 at the
Cheshire Baptist Church.
Lori is lhc daughter of Fred and
June Thomas of Cheshire. Timothy
is the son of Bill and Sharon Neutzling of Chester. ·
R~v. Howard Ki!llblc perform.ed
the double ring ceremony. Music
was provided by Susie Sigman, and
soloist was Tanya Jeffers.
The bride's gown featured white
satin, off-the-shoulder three tier
sleeVes edred in pearls and a fully
bead&amp;! bodice wilh a natural waistline. Alencon laec and pearl
appliques embellished the skirt and
chapel·l~nglh train. The bride car-

out on my own and meet the natives.
It was an cducarion to lalk lo them
and 10 to lhcir homes, meet their
children, see the way of life they
Jived and worked for a livina. lt is
much different from our life in
America. There is much suffering
and starvation going on in Aftica
today.
In Geneva, Switzerland, I lOCI a
fellow from Iran who later ~arne
over to the Uniled States and stllyed
with me a month. I could write a
long story about this nice fellow. He
now lives in Canada, and I still cor·
r&lt;spond with him. • ·
In traveiJns alone, the. best thing
is lo be nice to the natives. Never
take advantage of ~m - Be kind and
councous, and be proud you are an
American because lhcy are •oalways
glad to shake hands and lalk to an
American.
"' .
Another time I landed in a small
country called Balia which is in
'Indonesia.! introduced myself to the
be~d person at the airpon and asked
him if! could. get.ataxi to take me to
a hotel or some place I could stay,
He told me he would take me on liis
motorcycle in an hour when he got
off work .. I waited lhc hour. because
!here were no 'taxies. In the meantime, I got acquainted ·with the 14
boys who worked there. I gave each
of them $I . That was the best $14 I
ever spent. If I were e•er treated likC
a king, this was it. They cheeked me

- GALLIPOLIS - Jennifer Rose, a
slnior at . Point Pleasant High
!!thobl, has been selected to perform
..tith "The Sound of America" honor

All-County Chorus, and last year
she auditioned
became the first
person in Mason County to be
accepted into lhc West Virginia AllState Chorus.
Each year she compeles
at Marshall' University's
Solo and Ensemble where
she always receives a
superior rating.
Her
sophomore · year Rose
competed at Marshall'&gt;
SCORES contest and
received founh place.
In addition to her musical acti•ities, Rose is also
a varsity cheerleader, a
member of the National
Honor Society, an AllAmerican Scholar, a Peer
Mediator and a member of
Jennifer Rose
the Studenl Council .and
band and chorus.
drama club.
Two students from each state are
All student perfonners will meet
selected to perform. All applicants on. the campus of Dickinson College
ate screened through musical and in Carlisle, Pa. July ·4. After four
character evaluations before being days of rehearsal and orientation, the
chosen. Students Who are accepted group will depan for Luxembourg,
into "The Sound of America" have Germany. The group is scheduled to
ttre opponunity to sing in concert present nine performances in places
h8Jis throughout Europe. In lheir such as St. . Mark_'s Cathe&lt;)ral and
month-long tour, they will visit Ger- EuroDisney during its 25-day tour.
m'any. Austria, Italy, Switzerland
However, along with thi: honor
and France'.
comes lhe ex~nse ofthe tour.
"'Rose '.'Is ihi,. . daughter of Steve
Each stude~t qualified to perform
· Rose and Mary Beth and Mike has to raise his or her own money for
Carlisle, the granddaughter of Anne the trip, uniform, necessary pape.s
·schcr, M,errill and Thelma Rose .all
and some meals. Some students are
Gallipolis and Don Fischer of sponsored by businesses and service
- clubs .in their area.
emont.
She has been involved in the
·'
sic program at Point Pleasant
. Rose estimates she will need . to
cc junior high school. She has raiSe about $4,000. She plans lo
en a member of the band and ·is raise some of the money by per- .
a~tivc . in the chorus. She sang the
forming at least one public rccilal in
alma mater at the homecoming and the spring. She also is available for
t~c National Anthem at soccer and
Chrislmas performances and wedbhskctball games.
dings for a donation. To contacl her
I She has been a meml;&gt;cr of the call 675-6217.

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a

chologist, said study of 90 newly blood samples were taken ju~
wed · couples showed that marriage before discharge. For tbe men, 1 ·
argumcnls were panicularly damag- blood hormone levels were back t~
normal, but'lhe women still had hig ·
ing to women.
In the study, the couples were put levels.
"The stress hormone Ievell
into. a room together with blood
sampling needles in their arms. The showed that the women were muc't'j
blood samples cou Jd be taken at more sensitive 10 negative behaviOCi \
intervals without the subjects know- than were the men," Kiccolt-Giasc"'l
said.
;:
ing it.
A researcher then interviewed the · People with such high levels oC•
couples a~d intentionally prompted stress hormones arc lit a much
~ discussion that aroused disag'l'c- greater risk of getting·sick, said Dr.
ment and argument.
Ronald Glaser, an Ohio State vi role-- '
·:The couples w&lt;!tc at a point in gist and lhc husband of Kiccoll-' '
their maniagc when they should he Glaser.
•'
getting alqng well , when there
"If the hormone levels stay UP; 6
should be little hostility," said longer than they •hould. there is a,,
Kiccoii-Giascr.
·
real risk of infectious disca~." he,,
Yet, samples taken during the dis- sbid.
•,
agreements showed that the women
Glaser tested the ciTccts ofstres'r.l
experienced sudden and hi~h levels on the immune system by giving. 1
of stress hormones, just as if they hepatitis vaccine shots 1o 48 stu-.TJ
were in a ..fight or flight" situation dents, including 23 medic•l student~" ·
of great danger. The women also had in the midst of final examinations.,
steeper increases ~han ·thG men.
Blood lcs)s showed the medical stu:'"
The test continued through an dents had high levels
:,
. of stress hor- ..
overnight hospital stay and mol'!' mom~s .
·

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· Buttrick-Fil~inger·.
t

GALLIPOLIS - Kathy Bullrick
and Trent Fillinger were united in
marriage Sept. 21 at Providence
Missionary Baptist Church on Teens
Run Road.
Kathy is the daughter of Tim and
Kathy Smith. Trent .is the son of
Rhonda Richie Hymel of Lutcher.
La. and Fred Fillinger of Gallipolis.
The ceremony was performed by
Rev. Willard Blankenship.
Maid of bonor was Samantha
McKinney. Flower gjrl was Hannah
Rose of Barboursville .· W.Va. ,

•

'

be submillcd within 30 days of
occurrence.
All 'binhdays must be submilled
within 42 days of the occurrence.
All material submiucd for publication is subject to editing .

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I WS\jpli9S r;\ ~

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The Future Begins In Today,'s Scllools
GALLIPOLIS CITY SCHOOlS.-- A TRADmON OF EXCELLENCE

I!Jl~si~~

· First Y'ear

::
-~
~·
~·

~· Anniversary Sale ~·
j(
'
**20% to 25% ~~
•

•

**45% Off** •
••~~
·Our Large
Selection of
••
Custom Mini and · •'
Vertical Blinds

·Saturday, Dec•.7
l'Oam ~4 p~ ·
&amp;.

..

~

Sale Ends
Nov. 30, 1996
Hurry In TQday

Drapes By De1lgn

•
••
••

SIQ.lday, Dec. 8 .
-Noon to4pm

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••~·
46 State Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ••
614-446-4199

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Davia Hall Bulldtnl
First .Aftnlle, G•Dipnll• ,

s,.... ,..., ..

Holler H.._, C••&amp;er lnrl.ru AcdwlcJ Anodadaa

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The anistic arrangement classes in lhe adult division
are:
"Star of the East": an illuminary design, incorporat·
ing lights as one of the integral components.
.
· "Count Your Blessings": an exhibition table picture,
suitable for Thanksgiving, Christ111as, or New Year's
theme.
"Autumn Leaves" : a design featuring dried materials.
"Harvest Home": A design incorporating fruits and/or
vegetables.
·
·
"Hark, the Herald Angels Sing": a design featuring an
angel or angels.
··
"Oh. Holy Night": a design featuring a Madonna, or
all or pan of the Holy Family.
"Auld Lang Syne" : a Vibratile, an abstract design
characterized by vibration and sound.
"Winter Wonderland": a creative design suggesting
.

w1nte{.

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"Lillie Drummer Boy":. a small design; 6-8 inches.
The junior classes are:
"Ali i Wanl For Christmas": a favorite design.
"Frosty the Snowman": a winter design.
Other e.pressive classes to include wreaths and
swags, package decorations and ornaments are:

"Deck the Halls": wreath, swag or other doorway or
wall decoration, suitable for Thanksgiving, Christmas,
or New Years.
"We Wish You A Merry Christmas": an empty decorated Christmas package suitable for an adult or child,
And a Happy New Year": an empty decorate~ pack·
age suitable for a child or adult, for any special occasion
olher.than Chris~as.
,
"0, Christmas -Tree": a Christmas ornament using
plant material.
There are horticulture classes for needled evergreen
including pine, spruce, hemlock yew, and arbor vitae;
broadleaf evergreen, holly, magnolia and mahonia;
benied branches, pyracantha barberry, cotoneaster, and
euonymous; and potted plants. Christmas cactus,
African violets, blooming ·houseplants, succulents and
foliage houseplants.
. The junior classes are roadside material, dish garde.ns, and polled plan,s, and the educational exhibit will .
feaiure bird houses con.structed by the Carleton School
·workshop, and a display on feeding the birds by the
Chester Garden Club.
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Inmates make moves against chess champ
J~

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PITISBURGH (AP) The chess t;nania among state
inmates who make game
pieces but of toilet 'paper paid
off this week when two of
them beat a vis'iting world
·
grandmaster.
Alex "The Yerminator"
Yermolinsky caine · from
Glevcland to play 20 inmates
at once, walking around a
room for a tum at each board
on Thursday at the State ~or­
rectional lnsti(ution at Piusburgh.
Prisoners got · to use real
chess pieces - made of resin
-for the ~ames or~anized . by
the Piusburgh Chess Club.
Members of -the club challenge inmates a few ti~es a
year.
Inside the prison, competition is fierce, said Michael
Freeman of Beaver County.
"It helps the time 'go by
and c.crcises the mind," he
said.
.Monis Taylor of Pillsburgh
said he plays four hours a day.
"You don't get anything to
show for it, but you get so
much fun out of it," he said.
As the match began. Taylor
announced, "I'm going. to
come out with both guns blaz-

CHESS MATE • Grandmater ch- player Alex "The Yerminetor" Yennolinilky contemplates a move
against Inmate Peter Muse, left as ·G eorge Ha'-r, center looks on during a chess exhibition at W4!ster_n
.
· Rich Mazeffa of Bucks Pennsylvania State Correctional Institution In Plttaburgh, Pa. Thursday. ·
County' w.S the first .to win .
Yennolinsky shook his hand,
He wor~ headphones and
When inmate Dale Madden-EI · novices'?' '
made the uncommon choice to play of Pillsburgh became the second to
· Ken Davcnpon. who lost to Ycr- smiled and shrugged, ·say in g. "You
black pieces, giving Ycrmolinsky claim victory, · he joked: ''I'm the , molinsky, is No. 33 in the state and had no choice."
the first move .
'
United Sratcs' champion righr . "knocking on the door to hl:ing a '
master," said Russ Schuh. city
"I tried to trick hi!" and got
He defeated the Russian-horn now. ''
·u.s. champion in 25 moves.
tricked myself, " Taylor said.
The real champion told the pris- chess club president.
"He bcal me' " Ycrmolinsky oners at I he start that each of them
A fellow prisoner put his ann
exclaimed after the inmate's final had a shot at winnine:.
Taylor was the first to Jose afte•
tactic·.
"I'm happy to sc,; you guys play a\1out an hour of play when the around Taylor and said: " I know
" He basically just blundered ... chess,'' he said. "It makes my ·life rha...;rcr forced him to· move his y.ou like to be first at a lot of things.
but this is pro~ably not what you
Mazcffa said' of The Ycnninntor. wonhwhilc. Whal good is it to he a king.
had in mind."
"He missed a move ."
grandmaster if there arc no
ing."

Pennie's

that are

a far thing from heaven

By LAURALEE ORTIZ
The Palm Springs Desert Sun
Pcn~y candy costs a quarter. Penny
loafers arc out of ~ly le . Penny slot
machines have lost their pull .
And it's rumored that Hcnny
Penny, the chicken who thought the
sky was falling, is ;:onsidcring a
name change.
No wonder the penny, the American icon of thriftiness. is gcttin~ a
bad rap.
·
The big question: Can lhc cop·
per-zinc coin that made its debut in
1793 survive auacks saying !hat it's
not worth the effort io save any-

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Annual Hol!day era~ ~how.

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1 c-.~ Jbt:tl • Page CS

·on the other hand, Castle says, by opponents thul price rounding Benfield added that a study of u
inOation has made the penny more a would cause confusiOn among con- department -store chain concluded
symbol than a measure of purchas- sumers or work in favor of retailers. the company could save $3.2 million
Benfield' said a fair system has' a year without pennies.
ing power.
LAURALEE ORTIZ
That, in pan. is because clerks
The ycncral Accounting Office been · proposed that would round
fhe Palm Spring: De•ert Sun
substantiated his claim, announcing down totals ending in I , 2, 8 and 9 wastC 2 to 2.5 seconds per transac.:
A penny saved is .925 cents earned.
.
that
government lost $8.5 million to and round up totals that end in 3, 4, tion counting out pennies, he says.
Still, it's beller than nothin_g, which is what most people get by lclltng
Maria Fonsica, a clerk at a Circle
6 and 7,
$9.2
million in 1994 in pennies.
!&gt;conics collecl in ajar ~ith a zillion other coins. . .
K
convenience
store in La Quinta.
There
.would
be
no
way
for
retail
While
it
costs
only
eight-tenths
of
At least that's the thmktng behmd a new mvcnuon m grocery stores
Calif..
said
she'll
take rolls of pena cent to· make a penny, the GAO ers to know the total of multiple
hat gives consumers a hassle-free way to clear their pockcrs, dressers
said production J!1d distrihution shot ilcms to fix their prices in . their nics in exchange for merchandise as
nd junk drawers of loose change.
.
. .
. .
long as they're labeled with • name
the
cost of pennies into the red.
favor, he says.
Coinstar Inc·. of Bellevue, Wash., has placcil more Ihan 900 machmcs ·
In
defense
of
the
coin's
demise,
and
phone number.
Not
so.
said
Mint
Director
Philip
hat COUnt UOSOrtCd COins and Spit OUt VOUCher for cash Or ·SlOre purN. D1chl. who charged that the GAO
hoses in grocery slclres in 17 states.
,
mi
scalculated by adding into its '
The company's,takc for the service is 7.5 percent.
the cost of trahsponating
equation
For example, for every $10 in change. the customer gets $9.25.
old
pennies.
Diehl said pennies
more'!
Jeff Alexander of Richmond Public Relations Inc .. the company rcpthe
government
$17.9 milearned
Rep. Michael N. Castle (R-Dcl.).
-escnting Coinstar,.said studies have shown that 75 percent of Americans
doesn't think so. In a July hearing of ,, iion 10 $26.6 million in 1994.
ollect coins, bul only 25,porccntlurn them.in, · ..
Although neither Castle nor any .
the House llanking suhcommillcc in
i'. Coinstar_'s founder, Jcns. H. Molba~. tho~ghi more people woJIId usc
other
congressman so far has introWashin~ton
.
D.C
..
chairman
Castle
.the money tf they drdrl'l have to wrap 11 1 wntc accp11nt numbers on each
duced
lce:islmion 10 toss lhc penny,
prcdil.:lcd that "t his coin 's days arc
'roll and haul it to the bank.
' -; ·
.
the issue of rounded pricing that
!' Alexander said Molbak apparently was righl, because consumers numbered."
would eliminate the need for it has
Supporters
of
the
cent,
including
~ave dumped thousands of dolla~ into the machines since they were
come
up in Congress.
a
lobbying
group
called
Americans
· i~troduce11 in mid-Ausust.
. : ,,
. .
S~P.JlOrlcrs.
Coalifor
Common
&lt;;:cnts.
argue
that
the
I Using~. olnstar m8CIIine is as sim~lc 4s bringint )n a jar; ~'bag or a pul:)lic Jikcc. the penny too much 10 tion, a lobbylikeforthetheCoin'vending
shoe-box , II of coin~ and pourin!,;1hem ·into a tray, '
·· .
.
'
.
'
machine industry, say rounding off
sec it pitched.
totals to the nearest nickel will clim·
In
addition.
says
Mark
Weller,
the
, The Computerized system sons the coins ~!"i w'e~s out things like
inalc the need lo dig in a purse or
group's
c;s;ccutivc
director.
ridding
wedding l'inJ!S, slug~ and buuons.
'·
society of the penny would hun con- hold up a grocery sLOrc line. 1
Jim Benfield, the coalition's
B~mie Bow.er, cofOmunications man~~Jcr 'o r Coinstar. s:iid the average . sumcrs.
.- Rc says st udi~s haw shown that · executive director, hlcw off chamcs
single tran$action is $'30.
A ·
people , cspcoially the poor, still
·
pinch pcrinics.
·
However, one man in San Dimas, Calif.. brought the change he had
When
the
economy
is
good,
pencollected since 1954, she said. The total was $8,100.
TraioT•
nies gel collected in jars and on
JIIQUDES III'OIITIAIT OIIIISTMAS CARDS
.
burcaui.
But,
Weller
says.
when
Santa
Express
'96
' Of all the coins c~Jiccted, pennies ~tc most ~ommop. Alexander said.
AI Yow Favorite Sizes!
Y~taperove
times an;, tough. people real izc the
H1lf-Diy Mystery
coins' value and cash them an.
llxcm&amp;iions For BelieYCrs
1-10xl3 !t 3-8xl0s e 6-Sx7s
P.OStS, StieS &amp;
All Ap'lb Visit Wit~
s.
30 Wallels e 48 Keepsakes
Srnll apt! His Helper
Dec. 1at, lth • 111111
By ANITA MANNING
Research, in today's Science.
· Until now. says Polymcropoulos,
Baaldlnt lttlnllnlkln J
USA TODAY
Researchers studied the DNA of many thought environmental facto"
Ct.wluton, WV
Scientists have d~scovered I he 28 members of a family of nearly caused the dtseasc. whtch rs marke!l.
Moh a,.._,.,. ooia1 a
location of a· mutant gene that caus- 600 descended from an 18th century by tremors. "By localizing a gcnc ·in
ciUIJ oUt Luto a r;,r.tilul
es some cases of Parkinson's dis- Italian couple. More than 60 (ieople · a single family, it confinns" a genetTHE FOLLOWING KMART HAS A STUDIO OPt:N EVERY DAY
ease.
jp the family 'have Parkinson's.
ic culprit
·
Mon.-s.t. 10 am· 7 pm
••.,............. ,1/h.
,The finding is the first proof or a
The gene itsel(has yel to be ideoBut, "I don 't want patients scared
On Sun. tO rm (or atore opening, If later)· 6 pm (or store closing, If
T1cltel Ollce
acned~ cluse for the progressive tilied, but the knowlcdae it exists out of their minds that they're all
norve disorder that affects mor&lt; than • "opens up a new field of research" carrying a gene they're going to pass
1-304-112N412
GALLIPOLIS
' 500 000 Americans, says Mihacl H. that could lead to newlherapies, pre- on to their kids," says Judy Rosner
Older Now!
Polymeropoulos of the National . venli.~n or cur&lt;, says Polyme_ropoq., of the United Parkinson Association.
UrnllldSnluo
~
] .,..,.._,.._
Center for .Human Genome los.
' It's not known if the same gene

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Off** All

Lo~e

THURSDAY
POMEROY -- Meeting nf the
Meigs County Public Lihrnry Board
of DircdQrs will meet Thursday. at I
p.m. at the Pomeroy library.

! Penny-cashing machine rakes
i.
Tin the chang&amp;
~y

MIDDLEPORT '- The Middlepan PTO. 7 p.m. Tuesday with first
and second ·graders to prCscnt a
Thanksgiving' program.

cousin of the groom.
MIDDLEPORT ·- Meigs Junior
Best man was Todd Caner of
Grande . Point. La .. brother of the High, Boosters meeting Monday. 6
groom. Guest book attendant was p.m. at school cafeteria..
Patricia Caner of Lutcher.
MIDDLJ;:PORT -- Middleport
A reception followed the ceremony at Hannan Trace Elementary Village Council regular meeting
School.
·
•11 •
Monday. 7:30p.m. in village council
The bride is a graduate of Gallia chambers.
Academy High School. The groom .
POMEROY -- Pomeroy Village
is a graduate of Hannan Trace High
School and is employed by Louigino . Council regular meeting Monday 7
p.m. in the Pomeroy Municipal
of bckson.
Bu,ildinjf.
They reside in Wellston.

_ _ _ _,News policy---In an effon to provide our reader·
ship wilh current news, the Gallipo·
lis paily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel will not accept weddings after
60 days from the date of the event.
All club meetings and other news
articles in lhc society section must

1

NOVEMBER 17·13, 1996

RUTLAND -- Leading Creek
C&lt;mscrvancy Districl hoard meeting:
Tuesday. 5 p.m.

POMEROY -- Meigs County
Boafd nf Commissioners rc'gular
m ~c'ting Monday. I p.m. in ihc
Mci~s County Courthouse,
·

I

WEEK

POMEROY -- Eagles Auxiliary
2171 meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
Initiation of new mcmhcrs.

¥0NOAY
, POMEROY -- Mci~s County
'\-ibrary Board of Trustees. II a.m.
'r!onday at the prosec utor's office:
P~cr~onncl to be discuss'cd.

i

AMERICAN
EDUCATI.ON

TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club will
hold a blood pressure clinic Tuesday. 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the
townhouse. A Thanksgiving dinner
will follow for club members.

~

mENT AND KATHY FILLINGER .

The Gallipolis City Schools Board or Education
ulutes Its starr
during

. LETART FALLS -- Letart Township Board of Trustees · meeting
Monday. 6 p.m. at !he township
building.

and

~

Meigs community calendar
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non-.
profit groups wbhing to an11ounce
meeting and special events. The .
calendar is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers or any
type. Items are printed as space
penni!' and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.
SUNDAY
.
EEDSVILLE -- Hymn Sing.
Jop a Uniled' Methodist Church.
Su 1 day. 7 p.m. Rev. Bob Randolph.
paslor.
, .

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.Me·igs garden ·clubs to sponsor Christmas flower show

).
Max·Tawney's experiences of traveling alone
By MAX TAWNI!Y
In my younger days when I traveled a lot. I liked lo !ravel alone in
foreign countries, and I never had
anl problems. As soon as I anived at
· my destination and ~heeked everything in, I hurried out with' my camera to take pictures and to meet and
talk to the natives. There are two
good reasons for traveling solo. People are friendlier and easier to meet
when you are a single person. And
you are free to come and go wherever and whenever you want. But if
you are with someone else or in a
group, they might want to do something that you are not interested in.
On my solo trips I always
checked out several hotels and
always got a cheaper hotel than I
would have if I had been with a
group. These were always clean and
in a good neighborhood. I will never
forget when I was in Taxaco, Mexico, I met a man who had a small
store. and I could tell by his actions
that he was glad to meet someone
from America. I had lunch with him
and spent the day with him· and his
many friends. I stayed two extra
days in Taxaco and received a tour
of the city that no tra~el agent could
begin to give you and it cost me
almost nothing.
Seven years later I returned to
Taxaco to see my many friends. I
went to my friend's store and when
he saw me he dropped a large bowl.
'

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Pomeroy • Middleport • a.lllpolls, OH • Point Ple111nt, WV

Scientists discover Parkinson's gene site ·

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True to life story
Ann
Landers·

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: A while back,
you printed a very touchin&amp; column
aboui a i7-year-old boy who
described what it was like to be
killed in a car accident. I have a 16year..old son who is about to get his
driver's 1icense, and I would like
him to see that column. I hope you
will print it again for all the new

'

"Traffic Fatalities."
The day I died was an ondinary
school day. How I wish I had taken
the bus! But I was 100 cool for the
bus. I remember how I wheedled the
car out of Mom. "Special favor," I
pleaded. "All the kids drive." When
the 2:50 p.m. bell rang, I threw my
books in the locker ... free unril
tomorrow mornin&amp;! I ran to the
parking lot, excited at the though! of
driving a car and being my own
boss.
It doesn't matter how the accident happened. I was goofing off- ·
going too fast, taking crazy chances.
But I was enjoying my freedom and
having fun . The last thing I remember was passing an old lady who

seemed to be going awfully slow. I
heard a crash and felt a cerrific jolt.
Glass and sreel flew everywhere.
My whole body seemed to be turning inside out. I heard myself

scream.
Suddenly, I awakened. It was
very quiet. A police officer was
standing over me. I saw a doctor. My
body was mangled. I was saturated
with blood. Pieces of jagged glass
·were sticking out all over. Strange
that I. couldn't feel anything.
Hey, don't pull that sheet over my
head. I can't be dead. I'm only 17.
I've got a date tonight. I'm supposed
to have a wonderful life ahead of
me. I haven't lived yet. I can't he
dead.

Later, I wu placed in a dnwer.
My folks carne to identify me. Why
did they have to see me like this?
Why did I have to look 11 Morn's
eyes when she faced die most terri·
ble ordeal of her life? Dad suddenly
looked very old. He told the man in
charge. "YeS. he's our son."
The funenl was weird. I saw all
of my relatives and friends walk
coward the casket. They looked 11
me with the saddest eyes I've ever
seen. Some of my buddies were cry·
ing. A few of rhe girls touched my
· hand and sobbe4 as they walked by.
Please, somebody-- wake me up!
Get me our ·or here. I can'c hear to
see Mom and Dad in such pain. My
grandparents are so weak from grief

Where to find pet memorial markers
ASII: ANNE • NAN

they can barely walk.
My brother and sister are like
zombies. They move like robots. In
a daze. Everybody. No one c:b
believe this. I can't bel- it. eidh.
Please. don't bury me! I'm nol
dead! I have a lot of liviftJ 10 do! I
want to laugh and run aalin. I w~
to sing and dance. Pleue don't
·
me in the ground! I promise if y
give me just one more chance, G
I'll be che most carefill driver in
whole world. Alii want is one more
chance. Please, God, I'm only 17 .' 1~
Send questions to Ana Latochri,
Craton Syndicate, ~ W. CoiF
tury Blvd., Suite '100, Los Anael~
Calli. 90045
•
,,

ANNE B. ADAMS and
NAah·Cummlngs
..,,, DEAR ANNE AND NAN : A few
illonths ago I was looking at a cata1~ that had a slate grave ma(ker for
·~ pet At the time all of the pets were .
l!J!ire healthy, so I did not keep the
·catalog. Lase week, when we got
back from our vacation, I called our
daughter ami learned that her cat),ad
died. She and her family rent an
apanment and ~ave no place to bury
the dear cat, so they iroze her, waiting for us to rerum.
· We live in the country and have a
spot on our land that is becoming
our very own pet cemetery I Perhaps
some of your readers would .know
what catalog company offered the
slale marker. I have gone through a
large basket of catalogs and huve
found only a plastic one. -- NANC)'
CLINNIN, Marengo, Ill .
DEAR NANCY: We like the idea
fii'J pet memorial markers. We both
trti~e special places on our property
where onr four-footed friend s. are
ll'ilried . Nan intends to he buried
tllhl beside hers; this is still possible

IC

Domestic, .
r---F~---'----c'---~h--.----.- - - .-~ Workman ~;.
.By rom
N.Y
.
..
td
t
e
New
Philadelphia
library
. advances ·;~'..; international
PIKKOJA
automakers·
GAlLIPOLIS_: New York·City in one afterI. n tee·n
noon? Yes, I have seen New York.
· agree on
HaVing just arrived in America, my Jtusband
I were met by a young seminarian sent by our
pageant
host
to guide us from the harbor lo ihe
reducing force · and
"'
train on our way to Ohio. He just look a long way
to do so.
of air bags
Thus, I can tell you that I have walked on Fifth
VILMA

. ' ll

~hurch '

I .

BIDWELL - Melissa Workman,
Avenue and' looked in Macy's windows. I have:
daughter of Tim and Carol Jobnsi&gt;«
peeked into the lobbY of the Waldorf·Astoria
By CATHERINE O'BRIEN
and Dale and Edie Workman both !lf
Hotel and seen the smoke rings an advertising
Atsoelat8d Press Wrttw
Bidwell. has been selected as · M
man was p!lffing high ·up on tho; wall on Times
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Internaencranl in the 1997 Miss Ohio Te!n .
Sqtiare. I have seen the trees in Central Park an!l
tional automakers joined forces with
USA Pageant, Nov. 22 through 24 at
taken a ride on the subway train. I have been bufdomestic automakers Friday and
che
Radisson Airport in Columbus.
feted and pushed by the rushing crowds on their
agreed the government should
·
The
state pageant will ~le&lt;ittii"
way from here co there Ol' wherever. I just hope
change a testing requirement to
year's
Ohio representative (~ . ttl
they were happy when getting there.
al,low them to install air bags that
nationally televised CBS·TV Spelind that was my day in New York 50 years
deploy with less force.
cial
the Miss
ago. When I was slanding next to our luggage
The consensus, ~bed during a
Teen
USA
with my husband on the train platform, while the ·
twO-day conference in Canada, puts
Pageant,
lo
. be
conductor reached for the tickets from our guide,
more pressure on the National Highheld
next
we were ready to drop - so tired from the long
way Traffic Safety Administralion to
August.
•
day just looking for a place to sit down in the
change the test
.
Workman
already moving train.
..
~ · Air bags deployina :at up to 200
was
slilccicd as
And chat is when the puzzled conductor
mph have been blamed for the
an
clhrant·atdeaths of at least 19 adults and 30. approached us - not to shows us co our seat. bur
large and will be
children. The Big Three d'!meslic , staling instead the sad fact that the young man,
competing wjlh
somehow,
had
failed
co
transunit
'
the
seating
automakers have' · ~n pushing to
girls from all
arrangements. Yes, we had paid passage, but no
,
decrease air bag' deployment force
scats until Pittsburgh: From rhcrc on we had seats
THE. GIFT ,t;'F A 611-Ce~~ piece opened t"- doors for VIlma Plkkoja 1 lifetime of work 11 a
over the Buc~:by 20 percent to 30 percen~ arguing
cyc Slate for the
10 Dennision, a small station in Ohio, Tuscarawas librarian. for · Book Week she ehares one of,her many mamorlea or the New Phltadllphla Pubthat less forceful air bags would
County, and then 10 Winfield (that I couldn' t find lie Ubrary, where.ahe nrved as the Children 1 Ubrarlan- •• reflected In this 1957 ph~to.
title of Miss
mean fewer deaths and injuries.
1
Ohio
Teen USA.
Men... 1 '
on the map) . . ·
Meigs-Jackson-Vinton Counties in 1978. For "Book Wcek"l am sharing
Through their industry group She
is
a
student
at
Workman
"'
Our new home. Two tired to woory, I just stood there and hoped I had with you one of my memories in the New Philadelphia Public Library as
the American Automobile ManufacRi
vcr
Valley
High
·•!
nol forgotten the ability to sleep standing up. An ability I h\ld leaned dur- the Children's Librarian .
turers Association - the domestic
School.
While
in
school
she
has
pa,..
ing che war escapes- when traveling in crowded trains so packed that you
automakers have arsued that less
couldn't fall down, even asleep.
'
.ticipated in Key Club, SADD. Ai'l
I have been asked about Bee Wood's book.
forceful air bags cannot be installed
Club, FHA, Varsity ChcerlcadcrSJ.•
That
is
when
a
companment
door
nexuo
us
opened
and
a
gentleman
.
Here is how you can own one - by writing your name, your mailing
. unless the government changes its
NCA All American Cheerleader.
motioned
,us
to
step
in.
He
had
a
bed prepared. He offered to share the address and adding ·a check for $12.50, plus $5 for shipping and handling
test, which requires the bags to
space
by
sitting
up
rather
than
lying
down.
H•had
he
and
of
our
predica'
.
- UCAAII Star. Will Power Tumbliflt1
per book co the following address:
deploy fast enough to cushion an
Team and Ohio Valley Jets.
I' I ·
ment
and
his
gracious
offer
to
share
was
gratefully
accepted
by
two
dead·
Bee Woods, 3 Fox fire Drive, Portland, IN 47371.
·
nnbelted male dummy when a car is
Her
,
sponsors
arc
Wilsn)'l
Truck.,··
tired displaced persons.
o'ra&lt;hed into a wall at 30 mph.
·
ing, Anytime Butcher Shop. lmagG ,
We shared some experiences. He had been to war and IHA,HiiS
Q: Why is c'abbaRt juice helpful?
Domestic automakers want the
Gallery,
Fuccmyer Lumber. Face-&lt;
he. knew how much a steady home would mean. I remcm- ·
.
A: We arc what we cat. Choosing wisely we do
test changed to a so-calied sled test.
rnycr
Forest
Product, Pam ida.. Bob;
find relief in our food. In one of the herbal books I
'111•Y say that test would , better bepernedgivoinfghl'mhi~. a picture of us. I wonder wh~l ever hapEvans
Restaurants
in Gallipolis anlJ,
read about a man who was troubled by painful ulcer&lt;.
appro&lt;imate crashes in the realRio
Grande,
Darrell
Haney. Tom :~ 1
A~d it surel} was my longest day in the memory. It
·
This is what he used: uncooked. raw- unfiltered cal&gt;world - which mostly are of less
·Auto
Clinic.
Zeoli's
Recreate
Vehi~:
hage juice. It docsn 't smell delicious, but using 6-12
force but take place over a longer . started aLdawn with a g[Ccling by rhc sunlight on the Statclcs, Subway, C.C. Caldwell Truck.:
'ue of Liberty, and ending on the train as displaced persons
ounces in the morning and at night, his antacid contime - and would allow them to
lng. lrwins G)as.,, Dailey tire, Frull;l •
but
not
persons
without
scats
thanks
to
someone
who
cared.
sumption
dropped
and
lhc
pain
diminishedbut
after
six
momhs.
he
said
r9tcst vehicles '.quickly enough to
Pharmacy, United Slates and Cana~a ,
Dcnnision was our final station. From there we were taken by car he couldn'ttakc it any more. So, while it doosn' ttaste too good. his wife
install the ,new bags in six months.
.Sales
Inc .. Mournings Oflicc. Supthrough New Philadelphia and through Sugarcreek to Winfield · to Amish keeps some unopened cans of cabbage juice at hand.
Now lt'hat the Association of
1
plies,
Dcannics Pi1.1.a,· Joe Lcadn-·
•·ountry, .our ·first home was the "Miller Farm," which waJ next to a The Raw Cabball' Jylce Trellment
Imcmational Automobile ManufacSoutheastern Business College, TIJP•
co~lmin~ lhiit seeped ugly red water onto the farm land . It was hOI far from
You need a vegetable juicer: Stal1 with live glasses of cabbage juice a
turer&lt; has signed onto the domestic
Medical Shnppc. Carolyn Lilll&lt;~&lt;­
a small country store run by a single Amish lady with lwo grown daugh· day and slow to three glasses a day, writes another patient who round
au10makcrs approach,' the two preK.C. Auto Sales, Baxters Harl~ ,
ter&lt;.
·
.
relief in usc of cabbage juice.
sent a united front in building presDavidson, Tawncys, J.D. Taylorc
It was just 50 years ago chat this Amish lady gave me my first 5Q.ccnt
Cabbage juice remedy is a folk remedy and its origin goes back a few
sure on the govcmrncnl. The two
Doug Cowles, Gallia Auto Sale~,,
piece. It wa&lt; the higgcst money piece I had ever seen. She gave me lhc years to Garnett Cheney, M.D. who reported adding celery juice, tomato
groups issued a joint statement late
Specdos Piu.a, Lynn Angell. Jac~~ ·
money so I could pay the driver to take me to New Philadelphia to visit the juice and citrus juice to the new unpalalable cabbage juice. Let me ·know
Friday. '
Transmissinns.
Criminal Records, ;
public library .1 wanted to sec.
if you try. it wooldn't hurt you!
·
· The NHTSA has been reluctant to
Michael
and
Pticnds.
Smith C~stnm .
This 50-cent piece opened the doors for my life-work of 25 or more
.VIlma Plkkojala allf.-longglll'dallll' and a rounding member of the
change the test hccausc officials
Cabinets,
Dick
Brown
Ins., Brcg~
years. I retired form the Stale Library of Ohio Bookmobile Service for Gallla Area Herbel Guild.
· were uncertain whether 'it would
Saunders,
Rio
Tire
Exchange,
fami, ,
mean fewer adult lives would be
ly
and
friends.
.. ~,
saved in crashes. The bags have
saved 1, 136 lives from 1986 to
1996, according to an agency study.
Agency . officials instead proposed the cum:nt test be changed to
1':
·i
I• '
allow the male dummy's chest to
RIO GRANDE - Recognitions Jessica Collins. Christi Cremeans.
Eighl Grade - Matt Bess.
take 80 tirt)CS the force .of gravity
instead of the current 60 times, for achicvcmcnl in the classroom ~cthany Elliou, Forrest Elliou. ' Joseph Cornelius, Samantha Miller,
which would allow the air bag to during the pa&lt;t year were presented 'Erica Fisher, J.R. Fraley. John Gill, Faye Mullins. Valerie Taylor.
Ninth Grade - · Julie Armstead.
inllate more slowly, three industry during the 12th Gallia County Local Alicia Halley. Megan Harrison, ,
Schools
Academic
Ex'ccllcncc
FounHeather
Hineman,
Cindy
Hodge,
James
Cook. Jeremiah Donnet.
sources said.
dation
banquctlnst
week
at
Buckeye
Amy
HOO&lt;!.
Joshua
Hunter.
Christo·
Adam
Hood.
Lori Kennison, Ashli
However, domestic automakers
phcr Jackson, Kyle McCarley, Erin Pcnningtqn, Jason Veith .
- both in private meetings with · Hills Career Center.
The
.
1996
tc~chcrs
of
the
year
Mcaigc,
Brandon Mitchem , Kyle
Tenth Grade - Nicole Ferguson,
NHTSA and at the Toronto confer· ·
awards
were
presented
to
Jane
Ann
Moon~y.
Ashley
Myers.
Scott
Angie
Keeton.
·
encc- argued that approach would
Slagle
of
River
Valley'
High
School
Payne.
Elizabeth
Preston,
Brandon
Eleventh
Grade
"-James
Armallow them to put less forceful air
bags in only about one-third of thc,ir on the high schoollevei: ·Linda Fer- · Pyles. Ashley Reese . Cassandra strong. Kristic Booten, Christina
vehicles, several industry sources nnll of Vinton Elementary t&gt;n lhc Sheets. Sarah Sheets. Carrie Smith. Booth, Dewuyne Dillard , &lt;;:hris
familiar with the meetings told The middle school level; and Debra Kristin Smith, . Jamie Thcvcnir, Saber.
Rhndes. also of Vinton Elcmcntnry, Adricnec Webb. Jcnnine White. ·
Twelfth Grade - Chris Lane.
Associated Press.
on
the
grade
school
level.
Seventh
Grade
B.J.
Fortner.
Paige
Watts. Amy Williams.
One AAMA official, who spoke
Among the · special awards pre' Celeste Harrington.
3-year .awards
'on ·condition of anonymiiy. conscntcd
were
AEF
scholarships
to
Eighth
Grade
Rebecca
Baird.
Eight
Grade
Jcs.ica
finned those two suggested test
Angie
.Dory.
Lindsay
Fisher.
Eric
Sarah
Cornelius,
Charles
Pco,·:c.
Arrowood.
Dcrccia
Beaver,
Tammy
alternatives have. "really been the
Mulford and Mariana Mitchell , Mcghan Prose, Bohbi Roush , Knty Ferguson. Andrea Fn:cman, Kristen
debate all along."
'fhe automakers also argue that w~ilc Fisher was named the rcc1pi- Swain-Rumley, Tiffany Skidmore, Gillian . Rnhcn John Gruhh, Amber
NHTSA's proposed change to l~ cnl of• the B.J. Hairston Memorial Da~id Stanley. Amanda. Wears. Halley. Rachel Halley. Jeremiah
Nursing Scholarship.
Mclndy Webster.
Harkins. Joshua Harkins, Jennifer
test woold take them 18 months Honored
lor
top
performances
on
Ninth
Grade
Kristina
Berent.
Lewis.
April London. Jessica
tllree times as long as their proposal
the
College
Level
Achievement
Test
Carey
Campbell,
Josie
Hineman
.
.
Northup.
Karena
Pope, Katie Ratliff,
- and would be more costly.
were.
Burry.
Fi•hcr.
Mulford.
Jill
Eleventh
Grade
Christina·
Pam
Roach.
Nichols'
Sm1th. Craig .
In August. the safety agency proSwi sher. Daniel Tenney. Alison
TOP TEACHERS OF THE YEAR - Tht Gallla County l.ocll~
posed a series of mcilsures includin.g Butcher. Justin Halley and Cprtncc Be11.
Schools
Academic Exceller\ce Foundation Hltcteclthe letlchtrs ot'
Wood.
Twclfih
Grade
.Larry
Coon;
Terry,
Matt
Wood.
larger warning labels to reduce aor
The Odyssey of the Mind state Jennifer McGuire. Samantlui Smith.
Ninth Grade - Jonathan Baker, the yur for 18!16 at Ita racent award• banquet From left are Lin~
bag deaths - especially those of
competilion
"crunch"
team
of'John
2-year
awards
Kristin
Harrison, Matthew Milliron, Fematt, VInton Elementary; .J- Ann Slagle, River Valley Hlgi\ ,
children. .
· ;
;
Grubb, Nick Smith, April London.
Seventh Grade - Kyle Arm· Breezy R~berts, Williant Shato, School; and Debra Rhodes, VInton Elementary.
•&lt;!
Cara Butcher, Nick Fisher and T.R. . strong.f Caraleuh Bailey. · Christen Sasha Shriver. ·
·
.
,\1
Edwards was recognized, as wa.~ the Baird. Bethaney . Bryanl, Cara
Tenth Grade - April Layne. nifcr Gondy, Jeremy Sexton.
Amanda Wellington , Chriscinl!
. Odyssey of the Mind .stnte competi- Butcher, Rebekah Calllpbell; Devan Kendra Walker.
Twelfth
Grade
.
Jamie
Birch·
Wellington
, Jennifer Workman. •\i
Col1llnt*l from page c-1
tion "OM Vention" team of Caleb Conrell, Chelsea DeGarmo. 't.R.
Eleventh Grade - Jennifer Lane. f~eld. Charles Curnunc II, Lindsay
Eleventh
Grade - Jcnni Btyan{,l
member for several years wanted to . npcon, C~ndicc Fraley, Nick Fisher. • Edwards, Nicholas Fisher, Candice Misty Sayre, Ian Smilh.
Fisher, Kristi Fowble, Raymond , Bradley Hoffman, T.J. Lamben.
come back to he on hand ,for the Shannon Dailey, Adam Hall and , Fraley, Tiffany Frazee, Devin
'4-year awards
Pauley, Paul Polcyn, Nalhan Waugh,
Twelfth Grade ~ Katie Camden
finale. Bruce will he Hying tn from Jamie Wellinaton.
·
Gcofle. Adam Hall, Monica Helms. · Ninth Grade - Jaret Boothe, Cortnce Wood.
·
6-ycer awanla
·
Orlando Thanksgiving weekend and · Student honorees receiving grade Gennifcr
Henderson,
Jessica Jennifer Cornelius, Marie Denney.
5-year awardl
Eleventh Grade- Dara Belville
will he appearing u a suest artist in .point avera1es of 3.S who were hon- Hungerford, Amanda Lawson, Amy Rashel Fallon, Ryan Fowble, Julie
;renth Grade - .Shasta Amos, Michael Bess, Jill Butcher Jerrod
· the 1996 show. Bruce is the third · ored included:
Lundy. nna Mohler, Justin Mul- Hall. Dustin Johnson. Ha1.cl MeKin· Rebekkah Bowen, Terri Eddy, Abby Ferguson, Cryslal Norman', Holly
generation of the John .Stobart fami!·year awardl
holand, Lindsay· Nida, Eric Nolan, ney, Jessica Mulford. Megan Mul· Goodnttc, Jamtc Isaac, Mary Beth Pyle~. Amy Toler, Eli7.nbelh Vua.
ly to take part in Big Bend Minstrel
Sixth Oracle - Man Arha, Sarah Craig Payne,Jcremy Peck, Shannon ·ford, Miranda .Pcarc:e, Scan Smith, Lively, Brandy Metheney, Sarah
Twelfth Grilde - Angie Bill')'
AssOciation musicals.
·
·Booth, Adam Bowen, Dcmara Rankin. Cara Rocchi, Erin Salyers, Elizabeth Walker.
MinJUS, Matthew Myers, Kathryn Chuity Rccc Craycraft, Mlrlani 1
· So while I in frustration chaK the Brown, Cayla Caldwell. Ashley Jacob Sanders, Lindsay Smich,
Tenth Grade - Jennifer Drum- Non~up, Angela Phoenix, Nick Mitchell, Eric Mulford.
loose ends of the 1996 show. I'll . Cardwell, Tracy Cheney, Jarni Coc, Aaron Wal~cr, Cynthia Warde
field, Kent Butler, ):leth Conley, Jen- · Rocchi. Shalyn Searls, Sarah Ward,
.count on you to keep smilina.

• 1(

.

in Vermont.
cion. because the FDA says we
We found a slare marker and a can'l! Since we sell thoosands of
marble marker in the Alston's pairs each 'year, it appears that, one
Handy Helpers catalog. Tile slate way or another, word is getting.
marker is 12 inches by 8 inches by around." The bands, (item 360388)
1/4-inch.
are $7 .99, plus shi pping. To order,
It has room for 12 spaces and let- call : 1-800-538-0775.
ters for your pet's name; eight
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I have
spaces for the years of life and 15 been trying tQ find brass nails aad
spaces and letters for the memorial screws. The fittings on my doors are
line such as " Best Dog Ever."
90 years old, and I see no reason to
This is item F4357200 and sells change now. Tile nails are decora-.
:"r $39.95 . The smaller (6 inche~by tive. I fccltbe best pllll.e would.be in
4· 112 inches by 2 inches) marble the East, where people don't discard
marker has nine spa~es for the name things after a few years as they do in
and I 0 spaces for the years of life. California. Thank ,you for ~ny help
B4fi markers have .engraved and you can give me, -- LAURA
painted characters. The marble OPALENIK, Alhambra, Calif.
marker (item F-4357300) is $39.95 .
DEAR LAURA: We fo.und a
Shipping for either item is $6.95.
slew. of brass wood"' screws in the
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I have Hamilton Marine, Inc. catalog. This
lerrible trouble with motion sick- Searsport, 'Maine, company has been
ness. I have heard of a nausea-fight· supplying boat build~rs and the fishing band that goes around the wrist. ing industry for years. Give them a
It has a button or something that is call at 1-800-639-2715 .
supposed to press a certain nerve. I ' Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan'' at
have looked everywhere for one. but P.O. Box 240. Hartland, VT 05048.
I can' t f!&amp;\1 it. Can you help me? -- Questions of general interest will
MISS H~ffiER ACHEFF, Scher- appear in the co.lumn. ,Due to the
orville, Ind.
'
volume of mail , personal replies
DEAR HEATHER: West Marine cannot be provided.
in Wotso nvillc, Calif. , . ca']'ies
Anne · B. Adams and Nancy
"Queaz-Away Bands -- ' Sea Legs Nash-Cummings are co-au thors of
you wear on your wrists." They are "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetstone)
clastic bands with ·plastic buttons . and ''Dear Anne and Nan: Two Prize
The te&lt;t in the catalog says, "Per- Problem-Solvers Share Their
haps a fellow boater or traveler has · Secrets" (Bantam); To order, call J.
told you about these lillie Clastic 800·888-1220.
bands. We hope they explained how
Copyright1996 NEWSPA~ER .
they benefit. a squemnish constitu· ENTERPRISE ASSN.

FE.EDING THE NEEDY- This is the eighth year that Dr. N. W. Robinson and Dr. N. P. KlrM of the
Meigs County Chiropractic Clinic have participated in the "Doctor with a Heart" program. The two
provide free medical evaluations in exchange for non-perishable food items which Is distributed
to needy families in the area at Thanksgiving tim!!. Tills year Vaughan's IGA joined In the project
by providing a turke~ for each of !he b~skets which will be prepared and delivered nell1 - k .
From left, are Dr. Robtnson and Dr. Kirne 'Confer with Don Vaughan on the project.

Thanksgiving recipes .. ·---"------------:---------------'-:--

G'·ro' und' '·u·.. ··':.,.'.'··'

Cou.nty school teachers honored at academic banquet:

•

Feedy the need

•

0

Beat of bend ...

Jhalwe c-...- "" ' • Page C7 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WY

.......

open~

younc drivers whose l i - migbl be
saved by teading it. Thanks. -- Sherry from Kentucky
Dear Sherry: The colwnn you
asked for is probably the most effective I have ever published. It is also
one of the most frequently requested. Here i! is: Dead at Seventeen by
John Berrio
Agony' claws my mind. I am a
statistic. When I first got here, I felt
. very muah alone. I was overwhelmed by grief, and I expocled to
find SYJIIP.IIthy.
I found no sympathy.. I saw only
thousands of others whose bOdies
were as badly mangled as mine. I
was given a number and placed in a
calegory. The category was called

o.r. ...._ OH.-..._ wv
•
( _ ......- ... ,.,ii
teens eyes to dangers of careless driVi~gJ

SUnday, November 17, 1996

chips or snack crackers.
., Continued from page C-1
and salt. Place the dry bread
Nola Powers
c s in a large mixing bOwl, add
of
Gallipolis
n mixture•and, if using, canned
brooms. Drizzle with enough
Mashed potatoes
~th ·(1/2 to 3/4 cup) to moiscen,
5
lb.
potato
mashed
(~sing lightly. Coveqnd refrigerate
1-8
oz.
package
.cram cheese
t\)ttil ready to use.
2 tablespoon dried chives
.( Thanksgiving morning: Preheal,
1/8 teaspoon pepper
1\Je oven to ,400 degrees. Take the
l-8 ounce sour cream·
llJrkey out of the fridge, and remove
2 teaspoon salt to taste
~s wrappings. Remove the neck and
2 tablfspoon minced onion
'*'cket 9f giblets (liver and heart)
.IJorn the body cavities. Rinse the
Mash potatoes. Scir · in other
curkey inside and out under cold
ingredients,
· Grease large baking
running water. Pat dry with a clean
dish
with
butter
and add butter on
dish lowe!. Lightly season body cav·
il)&lt; with salt and peppe,r. Spoon some top. Bake at325 degrees for 30 min·
utes. This recipe works well in the
9~ tlte stuffing into lhe neck cavity,
crock pol and can be Jrozcn and.
111111 the neck skin to cover it.
brought out as a "treat."
. • Lighlly spoon. more stuffing into
1!1¢ body cavity do not pack it in ,
Sharon Cole
(l&gt;lace any remaining stuffing in a
or Point Pleasant, W.Va.
ca5serole', cover and chill. Bake this
stuffing alongside the turkey for 30
Sweet Potato Casserole
te-45 minutes before serving.) To
2 1/4 to 2 1/2 lbs. (about 4 cups)
dl»se up the cavity, tuck the drurn- sweet polatocs, cooked·, peeled and
s.licks under the band of skin across
the tail, or into the little plastic mashed
1/3 cup butter or oleo, melted
llliacket that some turkeys come with
2
eggs beaten
when you buy them. If your turkey
1/2 cup milk
tri&lt; neither, ti"' the drumsticks
I teaspoon vanilla
lligether with a bit of string.
1'/2 cup sugar
·CPJace turkey, breast side up on a
Topping:
rai:k in a shallow baking pan . Rub
1/2 cup chopped nuts
tUrkey with cooking oil (Ito 2 table1/2 cup shredded coconut
~ons) an'd sprinkle with salt and .
112 cup packed brown sugar
·pepper. Pour a cup of wine or cider
3 tablespoons butter or o)eo,
o...,r the turkey, and a cup of chicken broth. Cover the breast with a melted.
pitce of aluminum foil to prevent
In a large mixing bowl , combine
o•erbrowning. If your turkey does mashed potatoes, buuer, eggs; milk,
dot come with a little thermometer vanilla and sugar. Spread into a
bUilt in, insert a meat theimometer greased I 1/2 quart casserole. For
irl!o the center of one of. the inside topping, combine all ingredients and
thigh muscles. not touching the sprinkle over potatoes. Bake at 375
bone. Put in the oven and tum the degrees for 25 minutes or until healheat down to 325 degree s.
ed through. Makes 6to8 servings.
Plan on roasting the turkey aboul
2&lt;l minutes a pound (about 4 hours
Pauline Wolfe ·
fdr a 12-pounder); the meat tber·
of Racine
:!lil&gt;lll&lt;,ter will register between 1.80
185 degrees when the turkey is
Aulumn Apple Salad
. In che meantime, use a turkey
I can crushed pineapple (20
or a small ladle to scoop up
ounces) undrained
thai accumula1es on the bot213 cup sugar
of the pan and squirt or pour it
I package (3 ounces) lemon Jello
the turkey (you'll have to lift
I package (8 ounces) cream
foil up to get the breasl). Repeat
cheese, softened
'herv 20 minutes or so or whenever
I cup diced impeeled apples
ofit. If pan looks dry, pour
1!2 to I cup chopped nuls .
!.))other cup of wine and/or another
of broth over the turkey. Keep
About 2-1/2 hours into lhe
takt the· aluminum foil off.
wl~n turkey is done, remove
oven. Drain pan drippi11gs into
l
cup glass measuring cup or a
bowl. Cover turkey wilh alu·
··toil and let sit 15 to 20 min·
before carving. While lhe
is testing, you or someone
knowledgeable should make
gravy and finish 'the mashed
·tat&lt;JCs. Remove the lhermometer.
Use a spoon to remove stuffing.
Mk someone who knows how to do
it to carve the lurkey, or look at the
pl\:tures on page 410 of ''The Better
Hbmes and Gardens' New Cqokbook,'' Yield: 12 to 14 servings. Recipe adapted frdrll "The Better ·
ijpmes and Gardens Now Cooli:·
·book" (Better Homes and Gandens
~ks, 1996).
'

·celery

I
cup
chopped
I cup whipped topping
lettuce leaves

4 ounces cream cheese. softened
l/4 .cup sugar
1/2 cup frozen whipped topping,
thawed
I prepared graham cracker crumb
' crust (6 ounces)
I medium apple, chopped
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
'Fresh mint leaves (optional)
· Stir boiling water into gelatin in a
large bowl at lc&lt;L'I 2 minutes until
coohpletely dissolved. Stir in cold
. water and spiccs. ·Rcfrigerate about
I 112 hours or until thickened (spoon
drawn through leaves det'inite
impression).
Meanwhiie, .mix cream cheese
and sugar in medium bowl with wire
whisk until' smooth. Gently stir in
whippeJ topping. Spread on bottom
of crust. Refrigerate.
·
Stir apples· and walnuts int o
'thickened gelatin. Refrigerate 10 to
15 minutes or until mixture is very
thick und will mound , Spoon over
cream chcCsc layer.
Refrigerate 4 hours or until firm .
Garnish with additional whipped
rapping and mint leaves, if desired .

lh saucepan combine pineapple
and sugar. Bring to a boil for three
minutes. Add Jello and stir until dissolved.' Add cream cheese and stir
until mixture is thoroughly com·
bined. Cool. Fold in . apples, nuts;
celery and whipped topping. Pour
into a 9 inch square pan. Chill until
firm. Cut into squares and serve on
leuuce leaves. Makes 9 to 12 serV·
mgs.
RethaDay
Coolvale
Coconut caramel pie
1/4 cup butter or margarine
I (7 ounce) package flaked
coconUt

'

112 cup chopped pe~ans
I (8 ounce) package cream
cheese softened
I (14 ounce) can sweetened con·
densed milk ~
I ( 16 ounce) container frozen
whipped topping, thawed
2 baked !}-inch pastry shells
I (12 ounce) jar caramel 1cc
cream topping

Store leftover pie in refrigerator.

FRENCH SOD
CHRISTMAS BAZAAR
GALLIA COUNTY JUNIOR FAIRGROUNDS
"COMMERCIAL ANQ.ACTIVIJY BUILDINGS"

.DECEMBER 6- 7-8
.

9 A .M. TILL 5 P.M.

OVER 60 VENDORS WITH CHRISTMAS ITEMS
TOYS-CRAFTS-JEWELRY-SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE

~"~)

(~-BRING THE KIDS TO ·SEE
,

SANTA

DAILY FROM 10 A.M. TILL 6 P.M.

DOOR PRIZES-FREE ADMISSION AND PARKING

Makes 8 serving s.
Recipes from: Kraft Foods

Melt butter in a large skillet. Add
coconut and ·.chopped pecans, cook
until golden brown stirring frequent ly. Set the mixture aside.
Combine cream cheese and
sweetened condensed milk, beat
until smooth. Fold in whipped topping. Layer one fourth or cream
cheese mixture in each paslry shell.
Drizzle one-fourth of coconut mix·
lure 1evenly over each pie. Repeat
layers with remaining ingredients
cover and freeze until firm.
Let frozen· pie stand at room tern·
perature 5 minutes before slicing.
Makes two nine inch pies.

SPONSORED BY THE GALLIA COUNTY AGSOC/ElT
FDR INI"D 6 I 4-ZiiS-52.47

Fill Your Home With Comfort

Janie Bateman
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
Mock Cranberry Apple Pie
2 cups boiling water
8-scrving size package or two 4-.
serving size packages red-flavor
gelatin dessert
112 cup cold water
112 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/8_ teaspoon grou~d doves
Hunter Green Contemporary .
Sectional :witJt Reclining End
and Chaise Wedge
Reg. $3467

A.J. Rush, .M.D.

SALE.$2255

·-.Family Medicine
530 Second Avenue ·
Gallipolis, OH

Accepting Appointments

.

'

Choose
From Over

Recliners
In Stock

s2.49

(6·.1 4) 441-0~,57

.n

Veaetable dip
I eup•Hellman's mayonnaise
, 11 cup sour cream
i:. I tablespoon dill weed
vii tablespoon heaumondc
1/4 teaspoon parsley flakes
•1 I tablespoon on,ion cut inlo small
P~~:ces
·
Mix tll'orou$hly and chill.
This dip is good · for vegetublcs,

'

Et•Y Financing Available
Store Hours

Office Hours
Monday through Friday
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

I

l

(.

,,

MOn-S..
e:oo-s:oo
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Fri. 8:00-8:00

•

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Farm/Business

Entertainment
•

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...

-------'--------People in the n e w s - - - - - - - - - - - LOS ANGELES (AP) - HBO has signed a deal for a TV movie on rounding islands with pink fabric, and executing other environmental anTUple Shakur, and a feature film about the slain rapper is also 'under discus- works.
sion.
In 1994, he and his wife traveled through the Rockies, inspecting 89
The HBO project, "Rebel for the Hell otlt: The Life of Tupac Shaj&lt;ur," rivers for a new· project. On Thursday, Christo announced: "We now think
is liued on a .proposal from journalist and film critic Armond White. the project can happen in the Arkansas River."
Unidentified sources quoted in Friday's Daily Variety said HBO hopes to
Christo plans to suspend translucent fabric panels 6 to 25 feet above theo
have the picture readY by late 1997 or early 1998..
river. Steel cables anchored on the riverbanks would hold them in place. The
.
Pictures, meanwhile, is dis- fabric would be. up about two weeks and cover five to six miles.
r--;~---,.---, cussingTriStar.
a Shakur movie with Quincy Jones
Christo still mu~t get permission from various government authorities, a
and Neal Moritz, who produced "Juice," the process that could take years.
rap star's acting debut
In yet another.deal. Shakur's mother has
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Former Los Angeles Dodgers catcher Steve
a book and movie proposaL A publishing auc- Yeager is beinjl sued by regulators in two states in a crackdown on what they
tion will be held soon for "And Still I Rise," say was a fraudulent get-rich-quick scheme involving spons trading cards.
by Afeni Shakur.
The regulators say people lost as much as $3,500 each when they paid to
· Shakur's posthumously released album, become brokers for Collectibles International Inc., which used Yeager's
" The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory," is photo in newspaper ads offering the opponunity to earn up to $800 a day
No. I on the chans, sellipg 664,000 copies in from dealing trading cards.
its debut week.
In addition to promising big money, Collectibles Intc;rnational offered
Shakur died Sept. 13, a week after being . lists of hot sales prospects.
· ·
•
·
shot in Las Vegas.
·
In fact, .investigators said, some of the "hot leads" were people who had
died. Others were still alive but didn't care about trading cards.
Yeager, the Most Valuable Player in the 1981 World Series, "played an
ChMto
DENVER (AP) - The artist who
wrapped the Reichstag in silver polypropylene important role in establishing the credibility of the company." said New
wants to blanket pan of the Arkansas River now.
York prosecutor Fred Cantor.
Christo and his wife. Jeanne-Claude, have gained world renown for placThe New York City Depanment of Consumer Affairs sued on June 27.
inf thOuAilds of blue and yellow umbrellas in Japan and Californ.ia, sur- The state of Illinois filed similar lawsuit this week. .
.

a

LONDON (AP) - Allaying concerns about her health, the 96-year-old
Queen Mother went to a pany, her first public appearance since she missed
two engagements last weekend.
·
The widclipopular mother of Queen Elizabeth II went to a London
on Thursday for a reception of-the Black Watch
regimental association. She is colonel-in-chief of
the regiment
·

•

:rvadjusts its color picture: networks move minority actors -into mainstream
'

black dramas.
At the same time. CBS' "Cosby"
is the only new predominantly
minority sitcom on the four major
networks, while African-Americans
star in six new comedies On the ·
emerging networks, Warner Bros.
WB and the United Paramount Net·
work.
So the former "Roc" star moved
into "Chicago Hope" following the
l.ead of James McDaniel ("NYPD
Blue"), Blair Underwood ("High
Incident"), Andrew Braugher and
Yaphel Kouo ("Homicide: Life on
the Street'') and Eriq LaSalle and
Gloria Reuben ("ER"). .
" A friend told me, ' You're one of
the few people who had a failed
pilot, and has actu~lly done better
for himself and got on a hit show.'."
says Carroll, 33.
The offer to join "Chicago
Hope" as trauma surgery chief Dr.
Keith Wilkes came from CIJS Entertainment President Lcs Moonves,
who had followed Carroll's career
since Fox pncclcd " Roc" in 1994.
Moonves originally signed him to
star as a TV talk show host i'n "Talk
of the Town." a "Frasier meets
Montcl Williams" sitcom, Carroll
says.
" He's a •terrific performer. I
thought he was the standout guy on
'Roc ;·· Moonvcs says.
Moonvcs points to adding Carroll
MAINSTREAMING • Flocky Carroll stars in "Chlct1go Hope," CBS'
to
"Chicago Hope ': as part of his
acclaimed clnlme on Its best nlgbt of tiMI week. Increasingly, the
CBS
strategy of mainstreaming
four 11111jor TV networ1ut ant malnatntamlng one-hour dramas
casts.
instead
of "going specifically
lnataad of developing any naw all-blac:k dramas.
for' all -black shows or all-white
. show.s ...
By JOHN KIESEWETTER
The Cincinnati Enquirer
Afte{ CBS rejected Rocky Carroll's sitcom pilot last spring, he
jumped at the network's secondary
offer - a meaty role .on "Chicago .
Hope," CBS' ~¥'Claimed dr~ma on
its best nisht of the week.
"It's gt'cat ·for the ego to say, .
"I've got my own show.' but I'd
rather do 'Chicago Hope' than a
show that lasts possibly only five ~r
si~ episodes because the nerwork
doesn't believe in it the same way
they do in 'Chicago Hope,' " he
says.
Carroll knows that, increasingly.
the four major TV net works ~re
mainstreaming · one· hour dramas
in"!Cad of developing any . new all-

NBC has done the same with
"ER" and "Homicide: Life on the
St~ect, " among th~ best dramas. on
TV.

" We're not just into counting
bodies," says. NBC Entenainmcnt
Warren
Littlefield,
President
explaining the presence of minorities on TV's No. I .network.
."1 think it's no1 just quantity, the
number of roles (for minorities). I
think it's also the quality of roles,"
Littlefield says. "We're well pleased
with the types of characters and the
representation of those characters.
But as always. we can do better."
And things arc getting better for
African·American performers. The
Screen Actors Guild recently
revealed .that minority . actors and
actresSes arc being offered more
movie tlfld TV roles (19 percent)
than they were five years ago ( 1'5
percent).
" Now, more than before,
African-American actors have the
opponunity to build their skills as
actors. Doors arc open more." says
Carroll, who has appeared in films
"The Great White Hype." "Crimson Tide" and '.'Born on the Founh
of July.'' and on Broadway in "The·
Pianp Lesson.··
" Denzel Wa.&lt;hington talks abo~l
how his success is a logical pr9grcssion," Carroll says ahout the actot
whose first big break camc ·a.&lt; a reg·
ular on "St. Elsewhere" ( 1982-MK ).
For now, McDaniel has no c.:omplaints about his small hut signilicant role as the "NYPD Blue" hoss.
He earned an Emmy nomination last

..

summer despite, as he calls it, (Malik Yoba, Michael DeLorenzo).
"being underserved in .front of 20 Although the Fox drama was Nd. I
in black households: it ranked ~·
million people." .
76
in the Nielsen ratings last seru;QII.
"I have good writing where l
" We do feel we have a rcsponsiwork. I'm very happy." says
McDaniel, who won awards ,on . bility ... not to further segregate ~-·
Broadway before " NYPD Blue" pic. but to find a way to do drama~n
premiered in 1993. " My career . is a way thai is all·inclusivc," explains
nor over. This provides me with ·nick Wolf. executive producer of
opponunity and legitimacy. I could "New York Undercover " and
•··still be working off-Broadway in NBC's " Law &amp; Order."
some theater...
LaSalle. who plays surgeon P~ter
Benton on "ER," knows the impor·
lance of seeing more minorities on
TV.
~· As a minority growing up in the
'60s and ' 70s, I was told that there
were ccnain things that I should noi
aspire to. There weren ' t any' black
.actors from Hanford, Conn. At the
time. basically we had Sidney Poiticr out there." says LaSalle,. who will
make his directorial debut later this
year wilh HBO's , "Angel of
Harlem" movie.·
But LaSalle doesn't sec himself
as a role ::iodcl: "I am just trying to
do the best that I can with what I
have, and hopefully, there is a posi·
tivc inOucncc on people." he says.
TV 's increased mainstrcaming
~vcn has had an effect on Fox's
·" New York Undcrco~r." the most ·
popular TV scr.ics last season in
African-American
households.
according lo the BBDO advertising
agency.
A white actor. Jonathan LaPaglia,
has hcen added tp the ca.st to broaden the nrpenl llf the police buddy
series with two minority leads

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V•la1

Sears gran~ opening .
:scheduled on Nov. 23

,,,

~~i~!~x~~~s~~~~;r::,~a;~~.~~l~~

~Tis

Agncu
·•·· 1t.ure secretary Dan Gl"ICk m
·, an
t
t f • • f
•b •
arge o sn1p1ng . rom agr1 us1ness

..

·viewpoint

the season

i

..

CO-ROMs face challenge from Internet

Fertilizing trees .i s oft~rt overlooked·

MJA deadlines near
hN

. JIM HERI'IELL .
GA.LLIPOLIS - Traditionally,
qo.,rators and owners do not make
agreements until spring, howif a farm is signed in the
(Agriculture Marketing Tran-

·t~~fr~~~:~~'~:~~you
may want Ill
~
this procedure.

A new contract may have ~
¥.-&lt;:culled.. Advance payments fo
can either be paid by Decem
or by January 15, therefore, you
need to get all rental agreements
cash ·rent statements to our office
!fl.:these dead line5.
·
·
want'the advance paynients
tit &lt;:orriC in 1997, you need to take
and have information and
.&amp;.rw,ork completed priOr to the
~u•II'Y IS, 1997.

leski n

•

Contracts have-revisions effective
afterthe January 15 deadline will not
receive any advance payment, but
rather will .receive all the 1997 payment in September. We sent leuers to
all producers that were listed on the
contracts for 1996.
If you did not receive a letter or
you are confused by what the letter
stated please contact the office and
we will 1tY to clarify what needs to
be done.
Please ·contact · the GalliaLawrence COilnty office at446-8686,
or 1-888-211 "1626 (toll free) for
additional information.
·
Jim Herrell is the county executive
director of the Gallia -Lawrence
Farm Service Agency. ,

ed to post
poSitions.at SOCCo included section
supervisor, division mine inspector,
safety assistant and safety supervisor.
He transferred to Fuel Supply's Lan·
caster office in 1984 as a skills training supervisor and later was named
assistant to·the director of safely. In
1986, he transferred to SOCCo' s
Martinka Division as safety and
health manqcr.
He earned a bachelor's degree in
education from Ohio Univenity. He
also has completed sracluate course
worl&gt; in the ~ty and health field.
Zulesld II a member of the American Society of Safety Engineers,
Net'1011al Mine Rescue Association
~d the National Holmes Safety
Association.

Get A

LEVI'S
OPEN
lllnlllrwrl, wv
0 I' alii I iuo 01.,111, 0H

Sunday, November 17; 1996

By CLIFF EDWARDS
AP Business Writer
Copper futures prices rose sharply
Friday after the London Metal
. Exchange again defied expectations ·
and reponed ~s warehouse stocks fell
to six-year lows, the latest in a string
of declines that has baffied the market.
On. other markets, soybean and
natural gas futures prices rose
sharply.
Copper inventories in the London .
exchange 's warehouses have fallen
from 275,275 tons at the beginning of
September to 101 ,175 on Friday. The
ex~ange reported a net 8,000 tons
said "we hope to be In the new facility by the
·• NEW DANTAX HOME • Workers are putting
SEARS GRAND OPENING S~ NOV. 23 • Grand
cer·
had
been
removed
from
its
warefirst
of December." . DanTax wes originally
f'~ al touches on the new DanTax home at 1ii2B
. emonles for the n.W .seers Store In the Silver Bridge Shopping
located on 41 Court Street In downtown Gal·
houses around the world since its last
-Plaza will be held from 8 11.m. to 8 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 23.
Eastarn Avenue. H &amp;. E Conatructlon, Milson,
lipolls for a number .of years before It was
report on Tuesday; supplies are now
began work on the fOundation In early October.
.(, A_bove Jim Cozznncl Pat S.llu prepare for grand opening activ·
destroyed by fire last spring.
at their lowest since July 30, 1990.
· Thill peat week, Quality Hornell erected the pre. ltles.
Warehouse stocks on the Comex
fab structure. Claudette Daniels, manager,
division of the New York Mercantile
Exchange also are extremely tight,
forcing the exchange to delay physi- . Hunters, fishermen upset, too
caldeliveryofthemctal,saidanalyst
Michael Fr~wlcy at Dean Witter
Reynolds Inc . in New York.
' "The cooistantdrawdown ofLME
:-,~ GALLIPOLIS - Grand opening :prizes will be given away to thpse
who
register
during
open
house
·ceremonies for the new Sears Store
::n· ihe Silver Bridge Shopping ·Piaza activities. The store opened for busiwith the tigh\ncss on the Comex, it's By GEORGE ANTHAN
ness on Oct 14.
priority area.&lt; such as the Chesapeake for the c·RP, a development that asso- .
be held from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. on
just
starting. ')'his supply shonage is The Des Moines Register
Owned by Roben and Vanessa
Nov. 23.1 according to
. Bay region . cropped wetlands, ripar- ciation president Kendell Keith calls
Muncy, the store employs nine peo- dominating the market."
.
WASHINGTON - Agriculture · ian buffers to adjacent water supplies, " prcpos1crous on its face."
..,.~lnessa Muncy, store ·manager.
Opinions
differ,
however,
on
the
ple
from
the
Gallipolis
area.
They
are
and
land
that
states
consider
enviSaid
Keith,
"
It
brings
into
real
Dan
Glickman
is
the
target
Secretary
Celebration activities will actualcause
of
the
shortage.
By
some
Jim
Cozza,
Danny
Sickles,
Dave
ronmentally
vulncrahlc.
question
whether
USDA
is
serious
or
on Wednesday, Nov. 20, with
of sniping from agribusiness and
accounts,
China'
has
become
a
major
Gilbert,
Earl
Han,
Mark
Coleman
,
sincere
aboUt
tranSforming
the
CRP
Under Glickman 's rules, ahout40•
from hunters and fishermen over his
offers for all customers on all
.~,~~and sale-priced merchandise. Mendy Neal, Pat Sallaz and ,Paul . buy~r of the metal at its relativ~ly cffons to redirect the Conservation percent of land now in the program from a supply management program
cheap . prices and is storing it fpr Reserve Program closer to saviriHoil . won't be eligible for renewed con~ into a program targeted at truly cnviHollingshead.
l•
. official ribbon culling will
· mdustnal uses. A shonage of scrap and water resources.
tracts. For example. fewer than 1.5 ronmclitally scnsit'ivc lands.''
place·at 9 a.m. Saturday. Special
copper a!so has forced producers to
NGFA said Glickman has turned
Congress signaled in the new million of the 2.1 million Iowa acres
'
buy the more expensive refined cop- fann act that it wanted a more envi- enrolled in CRP arc eligible for the a " blind eye "to the CRP's continued
per. some say.
''catastrophic' ' impu.cl on rural areas
ronmentally · tao;geted CRP - the new program.
Others have suggested the metal is decade-old program that pays farm·
as deCreased fanning activity hus
Environinc~talists generally are
being bought to boost futures prices crs.$2 billion a year to idle erodible pleased with the changes.
adversely affected local economics.
and will at some pOint he resold for land fo·r 10 years.
Keith said, "The CRP has ripped
Not so says the National Grain &amp;
a profit
Under the original program. mil- Feed Association. who.sc 1,000 through the fabric of town after rurSentiment appears to be shifting to lions of quilc productive acres also agribusiness members have led oppo- al town, destroying the economic , ·
JAY CALDWELL
whenever possible. In addition, by
GALLIPOLIS - The holiday sea- 1999 all federal payments, including the view that most of the metal is entered the CRP. and payments in sition to the CRP on grounds that it base needed to suppon rural busi~~~~:::rd:a~;n;~d with the salaries and other benefits such as actually being used since the price some Plains states were considerably has idled too much productive land nesses, employment, schools and
comes those paid to veterans, will be issued has climbed sharply ;and liulc is higher than market rates.
and damaged U.S. agricultural com- hospitals."
But Ferdinand HociTncr of the
the
perennial electronically. Jim Hagedorn, the being returned to exchange wareGlickman has announced the new pctitiv.cncss.
.
' NCFA contends alniost half of Sustainable Agriculture Coalilion, question: what to Treasury o.Panment director . of houses.
CRP will target land' more prone to
That' helped overcome weakness .erosion: land in national conservation U.S. crop land still would be eligible
. eontinued 'on D·8
. giv,e that special public affairs'for the financial manchild in your life? · agement service, reports lhat con- tied to a rcpon that as much as
.
.
Consider vening to electronic payments could 600.000 tons of copper n~'ight have
an investment in save the government as much as been bui It up between 1991 -95 in
a mutual fund--a _ ~500 million over the next five years Dutch warehouses not included in the
that can grow ·and eliminate about I00,000 check London exchange ·s. inventory fig- By PHIL WAGA
The momentum at the Comdex Mooradian , an analyst at Jupiter
ures. Many analysts had been skep- Gannett Suburban Newspapers computer show that gcis under way Communications;
a child witliout getting lost, thefts and forgeries a year.
tical of the rcpon.
I
~ken or forgotten. There aremany Local stocks
•
CD-ROMs, the silvery discs that . Monday in Las Vegas is certainly' in
People working in the licld said it
·Rising prices arc likely to attract can tum personal COlllputcrs ipto per- ) favor of World Wide Wch pages over continues to be rohust.
could be well·suited for a · The Ohio Valley Bane Corp
because of their lotig-term announced net income for the third new supplies soon, said trader David sonal entertainment ccnlcrs, arc los! _dancing images or King Arthur's
"We're dealing with the crate of
ihc year," said Eliot A. Minskcr, n
1:~~~:~~~~ objectives. And an quaner of 1996. Net income was up Threlkeld of Resolved Trading LP.
ing some of their luster to the Inter- Court.
High -grade copper for December net.
ljl
established through the Uni- 13.2 percent over the same period
Of the 2.100 exhibitors, 550 fca- White Plains. N.Y., publisher of magdelivery
rose 5.60 cents to $1.01 a
Gift to Minors Act (UGMA) or last year. They also paid a dividend
lt 's not happening dramatically or lure rr?ducts related to the Internet a~.incs on muhimedia. referring to the
g~1~~). Transfer to Minors Act of $.[25 per share to stock holders of pound, the highest price since June quickly ·and CD-ROM sales remain global network, nearly twice a.• many Internet. ''Thorc 's room for rnulli13. when the scandal broke. .
(J
could provide cenain ta~ record as of October 28. 1996.
strong. But the multimedia industry . us last yeao'. Showcasing multimedia mcdia and therc'sroom forthc Inter- .
Soybean futurcs prices &lt;ose touted as recc'ntly as last year as the products will h&lt;&gt; . 613 companies. Oct."
"'e''"'· based on the laws in most
Bob Evans Farms announced that
a regular quanerly dividend of $.08 sharply on the Chicugo Board of medium of the future is being edged compared with 692 last year.
CD-ROMs weigh less than an
per share will be paid on December Trade after the Agriculture Depart- aside by emerging technologies. anar~:~,d of the fUture
"Multimedia isn't dead. hut it·s ounce but have a weighty name:
•~· ''"" U. S. Treasury Depanment 2, 1996 to stockholders of record as ment reported slrong export sales.
lysts said.
not very healthy. either:· said Mark "compact disc . read-only memory."
.,
Continued on D·8
summer announced that all of November 15, 1996.
(Jay CaldweU is an Investment
~I"""' Security recipients who apply
B~ker
with nie Ohio Company
benefits after August I, 1996,
Its
Gallipolis
office.)
in
have their checks automatically
~&gt;&lt;&gt;sited into their bank accounts

And
A

D

Copper
.futures
climb
sharply

· A call to Yeager's agent wentUDansweted.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Reason No. I on
Sam Lovullo's Top IO.Iist for liking Davidl.etterman: flattery.
Lovullo, who produced "Hee Haw" for 25
·years. writes in a new book that Letterman's staff
obviously watched the show.
. ·
"Through the years, David bas continually
poked fun at · 'Hee Haw,' especially George 1' " ·"
'Goober' Lindsey and Kenny Price," Lovullo c...=.-;
writes in "Life in the Komfield: My 25 Years at
l-:lee Haw.'!
·
.
"Both('in fact, have. appeared several times on his .famous Top .10
whi'h I always t.ook as a compliment: It meant someone on Davtd s
was a regular viewer of 'Hee Haw."'
One of the longest-running programs in TV history, the country mu:':'f_·
comedy show is in reruns on cable's The Nashvtlle Network.

Section

EVENINGS
Mondll)' thru
Saturday
\ Ul8 p.m.

.. ,

J

'

By Jennifer L. Bymas
GALLIPOLIS - It is often difficult
to understand why trees, like other
plants, need fenilizing. This is
because they grow so readily in natural areas without the benefits of fertilizer. According to Elton M. Smith,
trees that have been transplanted to a
human-made landscape are very vulnerable to the altered soil and envi. ron mental conditions..Trees growing
in fertile loamy soils will be less like· ·
ly to need added fertilizer, however
. most landscape trees are not planted
in ideal soil types. Thus, added fertilizer can be beneficial for those who
have trees growing in the average
landscape situation. The time to fertilize is now, between the mon1hs of
October to early December, or m the
spring from February through May.
Most landscape trees should be fertilized every other year, however
· those growing in unfavorable sites
may need to be fenilized every year.
..: Trees respond wen c!O fenilizers
that are high in.nitrogen. The ratio of
nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorus
should be about 3- 1- I, 4- 1-1. 3- 12, or 4- 1·2. Homeowners may also
want to consider fertilizer ratio's

such as 12-4-4, 20-5-5, 18-6· 12, or
24-6- I 2. Keep in mind that because
trees are not frequently fenilized it is
recommended that 112 to 213 of the
nitrogen be in a slow·rclcase form,
such as org.anic.
The method of application
depends on the plant cover under the
tree, soil conditions, rate of fcnilizing, and the amount of time and labor
available to apply th~ fenilizer. The
easiest way to apply fenilizc~ to yce~
is by surface ,application. This
requires less time, less equipment,
and little cost and labor. It is important to remember that the bulk of tree
roots are spread out under the branches of "the tree. Therefore, surface
application is accomplished by
spreading the recommended amount
of fenilizer uniformly on the surface
ofthe soil under the branches. Rate
of fcnilizer will vary depending on
the size of the tree and it's root system. A common role is 3-5 pounds of
actual nitrogen per 1,000 square feet
of soil surface under the spread of the
branches. If there is grass growing
under the tree, consider breaking th&lt;
trealment into 2·3 applications with

thorough watering after each appli- judging contest will be back, teniacation. Keep in mind tbat,grass will lively scheduled for Saturday mompossibly be damaged or grow execs- · ing. The Ohio Hols~in Association
sively where the fenilizer has been will sponsor a ·high caliber sale in
applied.
addition to the OSU Buckeye Dairy
FcniliziQg js not the answer to air Club's Buckeye Classic Saie. The
tree problems, however ot may send Ayrshire and Brown Swiss sales are
trees into next year's pest season less currently scheduled for Thursday.
The Ohio PDCA will hold their
stressed and thus less susceptible to
pest damage. For more detailed infor- annual judging conference at the
mation about figuring the surface Spring Dairy Expo. Major event suparea under branch .spread or about poner, the.America~ Oi'ary Associafenilizing trees in general, please call tion Dairy Council Mid East will contheOSU Extension office at 614-446- tinuc their popular Kick-Off Bar-B7007 and request a Fact Sheet on Fer- Que dinner on Thursday evening. The
tili&gt;.iQg Trees.
trade show is planning to increase the
Ag news for dairy producers
number of exhibitors and hold the
The Ohio Spring Dairy Spectacu- second annual silent ~uction Which
lar has adopted a new name and new will include many valuable items
look for 1997. The event is now. donated to. the show. Proceeds from .
kilowri as the Spring Dairy Expo and the silent auction will benefit the
will be held in Columbus April 3-5, Spring Dairy Expo general fund . Fur1997. The Expo will feature the ther activities include showmanship
largest dairy-related trade show of the contest, educational seminars and
spring, four cattle .sales, five breed ·dairy group annual meetings. For
more information call Chris Sayers of
shows, and educational actiyities.
Building upon the growth and sue- Select-Sires at 614-873-4683.
Jennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia
cess of previous shows, the 1997
event promises to be even bigger and County's Extension Agent. Agrlbettcr, bringing in more dairy related culture and Natural Resoul'&lt;'es
activities. The Ohio 4-H and FFA

w .ine industry chilled by
YAKIMA, Wash. (AP)- Wine- ducing grapes on a 110-acre vineyard
grape growers say they need a mild since 1971, had to buy grapes this
winter to enable their vineyards to year for the first time in order to make
recover from devastating damage .wine, Balcom said.
Don't look for any 1996 vintage
suffered in last February's extended
wine
from neighbor Preston Wine'
subzero freeze .
"The wineries, I don't think, will Cellars.
''We didn't harvest a single grape
be a)!le to make it in another year like
this
year," said co-owner Brent Pre·
this one," said Maurice Balcom, co·stan,
whose winery usually produces
owner of Balcom &amp; Moe, a winery in
Pasco. "Or some of the vineyards. 1,000 tons of wine grapes on its 173·
,
Most of the vineyards are just acre vineyard.
Vineyards
across
central
Washsqueaking by as it is."
ington
wcr«
devastate'd
by
bitterly
His winery, which has been ,pro-

,i

..

~itter

cold temperatures list February that
dipped as low as 30 degrees below
zero for a week.
"It was as severe as we've ever
seen. It was as bad as it could get. In
our area, it took most of the vineyards
out totally, down to the ground," Balcom said.
Balcom's and Presion's vi~yards,
and others hit nearly as hard, will
likely receive only 40 percent to 50
percent of their normal harvests next
year as the.vines grow biiCk.
. "It's good as long as we have a

,.

freeze

mild ;.inter.'' Presion said.
Jack Watson, a Washington State
University extension agent based in
Prosser, said vineyards in higher olevations and those near Paterson were
the only ones to escape the effects of
the freeze.
"For the rest; there was dcstruc·
tion of buds in the least-injured vines
and destruction of wood in some of
the worst," Watson said.
·
The good news is the wine that is
being made from this year's crop is
better than usual, said Steve Bum&gt;.

.,

'

�P9Da·~

t

~

...

II

HouiiiOt the Week

Homes: Questions and Answers

.

Classic ranch

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Spec... F..turM
Q: I want to uae the attic of my

Q: The concrete· walkway around
our buill-in ~wimming pool seems to
be flaking off. That is, when we
home for ·Storage. The roof has IniSS· sweep aroun~ the pool we have a lot
es instead of rafters, and l' ve been of dust. Is it nonnal for concrete to
told by some' (carpenters included) break down like this? rs there anythai you cannot put sheets of plywood thing we !'!Ill do to stop it?
in the attic because lniSs roofs must ·
A: The condition you describe is
be bllowed to sway. Can you clear called dusting. It usually occurs wilhthis up for me?
·
in the first several months of when
A: Your attic is not suitable for concrete is inslalled. Several lhings
storage because the bottom member can cause i~ such as using a concrete
of a typical IniSS (referred to as a mix that is too wet, allowing the surcord) is not designed to support a face to dry too rapidly, freezing ternstorage load, not because of lniSs peratures before the concrete is cured.
movement The cord is only designed
Since lhe concrete is seven years
for a dead load of I 0 pounds per old, we suspect it's being caused by
square fOOt. The IniSS will support its the pool water being splashed on the
own weight, the gypsum ceiling concrete. Chemicals in the pool
below, insulation and li&amp;ht fixtures. It water, such as chlorine, may. be
is not designed to support the weigh~ reacting wilh lhe concrete. '
'
..,~ -.
.
'-~
of stored objects.
. Try the following. Remove the
A OOVPUNG of' Early American and European desJsn lo In evidence In tbla home't exlel'ior, wblcb l'ea- . Incidentally, lnlsses move, but dust and clean the walkway by scrubture. cl-lc comer quolu 8lld keystones; decoraUve donnere and a brlek facade that aurroun~ tbe . they don't sway, exactly. Truss move' bing the surface with a stiff bristle
coJ.. _ed porcb:
ment occurs in a condition known as broom, then hose off the;tccumulated dust. Let the walkway dry, and be
"truss uplift" or " Iniss rise.''
By BRUCE A. NATHAN
And, the charming exterior of II 1~-foot-hlsh stepped Ceuins.
The spacious sreat room, sepaDuring the winter, lnlsses rise careful not to splash pool water 0n it.
Plan G-29, by HomeStyles
AP Newlfealures
With decor1•li•e !Irick quoins, a Designers Network.• surrounds a rated from the dlnlnl! room by a because of the different contraction Next, coat the concrete ·with a sealer
tidy 1,860 square feel of living columned afch, features . a between the bottom members of the that contains methyl methacrylate or
· ·. columned porch and dormers,
stepped celllns, a buill-In media ..,~n~ss, which are normally covered silane.
this classic one-stnry provides an spece.
appullnl! blend of Early · Just olf the foyer,the formal din- center and a striklnl! fireplace. with insulation, and the upper truss
One such concrete sealer is PakFrench doors lead to a larse members which are exposed to the mix, and it's sold at home centers and
American and European desl11n . ing room has bay windows and an
backyafll paUo.
cooler attic. The bottom members are masonry supply yards. For informaThe breakfast room, which exposed to warm temperatures and a tion, write Pakmix, Inc., 873 Western
cov
shares an eating bar with the low relative humidity.
Ave., Toledo, Ohio 43609.
PORCH
Consequently, the lower members
kitchen, has a celllnl! that slopes
Q: We recently purchased an oldto 12 feeL Freneh doori lead to a shrink and shorten slightly compared er home at a reasonable pri&lt;;e. The
PATIO
covered rear porch.
.
The master bedroom has a 10•. Ill the upper· members. Thts causes li&gt;ing room floor sags noticeably in
root tray celllns, 8 bay window the upper members ~o pull the bottom_ the center. A friend of ours says ibe
and a roomy walk-In closet, while members upward, hftmg the drywall floor joists probably are bad and need
the malller bath oiYera a whirlpool ceiling below. As the ceiling moyes to be replaced- a·major repair job.
tub In 8 bayed nook and a aepa· ilp, cracks form where it mee(s the Is this usually' the case?
, A: When sections of flooring
rate shower.
·
walls.
The front-facing bedroom fea :
tures a 10-foot-hlgh vaulted area
over
an arched transom window.
BEDRII 12

· u·-o·x

_,_

G-29.STATISTICS
-~

~~

2a·~o·x 20'-0~"

PORCH

G-29

•

• Design G-129 his a great room,
dinlns room, kitchen, breakfast
room, three bedrooms, two ·full
baths and a uUIIty room, totalliis
1,860 square feet or llvfng ·space;
Thl• plan Includes a standard
basement, a crawlapace or a slab
foundaUon, and 2x4 e~terlor wall .
framing. Its two•car garase provides 434 square feet of space. ·

57'-4' OVERALL

'•

:
•
·

'Mil! POliCH lntrod!lce• the foyer, which In t!lrn leads to the formal
dlnlns room' and two secondary bedrooms with a shared bath. Straight
ahead of the foyer, the sreat room has access to a· backyard paUo and
an ad)Oininl! covered porch. Next to the sreat room ·Is the breakrast
room and kitchen. The utility room is just steps from the kitchen, and
leade to the two-car garase. From the kitchen, a short hall leads to the
maater bedroom's eleeplnl! chamber. A private' bath completes ,this
suite.

For a mo,.. defaikd, scakd plan
qf lhis howe, illcludl1J6 6ulde• 10
eslimating cos II and ,financing,
send $4 kl Howe qf 1/u Week, P. 0.

Boz 1162, New York, N.Y. 10116·
t 162. Be lurtl to ·include 1/u plan
.number.

Backyard_deck requires
routine maintenance
.

.·

.

.By POPULAR MECHANI&lt;:S
For AP SpK... Features

grain, and keep the sander moving
evenly to avoid gouging with a sand'
If you're like many homeowners, ing block to remove roughness and
• the backyard deck is tile focal point hazardous slivers·.
for warm-weather activities. But as
You'll find many stains and sealwith most parts of your home, a cer- ers designed specifically for your
tain amount of routine maintenance deck. Several manufacturers offer
: is required to keep your deck struc- products called dec.k brighteners
turally sound, safe and looking its (actually bleaches) which ·remove
stains and weathering from the wood
best.
While otlii:r types of lumber may surfaces. Apply these products
have been used, chances are your according to the manufacturer's
deck is built of either cedar, redwood directions, usually with a stiff bristle
or pressure-treated yellow pine. brush, and rinse off thoroughly before
These are the most common! y used applying any top coat. Be sure to
materials because they are resistant to wear gloves and eye protection when
rot and insect damage. When exposed using these products.
to the elemehts for extended periods.
Sealers protect your deck from
however, any wood will show signs moisture and are available clear or
of weathering. Even if the deck wa,' tinted to act as a stain. Sealers need
originally treated with ·a stain or to be renewed p41riodically to offer
preservative, this treatment eventu- continuous protectiOn. Stains are
ally needs to be renewed.
offered in a range of opacities for
The first thing to do is inspect the either hiding the grain ·completely, or
surfaces of the deck and railing for allowing it to be visible. When it
excessive splintering. If splintering is comes to choosing a stJ~in and sealer
·a problem, sanding the surface is the for your deck, check that lhe products
simplest solution. Use a belt sander arc compatible and that they're suit·
. to smooth the boards on the deck sur- able for the type of wood your deck
face. Sand only in the direction of the is made with.

After a .new deck has been
exposed to the weather for a year or
so, shrinkage of the lumber can
cau5!' nails to JX!p up above the deck
surface. If the boards are still na~
reset lhe nails slightly below the ded
surface using a nailset or punch
which matches the size of the nail .
heads. If the deck boards have
cupped due to drying; there are several ways to approach the problem.
If the cupping is not 100 severe,
firSt remove the nai Is with a pry bar.
Then. install galvanized decking
screws to pull the bOard flat. If the
board is too severely cupped for lhis
technique, use a pry bar to remove the
board. Then use a .circular ·saw to
· make a series of relief cuts along the
back, convex surface of the board,
equal in depth to about one-third tbe
board's thickness. Replace the board
and fasten with galva~izCd decking

By IIUQfR'S DIGEST BOOKS

Having the right screwdriver. in
band makes most jobs a lot easier.
The Basics
. A basic saewdriver set includes
four standard slot-tip and four crosstip (Phillips) drivers in various sl]aft
lengths and blade sizes. Larger sets
may also include a few star-shaped
Totx screwdrivers. These are bandy
when repairing appliances, cars and
yard equipinent. · , ..
Square-drive (Robenson) screwdriven can be bousJ!t individually for
receued screws in furniture, boars
and recreational vehicles. If you plan
to work with many different types
and sizes of screws, consider buying
a~ of tips tlu!t fit one handle. Buyinl Tips
It pays to buy only the best screwdriven. The best ones have handles
of butyrate .o r other strong plastic.Tbey have Slrong steel blades that
are t'Oilgh-finished or ridged to resist
slipt!IJC- Choose ones that feel oom·
fortlble in your hand. Keep in mind
that.the llrger the bandle,, the more

m.

r

turning power(torque) you can bring
t9 bear on the screw. Screwdriver
1ips
- In selecting a screwdriver for
a job, make sure that the tip fits com·
fortably in the slot. If the tip is too big
or too small for the slot. the blade will
slip out.
~A screwdriver with a tip that's
badly rounded nicked can also slip
and injure you or damage lhe work.
A split or damaged handle is danger·
ous as well.
· ~ Keep screwdriver handles
clean, especially when working on
machines. A greasy handle can ea&amp;i·
ly slip out of your hand.
·
- Never use a screwdriver near
live wires or for electrical testing.
-If you need extra turning pow·
er, clamp a wrench or locking pliers
on a square-shank screwdriver. Don 'I
try to use ordinary pliers on a.roundshank screwdriver. They'll just slip.
Driving Screws
- When driving a screw, always
use your . other hand to hold the
screwdriver blade in tbe screw slot.
If you .hold the work while driving a

or

entry into casinO:style gambling but
opposed casinos in his home county
.._, WASHINGTON- The four peo- on a local option vote.
~- pi~ selected so far for a national gam- J Terrance Lanni. a gambling
. J··bhng study commission portend final proponent and chainnan and chief
r•res~lts that are little more than pos- executive officer of the MGM Grand
,... tunng rather than concrete proposals casino company in Las Vegas. He
"" for deali.ng with gaming's social-and also is on the board of the industry's
, .. econonuc effects.
American Gaming Association.
"~" . 11lat's the consensus. of many · Lanni said he pledged "to be .as
'" experts looking at the frrst four of the reasonable as I think I am on all
.1- nine commissioners named to the
issues" when the commission looks
...two-year study panel:
into the industry's strengths and
:-. - I ames Dobson, a gambling weaknesses.
~ ..opponent and head of the conserva"That doesn't mean I'm totally
_.,, tive Focus on the _Family, based in objective. I wouldn't even want to
•.. : Colorado Springs, Colo. His organi- present myself as a totally objective
~-zation officially opposes gambling
person," be said. But "I think it's
•,:- also.
·
appropriate to have an objective
,.
- Kay Cole 'James, dean of the evaluation and let's see what this
,,,Robertson School of Government at commission comes up with.
,.. Pat ~oberrson's Regent University in
That tallies up to two who are anti·
., V~rgm1a Beach, Va. Although she gambling, one pro-gaming industry
· hasn't talked about her gambling phi- official and one neutral member of
~ l~sophy, she is expected 10 oppose it
the commission. All were appointed
.~n&amp;IOCe Sb~ has served as a ooltrd mem- ·by Republicans.
,. her of Focus on the Family, a senior
"They'll just have a lot of heat; I
.,vice president of the conservative don't know if there will be any light,"
, ,,Family Research Council and a mem- said ~illial)l Thompson, a gambling
,;ber of President Bush's White House expert at lhe University of Nevada._ Task Force on the Black Family.
Las Vegas. "Let's have a study. Let's
, .. - Dr. Paul Moore, a radiolo&amp;ist in not have, people who have points of
.:· Pascagoula, Miss., who says he is view."
t , neutral. He supported his state's
But rumors and hints about the

O""''

t Goblet
.6 Dissolve
t 0 Agreement between
nations

14 Cooking vessels
· 18 Tell
20 Eye part
21 City in Hawaii
22 Geologic period
24 Frank admission
25 Free-lor-all
26 Corpuscle .
27 French painter
29 WaHet items
30 River in Russia
32 A metal
34 Oblig'I!IOn
36 - Stanley Gardner
37 Poetic preposrtion
38 False god
39 Canvas shelters
41 From- tb nuts
43 Sprite
44 Sapling
45 Exercise sessk&gt;n

47 Singer Guthrie
49 Entirely lacking, with
"or
52 Spoose
53 Wet earth
55 Lynx
59 The Ram
60 Harangue
62 British car part
64 "Lorna-·
65 Young woman
66 Caravan animal
67 Honest .:..
69 Actor Steiger
71 Old stringed
Instrument
72 Chem. or blot .. e.g.
73 Carries
74 Paid athlete
75 Foundation
77 Insect egg
78 CitY in Nebraska
80 Hold
82 Hard liquor
84 Adder
85 Conversation

87 Toward the rear
88 Duos
89 Actor
90 Titled anew
92 Ravine
93 Hearing organ
· 94 Passover meal

96 - and feather ·
~7 Fun-tilled gathering
99 Snead or Jaffe
102 Aara 104 Unhappy
105 Portable bed
t 06 Mrs. Dwighl D
Eisenhower

107 Taunt
t 08 Percolates
t tO Sage
t 12 Grinned
114 Student at West
Point

1 t 5 Compositions
t t 7 Narrated
t t 9 Hatchets
120 Desires
121 Uppity one
123 Suppressed
.125 Rabbit
126 Cigar residue
t 29 Long poem
131 Chide
132 Pile ol cards
133 Drun.kard
136 Time ol day
138 Plant part
140 New Zealand parrot
141 Carnation color

t 42 Pole on a st]lp
143 Fleet ol warships
145 Ponder
147 Perlman of "Pearl"
149 Find
151 Consumed
152 Black
153 Uninteresting
1~ Des)roys gradually '
155 Verne character
156 Gets browner
157 Hardens
t 58 Pitchers

1 Metal framework

81
83
84
85

2 Crowbar
3 Unaccompanied
. 4 Old sayings

5 :Depot: abbr.
6 .Wall painting
7 Wicked

· "By MITCH WEISS
·, ·Associated Press Writer
1 ".
TOLEDO - Some say the Rev.
r.-Siim Lake. is a food stamp Robin
" :·Hood who 's putting his freedom on
·,.the line to help the poor.
But others believe the rail-thin
r ·street preacher, who admits be buys
•· food stamps illegally to feed the
:: downtrodden congregation he minis:' ters to every Sunday in an inner-city.
': park. is a crook who should pay for
·: breaking the law.
The 40-year-old "Rev. Slim," as
his followers . call him, bas been
charged with food stamp trafficking.
If convicted, he could setve 15 to 40
.years in jail.
The prospect doesn't daunt the excon who has·been arrested more than"
30 times. The founder of God's
Church of the Streets is a man with
a mission.
"You know, I've been buying
food stamps to feed my congregation
since I started my ministry," be said.
"'How can you put somebody in
jail for feeding the hungry? If that's
a ciirru~;, then put me in jait. ..
He admits he buys food stamps on
the street at discount rates and
exchanges lhem for food to feed his
congregation, which consists of the
poor, the homeless: recovering alco- _
holies •and drug addicts.
For almost seven years, the former
drug dealer, addict and street hustler
bas been preaching the Word and
feeding thc:bungry at tbe.all.-day out· .
door services he holds every Sunday
in Gunckel Park.
One recent Sunday, Lake watched
proudly as followers erected a canvas
tent and lighted grills, set up folding
chairs and made ready for the day "s

\

worms

Help ·
Lubricate'
Works very hard
Word with card or

86 That girt
89 · - porridge hoL"
91 _Gym pads
92 Grating
95 Crowlike bird
97 Grew wan
98 Singer Ed -

10 "The - ot the
Opera"
·
1 t Island
t 2 Earthem lump
13 Btg boo~s
t4 Agitate
· t 5 Unclose. poetically

100 Help in wrongdoing

tQ1 NewYorkteam '
t 03 Mineral springs .
105 Welshmen, e.g.
t 06 Combined
107 Handed over
I 09 "Auld Lang -·
t t t pistress c~llleners
. t 13 Wild ducks
114 Bottle stopper
1_16 High singing voice
t 18 "Oliver Twist"
autlior
120 Laugh
122 Lite story. tor short
124 Enemy
125 Farm bird
126 Triumphant cry .
t27.Achy
t28 Person
t 30 Celestial body
132 Watch laces
t 33 Digging implement
t:i4 Horse opera
t 35 Lock of hair
t 37 Appraise

16 Musical sound

17 Make points
t 9 Got away Irom

23 Natural elevation
28 Game ollicial, lor
short

31 Fish eggs
33 Writing fluid
35 Feather scart
38 Part ollhe eye .
39 Complete
40 Retinue
42 Trudge
44 Foot digits
45 Merchandise
46 Atlempt
48 Greek coin
49 Hoover and Aswan
50 - the Red
51 Dreamers

52 Silent performer
54 Short trip ol a kind ·
56 Aural district
57 Capers
58 Molars
60·Bye:bye!
6t Make. as money
63 Dawn goddess
66 Sticks together
68 Trouble
70 Quarrel
73 "It - a Thiel"
74 Edible tuber
75 Receptacle.
76 Like a snake

man born Charles Lake is bad news.
" l jus( don't trust him," said
Charles Robinson, 52. " I don't know
w.hat it is. He brings in a bad group
of people. Bad group.''
Prosecutors and police won't comment about the food stamp oase. A tri·
al date was pending.
Lake claims he was set up. He
says an undercover police officer
offered to sell him $500 worth of
food .!tarnps for$300 . The offer was
too good to refuse and he was arrest·
ed.
He bas been in and out ofjail since
1978, when he accidentally shot a
friend in the head. The friend sur·
vived, but Lake served six months for
negligent assault and carrying a concealed Weapon.

From 1978 to 1989, Lake sold
drugs - getting hooked on crack in
the process - and stolen goods.
One night, while living at his sisted house, Lake says he got a message fiom God : establish God ' s
Church of the Streets.
Lake, a Baptist, began visiting
homeless shelters, offering $3 to the
homeless to join the church he attended ncar the park.
They came. But after a few weeks .
he said, the church told him to stop
bringing them because "they were
not the righ\ kind of pe 0ple." He
refused, and one Sunday, security
guards turned them away.
That's when L~ke decided to give
tip crack and preach at the park.
Some inner-c.ity residents admire

005

142 Flat-bottomed boat
144 Not a.Aep.
146 Male child
.148 Color
!50 Mineral

Possible new oper(i~gs
are announced tot ' ·. ~
Ethanol production
PEORIA, Ill. (AP) - Molecular
tinkerin~ . and genetic engineering
may open the . door to producing
ethanol more cheaply and from a
wider variety of material - everything from com cobs to potato peels.
Researchers at the Agriculture
Department's Peoiia laboratory ate
looking for ways to make ethanol
· more profitabl~ and more competitive
with gasoline.
In the short run, the research simply may improve efficiency for existing ethanol plants, said Rodney Bothast, bead of the Fennentation Biochemistry Research Unit.
The first step probably will be •
making ethanol -a form of alcohol
that can be' used as fuel- from corn
fiber that now is used as animal feed,
he said. That would boost production
by about 0.3 gallons for every bushel .
·of com- a small change that could
mean big money.
Scientists estimate an ethanol
plant now making 100 million gatIons a year wOuld .see annual income
rise by $4 million to $8 million .
Corn fiber can be · turned into
ethanol now, Bothast noted, ·but it

-

Classified Sectio1t!

Lost: 2 ·Kinens. On Neighborn.ood
Road, Reward Ollered l fiU -441 0934, Evenings.

And 14t, P lease Call 614-4460219 We Miss Him, Reward 01·
lered, Aaron &amp; Bra ndon.

u 619-645-8434.

Real Oueations, Real Answers,
Real Paychics l ·i0.0 -484· 1020
E11 t 6878, $3.99 Min. Uust Be 18
Serv U819-645--8434. ...

30 Announcaments
We ptoceu deer, maka hickory
smoked hams, vail bologna, pep·
paronl. jerky, summer sauoage.
CooiiH' kept, clean, sanitary. Hunting supplies, license &amp; oame
check alation. ca+wfpap·s Hen·

1

lost Wtlite {,:ow Wirh large Calf
ApproJC . 400 lbs. Gone 2 To 3
Weeks Near Richard Brothe rs
Orchard &amp; J),rn Lacke~ Road Call
Collect, 614·286·2394, Reward
Olteredl

70
Yard Sale
=========::;

.Gallipolis

derson wv.

&amp; VIcinity

Giveaway

ALL

1 ~r. old Elkhound, wel l mannered,
good wilh ·~·- 814-992·569o.

5 adorable kinen1. to good home,
males &amp; fema les. lilter trained, 5
wka. old, 61•·98S..3837.

Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance . DEADliNE: 2:00 p.m.
lh&amp; day b'efore U'le ad is to run .
Surday ed iti O[l • 2:00 p.m. Fr1day.
t.!onda~ edl\lon • tO :OO a.m. Sat·

:11;

.
•

.

Public Notice

FrH 1 Week Olc:l White &amp;· Black

KirteJ\S, 61•·446·1 731 .
Part Chow puppies, 3 Male, 3 Female 614-367-0575

Puppies to giveaway, 614 -9493078.

2529.

60 . Lost and Found

In Memory of
BELINDA HICKS
who pa!;Sed away
November 17, 1991
In life we loved
dearly
.
In our hearts we
you still,
In our hearts you
place
No one could ever filL
You teft behind

I':'::~:~~~~~ otrongtho, build
$10D REWARD- lost 10122196,
Ia
akltte, and Novemblr 13, 15, 17,1111
male Bluetick hound, Coolville
Ridge Rd ., Athens Count~. A.W.
provld•
community
Cline, 614-667·3709.
eupporll for famtttoo.
Public Notli:e
Servtcn ehould utlllzo a
Found: brownish red lemale dog,
fomlty-contor•d approach
vicinlly or AbbOtt Rd. and RoCk·
.
pUBUC
NOnCEwhlch addroaeoe the noedo .
Tho Vlllago ol lllddtoport Sj)ringS R&lt;J., 614-992-6~ 1.
ol tho chltd within the
conloxt of the family and will be recatvtng bldo at tho FOUND: Hunting Dog in CheShife
nt
Office of tho Mayor, 237 Ohio. XM-713-5839.
the flmlty't onvlranm• .
St., lllddtoport, O~lo
Tho lolol grant doltaro Race
unlit
4:00
p.m. November FOUND: Little female p,uppy,
avallabll for uch co.unly to 25, 1811 fro~
Drown/black miud, :v ic ini ty ol
roken t;learts,
$1,700.00. Appttcattona may lntereoted In contractor&amp;
GalllpoiiQ Ferry. 304-675-6343 al·
providing tat 6:30pm.
I haoov memories too.
be obtained by contacting traah pickup aervlca
to
we never wa.nt•1dl
tho following agency:
approxlmallly
175 LoBI· 1119/96, Wehe Terrace/
memories
we
GaiHwackoon-lletg..
Union
Avenue
vicinity,
year
old
rootdonto, VTdo wilt bo
Board of Alcohol, Drug opened at th• regular male OaChihund!Boxer miJC : le· lwa1nted you.
Addlcllon and llontal Heafth
Doreen Caroe,nte,rl
ochodulod councU mooting ,male Beagle, 1!114 ·992-6192. · ,
RoN llary Snowden
hrvlcel
Sadly mi!ISed
an Nov. 25, 1tte.
lOST : 10 U1 la craa" , Rt2 and.
""'"'I 414 Second Avenuo, SuHe
All bldo wm Include a cool Small black &amp; white Territr, b.obMother-Fona,
Sisters
VIllage of Rvlland 102, Oalllpolla, OH 45131
for each raold•nllal unit tail. REWARD! 304-895-3857.
Melissa,
Doreen,
(11) 14,15,17; 3TC
Phone: Ill ue 3022
along . wllh a roeume
Application iloadtlne: ahowlng
I
Ciui"''"·
Daughter-Brandi
the compeny'e
January
22,
1117 oxparlonce In lhll typa ol
(appllcattone will not be work.
.Pubflc Notlc:e
IDC I pled IIIII' thll dill.)
A propo11d contract for
A pu~llc hlartng witt be lhla
nrvtce witt bl avetlabll
LIGAL NOncE
,
Mkt on Deoeftllber 1, 1111, at the
mayor'o office upon
The Gallla/Jeckaon at
Buck• Hilla Cor11r rsquulll
no charga during
Coun- 4Gal Ch~d AlluM Center,
Fllo Grande, Ohto, at
lncl Naglecl ~Board 1:30 a.ni. Tho ""ntlflcettan · buolnen houra.
All btda mual bl gooel for
jloooJ Oblo Chlld111n 1 'I'Nal of MUnly lundlnfl , _ .
frund aoard) ta oooktng will Ito dtacu11ed wtth a period ol 120 daye and
applloatlone from tooal lntliiw..., eppRDMtalftd •H any contract which tha
vltlago on1o111 Into tor lhle
prov1t1e111 for lhl provtaton '
lnta'*:"
ora urvlc• witt be lor • period
6128152 to
R-'d K. C.adlly of HrvlNI lor chtld abue•
Galftll County AudiiDr and nagleol prev,eilllon ~ 1 • tundtng Wilt bl. ofoneyoar.
11128195
Tho vltlago raeii'Ved lha
Nov. 8, 10,11, 12. 13, 14,11.
lined ....n a propor110n of
right
to.
rejtcl
any
and
au
available lunda. l'rogt11m1
Sadly Misaed
,-17,1t,1t
-. . ...
lund a ·
of promoting political, blda ·ond to waive · any
lnlamulllllla
In
llkldlng.
family. rellla••_..._ ..
Wife, Family ondl
.DeMv M. H-,llayor
not ud•~l•lly ocnr.
· VIllage Of IINdlaport
Frieruh.
ne Advlaory loard
(11)
10,
17,
24;
3TC
p!JitlloiY anneuno11 their
PUBLIC NOnCE
Tho Vtllage of Ruttend
dntreo to rocotve ·ooal•d
bldo . tor the toltowlng
whlclel whlch tho VIllage
wllhlelo dtepenoe. A tM8
Chlvnllel poloo crul- ond
4 1
a 1171 chevrolet 31 on
dUIIIP truck.
All noted btdo ohllt u
,..colvod In the Clork'o
otnce 11 P.O. lox 420 11•1n
Street Rillland, Ohio on or
befora Novambet' 21,
of 7:00 p.m. The Rulland
VIllage reoorvea tho right to
.::,_ ~ialollal~ I accept or re)e&lt;?l 1 ny -or all

i

.,

...·.
•

,.

...
n

..•

..

..

In Memory of
Harry W.
Holderby, Jr..

'

...

See answer on page 84

.•.
If
u

.

;:r:::.';,!~=-·==

,i

area,

614-992·3324.

773-5785 Or

90

Card of Thanks

ana aU tlie empfo!Ju.s
there. 'J.{eitfs :JiitfFt Sta
&amp; Stuaents, Cliesrt
'E{ementa'!f Staff ·. &amp;
Stuaents, 'Meigs Squat£,
'Veterans 'Memoria( Sta
&amp; Sue . Zerije, 'lJrua
!Jisfier &amp; Staff. 'Ifian
!fOU to a{{ our famify .

Jrientfs.
flfiani;_!JOii aruf qoa'lJfess
!JOU aff.
~na ~icliarrf a

Clii{J{rm,

wfk, Josepfa
&amp;:Jior&amp;

The family of Eloise

F. Stiles would like to
thank Everyone tor
their cards, flowers,
food, phone calls and
words of comforl
during our recent
loss. We wanl to
especially thank the
emergency . room
physician and staff at
Veterans Memorial
Hospital, Rev. William
Middleswarth, all the
employers of Fisher.
Funeral Home, and
the emergency squad
personnel.
Your
kindness will never
be forgotten : .
Edward Stiles
Kay &amp; ,Carl Platter
Barbara &amp; Jim Fry
Roger &amp; Unda Sllles
Nina Stiles Craddock

.
.,....
.....
.
..•• ..••" ..•
Card of Thanks .

L...
.......

.::r••.,...

Clean late Ltode! Cars Or
TruCks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Poi1tiac, 1900 Easr·
ern Avet'IUe, GalliPolis.

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lu)l time aucttoneer. c omplele
auctioo
!ervice.
licensed
tee,Onio &amp; Wes1 i
304·

1'"

'
".,

Absolute Top Dollar: AII. U.S. Sll·.
ver And Gold Coins, Proofsets,
Diamonds, Antique Jewetr~. Gold
Rings. Pre-1930 U.S. Currency,
Slerllng, Etc. Acquisiriona Jewelry
- U .T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 614 -446- ~2.

Fill din wamed- win pay for digging
and hauling , Racine/ S~raCU$8

4314 •379•2720.

to~ an~ s;peci&lt;ll)
tfumf:.!JO• to ~icfumfs .
Sen's I.l. of .Utart !fa{{s

675-7911 .

Public Notlc:e
~lltlnil•, which o~cur at
toall four (4) limn 1 year.

and

Female Poodle w t papers . 304-

~·

Public Notlc:e

Public Notice

-----...,..---I
80
PubliC Sale

'16eJamify of £es
!/(JI!f r!(jc/iarrf woufi li~

·whirs steel bathtub . .304-882·

board Oat, install a new board in its
place. Reme.mber to always use gal' vanized nails or screws when work·
ing 'on a deck.

tr.e

.814 ·247-2032 Evenings,
Weekends.

----------~~+-~----------~--~----~----~--~--------~~p,~~~~..~.~~~~=l

· If this technique fails to bring the

All Yard Sales Must Be Pa id In
Advance . Deadline: 1:00pm
d8y belore the ad is to ruo, Sun&lt;Jay &amp; Mon&lt;Jay edition- 1:OOpm
Fr1da~.
·

Iii

Wariled tQ Buy

'I

Card of Thank's

Only

''

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepart
&amp;VIcinity

urday.

Chow Male Cinnamon Colored,
Verv Frlendl'f, To Good Home

·..
... ;...
HERO OR CRIMINAL 1 -The Rev. Slim Lake held his 3·year·
old son, Marvin Lake Jr., In front of a church tent located on .a
basketball court in Toledo lasl monih. Some say Laka is a f.o od
stamp Robin Hood who's pulling his freedom on the line to help
the poor, while others say his admilling to buying food stamps
illegally to .feed his congregation makes him a crook who should
pay for breaking ihe law. (AP)
·

costs too much. Getting the cost
down should be just a matter of finding new ways to chemically treat and
process the cotn.
"It's not a big jump from this to
dealing with potato peels and stuff ·
like that." said Robert Hespell, an
ethanol researcher.
The researchers have more exotic
tools as welL
Scientists can search for special
enzymes to break down the plant
matter so it can be fermented into
alcohol. They can breed 'strains of
·bacteria, yeasts, even fungi to help in
the process. What breeding does not
accomplish, genetic engineering
might
·
.
Better efficiency will h'elp quell
one of the major criticisms of elhanol
- that it takes more energy to rai~e
and process the corn than is derived
from ethanol. Bothasl said ethanol
already produces about 25 percent .
more energy than i.t requires for production.
Big improvements are probably
15 or 20 years in the future , if
research continues, Bothast said. ·

Utn·
.
St•ll
and
'fl'itdt• in fht•
'

Lost and Found

Personals

majority to produce a report of any
son. A likely outc010e would be
majority and minority repor/s, which
would lessen the impact of recommendations and probably fail!!&gt; produce legislation needed to implement
them.
!
But Moore thinks the commission
will produce " a decent report."
. "I have no axes .to grind with
gambling, -and I have no ~, desire
to see us have big-time 'gambling
everywhere:· he s•id.'But "1 be.lieve
·there ·will be enough ~oices that. we
will have a good working commiitee
and that we will ·coMe out ·with a
good report."
}

experts consider it unlikely the com·
mission will muster enough of a consensus to put to rest the raging arguments about gambling's problems
and economic benefits.
Because the appointments are so
clearly pro-gambling and anti-gambling, lhe commission h~s "lost any
reputation of being objective" before
it bas even staned, said Nelson Rose,
a gambling expert and a professor at
Whittier Law School in Los Angeles.
· "Instead of being an objecli•e
commission to study it, it looks like
a legislative committee to debate it.' '
The worst scenario would have
the commission unable to muster a

Meal Somaona Special From
Your Own Area. 1· 900·6 56-5050 ,Missing Small Blac~ Peek -a -poo
E11L 7338, $2.99 Min. Muat Be 1B Dog Black Collar, Lost Nea, 775

40

"1'11\ going to beat this." Lake
said. smiliog, showing off two gold
front teeth.
Then he paused, ·feeling .some
doubt
· "I don 't know what's going to
!Iappen. Everything is in God's
hands," he said.
·
."No way Rev. Slim! They're not
going to put you in jail," sh6uted his
girlfriend, Melinda Scott, 24 ..
Not everyone thinks Lake is a
godsend.
To many people, including some
residents of the housing project
..
across the street from the park, t~e

139 BrasS instrument
t 4 t tiit repeatedly

La.kc. They say he helps them when
they arc in trouble, takes them to
supermarkets to buy groceries and is
always around when they need to
talk.
"He's just like a brother and good
frienrl " said Willie Valliant. 37. of
Toledo, a recovering alcoholic and
drug addict
Ceceli~ Carter, who bad struggled
with alcoHolism for 20 years, joined
Lake's flock in 1994.
"You know what? Since that day
I haven't hadthe desire, nor the taste
for a drink;" she said. · ·
· The serv.l'ces are part revival , part
picnic . Children play football and
baseball in ·lhe park, while adults prepare food and talk . .
Food is served from 'noon until 3
.p.m. Then Lake preaches for an hour
from a makeshift stage inside the tent
Then more food is served- barbecue ribs,· chicken, ham sandwiches.

ANNOUNC EMENTS

SCTVICCS.

screws.

'screw, the blade can easily slip out of
the slot and injure your hand.
- To make driving easier, pull a
screw's threads ai:ross beeswax, an.
old candle stub or paste wax first.
.Pipping a screw in linseed oil will
also ease the job lllicr proteCt the
screw from rust. Don't use SO!tp,
wfiich 'may coiTode some screws.
·
- To start a screw in a difficult
place, push the point throuBh the
sticky side of adhesive tape. Insert the '
screwdriver into lhe slot and wrap the
~around the blade. Or try dabbing
a ltttle rubber cement on the screw
bead.
.
. -Despite the rule-thai says. tbM
you should never hit a screw wtlh , ,
bamm~r~ a few li~bt taps on aecrew
when It IS almost tn place c.uae1 the
l"ood fibers to compreu and sl~t
downward. ~· as~ tcrew pta all
fi.nal ughtenang, 11 wtll get a better
btte.
- To keeP. a ~w from being
looaeaed by vibralions, dab lheJIIC
underneath the ecrew held.

have a predispo!&gt;1tion, tbe less likely
it is to accomplish anything," Hom
said. "It seems certain that a majority of this cpmmission will not be
objective. How do you accomplish
things where a majority of the peapie come in trying to def~ their
bias?"
But Frank Fabrenkopf, llfCSident
of the American Gaming Association,
downplays that idea, noting the law
setting up the commissio n also
requires it to contract -rith the
National Academy of Sciences for a ·
study on compulsive and ·problem
gambling and with the Nati6n'ai'Advi;
sory Commission -on Intergovetnmental Relations for a study on gam•bling regulations and help with studies on crime and governmental revenues from gambling.
·
He said he expects, regardless of
the commission makeup1 •\some very,
• very definitive work done that can be
helpful to the publ1c ."
The commission will have two
years to carry our its wide-ranging
~tudy . of all forms of gambling.
mclud1ng _gambling on the Internet
and gambling advertis~ments. It is to
ISsue a comprehenSive report wnh
recommendations for leg islative
action, if any.
.
'
But wnh a spht panel, many

:.:Embattled street preacher defends his church

union

B Zodiac sign
9 Made ragged

five remaining commission appoin.t·
ments - three from President Clin-.
ton and one each from House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo.,
and Senate Minority Leader Tom
Dascble, D-S.O.- indicate the same
pattern.
For example, Bill Bible, chainnan
of the Nevada Gaming Control Board
who alread1 was interviewed at the
White House. is expected to be progambling if named to the commission. Clinton also is expected to name
a Native American, who likely will
have a pro-Indian gaming bias.
Nancy Todd, a gambling consultant based in Naples, Fla., said she is
pro-gaming, but "I don't think that
would warrant somebody like me
being on there."
" Instead of the same old arguments being rehashed - pro-garners
vs. anti-garners - I think you need
to have people truly go out with the
·idea to study it," she said. 'Tm not
pleased with the way it's being put
together."
Bernie Horn, political director for
the National Coalition Against Gambling, is concerned the final commission will have two anti-gambling
members, two neutral members and
five pro-gambling meiiJflers.
"The more people you put on that

"

79 Spring time
80 Open a -of

DOWN

·The use and care Qf s·crewdrivers
For AP lfll cltl .-turn

., By DENNIS CAMIRE
... O...lell Hlwtt Service

become uneven, usually a problem in
older homes, the cause is seldom the
joists but more often the weakening
of the girder (slnlctural member that
runs beneath and·al riglt anglea to the
joists) or supporting post. One remedy is to merely add another post
directly beneath the sagging section
' of girder. Rent a shoring jack and ilse
it to raise lhe girder to le~l. plus a
fraction of an inch more to allow for
settling. Raise the jack very gradually, a partial tum or so per day
the
course of a week or more. Adjust the
height of the new post and make sure
there is solid footing benealh (a 20inch-square concrete slab 10 inches
thick is st1111dard). Then fit the post,
check that it is exactly vertical, and
lower the girder onto it as you
remove the jack. Sometimes all that
is necessary is to ·place shims
between the girder and existing posts,
using the same jacking method.
Q: We remodeled our kitchea and
replaced our 40-gallon, gas~red
water heater with an electric water
heater that has a S5QO.walt element.
Now ;.e are stuc)( with a tank thai is
good only for me and my wife. When
our three grandchildren come to visit, the water is not hot enough for
them to bathe at half-hour intervals,
li¥fthey did when I had a gas-fired
.,;later bllater. Can you help? .
A: People switching from .a gas·
fired to an electric water heater fre·
quently cite the problem you discuss.
When selecting a water heater, consider its capacity and the recovery
rate. The recovery rate is the number
of gallons that the unit will beat to.90
degree~ to IQO degrees Fahrenheit
above its Jnlet temperature in I hour.

'

ACROSS

~· • I·~~ 11 J • P8ge D3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaeant, WV

,-First appointm.ents to gambling commission show pattern of s·p lits

SUNDAY PUZZLER

13'-0'

.__...,., .....

=8undlly,~17,1188

Sunday, November 17,1188

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Otf • Point Pleaunt, WV

(

.

•

••
•

'J'ru(y,

:
•
jfuwers, calfs, sifts, tliouglits anti' . •
•
~
prayers of liunt.fr~as ofpeopk : ·
•
wlio care anti'wlio sliaret.f
•.
• • • in tlit joy of i.MWin{J fit.r. • •

:
•

tlit famiCy.of :Neffe 'Balir
.Ms 6etn 6ksstt.f6y tli.e caras,

•

'11iani yuu!

••

Neffe 's :famify

•••

••

•

••
••
••••
!I
•

�Pomeroy o ~lddleport o Gallipolis, OH o Point Pleasant, WV
'Nintecl to Buy

110

J &amp; O'o Auto Partl. Burtn1 ool-

~
-

· Sollinv peril, :104·

II OJ U.S. ..... 1035 To

New

1t48li&amp;Yea. 114·448·,.._. Att.r

7PM.

Non-Working Waahttl, Drytrt,
StoMt, Retrloeratora. FI'Mzttrt.
Air Condil1onen, Color T. V."t ,

Help Want.cs

110

110

Babyalner nttdtd starting Jap

dart • --..

1at 2 or 3

muM: bl

1 non •tmoktr, rtltrencts rt·
Compu1er Ultfl Needed. Work
own houn. UOk 10 SSOklyr 1·
fiD0-348..71. IC 1!501.

-F.,;gllt
YHr Round HAUltNG FREtGHT
Sirct'28,
lleolon,lnc, Birmingham. AI. 801).

**

Crui&amp;t Ship Jobst Earn 1300 1
Wkty.
Round PatiUon.

v..,

7 Oay1 407·175-2022 Ext. 0528

c...
DnYero.flollod

NEW Pay Pacl&lt;ogol

WOOd ball", milk bottltt, Utiga
COuntr Advert1Hmtn1. Osby

$1 ,000 Sign-On Bonual Monthly

-

Mot. OTR Call TODAY For Oe-

110-ll!l2·7..1.

Wanr.d To Buy: We Buy Au10'1

Bonut f'n!tlraml NHd COL·A I 8

llllsi'ECKiolillor8CJ0.811-6836.

•

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•'

4563,.

MANAGER TRAINEES

tenti~l

84 Lumber Company, The Fas:

coli: (830l908·2350En3870.

IMMEDIATE OPENINGS .
ACTNOYII

8om-lpm.
AVON t All Areas I Shi rley

30....75-1429.

See: Jim Arnold

&amp;13-1814.

Apply At 84 Lumber C01T'p8ny
Route 1 Bolt 84A

'

Anlllble Work-Inventor; worktrt. general laborera, general of·
lice. Par10nnef Temi)Orary OHic._ 30W75-3BOS.
'

1-800-513-4343 Ext. B·

9368 CaU For Oelaija.
HOME TVPIST, PC u1er1 need·
ed . $45,000 income polentra l.
Call1..000-513·~3 Ew:t B-0368.

114 lumbor.Co""*'y, 1ho loollll •-... • ..

orowlne natlon.llu"*'tr chain ,

hn .., _ _ .,niUot todoy.

Gallipolis F,.,.ry, ~

At') Equal Opportunily Employer
MIF rN Drug Free Etwlronment

310

Do

odd Joba. l•yino tioc:k &amp;

~ 304-675-211&lt;.

And Home Health Servicat.
Ouelificatlont Include: ... . S.W.

blntllon of oolot o.a phyolctl

Opportunity

In Peraon Or Send Resume TO:
Oolc H• Corrmunloy llodlcol Conter, Anendon: Bttnda McKenzlt,
350 Charlotte Allenue, Oak Hill,
O!llo 45858.

EOE.

An Equtl Opportunity Employer

ton. No IICperitnCI ntcllalfJ.

Able

lng Of Tho HotpiWo Depor-L
Salary. Pltaoo Allt&gt;IY

montr

Gl*poll• Ftlrl.

wv

Apply •• Cr•wJard'a, Hendlraon

wv. 304-875-5404.

Avon 'j Representathtel
needed. Earn ~'18"f ior Christ·
mas bill&amp;. at homelat work. 1·800g92-8358 ar 30•·882·2845, Ind.

Rap.

Dtalenhtp Awallable Ste~ Build·

ing Sll" Art BoomirtQ Bio Profit
POtential From Sales And /Or
Conttructran Calt For · Avallable
Ulfk811303-7~ 135 Ext 6800.
H11lth Club For Sale. Includes All

Equiipment. Serrous Inquiries
Onl~. 814-.... 8-8929 8 A.M To 12
P..M For M ,\ppolntmenL

.

Long Term Cart Nursing Fac1lrtr
Seeking Enthusiastic Ohio Stall
Tested Nurse Aides. hcellent
Benefi t Package Including: Vacati on , Christmas Club. 401K Plan,
Insurance, And Uore. Sign On
Bon us Just In Time For Chrltt·
mas. Contact Pinec:rast Care
Cen1er - 614 - 446 -7 112 • Usa
Lee. Adon.

-

"

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'c

...
"

Bake &amp; Craft Sale
Homemade Chili
Dec. 7, 9 am - 4 pm
St. Louis
Catholic Church

Peoples Bank
Pomeroy

Coats For Kids
Drop Off Locations
Pomeroy office
. Middleport office,
Rutland Office,
vaughan's IGA

,.
FOR SALE
Used Story &amp; Clark Console Pian.o
Excellent Condition 90. Day
Guarantee Free Tuning $850
Call Grubb's Piano Tuning
614·446-4525
WANTED
Someone to open and close
graves at Addison· Raynolds
Cemetery.
· Telephone 614-446·375B

..

Happy Holidays from
KEMPER'S BUTCHER
SHOP AND

·-·'·
1..

bnck &amp; stone work, 30 year~ experience, reasonable rates. 30• 895-3591 after 6:00pm, no JOb 10
small or to BIG. WV-021 208

45831 .

balhs, nalural gas, new roof, new
ltPIIC, 36x50 thr6e bar garage
and workshop, 1.5 level acres on
Slate Route '7, Chester, OH, &amp;14·

985-3355.

Nallonal Bank, Racine,

AI real estate ~nlllng In
this ~r Is lllbleei.IO
the F~l Fair Housing Acl
of 1968 which makes It !llegsl
10 ac:Wertls't: any preference,
llmitatlon or discrimination
basad on race, color, rt41glon,
sex familial status or national
ortgln, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limHatlon or di8CI'Imlnatloo.•

330

Trap Shooting will be
after

-.

orders need to be

See what's new at

~··

placed

-·-

by Nov. 20.
105 Thompson Rd. Vinton, Ohio

Aunt Clara's
Collection

Umited 1st Edition

'.

of the G.A.H.S.
"Old blue" band bus is now
available for $1 0 eaCh.

.. 1'"

•

117 Acre Farm
2 mi.

Univ. Rio

Grande
County Water thru
center of farm.

2 barns, all mineral .
rights, 4 brdr, 2 bath
Call Wm .' or Martha
Meek

614-245-9695
Pi,.r1nTuning· &amp; Repairing
30 yrs. Experience
Call Elmer Geiser

614-388-9809

Fresh baked bread,

· CATS MEOW

-

Public Invited
Refreshments served

4 pm til ?

(614) 388-9847

..
-.
..
.

Monthly support group
meeting at Scenic Hills
311 Buckridge Road
Wednesday
November 20, 96
at 7:00pm

SLUG SHOOT
Gallia County
Gun Club .·

'-

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ALZHEIMERS .

house. Sell all or part

....

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All Ages, All Risks

'

Contact: Ann Caldwell
245-5565 or
Leanna Kingery 256-14n

pnxaads go to the "'-'~·n'·"·'
BAND BOOSTERS.

Ttis newspaper willnoc

opporttJnlty basis.

"'·

180 Wanted To Do

Phone (614)446-6111

Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio Pianos
starting at $1395
Also digital pianos &amp;
keyboards Free delivery,
Free tuning, financing
available ·
Lessons available

1-4 p.m.

'·
...,

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Brunicardl Music Inc.

We smoke Turkeys and
Hams
·Give us a call for more
information

~ -

Needed To Teach Community
And Peucmal SkUll To Adulra

advertised In lfil na;;sr.aper
are awailablt on an equal

· Gallipolis

Amish Pies
Open weekdays 10-6
Sundays 12-5
446·0205
Four miles west on Rt. 141

. FORMOREINFORMATION

~~~!!;~~~:.:....:.::=::1

::

320 Mobile Homes
tor sale
'73 K 1.

'

rr ... wood, 14x70, 2-3 bed·
total electric, one acre

REAL ESTATE

310 Homes for sale

~
1982 14JC65

7295.

Brookshire 2bed·
room, total electric, heat pump.
$6,500. 304·576·2046
1986 HollyPark 14r76, 3br, 2ba,'
wood porch &amp; cenlraJ au incl.
S12,0DO 304-675 -1213 Lean

251·!010.
Double

Wlde Mobile
At II 114·'

.....,.,._
S&amp;,OOO

-- -,_~

.

d

Home

WV. 304-755-YIIS

·
t.fJST SELL t981 14x70 wi11 lrO'11114-315-2434.

10- to-.. . """"*'·-

-HMOo, llil.l. 11111
.......nogolllll
~.-..y---(PPOo.
flvor- ( - NYingl - - -

I-

panlclpotlon In tlto olllt rttlrlmo!JI oyolem. TU111on •ml"lon Is

..lor0f11'10100.- trtd ·
Plo- lind 1 lottor ot oppllcollon, '"""""· oncl 1 .llol of
PIC~ tl~- ,,.... ION to: Paat Hft'k, OhiO U~•. U~

Humon , . _ , _ , - - · - . ONo &gt;1070t .
rna.bii'ICIIoed br Dec I ,.., 4, 1M. ,

•*""-'

~ OflPOI1UniiY •

"'

...,.,

'

'40

Apal1mlnts

for Rant

....

•·2211.

Z IM"¥111" Apanmenl At 50
tltape s•oo&lt; In Golllpollo S2IIOJ
lla.. Coil 814-311-1701.
unfurnlshMI tpt over

Coll304·875·

S275

_nl- S4!0111o.,

, total eleclrlc, ap.
l11.1ndry room
doH to tchool In town.
twiUIIH at: Vllllgt

Dopoolt l ~t.

.• ( MnCit RIIJI!red, Oft

New, 141t80 Only make 2 pay;.
mtnll &amp; ITIOYI-in, no PIW'mtnl at.
tar 4 yeart, frae HI-up I deiwry.
304·75551111S.

Strua Roull

• 1 850, eu-•AI -41 tt Ev.nlngs,

•• &amp;14-:145-«&lt;E.
... ~ 2 Bedrooma, '340/Mo., Water
.... l'llld. 15 112 Vlno Flrll
, .• Ave., Glrlge, Oepotlt, Rift~ tnc-

N!W 1117 14 WIDE 2 B£0.
ROOMS $15,225 Frto Doll..ry

Stt·Up No Ptlrmentt Until ftbr't
ary, 1997. 1-fl00.251·5070.

.1

-mo.

"814

ue :1411

c.,...

. 3
2 bolhl.
Con. loy atoo. $350/mo. 304-67531112.

New 1Q97 14 WldH, 2 bedroom,

$15,225. "" doloerr 11111 Ht·uti.
No parment unlit February
111117.1-IOQ.251·5070.

:::

' " " Of'

Clll1 ....'112-

I;~;;;;«~;-;;;;ca~

includ" e month1 FREE lot renL
Orii St85.57 ,... monh wilh $911!

3 Room 1 Bedroom Apa;rtment,
With Stoll• &amp; Refrigerator Fur-

614-441-2583.
1 Room, In Country, 3 Bedroomt, BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
t Bath. Basement, Total Electric:, BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
nithad,

'···

down.Caii1·IIJO.I37"3238.

New homes starting 11 1185 pet
month with only SieS down. can

JIJSS ot814-3e5-0698.
NEW REPO'S ONLY 2 LEFT

- lleoutilul ,_ Loo Homo ruriJ pri·

~~

vatt aetllng, spaciout 2 bedroom.

'i 1 bath, 1 ytlr IHSI, relertntfl
·,!' required, ...25 monlh plua dtpo•

Never Uvad In, Free Deliver~
And Set-Up, No Paymantt Unul
February, 1997. Call 1-800 ·251~

· it. 614-448·2801

r

!070

9t.lrkhatt Lane, 2

_

, , Garage, $340, Dtt&gt;otil

New Repos , only 2 left, neveihved Jn, tree deliverr and ut-up1
No pa~ment umil February 1997,

...lc

H,

With

513-57....253D.

"

1-800-251 -5070.

Ntw-199714 Wuie-1 bath, $1991
down, $150/mo, wtth approved
credit Call1·800-691 -6777

1997 Oovblew•de, 3 bedroom, 2
btttt, S1,44Sidown, $2~/mo, rree

o~ at Oak Wood Homes, Nitro

Ufl Chaks, Electric Wheelchairs,
Stair Lilts, Van Litts, Scoo1ers.
New JUMd, Bowman't Homec:are,
e14-4&lt;t6-7283.

furnllhtd wilh washtr, dlyer, dithwathtr and large kitchen wi'tl'l all
applia.nce1. Nice birth with t are~•
show.r. large master bedroom
Wllh a working fireplace. Living
area has loll of room . At $400
per tronlh with ublilies Included. A
deposit of $400 Is rtqulrtd. F.or
more inlormadon call e 14-843-

Concrete &amp; Plane Septic Tanks.

5343and ltaYe menage.

E.-ans Enterpr~sas, Jackson, OH
1·800·537-9528.

Llyoway now 1:&gt;&lt; ChrlotmU.
Polly'~

...,

Eloclr'&lt;,8t4-448·Q1311

Sleepinq rooms w1th cooking .
Also trailer spac:e on nver. All
hook·upl. C1ll alter 2 :00p.m,
304·773-5651, Mason WV

OHice Chairs, AuiOml.llc: W.thtr
$50; Electric Ranoe $75: Dtlk

460 Space for Rent

"'' Model Color T.V. $,25 Good

Ultd Furniture 130 Bullville Pike,

SSO Mlcrowavt ti!ID, Gaod CablCouches. Btdt, Uanr""'· e1e
0411-47112.

Uobile home IlleS lor rent, cal 1-

B00-837·3238.

520

510

G~ds

Two bedroom, carpel, atove, no
refrigetttor, no insidl ptlt, 81~·
l 892·3090.

with gat well, 1oc:at1d orf Beech
Grove, Rutland, 614•0i2·5440.
BAU~A LAND
114-775-117a

• 420 Mobile Homes
tor Fient
S2351Uo., $200 Deposit, Refer-

~·

Co.: Jut N. Of Hunlingao"fi, 3.
Mrles Out Teens Run &amp; Chambers ~ds. 011 SA 7, 11 Acres
$11 .000. g Acres S11 ,000, tb
Acres $10,000 Gallipolis, 2 Mrlel
Ou1 Netghborhood Road, 22 Acr-'
as With Pond S25,9DD, 10 ACfeS
$17,000.
'0)

U!

RUSSELL_D. WOOD, BROKER

1·800-585-7101 or (614) 446-7101
Real Eatete

Jac:ksan, Ohio, 1-800-&amp;37-8521.

AUOION

Mell:handlse

"' 2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes
• : Starling It S260·S300, IIWII', wa•

513-574·2~.

' . ter and trash included, 61.f-D92·r 2167.

, 2 &amp; 3 Bedroom Trailer 614- 4-480122. 614-146-7788.
•. 2 ~~~~om Moblll Hom•. ·M~r·
cenoille
No Pets, Referenc.• 11.814-448·1158.

Ar•.

~aU For t.tapa &amp; Owner Financ~­
mg Info. 10% Down + WI

Finance Bat•nce. tO%- 011 Cash

.J

2 Bedroom Mobile Home Clott
To Gallipolis, $27MAo .• lncludat
Weier, $200 O..potit Rererences,

•V

814-448-8805.

•

Two 2 Bedroom Mobile Hom11

On McCarmidl. Road .. Total Electric, 614..t.te-9689.

Help Wanted
f

'fiNANCE

~;

r

considerati~n. please send a re&amp;Ufll&amp; to:-

Manager ;

.

WV 26531

2 Bedrooms S2SOIMo., 814-44EI 8958.

All Utllitiet Included S1 85!Mo.,

s•io"'"' andWhlriPO&lt;il.
Tub Showa&lt;s $75.0010$199.95.
From $89.9510 $995.00.
and

1pc. and 2 pc. ColoiS and wMe. $49.9510
$7.95 oa. or 2 tor $15.00.

. $8.00 IO $17

New up1taars etlicienCr with ·priwate entrance, completely lur ·
n1shed, cjuiet surroulldinga, three
mllet from the R1venawood

Ritchie Bridge In Ohio. If y'ou are
looking, irs a rwsJ see. 1ra $390
Pll' month. ulililitt are included. A
'300 da.,P:Otlt is requ~red . For
more InfOrmation or an appo•ntmenl, call 814·843·5343 and
leave ,....ge.
Nice 2 Bedroom Furnrshed
Apartment , GallipoliS. Laundrv
Room, Au. No Pets, S3501Mo ..
Plus Deposit, 614·44e·2800.
N1Cft two bedroom apartment 1ft
Fomeroy, no pelS, 814·992·5658.

, .112" x4'x8' Foil Faced Styrofoam lnsulatioo Board $5.95 ea. or
pc. Uft $5.50 ea. f06 pc. $5.00 ea.
, 314• K4'x8' Foil Faced Styrofoam Insulation Board $5 .95 ea. or

.,•. . ....

pc. lift $5.50 ... 100 pc. $5.00 oa
Metal

Wall studs $1.25 ea. or 250 pc . Lift $1.10 ea· Take f-R

•• ,

• • Como To Oltlco, No Cillo -...
Mobile Home and Lo1 for Rani
~ ~· 814-o44&amp;-1278

One btclroom apar1ment •n Pt.

: • Mobile home ilr rer'll In Porntro)l,
• ·l 1250/mo., S100 depolil. no inlide

-

.-

• • pttl, 814-887-3083 aher 5pm.

N1ca 2 Bedrooms,
~ . Miles Down 2t8, N1ce,
, · es , Depo11t Required.
~ .. 8112. 61•·256-8251 .
'

,_

' .., Small IWO bedroom tralllf, S185

1

. .,.

UIIe:•::·~81:;4-:.:89:::2:.·M=7::;4·--::::-' . ,pi.:••::.:•::~::

; " Trailer for AenL Beautiful Ri~er
• ~ View. Kanaug1. Foliar's Mobile
: 1,

53)4 01' 814 -992-5231

.

Small furnished apt, 1br, upllalrl, icle11 for , perton, 402·
2111 SL S250tmo + 1lec:tric. No
pets, no smokere, references &amp;
deposit. 004-1175-2651.

pwnp.deposit,l14-fi2·7201,

Relngerator
Included. No
Smokers. No Pets, S300 Oepotit.
S350JMo.. Centet"lary Area, 614446·2205, 61 4-446-9585.

~ :)

:1•'' '; ;;;;;:::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::;1

~:

I.

ESTATE
AUCTION

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1996
10:00 A.M.

Not Rf'::.Oj o

ANTIQUE &amp;

SALE

November 24, 1996 at 11 :30 a.m. ·Athans, Ohio
• Junior Fair Building Alhens County Fair
Grounds on Wesl Union Street. ·
FURNITURE: Oak 48" S Roll top desk; Walnut
Victorian beds; Oak Hoosier kkchen cabinet; Maple
Hoosier cabinet both with flour bins; oak flatwall;
willett cherry hutch; 3 pc. oak bedroom suke (1950's);
oak deepwell dresser and mirror; Stickley (pllper
sticker) chair and stool; set of 4 Roaeback chairs;
good Cadette jukebox and Gottllebs pinball machine;
Mahogany rocker with fancy Minerva back; oak
dresser made by Gallia Co. Furntlure Co., Gallipolis,
Ohio; several stands. oak and mahogany; cedar
chest organ stool; depression dining room suHe; dep.
bedroom suite; watljrfall poster bed and chest; 4 ft.
showcase; wood clothes closet; Spinnet dosk; oak 5
leggtl!f table; childs oak rocker; set of 4 oak chairs;
oak desl&lt; chairs; plus approKimately 15·20 as Is
places.

.

GUNS: Old model 97 Winchester pump 12 ga,
(really nlce); Mauser Chlleno Model 0 1895 Mt.
Loewe Bertin a 117 boH action.
TOYS: ,Good toys • donald duck duet wind up tin
toy; Fred on Oino battery operated; Ski Boy tin toy
Chain &amp; Co.; Old Donald Duck • original Disney
celluloid, sold only at Disney Land; Steiff bear on
wheefa; fully jointed Mohair bear· straw stuffed, glass
&amp; shoe button eyes; several more Disney pieces •
Mickey Mouse collectibles; wind up dolls; Victorian
doll bed or sampler; Ideal stuffed Dwarf Dopey; childs
plano; t3 Railroad engines, N.Y. Central 11164,111120,
Uoneiii2S2, 111681, 16683, American-Flyer 113011,
11302, 1121165, 11300, Sanla Fe 1121, Union Pacific
M1005, General 111872, Plus 18 other railroad

Located 2 miles above Holzer Hoaphal right O!l
Jackaon Pike. Watch for algna. The eatate of
Ch.... R. Miler will be aokl.
:,
Beautiful Queen size Hkfabed, t:olor console TV, oak
) : finish coffee ·table, 2 recliners, oak finish D.R. suite
consisting of table-chairs &amp; matching 2 pc. '" "~"
Radio Shack 19' remota TV, 2 nice 4 pc.
BR eu•e. lg. 4 poster queen size BR suite must
• Starter eel of kitchen cabinets, set of cabinets w/s.lnk.l
Tappan 30" Gas Range, 17 C.F. Gilson Frost
Refrigerator, Whirlpool washer &amp; d"fer almond,
lltSIIOrles.
Kenmore Washer &amp; 01)'8t' heavy duty, Ilks new, misc.
GLASSWARE &amp; POTTERY: Legion Rockwood jar
, dishes, plates. mixing bowls, Mr. Coffee pot, 8 pl.
wltll lid; Big Apple cookie )are with salt &amp; pepper;
Fenton P~ecea, some signed; large phone pes.; cut
' . satllng of Stoneware china Sunriae Roostar pattem,
glaaa; art glass; slag glaas; Carnival, Depression,
email knchen appliances. pole lamp, llnene. toWels.
Ruby, Hull pottery, Fiesta, Shawnee Comware.
1 ~. luggage, few pota &amp; pans, Dirt Devil SWI!epsr
MISC.: Old Iron bulldog door stop; Bulldog Mack
: like new, flatware, Deaa Ventlels gu heater, lg.
om1ment; Indian artifacts; old pictures and
t zaper, few hand toola, hedge trtmmarw. lawn chairs, I· -·• ~ 10me
children; Large Coke bottle; milk bottles;
Saela'LT. 8-36" cut riding lawn mliwer; model900 H &amp;
Ba1rb.le Dream Houae, 1962; oil lamps; chalk-ware,
: R 22 Pletol mora. ·
cooper boiler; lldvertlalng boxes an'd cane; several
AUollonHr Note: All fumll\lre &amp; appllancea are like
clgar.tte lighter; Blue &amp; White granll; Iron pieces;
blind MW. Not many llrnelllleml. Be on tlmel
pddcet watchel; - t i l e kema; ltDne jara and juga;
•
old toola; wood pll!ntl, ,uver money dollara; walking
Auction Conducted by
ladlea; proof lfll and mora.
Rick Pearson Auction Co.
TEAMS: CASH OR CHECK W/POSITIVE tO.
•
lxecutrbt: a.tly.C..
•
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE

I :_
I

FROM GAWPOUS, TAKE ROUTE 141, TURN
LEFT ONTO ROUTE 775, TURN RIGHT ONTO
PATRIOT ROAD, WATl;;H FOR SIGNS.
PI!RIONAL PROPERTY OF THE LATE J, IICCOAIIICK
HOUSEHOLD AND MISC.
roclter, 3 pc. bedroom aune. and chalra,
electric cook tllove, !Mng room chalro, dresser, chest ot
drawers, end table, ale&lt;:trlc sewing machine, lots of
dishes, pots and pens, linens, pictures, !aJnPs, boolcsheW,
sofa, chairs, coffee table, whatnots, refrigerator, glasses,
set dishes, coot&lt;le jar, set alum. coolcware, sewing llems, 2
oak double bed with oak ml'!or &amp; chest of drawers,
chassis lounge, and much, much morel
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES
Hal !able. aide chair, daisy churn. colte cooler, rolling pin,
quilts, washboardo, bultets, lloor lamp, wooden Ironing
bOard, shaving mug, IHcl sacks, olow cutter, iron banlc,
John Oeere 11011 IOV tractor, oil lamps, Crock, marble chess
set, Iron match box, tina, 2 trunks, oak table, treadle
_.ng mKhlne, 111one jlrl, walt apple ti600 covered
C8SS8fole, granne wa1e, coffee pot, carnival glass,
depression glass, aprons, hankies, doilies, cookie jars, red
handle k~chan 11ems, marbles, WOOden lniiJieiB, wooden
rake, cookie cutters, round Duncan Phyla etyle lable,
varlely of ston~ jars, Christmas noms, 6 Ice cteam chairs,
anllque lraclor seals, 4 woven seat chairs, 2 marble top
iee crea11 tables, electric treadmill, woven chair, wicker
rocker, vanity chair, 1 yem winder, chest, much, much
moral Eats
Cis~
Positive 1.0.
Marlin Wedemeyer, Auctioneer uc. 3615
lSiblt

For Acud( nt Ur l

'J •"

llf

Public: Sale • Auction

Come See What We Discovered !

rn~oon~ JJ.m(Bafi(])m

IfALL/POL/$ AUCTION I
I
Saturday, November 23, 1996
At 10":00 a.m •

NCIII riiPGIIIIble Jw 1aal-. or 1oM ol atpilllopei-lltlf.
LinD II I A llaRdldlnlllelllaleoiOillo
j

Eatete General

MEIGS COUNTY

.BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
(614) 742-3171 or 1-800-585·7101

tit

[9_

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER

'""o'

I.'D.WIR Cheryll.emley.......: ......742-3171

EAGLE RIDGE ROADI Alumln~m ...... f 1/2 t1ory
home, living room, kllchen, OYer al~ed detached 2 cer
garage. FA electric fumace. Additional mobile home hook·
up. Must call today for an appointment! \.
ATTRACTIVE CORNER LOT I THIS 3 BEIIROOM 'I
RANCH style home. Living room, Idle~ , laundry n -•· •o
Partial ~- llmmadlate poUeotlon~ IBn
USE YOUR IIIAGINAnON. This bulldlrg has alot -of
potential. It CU""'/tly houses 8 g&lt;OOOIY ~with a -bit al
everything ~""' great cuts of , . t to ltafdw-. ~ 11 '
1a1ge second story seqion thll would mike a greet craft
b.arnl So much for· e really great prlcell CaH CMryl for
datallsl 1861
LOTS OF LANOI

thll121

119 Uncoln Pike, Galilpolla, Ohio ·
Estate of John Johnson Caae #961167
I'ROM OAL.LI'OLIS, TAKE STATE ROUTE 141, """"'"· 3
milo a, tum loft onto Uncoln Plkt, Approx. 500ft. 'WATCH
FOR SIGNS.
HOUSEHOLD AND IIISC.
RCA Color 1V wltlt remote control. 6 Pc. wood set IMng room
oune, 5 Fl pendulum clock. foot stool, lamps, 2 living room
chalro, wall clock, lola of brass collectible hems, magezine
racks, dlneno set wHit 6 chaira, eloctrlcal kitchan appHancas,
lola of miSc. whatnots, old carnival ~og chllk, set of dlehes,
lois of pols and pans, lots miSc. dlsltoo, ollverwaro, cut ken
.ekillall, s_harp microwave, twin bed, luggage,-~. omal
•cne01, full s;zo bod, lots ot old jewefly, Christmas
decorations, 2 Pc living room suhe, B&amp;W T.V. , End
tables, kerosene healer used only 6 times, Kenmore

882·2407

. Cll T~Jq

VltW Iblt g

I.YJ 1 Acre Lot

ctJ
ctJ

rn
rn

\

'

446-3644

acres

a

E.O.E. MIF

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC . .

47158

l

t

way

Plf•l r•11y

'

;

WHEN YOU RECOVER
(H you rec:OYl!r) ellha high coft olliulldlng, gift
ua a ..-11. You'll be thrilled to - what S110,000
wiH bl!t: OVer 11,000 eq. ft. of qualflt lllrlng apace,
3 bedroom•, 2 full llllha, living room, flmUy
room, dining room and HI-In kllit:han plua 1 .....
rag. room and 1n equ1lly l1rga llonu1 room.
lnground •wlmmlng pool, 2 car garage, 3+ of ground. Try to build 1111 For the price wa'ra
ollerlng, you wouldn't get half
lharal Cllf
toc11y, don't- h11ltate. B1rg1lne ·like lhle dan't
happen alonQ oflenll 1200

- 614-379-2720

Public Sale &amp; Auction

One bedroom furnished apart ment In Middleport, call 614·446·
3091, 614·992-2178 or 614·992-

Small One BedorofTI, EJCcetlenl
:.:Ho::me:::..:Pa..::;r~:.8::.:1~4-44.::::.1;.;.0:.:1:.81;__~ Condition, Wastler. orrer. Sto'i'e,

~ ~ Two bedroom mobile home for
~
rtnt in countr~. City 'll!ller, heat
II~

..., 814-992-5158

NOVEMBER 22,1996
AT7:00 P.M.
.

s-

Heavy Rubber Bi.ck • 1a·x1e• and
quantities.

882-2568 . •

" an, WV
r-: calli or Clllolt IWI.O.

.. '

Flb.,rgiiltiS

Middleport. N 3rd 'Ave. 2bedroom.
lurnlshed •~t . Deposit &amp; reler·
encas. 304-882-2566.
New Hav.n, 1bedroom lurmshed
apt Deposit &amp; refe rences. 304 ·

·

tax today at 1-304·744-1787

Aluminum Windows from $12.951o $69.95.
Aluminum SIOrm Doors and Screen Doors $19.96 lo $69.95.

tt ~.;;.;;·, sq. edge O.S.B. Boord. $11 .95 ea. or 46 pc. Lift
l$1,0.95· ea. 100 pes. $10.00 ea.
.
One and two bedroom apart (ll Joists IS"Jt8' IO 22' long. 50e ft. or make Offer.
ments; also an eflicrency apart·
CLOB!D THANKSGIVING DAY
ment; 814-992·2888.

'• • At Blue Fountain Morel, 151 Up: r ..- River Road. GaMipohs, Pleatt

~n

and an exceptional benefits
compensation package. For

house. deposil &amp; references requ1red 304-f17S,t419.

:

.•

addition to operating to yo4r
professional and per8onal satistactiol'l
you will also enjoy an' excellent
'

Bedroom tra.lltr &amp; 1 bedroom

FRIDAY,

1Urili81.

Lafayette Mall: 2 Room And Bath,

You Own In 6 Vearsl 5 Acree

P.o. Boxm

lit

PUBLIC

540 Miscellaneous

GracMtu&amp; living. 1 and 2 bedroom
1panment1 111 Viiii!Jt Manor and
Riweraide Apartment• in Middleport From S232·S355 . Call 61:-t·
092· 5064. Equal Housing Opper·

. enceaRequirad. 614·388 9082.

Co.: Ltll Than LOt Rent :-

Pharmacy Development

BIG BEND REALTY, INCY

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright. Ron Evans Enlerprlltt,

,.

82 aeres or prime deer huntlflo~

environment.

HIDDEN

PICTURESQUE VIEW ACROSS GALLIA COUNTY
20 WOODED SECLUDED/PRIVATE LOTS RANGINO
FROM 5 TO 8 ACRES. RESTRICTED. COUNTY
WATER AVAILABLE, CITY SCHOOLS,
HOME OWNER ASSOCIATION.
FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL

77115.

1~~~~;~~~·fG:r·:~:·~s:ch~o~ol
~·

Ueig•

Nordic Troclt Skier Soquoio Mod·

el '250 , 114-1Si12-&amp;e41 Af1er 6
Oo ublt Manreu, Box: Springt, 1 P.
·:;;·M;:._______________
.Bed Frame, Excellent Conc:hlion, 1•
$50, 614-448-4474.
N0tdlc Trot:k Walt.flt llkt brtnd
new, lWO years old, UOO. Nice
FALL SPECIAl.
ClvlotmloGift. 814-lMI-2778. '
82% High Efflcitncy Furnac:e,
80,000 BTU ·$785; 80,000 BTU • Refrlg.,IIOrt, Stowe&amp;, W.th«l
$885: 100,000 BTU ·S995. Tho And Dryers, All Racondltionecl
Above Prices Are For Furnace And Gturanttedl $100 And Up,
Only. Free Estimate To lnatall WiR 0et1ver.e1' eee eu1.
Furnace, Duct Work, Etc. 5 Year
Warranty All Parts Life time War- Sail rour to~·· ta the Pomtroy
Thritt Shop, oo Santo con tftord to
ranry On Heat Exchanger 614vltll more children, 220 E Main
446-6308, 1-800·291-0098. •
Street, Pomeroy, Oft e 14·882·
Fire wood lor sale. 304·67S-7937 3725.
or 30o4-67S..5053
Slab Wood Cut To Preferred
Firewood $30 pick-up toa.d, you Lenolh $35 Truck Loed, Oellvtf'ed, 114-251-,102.
haul 304-458-1583.
Firewood : Milled Hardwood Full
Cord (3 Stack• 16- Average, 4'
High 8' Long) $100, 814·3888879.

Household

Apphancea
Recondit1oned
Washers, Oryen. Ran~• . Rtfrt grators. 90 Day Guarantee!
French Cily Uaytag, 614-446 -

secluded home sire

.

Sporting
Gooda

~enl, Addison,

81........,·3964.

Duplex: 848 Second Avenue, Gallipolit, 3 Bedrooms, L.A., D.R. ,
~5/Mo. , One Year lnse, Ref·
trtneH Requ ited, $345 Depos1t,
l&lt;ey Available, Tope's Furniture .
10-5. 81.-446-0332.

Very nrca 1985 14x70 wnh :
balhl. Laroe island kitchtn wrth
patio door. Call 814 .38S-9621 esk

Gal~a

Now ond Uoed Furnlluro

2101 Jefferaon Ave., Pt PieRI ·

1

Trallar Space For

-IIM840ApoMo c_....
with Color Jet Prlnler 205. Nice
Package deal wilh Ew:tra's. Less
lhln 10 Hrt use, &amp;2,500 . 114148· 7382

300 Thru 2.000 GajJons Ron

Furnished
Rooms

814-4415~9!80.

Grubb•t Piano- tuning I ttplirt.
Problams7 Heed Tuned? Call 1h&amp;
piii'IO Or. 814-.WS .... 525

Cal Roo Evant, 1-81)0..537-9528.

Ritchlo llridgo In Ohio. C~tllly

450

Golf Corte For Salt. 304-875·
5182.

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Ropo;rod, Now &amp; ih In SIO&lt;k.

S100: Wood O&lt;Gplotl Tobit $40
814-251-1013

Uoore owner.

phar~acy ~raduates the opportunity ~o
pra~t1ce m a highly innovative

I

ney.r Ulld f200; Wood Burner

MERCHANDI SE

Downtown Newt~ Relurmtfled
Carpe.Mid, CompltN Kitchen, All

Arrificla.l Electric Fireplace 2 Ui·
~op Rabbitt, 1 Femtll, Sil\ltr
Martin. e14-2511-6847,

Vlfy nice ground floor apartment
in quiet turroundlnga loca ttd
thrH milts lrom lht Ra..,.,...._d

2516.

Schult 12~~:85, lair cond., 2br, WI
ltrGt utllny room, rtfrigtrato ~
stove &amp; 2 window ac, $2,80u
frrm. 304-1175-3000.

DIRECTOR

or

Broncl now portlblt Dlohwtohor

Twa bedroom apattmtnl In P6.
mlf'Oy, $11011"1'10., t1oa dtlpollt,

I lot·up. 304·~5-7181 .

• ~ 2

Dellslow,

- - · ll._.t1811.

wv
Miscellaneous
Merchandise

2 Fit~ T1nkt , Hame lnttrior,
Swtep•r. B•dtpreacl. Sttams,
Curlllno, Clolhoo, 81..., tloybocl,
814-&lt;14$-1385.

Buy or Sill . Riverine Antiques,
112• E. Ma in SIJnt. on At. 124,
Pom~ro~. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sunde~ 1:00 _,
6:00 p.m. eU -9Q2-2528, Run

·

o

LMw..._

3 Bedrooms In Gtlllpollt 114·
Ono

NEWI Bank Repo't, only 3 left,
st•ll und&amp;'r warranl)", lree deliver)'

Purc:hue1t

11

-.-71.

RoorN ror rent - wetlc or month.
Stardng at $,20/mo. Ga!Ha Hotel.

. Ston Included, Referenc11 &amp; ESTATES. 52 Wtttwood Orlv1
, • Dlpaslt, $450/Mo.. No Pets, 814· from 1244 10 $315. Walk to ahop
1,. 446-1012.
&amp; mov111. C111 &amp;H-446-2568 .
Equal Housing ()ppo&lt;llnity.
All electric 2 bedroom houst.
• Gorago, ltrgo yon!. $400 pluo do- SL MlddltpOr~ 2 bodroom,
. • pollt Hometteld Rtalay, Broker. furnished 1pt, ulilltlet paid . De.. 304·87S-55&lt;0.
j)Oii1 1 retetenca&amp;. 304 -882-

New 1997 ,4x70 three bedraom,

""'2-cappod. EOH

dopotll ._I rod, no pate, 81 4· no- 81..-·3013 ow 5prn.

: : 2 Bedroom Furnllhtd Houu Na
Inside htl, County W1ttr Fur·

•

11111111 ,.,.. provldtro Including hotpltaio, clnlco, llllolt1ortot,

~.-trtd ...... l'fO\IIdlll. ' '•
Tho lllrlinllllllfl' ... bo
oiPI!.OOO. Nl atridliO .....,.,..,... poclllgl Including Univlf1ily lnlurMOO tr111

polio. Ntitlflborftood

- 814-44384e

p&amp;ace. Need to safl fatt Cal RE..
~

II...._,CII814--

':~ 1-38R Home 112 nile fnNn

·

PHARMACISTS AND NEWLY
LICENSED PHARMACY
GRADUATES

Dwlblllly
,.!Jnhelelty
mo
UnlvOnlty hlollh _ , ..,..,._ ond cjltormlne ""'"' ot

... - }

REJHALS

3br, 2blttt , 117H down, S27a/
month. Free delivery I "'u~
Only 11 Oakwood Homaa, Nitro

The University of Rio Grande annouttces an o~~:~
an experienced· accounting Individual foi the p
of!'.irector of Finance.
dhlons, porcttes, decks, have Nice ·1 11,2 Story House With
successful candidate will be responsible
1'8lerencet.304-675-t013.
Building, 32.D Acrtt. LoCation
monthly financial statements
Stilt Route 7 South 814 -258 · supervising and assisting
·
0dd Jobs &amp; Sltrp Tobacco, 614- 6878.
441-1682, 81 ..... 4ot1-0253.
i daily duties, preparing reporta for
3-4 bedroom house, heat pump,
agencies, primarily the Federal government,
Piano lunln" and repair 30 years
appliances, tweezftar. 1
overtime. leaves, and other absences, within
experience call Elmer Geiser kitchln
car oaragt, full basement, nice
8t4·388-9808
and preparing detailed aud~ SChedules at
lot,' C1ose to hospilal artd ac:hool,
fiscal
year
in accordance,with the· latest FASB
814-a92·31
1&amp;
or
614-992-1451
.
ProresstOnal Tree Strvlc:e, SlUmp
RamO't'al, Free Eatimatesl In· 31 Acres 3 Bedroom Hou1e, I gtJide•linEIS. The Director of Finance reports directly lo the
President for Finance.
aurance, Bidwell, Ohio. 814-388- $51,500 814·2511-6718,
8648. 614-387-7010.
The suitable caitdidate should possess the fofk&gt;Wing:
4bec:lro.om, 2bathl, 14~~:36 family
minimum of an Associate Degree and preference 1
THE CLEANING DOCTORS
room,
1car gara~. $90,000 080.
to a candidate that has complettid or is pursuing a
Re1identlal &amp; Commercial Clean- 6,4·992-5862.
.of Scie~ degree in Business with emphasis
tng. Will Cover Surrounding Ar eas. Can ToH Fru For Estimalel A-Frame 3 ;4 Bedrooms, 2 Full
1 , a m1nlmum of five years experience in
1-888-810-0700, Or 614-245- BaH'tl, Laundry Room, Large 2
I higher education, computer expertise
0412. Call for our Holiday Sp 1• Car Garage, $49,900 Gallipolis
on spr~ad sheets, good analytical and
cilia.
ArM, 614-256-6928
sk1lls, and the capacity lo Interact
eKectively with slaff, faculty and students. Salary range:
11 o Help Wanted
$20,1)00.$25,000. .
.
Interested candidales should submil a letter of
application, resume including the names, addreaaes
WANTED: EMERGENCY
RELIEF
telephone numbers of three references and a copy
WORKERS (Substitutes} needed to · !heir most recenl transcripts before the deadline
Decemt&gt;er 2, 1996.
•
teach community and personal skills to
Ms. Phyllis Mason, PHR, Personnel Oflicer ~
adults with learning limitations in their
The University of Rio Grande
P.O. 9ox969
own home in Gallia and Meigs Counties.
Rio
Grande.
OH 45674
Hours: As scheduled/as needed; must
The Univaroi1v of Rio
Equal OPIIOrtunHV''I
be able to work evenings, weekends and
o~ern!gh~s. High scho91 degree, valid
dnver s license, three 1years licensed
driving experience; good driving record
and adequate automobile insurance
coverag~ ~equired. Salary: $5.25/hr, to
starty Tnumng provided. Send resume to:·
'
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640;
Due to recent expansion, RITE AID
ATIN: Cecilia. Deadline for applicants:
CORP., one of the Nation's largest .., ,.....
11/25/96. Equal Opportunity Employer. .
fastest growing. retail drugstore chains,
offers pharmacists and newly licensed

O,O,.Onmont Mutt hlilo

.....-

Umltod Olfofl 1197 doubl-.

588, City Schools, $89,5oo 614·

_,., ol1ho Un1Ytr111y Human -

....... -

814-

Interior and E..:t111or finlthes car- 446-7438CEvenings).
pen1ry, fireplace relinlthlno. ad-

htalth administration, businell, or a retated field. preftrebly a
l'nllllr'l c»grtt aoo three )'Nra of general ti(JIIrletiOt k1 torlracl,
neQotlatiOnl, marketing, and the hutth btMfMt area. A working
luiCnl ...... crf m.dk:af llnninology II!WQL~Nd .
Thil ptnOn wtl work u p!Citsttlonll ,llaft mtmber In thl benefttl

f)

Btlgt S.Ct1on1l Couct'l with
tleeper; Dark brown swivel fOCkGreen h1gh back chllr, 21'
TV wtth 111~ : ltl World
Encyt;lopHia Rainbow: Va·
CUf.IITt CIMMr CaM 114~·1304

Twin Rit.w1 -ro.tf, now ICCIPiino
TWo bedroom trailer, txcelltrn .,........,, lot 1br. HUD ouboldcondition , nice neiQhborhood In lzM apt. for eldlfiJ 1nd handi·

rttrrlc· I ond 2 - - fut.
llono. 304-175-15253. (no , ,... . nllhM lnd untumlshld, IICUtlfJ

.r paved tOad , r•sonab4e

540 Mllcellantous
Marchandlle

420 MObile Homal
tor Rtnt

'· =-~--~~=-.:~===-­
Pllctle on Rayburn Rd. Water,

.~"

rntnt untii' FtbruiFY 1.7. 1-800-

met~age.

Let us help you shop or wrap 3 Bedroom .R&amp;Ilch, 3 Baths, Full
raur oiltt. Call Mlchtlle at 1!114· B_
u ement, Garage, Gas Heat,
245-0701 orCindy814·245-0412.
Frr-CH, Pool, Large Lot Route

~.
The candkfate llleetld wil halve at 18Ut a blchetol'l degree In

2--

~~~-.
• ·-g utlllllol.
304·273-1773or-273-3052.

111 Time lluylfl. E·Z 11n1ncin1 2
or 3 M*oam, eround UOO/mo,
ho dol~ oncl ,...,.. No poy,

73 5

'

modvated lndlvlduiiiO coordlnlte managed care oppartoottleS tor the

Ad.
c.. Olono llarnm 304·743-

loiS,

lent Cond itiOn, $3 ,500, 304 -736-

W · 304·755-5885.

MANAGED CARE SPECIALIST

80'o.

300 t&lt;rtl.

u ..on Co. Ulll11o"'

'• -latet,o-oo_..El"'"1c \lnderground

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

2 bedroom house, let 7Sll80,
IF YOUR HAVING A HARD fenc:ed, garage, Mason, Wv 614-

Ohio Unlverolty In Alllena, Ofllo, 11 -lng 1 highly. compt&lt;ent,

td ' "

·'ol 'I _11_..;.118.,:
0...
--,•:_:F'"'~·;.::AMI::Il:._ __
:-:

121160 2 tle&lt;tooms, 1Balh, Exc~·

$195/mo. Free delivery &amp; set-up,

TIIIE OETTtNO READY FOR 742·2023. '
THE HOUD.l'I'S?

Latld·~ ~s .

11

·

a;r, with approved credil. 1·800· $6,500 · $8,500 · $1 ,000 Down &amp;
$101.90 Mo.
. ..
891 7
22 Highland Ave. 3Bedroom , 2 I :::::--a:-n-:-:·:-::--:----:--:---•
blllh, breed atr oas furnace. cen· 1997-2 &amp; 3 Bedroom, S995 down,

304-875-11157.

-

Pomeroy o Middleport o Gallipolis, OH o Point Pleaaant,

95.
L·:::=:;...
.~~~~-~5~m~lle~!~o~UI~S~R~14=3,
for Mike. _____

ttal air, full basement $45,500 .
haul your logs to the mll just call 304-675·1120.

ONo u.n • .., 11., .,,,.,. • •

•

&amp;14·

1997 11fh80 3 bedroom, 2 bath ,
$t,325tdown, $216/mo, tree atr,
with approved cred11. 1-800·691·
67n.

managed cart, utltt wtth cw.r au bentrltl planninG and

Call446-2342 or
992-2156

Oh10,

949·2210,

AUTOHIO Insurance

446-2131 •

2 baths, heat pump, 2

Two beclroom home, 5 acres, all
on SR 124, Racine, IWO car oa·
rag~ wtrh apartment, wen, elecltlc:
heat, olher buildings. Call Home

knowtlngly lccepl
advertiSements for mal estate
which Is In violation' of the law.
Our readers ara hereby
lnlormed !hal aU dwelllngo

everyone!

. Hair Salon

In Muon, 1 1/2 atory wlbastmll'll, completely remodeled,
new kuchen c11bin1t1 &amp; appllanctt, new vinyl siding, n.w
r:arpet throughout, living room,
dining room, 3-4 bedroom, cenrral
air, Iaroe covered front porch &amp;
deck , 2 car carport, nice yard,
quiet . neighborhood. $45,000.
304· 773- 58.28.

AIV~R FRONT PROPERTY,
WITH HOUSE, 727 FIRST AYE·
Professional
NUE, GALLIPOLIS, 161,500,
Services
814-408-7812.
HARTS MASONARY · Block, Three bedrooms, one and 112

SR-22
Cancelled/Rejected
• CUI • No Prior ·
Insurance
We try to insure

Co ..

Sunday, November 17

'

..

&amp;

SMOKEHOUSE

t

'

Cheryl

Hon~ And Lot For S..:
2 Bedrooms , One Bath, SCIOO
Down, W.A.C Eall)' Terms, t-800448-11108, Ask For David.

230

Georges Portlble Sawmill,

'-

-·-'-

Auto Insurance
Low Down
·Paymeot

Glamour Photography
(Free 8x10 portrait)
"Just in Time for Christmas"
Fun For All Ages
Wed. Nov. 20th 12·8 pm
Call for an appt. at

H·2814 For Current Ustinga.

bedroom,

43'l28 Of Fal1To: 814-529·2411 .

SHOP AND $AVE NOW!
Serta Mattress
$59.00
Bed Frames
$19.95
Recliners
$99.00
4 Drawer Chest
$49.95
La·Z·Boy Recliners
$299.00
4 pc. Bedroom
Suite
$499.00
FLAIR FURNITURE
675·1371
Gallipolis Ferry, 'WV

For Penniet On St Oelin(tuent
Tax:, Repo'l, REO's. Your Artl.
Toll FrM (1) 800·218-9000 Ell.

·4353

WANTED: EMERGENCY R£·
LIEf WORKERS (Subi!IIU!tll

..

81 4-112-451 ._
GOV'T FORECLOSED Homoo

Laroe Profit Potential From Steel car garaoe. 3.1 acres, 3 112 milel
Bldg Buslne~t Natn Co. Award - from IOWn. 304-tl7s-6889.
Ing Dealtrshrp In Open Warktl.
Salet Or Construcuon. 303-759- Ohto Va ll ey Bank haa a 2-stary,
Sbr home for sa le in Muon
3200 Ew:t saso.
Countt. Call 614'-441-0890. Serious InQuires Only.
L - Vondlnl Aou1o For Slit,
Be Your own Boat. Bkl Cash
Poplar Harghls-3-4 B.A., L.A.,
WHkly. C.ll - 1·8(i0.3ft,
O.A.. F.R., 2-baths, 2·1ireplactt.
113113.
large utility- Rm. 2-car garage,
VENDING : GREAT 2nd Income wrap around deck, almott 2 acr·
and Top Oualiry Equ1p. 1800-820- es. 3CW.S7S-7998.

Cas.h paid weekly, need small
car &amp; know area well. Call Ed @

GRUBB'S PIANO
TUNING SERVICE
Parts repaired. replaced, rebuilt.
lvorys replaced. Need your piano
or restored? Call Bob Grubb
614·446·4525 Gallipolis, OH

-cor·

"Prrct Reduced"! Log Home 3·.t

BULLETIN BOARD
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
MATTRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
Ragular............................:.$85
Finn ................................... $95
Extra Finn ....... :................$105
OIM«l Size Sets .... $295 &amp; Up
King Size Sets ........ $350 &amp; Up
••I'RI••• Mattresa .......... $48 &amp; Up
Frames ...... $25·$35 - $50
Bed Replacement
Mon. lhru Sat. 9·5 p.m.
miles out Bulavllle Pike Free

houu.

Four bedroom l'loutt, one oulbuilding. 1+ acre of lind, c..lr, 1J2
yttr old siding, $28,000 080,

year

work, have completed Mloh
IHOTICE 1
othool (oomo coU~t proltrrodl OHIO VALlEY PUBliSHING ·co.
then you may quellty, No knowl· recommends that you do busltdge of bulldln:g mattrltlt nee:- ntll with people you know, and
ttury-we11 tt1ch. Mu•b• will· NOT to 11ncl
through thl
lno lil'tfocaae.
mail undl you hav• inv11tiga1ed
lmnedloiO O!&gt;oninGo·ACI Now!
lho ollorlng.
Stl: Jim Amotd
Wed, NrN. 2D!h
8e YDUr Own BOS8I
Noan-!lpm
Collo ....... FloU1t
A!&gt;PI)' Atll4 lumber Co.
High ..........
Aooto 1 llolf 84A
llln ......!11110-712·21511

Compotil~t

Uvlot

In fluta.cl: • 4 blc:hom
,_., ,_ltd. CIA;

pon. - . , -tiding. oulbuilding, $21.000080, 814-1112-4514.

promotions .,, hom MINn. Flrtr

much more. If you tnJor a com-

350 Lots a Acre~g~

Holllll tor sale
Clwloly'o Filllllll'

•

Adw1ncement 11 rapid lnd all

LIGHT DELIVERY
304 -675-3285.

180 Wanltd'RI

'11-l'::':'::--~""""~..,:..-----22,000.tarnlnoa
llonofltt '"''II'
lncludo hol91·
11Uzallon, prolll ohorlng ond 210
Buslnei.

DIET TECHNICIAN NCS HealthCare A Wotld Clau Providtr Of
Integrated Health Care Solutions,
It Accepting Appllcattons, For
Part-T1me Diet Techs, Good OpPOSTAl. JOBS
portunity To Work Flexible Houra. Stan $,2,08 /Hr. For Exam And
Wutt Halle E•peri1nce In Long Application Info. Call 218 · 788·
Term Cart. Send Resume To : 8301 Ext. DH581, 9 A.M. ·9 P.M.
CPS, P.O. Boll 248, Hilliard. OH S..m -Fri.

Wed. Nov. 20ih
Noon - 5 PM

Nuded :'rNtrboat PIIOtl &amp;
handt, call 30-t-527-3234 or

Help Want.cl

WF ov. Druo Frtt Erwitorrnent
HOME COMPUTER USERS
NEEDED. S45;ooo Income po· People 10 work durino dHr HI·

lett GrowinG National Lumber
Cha•n, Has Career Opporwnrries
Today. Advancemen t Is Rapid
110 Help Wantell
And All Promotrons Are From
Within . F1rst Year Earnings Aver"POSTAL JOBS ..
P~rmanent, Full-Time, it3/Hr age S18 ·22,000. BenefiiS Include
With Government Benefira. Apply Hospi•tization, Profn Sharing And
Much More. II You Enjoy A ComToday For Clerk, /Carrier, Appli·
Of Sales And Physrca.l
cadon lnro.. Call 219 -79t - tHa1 binallon
Ert P23.
. .
' Work, Have Compltle High
School (Some Colt• PrefBfred)
• ATTN: Point Pleasant• Postal Then Vou May Quality. No l&lt;nowlPotitiona. Ptrmanent full lime for edge or Building Ma!arlala Necc:lerklsortera. Full 8enelit1. For tnary - Wa'll Teach. Mual Be
eaam, appliCation and satarr 1rtlo Yfllling To ~11.

Spoor~

act Positively With Other~ , And
Have Reli able Tranaportllion
High School Orploma Requrred ,
And A BackgroUnd In So"al
Work Preletred Interested Per·

110

SOCIAL WORKER NEEDED,
Wt Are SMklno A Dlrtctor For
Our Soclll SotvlcM llellortmont.
~.,.,..,bllltlot lnctudo lnpltlonl
Hoapltal, long Ttrm Care Unit,

From An Apploved School. fltua
Women And Children E'tlenlnga l .S.W. Ou~H Win lncluft Homt
And Wttktndt. The Ideal Can- Health Evaluation• And s.Mcea.
didate Muat Be Able To Work W.D.S. Initial And folaw-Up For
Whh Minimal Superyiaion, Inter- long Term C1r1. And Supervls·

P.O. 8011 454. Gllllpolls, Oh)o

14LUMBER

•

Full Time Position Available For
A Vlclkn AdYOCitl To Work Wilh

sons May Ap~ly To: Personnel ,

""" Conclilion, 814-381·1002, 0.
81._.MRI'.
·

Ef.IPl OYT.IEtH
S£-RVIClS

255-5512

Help Wanted
OAI&lt; HILL COMMUNITY
,MEDtCAL CENTER

TORS, \If&gt;" 71'4or100..

Glou Roo., 21 yro., COI.-A.

Room And Board. 'Mil Train. Call

Top dollar- anllqu ... lurnlturt,
gl~aa, cttm, clodl.a, gold, sllwr,
COtnt. wttchtl, tllalfl. old ,., ...
jl.11, old. blue &amp; whitt diahtt, ~d

Orl'ltf't-Vana Fiatt, Home Otten.

Up to 32·tt2c·OWNER OPERA·

... -Coll304-e7we.41.

Aloo Juri! Coro, 81H51· Hiring Bolh Men !Womtn. Free

VCR'o.
1231.

11 o

Help Wanted

, SundaJ, November 17, 1.996

4 Badrooma
3.5 Batha
4 Clr GINga

Cu..; Wa adworfl

rna..

emant

AUCTIONEER: ROONEY HOWERY

rtJR..f-e

1114-4188-7231 or 1-800-264-8380
Llcentoed lind llondtd In the 1111e of Ohio

1157-823279-3330

'

'•

�f"nct.J, November 17, 1996

~.

P8geDI•

&lt;

e
seo

Salt

570

Mullcll

.
l12.50·5gal

Gult.r 12 String Latus L 125 W

-

SOinQI VGC W. Good Cooo

•175 Ctih or TraM E.V. eu381-8181

Hydoogon Wonch Soi·UP For A
Farm TractDr Mounted On A Tripod. 114-3711-2730.

4 W0 &amp; Loader 1700 Hra; Whitt

-r

White 21 HP 4 WO W 180. Oeck
300 Hra; MF 1010 18 HP 4 WD

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

lllod&lt;, brid&lt;, • - plpn wtnd·
awi, lknllt. eiCl. Cllude W1ntera.
Rio Grande, OH Call ~U·-245-

5121.

560

Pets for Sill

ltred, male. 61bl, 1 1 r2yn old.

610 Farm Equipment

CFA Reatltefed Per1inan KitteN,
&amp;

'78 John Deere 2840, 82 hp.,
Hl57 twa. with 148 JO endlaader
bucket and larks, $13,500, call
614·a82-7421 .

304-576·2444.

1200. With Broodln8 Rlgnta
P

'a w. Phant: e1•256-6107

Cocklde4a. Please Calt 814-388·

I - k Algi- Booglo Pupo, Codttr PuPt, While, 8uH Spots.
SI1CIII, Wormod, T~"? R-n- Short, Warmed, Tails Oocked, 2
11&gt;11 Oflorl.
Slaplt.,n, 014- Femaln, 3 Mates. Ready 11/181

... 1150 Eoeh, 8,14-446-8100.

114...-an

.

II lui, Silver Bridge Plaza.
01! Every Tting, Every Day~

81 ....U1.0770.

Michael Watson, Broker
Office 675-3433 • 675·7109 Home
Serving Ma~on Anil Gallia Countiea

06.

~s.

~·~~~ Hoy RDII ..S10flll ond de-

l

ery available. Noroan Farm

, ..._-937-201&amp;

.

,

TRANSPORTATION

•'

1973 lnlernatlonal Seoul 4x4.

tM&amp; FO«:: Ranger V-8, automatic,
tilt, ac, nice truck 4X4, roll bar .
- · .........-....

$1,250, OBOti14·44ti·8651.

show ca"'· good shape, 114·
149·2045 .. 614·148·2838.
Au10 loana: Auto Dealer Will Arrange Financing E\len 11 Vou
Have Been Turnad Down Before.
loens A\lliltble For No Credu,
Bad Credit And Bankruptcy Buy-

Erl 5-8368
power,

32 LOCUST STREET, GALUPOLIS, OHIO 456JI

1992 Dodo• Shadow Automalic:,
Air, Aeer Spoiler tiS,OOO Uiln,

5801 .

13,700 080 614-258-6340. 614·
256-7.

188:1 Chl¥1 Covollor AS
814-4-46-81158.

$5,500

~993 Cougar

.t5,000 Milet, 1
OWntr, Garage Kept, All Power,
$9,500, 080 814-..tl-8028, Or

new tirea, exc:etlent shape,

bo&lt;ly &amp; mechanical. reagqnable,
814-992-2012.
Uuat Sell : 1983 Jaguar 82,000
Mile~ N.., Pain' (C~Ie, lnteriar, 1 Nice Car, Ala tlnvesutd
Will Sacralica $(1,900 Wil Consid·
et Trade, 814.,.46-8795.

1985 Ranaar Long Bed Automat·
lc, Good Condition, &amp;4.000 Mlltt.

$2,500, 814-379-2152.
\9e6 5-10 Auto, TIS Tl8, 1992 S.

1981 Dodge Caravan LE, lOaded,
\llry nice condition, high miles.
Asking 1$7,800. (Below book val·
Ue). 814-4o41..0135 Ar.r 5;00pm.

1D TahOe, 1988 Caval .., 2 Doore,

1988 VW 2 Doors. Tradet At·
cepled, C~;~ok Motors, 814-441·
0103.

1 991 Dodge C&amp;rann LE, 53,000

1967 1Ton Cllrly Box von. Willi

mllea, locoal owner..t304· 075-

Aluminum Box, 350 V-8 Engine, · 2803·
814·446-14l6 Monday Thru Fri·
day 9·5. Or Leave Mes•oe Aft11' 1D92 G20 Full Size Ch,vy Con·
version IJan, Tiara Package, ::150
5P.M.
Full lnje&lt;:tion, Completely Loaded,
1990 Chevy ex.. Exeetlent Condition, $12,500 et•·256-s=J47 After
~30

P.M.

1990 Cflevr Silverado E•l. CaD,
2 wid w/posillve traction. llnted
glass, 350 ci. trailer package,

Q.trrent Ustinga.

su- ·

WATERPROOfiNG

Unconditional lifetime puara"nlee.
local ref~rencea lurn1she&lt;1. El·
tablltfle&lt;l 1975. Call (814) 448·
0870 Or 1·800·287·057El.' Rogers

WaterPfOOfiOO.

' 1&amp;92 lsuzu Rodeo LS, loaded,
4WO. 100.000 miles. eacellent

10,000 Tral\smlnlans, Clutches
Flywheels, overhual Klta , eu245-5677

Name Brands 0\ler 25 Years Exparlance All Work Guaranteed,
French Clly Mavtag, tiU-448-

Appliance Pans And Service: All

.......,,~

,

;(_.

•

*

C1P

~ (t}Jia/6

wHh eating area
cozy family room

gas log fireplace was
buln with a family In mind. 4
BAs, 2 1/2 baths and the

-\

446•6806
Office - 388-8826
Rd.

MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

_.

15!
..

mn.

0\18rhtiiCI storage &amp; 1 aet11
11053 4 BED~OOMS 2 ·112 balhs,
lovelY kitchen wleat In breakfast
area, format dihlng rm .• sunken

comfort.

12021 A WONDERFUL PLACE living rm , w/fireplace, family rm.,
TO LIVE • BEAUTIFUL SPANISH new lurnace, attacfled 2 car
BRICK RANCH. 4 bedrms .. 1 Qarage, detached 2. car garage,
bath, format living &amp; dining · rm. , lnground poOl &amp; poolnouse. !-Ovell'
eat-In kit., teakwood entry, 16x32 lraed yard w/gazebo, deck In the
lnground pool. Gazebo, 2 car rear, fenced.yard.

yours. Maximum

and

numerous

ad

~.

$1

quality

to mention in

lo

this

Call for

vinton , Ohio. If you are Into
oounlrY· II~ng lhls

Ha~rl8onvllle • Here could be a nice family home.

stained glass window In ·the living room. Downstairs
there's a living room, dining room, kitchen, bath and
laurljlfy room. Upstairs there 3 ·good alze bedroOms
and a 1/2 balh, wraparound enclosed front porch ·and
co~1ple of outbuildings
has · cellar In ~. All
approx. 1/2 acre. :ti21!',~UIJ.uu

NEW LISTING • Located on Easl !;lain
Street • Very Well Maintained Home. 1
1/2 Story Frame '. IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION • 2 car garage and utility
area In basement. Carpet, perma payne
windows, fireplace, F.A.N.G. heat, nice
front porch. Beautiful River View, 3
bedrooms. COME SEE!I This Is ·so
CUTE' ASKING $34,900.

mention lhis almost new 2

Middleport • Railroad St. • River frontage A 3
bedroom, one story home with equipped kitchen and .
washer and dryer. Had shingles put on last year. All
sltting on approx. 50x354 lot.
$38,000.00

tlf·

to

12005 NEW LISTING Romodeled
1873 12 x es· Stardust mObile
home with expando. 3 BR'1, large
living room. Situated .on 1 ac, mJ1
with a hook up lor another mobile
home. Just 10 minutes ftom laWn.
Call Patrv Hays 446 3181.

ending

...

!'::.

-n

ei.tlehert

.

.

,~~~oda~n~~

newer repairs throughout the hotme
Includes dining room, family room,
spacious living room . Abundance ol
closet/slorage space. Small yard to
maintain. erose to schools and local
shopping. ASKING $36,500
RACINE • One Floor Older Remodeled
Home
siding, has 2 bedrooms,
kitchen,
living room, f bath,
Iota ol
Laundry room wKh
F.A.N.G. he.t/C.A.,
Garden space. Real
$39,500
two
new
and

Follow Your No'sll To this
home and you'll say yes!
Beautiful, spacious trl·levei
hOme. Around 3,000 sq. ft.
features a huge master
bedroom suite, warm, cozy
family room, super kitchen
oak cabinets, and
oonsm: on garage. 3·4
0 &amp;&lt;ircior1
u'
2 1/2 baths.
Caution: It will
"no"

In Searcl1 or Peace? Get your master bedroom and bath
share of wide open spaceo on lhlrs practically a 11ome In
lhis 24+ acre farm, lust 7 miles 11aen plus two more bedrQOOIS
from town. Large bam. storage and ~ath. Call on this one If
building, tobacco base and privacy Is what you want.
mineral rights also Included. 11606
Home has been updated with
'
replacement windows, vinyl
siding and newer roof. With 4
~::::.
•
.....
bedrooms and 2 baths, It will
~,.. !&lt; "
accomodale a large family. I'-'f!okeA
Don't hesitate on lhis one.
C:~,::V,:,W57· 1:c~e~
Priced to sell at $'19,500. 1510
and 5 acres crop.
ral

'=========.t
',+~'

~

to .

LAND 117 Ac . MIL. Close to
freeway &amp; hOspllll. Old homt
and bam. Gallia Co.
12014 Vacant land 3 ac. MIL new
sewage will be availabte. Great

VLS 388·88261446·6806
11012 ROOMY HOME located ln
quiet location w/prlvacy 4

a

lledrml. 2 1/2 bolllt, 2160 sq. ft.

12013 LOcated an Sr 850 .459
ac. ·~plat. $15,000.00 VLS

3ea as .441·8806. .

12035

BRIGHTEN YOUR
FUTURE WITH A WONDERFUL

FAMILY HOME located In a
tuburban area, like new 3/4
bedroom ranch. bath, cozy
111/tngroom, very neat kitchen
wllola of oak Clblnall, basement

Approx. 72 &amp;ci'\'S that are totally secluded wHh a right
l)f way off Klngsbury Road. Lays nice and has tree
. gas. Some tlmbar. $30,000.00

wfflmlly rm. &amp; bedroom. outakte

amry to on lbOvt ground pool.

Storage bldg. 2 car attached

Pomeroy-Condor Street • 3 Iota with a one b'droom
home that could have more room If you flx up the
basement. Has equipped kitchen and washer and
dryer lnclucted.
Only $12,000

12021 COLONIAL 2 STORY . HOM£ Located near Rio Granda.
4 bedrml, 2 112 baths, lOvely
liv•ng rm, formal dining rm, 26'
kit, w/eat In space, family rm, ·
also Reo. rm. 2 ac. MIL. Dnty 3
yrs. old. bulk! hen lhls can
be bought far $41.2. per 1q. ft.
S12tl,OOO.OO

Side Hill Road - Approx 1 1/2 acres wHh water 1ap
and septic
Only $15,000
or Approx. 7 1/2 acres wnh water available.
Only $10,000

POMEROY · OWNER WANT'S TO SALE
ALL PROPERTY
F0 R ONE PRICtili
MAKE AN OFFERII 11/2 story
·
home with 3
Basement
garage. Older
1/2 baths,
older frame

1173 PRIME DEVELOPMENT

VI-S 388·8826
12015·
PRIME
LOCATION In
thBRD&lt;Iney area, 45 ac. MIL 1/2
pasture, 1/2 wooded w/stream .

'

BEAUTIFUL LEVELJSLOPING GROUND.
Located 1n Salam Township. Public
Leading Creek water available. Perleo;t
site lor Mobile Home or Building SKa'.
OWNER WILLING TO HEAR OFFERSh
ASKING $7,900 •

3.::,r,;:;,

~ ClfPO'I.,.,

never

Pomeroy • Wright Street - Always wanted an A·lrame
home? Well we have just the one for you. It has over
3,000 square feet and is 3 stories tall. Has 5
bedrooms, 2 baths. gigantic faily .room and master
bedroom. Decks on ·each level, 2 car garage with
workshop above, paved drive and Is nestled In the
hollow.
Just $95,000.00

MIDDLEPORT -, Main Street - 2 Story
Frame Home with care free sldiQg.
·Several new rePIItrS I.e. roof, ceilings
paint, plumbing', 4 yr. old F.A.N.G:
lumace, full basement with utility hook·
lipS. 2 baths, 3·4' bedrooms, 1 car
garage with upstairs storage, attic
space, cement front porch, carpet and
hardwood floorinJI. This is a Very Nice
Hornell ASKING $46,900

story hOmo that has around
3,800 sq. ft. wltl1/ust enough
badroomo 4, ba 11s for 1111
family. Nlco oenced In lawn
with an tnground pool. Thera
II to much to mention IC1 this
ad, call and let us ohow nall
You will be impresaed.

room, kotchen, 2 bedro~ms, being approx. 86' x 168' &amp;
large laundry room, both. more. Call todeylll71
~::=~ $3S,OOO.OO. ~er ROAD FRONTAGE GALORE
NEW .FARM USTINGI Over comeswilhthls251acrelracl COIIIIERCtAL· Preoonlly
107 acres of land lh8t hu ol land, 2 bams, tobacco used
as 1111 Foodland
some fencing for perhape aUotmen1 and more. Owner building sltualad between
caHie or horses. 2 Story Vinyl would possibly split· up Into 3rd &amp; 4111 Avenue. Plenty 'of
sided hOme thai has 4 s.malillr tracts.
parking. Call Rusoall for
beclrooms. LoiS of road
~~plate
dotaliol
frontage, bam and· morel PLANNING TO PURCHASE ._,,_
A NEW MOBILE HOME? aOM GEORGES CREEK.
I com11
NEWLY USTEDI TIRED OF Why pay a higher price for 8 Ex 11 t II
ranch,
THE ORDINARY? Then why now one. consider thlo w~'i:' .:,~
now 11195 14' x 70'
k" h - living
not consider something a almost
homo with lots of extreo. dining area. ,.c.~ ...
liHie different Very unique
room, approximately 24' x
slyle 3-4 bedroom home. Skyllghls &amp;·!rancl1 doora lh8t 30' gorage wllh furnace &amp;
Rustic walk-out basement compliment the maotor weter p•lus 1 24' x 50'
~-1 f 1011
that has a family room . 'Nice bedroom and bath.
more
oak cabinets In kitchen. Additional batl1. cethedril =~1ic,;;-'~
Treed lawn, approx. eo· x calling• In living room .00 3 ACREI 11/LI $5,000
kHchen which fo equipped c
1
11 11 bll
138'. City schools. Minutes or wlfh
lots ol cablne~ece,
ounty wo er 1 a a 1
town. 1813
•
range &amp; refrig. Und nnlnQ County schOOls. Nloe plooe
&amp; dock Included. · oil foi' for 1 mobile home or pfaCI to
more details. Immediate build · a
home .
pou811ionl Lowered. p&lt;lce FRUit Oil THE M.AJII(ITI
$2,000.00 ft7D •
• ......,...,. FOR A ........
NEW USTINGI
A IIUit ...,........~
.....,
10 MANY POIIIIIUTIE81 NICE IETUPI Supor 14• x THAT II READY TO MDVI
OVER 11 .ACRD with 70. mobile 11ome 11111 ; . 3 INTO? Then Ill .,. .._you
aeverlf ~ 01 road frontage.
batho set
lhll 3 Mdr00111 trt-lowll.
Two Iorge bldQI that are In bedroom~, 2 with' ~ NeM1 ... pellng &amp;
uoellent ~ondllion. One ~ and 1 car datllcl1ed f)lllnled.
~ tewt f1W
equipped with lolldlng dock. g•age. A real neat property. . AddiiOn~·1 ~or~:,...,
PrevlotJI UN WIIS I veal caW Caf1 foilay il884
~-'"" 50'I
.
operallonl
ll4e
'
.,...._,
231 .ACRES
1111. • CHECK IT OUTI REDUCED BIDGI!T •
Cozy 3
...,1100..001 Oreat 1u111ng PRICE TO .31 ,tOO c:olY bedroom 11omll Vtnyllllded,
land. 1.a11 or WOOdl. 01o1n1r
wtlh nice level tnn. on nice 11Ze tawn.
,~~~~~~In Ollila
front porch, nice kltchon, L-8hlped dining
!;:
Twp.
Call lor an &amp; 1Mni!I'OOI11. AI llhld
Cen1

see

breakfast nook. EICtravaganl

over

=

musl

..J

;"m
'

cabinets,

acres. Plenty of pasture &amp;
tillable land. Several largo
barns, misc. buildings that are
In excellent sl1ape. Not lo

-

home you

I!PPrl&lt;iato. Offers a 29' long
I.!~~!.:..!:!!!!:L____
living room w!th vauttad
ufiticiji8i
..
"'1,".1.
ceiling
and pellet stove,
1
formal dining room, gol'g\IOUS
kUchen with island, oak
counters, huge pantry and

garage. Over 2.s·acres, and
a 30' x 40' barn. Pfus more.
Close to
1875

lvmg two nice level lots each

secluded, wooded setting
hosting 5-6 acros, m/1, lhis
cedar sectional Is truly a

~

bedrooms
&amp;
more.
· Breezeway attached to

Vinton Street. Neat one story 2 story roomy home lhat hu
bedrooms. bath, living
brIck hombe. Off • Iree I palrkl.ng 4
room, dining room, k~chen,

120114 NEW UITI~G Voconllond
1. 13 ac. mil, gently aiolftd.
Raccoon Rd. AccessiO boat ramp
on Raccoon Creek &amp; parking lor
your boat trallor. Beauttful kJI to
1&gt;u11t1 I'OUf dream 11omt or 10 PfiC!I
~:~traitor! ~II Pany Maya 448-

Dream all

LOIS"ol large rooms, 7 In all. Pretty woodwork and a

BROKER
OWNED!
2 story brick hamel
1.5 baths, lull
thla Inviting brick ranc.h.
Iorge
Extra sized rooms includes
lots
living room, kitchen, 2

acreage

could be lcl&lt;you.

It won't last tong.
·
11034 10 acre• mJI or prime ·
dellufopment land close to h"eew1~
and S1ate Aoute. Public utmuea
available. Land level Ia rolling. ·
E~~:cellent for development or
commercial use. I 155,000. Call

Country

..,

,

attacllel:l garage plus 25&gt;c31 barn. 11097 AN ElCCELI.ENT 8UY.B.62
2 w:.. m/1. Only 15 min. to Hclze(. ac111s m/1 of le-.tellc rolling land. A •
well constructed 3/4 BR home.
Coli IllS 388-8828.
APpro&gt;cimatelv 4.5 mllal out of

I Kalthlecm M. Oeland 992--619:1:1

-

..

. bldg. W/2

units also
room tor a 1
business lo your own. Bidg 46l$8.

Paby Hays 446-3184.

Y~~~h~;!~;L~~
"Homo"! ,
A
pervades

· VLS 388-811211446·8806.

·~·· ~,

-~-

',

... ,.J l. b~ ..

..

Pomeroy - Wehe . Terrace ·_Really neat and nice.
Has a large l·tlhsped living coom • dining
nice modern kitchen, lull basement, 4
and an attic tor·storage. Has 2 lotS with 2
on
elde of road.
to sell $40,000.00

Also there ts a r~i'·si-~~li~:E
need of '.!'l'.!''r·....~
WITH
' PORTLAND • Vacant Ground," 4
drilled well and aeptic. Beside ramp ~
river. ASKING $8,000.00

j!~::~R;~oute
124 Near Corn hollow·A ranch etyilt
with 4 bedrooms and ~ bathl. Hu new oarpet,

l

WE HAVE OUT OF TOWN'
BUYER~ WANnNO MEIGS
COUNTY PROPERnES. IF
YOU WANT TO SELL.. we·
HAVE THE
HOOK-UP WITH
REALTY, TO SIU YOUR
HOME TODAYIII .

fresh paint and border. Nice oak Cabinets.
new and efts Of1 ~prox. f acre of level
now $52,000.00

Brolceru........................lt2..,.
31
31

I
to
an ad, eo cell
complete detalo.

WISEMAN J!EAL ESTATE, INC.
446-3644
DAVID WJSEMAN, BROKER:. 446-9555
Loretta McDa~e
Caroly• Wudi·&lt;Ml-1007

-446-m' .
.,

I

'

Ohio.

VLS
,.a.,.
LISTING-

carrying clothes up &amp; down
fhe stairs) will make you
wan I to make this , home

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

~.

-·

• Clll.

o,

Residential Or Commercial Wiring, New Service
Repa irs. Ll·
cenud Electrician. 1Welsh Electric 61.&amp;-446-9950. GaUipolia,

convenience of an upstairs
laundry room (no more

style

NEW LISTING· 100 acre larm In Mason County
Includes a nice 3 Bdrm., 1 112 bath home. Privacy,
good hunting.

. 2S LOCt,IST ST. - GAWPOUS

ack lawn.

1786.

VIRGINIA SMITH; BROKER ......,....,... 3181111
Branc11 Office EUNICE NIEHM................................4.a-1tlf7
23 locust St. PATRICIA HAY$ .......................~ ......,••441 1!11
1 , Ohio ETTA SPEHCE ............................... c.. U8 1121
CLAUDE DANIELS ............................ -7801

RIO Grande · Charming
home has been redone and
Is waiting for you to move in
lmmadiately. 3 or 4
bedroom,
bath, .formal
dining room, ,living room,
brealclast room, kitchen.
Very niCe 2 car garage. Can
be purchased wll~ 1/2 acre.
More land Is available.
$59,900 1307

w~h

®

NEW LISTING· INVESTMENT PROPERTY IN
GALLIPOLis- 5 total units. Good Income, 'lull' rented.
Call for more details. 675-3433.

..

sha.ded.

Resideruial or .commercial wifing,
new service or repairs.. Master !LIcensed electrician. R iden our
Ele(ftrical, "WV000308 , 304·675·

.,

nice

10 APARTMENT UNITS IN PT. PLEASANT·
rental income. Priced to Sell

l-800-585-710l .o r446-7l01

446-3636

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ~NTERP~ISES
Heat Pumps. Air Conditioni ng. If
You Don't Call Us We Both laael
FrM Estimates, 1·800·291·0096,
614-446•6308, WIJ 002945.
r

BASEMENT

1-:-.,-,.-'--:-- - - - -

1994 2· 26 Chevy Bereltl, Red,
PS, PB, P~ Automatic Tronaml ..

1131 MOVE fliGHT INTO

Judy Dc:Witt .......... :................... 441-0262 Tammie Dc:Witt ................................24S-0022
J. Merrill Carter.........................379-2184 Martha Smilh ................................... 441-1919
Ruth Barr...................................446-1093 Oteryl Lcmly ......................,............ ~42-3171

'

Home
Improvements

SudQtt Price lfansmillione,
Used /Rebuilt, All Typal, Ovtr

Main
958

THIS, 3 Bedroom Ranch wtlh
vinyl Sid!"?. fullblml, Fenced In
lot. 2 car attachec:l Q&amp;rage, shed,

446-4618

BEAUTIFUL LAND.. OVER 300 ACRES LOCATED
NEAR' WAYNE NATIONAL FOREST AREA..
PRODUCTIVE FARM, DUDE RANCH OR A
TERRIFIC PLACE TO LIVE AND ENJOY THE
GREAT- OUTDOORS. 3 BEDROOM HOME. 3
BARNS, OTHER OUTBUILDINGS. POND,
TOBACCO ~. THERE ARE VERY FEW I';I.St.1S
THIS SIZE ON THE MARKET.. DO NOT MISS &lt;fLIT
ON THIS Qt.IEI

8.10

614·380-9192
lw=an:..1..,:....;t.:o:..bU.:..,.:..Io:..u:..r_w_Ke_el_er_s-,nd-:

0110.

OFFICE 992-2886

· RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER

'1WO STORY ,FRAME.HOME... SPACIOUS LIVING
ROOM. DINING ROOM, ONE BEDROOM AND BATH
ON FIRST FLOOR·. TWO BEDROQMS AND BATH
ON SECOND FLOOR. LOTS OF STORAGE SPACE.
IN GROUND POOL .. CAU. FOR AN APPOINTMENT
jWONI PRICED LOW AT $311,000111 .

SERVICES

F001, 4 Wheeler Kit brand new

Electrical and
R~lrlgeratton

Real Estate General

Audrey F. Canad,y, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 446-3383

Ron's TV Ser~ice , spacializiniJI in

Zenith alto servic;:ing most other
btaods. House calls. 1-800 -797·

840

many accessories.

tru. Callarter e:oo Atk for Ray.

Auto Parts &amp; •
Accessories

experienc:e.

001 s. wv 304-576-2398.

e.

At It S4,&amp;50. 11111 Honda Fourtrax •••. loaded and manY ex-

304-675-175tior304-875--4474.

CaU Tom 304-875&gt;4186. 20 yea!&gt;

sleeps

$15,000. 30'-875&gt;2464.

940ft'

Ceilings telftured, pinier repa1r.

1IUI5 Dutchman RoYal wltWin slid
out queen bed, corner tub, Slereo,

Office ...........;..............9t%-U59

.IB

3 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME ON
ROX.
f
1/2
ACRE
LOT.
bUTBUILOINGS... AFFORDABLE HOUSING WITH
OF SPACE. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT
VIEW THIS PROPERTY!

Good Condlnon. S3.100. 81..,.41-

760

18t0.

c:ondition, Sto,soa OBO, 11114-992- , ::==~~~~~~~.1.79~~5.~·~~~~~~~·
~~~~~~----..;,
General
1 n/ . . OP
. PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

~aded.

-BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

I )IllS! USTEDI

199S Vamaha 'Warrior 4 WhetHer,

67.000 '-Iiiii S12,500 Oaya: 614·
446-4554, Evemnos: 614-2586684.

2001.
304-875-2464.
1982 -l"oyole Pick-Up 4 Wheel
1881 Chevy SliYOfldo Ercollonl Drive, 5 Speed, AC, Bedllntr,
SEIZED CARS From $175. Condlllorl. suoo,., ........ 7730.
Parscnea. Cadtuac:s, Chevy&amp;,
Sunrool, Batman Amedcon RaeBMWs, Corvettes, Also Jeeps, 4 For Sale 1He Nl111n 5 Speed, lno Whnl1 Excellent Condition.
WO'I, Your Area. Toll Free t - New Tiree, Runli Good, lt4-2Se· 75.ooo Miles $10,9oo. &amp;1 ... 46800-21 8·9000 E•t. A-2814 Fo~ 9303, 014·251·1583 11,100 Or 3117.
1

•

dinblkea and condition. call
448-0211

rMAOdllhng, 'Oill&amp;r 10 )'ean &amp;a:penenee. free est1mafes. 8U-99o2-

14001 Two ecru 111/1 with a
14x70 Mobile Home, out bl~ .•
fruit trees. Priced in the low 30s.

NEW LISTING· Medical building in Pt. Pleasant·
perlect for office building: Dr's office etc.

1-800-458-9990

'

.:..-;.,..;-'~;-:,;:;;:;.·....;._ _ _ _ _
, IU Chevrolel A1tra Van, V-e.
Fl. .twood ConYerlion Package.
304-675-e143or304-875-239&amp;.

3711 .

Collins Construction- blJlldlng and

1173 Venture Pop-Up Camper
Steep•· 8 , Basic Accessonas,
Ceiling Netds Rtdclne, Non·IHk·
tr, Greet For Hunters! 11,300
BtstOtfer, &amp;14·388~13.

Eveninof: 614-256-668-4.

$800. 304-675-8183 or 304 -&amp;75·

G"nd

1!323.

lolcCormid&lt; Rood. Gallipolia. ONo
OAYWAI.L
61 ...48-1511 .
Hang, finith. repair.

Selll ",500, Dora: 814-.l&lt;e-4554,

Prlr, 2

8~

C&amp;mper1 &amp;

1173 Fleetw1ng 17Ft. t97ti 811·
zon With Awn1n9 24 fl. Hl75
Mallard Wlll'l Awnmg 27 fl. 1&amp;80

C811tl1e, CB. Intercom Heel·Tot

dr., auto, nice, 13,150, 2 large

Gen•ral Home Uainlenen"· Painting, vmyl sed1ng,
cerpentry, doora, windows, ba'lht.

C.tC

mobile home repair and more For
lrH tslimam call Cl'lel. &amp;1•·912·

Motor Homes

Shlhtr. Rl\ltUt Loaded, Mutt

1921.

CARS FOR $1001 Trucks, boats,
4-WhHitrl. motor homes, lurni!Ufe, electronics, computers etc:.
b)' FBI, IRS, OEA. A\lailabfe yout
area now. Call 1- 800-513-4343

1990 Mercury Grand Marquis,

&amp; Tlr..,

614·258-17'1iM1

..,.... $2,400:

790

Home
lmprovemenls

alon, 814-310·2786.

Inc. '

Ripley, WV 25271.

-zn.e3211.

Salo: 1~81 GL 1SOO Gold
187'1 :114 Ton OMC 4 WD 350, 4 For
Wing Tflke Wlntberry AMIFM

$1.250. 814-843-5:!11 o11or Speed, Ntw Plrtl,
$2,1100, 114-:J)Og-21 52.

or 1·

Ripley, WV. 304 -372·3133

Motorcycle•

19115 Honda XR&amp;OR Mint Cona,.
tion. Looks &amp; Runs like New,

1988 Plymou~h Sundance, Auto,
AM/FM Ca11ette, AC, Approx.
74,000 Miles. $1,800 &amp;14·441·
0191, Alter .C P:M.

730 VBIII &amp; 4-WDs

1970 F-100 · Ford Ranger,
...,lbtd, 87,0011 miiH, 3 OfiOtd
on column, good thape, runt

1970 Ford F-250. Re~lli:i Mater- 1118 Chivy fuN Sl&amp;e COIWtrllon
and Transamlulon. Topper, Cat· , Van, While and Navy Eacellent
tie Racka, Good Shape. $1 ,200. Condition, low Ml..,gt, 014·448·

1984 Crown ViCiorla, 302 V-8, fuM

Diplomal, 318 enasking $1200 080,

New 011 tanka, 1 ton lruck
WhHII &amp; radiators. 0 &amp; R Auto,

$2.100, 814-~.

Spcm1.11r, candy brandywine &amp;
llltcl&lt;. only 10K m&gt;ltl,loodtd or/
chrome, erc:ellent condition,
17.100. 814-H2·5174.

Parta, Well Maint1lned. Super
Nlc4 Car, A Staal Balow Book At

open

P.O. Box 614

(

good,
5pm.

13, 800, 814·256·8347, After 5:30

abOve ground pool.

Dept. GOT,

~.

5
Spotd, 78,000 MIIH. Loll ol New

Stripe Package, 41. Crllndtr,

ers, can Daln 614-446-8172.

..,.83 Buk:k Elect11, body fair, runs,. P.M.
Milt. Ecli p11 GS Turbo, 5
air, CD changer, $~700,

FM Caueua. Spon Whtelt,

48 Chevt 2 dr. Sedan, goad

SuMIOI, $1,400.614-379-2845.
1988 Olda 88 Excellonl Condition,

~~10 AU1os for S81e

0.0 Stcwm AM/

1986 Ford Thunderbird, Falf

PB. Tilt. Crulta, AMffM Cassette,

.

Must Sell : 1100

a14-245-5887.

1987 Callc:a GT 5 Spotd, Air. PS.

Carlo dirt track
·, Ford 9" rear end,

we'll cullom dcaign ,
for you.
'

START THINKING ABOIIT SPRING &amp; SUMMER 1997
Fllhlng, Booting, Hunting, or just relaxing In your own
ca""or &amp; campllte approX. 7 miles from Gallipolis,
- - . , g Blue L11k8 &amp; Raccoon Cfoek. WE ARE NOW
GOING TO SELL THIS CAMPSITE &amp; CAMPER. BUY IT
W1N AND BE PREPARED FOR SPRING 1997. SEE IT
Nrm. PHONE TODAY.
.
t584
PHONE 448-7899
KENNETH AIIBBARY, PH. 245-5855
WILLII LEADINGHAM, BROKER, Pit. 448-9539

742~.

304-875-5348 E'"'*'IIL
car,

standard modcla or

Structures,

8. loodod, lln&gt;...m or LS. 81,._

7CO

$3,800, 814-448-8785.

Shape, Good Running Condition,'

••

~·c

QOK Acluel Mllea, S2,800,

11,200 Before 8:00 Call 114-«1·
1052. After e:oo Call 614·44G·
1421 .

Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Reaitor/Brokei-446-0971
Jeanette Moore, Realtor· 256-1745
Tim
'Realtor-256-6102

from over

Appalaehian Log

1113 FO(d PU V·l. 411•. N . .
Peinr, Chrome Whetlt, Goad

,1,200. 304·

00 lb. bolo&amp; of 11oy, UO ptr
, 114·742·3088 or 814-7•2· 1985 O.,a 9S Regoncy PW, POL,

REALTORS:

Log
Stt·tu:turc.t his been a
IJ!""''lcr in the log home
lor over 15

'iMi&lt;ifOOins· large
llvl"ll room, eat In modem kitchen, plenty off street
parldng. Phone tor mole lnfolmatlon.
t762

Aa~ng

Ul85 Nlllan UUifna $500. loll
or new parts. 81-4·387·7128. Aek
lor Don.

Hay &amp; Grain

A:ppalachian

fur mo'rc I

Co·

810

Accessories

1118 Harle)' DIYiclson 1200

446-1066

I

Coli ur w.-itr.

Wonltd ., buy- 87 or -

prtc. CloMic, ..,., bo 4 - · Y.

Auto Parts &amp;

760

730 VIlli &amp; 4-WDI

Daytime. B14·245-

92,000 Milos, S5,000, 614·992·

Comfort. eonvcDicncc,
rgy
efficiency,
I d•ura•bili1Y and Ocxibility
deaign arc. a few of the
why 2,000
fa•miliooo will build a
home this year!

Choose

4013 or :10+e~1111.

lor Mall&lt;.

LOG HOMES

I v•car'a,

til power, low mil ... $04-e?S-

5'78-4047 or 304·075--1150. Alk

. LET US WORK FOR YOU!
CALL US TODAY!

tO)'I,

Puppy Pala&lt;:e Kennels, Boarding,
SIUd Setvlce Pu~e~. Grooming!,
Buw-j Sell &amp; Trlde, All Bi"eeds.
Payments Welcome, 814-388 ·

C(Uita, Air, Po.., SN:tl 11,800
114-441-1875

~~o!~ro~!!1!Y1H~MJ!C•

$1.250,

Poodle puppl"- teacup1. white;

Flollwood 11110 Gron4 Prir 56, rtd, ou10,
Mr. fuiy ......, opliona.

720 'tlueks for Sale

0484E-.

NN i.JSTINGIIII - Thia brick, ranch
home aeta on 2.15 acres, m/1 within 5
mine. of !dim. There is 2 bedrooms, with
an unfinished room upstairs, this can
become vour third one. The living room
has a 11oor to ceiling fireplace. A perfact
place to spend your winter months
ahead. The walla of this home has longan-goved walla. They are a rich honey
brown color. Your equiped kitchen has
an eye level oven, dishwasher, and
counter top range. In the dining area there is a large picture window thai ~~~:1
out on a pond where the ducks swim . Your partial basement is finlshad.
same rich wood Is located In this' area. There is room for storage and your Dllil:&amp;·l
this area. The storage is abundanl in this house: With a new roo!, new
furnace, new central air, new carpet, and a blaclc
drive there isn't much any
one can do to
this home. Call us

Farman Cub, with hydraulic front
culli\lator, locks &amp; runs good,

(1~

~ping
~ 211».

Cadillac

Brougham Exc•Hent Condh..,n,
Power Windows, Pow•r Door
Locka, AM/FU Cauent. Tilt,

looks eooc~ .

Clark Clipper Fcrk l tft, $1,000
814·258- t270.

=Po_:.;..'::p::-'-::-::--::-.,-,.-::c--

bllck; al10 miniature
Sc:hnauzafl, AKC, ahots and
- - · chomplon bloodlne: 814CICI1·3404.

81 ....802-&amp;8110.

•

t 4-H Club
Calv11, Tobec:c:o StripMad11nt For Solt. 81 ...48·

tU5

71 0 Autot for Slit

HUtS Ford Tempo, runs grear,

REALTY COMPANY

2427.

ClAy, $100, 614·9..·2857.

Hanny Blockburn, Broker, Phone: (614) ~
li;( Joe Moo...,, Aaoociate 441-llll

t•1..-.1S.

710 Autos for Sale

~50080, 814-992-7271 .

440 John Deer Skidder Excellent
Condition, $13,500, 614·379·

A Groom Shop -Pit Grooming.' One ye1r old -Husky, black and
cream. wltn brown eyes, spayed,
loves children, to approved home
114~{)231.

FtiiUrinQ Hydro Bath. Con
Shetts. 373 GeorQtl CrHk Rd.

AKC Go.,on R01tiovor Pupa, 12
Wetkl Old. 2nd ShOll, tiDO,

800-594· t 111 .

sin engine. $8,500. Keeler's
Service Center St . Rt. 87. 304895-3874.

s-

4411-4172,114-2!01-1818.

•so.

Rollt)' Cuuert. Carmichael's Walk behind Gt'8'181y tractor with
Firm &amp; Lawn ISU--.u&amp;-2412 Oft - mower. netdl repaired 1200,

1987 Hahn 440 HI-Boy tpt"ayer,
tlydrostal drive, 40' hyd booms,
200 gal a. a. tank, •cyl Wiscon·

1714

BLACKBURN REALTY-"
\.... ... .
514 Second Ave., GallipoliJ, Oh. 45631
·;~

22:5 Amp Lincoln welder, Ilk•

2 ·55 4 WD 55 HP 2100 Hra: now. $150. 3811. Elteulc

cord, 4 wires tor ..,_. ell:. f.IO.
Ntw 500ft. roll na.l alumjnum
RICHARDS BROTHERS FRUIT W 148" Dock: Ford 2800 1~00 electric wire.
275 gtil. rv.1
FARM ··APPLES! APPLES! AP· Hra; Ford 3800 Nice; ford 4000; mnk an ttand 145/ 2 ponr sad·
PLESI large Crap Wllh Many JO 2040 Nice; MF 185 W !load· dlos, $50 &amp; S35ta. 304-875·
Varieties To Choose From. We
er: MF 235 1100 Hrs; 2 -NH 355 2833.
An Feah.tring Rttd Otlicioul AI Grindefs: Nl 2- RoW Picbr; JO 35
Our SPECIAl For November.
Forage Chopper: 2 -JD 115 SI- Simpliclry Ctlipper Shradd4HI 2·
Come Check Our Prices And
lage Wagons; JO 80H Blower; P· 5hl) rnoo.ll , chip• up to 2" limbl
Compere. LocoiOCI 2• MI. Nor1h Of 2 Gltlntr Ollltl Comblnt 4 ·30 $375. 1·8hp model, chipt up w
Gaaipolis On Route 35. Exit Rigid Head t3 Ft Grein Table; Ntw 3• $4115. E•cellanl 1001 for chop..
On Co~mly Road A&amp;. Phone 814· John QHrt Tractor• • Financing ping tobacco stalks. K•tftr'l
286-4584.
-'' Low Aa 6.0% W IJD Credit Service Centtr St. At 17. 304·
Approval. low Low Prk:ea On JO 1185-31174.

Black Miniature Poodle, neu-

--~

JD a2llO ee HP 1105 Hra: JO 2156 ...... holt dloolr 12" Auott t275.

Fruhs &amp;
Vegetables

580

Hydraulic Oil
pall.
Sldetl Equipment, Henderson,
WI/. :J04.fl7'5-7421 .

Livestock
,;i'YHr 0~ Hollleln Bull 1100 ,

610 Farm Equlpnient

Pomeroy·• Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plee..nt, WV

Autos tor

130

Pets tor

lnatrumems

Building
SUpplies

Sundly, November 17, 1191

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt • Gllllpolll, OH • Point Plea..nt, WV

'

•

..

D1r1e11e Wedp • 441..o2QI

••

•

�•
•

..... DI ... , ...

Sunday, November 17, 191M!

Pomeroy • Mlddl1p Ott • Gilllpolll, OH • Point Pltusnt, WV

•

Hi h Tech Livin

Some North Dakotans
didn't .heed water warning

_
·•

·

•

GROUND BROKEN FOR NEW FACILITY Will P - Tumbling took the first step In
Mtabllshlng a new facUlty IIi Gallipolis wl1h a
groundbreaklng ceremony Wednasday. The
naw structure will be located on Airport Rd. off
upper SR 7. In front ere (L·A) Kalae E:dmonds,
co-owner Lynnlta Edmonda, William Edmonda,
Logan Edmonds end Bill Edmonda. Behind
them are A. V. (Buddy) Graham ollhe Commu-

nlty Improvement Corporation ol Gelllpolla,
Gallla County Chllmber of c-ce "'l"aenlll11vea Marjtllln Butcher and Gary Roach,
U.S. Rep. Franll CNI1 sana (R-GeiUpolls), Gallipolis City Manager Matthew Copptar, Holzer

Clinic admlnlatretor Tom Gooch, accountant
Gary Jarvia, John Cornett ol Peoples Bank and
Trust and engln.r Randy Braech. (Times-Sentinel photo)

.c orn, soybean, milk estimates rise
·By ROBERT GREENE
·AP Flll'ri1 Writer
: · WASHINGTON -The nation 's
com harvest should reach 9.27 billion
.bushels this fall, the Agriculture
Department said today, again raising
;its monthly forecast because of good
•weather in the big com states.
- The forecast .for soybeans rose to
~.40 billion bushels, renecting near•fy ideal weather conditions late in the
growing season. Milk production
.rebounded, too, causing a sharp drop
,from last month in the forecast price
;for milk in the coming 12 months.
. · The revised estimates for coni and
·.soybeans will mean lower prices for
fi!TIIers but less expensive feed for
livestoCk, especially chickens and

·~copper

turkeys. The boost m dairy produc- iargest production behind 199~ and
tion will end the shan-lived run up in 1992.
f81111 prices but should mean lower
Com yields are expected to aversupermarket prices for milk.
age 126.5 bushels an acre, up 3.5
The good fall weather capped off bushels from last month. Because
a season that staned miserably. Rain most of the extra production will go
and cool weather delayed plantings of into surplus, prices should average
both crops. Harvesting is nearing $2.70 a 'bushel , down from $3 forecompletion.
cast last monlh. '
Favorable late-season weather in
Prices avera11ed $3.24last season
Mississippi and Texas also helped and $2.26 the season before.
raise the forecast colton harvest to
The soybean forecast of 2.40 bil18.6 million bales, up 2 percent from lion bushels is up 2 percent from
last month and 4 percent from last October and 10 percent from last
year.
year. It's the second largest producThe \'Om production forecast of tion behind 1994. Yield is forecast at
9.27 billion bushels is 3 percent 37.9 bushels an acre, up0.9 from Oct
above the October forecast and up 26 I. Prices should average $6.50 a
percent from 1995. It · is the. third bushel, down from $6.95 forecast last
month.

futures jump sharply...

Continued from D-1
USDA ·weekly soybean expon
-"les came in at a stronger-than·expected 1.12 million tons, up from
804,700 tons a week ago.
•. China bought 249,800 tons, while
.Belgium bought 194,200 tons, Spain
123,500 tons and the United King.dom 101,900 tons, the USDA saod.
The National Oilseed Processor's
Association also reponed another
record-high crush of soybeans for
making meal and oil, at 30.145 million bushels for the week ended
Nov. 13. That was the first time the -

association's members broke the 30
million b~hel mark and indicated
demand remains high.
"Soybeans are continuing to show
surprismg expon strength and that
just keeps the market rallying," saod
analyst Susan Leighty at Prudential
Securities in New York.
January soybeans rose 8 112 cents
to $6.96 3/4 a bushel.
Natural gas futures prices jumped
a second day on the New York Mercantile Exchange amid forecasts'callong for cold weather to linger in the
-

Dr. Gricoski reappointed
cancer liaison physician
GALLIPOLIS · Holzer ' Clinic
' . recendy announced the reappointment of clinic surgeon Alice A. Gricoski, M. 0.,
FACS as cancer
liaison physician
of the commission on cancer at
Holzer Medical
Center. This is Dr.
Gricosko's second
three-year term.
The cancer liaison program is

Powell graduates

''

•

responsible for providing direction
in order to establish, maintain and
suppon cancer programs consistent
with criteria set by the approvals
program of the 'commission on cancer.
,
Jn the role of cancer liaison
physocian, Dr. Gricosko will panici. pate as a volunteer for the American
Cancer Society, repon an~ually to
the cancer committee and contribute
to the annual repon on the activities
and programs-of the commission on
cancer, and represent Holzer and lhe
region at the annual comdtission on
cancer meeting, held in conjunction
with the Clinical Congress of the
POMEROY - Misti Dawn PQwell American College of Surgeons.
recently gradual·
ed from Hocking
College and met
the requirements
to take her board
for practical nursing. She has also
been
accepted
into the associate
POWELL
degree program
at Hocking College and is currently working pan
time at Winchester Place in Canal
Winchester.
She is a Meigs High School grad·
uate and the daughter of Glen and
Sheila Knudson of Athens and
Slephen Powell of Sa~ Francisco.

Nonioeast and Midwest through at
least next week.
· Snowstorms and unusually cold
weather last week contributed to a 22
bilhon cubic· foot drop in storage supplies, the American Gas Association
reported, which is causing shan-term
supply ughtness. Cash prices rose
a~id buying to replace the invento-

ry.

.

December natural gas futurcs set·
tied 12.1 cents higher al $2.908 per
1.000 cubic feet.

Terry -.uends
·eye conference
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Raben Terry,
Oallipolis, attended the inaugural
East-West
Eye
Conference
in
Cleveland recently.
This was the
first Ohio-based
•1
national eye care
conference.
It
attracted
more
than 1,100 oplometrisls, paraoplometrics, technicians and others from
i4 states and Canadian provinces.
A distinguished faculty, more
than 120 hours of continuing education, and an extensive exhibit hall
heildlined the three-day conference,
which . was sponsored by the Ohio
Optometric Association.
The event was held in the Renais1nce Hotel in downtown Cleveland.

'

By JOHN lllecOONALD
Aeaoclatecl PNII WI ltw
LIDGERWOOD, N.D.
Groundwater contamination didn't
top farmers' worries around here in
the 1930s and ' 40s. Grasshoppers
did.
.
Hordes of the, insects clung to
every plant in sight and devoured
crops acres at a time, threatening
fanners with financial ruin.
So, when crews showed up with a
concoction of molasses, grain and
arsenic to bait and kill the pests, the
farmers used it- libemlly, 300,000
pounds of it. Wbal was left usually
ended up in burlap sacks buried
under a few feet of dirt.
It's no wonder that 50 years later,
this pan of southeastern Nonh Dakota has a problem with arsenic contaminalion.
The area, which includes ponions
of three counties. a half-dozen small
. towns - 570 square ,miles in all was listed as an Environmental Protection Agency Superfund cleanup
site in the early 1980s. Arsenic levels in the groundwater were so high
the government felt it was unsafe for
human consumptoon.
But not everyone listened, or
cared, what the government bad to
say.
Despite a sro million project in

the early 1980s to gel as many residents as possible a new, safe water
source, dozens still drink from conlaminaled wells.
"I never felt il was that big of a
deal," said Lawrence He ley, who
lives about eight miles from Lidgerwood, where he used to raise cows
and hogs. He moved to the area in
1951 and his family has been drinking the same well water ever sonce.
"We' ve never been sick," he saod.
"Some folks just made a choice,"
said Joel Heitkamp, manager of the
Southeast Water Users Association,
one of the groups the EPA charged
with getting clean water to resodents.
"You have to understand some of
these people have loved there for
years and say. 'The arsenic hasn 't
kolled me yet; what's the problemT'
Exposure to low levels of arsenic
over a long period has been shown to
cause cancer, specifically the skin
malignancy melanoma. But there has
never been a documented case of

arsenic-related cancer in the contamination area.
Officials insist, however. 1ol docsn't mean the risk isn't there. •
The EPA first tested the water in
the late 1970s. In some areas, the
arsemc levels were relatively low and
possibly even nat~rally occurnng on

Agricultural Secretary Glickman...
Continued tropm D-1
which generally backs Glickman's
new CRP rules, said agribusiness
interests "are way off base. What
they really want is JUSt what they'•e
wanted since this ilebatc began: A
CRP of 10 million to 15 molhon acres
instead of a CRP of 36 million
acres," the legal limit.
Glickman also is getting sniped at·
from an entirely different direction:
sponsmcn. ,
They' ve been happy with the old
. CRP because it has oncludcd more
than 8 million acres in the prairie pothole region of the upper Great Plams,
especially in Nonh and South Dakota. The CRP over fhc past decade has
been credited with tripling waterfowl
nesting success. This year·~ fall flight
of 90 million ducks "is the largest
migration of waterfow I in 25 years,"
accordong to Ducks Unlimited.
But Glickman's new rules, 'the
580,000-member group slates, would
make perhaps half or more of the
CRP land in the Dakotas ineligible

for inclusion in the new reserve.
"The consequences for waterfowl
and other grass! an~ wildlife would be
deva...tating."
Glickman so far has firmly trod a
middle path. He has emphasized the

CHESHIRE - James E. Presion, a
performance lechnician al Ohio Val·
ley Electric Corporation's Kyger
Creek Plant, retired Nov. I, after
more than 41 years of service wilh
the tompany.
PrestOn joined OVEC in )955 as
a pard in the personnel department.
DurinJ that same year, he lransfened
10 the performance department where
ti .dvanced 10 illlitrumenl mechanica ln 1957.
111 1964, he lrlllsfemd 10 the
chemic:al depanment as a filter plan I
opemor and sample~ and .was proJIII)Ied 10 chemist ass15tanl.m 1967.
Ill I9119, he be&lt;:IIIIC a performance
......icW. in ~perfomwtce depart-

November 17, 11M

In-store, on-line shopping

Shopping the Internet
A li1tle-known patent thai covers ce~ain 1ransact1ons over the Internet could raise

the cost of dolng business tor co~anles looking to sell d1gital products online.

I

Virtual Emporium seeks to serve Net-savvy buyers
IIY BRUCE HARING
USA TODAY

first retailer dedicated to in-store, on-line shopping - a concept some say sounds absurd.
SANTA MONICA, Calif. - Virtual Empori"Why would people go 10 a store to do on-line
um looks, from the outside, hke any other store on shopping?" asks Maria Annoudian, a reporter
the bustling Third Street Promenade, with wide with Video Store magazine. "I r you have to leave
windows and a quorky sign beckoning strollers.
your house, what's the point?"
Inside, the store resembles a funky cyhercafe.
Founder Thck Rickards says m011t of~ popuComputer workstations with comfonable chairs lation is nol familiar woth on-line lhoppin&amp; bul
and couches are set liberally throughout the store. slill has high expectations. "They want to find
Merchandise bearing the store's logo, as well as . products quickly and want someone to. help them
such products as stress balls, Mighty Morphln if they have any questions," he says. "We need to
Power Ranger CD·ROMs and wine bottles are make thiS"approachable for anyone who walks in
displayed along the walls and on the noors.
the door."
Virtual -Emporium claoms to be the world's
The Vinual Emporium launched Nov. 7 on the
Promenade; a pedestrian mall near
the beach that attracts huge crowds.
The 2,500-square-fool store
lures shopping via 30 computer terminals with high-speed T-1 connections.
Net-savvy store employees
guide computerphobes through the
site's offerings. Both on-line businesses and traditional retailers are
among 70 featured businesses,
including 1-800-FLOWERS, Amazon.com Books, Mercedes-Benz,
Jaguar, Lands' End, Spiegel,
Sharper Image, The Disney Slore,
Orilaha Steaks, Nordic'Tt'ack and
the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
.

rea-

The store and its Web site are divided into
areas for home, entertainment, apparel, kids and
seasonal items.
"Our goal is to drive traffic to the Web site and
create an e.perience to make on-line shopping a
reality," Rickards says. "We probably learned
more about on-line shopping in the last two hours
(of the store's opening day) than we knew before.
It's fascinating."
Vinual Emporium is sponsor~ by on-line
merchants in return 'for feedback on how to make
their sites more user-fnendly.
Store management hopes to expand to three or
four more markets by the end of next year. Also.
mini-kiosks featuring on-line shoppmg will soon
launch with two tenninals each at the UCLA Stu- ·
dent Center and an Encino, Calif., mall.
"Anything that helps the typical consumer
overcome the leammg curve or their msecurities
about buying on line is a good thing," says Ron
Bel Bruno of NetGuide magazme, "especoally of
it tokes place in a shoppong mall," where they're
used to making purchases.
But, he adds. "It certainly, doesn't get around
other problems, such as the perception that these
transactions aren't secure."
Of course,,those who feel comfonable with the
Net can also do it the old-fashioned way accessing the Virtual Emporium from.home using
their comput~.rs ~the world wide web at: http://

www.vemponunfcom.

.

BERKELEV, Calif. (AP)- One week after state voters approved the use other obtain marijuana, but QOW we can be more out front about it," Tuk
of marijuana for medical reasons, a group has set up an Interne! sile with an · said.
order form for pQtentoal customers.
Proposition 21~ legalized the cultivation, possession and use of marijuaWeb browsers can choose from "B grade imported" 10 "AA grade Cali- na for l.!ealth reasons. However, il is still illegal to sell or distribute marijuafornia green" at the new site of the Berkeley Prescripbon Cannabis Growe111 na, 1111d growing it is a federal crime.
and Buyers Club.
Tuk's group does nol seem to care, but police do.
"The victory of (Proposition 215) has allowed us to come out of the clos"Along with supplying and selling .marijuar.a, which are felonies, I imaget," said Ted Tuk, temporary director of the 10-year-old group.
ine you could cook up something extra for '!Sing the Internet," said Berke" We've always been an informal group of disabled people helping each ley police Sgt. Michael Stafstrom.
'

Making the payment ..
The customer pay1 for the purchiH

through the tntornet With 1 ertdH eord.

,•,

Product download

.
''
The customer downiOida the product 10

hta11m1lnol.

Encryption code
The seller provldoto 1 code to unlock the
encrypted dell, thereby allowing the
customer to ustlhe product.

.~--~----------------~--~~----------~
.

The auorney general'• office declined to comment on the group's offer,
saying the law has left things "murky."
Tuk, who is prepared to go to jail, said eventually the Web site will only
be available to club members, who must have a doctor's penmssoon to use
marijuana.
•;1don't want people trying to order maroJuana wothout the proper authorization," he said. "I'm really trying to do this in keepong with the proper
spirit of Prop 215."

·c yberl ist:

Small businesses
looking for
dependable PCs

What's on-line this week ·
AMERICA ONLINE· lkeyword for all· Center SlaKe\
•The Artist Formerly Known as Prince joons AOL l-ove, Sunday al7 p.m.
•Chef Juli~ Child joins the electronic Gourmet Guide, Sunday al8 p.m.
oQJdmobile hosts actor Greg Eviganrstar·of "Melrooe l'lace,'.:.Monday at IOp.m.
._,,
•James Doohan, "Scotty" from the anginal c~t nne TV series "Star
Trek,'' joins The Book Repon in AOL Live, Tuesda at 8 p.m.
•AOL Sports hosts a chat with Olympic gyllUI Kerri Strug, Tuesday at
8 p.m.
•Join Sprint's Cyberspace Showdown between Jim Harbaugh, quanerback for the Colts and Drew Bledsoe, quanerback ~or the Patriot, 'l)iesday at
9p.m.
•Fran on " Mad About You,'' actress Leila Kenzie, Tuesday at 10 p.m.
•Rick Elias, stiu of "That Thing You Do," joins Christianity online,
Wednesday at 8 p.m.
.
•Author of "Snow Falling on Cedars,'' David Guterson, joins The Book
Report, Wednesday at 1.1 p.m.
•Rep. lien a Ros-Lehtinen woll be in The News Room on AOL, Thursday
ao7 p.m.
•Hollywood Online presents Marina Sirtis of "Star Trek: The N~xt Generation," Thursday at 9 p.m.
•Oidmobile presents actor Emilio Estevez, Thursday al 10 p.m.

1996 ~MC SONOMA 4 WHEEl: DRIVE
Only6,000
miles, auto
trans, factory
warranty still
applies, save on
this one.

WASHINGTON (AP) - With
hundreds of billions of dollars on the
line, four of the nation 's largest
defense conlractors anxmusly await a
preliminary Pentagon decision Saturday on who will develop the multi-service loon! Strike Fighter.
Since the ul.matc winner will
probably assume the dominant role in
fighter aircraft construction welfinto
the next century, the stokes include
tens of thousands of future jobs that
could go to Marietta. Ga.; St. Louis
or Seattle. Wash.

'
Just traded.

Full power, ·
locally owned,
priced
accordingly.
See it now.

By The Associated Press
A volatile day on Wall Street end·
cd woth the Dow Jones industrial
average achicv1ng its eoghth straight
record high, gaining 35.03 points to
6.348.03.
't
The dollar fei'i against the yeJ&gt;1lnd
pound. but was olhcrwisc marginal ~
ly higher. Gold and oond prices fell.

. ''
COMPUSER\'E:
. •Sponswriter Mike Lupica talks about his book, "Mad As Hell: How
Sports Got Away From The Fans," Monday at 10 p.m. (Go CONFERENCE).
•Writer, editor and sex crusader Susie Bright discusses her latest book,
''The aest American Erotica 1995," Tuesday at 9 p.m. (Go CONFERENCE).
•Tom aergeron and Laune Hibberd,
hosls of "Fox After Breakfast,"
Thursday at 9 p.m. (Go CONFERENCE).
•Horror writer Greg Kihn discusses
his new book and CD, Thursday at 10
p.m. (Go CONFERENCE).

1990
This weeks
special. Don't
Miss This one.

1993 CHEV S·BLAzER
4 Dr model, air
condnion, bench
seat, locally
owned, new
Chevrolet trade,
Go in the snow
wilh !his one.

PRODIGY'
.Co-author (with Ellen Fein) of
"The Rules: Time-Tested Secrets
for Capturing the Heart of Mr.
Righi," Sherrie Schneider, Monday
at 9 p.m.
•Miss Universe 1996 Alicia Machado, Monday al 10 p.m.
•SonicNet presents t)oe hip-hop duo
Heltah Skehah, Tuesday a1 7:30
p.m.
•Dr. Tony Iones of ABC's "General Hospital;" actor Brad Maule,
Tuesday .at 9 p.m.
•Deanna Caron, senior editor or the
Birnbaum Guides (Official Guides
to Disney Parks), will give the latest
information on this year's holiday
celebration at Wall Disney World.
Tuesda)\.al9 p.m.
'
•Star of the new thriller "Set It
Off," aejor Blair Underwood, Tuesday al 10 p.m.
•Jazz clarinetist Don Byron, Tuesday at 10 p.m.

For a great deal on any
one of these cars see...

ON AU NEW BUICK REGALS
Only
&amp; They'r~ Going FAST!!
S
In &amp; See Us At•••

.Left

Sh...., Turl,y T(liVOr Peaytt Louie Buah

' GEO

/

-

(all times Eastern):

Business highlights

E

Medical marijuana club to offer.drug over the Internet

need to bring more crop land into
productoon. J1ut he also stresses that
there woll be "no Dust Bowl on my
watch."
(George Anthan writes for The
Des Moines Register.)

Auto trans, 4
cyl, Just Traded.
Priced to sell
now.

' Calif.

Preston.retires

the sandy soil. But in other areas, levels were four or five times what lhe
government considers safe for hum011
consumption.
The entire area - from Lidger.
woOd to Wyndmere to Milnor- was
hsted as a federal Superfund site in
1983. It quickly became evident th,e
contamination was so widespread
·there was no viable way to cl.ean it
up.
.
Instead, the EPA decoded to extend
rural water systems to more residentS
and to upgrade treatment plants on
Lidgerwood and Wyndmere so they
could filter out arsenic.
The project was completed ip ,
1990 and Heitkamp estimates that 80
percent to 90 percent of the resident'·
arc hooked up to the system. Thosa
who aren't simply chose not to be, he ·
saidr
&lt;4
When the project was being buolt,
the EPA paid about 90 percent of the
costs. Today, having clean watei
piped to a rural home can cost homeowners $15,000 to $20,000,
Heitkamp srud, even of they live within a mile or two of an existing
.,
pipeline
The government doesn 't pay for
any of that anymore, That, Heitkamp
says. makes the chances of anyone
clsCJOining "shm to none."

Section

Bob Turner

• OLDSMOBILE

AIMING TO SAVE on rMI -

coats and promoting tatunwortt, bualneaa execU11ves and their under·

~~~;~; ri1-;;:;;;~~~~:;;;lh;~~;ndh~hl~~hamora.
office look like a 'F~rtune 500' company
(NAPS)-More people than ever are
leaving the corporate office world behind
and going home-lo tlleir own home-based
business.
A home-based office has unique advantages and challenges. Considering the essentials can help you make SilO square feet of
home office space as successful as any Fortune 500 company:
• Location, location, location-You need
quiet, well-lit, distraction-free space to
work in. Consider converting your 'garage or
a seldom-used guest room. For conference
space, rent additional space at a . neruby
hotel.
· • Manage your time-Fighl the urge lo
caleb up on chores. Keep separate notebooks
or organizers with "to-do" lists and don 'I
tackle your household "to-do's" unto! you've 'So;~;f.~~;jj'E~~~ IUNey
Suzy'Parker, USA TODAY
completed your office worjt. • ·
If you prinl a lol of material daily and don't need
. • !l!luip your office for success-You can equip
color,
consider a laser printer. Affordable laser printyour home office with a personal computer for about
$2,000. On-line services offer electronic mail for you ers; like the HP Laserlel SL Xtra wilh business proto keep in &amp;ouch with your client and conduct business ductivity software, leis you produce documents just
like !he ones from larger companies.
research. .
·
·
Limited on space? Consider a multifunction printer.
• Project a professional image-High-quality out·
Products
such· as the HP OfficeJet 350 combine a
put improves your image, especially in a home-based
business. Every piece of paper that leaves your printer, plain:paper fax, ..:ionnerand convenience copi·
s
office-business cards, letterhead, brochures- is a er all in one space-saving package.
•
Organize-Cut
.
.down
on
paper
clutter
by
scanning
direct reneclion of your company. Fonunately, quahty
printers have become much more affordable and there imponant documents and filing them electronically.
Companies such as Hewlett-Packard have scanners
are many good options to choose from.
Color adds emphasis to presentations or brochures from small desktop models that easily scan receipts,
and inkjet printers such as the HP DeskJet 820Cse and business cards or sheets of lexl to larger models for
·DeskJel 870Cse are an affordable option for high scanning photos and color graphics. Staning at about
$200, these scimners make organization a cinch. ,
image quality.

a

(NAPS )-Small companies are
learning the joys and pains of computong . l11e Joys, for about two thousand dollars, onclude being able to
function like a large corporation
using sophisti&lt;ated voicemail, faxon-demand, desktop publishmg and
Internet tools. The pains indude
being left' alone woth a 'SOmetimes
unruly PC. Wuhout their own tulltime inforn\ation systems (tS) staff
on hand, small busoness folks are
often left to fend for ohemselves
using telephone suppon lines and by
seeking out neighbvrs and friends for
advoce.
One PC company may offer a
solution. Hewlett-Packard 's "office. .in-a-box" products designed for
small businesses and its special " Vortual IS Department" support intro-.
duced tho s pasl spring. have been a
huge success: The HP Vectra 500
Series PC, ' the first computer
designed as a small busmess solution, includes a built-in modem, onte·
grated voicemail, electronic-mail
and fax, pre-loaded business produchvity software, ease~ofause features,
and on-line and phone suppon from
control software which allows HP
technicians to take over a user's PC
via modem connection to investigate
and fix the PC's problem. The soft- "
ware has been very popular with its
users, especially among those with
limited technical knowledge.
"The once threatening idea of
owning and J]\aintaining a computer
system os now becommg a requirement for small businesses," said Eric
Cador, general manager of HewlettPackard's Small Business Computong Operation. "On the other hand,
the average user is no technulogical
expert
.
Today, HP is improving its small
business line by adding more functoons desored by small companies.
Such functoons mclude software
tools like PC411 software whoch
houses a U.S. phone book woth
address managing capabilities, Intel
Proshare dalaconferencong software
for collaborating on projects from
different locations via modem,
Netscape Navigator for easy lntemet
searches, and self-diagnostics softwar~ - for troubleshooting anti-vorus
software.
To help small business enjoy the
benefits of a network system Joke
sharing foles and pronters, HP has
also introduced a new "netw01 k in a
box" product. The HP Network Kn
includes everythin g a small busoness
needs to set up a simple first network.

·.Teen computer hacker pleads guilty to electror,tic breaking-and-entering
1616 Ea•tern Ave.

(614) 446-3672

meal.

Platon. hil wife Nsncy, reside in
a.Jiipolil.

a

•

.'

Gallipolis

.
I

By CONNIE PARROW
The break-ins took place between October 1994 and
JUilty Thurs.!ay to IWO Counts of computer frou~ and one
'A•soclatacl Press
counl of iiiCJal wiretapping. He faces up to I~ years in April 1995, when Schano1 was an honor student at a
· ST. LOUIS (AP)- A computer whiz deemed so cun- · prison and $750,000 in fines at his sentencing on Jan. Catholic boys' school in suburban St. Louis. He •annins he could control almost any computer ~tern has 31.
ished after graduating in May 1995.
accepted a plea bat'gllin for hacking his way into the
~eerel files of 1wo major communic,tions companies.
I'Tooeculorl Aid Schanol broke into national computAuthorities caught up with Schwool last March and
h
the
and
had
passwonls
to
military
computen,
l'nked
er
networb
1ntemel lhe credit reponinl oervice TRW tutd Sprint. They gave anesled h'om at the su burb an Philadelphia apanment he
Chriflophcr Sc anot, 20, was o
lo
' )..ibention Front, a group of hacke111 who havo claimed
'nd' . he .
proti fro h' .
.
shared with ~ )7-year-old woman, Nella Gilboa, the
raponaibility ~for ~me high-profile computer pranks no 1 tcaloon tried to
11 m 15 mtruaoon.
publisher of Gray Areas. The magazine professes to
0111d who decry the C(/mmcrcializalion of cybenpace.
Hil hackina cauoed security breaches that companie~ explore subject m~tter thai is "illegal, immoral and/or
·· ¥ elldlall&amp;e for a reduced sentence, SchanOI pleaded' llfi'Wd COlt tens jlf lhoulands of dollars lo repair.
.,
9 controversial."

.

+.

In April, Schanot was placed under 24-hour house
arrest and ordered to nol even talk about computers.
Originally accused in a fove-count ontlictment, he
pleaded guilty to charges surroundong ~reak-ins at
Southwestern Bell and Bellcore. u communications
research company owned by seven regional telephone
compan1es.
Mike Schanot said hos son made the plea bargain only
after prosecutors threatened hun with a wider range uf
..
charges.

�·. SUnday, Ncw.mber 17,1te6

. Ncwi!IIIMI' 17, 1111

O.llpolil• Pomeroy, Ohio

Beware hardware that isn't 'plug-and-play;
By LARRY BLASKO
Aa-ll!ted Plwa Writer ·
Never mind bad bair days. It's the bad han!ware days
that take ~ir toll on a ~ junkie. .
· .
A revoew model amv~ of a mfty-looking flatbed
color scan.ner. The street pnce was less than $300. With
software, II would scan ima~s at ~.800 dots per inch in
24-bll color. It was compatible ~·th Windows 3.1 and
Windows 95. It could handle lone an and. gray scale
· ~mages. The scanner Jl:ed was a full 8.5 x 1.1 mches. And
II was a fax and a copter. All together, a noce value.
So I opened t~ bo~ ~ith anticipation! Five hours
later, I closed tl woth loathmg.
The; first thing ~ noticed was that the scanner didn't
have an on/off SWitch. Oh well, sometimes that's handied by the IOftware. I removed the scanner, the connecting cable and the SCSI card. SCSI mcins Small
Computer Sy,tems Interface, a standard that migrated
from the Mac/Unix world.
.
· Off came the cover of my (lateway 2000 P5--120, ·
. where I test most of what's new. (lbe Gateway cover

designer must have a brother-in-law in the screw bosiness. There ire a lot of them to remove to get the cover
off.) In went the card, back went the cover.
Then I noticed that although some software was on
CD-ROM, including aii Internet come-on, the real
installation and operating software was on floppies,
somewhat unusual by today's standards.
No problem. I flipped the disk into the drive and proceeded as requested. Then I ran into a rock when the
software complained that the "twain.dll" file was in the
read-only mode. Well, life's like that. TWAIN- believe
it or not - is an acronym for Technology Without An
Interesting Name and is the de facto standard for scanners. While not. a promiscuous scanner, this was.n:t my
first date, se the file was a1ready there.
·
Intelligent software would have continued. This one
skidded to a halt I fired up the Windows 95 Find utility
and chansed the read-only status of twain.dll. The install
software ran and cheerfully reported success. Of course,
I had to restan Windows for the changes to take effect.
This isn't unusual. What is unusual is for the restan

to cause a fatal error that froze Wmdows 95. Well,
patience is a virtue. So I punched the reset switch to kick
Windows 95 in the rear, wailed until the system came
ha&lt;k, went through the install process again, and this
time closed the application ud reboored froni Windows.
If you've watched a reboot, you know that Windows
pl'\ludly anno.unces the successful installation of every
device, every time, kind of like a kid in potty training.
"Successfully installed," the screen crowed.
The screen lied.
.
Any attempt to contact the scanner thrOugh its own
software froze e'ierything in Windows 95 except the
mouse painter. Aqd that could be used only to pointlo
things. Clicking brought no response. To be fair, any
attempt to contact the scanner from other software also
froze Windows 95.
·
The manual's advice, in iu entirety, was " Verify"
there is no SCSI ID conflict on the SCSI chain. Each
device on the chain must have a unique ID number."
Well, there were no other SCSI devices connected, and
the manual neglected to say which SCSI ,device number

•
·~--------~----------------Printer qualitY still developing

·,

USA TODAY
Unless you live the truly vinuallife, sooner or later you're going to
have to print a hard copy of your digital photo to frame, hang or hand to
granddad.
A video screen is extremely forgiving of a picture's faults; paper is
much less kind. When you print a photagraph, its flaws pop out at you,
from a general lack of focus to "pixellation," where the small color
blocks that make up an image become all too noticeable.
In general, with a digital camera, yoOJ try not to crop pictures too
severely or print them too large. .Some expens recommend that you stick
to baseball-card size or less, but the bener cameras can support a 5-by7 if you don 't.scrutinize too closely.
·
Printers add !heir own inadequacies, b~l ~~ality is rapidly improving
even as pnces radically drop.
·
.
Of lhli'C ink-jet color printers I test-drove...., a Lexmark 2050 (about
$250), Canon's BJC-4200 (about $280) and Hewlctt,Packard's 855 ,
(about $500, just replaced by the similar 87Q) - all proved mort than
passable.
.
.
The Canon did best with color-quality paper (around II cents a
sheet), and the HP did quite well with heavier glossy stock (about ~ a
sheet). The Lexmark's dot pallems seemed more noticeable in most photos.
Digital pictures may seem to offer a free ride on developing costs, but
CO!lSidering ink and paper prices you can go well beyond what the corner drugstore charges. And which paper and ink you use can be critical.
Normal copier-quality office paper doesn't stand up to the heavy
spray of color ink that photo imaging demands. llle ink soaks and
spreads. Bare-minimum paper is a special, heavier color-quality stock,
bright white and clay coated, that's less absorbent and allows a finer
spray. Sold in packs of 200 from· several maker... it usually costs about
$20-$25.
The Canon printer tailors the ink to the paper. It did best with·a special, finer ink called Photolnk, which retails for more· than $40 and
demands the company's own HR-101 coated paper.
The nicest surprise, though, was a new inkjet paper from Kodak that
has the heft, flex and sheen of high-quality glossy prints. It improved the
pictures from every printer I tested - and, at around $33 for 50 sheets, ·
it costs less than other glossy stock.
'. I
..
But it's still expensive enough that you'd probably want to pracuce
on cheaper sheets first.
~
And for perfectionists, the $500 Fargo FotoFun specializes in 4-by-6
photo prints.
·

the ma&lt;hine was using.
.
Three houn more of fooling around failed to get the
doggone thin&amp; to do anything other than raise my bl&lt;¥ld
pressure. Oh yeah, reading the documentation con'finqed
that the scanner stays on all the time, which is aboutlhc.
only thing it confirmed.
'
Finally, back to the Gateway screw-a-rama. Out with
the card, restore altered system files,
. and settle down to
vent. ·
So whose scanner? Doesn't matter. Point is that if
you are using Windows 95 and buy hanlware that is~'t
Plug-and-Play compatible, you have a screw loose. You
could have a good experience - I've had them - or
you could have one like this. But be warned, you'"' taking a big-bucks gamble.
,
.

.

..

.' .

Queallona and commenta .,.. welcome Ill Com•
puBug, P.O. Box 626, Summit, N.J. 07101. Or e-m811
via the lnlemel La! ll' !illasko"llt"llp.org. CompuB·,
ug'a 11111at edition of "ABCa of Computing -A Pial~ .
Engll•h Guide" Ia Sf 0 .a11he aame eddnlas.

Watch for upgrades to the traditio.nal mouse , .-H-ig_h_te_ch~COI-.-Ifort-.-~--=:--i
By RIC MANNING
Loulavllle Courier-Journal
Point and click.
Run and shoot.
Define and copy.
Aom and fire.
It doesn't matter whether you're
preparing a repon, de~igning a birthday card or assaulting a haunted
mansion, it seems like You've
alwan got a hand on that mou~.
The mouse was around long
before personal computers. Douglas
Engelban .invented the : mo~se in
1963 but no one took 11 senously
unhl. •21 years later when Steve Jobs
.
made n. part of the Mactntosh
,
. standard
·
These days a mouse JS
equipment on every personal compuler, but it hasn't changed much for
more than a decade.
Until now.
Spacetec JMC has come up with
a high-end controller for computer
games that' combines the best. features of a mouse and a joy-stick.
A~d Microsoft Corp. will soon
release a new version of .its mouse
that is integrated more closely into
Windows 95. .
Here's a closer look:
•SpaceOrb 360. Many of the hot
new com~uter games like Quake,
MechWarnor2 and Duke Nukem run
better with a mouse than with a joystick. The games also o(fer the play-

er 360-degree movement, and that's such as Quake, is posted on the com- your nails while you ~.
not easy to accomplish with a regu- pany's World Wide Web site:
lar mouse.
http:(slash)(slash)www.spacetec.co
•Zooming. The wheel will ZQOm
But the SpaceOrb 360 is 3 hand- m.
on documents so you can seetakall of a
held controller that gives computerSpaceOrb's list price is $99 and large spreadsheet or it will c you
game players almost unlimited comes with two shareware games: down 10 cell level.
movement.
Duke Nukem and Descent Test
•Data zooming. With this option,
Push or pull on the controller's Flight. ·
you can enlarge or collapse an outrubber ball and your charaCter
•lntelliMousc. The first thing line such as a collection of presenta·
charges forward . or scoots back. you'll notice about Microsoft's new lion graphics in PowerPoint. ·
Twist the ball left or right and chat- mouse is the rubber wheel wedged
acters can execute a fast, 360-degree between the right and left buuons.
The lntelliMouse has ·other
tum
What's the wheel do? That options. A SnapTo setting ·will autoOnce you , get the hang of the . depends on what Windows 95 appli- matically move the pointer to the
def~ult button oil 'a dialogue box.
Space-Orb ' you also can look up or catio.n you're using.
You can tum your pointer into a ·
down, J'ump, duck or execute any
Install the ·lntelliMouse ·now and snake or an ear of com or make it
other moves that the. game allows. . the wheel can save you a trip,to the disappear when you're ty.ping.
. The sp~re also os pressure senSI- scroll bar on the right side of an
If you spend most of your colll"
ave, so players ca.n blast do":" a cor- open window. Run your index finger
ndor or move one step at a ttme.
up and down on the wheel and text puler time using Microsoft products,
The device plugs into a PC's and images will scroll up and down. this is one more that shOl!J!I. be close
.
COM port not the mouse or joystick
The scroll feature only works at hand.
port. I~ yoar COM pons already are with Windows 95's Explorer and
The IntetliMouse is scheduled to
full, With a mou":" and a modem, for . with Microsoft Internet Explorer be available later this li)Onth at 1 list
example, you rmght not have room version 3.0. . .
.
·price of about $85.
for the SpaceOrb.
However, the new mouse will .
·The device will work with all really get to strut its stuff when
games designed for Windows 95, Microsoft rtlt115es its new Office 97
IINdera ..., - : Ric Miming,
but not all DOS games. Using . collection of applications.
The Coul'ltr-JoiA'IIII~ 125 W. "I'OtldSpaceOrb's special software, you
In addition to up and down . !lilly, P.O. Box 740031, Loullvllla, Ky.
40201·7431 • ....,.. on Como
can set up the controller for 19 scrolling, the wbeel will offer:
pullwva, 72715,210;
Prodigy,
shooting games, incl~ing Dark
··Hands-free scrolling. Set the USJMtaA; or on the ln.. ,..., rlc:mtln
Forces, Doom, Hereuc, Hexen, mouse to scroll through a document • lglou.oom. The ·ct~~teoh pooge
thew- Wide Wab 11:
MechWarrior2 and X-Wing.
automatically like a teleprompter
Driver software for otbet games, and you're free to take notes or file ' htlp:l....,..tglou.com!gizw'ob
; ·

-

on

.-.on

•

Polling post-mortem

.

.

. .

.1

• · .

computers, e-mail and cellular
. phones. Those very comfortable
by household income:

themselv.es.
Only 43 percent gave v.oter$ a grade
of A. orB far "the way !hey conducted
themselves in the campaign," down
from 67 percent in 1992. The poll from
the Pew Research Center forThe·People
&amp; The Press was taken • Nov. 7-10
among 1,012 people who said they
vored.
Another poll out today from
The Washington Post, Harvard I;Jniversity ·and the Henry J. Kaiser F8111ily
Foundation, concluded that voters knew
no more about how the two major presidential candidates stood on the issues
than they did when the fall campaign
1
began. .
.
.
Because President Clinton was ahead in just about every poll before the
election, the media played up the possibility of "strategic voting,"
Frankovic said.
The theory \1185 that if voters knew Clinton was going to win,lhCy might
lodge a protest vote for someone else or favor a Republican for Congress to
ensure the check and balance of divided government.
But the exit poll found little ticket-spliuing, even among the late deciders,
Frankovic said. :
Gary Langer. senior polling analyst for ABC News, said he couldn'-t
understand some people's reluctance to have the media repon who's 'ahead.
"If you want to understand what's happening you've got to know the
score. It's the source of context," he said.
ABC track~ the race daily and found each candidate's support remaining within a narrow band, Langer said. The final poll had Clinton with 51
percent, Bob Dole 39, Ross Perot 7·, Undecided 3. The actual v(Jie result for
each candidate was less than 2 points away- Clinton 49, Dole 41, Perot 8.
The polls didn'tlook so good when media repons focused on the difference between the top two candidates- 12 points in the ABC poll, 18 points
in the final CBS-New York Times poll, but only 8 points in what sinking
candidates always call "the only poll that counts."
While only one-fourth of the final national polls came within. 3 points,
Mitofsky said, about half of the last state polls came that close in predicting
Senate elections, and six in 10 came within 3 points of the state's presiden·
tial vote.
.
.
.

New on the net..

How to enjoy fall and winter sports without season tickets

..

(NAPS)-When people begin crowding in
front of big screen television sets on Saturday and
Sunday, stocking up on beer and pretzels, it can
only mean one thing-the much-anticipated fall
and winter spons. seasons are upon us. Some diehard football and basketball fans have already
purchased costly season tickets for their home
tea'l's. BuL what is a true sports fan supposed to
do when his or her favorite team is not the hometown team and the games they want to watch are
not televised in their region?
More and more SpOrts !pvers are watching professional and collegiate sporting events at home
via comprehensive out-of-market Sports propamming pickaces through satellite lV. And with the
advent of the 18-inch satellite dish, satellite 1V is
now more affordable to sports fans nationwide.
·One satellite 1V service that hu found a place in
·the hearts of sports enthusiuts is direct_., the
nation's leading llirect broadcast satellite service.
For sports fans, directv offers an unprecedented 3.,000 professional and collegiate games!more sPorts progngunin1 than any other broad~~ st:~Vice in the U.S. directv offers more than

175 channels of digitally-delivered programmins
to owners of the popularD55® system, whichfeatures an 18-inch satellite dish.
A must-have for football fans, nfl sunday ticket''"• which is not available on any ~r smalldish service, offers nearly 200 out-of-market regular season games. As one of the most popular
sports packages on directv, you get at many as 13
games every Sunday for only $159-and it's
almost guaranteed to make you the most popular
•
individual on the block.
As ticket prices for NBA games continue to
rise along with players' salaries, basketball fans
will find a barpin in the nba league pas"". With
· up to I,OOOreaularseason NBAbasketball games
from outlide the local area, · yo11 can catch
Michael Jordan, Shaquille O'Neal, Patrick Ewing
and other stan in action.
·
With limited national network coverage of
NHL games, hockey fans can now tune to direetv
to catch the world's greatest players-such 11
Wayne GMzky, Mario Lemieux ·aad Brett Hullon a ~JVIar t.is. directv caters to avid hockey
faJU with nhle center ice4D which is not available

on any other small-dish service. Up to 500 out-of·
market regular season NHL hockey PmeS are
available on this package-the most aames available on a small dish. .
In addition to. professiOnal sports, directv also
offers packages for college sports fans. Perfect for
alumni that moved away from their college home·
town and team, ESPN GamePian"" College Foot·
ball offers 13 weeks of out-of-market regular season college football action-up to .ten games
every Saturday, .This package incl_. schools
from top conferences. slich as the Bia 10, Pac 10,
Big 12, SEC, ACC, WAC and Bi&amp; East. And for
the colleae basketball tan, upn full counn&lt; Col·
lege Basketball offers up to 400 out-of-market
NCAA Division I colleae basketball James, and
top conferences, including the Bii 10, Big East,
BiJI2,IJid Bi&amp; West.
.
dilectv aports pacl&lt;aaes ll'C priced per ICIIIOll
and are payable in minimal, interest-IRe monthly
i111tallmen1•. Each packaJe is desi,.t to meet
the individualtasru of ttue spoiU r.... 10 it's best

FROM

CONSUMER
REPORTS .

. By the Edllen

or COIIIUIDCI' Reporls

I

. Nearly a third of the carbon dioxide
and moat
: of the Ingredients of urban IIDOg come out df the tailpipes of fuel-bum·
lng t:an and trucks. So any hope or
. signlf!canUyreducingourearbondiox: Ide output, and thus lesaeninl the
threat of global warming, requires
finding wi.ya to burn less gasoline.
· That kind of change won't cot~,~e
. easy. Aller all, this Ia a country where
~le buy 13-mpg sport-utility vel\1e1ea just to drive ID the mall! No sur-, prise, then, at tbe appeal of one
proposed solution: electric automobiles. 'Someday, the notion goes, a
driver could plug the car into an outlet,
. charge it up and zip olf down the highway - still driving as mueh 11 ever,
but leaving hardly any effect on the
environment.
·
Unfortunately this is just wishful
thinking. Electri~ t:an would belp lbe
environment by reducin&amp; local smog.
but at best they would do Utile to slow
global warming - the potentially
catastrophic heating of the Earth's
surface ·caused in part by the buildup
of carbon dioxide. That's because
nearly all of the carbon dioxide that
conventional cars contribute to the at: m01 pheric glut would just be supplanted by emissions from tbe
fossil-fuel-fired power plants thai
would produce most of the juice for
hordes of electric cars. ·
· Also working against a switcb: The
performance of electric cars Ia still far
from satisfactory. Experts in automojive technology bave come to believe
l)tat the electric car wUI be nothing
· more than a niche veblcle suited for
de6very Oeets or as a second, •town
1'81"' 1n urJ)an areas.
. The main ptoblem with eleclr:ic cars
. 1w always been, and remains, the bat-

.Produced in thla country -

..

of

USA TODAY

Casio QV-JOA+, QV-100

ea- PowerShot600

Prices: QV-IOA+, around
~:
Less
than
$1,000
$500;
QV-1
00, around $650
Epson PhotoPC
-. Hiahlights: Images were the
- Highlights: An e•ceptional
- Price: About $501:r'
-Highlights: A Cinderella story. most detailed of any in the test. cool quotient. The tiny TV screen, a
The plain-looking PhotoPC took the Printed on high-quality paper and 1.8-inch diagonal liquid-crystal disoverall best photos in this test. Col- tweaked with ~oftw~• .these pic- play on the back, •!ways draws a
on were true and vivid, the detail is tures do a convoncong tmttallon of a crowd. You and ·fnends can see
second o~ly to ihe Canon, and ink- 35mm photo. And they stand up to exactly. what you're shooting,
jet prints were satisfying. And there enlargement. With built·in micro- review what you ' ve just shot, selec' are no ~rgonomic drawbacks. It slips phone, add voice annotation to pic- tively erase the losers and reshoot.
(snugly) into a shin pocket, . feels lures. Slot accepts laptop-computer You can also play images directly on
comfortable in one hand, beeps to let type PC caf\ls for gobs of added a 1V without a PC. It's shin-pocket
you know the picture has been . storage space through either "flash" small and shaped to fit the hand:
- Lowlights: Sub19r image·
taken, and is flexible enough to memory or.a tiny hard disk.
- Lowlights: An infuriating lag quality. When printed, even small,
accommodate extra memory cards
and 37mm camcorder lenses and fil. of up to several seconds between the the pictures all seemed to be blotchy.
'ters. At the price, the Epson stands · time the shutter is pressed and the Don't depend on these to pr&lt;!serve
time the picture is taken. Combined priceless moments. (QV-100 is said
alone .
with a lack of tactile feedback -no to have better picture quality; our
-Lowlights: None.
-Software included: EasyPhoto loud click, no beep - you never early production model may have
from Storm Software (also sold sep- really know when th~ picture has been faulty.)
.-Software: Adobe PhotoDeluxe
arately for about $50) lives up to its been (or will be) taken , Also, the·
name. Ft;tches photos from the cam- Canon uses a PC's parallel pon (also sold separately for about $100)
era 't'nto an on-screen photo album, where the printer usually connects, makes it easy to create photo cutouts
lets user adjust colors, contrast and guaranteeing ·a lot · of cable-swap- and collages, erase "redeye" and
so on. and keeps file sizes small ping. The other.. use a serial pon, of adjust pther picture dcficiences.
Thereao:e lots of fu n by-the-numbers
enough not to bog down most PCs. · which mostPCs·have two.
- Software included: ULead .projects, frol)l making calendars to
Lacking: a simple one-touch way to
fix photos. Nor do.you get a range of Photo Impact (sells in stores for $99) putting your face on a dollar bill.
possible adjustments to choose gives the best adj ustments, at a · But files get large quickly, and withfrom. Every adjustment is made touch, of crop, focus, brightness and out extra disk space arid memory,
with a sliding control.: Unless you color, among others. It's also easy ,to PCs stumble along.
- Resolution: QV-10, 320 by
have an experienced eye or a frame add frames and special effects.
-Resolutions: Three, up to 832 240 pixels; QV-100 adds 640 by 480
of referenc~. lt's more guesswork. ·
- Capacity : QVIO, 96 ph01os;
- Resolutions: 640 by 480 or by 608 pixels
·
Capacity:
4
to
15
images;
QV-IOQ,
192
320 by 240 pixels
added
cards
can
hold
up
to
3,000
-Focus:
Auto, s·inches-infinity
~Cal'acity : 16-32 images; up to
- Focus: Auto, 4 inches-infinity
-Exposure: Automatic
·160 with memory expansion.
·
- Exposure: Automatic
- F-lash: No
-focus: Auto, 2 feet-infinity ·
·, -Flash: Yes .
-Shutter: 1/8-1/4,000 second
-Exposure: Automatic
-Shutter:
1/30-11500
second
--System:·
PC or Macintosh
-Flash: Yes
--System:
Windows
,
-The
finish:
Third
plac~
·
- Shutter: 1130-1110,000 second .
-The
finish:
Second
place
--System : PC or Macintosh
Kodak DC20
-The finish: First place
-

- Price: Less than $350
- Highli~hts : Pure point-andshoot. Small as a deck of cards , light
enough (lpss than half~ pound) to
schlep around forever, onexpens1ve
enough to take a chance on, and som' pic enough for absolute. novtces.
(Rugged, too; I dropped n at lea~t
twice.) Nothing here to intimidate,
no "wow" features to ompress.
- Lowlights: The sacnfices you
make for size and price. Images look
surprisingly good on screen but are
of middling quality when pronted.
You rieed to connect to a PC to
change the camera from taking lowresolution images to high; you can't
erase individual images, only all at
once; and there's no digital readout
to let you kn0w how many pictures
you have left or other conditions,
just cryptic flashing lights.
- Software included: PhotoEnhancer Fun Edition has automatic
one-button adjustments to cure
photo deficiencies and automatically
adjusts color balance based on lighting conditions. Software also lets
users "adjust ·by example," giving
comparative views of nine possible
adj ustmen ts at one glance. Also
· comes with Kai's Power Goo, entertaining software that turn s photos
stretchy and swirly ($50 in stores).
- Resolutions: 493 by 373, or
320 by 240 pixels
- Capacity : 8-16photoS ·
- .Focus: Fi~ed, 20 inchcs-infinity
- E~posure: Automatic
- Flash: No
- Shutter: 1/30-1/4,000 second
- System: PC or Macintosh
-The finish: Fourth place

No On!inary Computers.·No Ordinary Deat ·
'

'

The House &amp;-Family PC ·-

I

I

·I

I.

'

II

• 166MHz Pentium® processor
• Total/mage 3D'" video
• Home Director'"
• 2GB hard drive
• BK CD-ROM drive
• 16MB mel]1ory,
expandable to 128MB
• 3D TheatreSound"' .
• Stereo speakers
• 28.8Kbps fax/modem with·
speakerphone and answerer

(66 System includes 125-458, ~25·446, lt26·2982, 1126 -288.lotal system price 2787.98,~or as kJw·as $59 per month.t

.Ta•l!§ not included. IBM Aptiva (66 iC alone, ~25-458. $2,199 or Low 1$$46 Per Monlh.t Taxes not iJ;cluded.

Basic Black? Hardly!

Comple te System

,$. •. ~6
:'.• ,,.,.
'~

( l ll h

l :lllir•""h.t~k

ltlt l111 lr -- 11,1111' l lir rrlut
lnduded HOI!'&lt; Direa~ software and module!'~!
you easit,r lun rust~ light and appliance rou tines. It saves time and improves sewrity by giving
your home a •lived·in" look whne you're away.

•

lr1 i1.r'.
II'.~/ I()L·

l··•.'l'd'"
,,11:1 •r,k i' I prrrl1•·• ."'.' 1hl··

PetC*U of aclulta Hying Mil ctecl ~I llama.,. p11rt of
the goaclllfe, 1884, 8lld )*Cal.... point chlnglt, 1175-94.

No long Distance Feee!
~et&amp;eape Navisator with Sign Up
Friendly Technical Support ·
BusiJtess Wed Site Hosting
Sip up1ocally at Take Two Video.
comer 3 14 and V'me St~

lbW • Page E3

Products give a range ·of performances

tery. '1ttDu&amp;b reaeareh on better balterieolllu l!een going on for years; at
huge COlt and eltirt, no one has yet'
manapd to proclucl a reUable, inex·
penaive power IOII1'Ce thai can provide
auyfhing like the range of conventional cars. Electric cars' batteries
heavy - weighing about half as
as the car itaelf - and they '""'or-o'.LJ
after a year or·two .of normal use, requiring replacement at a coot of some
$2,000 per car. The power they store;
moreover, gives a small car only about
one-quarter the range of a conventlonal wlhicle under optimum cireumstancea.
.Last winter, under far-from-opt!·
mum conditions, test drivers spent
several days with a 1995 Solectria .
Force, wbich is a converted Geo Metro ·
running on standard lead·acid batteries. In the midat of a long. cold winter,
tem~!ure&amp; ranged from 10 to 30 de~ ~elt; the kind of cold that
~pa a ~ttery's .energy and reduces
!Ia eflicieney. Still, experts agree, of
~lectrlc ears are ever to ~e market
inroads, they'll have to run. on all kinda
of weathey.
Even. woth a full battery eharge, the
Solectria Force was never able to p;o
more than 30 miles before runningout
of juice. During the first two-thirds of
those ll)iles, lbe car performed slug' gl.shly, to say the least, with acceleration 'ahout half that of the fe!!U~ar Geo
Metro the magazone had earlier tested.
Over the last 10 miles of !~ charge,
the car crept alon~ so agonwngly that
the CR drivers 81Ud they eXJlOCI:OO to
have to get out and walk at any tmnute.
Ita range was essentially identical to
that of one of the nation's first electric
vehicles, the Sturges' Electric Motor
Waaon, which a century. ago went
about 35 mljes ~der ))CI"':er of- what
else? - leaohcod battenes.
A. re~archer. at.the University. of ·
Califomoa's Institute of Transportation·
Studies has ealCI;Ilaled that.replacing
all ~Hne-burnmg cars woth an allelectric fleet ~would 0:00~ ve. hicular carbon dioxide emos~nons by
only 20 percent. That same unpro~
ment, however, could be readily
achieved - at lower cost - jl,lllt by
~roving the emciency of gas-bummg t:an.
··

The good life

•
•
•
•
•

~ t

~

By San\ VIncent Meddle
USA.T®AY
.
.
Learn about how f\mma George vaults over stereotypes at the Jus1
Spo.rts for Women site. Or share some thoughts about your own sports
inspiration.
http:l/www.justwomen.com
Prison Fellowship believes that fighting crime is not just a mauer of
locking people up and throwing away the key. It works for what it calls;
the biblical standards of jllstice.
hllp:l/www.pfm.org
·
.
• TechnoTeen bills itself as a Web site built by teens for teens. You'll:
find things like essays written by students, tips on science fair project~
and ways to improve your complexion.
;
. http:l/www.TechnoTeen.com '
.
. .
· • Get in touch with your submerged poetic impulses. Then v..ite thet11
down and submit them to Word Salad. You won't get paid, but you may
i
gel published.
'I
I
http:l/www.interpajH.net/whealton/salad.corn
''.
• The aptly named Wcbflyer wants you to he "the frequent flyer afi-.
cionado you always wanted to be." Includes a top 10 bonus-miles offer;
"flyer guides" and even a newsflash for the truly obsessive.
http:/lwww.insideflyer.com
• The new Field &amp; Stream site has ab~ndant resources to help you with
that h~nting, fishing or ~amping trip.
·
http:l/www.fieldandstream.com
,
• impotence, job interviews, dand111ff and "that big muscular drunk
guy at the end of the blll'." The Webzine Men's Health wants to help you
fellas cope with those and other, uh, challenges.
·
http:l/menshealth.com ·
·
• There's such • thing as a Pasta Dictionary. Find that unusuil ·. ~i' if'•"':'~
(along with recipes from COQkbook author Marcella Hazan) while you
cruise throUgh Dolce Vita. You'll also find Italian-style fashion, wine,
design and travel. ·
. http:l/www.dolcevita.com .·
• The Virtual Job F~ir claims more than 150,000 jol&gt;-search queries
daily, along with a list of some 500 employers and 15,000 employment
opponunities. With a clean interface.
http:l/www.vjf.com
• LD:OnLine is a very nicely organized, information-packed resource
for parents and teachers of children with learning disabilities - ,and for
the kids themselves. The kind of resource that's a n&lt;Uural for the Net.
http:l/www.ldonline.oig
• Thursday night is now busine~s night. That's when the latest issue
of Business Week gets posted on line. Not only te~t but g~aphics, tables
and selected photos. http:l/www.businessweek.com
·
~ P.O.V. wants to provide a space where Vietnam War veterans, their
famoly members and even protesters can ~peak out about their experiences and how !hat confloct shaped theJr loves. You don't want to miss
th~
.
http:l/www.pbs.org
.
·'
.• Medscape is designed for anyone from health ·professionals to
health-care consumers. It offers thousands of full-text articles medical
news and interactive quizzes - and boasts that it's updated ~ily "and
free!"
.
http:l/www.medscape.com

Sports ori Satellite TV

l •••

Electric-car·technology lags ·

I,

Pollsters bemoan ,public ·nonc()operation
By HOWARD GOLDBERG
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- Leading pollstets, reviewing their 1996 election
work, bemoan resentment and noncooperation from the public, the very people whose voices they are trying to aml!lify.
·
"We have nbnresponse. This is a major Issue in every survey," Murray
Edelman, editorial director of Voter News Service, told colleague.s at a
forum Thursday night.
VNS, which is a panne.Ship of The Associated Press and five 1V networks, interviews thousands of voters on Election Day, 'providing the mos~
authoritative way for analysts"' talk about how men and women voted'dif·
ferently and what issues were on their mjnds.
These exit polls are put to the test when news organizations use them to
project winners before all the returns are in. One call, in the New Hampshire
Senate race, was dead wrong - the only wrong projection of a winner in
about 500 races covered since the networks pooled their exit polling operations in 1990.
"'
·
.·
Edelman said a review found no evidence of a bad sample - such as
picking too many Democrat-leaning precincts- so he assumes Republicans
refused to participate at a higher rate. He doubts voters lied when they filled
out the written questionnaires..
"I find that a real cop-out," he said.
The respondents are selecred at a predetermined interval, like every lOth
voter, but in some states, up to SO percent refu~ or get away at busy times,
Edelman said. Their sex, race and approximate age are noted and taken into
account.
·
·
Even the correct calling of elections becomes an issue every four yeimf
because West CoastlV viewers can learn who won the pRsidency before
their polls close.
Western voters may not like it, but they are coping by more often voting
in advance by absentee or mail ballot, said Kathleen Frankovic, director of
surveys for CBS News. ·
.
·
The networks take heat when they declare a presidential winner, as they
did this year, before California's II p.m. EST poll close.
"! think it's a phony issue," said exit poll pioneer Warren Mitofsky. He
.said several studies have shown no effect on voter turnout, 'but acknowledged people do resent the projections ..He and other members of the American Association for Public Opinion Re!jCarch spoke at the Media Studies
Center. .
A new poll released Thursday found that voters gave lower ratings than in
1992 to tlie !lledia, political parties and pollsters - but especially to voters

Thirty percent of Americans say
Jhey are "very comfortable" with

~

Galllpollto • Pomeroy, Ohio

111(ll'ihll

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SUndlly, NcMmber 17, 11M

Glllpolls • Pomeroy, Ohio

I

Buffalo
defeats
Bengals

Toy Wars: -It's Disney vS. Warner Bros.
By JACK GARNER
G - News S1n.1ce

Warner~

is spending more than
$100 million on its ''Space Jam"
push. "It's the biggest promotion
we've ever done, including the ' BaJman' films," says Daniel Romanelli,
president of Warner Bros: Worldwide Consumer Products. .
But at first glance, Disney would
seem to have the inside lnlck. This is
the studio, after all. that pioneered
movie tie-in merchandising way
back in the 1940s with "Snow
White" and "Pinocchio." The technique has been polished to a fine
sheen with such recent films as
"Beauty and the Beast" and "The
Lion King."
While "101 Dalmatians" will
presumably appeal to younger children, · "Space Jam" has a secret
weapon: Michael Jordan.
Jordan is the all-lime champ of
sports merchandising, a $40 million
pitchman who made the phrase ·'Air
Jordan" synonymous with "sneak-

FO!llet Holyfield and Tyson. The
true heavyweight battle of the season is between Bugs Bunny and a
bunch of dogs. One hundred and one
of them, to be precise.
Bugs and his Warner Bros. cartoon buddies star in "Space Jam,"
opening at movie tfieatc:rs Friday.
Walt Disney's new, live-action ver'sion of " 101 Dalmatians" follows
12 days later. Both will be compel·
ing intensely for your movie dollars
- and for the affection of young
moviegoeB.
"Space Jam" is .the fiB! Looney
Tunes feature-length film; Bugs
made his name in cartoon shorti. So
this malks the fiB! toe-to-toe theatrical battle between a Warner Bros.
cartoon feature and a Disney family
film.
.'
Tbe battle, though, won't just be
waged on movie screens. Both films
have already generated tons of toys, cr...
T-shirts, books and other men:han·
That's why Jordan is a key part of
dise - so the competition carries Warner's merchandising. He's· one
over to shopping malls, toy stores, of the 10 figures on the miniature
Internet Web page$ and television "Space Jam" b!ISketball coun ($18).
home-shopping channels. .
You can also buy a ceramic, I l-inch
Both companies want you and cookie jar depicting Jordan, with
your children to feet ·an intense need Bugs peeking over his sjloulder
.
'
for such products as the Dalmatians •. ($40).
Collectors' T~apot ($,80) \}r the
"Space Jam·~ fans can buy Jordan
Space Jam Gumball Machine ($34 figurines playing basketball or base- gumballs not included). '

toy cdlled Wllttin' Wizzer, a plush
Dal~ae tl&gt;at ''.drinks" water from
u bowl and then "wets" and w~s
his tail ($29.99).
..
A white-w_ith-black-spots fur coat
is for adults, modeled after the coat
the evil Cruella De V.il wants to
s•.~oo&gt;.
or course, there's also the typical make with the skins of the 101 tlalwave of baseball caps, T-shirts, matians. Made of acrylic; the evil. , ;
video and CO-rom games, comic looking coat sells for $198.
At
~ameB,
Romanelli
says
books, coffee-table art books, musical COs and more, available at they're not con&lt;erned about compel·
Warner Bros. Studio Stores and ing with Disney for merchandising
dollars. "First of all, I' ve found that
scores of other outlets.
To market "Space Jam" clothing Disney and Warners have co-existed
with the Jordan image, Warners had very well for years. We both have
to secure a license from Nike (Jor· stores. We tend to sell more of our
dan's long-time clothing, tie-in), products to adults. But we. have a
huge appeal with kids.. I belie,ve
Romanelli says.
That's why Jordan's face is only we'll do well with "Spac~ ~~m."
on apparel sold in the 158 Warner and Disney will, as we.ll, with '' 10 I
'
•
Bros: Studio Stores. Clothing sold at Dalmatians."
" You could argue, I suppose, that
other outlets may include Bugs,
'Space
Jam' has a bit more appeal
Daffy and the other 'loons. but no
J!lrdari.
'
for boys and the.other film for girls.
If "Space Jam" has generated a But I'm not sure of that." Rornnnelwave, then "101 Dalmatians" has li adds.
Disney publicist Denise Vastola
triggered a flOod . Those spotted
dogs are all over the place, and the says, "The way we view it, those
film's colorful villain, Cruella De people who are interested in ' I01 ·:; .,
•
Vii. adorns a recent Disney catalog. Dalmatians,' will buy our products.
II may seem like the Dalmatian Those with interest in the other film ·
items have been' in the mar\(etplace . will buy theiB. We don't view them''' , .•
- imd In Disney's 540 retail stores (WarneB) as competition."
-for a long Jime. but that's because Julian Yudelson, who teaches marDisney reissued the original 196t keting at Rochester (N.Y.) 'Institute
. •1 '
animaJed version of the film on of Technology. says movie tie:ins
videotape one year ago. (It has since are a logical way to sell things.
The market is inundated with
been withdrawn and is not currently
advertising; he says, so "people are
available.)
" All the (Dalmatian) men:han- trying to find ways to increase their
dise. though, was new to (last visibility. There's the hope that a
year 's) videotape reissue and the movie will give you ml&gt;re expo(fonheoming) theatrical film," says sure."
"A younger customer likes to do
Disney publicist Denise Vastola.
None of the items are merely left- things they see in the , movie,"
overs from previous theater or video Yudelson says. "And Disney is
r:cissues of the 25-year-old original probably one of the best at pulling it
all together."
," 101 Dalmatians."
.
While, "Space Jam" and "101
Fans can buy huggable, pi ush
versions of the dogs, complete with Dalmatians" will be competing 0
a bark or a tail .waggle ($19.99), or a screen and in stores, both films have
· minaiure figurine set of six dogs tak- contracts for toy promotions with
ing a bubble bath, complete with McDonald's.
The fast-food chain is offering
music and real bubbles ($55), or a
comforter adonied with dogs ($70) "Space Jam" Happy Meal items
or a Dalmatian puppy backpack, until Nov. 26, Starting Nov. 27,
JORDAN le !he Ill-time champ IJIOita
1
they'll be pushing "101 Dalma- $40MICHAEL
complete with a coin purse ($22).
million pltcluMII wt19 mllcle the phraM "Air Jordln" synonymous
The.two most bizarre offerings: A lians."
with ..........."
.
ball {he does both in the film).
There's also a fine porcelain collector plate with a gold rim ($35).
And high-roller fans can buy a
framed series of three scenes from
the film signed by Jordan (a mere

Why would consumeD spend hundreds of dollm on
filmless digital cameras when a $10 disposable film
camera gets you a far· better pictu~ "!ith (~r less fu.ss?
Good ·question. But not the on!):. one.• '"
..
Beticr to ask: Is there a' llonii (Ot-~caiiieras whose
images can be pos1ed instantly to a Web paae or winged
cross~ountry via e-mail in moments?
Is there a !nalket for cameras that give avefllge.shut·
terbugs access to the provinces of pros, from simple
trimming and retouching to complex collages and
morphs?
.
·
Is there a future for a technology tbat lets you'.see
shots instantly on a TV or a PC, print only the toest .l\!Jd
even design your awn photo stationery?
'- ' " •v
Is silver film in danger?
.. . · · .. :;•·;~,··~··
"Absolutely," says Michael McbllliriAra,' technology
editor at Popular Photography: " If y)lu could give me a
camera for my point-and-shoot stuff.dlatl didn't have to
PaY for film or·processing, you'd have my interest. And
I think ypu'd bave the interest of hundreds of thooliands
of consumers.... I see where it's goin1 and I seo . the
advantages."
. ";:
Tbe buzz is growing, but the technclogy is !!'!IY.lr:few
years old even at the profeuionallevel. ,W hat'•nsilable

. . ·'

. 3·1·5~1

2 Secttono, 12 Pqeo 35 eem.
A O.nnett co. -,..per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 18, 1996

While it may be expensive for motorists to get their license back, it is a pality, records from the state auditor indicate. Throughout the state, dozens
COLUMBUS (AP) -Every 45 seconds; an Ohio .driver's license Is suspended. Last year, nearly 700,000 licenses were taken away from motorists. big business for the state. This year, the state will collect more than $12 mil- of other villages and cities rely on traffic fines for 50 percent or more of their
annual budgets.
, Never before have so many licenses been suspended, The Columbus Dis- lion in license reinstatement fees. ·
"It's always tough when money drives the system- a system that should
Trying
to
make
the
mads
safer
has
created
a
billion-dollar
business
in
Ohio,
. patch. reponed Sunday.
.
be
driven
by justice," said David Diroll, director of the Ohio Criminal Senthe
newspaper
said.
Local
and
state
agencies
will
collect
more
than
$500
milAnd once they are gone, many drivers do not get them back.
.
·
•
• .
•
"Tbey've raised fines and everything, and it's just getting worse," said ' lion from fines and court costs from the more than 4 million traffic tickets tenci~g Commission.
1 . •
D~roll said too many dnvcrs are Jahed and treated hkc cnmmals for faolthat
will
be
issued
this
year,
a
founh
of
which
will
be
speeding
tickets,
Mary Dearwester, data coordinator for the Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
A motorist cited for speeding pays an average fine of $25. But with court . ing to pay fines . and the nc)Vspape.r said the business of citing motorists has
"Ifs worse than it ever was."
resulted in selective enforcement, stiff fines and jailing of the poor.
: An estimated ·1.5 million ~nlicensed drivers !lrive in Ohio, about one of costs. the offender typically pays $68, three times the amount of the fine.
More traffic offenders arc jailed in Franklin County than any other Ohio
Some
cities
have
grown
financially
dependent
on
the
revenue
generated
:. six motorists, according to the bureau. The state h~ 7.8 million licensed dricounty
-a practice that generaies millions of dollars for cities w~hin the
by traffic tickets,.the newspaper said. ·
vers.
One suburban Columbus community. New Rome, too~ in' 33 times as county.
One reason why dri ~ers may not get their licenses back: cost. Penalties
·much
revenue from fines as taxes - the highest ratio of any Ohio municiaverage $250.

:
·
:

·
·

He ootonhf:knowswho is naughty and

new

a1so knows why the
IIM4~ 'IJ/vn is a super deal

FBI looks
into lead
on crash

State qrganiza~ion
honors Middleswarth
for volunteer ~ctivity

SMI1l!TOWN, N.Y. (AP)- The
FBI is investigating a Pjikistan Airlines pilot's claim that he saw "some· '
thing with lights" in the sky while
nying near the crash site of TWA
Flight 800.
The soun:e of the light was not
immediately clear, but the National
Weather Service confirmed a meteor
shower was in the area at the time.
· "There's a pretty fair chance that
What he saw was a meteor," meteo-rologist Edward Yandiich said.
FBI spokesman Joseph Valiquette
sai&lt;l Sunday night that the FBI is foll;bWihg-up-otf.the tepon;--tlllt"fllded:
"AI'this point, we don'tknow what,
if anything, was seen."
The pilot reponed seeing a streak
or light Saturday night shonly after.
departing Kennedy.Airport for Frank-- ·
'fun, Germany. Another pilot of the
plane described to WCBS radio on
Sunday what his co-pilot saw.
"A light, coming from the left
hand side to the ride hand side in
front of the aircraft," Wajid Shah
said. "It was about three to four miles
in front of the aircraft and was above
Press" new show Sunday. 1'he topic of the
DEPLOYMENT DISCUSSION- U.S. Defense.
the aircraft."
show wae the deployment of u.s.. troops to
Secretary William Perry llatened to NBC's Tim
Shah said they were told by
·
Zaire and Bosnia. (AP)
. Russert as hl!.appeared on NBC's ."MHt the
Boston jlir · traffic controllers . that
then: were no military exercises in the
lirea. He said the pilots were inter~iewed by officials with the U.S.
Embassy in Frankfun. •
: A woman at the Federal Aviation
~dministration office in Boston, who
declined to give her name. referred
questions about the reponed sighting
· The situation took on a new was staggering, the response of the
WASHINGTON (AP) - Not
to the FBI.
The chance that a missile brought· long after taking office. Secretary of dimension last month when lighting United States and the rest of the
Oa&lt;ed again and forced hundreds of world tepid.
down the plane is consi!lered the least State Warren Christopher said U.S.
thousands
of Rwandan Hutus to nee
This time. an oiTicial said, "Pcodecisions on committing troops . to
likely of all three scenarios.
U.N.
refugee
camps
in
Eastern
Zaire.
.
pic
didn't want a repeat of that."
save' lives. In distant lands would not
where
they
were
sheltering
from
·
The
Rwanda tragedy occurred
be dictated by· television's graphic
when . administration resistance to
horrors at home.
images of human suffering.
It became obvious that a major · overseas troop commitments was at
CNN, he said. \':t:ald not be the
" north star'' guiding U.S. policy humanitarian disaster was in the a hi~h point. \t came just months after
making, and the administration's IXAmerican soldiers were killed and
decisions.
steadfast
resistance to committing 7X woundcc! in a fircfight in SomaBut U.S . officials said last week
IRONTON (AP) - A fire that
"the CNN factor' ' in no small way troops to Central Africa began to melt lia. an incident that gave humanitardestroyed several downtown busiinfluenced
President Clinton ·s provi- - a prOCess ac~.:clerated by televised lan intervention a bad name.
nesses in Ironton may have stancd
As for Zaire, the United States
. in a ~ar that was being remodeled, sional decision to send thousands of images of desperate refugees hercft
of
the
mosi
elemental
human
needs.
might
have been spared a signilicant
troops to Central Africa to help prothe Ironton Fire Depanment said.
"The
folks
upstairs
spent
a
lot
ol
military
role if other countries ~ad
tect and fun ncl .aid to more than I
No one was injured in the fire.
time .worrying about it,'' said one taken the lead. otficials said.
· which began atl2:30 p.m. Sunday. million refugees.
official,
alluding to the impact those
"There was a sense that someThe crisis ln~entrai .Africa. based
· Dozens of firefighters from four
scenes
hi)d
on
policymakers
in
scv·
thing
had to be ,done. But the Euro·
largely on cnmi between Hutu and
communities, irclud:ng one in
cnth-Ooorofficcs
at
the
State
Depan·
peans
were ducking. No onq was takTutsi , traditional antagonistic tribes
· Kentucky, spent about four hours
mcnt.
ihg
the
lead ," one official said. The
living side-by·sidc in several coun·
·controlling lhe fire .
At lhe same time appe~ls for U.S. decision was made somewhat easier
It destroyed a fitness center, it tries, festered all summer. The worst
intervention
grew more strident from because the pressure for intervention
problem
was
in
Burundi,
where
tlobu·
. laundromat. a carryout, a Knights
private
relief
organizations, newspa- seeined to peak just after the U.S.
sands were dying each monthMlrib·of Columbus hall and the bar.
per
editorials
and foreign govern- elections- meaning that Bob Dole's
al bloodshed.
No one was in the bar when the
·
'
reaction need not be pan of Clinton's
The Clinton administration. inOu- .mcnts.
. fire started, Capt. Jim Riedel said.
They
also
were
inOuenccd
b)"
bit·
calculations
.
cnccd
by
electoral
considerations
.A damage estimate and cause have
ter
memories
of
199,4
when
an
esti·
Defense
Secretary
William Perry,
and
bitter
memories
of
when
the
·not been determined.
·
mated
500.000
Rwandans.
mostly
speaking
Sunday
on
NBC's " Meet
Somalia
intervention
turned
sour
· Ironton is along the Ohio River
Tutsis.
w~rc
massacred
over
a
period
the
Press,"
denied
political
considerthree years earlier. was co ntent to let
.in southern Ohio about 100 miles
of
a
few
weeks
by
their
Hutu
com'
a
tions
were
plnying
a
role
in decithe United Nations play the leading
south of Columbus.
patriots. The scope of the brutality sions to deploy troops.
role.
·

.By CHAR!-ENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Newe Staff
The Rev. William Middlcs\Varth,
the 'llan who has ''volunteered countless houB to helping promote and
prcstrve the history of Meigs Coun:
ty" is the recipient of an Ohio Asso·
ciation of Historical Societies and
Museums Individual Achievement
Award.
Announ~emcnt of his selection for
the award was made at the' recent
anl10al meeting of t~c group held in
Columbus.
He .was nominated for the award
by the. Meigs County Historical Soci·
ely for his many years or volunteer
work with tbc local group.
For. the past 14 years, he has
served as a trustee of the Meigs soci· .
ety. He was vice president for a time
and for the past several years has
been serving as

'

•

trca~urcr.

In announcing the award. Margaret Parker. local society president,
commended him for the hundreds of
hours he has spent assisting at the

museum.
She notcd.that he copied, cropped .
and completed layouts of photographs for history books published ·
by the historical society over the past
dozen years.
These include the Meigs County
History Book. Vol. 2, "Through the
Years in Pictures," "Meigs County
World War II Soldiers," "Log Cabin
Reminiscences,'.' Vol. I and 2, "The
Camp Fire," Teacher Reminiscences." and he is currently involved
in doing copy work for the planned
pictorial history of Ponland ..
Middlcswanh is also known for
research assistance and dircclion to
museum visitors, for promoting the
history of Meigs County in school

Officials cite 'CNN factor' as cause
behind troop commitm~nt . to Zaire ·

Ironton blaze
:destroys firms

. ··Enjoy Cellular0nc;111 convenience .
and safet,Y while you're out shopping or.
traveling, making deliveries or ·picking up
holiday ' rs... (not to mention making
yo'ur list an . hecking it t\yiqe !) ,
.

ro

~ cloudv tonight, Iowa
In the 20.. Tunctey, 1119•tly cloudy. Hlghe In the
4o. .

traffic fines translate into big business for state

.

this ho1iday sea8on.

Pick 3:
8-7-8
Pick 4:

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

~

who is nice,

1-8-1-6-3-3

·.0 1-

'is

'

Kicker:

Vol47, NO. 1311
Ohio Valloy Publlehlng c:omp.ny

Fitting film less digital cameras into the ,b ig picture
U8ATDDAY ·

1o-15-1~-39

..

.

"Within two yeqB you'll digital ~its and bytes of computer.la~guage. ·
for consumers oow is fun, and the, promise is evident.
• Digital camera
have a $500 camera that' · · . On this page are close-up looks at these methods.
But desktop photography has a way• to go to compete sales are expected to
gives
you all that. A year , Some general observations:
·
·
with silver halide film, which benefits from a century
boom. About 278,000
ago
I
would
have
said
it
-If
you
don't
have
to
buy
now,
wait
awhile.
Prices
lind a half of evolution.
ware sold worldwide laat
would
be
four
yem."
are
fallbig,
and
quality
iS
on
the
upswing.
In
a
year
or
"The system in place for conventional photography
year. Sales climbed to
Even·
now,
niche
two.lhi!re'll
very
likely
be
a
dozen
mass-malket-priced
offertjOPI of~iaJllarU in.price and quality," says Ted 400,000 In the first thrw
markets ·have been estab- choicel:
months of 1996, and
Fox, with the digillli iD)aging branch of the Photo Mar- If you can't resist, the Epson PhotoPC offers the
they are projected to hit lished, particularly in the
keting Association. And he says film is still improving:
1.19 million unllllhls
insurance and real estaJe best b~lance of quality, price and features. For sheer.
. "I can tllke one brand of film. at 100 ISO (speed), use an
industries where instant party (Jn, the Casios with tiny built-in TV screens are
eighth of the information on the photo and blow it up to yur and 5.58 million In
1999.
images that can be dis- best, bJI you pay a price in picture detail.
~-by-7 or 8-by-10 and make it crystal clear. You can't do
tributed electronically are
- Start small . .Get a roll of film put on a floppy disk
that with consumer-oriented digital cameras."
But McNamara says the object isn'tto be lis good as . important. But Fox use~ the term "stealth consumers": . by your local photo finisher. Also, individual shots can
film. The goal is to be just good enough. "For me the Customers who buy digital cameras for businesses are ~ ' digitized nod returned to you electronic~lly by llCr·
consumer Holy Grail is achieving 4-by-6 image qufility ''taking them home evenings and weekends for peBOn· · ·vices 1!\ach as PictureWeb on AOL and the"Internet. See
what
you'd have for electronic images.,,
that, when they go to print, is equal to what they'd get al use."
Digital camera sales are e•pected to boom. About
- , rry. a 35mm film camera along wiih your new
from 3~mm," he says. "Up to 98 pen;ent of all color
278,000 were sold worldwide last year. Sales climbed to digital· it: Digital performance in leS.-than-ideal conphotographs never get enlarged further than 4-by-6."
undependable and even in ideal conditions can
Even as prices drop dramalically, technology 400,000 in the first three months of 1996, and they are diti\:lil
t. Digital caineras have a way iif'ninning out of
advances. Sophisticated software that controls color projected to hit 1.19 million units this year and 5.58 mil- disa
pictu~ orage space when you need it (and once they're
quality from camera to monitor to printer is on the way, lion in 1999.
Is
the
equipment
ready
today
for
prime
time?
I
spent
full, yoii need a PC to unload the images).
And new technologies such as Compact Flash cards,
technology 's rapid advance, you
designed to plug into cameras and store images, will more than a month with five of the newest consumer
w~ther your descendants will ever be
help standardize storage formats so one card, like film, digital cameras, along with several new inkjet printers
that promise p)jotolike reproduction. And I checked
at the digital photos you take today. There's
c~ be used with many cwnerl\8.
be said for the old shoeboll.
McNamara says the future .is just a few frames away: other methods of turning standard snapshots into the

Super Lotto:

Sporte on Page 4

o

11Y BRUCE SCHWARTZ

Ohio Lottery

·

&gt;

Rev. Mlddleawarth
programs and when students arc
brought to the museum, and for participating in the annual "Yesteryear"
program. ·
"He has heen a continuous sup- .
110rtcr of the museum, volunteering
dbring open hours for many years.
No matter how hard or how menial
the task, he never refuses to do it."
sai&lt;l Parker of Middlcswarth, who
came to Meigs County in 1973 to
pastor St. Paul Lutheran Church and
stayed on after his n:tiremcnt in
1989.
Parker and her husband, Leland,
attended the Ohio Association of Historical Societies and Museums when
it_was announced that Middleswanh
wa.&lt; a recipicntof the award.
At that session, she was elected for
her lifth tear a.&lt; secretary of the state
association.
'

Piketon deer problem
prompts call to hunter~ ·
COLUMBUS (AP) - The bowIf the hunt is successful, it prohahunting season for deer couldn't bly will become im annual affair, said
come soon enough for a Piketon plant Rick Gen01--hio, plant safety engineering manager.
overrun hy the animals.
Only two deer were taken on Nov,
One day each week. bow hunters
arc alleviating deer overpopulation 9, the first day of the hunt. GenQ&lt;il\lu
on the grounds of the Portsmouth said cold weather cnmhi.ned with 1v.l.~
Gaseous Diffusion Plant. They were _and snow to reduce the numher of
·
invited to hunt on the 2,500 acres hunters .
The
number
o[
deer
in
Ohio
has
because there has been an average of
risen from 17,000 in 1965 to more
one deer-vehicle crash weekly.
The hope is that the herd, esti- than 500,000 t()day. The state cstimated at between 400 and 1,000 ani' matedthati4S,OOO will be killed·dur·
mals, can he reduced by half. ing a weeklong gun hunting sea.s~om
Through Jan . 25, UP. to 85 bow staning on Dec. 2. Bow hunters will
hunters can bag one deer each Satur- take about 20,000 and anpther 25,000
day. Most of the hunte~ are plant will die in collisions with vehicles
employees.
this Y.ear.

.

'

Sign qp
ulat0ne setvice tlefme
Ilea!mber 31,1996, and get l,OOOoffpeak
(evening and weekend) minutes per month
FREE through J1ine.l997I
111

.Hawaii relaxes after falling Russian probe hits

o~ean west of Chile

•

'

Some .-ridions app\y.

..

We're the One.l1l :' .:

HONOLULU (AP)- The United States rushed into action Sunday as a
Russian space probe fired toward Mars hunled back to Eanh. tracking its
fall, plotting its impact site and offering help in the remote event of nuclear
.
•
contamination.
· In the end, the craft smashed harmles~ly into the' atmosphere at 17,000
miles an hour over the sOuthern Pacific Ocean west of Chile. The U.S. Space
Command slid it could not confinn whether .any objects surv\yed re-entry.
President Clinton, here on a weekend vacatJon, spent much of the day conNiting with senior advisers lbout the matter. "He did not .have a very restful day," spokeswoman Mary Ellen ()lynn said.
: .The' president talked by telephone with Prime· Minister John Howard of
Austnlil.

•
•

•

Originally, there was concern the impact site would be in cast-central Australia. In that event, U.S. officials said there was an "extremely unlikely"
worst-case scenario in which four tiny generators on board could release a
small lethal plutonium cloud.
When it became clear the rocket would miss Australia, Roben Bell, a
senior aide on the White House National Security Council, said, "If that's
what happens there's fio danger to anyone and that's very good news indeed. "
Ironically, word of the expecte~ crash carne one day before Clinton was
scheduled to. fly to Australia on the fiBtleg ofa 10-d~ tour of Asia-Pacific nations.
·
'
·
.
The president, making his first visit to Australia, w. ·due jo arrive in Syd.

.

&gt;

ney in the southeast rcgio~ of Jhc co~ntry on Tuesday night, with subseqiJI:!It
stops in nearby Canberra lana Port Douglas on the northeastern coast.
The unmanned Russiah craft- Ma~ '96- got into trouble when it was
unable to break out of Earth orbit aftbr'ihe failure of a fourth-stage booster
rocket.
From ~ stan, the Space Command. based in Colorado Springs. Colo..
tracked the re-entry path of the probe.
In Washington, Vice President AI Gore; White House chief of staff Leon
Panetta and National Security Adviser Anthony Lake coordinsted the mponses of NASA, the Department of Energy and the Federsl Emersency Management Agency. .
,•,

-~

-

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